Anderson County Review — September 22, 2015
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from September 22, 2015. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
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Bush City, Colony, Garnett, Greeley, Harris, Kincaid, Lone Elm, Mont Ida, Scipio, Selma, Welda, Westphalia KANSAS
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See
ACHS Bulldogs
Cornstock returns –
opponent 63-13.
is Saturday.
trample football
Annual music fest
See page 8A.
See pages 4-5B.
nam
ONE U.S. DOLLAR
September 22, 2015
Probitas,
virtus, integritas
in summa.
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Plea deal made in child rape case; prison likely
Former EMT, firefighter year-old girl, but it remains
unknown if he will serve a
pleads guilty to 1 count Jessicas Law sentence of 25
years to life, or a sentence of
of rape of 10-year-old girl less than 13 years – about half
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – A former local
EMT and firefighter likely
will be sentenced next month
to prison for the rape of a 10
the minimum in such cases.
Michael J. Spellmeier, 47,
accepted a plea deal Monday,
Sept. 14, in which he pleaded guilty to one count of rape.
Three other rape charges were
dismissed, according to district
court records.
Sentencing is
set for 10 a.m.
Oct. 26.
The sentence in the
case
falls
under
the
Jessicas
Spellmeier
Law specifications,
which requires a minimum
prison sentence of 25 years
to life for anyone 18 years of
age or older who has sex with
someone younger than 14.
As part of the plea deal, however, Spellmeier is expected to
file a motion that essentially
would ignore the Jessicas Law
guidelines in favor of previous
state sentencing guidelines.
Anderson County Attorney
Brandon Jones said the plea
agreement recommends a sentence of 155 months, or just less
than 13 years. A judge ultimately will decide whether to follow the plea recommendations,
or sentence Spellmeier under
Jessicas Law. In most cases,
judges tend to follow the recommendations of plea agreements.
Spellmeier worked in various capacities of local public
protection during the past 20
years, including as a former
firefighter, EMT and emergency services dispatcher. Most
recently, he was a firefighter
for the City of Garnett until
May 22, the day after his arrest.
He was accused in May of
having sex with the girl on at
least four occasions between
Oct. 1, 2014, and April 24,
SEE RAPE ON PAGE 3B
Concerns raised about
Central Heights
crosswalk speed limit crowns homecoming
walkers and bikers travel
Speed limit was 20 mph as
across Park Road to and from
recreational activities on the
several years ago, but
trail or at the lake. Park Road
raised at drivers request is one of the most heavily traf-
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – Concerns about
motorists speeding and not
stopping for pedestrians in the
crosswalk on Park Road near
the Lake Garnett Park could
lead to a reduction in the speed
limit there.
If that happens itll be deja
vu all over again. Several years
ago, the speed limit was 20 mph
at the crosswalk on Park Road
just west of the entrance to
Lake Garnett. The crosswalk
is part of the Prairie Spirit Rail
Trail, and is frequently used
royalty
ficked streets on the north side
of town.
But after complaints from
some drivers – particularly
drivers of semi-trailers en route
to the Anderson County Sales
sale barn or other Garnett businesses – city commissioners
increased the speed to 30 mph.
Recently, people have complained that drivers frequently fail to stop for those traveling through the crosswalk.
The crosswalk is the primary
southern route for children
who walk to and from Garnett
Elementary School.
SEE CROSSWALK ON PAGE 3B
Domestic dispute leads
to kidnapping arrest
woman, according
Fight between couple 43-year-old
to a report from the Garnett
leads to restraint, arrest; Police Department. At least
three adults were listed as witman released on bond nesses to the incident. Alcohol
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – A couples fight
on a recent Sunday morning,
landed a Garnett man in jail
on suspicion of kidnapping and
related charges.
Eric Weems, Garnett, was
arrested at 1:07 a.m. Sept. 13 on
suspicion of kidnapping, criminal damage criminal restraint,
criminal damage to property,
disorderly conduct and domestic battery.
The victim in the case is a
was involved, the report said.
Garnett Police Chief Kevin
Pekarek said although the
incident falls under the statute
specifications for kidnapping,
it was more of a domestic dispute. The female victim was not
taken anywhere, nor was there
any sort of ransom request.
Anytime you restrain someone from doing what they want
to do, it falls under the kidnapTHE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-22-2015 / Vickie Moss
ping statute, Pekarek said.
Weems was released from Jessica Beets and Cade Hibdon were crowned Central Heights 2015 Fall Homecoming Queen and King before the game Friday, Sept. 18.
Central Heights lost the game to Prairie View, 53-6.
jail Sept. 15 on $2,500 bond.
Boots led city, war missions
War veterans, Garnett Boots.
Boots, who
served on the
commissioner served
Garnett City
as leader on many fronts Commission
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – Bob Boots, who
died Wednesday, Sept. 16, at
the age of 94, was a lot of things
– a distinguished war veteran,
a farmer, a city commissioner
and former mayor, an active
member of his church, and an
inspiration to family members.
But it was his unofficial
role as a teacher that left the
greatest impact on those who
worked with him on matters of
city government.
I learned a lot from him,
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-22-2015 / Vickie Moss both former city commissioner
Taryn Covey was crowned Kincaid Fair Queen Saturday, Sept. 19, before the parade. Pictured from left Janice Hodgson and Garnett
are: Candidate Kendra Sprague, last years queen Shelby Ramsey, Covey, and candidate Katie Brewer. City Manager and former city
clerk Joyce Martin said of
See more pictures from the parade on page 1B.
task, and he was also very fair
and very honest. He liked to
joke around, too, Martin said.
You always knew where you
stood with him.
from
1985
Boots joined the commisto 1990 and
sion just after the Cedar Valley
as
mayor
Reservoir was constructed.
from 1987 to
The controversial water supBoots ply project still suffered some
1989, talked
Hodgson into
growing pains, particularly
running for the commission. between fishermen and boatShe ended up serving 12 years, ers, former city manager Rick
and said she learned a lot from Doran recalled. Fisherman
Boots leadership.
didnt like boats speeding
He was very level-headed through the water and disruptand cared about the communi- ing their activities, and boaters
ty, she said.
wanted to enjoy the reservoir
Martin, who was still rel- without worrying about the
atively new to the city clerk fishing conditions.
position when Boots served on
He helped work through
the commission, said she real- those issues, and really helped
ly appreciated his approach to get over those growing pains,
time management.
Doran recalled.
He ran a tight ship. He
SEE BOOTS ON PAGE 3B
always made sure we stayed on
Custom printed napkins for your party, anniversary, shower or special event – Call the Review today (785) 448-3121
2A
NEWS IN
BRIEF
NAME THE PARADE
The Name the Parade Contest
is open to all children in
Anderson County ages 12 and
younger. Contact the Chamber
of Commerce for more information, (785) 448-6767. The deadline is Oct. 5 at 5 p.m. The
child with the winning theme will
receive $25 in Chamber Bucks,
a free picture with Santa and ride
with Santa through the annual
Christmas parade.
VENDORS SOUGHT
The Annual Holiday Boutique will
be on Sunday, December 6, at
Prairie Belles from 12-3 p.m. This
event will be held in conjunction
with the Librarys Holiday Homes
Tour. Any vendor interested in
registering a booth for this event,
please contact Helen at (785)
448-8745.
CORNFEST BREAKFAST
Garnett United Methodist Church
will have a community breakfast
at Cornfest, from 7 a.m. to 10
a.m. at the Community Building.
FALL DINNER, BAZAAR
St. Johns Church Fall Dinner
and Bazaar will be Sunday, Sept.
27, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the
parish hall in Greeley. Everyone
is welcome. Handicapped
accessible.
GREELEY GARAGE SALES
St. Johns Hall and Greeley City
Wide Garage Sales will be 7 a.m.
to ?? Saturday, Oct. 3.
DRUG TAKE BACK
Anderson County Sheriffs Office
will participate in the National
Drug Take-Back Program. The
sheriff will be in front of the jail
at 135 E. Fifth Ave. from 10 a.m.
until 2 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 26.
No syringes are accepted.
ACHS TAILGATE EVENT
The Anderson County Booster
Club will have its annual tailgate event with free pulled pork
sandwiches, chips, drink and
cookies for those who attend
the ACHS home varsity football
game Friday, September 25th.
Serving will start at 6:00 p.m.
We will also serve football team,
coaches, cheerleaders, band &
dance team. Sponsors of this
tailgate is the Anderson County
Booster Club.
LADIES NIGHT OUT
The Ladies Night Out, sponsored
by the Garnett Area Chamber of
Commerce, will be 4 p.m. to 8
p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 7. Shop at
participating businesses for door
prizes, food and shopping. Get a
business card at the Chamber
office at Garnett City Hall after
4 p.m. and find hidden items at
each participating business to
get the card stamped. Return the
card to win prizes.
CLASS OF 1985 REUNION
The GHS Class of 1985 reunion
is scheduled for Saturday, Sept.
26. The GHS Class of 1985
Reunion picnic will be from noon3 at west shelter house during the
Anderson County Corn Festival.
Reduced-price Cornstock concert tickets are available. Call
or text Connie Fagg at 785-4482916 for details.
MEMORIAL BRICKS
Inscribed bricks are being
sold for the Anderson County
Veterans Memorial and will be
used in creation of the walking
area. Bricks can be inscribed
with whatever names the purchaser desires. A minimum $100
donation is requested. Forms for
the bricks are available in the
office of the Anderson County
Clerk.
CAREGIVER SUPPORT
Anderson County Caregiving
Support will meet the fourth
Monday of each month from 1-2
p.m. at the Garnett Recreation
Center. For more information, call
Phyllis at ECKAAA, (800) 6335621.
1×2
AD
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 22, 2015
RECORD
ANDERSON COUNTY BOARD OF
COMMISSIONERS SEPT. 8
Chairman Jerry Howarter called
the meeting of the Anderson
County Commission to order at
9:00 AM on September 8, 2015
at the County Commission Room.
Attendance:
Jerry Howarter,
Present: Eugene Highberger,
Present: Leslie McGhee, Present.
The pledge of allegiance was
recited. Minutes of the previous
meeting were approved as presented.
Road and Bridge
Lester Welsh, Road Supervisor
met with the commission. He
reported the insurance company
settled on the dump truck for an
amount of $55,000 less deductible. Cedar Creek Bridge should
be opened up later this week if the
weather cooperates. The state
has approved the replacement
of a bridge on 100 Rd between
Delaware and Florida, however
Lester still needs to check with
Allen County to see if they are
okay with it.
Don Bowers joined the meeting. He requested the commission replace a low water bridge
with a span bridge near his home.
He reported he purchased the
land and built his home a couple
of years ago. When the water is
up he is unable to get out. He is
also concerned that if the water
is up emergency vehicles cannot
get through. He feels that if the
road is built up, or, more pipes
put in, he could get out. The commission does not feel either of
these ideas are a solution. It was
recommended he see if he can
get an easment from a neighbor
to go out another direction. Dan
Harden, BG Consultants was also
present. He informed the group
that he has seen this situation
numerous times over the years.
His recommendation would be to
get an easement to go north off
of his property. Discussion was
held with Dan Harden on the new
shop building and getting a bid
for a traveling crane. Discussion
was held on bidding the building
in two seperate bids with the office
area as one and the actual shop
as another. One bid could be
done this year and taken out of
this years budget and the other
bid could be done next year and
taken out of next years budget.
Appraiser
Steve Markham, Appraiser met
with the commission. He presented information to the commission
about how all the ethanol plants
in the state have been valued.
There are 12 plants in the state
and they have all been valued
differently. Since there is not set
formula for appraising them Steve
still feels that hiring an outside
appraiser, who has valued ethanol plants, is the best way to
get a fair appraisal. Commission
approved proceeding with having
PVD search for an appraiser to
value the ethanol plant.
Veterans Memorial
Dorothy Lickteig, Kristie Kinney,
Jesse Minkler, Tommy Lewis, and
Phyllis Gettler, Veterans Memorial
Committee met with the commission. Dorothy questioned how
the commission wants names
on the board. It is becoming a
monumental task trying to verify
all the names that have been
turned in. Other than history
books with names of the WWI,
WWII, and other older wars there
are no records to validate service and even the history books
have errors. The committee has
opened the names up to all citizens who have lived in Anderson
County but it is questioned if we
included someone who comes
here and lives for a couple years
and then dies.
Rural Fire
Mick Brinkmeyer, Rural Fire
Director met with the commission. He is needing to purchase
a new hydraulic power unit for
Colony. He presented prices on a
new unit and demonstrator models. Commissioner Highberger
moved to purchase a demonstrator model power unit from Danko
Emergency Equipment at a cost
of $5820.76 out of the Rural Fire
Fund. Commissioner McGhee
seconded. Approved 30. He is
working with the Coffey County
Fire Chief on a mutual aid agreement to have the Westphalia station be the responding department
in case of a fire when it is within 5
miles into Coffey County.
Meeting adjourned at 12:30 PM
due to no further business.
LAND TRANSFERS
September 8, Richard Wallace
Briggs And Dorothy Briggs To
Gary W Briggs Sr, Ne4 14-23-19.
September 8, Eric R Callahan
To Shannon M Wickwire And
David A Wickwire, A Tract Of Land
In N2 Se4 7-21-21 As Follows:
Beg At Secor N2 Se4 7-21-21,
Thence North 885812 West
For A Distance Of 828.92 Feet
Along South Line Of N2 Of Said
Quarter Section To True Pob;
Thence North 000000 West
For A Distance Of 1324.63 Feet
Parallel With East Line Of Said
Quarter Section To Pt 828.92 Feet
West Of Necor Of Said Quarter
Section; Thence North 885917
West For A Distance Of 262.84
Feet Along North Line Of Said
Quarter Section; Thence South
003151 East For A Distance
Of 943.13 Feet, Thence North
885812 West For A Distance
Of 65.00 Feet, Thence South
030610 West For A Distance Of
381.80 Feet To Pt On South Line
Of N2 Of Said Quarter Section,
Thence South 885812 East For
A Distance Of 339.77 Feet Along
Said South Line To True Pob;
September 8, Blayne A Keith
And Chelsie R Keith To Mark W
Keith And Kara L Keith, All That
Property Lying South Of Old K N D
Railroad R/W (NOW Abandoned)
In S2 Se4 18-20-19 Except The
Following Tracts: 1/1/2 Acres In
Swcor For Cemetery Described
As Follows: Beg At Swcor Of Said
Quarter Section, Thence East 12
Rods, Thence North 20 Rods,
Thence West 12 Rods, Thence
South 20 Rods To Pob; & Except:
Com At Secor Se4, Thence North
390, Thence West 390, Thence
South 390, Thence East 390 To
Pob; & 390 To Pob; & Except:
Com At Pt 390 West Of Secor
Se4, Thence North 390, Thence
East 390, Thence West 610,
Thence South 750, Thence East
220 To Pob; All In 18-20-19;
September 10, Daniel Skaggs
And Rachel Skaggs To Brittney
Goldner, Lots 9 And 10 In Block
12 In The City Of Kincaid;
September 10, Kelley E
Swonger To Christian Manuel
Bautista, Lots 4, 5 And 6 In Block
18 In Chapmans Addition To The
City Of Garnett;
September 11, Lisa Kay
Simmons And Ralph Donald
Simmons Jr To Jeffrey E Mccain
And Brenda K Mccain, Lots 13 &
14 Blk 25 City Of Garnett;
September 15, Joyce A Benton
To Ramon Garcia And Mary
Garcia, North 1/4 Lot 3 & All Lots
4 & 5 Blk 9 & Lot 1 Blk 10
In Parkview Addition To City Of
Garnett;
September 15, Ralph A Schmidt
To Brandon D Gates And Randi Jo
Gates, N2 Lot 10 & All Lots 11 &
12 Blk 2 City Of Kincaid.
CIVIL CASES FILED
Charles A. R. Burris vs. Kansas
Department of Revenue, petition for reinstatement of drivers
license.
rape. Dismissed.
Speeding violations:
Brandon Kenneth Brallier, $333
fine.
Lenny D. Brubaker, $171 fine.
William Bradford Dawdy, $240
fine.
Ryan B. Hutton, $183 fine.
Conner A. Lair, $483 fine.
Jeffrey H. Malone, $165 fine.
Jere Joe Patterson, $189 fine.
Etta M. Stanley, $153 fine.
Brady James Tucker, $408 fine.
James R. Watson II, $183 fine.
Ian J. Yost, $285 fine.
Seat belt violations:
David Michael Sims, $10 fine.
Nolan R. Sobba, $10 fine.
Other:
State of Kansas vs. Elizabeth V.
Ojeda, speeding. Dismissed.
State of Kansas vs. Vanessa
M. Williams, no vehicle liability
insurance. Dismissed.
State of Kansas vs. Steven
Michael Moffitt, no vehicle liability
insurance. Dismissed.
Lisa Marie Beers, disorderly
conduct. $293 fine.
Alicia Ann Ellis, found guilty of
burglary. No penalty listed.
Nicolas Ryan Mueller, over
weight limit on wheels and axles.
$273 fine.
Elizabeth V. Ojeda, driving
while suspended. $393 fine.
Michael Julius Spellmeier,
found guilty of rape. No penalty
listed.
Vanessa M. Williams, driving
while suspended. $318 fine.
DOMESTIC CASES FILED
Amy Lynn Burnett, Andie
Burnett, Braylee Burnett, Chloe
Burnett, Danielle Burnett vs.
Michael Keith Burnett, petition for
protection from abuse.
Felisha Duensing vs. Salvador
Ortiz III, petition for protection
from stalking.
LIMITED ACTION FILED
Midland Funding LLC vs Haley
Lively, asking for $594.80 plus
costs and interest.
Midland Funding LLC vs. Jason
McManus, asking for $676.34 plus
costs and interest.
Portfolio Recovery Associates
LLC vs. Susan J. Michael, asking
for $1,184.80 plus cost and interest.
LIMITED ACTION RESOLVED
Sandy Otipoby DDS vs. Rene
Bartlett, judgment for $484.10
plus costs and interest.
Sandy Otipoby DDS vs. John
C. Glukowsky, et al, judgment for
$100 plus costs and interest.
CRIMINAL CASES FILED
Eric M. Weems, domestic battery.
Tevin Isaac Arthur Hall, possession of marijuana.
Weston William Warren, possession of marijuana and drug
paraphernalia.
Jason L. Thurman, possession
of methamphetamine, marijuana,
operating motor vehicle without
valid license.
Patience Jane Theiss, possession of methamphetamine, marijuana, and drug paraphernalia.
Chad William Flinn, possession
of methamphetamine, marijuana,
and drug paraphernalia.
GARNETT POLICE REPORT
Incidents
On September 1, a report of
burglary, theft, and criminal damage to property was made in the
300 block of North Maple, Garnett.
A masterlock was destroyed/damaged valued at $10.
On September 5, a report of
theft was made in the 300 block of
South Oak, Garnett. A Japanese
Maple was stolen valued at $100.
On September 9, a report of
disorderly conduct/fighting was
CRIMINAL CASES RESOLVED
State of Kansas vs. Alicia Ann
Ellis, possession of drugs, theft,
criminal damage to property.
Dismissed.
State of Kansas vs. Michael
Julius Spellmeier, three counts of
Portraits
of
Honor
made in the 500 block of East 3rd
Avenue, Garnett.
On September 11, a report of
drug seizure was made following
a traffic stop on Highway 169
near mile-marker 101, Garnett.
Driver was speeding, driving recklessly, fleeing/eluding an officer,
had possession of drugs and drug
paraphernalia.
On September 13, a report
of domestic battery, kidnapping,
inflicting bodily injury, criminal
restraint, criminal damage to
property, and disorderly conduct
was made on East 6th Avenue,
Garnett. Wicker shelving and a
lamp was destroyed or damaged
valued at $70.
On September 14, a report of
criminal damage to property was
made in the 400 block of South
Cedar Street, Garnett. Two windows were destroyed or damaged
valued at $25.
On September 16, a report of
burglary and theft was made in
the 100 block of South Oak Street,
Garnett. Cash, wallet, debit card,
and drivers license was stolen
valued at $135.
Arrests
Justin Hubbard, Garnett, was
arrested September 10 on suspicion of disorderly conduct, criminal damage to property.
Justin Jones-Dowe, Tulsa OK,
was arrested September 11 on
suspicion of fleeing/eluding officer,
reckless driving, speeding, driving
on left side of roadway, following
vehicle too closely.
Tevin Hall, Tulsa OK, was
arrested September 11 on suspicion of use/possession of drugs
and drug paraphernalia.
Vicky James, Garnett, was
arrested September 12 on suspicion of no vehicle registration or
liability insurance.
Eric Weems, Garnett, was
arrested September 13 on suspicion of criminal damage to property, criminal restraint, disorderly
conduct, kidnapping, domestic
SEE RECORDS ON PAGE 3A
it
Submotos
h
your pday!
to
A hard-cover pictorial roster
of local veterans, available Nov. 11.
T
hey are the pride of our nation the sons
and daughters of Anderson County.
They answered the call to serve our country.
To them, we owe our solemn gratitude.
Join The Anderson County Review during our
150th Anniversary celebration in commemorating Anderson Countys present and former
military personnel as we publish Anderson
County Portraits of Honor, a pictorial roster of
our countys military veterans.
You can take part in this special commemoration of local veterans by submitting a service
portrait of yourself or a family member to be
included in this glossy, archival quality hardcover book, set for release Veterans Day 2015.
Photos may be submitted for military personnel who presently live or previously lived in
Anderson County, including those in memoriam for a deceased veteran from the modern era
or generations prior.
Photos may be emailed to review@garnett-ks.
com. Hard copy photos can be dropped by our
office at 112 W. 6th and electronically scanned
while you wait.
Book release: Veterans Day, Nov. 11, 2015.
ONLY
Submit your photos for this
commerative history book by emailing them to
review@garnett-ks.com or dropping them by
our office at 112 W. 6th in Garnett.
Questions?
Contact us at (785) 448-3121
or (800) 683-4505.
39.95
Mail this order with your check
or credit card info to Garnett Publishing, Inc.
P.O. Box 409 Garnett, Ks., 66032
Name___________________________________________
Phone __________________________________________
Number of copies_________x $43.35 = _______________
Amount enclosed_________
Check
Credit card
Credit card #, exp., code ____________________________
________________________________________________
Will pick up at your office
Please ship to: __________________________________
(Add $5.00 per book shipping) _____________________________
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 22, 2015
BOOTS
AUGUST 19, 1921-SEPTEMBER 16, 2015
Bob Boots went to be with the
Lord on Wednesday, September
16, 2015, after a brief illness. He
had celebrated his 94th
birthday just
one month
ago, and we
are all very
grateful for
his long life
and for his
many years
Boots
of service to
God, his family, and to our country.
Bob was born on August 19,
1921, in Welda, Kansas, the son
of Claude and Rozella (Landis)
Boots. He grew up working on
the family farm. Bob attended Welda High School and was
a standout athlete in football,
basketball, baseball, and track.
He enrolled at the University of
Kansas and played on the university football team until the
outbreak of World War II.
Bob left college to join the
Army Air Corps as an aviation cadet. While training at
Washington University in St.
Louis, he met his future wife,
Eileen. Bob graduated from pilot
training in 1943 and deployed to
England as part of the 438th
Troop Carrier Group. He flew
numerous combat missions,
including air dropping the 82nd
Airborne behind enemy lines
during the Normandy invasion.
Bob was awarded the air Medal
of Valor and was promoted to
Captain before the end of the
war in 1945. Bob returned from
the war and married Eileen
Cunningham in 1945. He served
as pilot in the elite Presidential
Support Group in Washington,
D.C. during which time he and
Eileen had their first son, Mike,
in 1946. Bob left active service
and began farming in Garnett,
Kansas, while remaining in the
Air Force Reserves. In 1949,
their second son, Randy, was
born.
Bob returned to Active Duty
in 1953 when he was recalled for
the Korean War. The war ended
before he was sent to combat,
and after a tour at Smokey
Hill AFB in Salina, Kansas, he
was selected for training in the
new B-47 Stratojet. While Bob
was training in the B-47, Bobs
third son, Mark, was born in
Waco, Texas, in 1955. The B-47
was to be our nations frontline defense during the early
years of the Cold War, and
in 1955, Bob was assigned to
Walker AFB, New Mexico, to
the famous 509th Bomb Wing
(the unit that dropped the
atomic bombs on Japan). Bob
became an aircraft commander
and deployed numerous times
to England, Europe, and North
Africa to sit on alert during
times of high tension between
the United States and the Soviet
Union.
In 1958, the 509th moved from
New Mexico to Pease AFB, New
Hampshire, where Bob, Eileen
and their family would spend
the next eight years. Daughter
Elisa was born there in 1960.
Bob would continue to excel
as a pilot and received prestigious spot promotions to
Major and Lt. Col. He served
as the Stan/Eval check pilot for
the Wing until the Viet Nam
War began. Bob served in Viet
Nam in 1967 and 1968, flying the
C-130 Hercules out of Mactan
AFB in the Philippines. He was
awarded the Distinguished
Darrell D. Jones, age
75, passed away Tuesday,
September
15,
2015.
Committal
Services were
Friday, Sept.
18, at Kincaid
Cemetery,
Kincaid, KS.
Darrell
married Cena
Jones
M.
Davis
on July 12,
1963 in Kansas City, Missouri.
She preceded him in death on
October 27, 2014.
He was also preceded in
death by his parents, William
JEFFERIES
Bertha Jefferies of Iola,
Kansas,
passed away on
Sunday, September 20, 2015, at
Anderson County
news DAILY
at 8 a.m.
WOODS
DECEMBER 23, 1998-SEPTEMBER 4, 2015
Grace Gracie Woods, age Moorhead, MN, and Karen
Flying Cross for his major role 16 of Thief River Falls, MN, died Jegtvig of Carrington, ND; her
in planning and leading the res- Friday, September 4, 2015, in the loving aunts, uncles, and couscue of the Marines trapped at arms of her sister, surrounded ins; numerous friends; and her
beloved canine companions,
Khe Sanh. While still in Viet by her loving
Max, Ginger, Lucy, Cash, and
and
Nam, tragedy struck the family family
Fifo.
when son Randy was drowned friends after
Grace is preceded in death
while trying to rescue the fami- a courageous
by her grandfather, Jerome
ly dog from raging flood waters four year battle with canJegtvig, and special friend, Ian
of Cedar Creek in Garnett.
Alves.
After his tour in Viet Nam cer.
G r a c e
Attending the funeral serand a tour at Forbes AFB in
vices were some of Graces great
Topeka, Bob retired in 1970 Noelle Woods
from the Air Force as a Lt. Col. was born on
Woods aunts, great uncles and cousins
from Kansas: Catherine Crotts
with 28 years of active service December 23,
and Janet Payne, Burlington,
and returned to Garnett to start 1998, in Thief
a successful hog and cattle River Falls, MN, the daughter of KS, John and Mitzi Wiesner,
business, Rocky Ridge Farms. Todd and DeAnna (Hermreck) Jim and Lois Foltz, Butch and
Marilyn Foltz all of Garnett, KS,
Eileen became ill in 1984 and Woods.
Grace is survived by her par- Michelle Ratliff, Westphalia,
passed away in April of that
ents, Todd and DeAnna Woods KS, Marla Youk Overland
year.
Bob began a new chapter in of Thief River Falls; sisters, Park, KS, Nevalea Magrath
his life when he and Estella Paige Woods of Minneapolis, Williamsburg, KS, JoeAnn
Toots Watt were married in MN and Taylor Woods of Thief Oswald Gardner, KS, Lynneda
1985. Bob soon retired from River Falls; grandparents, Sullivan of Kansas City, MO
farming. He became involved Warren and Mary Ann (Foltz) and Ray and Nancy Foltz Paola,
in serving the City of Garnett Hermreck of Thief River Falls, KS.
on the city council. He was on Patrick and Donna Woods of
the city commission from 1985
through 1990, during which
time he was Mayor from 1987 to
1989. During his tenure, many
improvements were made to
Annette Coleen Croan daughters, Lindsey Ruppel,
the city infrastructure and (Powelson) Logan, age 55, Natasha Jones, and son, Chance
recreational areas. Bob was an returned home to her heavenly Powelson; and multiple grandactive member of the United father on September 14, 2015 in children.
Methodist Church, serving in Garnett after
Preceded in death by her son,
many leadership positions, but a valiant batJustin Scott Powelson; mother,
also could be found mowing tle of a long
Beverly (Croan) King; uncle,
or watering at the church on disease.
George Croan Sr.; and cousin,
many occasions. Bob and Toots
She
was
George Croan Jr.
to
served freely of their time at the devoted
Memorial services were
Senior Center in Garnett and her family,
Friday, September 18, 2015, at
delivered Meals on Wheels in grandkids and
the Feuerborn Family Funeral
friends, who
past years.
Service Chapel, Garnett.
Logan
Bob was not only an she loved and
Memorial contributions may be
inspiration to his own chil- cared for with
made to Crossroads Hospice.
dren, grandchildren, and all her heart.
You may send your condoSurvived by her longtime lences to the family at www.
great-grandchildren, but was
a second father and grandfa- companion, Don Edgerton; feuerbornfuneral.com.
ther to Toots children, John,
Julie, Beth, and Mary, who are
grateful for his devotion and
influence upon them and their
children. Between his family
JUNE 25, 1944-SEPTEMBER 18, 2015
with Eileen and Toots family,
Charles R. Kesinger, age dents becoming professional
Bob is survived by seven children, Mike and Cheryl Boots 71, of Garnett, Kansas, passed level musicians.
He was a member of the
of Wyndham, NH, Mark and away on Friday, September 18,
Garnett Community Band; the
Cathy Boots of Dallas, TX, Elisa 2015, at North
Hella Shrine Drum and Bugle
and Mike Mullins of Meriden, Point Skilled
Corp; and various other comKS, John and Susan Watt of N u r s i n g ,
munity musical groups.
Wamego, KS, Julie McNall Paola, Kansas.
He
was
He was preceded in death
of Lawrence, Kansas, Beth
by his parents and stepfather,
Anderson of Garnett, KS, and born on June
Elmer Norton.
Mary Koch and Dennis Hastert, 25, 1944, at
Charles is survived by his
Jr. of Garnett, KS; 18 grand- Leavenworth,
Kansas,
the
son,
Christopher Kesinger
children and 8 great-grandchiland wife Sarah of Pflugerville,
dren. Bob is also survived by son of Eugene
Kesinger Texas; two grandchildren, Ami
his two sisters, Wilma Berggren K e s i n g e r
and
Marian
Kesinger and Alex Jones; two
of Stromsburg, NE, and Patricia
(Landon) Norton. As a teenager, brothers, Richard Norton and
Horner of Tulsa, OK.
He was preceded in death he was active in a local Topeka wife Sandy of Mound Valley,
by his wife, Eileen Boots; son, DeMolay Chapter. He graduat- Kansas; Dennis Norton and
Randy Boots; sister, Norma ed from Topeka High School wife Jeanette of Paola, Kansas.
The family will greet friends
Benjamin; brother, Jim Boots; with the class of 1962, furtherson-in-law, Steve Koch; and ing his education in Music at at the Feuerborn Family
Washburn in Topeka, Kansas Funeral Service Chapel in
granddaughter, Sarah Watt.
Garnett for visitation from
Serving others was always and SMU in Dallas, Texas.
Charles taught in Catholic 12:30 to 2:00p.m. on Tuesday,
the hallmark of Bobs life. He
has now slipped the surly schools in Texas for sever- September 22, 2015 with a gravebonds of Earth and gone to be al years and also worked in side service and burial to follow at the McLouth Cemetery,
with his Lord and Savior. Until restaurant management.
McLouth, Kansas.
He
recently
got
back
into
we see him again he will live on
teaching
over
the
last
ten
years
Memorial contributions may
in the hearts of those who were
privileged to know him here on retiring from Pomona School be made to the First United
District, continuing to give Methodist Church, Garnett.
Earth.
You may send your condoFuneral services were private music lessons in the
Monday, September 21, 2015, Lawrence, Ottawa, Garnett and lences to the family at www.
Paola area with several stu- feuerbornfuneral.com.
at the First United Methodist
Church, Garnett, Kansas.
Burial followed in the Garnett
Cemetery, Garnett, Kansas.
SEPTEMBER 6, 1934 – SEPTEMBER 17, 2015
Memorial
contributions
may be made to First United
Milo M. Kesner, age 81, of Missouri; Kimberly Adams and
Methodist Church and left in Garnett, Kansas, passed away husband Ernest of Chanute,
care of the funeral home.
on Thursday, September 17, Kansas;
Traci
Witteman
Condolences may be sent to 2015, at his home.
and husband Doug of LeRoy,
the family at www.feuerbornfuHe was born September 6, Kansas; and Kristan Broussard
neral.com.
1934 in LeRoy,
and husband Bob of Grapevine,
Kansas, the
Texas; 10 grandchildren and 6
son of Milo M.
great grandchildren.
and Frances
He
married
Donna
(Ringle)
Worthington on December
Kesner. He
6, 1986 in Miami, Oklahoma.
She survives of the home. Milo
and Ruby (Dinges) Jones; son- g r a d u a t e d
from LeRoy
is also survived by her chilin-law, Kevin Williams.
dren, Brenda Osler of Garnett,
Survivors: son, Darrin High School
Kesner Kansas; Linnie Grosdidier and
Jones; daughter, Chris (Gene) entering the
Connie of Garnett, Kansas;
Pequin-Williams, all of Wichita; United States
Brandie Gilkey and husband
brother, Charles Buck Jones Navy shortof Belle Aire; sisters, Elaine ly after. He went to work for Doyle of Garnett, Kansas;
(Delbert) Yokum of Wichita, an appliance store in Iola and 6
grandchildren,
Justin
Rene Jones of Wichita; grand- then became a mail carrier Grosdidier, Hannah Osler,
children, Joshua (Trish) for the post office in Chanute. Misti Villegas, Britnee Gull,
Williams, Whitney Williams; He moved his family to LeRoy Macy Adams, Austin Adams;
great-grandchildren, Chace and and worked at the CO-OP and and 5 great grandchildren,
from there to Joplin, Missouri
Jessalynn Williams.
Trent Miller, Haylee Miller,
Memorials:
Meridian at the boat plant. Milo worked Gunner Grosdidier, John Jon
Ave. Baptist Church, 200 N. at Eagle-Picher for many years Villegas and J. Linn Villegas.
Meridian, Wichita, KS 67203 retiring in 1997.
Milo was preceded in death
Milo was a member of the
or Johnson Cancer Research
by his parents; Beverly Kesner
American
Legion
BoerstlerCenter/KSU, 1 Chalmers Hall,
May Post 170 in Chanute, in December 1985; and one sisManhattan, KS 66506-3901.
Kansas. He enjoyed fishing, ter, Barbara Sue Dougherty.
Funeral services will be
reading, drinking coffee and
held
at 10:00 a.m., on Tuesday,
going to flea markets and finding bargains. Milo was a very September 22, 2015, at the
fun loving man and never met Feuerborn Family Funeral
Windsor Place in Iola, Kansas.
a stranger. He also was an avid Service Chapel in Garnett.
Funeral services are pending at
Chiefs fan and was a big fan of Cremation will follow. The
this time.
The Price is Right and Wheel of family will greet friends at the
funeral home from 6:00 p.m. to
Fortune.
Milo married Beverly Ann 8:00 p.m. on Monday evening.
Memorial contributions may
Grady on January 30, 1955.
This union was blessed with be made to the Milo Kesner
five children, Lari McCullough Memorial Fund.
You may send your condoand husband Gene of Wichita,
Kansas; Micki Deater and lences to the family at www.
husband Rick of Carthage, feuerbornfuneral.coma
JONES
3A
REMEMBRANCES
LOGAN
KESINGER
KESNER
STAADT
NOVEMBER 8, 1937-SEPTEMBER 3, 2015
Robert Edward Staadt, age
77, of Welda, KS, passed away
Sept. 3, 2015.
He was born on Nov. 8, 1937,
near Osawatomie.
He was preceded in death
by his parents, Homer and
Josephine Staadt, Garnett,
and his wife, Bertha Mae Beck
Staadt.
He is survived by his son,
Richard L. Fry of Canyon,
Texas; grandson, Josh Fry, and
grandaughter Courtney Fry of
Cibolo, Texas; brother Richard
Staadt of Fort Wayne, Ind.;
nephews David Staadt, New
Haven, Ind. and Gary Staadt,
Rockville, Ind.; stepdaughter,
Connie Ryan, Pueblo, Colo.,
and stepgranddaughter, Robin
Calloway, Colorado Springs,
Colo.
Bob was employed at Kansas
State Highway Department.
Later he and Bertha owned a
business, B&B Mobile Storage
in Manhattan. He enjoyed his
hobbies of Cushman scooters
and antique Ford cars. As a fan
of Elvis Presley, he collected
Elvis memorabilia.
A memorial gathering will
be held at Welda Community
Building on Sept. 27, 2015, at 2
p.m. where family and friends
can share memories of Bob.
RECORDS…
FROM PAGE 2A
battery.
Karen Johnson, Garnett, was
arrested September 13 on suspicion of domestic battery, disorderly
conduct.
Frankie Robertson, Garnett,
was arrested September 13 on
suspicion of domestic battery, disorderly conduct.
Nancy Feuerborn, Garnett, was
arrested September 14 on suspicion of failure to report an accident.
ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS
REPORT
Incidents
On September 6, a report of
theft was made in the 100 block of
East Broad Street, Colony. A Yeti
45 gallon cooler was stolen valued
at $349.
On September 3, a report of
drug seizure was made in area of
Commercial Street and Highway
31 in Kincaid. Green leafy vegetation and an E-cigarette pipe was
seized.
Accidents
On September 3, Nathan Lee
Emert was driving an ATV 4-wheeler in a reckless manner, lost control, went into the ditch and rolled
the 4-wheeler on 2400 Road near
2430 Road. No injuries reported.
On September 8, a vehicle
driven by Lauren Elizabeth Hugle
experienced a blowout on the
front left tire and then lost control.
The vehicle left the roadway, went
through a barbed wire fence, and
came to rest against round hay
bales. No injuries reported.
On September 10, a vehicle
driven by Vernon Yoder struck a
deer on Highway 58 near Arkansas
Road.
JAIL LOG
Michael Keith Burnett, 33,
Colony, was booked into jail
September 10 by Anderson
County Sheriff for failure to appear
and suspicion of domestic battery,
disorderly conduct. Bond set at
$12,500. Released September 10.
Justin Allen Hubbard, 27,
Garnett, was booked into jail
September 10 by Garnett Police
on a warrant. Bond set at $1,500.
Released September 10.
Julia Ann Hurlock, 20, Garnett,
was booked into jail September
10 by Anderson County Sheriff for
failure to appear. Bond set at $300.
Released September 10.
Joshua Wade Heubach, 24,
Newton, was booked into jail
September 11 by Anderson County
Sheriff on suspicion of burglary
and theft. Bond set at $5,000.
Joshua Wade Heubach, 24,
Newton, was booked into jail
September 11 by Anderson County
Sheriff on two counts probation
violation. Bond set at $20,000.
Bryan Mitchell Troxel, 30,
Osawatomie, was booked into jail
September 11 by Miami County
Sheriff on probation violation,
two counts violation of protection
order. No bond listed.
Danial Ray Evans, 28, Lane,
was booked into jail September
11 by Miami County Sheriff on
suspicion of use/possession of
drug paraphernalia, possession of
drugs, and 2 warrants. Bond set at
$5,500.
Dale Alan Freeman, 29, Paola,
was booked into jail September 11
by Miami County Sheriff on suspicion of domestic battery, criminal
threat, criminal damage to property. Bond set at $15,000. Released
September 14.
Chance Allen Ayers, 21,
Osawatomie, was booked into jail
September 11 by Miami County
Sheriff on a warrant and suspicion
of burglary. Bond set at $309.26.
Released September 16.
Robert Anthany Blurton, 29,
Parker, was booked into jail
September 11 by Linn County
Sheriff on a warrant. No bond listed.
Zachery Hunter Trivitt, 18,
LaCycne, was booked into jail
September 11 by Linn County
Sheriff on a warrant. No bond listed.
Justin Dewey Powell, 37, Moran,
was booked into jail September 11
by Linn County Sheriff on a warrant. No bond listed. Released
September 15.
Justin Maleer Jones-Dowe, 19,
Tulsa OK, was booked into jail
September 11 by Anderson County
Sheriff on suspicion of flee or
attempt to elude law enforcement
officer, reckless driving, speeding,
following vehicle too closely. Bond
set at $750. Released September
11.
Jack Earl Haverty, 57, Colony,
was booked into jail September
11 by Anderson County Sheriff on
probation violation. No bond listed.
Released September 13.
Tevin Isaac Arthur Hall, 22,
Tulsa OK, was booked into jail
September 11 by Anderson County
Sheriff on suspicion of drug possession, use/possession of drug
paraphernalia. Bond set at $500.
Released September 11.
Brian Scott Gedrose, 31,
Garnett, was booked into jail
September 11 by Garnett Police
on suspicion of disorderly conduct. No bond listed. Released
September 13.
Evan Archer Doran, 46, Garnett,
was booked into jail September 12
by Garnett Police on suspicion of
transporting an open container. No
bond listed.
Vicky Kay James, 40, Blue
Mound, was booked into jail
September 12 by Garnett Police
on suspicion of no vehicle registration or liability insurance. Bond set
at $650. Released September 13.
Eric Matthew Weems, 44,
Garnett, was booked into jail
September 13 by Anderson
County Sheriff on suspicion of
domestic battery, criminal damage
to property, disorderly conduct,
kidnapping, inflicting bodily injury, criminal restraint. Bond set at
$2,500. Released September 15.
Frankie Lorraine Robertson,
49, Garnett, was booked into jail
September 13 by Garnett Police
on suspicion of domestic battery,
disorderly conduct. Bond set at
$1,500. Released September 14.
Karen Ladon Johnson, 29,
Garnett, was booked into jail
September 13 by Garnett Police
on suspicion of domestic battery,
disorderly conduct. Bond set at
$1,500. Released September 13.
Bruce Lee Henry, 38, Garnett,
was booked into jail September 14
by Miami County Sheriff on a warrant. Bond set at $2,000. Released
September 14.
Justin Richard Reed, 27,
Garnett, was booked into jail
September 16 by Anderson
County Sheriff for 48-hour writ.
Not bondable.
Scott William Shay, 49, Paola,
was booked into jail September 16
by Miami County Sheriff on suspicion of rape. No bond listed.
William
Christopher
Vandenberg, 20, Kansas City, was
booked into jail by Garnett Police
on suspicion of speeding. Bond set
at $180. Released September 16.
Edward Charles Beddingfield,
31, Lees Summit MO, was booked
into jail by Douglas County Sheriff
on suspicion of drug possession.
No bond listed.
Samantha Emma Burgett,
30, Leroy, was booked into jail
September 16 by Anderson
County Sheriff on probation violation. Bond set at $5,000. Released
September 16.
JAIL ROSTER
Michael Spellmeier was booked
into jail May 21 for Anderson
County, bond set at $250,000.
Herbert Hayden was booked
into jail June 11 for Anderson
County, bond set at $30,000.
Branden Dulin was booked into
jail June 25 for Anderson County,
bond set at $30,000.
Jacob Gilpatrick was booked
into jail July 6 for Anderson County
for court.
John Miller was booked into jail
July 9 for Anderson County, bond
set at $1,000.
Jason Hermreck was booked
into jail August 11 for Anderson
County, bond set at $35,000.
Joseph Daulton was booked
into jail August15 for Anderson
County, bond set at $15,000.
Yates Rosendahl was booked
into jail August 27 for Anderson
County, bond set at $2,500.
Charles Steele was booked
into jail August 26 for Anderson
County, bond set at $2,500.
Michael Kinder was booked
into jail August 15 for Anderson
County, bond set at $19,000.
Nathanael Talbert was booked
into jail August 28 for Anderson
County, bond set at $100,000.
FARM-INS
Michael Jackquinot was booked
into jail July 21 for Linn County.
Andrew Yeager was booked into
jail July 28 for Linn County.
4A
Selected by newspaper professionals nationwide for 43 Awards of Excellence
in editorial, column writing, photography and advertising.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 22, 2015
EDITORIAL
Recording cause of death in
obituaries beneficial to all
Genealogists, as well as people
researching their own family backgrounds, often encounter an obituary
with no explanation or reason for
someones death. The lack of information is particularly problematic
for those trying to connect the dots
of events related or perhaps unrelated to the death. Those types of
questions, however, arent just relegated to deaths in the distant past.
Today unexpected deaths, especially of young people, leave a
number of unanswered questions.
Some people are taking a different
approach courageously including
the cause of death in their loved ones
obituary, despite any embarrassment
or shame some might experience, so
it can serve as a lesson to others.
Fred and Dorothy Shuemake,
Middleton, Ohio while grieving
the death of their 18-year old daughter, Alison, from a drug overdose
decided it was more important to
tell her story as a warning to others
rather than worry about any stigma
related to the announcement.
Alison died from a heroin overdose.
What really matters is keeping some other person, especially a
child, from trying this. We didnt
want anybody else to feel the same
agony and wretchedness that were
left with, Alisons mother, Dorothy,
said.
Sadly, Alison wasnt alone in
the cause of her death nor of its
announcement. The teens live-in
boyfriend, Luther Combs, 31, also
died at the same time of the same
cause and his obituary also said he
died of a heroin overdose.
As some diseases become more
mainstream because of their impact
on so many people cancer comes
GUEST EDITORIAL
JEANNY SHARP, The Ottawa Herald
to mind some families are including details of the individuals cause
of death as part of the narrative and
tribute to the person. It isnt unusual
anymore to see, John Smith died
after a long battle with cancer. The
cause of death explanation not only
aids the family and communitys
understanding of what happened, it
also assists far into the future when
the deceased individuals descendants are trying to piece together
their own family tree possibly
including a family history of particular illnesses. Chronicling the persons life and death, whether one of
notable distinction or not, provides
a suitable proxy for a practice many
families moved away from recording births, marriages and deaths in
the cherished family Bible.
Every life matters. Recording a
life from beginning to end regardless of the tragic circumstances causing the death can be instructive
and beneficial for loved ones and
strangers alike, perhaps averting
some from dying earlier than they
should by warning them to change
their own behavior or face the same
fate.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEWS
PHONE FORUM
Record your comments on the topic of your choice at (785) 448-2500, press option 1. You do not need to
leave your name. Comments will be published anonymously. Calls may be edited for publication or omitted.
I see where the Confederate Air Force is
going to be up in Kansas City the end of
this month. I wonder if theyre going to
have to change the name because of the
racism in the word Confederate?
Nice try, but dont even try to make
those of us who clean up after ourselves
and mow our yards, paint our houses
and keep the toys and furniture and
old boats and cars and yard sale junk
out of our front yards feel like bullies
for pointing out your trashy property.
And yes, I do know very well the reason those lawns look the way they do.
Its because the owners or the renters
along with their landlords are too lazy
to get off their duffs and clean them up,
plain and simple. They werent raised
to have any self respect, much less have
Biden being Biden – the crazy, beloved uncle
While Hillary Clintons team of consultants is locked in a room somewhere trying to
figure out how she can project authenticity,
Joe Biden is out doing it.
The vice presidents recent interview on
The Late Show With Stephen Colbert was
compellingly human, as Biden talked of the
tragic loss of his son Beau and his decision
whether or not to make a late entry into the
Democratic presidential race.
Its rare for someone who has been at the
pinnacle of our politics for decades to get a
second look. But Bidens latest family tragedy
(he lost his first wife and a daughter to a car
accident in the 1970s) means that the vice
president is viewed through a prism of sympathy, as a grieving father rather than just
another politician. And Hillarys struggles,
especially her woodenness, put an accent
on Bidens let-it-all-hang-out, true-to-his-self
personality.
You can disagree with Biden, you can
mock him, you can cringe at his miscues -but it is impossible not to like him. Hillarys
team can come up with the best, most elaborate plan for her latest makeover (it will
emphasize spontaneity, The New York Times
reports) and still not come close to matching
the bizarre charm of Biden being Biden.
We are constantly assured by people
around her that Hillary Clinton is warm in
private. Biden is warm in public. His perfor-
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
mance swearing in new senators earlier this
year was a nonstop Bidenesque spectacle of
selfies, folksy comments and general crazy-uncle antics, some of dubious appropriateness.
Their public personas are captured in the
story of two parades. One of the enduring
moments of the Hillary campaign so far is of
reporters being corralled in a roped-off pen to
keep them away from the candidate during a
small July Fourth parade in New Hampshire
— creating an instant metaphor of arrogance
and control.
When Joe Biden showed up at a Pittsburgh
Labor Day parade, he broke into a trot, eager-
ly bouncing from one side of the route to
another, shaking hands, dispensing hugs
and kissing babies. Low energy, in Donald
Trumps signature phrase, this was not.
Biden was a joyous retail campaigner in his
element.
On paper, Biden is hardly a natural match
for the populist, anti-establishment mood. He
first got elected to the Senate in 1972, a year
after Florida Sen. Marco Rubio was born.
His resume includes 17 years as chairman
or ranking member of the Senate Judiciary
Committee, and 12 as chairman or ranking member of the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee. This is a resume for a gold watch,
not for a late-developing insurgent president
campaign.
Yet Biden is a practiced and, unfortunately, fairly effective demagogue. He can
denounce the rich with the best of them.
If he gets in, he will immediately be evaluated by a different standard. Hell be an
actual candidate rather than the intriguing
potential new entry. Hell be the old white
guy trying to stop history. But hell also
be a breath of fresh air in a Democratic race
that was supposed to be the stultifying march
to the nomination by one of the dullest politicians of our time.
Rich Lowry is editor of The National
Review.
REAL ESTATE
4×5.5
real estate
Brokers and Related Services
Also, be sure to check the Reviews Regional Classifieds for listings.
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AFFORDABLE HOME LOANS
To be added to this
once-a-month real estate guide
any respect for their neighbors who are
trying to make an effort to make their
neighborhoods look nice. If youre teaching your kids its okay to leave their toys
out in the yard strewn about then youre
not teaching them any better than you
were taught. And dont try to tell us its
about money. If you cant afford a lawn
mower or you cant afford to have somebody mow your place or youre really
disabled or something, tell the churches
or the Boy Scouts or the civic clubs in
town. Theyre always looking for worthy
projects. Stop making excuses for your
laziness and sloppiness.
If Obama isnt a Muslim, why is it that
he is so entrenched in trying to kill
Christians religious beliefs, especially
when it comes to gay marriage? If this is
their belief that theyre against it then
they should be sued if they dont want to
bake a cake or something. Thats against
their religious rights. He is a Muslim all
the way. He was born in Kenya.
Have you ever noticed how some professing Christian people are really bad at
gossiping and are really bad at cussing,
even some of the plain people. Wake up
Christians.
So, we have the people who love this city
who want to be good citizens who attend
to their residential hygiene and who support their city leaders, and we have the
rest who clearly dont give a damn. Its
easy to label people. Its easy to blame
this citys problems on those who may
just be doing the best they can do in
their current situation. Its easy, but it
isnt right. It wont build community and
it wont solve anything.
That mural on the wall on the side of
that building up town looks terrible.
Looks like somebody started something
and decided to quit. That one little spot?
Come on. I thought they were going to do
the whole building with some cool scenery, but its half-(deleted) like everything
else in Garnett. Im disappointed in that.
Congratulations to the people who
attended the triple history-making football game last Friday. I would like to
thank the school board, administrators,
school teachers, patrons of the district,
band super student section, cheerleaders, dance team and of course the coaches and football team for a fun night.
As for triple history, it was 1)the first
home varsity game in a new stadium;
2) Coach Welchs 200th win. To put that
in perspective the earliest you could do
that would be to win 9 games every year
for 22 years and then 2 more the 23rd
year; 3) maybe the first time a coach won
his 200th game on a first game in a new
stadium. I hope we will see this kind of
turnout for the rest of the football games
and also for all the other sports, music
departments, drama departments and
other club activities in the schools. I am
sure the football team will admit to playing better because of your support. It was
a great time. I live in Anderson County
by choice, not because I have to.
FORMERLY THE GARNETT PLAINDEALER, THE ANDERSON
COUNTY REPUBLICAN, THE REPUBLICAN-PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT
JOURNAL PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT REVIEW, THE GREELEY GRAPHIC,
THE ANDERSON COUNTIAN.
Call Stacey at (785) 448-3121.
Published each Tuesday by Garnett Publishing, Inc.,
and entered as Periodiacls class mail at Garnett, Ks., 66032,
permit number 214-200.
Postmaster: Send address corrections to:
The Anderson County Review
P.O. Box 409 Garnett, KS 66032
(785) 448-3121
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 22, 2015
5A
LOCAL
Four Winds DAR members learn about Irena Sendler Moore 50th anniversary
Four Winds Chapter of
NSDAR Meets and Learns
About the Irena Sendler Project
Life in a Jar
The Four Winds Chapter
of the National Society of the
Daughters of the American
Revolution met in Garnett, KS
on September 3, 2015. Carla
Ewert and Donna Roberts
served as hostesses. There
were nine members, five prospective members, and eleven
guests at the meeting. Regent
Donna Roberts and Chaplin
Agnes Carr led the opening
ritual, Pledge of Allegiance,
the Americans Creed, and the
Preamble of the Constitution.
Linda Coffman read the
President Generals message
which told about what difference DAR members all around
the world are making with their
volunteer hours. President
General Lynn Fortney Young
also reminded every one of the
national day of service that
is coming up in October. All
members are encouraged to
participate.
Judy Carr read the National
Defense report. You might
have wondered if non-citizens
can serve in the United States
Military. The answer is yes
they can. Some 8000 non citizens with green cards and residence in the United States have
proudly served in our Armed
Forces with great pride.
Kim Stapp was announced
as a new member of our chapter
and newly verified members
Joleta Kent and Linda Coffman
were introduced to the chapter.
Paula Scott is verified also and
all are awaiting their national
number and special anniversary certificate. Two prospective
members who are finishing up
their paper work were introduced also: Kay Roeckers and
Virginia Beard.
The minutes of the June
meeting minutes were read and
approved. The treasurer gave
her report.
As announced, the program
was to begin at two and several guests were arriving, the
meeting suspended for the
guest presenter. Carla Ewert
introduced our guest speaker,
Jessica Shelton, an original
member of the group of students who worked on the project to introduce Irena Sendler
to the world. The Life in a
Jar project began in 1999, in
Uniontown, KS where a history
teacher challenged his students
to seek out and research people who have made a difference in our world for National
History Day and the girls wrote
a play entitled Life in a Jar.
The project got its name from
the fact that Sendler would
rescue the children and place
their family information in a
jar and buried them under an
apple tree with the intention
of digging them up after the
war and reuniting the children
with their family.
The students stumbled upon the name
of Irena Sendler from Warsaw,
Poland, who risked her life to
save 2,500 Jewish Kids who
lived in the Jewish Ghetto in
Poland beginning in 1942. Irena
was born in Poland in 1910, the
daughter of a Doctor and he
gave Irena the inspiration to
rescue Jewish children from
the Ghetto and place them with
Catholic families. When she
was a small girl, her father was
ill and in quarantine, she asked
him what advice he had for her
to live her life. He told her, If
you see someone drowning in
the river jump in to save them
even if you dont know how to
swim. So, Irena knew what
she had to do during the war
when she saw what was happening to the Jewish families
that the Nazis put in the Ghetto
to await their certain deaths.
She was a social worker and
so she could work in the ghetto
and talk families into sending
their children with her to a safe
place. She organized a rescue
network to save the children.
She risked her life by hiding the
children and transporting them
to safety and to a family who
would raise them as their own.
Some of the stories of the rescues told how she would have
a dog along on the truck with
children and babies hidden and
use the dog to detract attention
from the sounds or cries made
by the children. Her story took
sixty years to uncover. The
play was performed in rural
Kansas and then on to larger
cities in the Midwest, then to
larger cities like New York, Los
Angeles, Montreal and finally
Poland. As the play brought
this amazing true story into
the light groups that saw it
and worked to do fund raising
to actually send the girls on
a trip to Poland to meet this
amazing woman and interview
her. They used the letters and
interviews with Irena to fine
tune the play and made it very
accurate. As a result, Sendler
became a national hero, even
though she had suffered from
severe punishment and had
stayed hidden from the public eye to try to protect this
amazing rescue story. Jessica
described Irena as a very small
woman with powerful eyes!
As a result of the Kansas girls
studying, researching, documenting interviews, and presenting this true story to the
world: Irena was presented
with two awards for Holocaust
education in Poland and the
United States. She was also
nominated for the Nobel Peace
Prize in 2007. The book Life
in a Jar was published in
2009. Also, the story is told
in a Hallmark Hall of Fame
Movie The Courageous Heart.
The story of this project has
been on national television on
the Today Show and been published in an article in the 2003
December issue of the Ladies
Home Journal. The students
have given over 350 presentations of this story. Of the 2,500
children only five were reunited with some family member
who was fortunate enough to
escape death in the ghetto.
Five hundred of them never
even knew they were Jewish.
What an amazing story in history that these Kansas students
discovered and shared with
the world and it truly demonstrates how the power of one
person can change the world!
These Uniontown students are
living examples and models for
young people everywhere.
The guests and members
had time to visit with Jessica
and enjoy refreshments. It was
truly an inspiring story, one
that will not be forgotten by all
attendees.
The meeting continued with
the Committee Chairs preTHE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-22-2015/ Photo Submitted
senting minute reports on
Constitution Week, American
Indians, Conservation, DAR
Janet (Hopkins) and Dale Kimberly (Marshall) Nienstedt,
Schools, American History Moore, Edwardsville, KS, for- Fredonia. They have been
Essay Contest, Good Citizen, merly Garnett residents, are blessed with 10 grandchildren:
and Junior American Citizen celebrating their 50th wedding Kelsey (Ethan) Becker, Rose Hill
Contest.
anniversary.
and Ella Moore, Topeka; Kyra
Four members will be attendThey were married on and Piper Moore, Iola; Austin,
ing the fall workshop in Topeka September 25, 1965 at St. Francis Gabrielle and Sophia Rossetti,
and hearing the message from Church, St. Paul, KS.
Shawnee and Jack, Grant and
the President General to all
Dale was with the Kansas Beau Nienstedt, Fredonia.
Kansas Daughters. Plans were Highway Patrol for 29 years and They have 1 great-granddaughdiscussed for the upcoming then with Kansas Corporation ter, Charlie Rae Becker, Rose
event Four Winds is in partner- Commission for 14 years before Hill.
ship with the VFW/Auxiliary retiring. Janet worked for the
A reception hosted by their
Post 6397 honoring MIA/POWs, Anderson County Abstract Co. children and grandchildren is
all veterans, with special recog- for 27 years.
being held in their honor on
nition of our Vietnam veterans
They have 4 children: Kelly Sunday, September 27, at the
on Friday, September 18. All (Carmen) Moore, Topeka; Knights of Columbus Hall in
members were invited to attend Kris (Lori) Moore, Iola; Karen Garnett, KS from 2pm-5pm. No
a Naturaliztion Ceremony on (Vince) Rossetti, Shawnee and gifts please.
September 25 in Fort Scott.
The next meeting will be on
October 3 with the topic given
by Louise Stites on the Choctaw
Code Talkers of WWI.
Carole Gibb and Phyllis and Faye Leitch were in third
Cobbs won the duplicate place.
bridge match September 16th
The Garnett Duplicate Bridge
in Garnett. Mary Margaret Club plays each Wednesday
Thomas and Tom Peavler came at 1:00 at the Garnett Inn; all
in second. Lynda Feuerborn bridge players are welcome.
Osborn, Irvin Osborn, Willis
Duplicate Bridge played
Review needs soldier info ASAP
GARNETT The Review needs
veterans or family members
of the following list of military personnel to contact us
ASAP. We have questions concerning service dates that will
be included in our upcoming
Portraits of Honor book, due
out in November, and the following service personnel have
incomplete information:
Fred Beckwith, Gloyd
Biessel, Ralph Blevins, Howard
Cox, Charles Hardesty, Edward
Hart, Burke Rogers, Norbert
Scheckel, James Smith, Floyd
Stephenson, Frank Stifter,
Lionel Sutton, Vera Wills,
Emmett Bilderback, Jerry
Dixon, Bud Fraker, Gerald
Gifford, Robert Guilfoyle, Ray
Harden, Lynda Hermreck, Walt
OMalley, Shawn Parks, Ivo
Pickert, Vernon Young, Robert
Notice for zoning
change hearing
(Published in the Anderson County Review on
September 22, 2015)
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
Notice is hereby given that the Anderson
Count Planning Commission will hold a Public
Hearing on October 19, 2015 at 7:00 P.M. in
the Anderson County Annex, 409 South Oak,
Garnett, Kansas to consider:
Zone Change application #ZC201505 (Stanley) to rezone approximately 7.62
acres from A-1 Agriculture District to R-E
Residential Estate District. Said property is
described as follows:
All that part of the North Half of the
Northeast Fraction Quarter Section 3, Township
21 South, Range 21 East, Anderson County,
Kansas, described as follows; Commencing at
the Northeast corner of the Northeast Fractional
Quarter of said Section 3; thence S881053W,
along the North line of the Northeast Quarter of
said Section 3, a distance of 755.00 feet, to the
Point of Beginning; thence S20706E, a distance of 576.01 feet; thence S881053W, parallel to the North line of the Northeast Quarter of
said Section 3, a distance of 576.00 feet; thence
N20706W, a distance of 576.01 feet, to a point
on the North line of the Northeast Quarter of
said Section 3; thence N881053E, along said
North line, a distance of 576.00 feet, to the Point
of Beginning, Containing 7.62 acres more or
less, subject to any part thereof in roads.
Any person concerned with this request may
attend the public hearing or submit written comments, opposed or in support, to the Planning
Commission. The Planning Commission may
continue this hearing date to a future date, if
necessary, without further notice.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING BEFORE THE
GARNETT PLANNING COMMISSION
The Garnett Planning Commission has
received an application for a zoning change.
TAKE NOTICE this matter will be considered on
the 20th day of October, 2015 commencing at
6:00 P.M. in the Commission Room at City Hall,
131 W. Fifth Ave., Garnett, Kansas.
1. An application from Scott & Jody Troyer
to rezone 409 south Maple Garnett, Kansas
66032 from a B-1 zoning district to an O-I zoning
district.
The complete application, including legal
description of property, may be viewed during
regular business hours at City Hall.
The purpose of this hearing is to receive
evidence from the applicant and to take comments from the public which will be considered
by the Planning Commission in making its report
to the Garnett City Commission regarding the
requested zoning change. At the hearing, any
party may appear in person or be represented
by an agent or an attorney.
Marion
Parker,
Lawrence
Riblett, Morris Riblett, Eugene
Rommelfanger,
Rommelfanger,
Francis
E.
Bernard
Rommelfanger, Glenn Ryman.
Contact the Review at (785)
448-3121 or email admin@garnett-ks.com.
Notice to settle
Teter estate
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday September 8, 2015)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
In the Matter of the Estate of
RICHARD E. TETER
Deceased.
Case No. 14-PR-19
NOTICE OF HEARING
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL
PERSONS CONCERNED:
You are hereby notified that a petition has
been filed in this court by Rebecca D. Teter,
/s/ Michelle D. Miller the duly appointed, qualified and acting adminPlanning & Zoning Deputy Director istrator of the estate above-captioned, praying
sp22t1 that petitioners acts be approved ; the heirs
be determined; the estate be assigned and
distributed to the persons entitles thereto; the
court find the allowances requested for administrators and attorneys fees and expenses are
reasonable and should be allowed; the costs be
Notice for zoning
change hearing
(Published in The Anderson County Review,
Tuesday, September 22, 2015)
Andrew, Jerry Baker, Thomas
Ballard, Glenn Benjamin,
Franklin L. Borror, Erwin Leon
Brocklesby, Drew Bures, Wayne
Butcher, Earl Cass, William
E. Drum, Bernard Conrad
Katzer, Urban Katzer, Lewis
Kellerman, Lee Kellerman,
Kenneth Kellerman, Glen
Kramer, William Bill Miller,
Kendal Mulkey, John Emmett
OMalley, Clinton Olson, Glen
PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE
THE CITY OF COLONY, KANSAS WILL
HOLD A PUBLIC HEARING WEDNESDAY,
OCTOBER 28, 2015 AT 7:00 PM in the City
Hall located at 339 Cherry St. for the purpose
of filing an application for financial assistance
with USDA Rural Development. The specific
purpose of this application is to request funding
ANDY FRYE of $307,000 for the proposed City of Colony
Zoning Administrator Sanitary Improvements Phase III sewer project
which is the rehabilitation approximately 15,100
sp22t1 linear feet of existing clay sanitary sewer piping
2×2
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Serving 11-2 Adults $9.00, 12 & under $6.00, Take out $10.00
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Parish Hall Handicap Accessible
determined and ordered paid; and the administration of the estate be closed; upon filing
of receipts, petitioner be finally discharged as
administrator and released from further liability.
You are required to file your written defenses
thereto on or before the 30th day of September,
2015, at 8:30 a.m. in the District Court, Garnett,
Anderson County, Kansas, at which time and
place the cause will be heard. Should you fail
therein, judgment and decree will be entered in
due course upon the petition.
REBECCA D. TETER
Administrator
Terry J. Solander #07280
503 S. Oak St. P.O. Box 348
Garnett, KS 66032-0348
785-448-6131; FAX: 785-448-2475
solander@embarqmail.com
Attorney for Administrator
sp8t3
Notice for hearing in Colony
(Published in The Anderson County Review on
Tuesday, September 22, 2015)
Fall Dinner & Bazaar
St. Johns Church Greeley Sunday, Sept 27, 2015
with installation of Cured-In-Place or Fold-andForm pipe liner.
Any written comments regarding this application should be provided within (15) days of
this publication to USDA Rural Development,
1303 SW First American Place, Suite 100,
Topeka, Kansas, 66604-4040. Requests to
receive a copy of this application should be
directed to this office.
Reasonable accommodations will be made
available to persons with disabilities. Requests
should be submitted to the City Clerk Amy Ray
by October 28, 2015
City Council of Colony, KS.
sp22t1
2×4
AD
6A
LOCAL
Pieces & Patches Quilt Guild members meet
The Pieces & Patches Quilt
Guild was called to order by
President, Charlotte Lutz, on
August 27, 2015, at 9:30am at the
Anderson County Extension
meeting room.
Roll call was answered
with a quilting tip or showing
a quilting gadget by 24 members and 4 guests: Marilynn
Lolley, Jackie Gardner, JoAnn
Porter and Shirley Allen. The
minutes of the July meeting
were approved as printed in
the newsletter.
Terrie Gifford gave the treasurers report.
Bonnie reported that 22
members and 23 guests went
on the bus trip to the Missouri
Star quilt company in June and
spent around a total of $7089
that day.
The 2016 Opportunity quilt
is complete and will be shown
at the September 16 program
with chances available.
Terrie Gifford reported on
the Anderson County fair and
thanked everyone for their
assistance. There were 43 items
entered in the quilt classes and
18 challenge blocks. Members
felt that the judge was fair and
diplomatic and she commented
numerous times that binding
and corners needed work.
Items left from the Boutique
were awarded to 10 visitors
and 11 individuals who entered
items.
Several members showed
their block of the months from
the June & July patterns.
Sharon Bowman showed the
August block, Bachelors
Puzzle, and distributed the pattern.
There is a new committee
this year that will work on a
policy for loaning our Quilt
Racks.
Bonnie Deiter distributed
a signup sheet for next years
committees and encouraged
members to sign up for committees they are willing to
work on.
Judy Stukey installed the
new officers using the Colors of
the rainbow: President Bonnie
Deiter, Vice President Sandra
Moffat, Secretary Ruth Theis,
Treasurer Terrie Gifford,
Newsletter Carrie Rulon and
Historian Joen Truhe.
Secret sister gifts were
received by Sharon Rich and
Cynthia Fletcher. The following items were shown: several members showed their
president blocks; Violet Holt a
purse, paper pouch and 2 crapper covers; Sharon Bowmen
2 charity quilts; Joen Truhe 2
charity quilts; Phyllis Gordon
a charity quilt, table runner
and place mats; Marilynn
Lolley a mouse pin cushion;
Sharon Rich a lap quilt and
paper piecing blocks; Marvell
Harris a wall hanging, table
runner and table topper;
Terrie Gifford block for Parker
Days. Terrie also showed the
Challenge blocks from the fair.
Meeting was adjourned by
Charlotte Lutz. Following the
meeting a delicious luncheon
of salads and desserts was
enjoyed by all. The school supplies used as table decorations
will be donated to the local
schools.
National Farm Safety
and Health Week
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 22, 2015
Egidy makes Spring
2015 Deans List at OU
OTTAWA – Sarah Egidy, of
Greeley, has made Deans
List at Ottawa University for
Spring 2015.
Deans List honorees must
be full-time degree-seeking
students who have earned a
minimum of 24 credit hours
over the preceding two semesters at Ottawa University and
earned a cumulative grade
point average of 3.5 or better
on a 4.0 scale.
Founded in 1865, Ottawa
University is a comprehensive, not-for-profit educational institution serving over
4,000 students through its residential campus in Ottawa,
Kansas, and adult campuses
in Overland Park, Kansas;
Phoenix, Chandler and
Surprise, Arizona; Brookfield,
Wisconsin; Jeffersonville,
Indiana; as well as international and online. For more
information, visit www.ottawa.edu.
You name it, we print it.
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Winter propane contracts
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 22, 2015
7A
COLONY
Winners of Colony Day parade, drawings announced
Calendar
Sept. 23-First day of Autumn,
City Council meeting, City
Hall, 7 p.m.; fire meeting, fire
station, 7 p.m.; 29-VFW Day
(established 1847)
School Calendar
24-middle school volleyball 5
p.m.; football, 6 p.m. at AltoonaMidway; 15-high school football
at Crest, 7 p.m.; 28-Jr. Varsity
volleyball at LeRoy, 5 p.m.; Jr.
Varsity football at St. Paul, 6
p.m.
Meal Site
22-live music, Vision cards
accepted-turkey roast, mashed
potatoes, green beans, roll,
fruit mix; 25-chicken fried
steak, mashed potatoes, gravy,
carrots, wheat bread, lemon
medley; 28-turkey burger, raw
veggie salad, bun, apricots.
Phone 620-852-3450 for meal reservation.
Christian Church
Scripture
presented
Sept. 13 was Revelations 2-3.
Prospective Pastor Andrew
Zoll presented the sermon
The Seven Churches. Sept.
23-Womens Bible Study- Fight
Back With Joy, 6:30 p.m. at the
church. Sept. 27-Andrew Zoll
will be back to preach another
sermon.
Northcott Church
Bible Study 9:28 a.m. followed by worship 10:28 a.m.
all Sundays; Bible Study 6:28
p.m. all Wednesdays. Helping
Hands for Him projects are
Gospel for Asia and Reaching
Unreached Nations Ministries.
September
Celebrations:
Anniversaries: 15-Orville and
Lora Crouch, Bill and Jonita
Otto; Birthdays: 2-Spencer
West,
11-Sharon
Smith,
20-Camden Piper, Orville
Crouch. Prayer focus: Revival,
Church Growth and American
Government.
Membership
focus: Intercessory prayer and
Missions support. Pastor is
Mike Farran; church address:
12425 SW Barton Road, Colony
KS 66015, located west of Colony
on highway 58 then south on
SW Barton Road.
UMC
Sept. 13 scripture at United
Methodist Church was Psalm
19, Proverbs 1:20-33, James
3:1-12 and Mark 8:27-38. Pastor
Dorothy Welch presented
the sermon, Practice Makes
Perfect.
COLONY NEWS
Mrs. Morris Luedke
Contact (620) 852-3379 or
colonynews@ckt.net with Colony news.
UMW
Two special guests, Donna
Griesby and former pastors
wife Alice Hood, attended the
Sept. 3 meeting of the United
Methodist Women. Six members and Pastor Dorothy Welch
were also in attendance. Big
Sister Donna Griesby spoke on
the Mission Work on Uganda.
Nifida Missions go to certain
places all over the world. They
mainly assist people in growing
and prospering as many do not
have the knowledge to do so. In
one instance a metal roof was
put on their home and another
one was for their little girl to
attend school. The requirement
was to have a uniform and they
helped the mother to work and
be able to accomplish this for
her little girl.
For September members
are working on medical kits
for the Methodist Emergency
Relief Agency. In October the
challenge is mittens, muffs and
socks for the Bishop Roundup.
Members served refreshments at the meet and greet
new staff and public that
attended the Open House at
Crest School. The members
wore their United Methodist
t-shirts for the occasion.
April
Sanders
served
refreshments at the Sept.
3 meeting. Jane Ward won
the hostess gift. Claudette
Anderson will bring the lesson
and serve refreshments for the
Oct. 1 meeting.
City Council
At the July 29 regular meeting the Street and Alley committee reported that hot mix
is laid in and cold patch to
plan on this year. A city-wide
cleanup was held August 22-30.
Larry Ward has been hired at
city dog catcher, agreed to sell
old ball park lights to Travis
Hermreck for $2.00 and Dixie
Ward and Diane Rogers were
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-22-2015 / Photo Courtesy Allen Luedke
Colony Fire Department fire fighters were named Grand Marshals at the 19th Colony Day Parade held Saturday, Sept. 5. From left are: Tim
Dietrich, Eric Seabolt, Paul Stephens, Blake Boone, Logan Boone, Ashleen Seabolt, Jim Atzbach, Luke Decker, Randy Runnells, Richard
Buckle, Tom Buckle, Crystal Lyda, Jeremy Ellington, Paula Decker, Garry Decker, Michael Steedley, Richard Webber. In background on
platform are from left: Billy Beckmon, Colony Day announcer, his sister Mary Scovill assisting him and DeDe McMullin who opened the
Colony Day event by singing the National Anthem. A lovely day and one of the best Colony Day parades.
hired to wax the city hall and
community room floors. They
will use citys own wax and pay
each person $240 based on 24
hours of work time.
Past due water bill procedures will be same as always.
August meeting was held
and report will follow later.
September meeting is set for
the 30th.
Colony Day Winners
Large Floats-1st-Jolly Dozen;
2nd-Iola Nursing Center;
3rd-Crest Cheerleaders; Mini
Floats1st-Colony
United
Methodist Church; 2nd-Gene
Anderson and Grandson;
3rd-Colony
Lions
Club;
Judges Choice Awards-Colony
Christian Church; Fellowship
of Christian Athletes; Crest
FFA; Homemade Pie Contest1st-Tucker Yocham; 2nd-Lane
Yocham; 3rd-Jane Ward; PieEating Contest-1st-John Wood;
2nd-Dylan McCutchen; 3rd-CJ
Ward; Best Decorated Cookie
Jar Contest-1st-Marla BainUncle Sam Patriotic Royals
(chocolate fudge drop cookie); 2nd-Nicole Wainwrightbaseball theme (sugar cookies); 3rd-Cathy Allen-softball
decorated (pictures of balls
on side); Best Tasting Cookie
Jar Contest-1st-Hannah Ray
(Manhattan cookies); 2nd-Denise King (white chocolate no
bakes); 3rd-Cathy Allen (oatmeal); Basket Auction-23 baskets auctioned off.
Mrs. Leonard (Debbie)
Wools was the winner of the
grand prize drawing, a twonight stay (up to 6 people) at
a Sisters Condo, Branson, Mo.
This was donated by Colony
Day and a Sisters Condo (Pam
Tressler).
Around Town
Former Colony resident,
Margaret Siemens Weathers of
Siloam Springs, Ark. recently
celebrated her 90th birthday.
Her nine children took her out
for dinner and the following day
they hosted a birthday party
for her at the Siloam Springs
Bible Church. Tributes were
made from people she knew
throughout her life beginning
with her youngest sister that
made a surprising visit to the
party.
Phyllis Luedke has returned
following surgery at Menorah
Medical Center, Overland Park.
Her daughter, Julie Nichols,
Beloit brought her home and
stayed with her to help out for
awhile.
Fall is fast approaching.
Summer was not so kind to
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-22-2015 / Photo Courtesy Trish (Patricia) JuAire
Open house was held Sept. 8 at Crest with the following new
teachers attending (l-r)-Kristen Farnsworth (4th grade); Terina
Platt (business and technology); Cody Kramer (MS social studies);
Ashley Bures (elementary resource room), and Zach Mason (elementary PE and HS weights). Crest School District staff changes for
2015-16 school year: Lori Garland moved to 2nd grade and Kristen
Farnsworth joins the staff as the 4th grade teacher. Replacing Gary
Hobson as the Business/Computer teacher is Terina Platt. Cody
Kramer will be teaching the middle school Social Studies courses.
Ashley Bures takes over the elementary resource room, while Zach
Mason assumes the PE duties previously taken care of by Craig
Frazell, who is now the counselor.
farmers, too wet for planting
and haying.
But this has been the green-
CONTRACTORS
Guide
6×10.5
contractors guide
GUTTERING
ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS
Get the job done right!
Check this handy directory
of contracting companies
before you take on that
home or business project.
AIR CONDITIONING/HEATING
NOW
FEATURING
CARRIER
SYSTEMS!
Lawrence (785) 749-0600 Ottawa (785) 242-3714
Baldwin City (785) 594-3357
(620) 363-4327
GLASS
BUILDING CONTRACTORS
est summer seen in quite some
time. Trees and grass were
green the entire summer!
BUILDING MATERIALS
SEPTIC TANKS / SYSTEMS
D&S Sanitation LLC
Brian Falk
SIDING & WINDOWS
Construction Supply
Contractors Residential & Farm
410 N. Maple
Garnett, KS
785-448-7106
LIME & LIMESTONE
FLOORING
TRUSS SUPPLIERS
GAS – PROPANE
Visit The Anderson County Review
online at www.garnett-ks.com.
If you would like to advertise your business in this directory
call Stacey at 785-448-3121, or email review@garnett-ks.com.
8A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 22, 2015
LOCAL
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-22-2015 / Vickie Moss
Central Heights linebacker DJ Smith, right, prepares to tackle Prarie
Views Trevor Hoover during the homecoming football game Friday,
Sept. 18. Central Heights lost the game, 53-6.
AC swaps wins in pair
GARNETT ACs varsity team
swapped wins with St. MarysColgan and Girard on Garnetts
court Thursday.
St. Marys beat AC 27-25,
14-25, 25-16, and AC topped
Girard 25-22, 25-12.
The matches brought the
Bulldogs to 7-4 on the season.
We played a couple of really
good teams, head coach Glenn
Suderman commented. Even
with the loss AC players racked
up some impressive stats for
the day.
Cassidy Lutz had 10 kills
and went 25/25 attacks with
6 blocks; Alexey Lickteig had
16 digs on the day to lead the
defense; Kinlee Jones managed
a 96 percent setting ratio with
69/72 for the day. Reagan Jirak
topped the AC serving effort
with 7 aces and had 16 kills, and
led passing with 25 on the day.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-22-2015 / Dane Hicks
AC Bulldog guard Tim Comfort strided into a secondary block during an offensive play in Garnetts home opener Friday with Northeast
Arma. AC christened its new football field in style with a 63-13 victory over the Vikings.
Dawgs maiden voyage on new field rewarding
GARNETT The Bulldogs christened their newly adopted football field in style Friday night
with a 63-13 win over Northeast
Arma that brought the Bulldogs
to 2-1 on the season.
It was ACs largest winning margin in recent years,
and coach Greg Welch said
the score made two important
points about the 2015 season.
Thats what happens when
teams change out, Welch said.
Last year their quarterback
(Drew Mills) just riddled us on
those short pass plays. But they
a 50, Syndney Holloran and graduated off a bunch of the
Sammy Walter both shot a 51.
All ACs finishers were in
the top 13 in the field of 35 golfers.
guys around him and he didnt
have the protection he had last
year.
Last year AC led Arma at the
half but fell behind to a 26-14
loss by the end of the game. This
years win over the Vikings
doubles ACs win record from
2014, when the Bulldogs went
1-8. But Welch said the Bulldog
factor in Fridays game couldnt
be denied: The Bulldogs are a
better team than they were last
year.
We executed and did some
things. It snowballed pretty fast
against them and sometimes
RICHMOND The ACJH 8th
grade snapped up a 42-6 win
over Central Heights last week
to bring its record to 3-0.
Tanner Spencer opened the
game by running back the kickoff for a TD, the first of three he
would notch for the night.
Dallas Higginbotham ran up
the middle for two TDs for the
night, and Joe Finley ran in for
a touchdown in the third quarter.
Defensively, ACs Red
AC golf 3rd at Eureka
EUREKA Golfers fought the
wind at Eureka, and AC managed to anchor down with a 3rd
place finish.
Miranda Akes finished 9th
with a 49, Abbey Barnes shot
that can happen. It was just
great for our team to have such
an outstanding day. I think its
an affirmation that were doing
some good things, Welch said.
On the field it was clear the
Bulldogs were in charge from
the opening whistle. Chase
Ratliff scored ACs first TD in
the early moments when Arma
failed to stop either the pass
or run as the Bulldogs sought
to test different facets of the
Vikings defense. Not far past
ACs first offensive series it was
clear Arma had lots of soft spots
to exploit.
Welch noted Ratliffs offensive effort throughout the
night, as well as performances
on the offensive and defensive
line.
Derrick Nelson really
blocked well for us, Welch said.
The defensive line is doing a
good job of crossing face. Kyle
Lamb is playing great physical
ball. Tim Comfort had a great
game. They looked solid.
AC hosts Santa Fe Trail this
Friday. The Trailblazers are
also 2-1, coming off a 40-14 loss
last week to Royal Valley.
Bulldogs 8th graders move to 3-0
Anderson County
news DAILY
at 8 a.m.
Swarm allowed only one TD
by the Vikings, coming in the
second period.
Head coach Steve Lyon credited the offensive line with
opening up holes for the running backs.
Weve been working hard
in practice, and that hard work
has been producing wins on the
field, Lyon said.
AC plays Osawatomie this
week.
CREST
HOMECOMING
CANDIDATES:
VS.
ST. PAUL
6×10.5
Friday,
Sept.
25
crest
homecoming
Front Row from Left:
Karlee Hammond,
Lupita Rodriguez,
Taryn Covey
Back Row from Left:
Brandon Brallier,
Evan Godderz,
Kellen Ramsey
Game Time 7:00 p.m.
Coronation 6:45 p.m.
These area businesses proudly support our youth…
Adamson Bros. Heating & Cooling
Ottawa
(785) 242-9273
C.D. Schulte Agency
Garnett
(785) 448-6191
Greeley Farm Implement
Greeley
(785) 867-2600
Sandras Quick Stop
Garnett
(785) 448-6602
Anderson County Abstract
Garnett
(785) 448-2426
Country Mart
Garnett
(785) 448-2121
GSSB
Colony
(620) 852-3512
6th Ave Boutique & Bronze
Garnett
(785) 448-2276
AuBurn Pharmacy
Garnett
(785) 448-6122
Dairy Queen
Garnett
(785) 448-5800
Barnes Seed Service, LLC
Garnett
(785) 304-2500
Farm Bureau Financial Services
Aaron Lizer – Garnett
(785) 448-6125
Beckman Motors
Garnett
(785) 448-5441
Flynn Appliance & Hi Def Center
Iola
(620) 365-2538
Benjamin Realty
Garnett
(785) 448-2550
Front Row Sports
Garnett
(785) 448-5818
Brand N Iron
Princeton
(785) 937-2225
Garnett True Value Home Center
Garnett
(785) 448-7106
Member FDIC – Equal Opportunity Lender
Iola Pharmacy
Iola
(620) 365-3176
Patriots Bank
Garnett
www.patriotsbank.com
Member FDIC – Equal Opportunity Lender
Princeton Quick Stop
Princeton
(785) 937-2061
Ryans Pest Control
Garnett
(785) 448-4323
Sonic Drive-In
Garnett
(785) 448-6393
Southern Star Central
Gas Pipelines – Welda
(785) 448-4800
Emergency: (800) 324-9696
State Farm Insurance
Ryan Disbrow Agent, Garnett
(785) 448-1660
Terry Solander, Atty. at Law
Garnett
(785) 448-6131
Wolken Tire
Garnett
(785) 448-3212
1B
B
Section
CALENDAR
Tuesday, September 22
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club,
at Garnett Inn and Suites
4 p.m. – ACJH JV football at
Osawatomie
4 p.m. – ACHS cross country at
Iola
4:30 p.m. – ACHS volleyball at
Iola with Santa Fe Trail
4:30 p.m. – Central Heights
volleyball at home with
Wellsville, Prairie View
5 p.m. – Crest volleyball at
Chetopa
6 p.m. – City of Garnett at
City Hall
7 p.m. – Legion BIngo at VFW
Wednesday, September 23
9 a.m. – ACHS, Central Heights
FFA Land Judging at
Prairie View
3 p.m. – ACHS girls golf at
Spring Hill
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Optimist
Club at Mr. Ds Restaurant
1p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
7 p.m. – Garnett Saddle Club at
the Garnett riding arena
Thursday, September 24
9:30 a.m. – Pieces & Patches
Quilt Guild at the Anderson
County Annex
4 p.m. – ACJH football at home
with Osawatomie
4 p.m. – ACJH volleyball at home
with Wellsville
4 p.m. – Central Heights cross
country at Prairie View
4 p.m. – Central Heights Middle
School football at home with
Santa Fe Trail
4 p.m. – Central Heights Middle
School volleyball at home with
Prairie View
4:30 p.m. – ACHS freshmen
volleyball at home with
Paola, Prairie View, Burlington
5 p.m. – Crest Middle School
volleyball at Altoona-Midway
6 p.m. – Crest Middle School
football at Altoona-Midway
6 p.m. – 13 Point Pitch and
snacks at the Garnett
Senior Center
Friday, September 25
7 p.m. – Crest football at home
with St. Paul, homecoming
7 p.m. – ACHS football at home
with Santa Fe Trail
7 p.m. – Central Heights football
at home with Olpe
Saturday, September 26
8 a.m. – ACJH JV volleyball at
Central Heights
8 a.m. – Central Heights Middle
School JV volleyball tourney
at home
8:30 a.m. – Central Heights
varsity volleyball tourney at
West Frankliln
8:30 a.m. – ACHS volleyball at
West Franklin Invitational
9 a.m. – Central Heights JV
volleyball tourney at Osage City
Cornstock
Monday, September 28
No School, USD 288
Central Heights
9 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission at the Anderson
County Annex
1-2 p.m. – Anderson County
Caregiver Support Group,
Garnett Recreation Center
4 p.m. – ACJH volleyball at
Prairie View
4:30 p.m. – ACHS JV football at
Santa Fe Trail
5 p.m. – Crest JV volleyball at
LeRoy
6 p.m. – Crest JV football at
St. Paul
6 p.m. – Central Heights JV
football at Olpe
6 p.m. – Friends of the Arts
6:30 p.m. – Tigers (first grade)
Den Cub Scouts and Wolves
(second grade) Den Cub Scouts
meeting
1802 1/2 East St.,
IOLA
More information:
(620) 365-2255
or visit
www.bbtheatres.com
Americas
Oldest
Cinema
Movie MuseuM open 1-4 p.M.
For show times visit our website
plazacinemagicexperience.com
209 S. Main, Historic Downtown Ottawa
Cinema Line 785.242.0777
community
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 22, 2015
Kincaid celebrates 2015 fair
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-22-2015 / Vickie Moss
The Crest High School marching band was one of several bands that took
part in the Kincaid Farmers Free Fair parade Saturday, Sept. 19. The theme
of the parade was Town & Country Living.
Bonnie, left, and Linda McAdam served as grand marshals for the parade.
Above, Ann Donaldson
rides Checkers in the
parade.
At right, the Seekers Not
Slackers 4-H float took
first place.
The Crest High School Class of 1985 celebrated their reunion this year.
Below left, the Patton
Family float took grand
champion float honors.
2×5
AD
Rail trail friends plan for fall events
Friends of the Prairie
Spirit Rail Trail met at 7:00pm
September 9, 2015 at the depot.
Twenty members were present.
Terry Singer reported on
the September 12th refreshments for the Pub to Pub Run
at Scipio.
Trail members will be placing scarecrows along the trail
for fall. Members were asked
to meet at 10:00 am Sept. 24th to
place the decorated scarecrows
along the trail.
Bill Ratliff, Skip Landis and
Ruth and Dave Theis will represent the trail at the Kids
Gone Wild booth at Cornstalk.
The trail voted to give away two
bike helmets as prizes that day.
An update for the Halloween
Haunted House was presented. Eric Vaughn from Baldwin
City, Ks will be the magician
for the evening. The theme this
year will beHocus-Pocus.
Trail members are taking donations of money or canned goods
that evening for ECKAN.
The Prairie Spirit Rail
Trail members meet the 2nd
Wednesday of each month. New
members are always welcome.
Dues are $10.00 a person.
$20 for adults $10 kids 12 & under
Registration available at the event at 7:00 a.m.
(limited shirt availability)
Event starts at 8:00 a.m.
Forest Park: 600 N. Locust St., Ottawa, KS
Wear a costume or anything fun! (and appropriate)
2B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 22, 2015
LOCAL
The secret selling Local youth enter Kansas Junior Livestock Show
power of balloons
Youre a savvy business person. You know in order to continue to make an impression on
old customers and attract new
ones, you have to continually
come up with new and novel
ideas. Something different is
always worth a shot.
You know that some customers are buying today because
they have a direct want or need.
You know that some buyers will
move into that want or need
phase at a later date, and thats
when you need to have top of
mind awareness in their heads
so they buy from you and not
someone else.
Which is why you need balloons. Or cheese.
When I was a kid, my folks
used to shop at the Farmers
Exchange grocery store owned
by what was then the Missouri
Farmers Association (MFA)
where we lived in southern
Missouri. The butcher would
always cut a piece of cheese
off the block and give it to us
little kids when mom passed the
meat case. Ive remembered it
for 50 years.
Laugh if you want, but balloons rock; maybe even better
than cheese. Theyre cheap,
theyre fun (even for adults) and
they say something that a printed coaster or koozie or ink pen
doesnt. They say Look at me!
Im fun!
A couple hundred balloons
printed with your logo only
costs a few bucks. A tank of
helium is a little more expensive but lasts forever. Combine
the two and your store becomes
just like the Land of Oz without
all the short people.
Does your restaurant have a
HOW TO SELL STUFF
Dane Hicks
Review Publisher
kids menu? Give away balloons
to every kid under 40 at the cash
register. Have a little front end
space to spare? Make a cool balloon archway just inside your
front door. Blow up a bunch
of them and just weight them
down outside in your parking
lot or near your sidewalk. A
bunch of balloons gets attention
it says Theres a party here!
If youre at an indoor event of
some kind you can even make a
game out of all the balloons kids
let go and end up in the ceiling
rafters. Roll over a couple of
pieces of tape and stick them to
the top and sides of a balloon,
tie on a long, long piece of thin
ribbon or string, and see who
can capture the most balloons
off the ceiling.
Youll come up with all
kinds of neat ideas once you
start blowing them up, because
nobodys really too far from 8
years old when it comes to balThe American Quarter
loons. And, after all, they can Horse Association, Oklahoma
help you sell stuff!
City Sydney Scheckel of
Richmond, Kansas captured
Dane Hicks is president of the world championship title in
Garnett Publishing, Inc., and showmanship at the 2015 Built
publisher of The Anderson Ford Tough American Quarter
County Review. Comments or Horse Youth Association World
questions may be directed to him Championship Show on August
at review@garnett-ks.com or 4th in Oklahoma City.
(785) 448-3121.
Scheckel
showed
the
American Quarter Horse
A Perfect Pleasure. The 1997
black mare, sired by General
Mito and out of Ragazza River,
was bred by Caroline West of
Etobicoke, Ontario Canada.
HEALTH NOTES
In the Showmanship class,
162 entries competed for world
champion honors. The world
champion received a prize package that included a custom-designed gold trophy; Montana
Silversmiths buckle; specially
designed logoed jacket, courte-
champions, a showmanship contest will
be held. The top showman in both the
junior and senior divisions of each species will receive a silver belt buckle.
Prizes also will be awarded for second
through fifth place in each division.
The Kansas Livestock Foundation
(KLF) will sponsor a club calf show and
sale during KJLS. Steer and heifer prospects from some of the top club calf producers in the Midwest will be consigned.
The event will take place October 3. Sale
proceeds will go toward KLF Youth in
Agriculture scholarships.
The Mid-America Classic Collegiate
Livestock Judging Contest also will take
place October 3 in conjunction with
KJLS. This event, which has been held
for more than 30 years, provides college
teams the chance to compete in a quality,
collegiate-level livestock judging contest
earlier in the season.
KLA, Kansas State University and the
Agri-Business Council of Wichita serve
as major show sponsors. In addition to
Cargill and Merck, other sponsors include
Seaboard Foods, Ag Choice/MFA, Kansas
Farm Bureau and Farm Bureau Financial
Services, Friends of KJLS, Elanco Animal
Health, Syngenta, Kansas Department
of Agriculture, S.O.W. Corporation and
Western State Bank. Hundreds of volunteers from across the state also help
organize and put on the show.
Local youth wins World Championship Title
Are you adherent?
Adherence is defined as
the extent to which a persons
behavior, such as taking medications, following a diet, or making healthy lifestyle changes,
corresponds with agreed-upon
recommendations from a health
care provider. More specifically,
medication adherence relates to
how closely a patient follows the
recommendations in regards to
dosage, timing and frequency of
medication use that the provider and patient agreed upon for
treatment.
Medication non-adherence, or
failure to use medication in line
with the recommendations of a
health care provider, is a common problem that often leads to
poor outcomes.
As many as 30% of medications prescribed are never filled,
and in 50% of cases, medications
are not continued as prescribed.
Non-adherence can interfere
with the treatment of many diseases, which can lead to unnecessary disease progression, worsening complications, lower quality of life and premature death.
Thirty to 50% of treatment
failures and 125,000 deaths annually can be attributed to non-adherence. Non-adherence can
increase mortality, hospitalizations and emergency department
visits along with causing a substantial economic consequence.
Economically, non-adherence
causes between $100 billion and
$300 billion annually in avoidable health care cost and $2000
annually for cost to the patient.
There are many barriers to
medication adherence including,
cost of medications, confusion
about how and when to take
medications, forgetting to take
medications, side effects, and
doubt regarding the need for or
benefit of certain medications.
resents the largest number for this category. Bourbon County competitors have
entered the most meat goats, 11, and commercial doe kids, 16.
New this year to KJLS will be cash
awards for the top five in both market and
breeding shows in all four species. The
show is replacing the premium auction
event with direct cash payouts ranging
from $4,000 to $500 for steers; $1,000 to $300
for heifers; $2,000 to $500 for market hogs;
$750 to $250 for breeding gilts; $2,000 to
$400 for lambs and market goats; and $750
to $200 for ewes and commercial doe kids.
The KJLS Board of Directors enhanced
these awards to recognize more of the
shows exhibitors than ever before and is
looking forward to showcasing the states
prized livestock this fall.
Immediately following Saturday evenings exhibitor barbecue, sponsored by
Merck Animal Health, KJLS will present scholarships to exhibitors who have
excelled academically, in community service and in 4-H/FFA. This is the 23rd year
for the scholarship program, which has
awarded a total of $368,700 to 281 exhibitors since 1993. Last year, a total of $20,100
was awarded to 13 exhibitors.
KJLS is a great chance for our livestock-producing youth to participate at a
higher level of competition and interact
with others from throughout the state,
said KJLS President Dale Lanham, Yates
Center.
Separate from the selection of species
WICHITA The 83rd annual Kansas
Junior Livestock Show (KJLS), proudly
sponsored by Cargill, promises to be a big
event, with 738 youth from 87 counties
entering 1,861 animals. Three area youth
are participating.
This is the largest number of livestock
entered in more than 25 years. The total
includes 147 market steers, 338 breeding heifers, 244 market hogs, 194 breeding gilts, 305 market lambs, 261 breeding
ewes, 229 meat goats and 143 commercial doe kids. The statewide event will
be held October 2-4 at the Kansas State
Fairgrounds in Hutchinson.
From Anderson County, Chase Ratliff
of Westphalia has entered Market Steer
and Simmental Pct Breeding Heifer;
Madison Ratliff of Westphalia has
entered a Market Steer and Chianina
Breeding Heifer; and Maycee Ratliff of
Westphalia has entered a Market Steer
and Commercial Breeding Heifer.
For the second consecutive year,
Douglas County leads the state with the
most exhibitors, 42, and the largest number of total livestock entries, 100. Youth
from this county also have entered the
most market lambs, 24, and breeding
ewes, 19. Coffey County has entered the
most steers, 13. The largest number of
heifers, 30, was entered by Pottawatomie
County. Dickinson County is sending 17
market hogs, the most of any county
in the state. Franklin County youth are
bringing 14 breeding gilts, which rep-
COURTNEY OTTO, KU School of Pharmacy
Patients may be better able
to overcome these barriers by
talking with their pharmacist or
other health care providers.
If paying for a prescription
medication is a problem, your
health care provider may be able
to recommend a generic medication or similar product.
If forgetfulness is an issue,
try to set a routine to take medication or use a daily dosing container.
Your pharmacist may also
help you increase your medication adherence by setting all
your prescriptions to fill on the
same day or setting up refills to
process automatically when they
are due.
If medication side effects are
an issue, there may be ways
to lessen these effects such as
adjusting the dose or timing of
your medication, or switching
to a different product. Also, be
sure to ask your pharmacist or
health care provider about the
benefits of your medication and
ask for ways to see or track these
benefits.
Medication adherence plays a
very important role in the management of many different illnesses. Though there are many
obstacles on the path to adherence, your pharmacist or health
care provider may be able to help
you find the solutions to your
specific barriers.
Manufacturers of
Metal Panels & Trim
2×2
& Doors
cedar velley me Windows
Building Packages
sy of Cripple Creek Outerwear; to be the title sponsor of the Merial, Montana Silversmiths,
a WeatherBeeta embroidered Ford Youth World. Other spon- Nutrena, Professionals Choice,
blanket; world champion patch; sors include Bank of America, Cripple Creek, SmartPak,
and gold medallion.
B&W Trailer Hitches, John WeatherBeeta,
Wrangler,
The Ford Youth World is the Deere, Justin Boots, Markel, Farnam and Zoetis.
pinnacle event for American
Quarter Horse exhibitors ages
18 and under around the world,
who must qualify for the event
by earning a predetermined
number of points to compete in
each of the classes representing halter, English and western disciplines. More than 2,100
entries from the United States,
Australia, Canada, Germany,
Luxembourg, Norway, Sweden
and United Kingdom are competing for 35 world championships at this years event, July
31 – August 8 in Oklahoma City.
For more news from the Ford
Youth World, visit www.aqha.
Sydney Scheckel at the 2015 Built Ford Tough American Quarter
com/youthworld.
Built Ford Tough is proud Horse Youth Association World Championship Show.
ANDERSON
COUNTY
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Check your local area businesses first – keep your local dollars at home!
4×10.5
biz directory
On-the-Farm Service Alignments
MIKE HERMRECK
DIGITAL COPIERS
COLOR PRINTERS
NETWORK PRINTERS
NETWORK SCANNERS
FACSIMILE
Sales & Service
601 South Oak
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3212
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
BECKMAN MOTORS
111 E. 4th Ave. Garnett
North Hwy. 59
in Garnett, KS Jetzon
Cooper
Kumho
Current Rebate
$2000
CARPETING
SERVICE
448-3720
Carpet – Vinyl
Laminate – Hardwood
Ceramic & VC Tile
See dealer for
additional rebates.
(785) 448-6122
429 N. Maple Next to Country Mart
(785) 448-5441
Reliable, Dependable, Consistent
Always There Always Caring
Jo Wolken E.A., A.T.A.
IRAs
Mutual Funds
Investments
Aaron Lizer
Agent
E-Statements &
Online Banking
120 S. Maple PO Box 66 Garnett, KS 66032
Phone: (785) 448-6125 Cell: (785) 448-4428
Fax: (785) 448-5878
785-448-1614
Garnett Colony Hepler
Ottawa Pomona
St. Paul Walnut
Garnett, KS
Has Your Foundation Let You Down?
Serving your area since 1969
Waterproofing Epoxy Injection
Straighten & Stabilize Walls
Solid Piering & Leveling
785-418-0711
Please call 785-448-5931
after 10 a.m. and
leave Tony a message.
Since 1980
Delden Doors & Openers
We sell & service these
brands & more.
Call for quotes & details.
Everett Miller (785) 448-6788
Ladies Day
412 S. Main St.,Ottawa
Every Tuesday!
Mon-Fri 10-8 Sat 10-6 Sun 12-6
www.thegunguys.net
info@thegunguys.net
The TV Shoppe
Continuing to serve
you after 31 years.
Millers Construction, Inc.
Now Open 7 a.m. – 5 p.m. M-F 8 a.m. – Noon Sat.
ns
es of Gu
ALL Mak Ammo
Archer y sses
CC H C la
Patriots Bank Bldg. Richmond
(785) 835-6161
Mon. – Fri. 8:30 a.m. – 10 a.m.
20102 NW 1600 Rd Garnett, KS
2×2
NOW OPEN
gun guys
Patriots Bank Bldg. Princeton
(785) 937-2269
Hours:
785-448-3056
www.taxtimetaxserviceinc.com
HELPING YOU PLAN
TODAY FOR TOMORROW
29 gauge metal 40 year paint
$62.50 /square
New Indoor Range
(785) 448-2284
TAYLOR BROTHERS CONSTRUCTION
Foundation Repair Residential and Commercial
785-242-7477
Ralph Taylor Ottawa, KS
To advertise in this
directory contact
Stacey at
785-448-3121.
Rodney Miller (785) 448-3085
And
Cou
Ne
Mon
8:0
Country
Favorites
Country
Favorites
Anderson County News
Mon-Fri 8:00am.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 22, 2015
3B
LOCAL
Native Americans Whether its the basement, highway or
history with pipes community, flooding can happen anywhere
Sorry, no picture of an
archaeological find again this
week. We just returned from
a trip to Bailey Island, Maine,
where we attended our youngest granddaughters wedding.
So once again I will share a
little Native American history.
THE SACRED PIPE
Native American peoples
have used pipes in ceremonies
for generations. The sacred
pipe is one means by which
the peoples connection with
the past remains vital. It represents the centre of the cosmos. To celebrate the pipe is to
a time when spirits entered the
world of humans and gave a
profound gift. The smoke from
a pipe may carry prayers to the
ancestors.
The Lakota say that their
scared pipe came to them from
a beautiful spirit-being called
White Buffalo Calf Woman.
Two Lakota hunters saw her
and one desired her. But a
cloud covered him and, when
it lifted, only a pile of bones
remained. She came to the
BY NANCY SCHUSTER & REBECCA MCFARLAND
DIGGING UP THE PAST
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 448-6244 for
local archeology information.
FRONTIER DISTRICT EXTENSION AGENTS
Sometimes you can anticipate flooding as youre watching the rain fall in sheets from
the living room window. But
what if youre on the way home
from work or picking up the
children from school?
We cant be 100 percent prepared for every emergency, but
we can take actions now that
can get things back to normal
more quickly when disasters do
happen.
With September designated
National Preparedness Month
by the Federal Emergency
Management Agency, K-State
Research and Extension is
working with Kansans to be as
tribe and gave them a sacred
red pipe, saying, Behold this
pipe! Remember always how
sacred it is and treat it as such,for it will take you to the end.
Remember, in me there are
four ages. I am leaving, but
will look back on your people
in every age, and in the end I
will return.
Since then, the Buffalo Calf
Pipe has been held by the
Keeper of the Sacred Pipe, a
FROM PAGE 1A
member of the Looking Horse
Boots also was instrumental
family, who now live on the
Cheyenne River Reservation in developing the local economic development group, and iniin South Dakota.
tiated joint city-county meetings to facilitate better communication between the governing
bodies. In the late 1980s when
Garnett Church Furnishings
began to experience financial
problems and had exhausted
its commercial credit options,
Boots offered up $5,000 of his
own money for a private loan
bail-out package and helped
recruit others to contribute private funds as well.
He also helped the city
work through various infras-
1×2
AD
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
a good time to consider the true
risk. This month, this week,
today, we hope everyone will
take action to develop and practice a family emergency communication plan for hazards
like flooding.
This year, the FEMA preparedness month theme is
Dont wait. Communicate.
Make your emergency plan
today.
Its better to have a plan
about how you and your family will handle situations ahead
of time, rather than be caught
in the disaster having never
talked about what to do. Also,
now is the best time to build
or restock your emergency preparedness kit, including a flashlight, batteries, cash and first
aid supplies. Keep in mind, text
messages and social media are
sometimes better ways to communicate during an emergency
when phone lines are tied up or
not working.
If flooding is occurring on
the roads you are traveling,
keep these tips in mind:
Turn around, dont drown!
Avoid walking or driving
through floodwaters. Just 6
inches of moving water can
knock you off your feet and 2
feet of water can sweep your
vehicle away.
Avoid camping or parking along streams, rivers and
creeks during heavy rainfall.
These areas can flood quickly
with little warning.
ructure problems, including
development of an industrial
area where several businesses
– like the new Orscheln Farm &
Home store will open soon – are
located. Martin said one issue
that came up during his tenure
was lack of parking around the
square in downtown Garnett.
There were several meetings about it. People were not
parking correctly and there
were not enough spaces,
Martin said. They dealt with a
lot of utility and infrastructure
issues – dilapidated houses and
sidewalks. They were having a
lot of the same problems were
having now.
He also was instrumental
in helping a group of interested community supporters
who wanted to place lights
on all downtown buildings at
Christmastime, a tradition that
continues to this day.
Even after Boots left the
commission, he and Doran
remained friends. Boots was
a great storyteller, and Doran
said he especially enjoyed hearing about Boots military service.
It would raise the hair on
the back of your neck to do
some of the things he had to do,
like he had to go drop supplies
into troops. He didnt land, just
came in, dropped supplies and
went back up, Doran said.
Boots joined the U.S. Army
Air Corps and graduated in
1943. He served in World War II
and Vietnam and was recalled
for the Korean War, but the
war ended before he was sent
to combat. He retired in 1970.
During his 28 years of military service, he played a role in
several important combat missions, including dropping the
82nd Airborne behind enemy
lines during the Normandy
invasion. He received several
awards and recognition for the
role he played in various missions.
A full obituary can be found
on page A3.
BOOTS…
Jesus set a clear
example for our lives
The following quote is
attributed to John Calvin, Man
never achieves a clear knowledge of himself, he can never
know who he is unless he has
first looked upon Gods face and
then descends from contemplating him (God) to scrutinizing
himself.
It is very easy for us to contemplate God. Some people see
him as a grandfather figure,
others as a friend, some see him
as a task master still others
have no convictions at all. We
need to understand that God is
Spirit. In John 4:24 Jesus tells
the Samaritan woman, God
is Spirit and his worshippers
must worship in spirit and in
truth. God makes it very clear
in Isaiah 55:8 that we can never
understand him when he says,
For my thoughts are not your
thoughts, neither are your ways
my ways. Jesus tells us in
the Sermon on the Mount that
only, the pure in heart shall
see God. That disqualifies me
for sure. I have a healthy heart
and sometimes a soft heart but
far from a pure heart.
So how do we begin to scrutinize ourselves in relation to
God? A good starting point
would be John 4:34, where
Jesus puts forth the following
statement concerning his need
for food. My food, said Jesus,
is to do the will of him who
sent me and to finish his work.
Somehow we must strike a balance between a life lived for
ourselves and a life lived for
God. If we bring nothing into
the world and we can take nothing out of the world it would
stand to reason that the storing
up of riches and goods for ourselves at the expense of God
would not be pleasing to him.
Yet, if we use our resources to
further Gods work as well as
our pleasure he will be pleased.
God created all men equal.
Men separate themselves from
each other as they live their
lives. The paths they chose
determines their relationship
or lack of relationship to God.
It is this relationship that is
forged with God that defines a
man in Gods eyes and answers
the question. What is my purpose in life? Jesus clearly stated
his purpose as To do the will of
him (God) who sent him.
The Bible is very direct in
stating that the chief end of
man is to glorify God. No where
is this stated more direct than
in Revelation 4:11; when the
twenty four elders proclaim to
God at the throne of heaven,
You are worthy, our Lord and
God, to receive glory and honor
and power, for you created all
things, and by your will they
prepared as possible for emergencies.
The Prepare Kansas blog is
available any time of year for
tips to help mitigate the effects
of disasters for you, your family
and your workplace. Find more
information here:
https://
blogs.k-state.edu/preparekansas/ and at www.ready.gov.
Flash floods are the No. 1
cause of weather-related deaths
in the United States, according
to FEMA.
Flooding is fresh on the
minds of many people in
Iowa, Kansas, Missouri and
Nebraska, said FEMA Region
VII
Administrator
Beth
Freeman in a Sept. 2 news
release. With so much flooding
during the past few months, its
WEEKLY
DEVOTIONAL
By David Bilderback
were created and have their
being.
Unlike in this live where
we cant see the face of God
because of the impurity of our
heart as believers we will see
the face of God when we cross
from this life to the next. How
well we are prepared for that
will depend on the degree of our
likeness to Jesus Christ.
CROSSWALK…
FROM PAGE 1A
After their complaints,
Garnett Police Chief Kevin
Pekarek began monitoring the
area. According to a report
from Garnett City Manager
Joyce Martin, Pekarek is
expected to discuss his findings
and the issue of lowering the
speed limit with city commissioners at their regular meetDavid Bilderback: A Ministry ing at 6 p.m. tonight.
The current trio of commison the Holiness of God.
sioners may be less receptive
to the concerns of semi drivers
than previous commissioners.
Semi traffic on Park Road has
been part of ongoing discussions with the current city commission for the past couple of
years.
Last year, commissioner
Preston Peine pushed the issue
of keeping semi traffic off Park
Road because of the damage
the trucks cause. The road was
not designed to handle heavy
Dont Turn Your Back On Pain
If you want to feel your absolute best,
2×2
Let the healing hands of gentle chiropractic care
help
you avoid injuries,
prevent spinal degeneration
balanced
health
and maintain a healthy balance in your life.
No Popping No Cracking No Twisting
Dr. Glenn D. Bauman-Chiropractic Physician
519 S. Maple Garnett
785-448-2422 Fax 785-448-2427
M/W/F: 8 a.m. – 6 p.m. T/Th: 9 a.m. – Noon
St. Boniface Church
Fall Bazaar
Sunday, October 4, 2015
2×2
Boniface Parish Hall, Scipio, Kansas
stSt.boniface
Serving: 11am – 2pm
Roast Beef, Mashed Potatoes & Gravy,
Chicken & Noodles, Green Beans, Sauerkraut,
Salads, Bread and Pies.
Adults: $9.00 Children 5-10 Years: $5.00
Children 4 & Under: FREE Carry-Outs Available: $10.00
2×4
AD
3×10.5
ren fest
trucks, and the city pays hundreds of thousands of dollars
every few years to repair the
damaged road. But county commissioners refused to cooperate, saying they didnt want to
inconvenience local ranchers
who travel the road en route
to the sale barn. Without the
countys help, there is no easy
detour route for semi traffic
within the city limits and the
matter was dropped.
RAPE…
FROM PAGE 1A
2015. The girl no longer lives
in Anderson County, and the
case was part of a multi-agency investigation that first was
reported to police in Texas.
A trial had been scheduled to
begin Sept. 30. Spellmeier earlier waived a preliminary hearing
in the case.
Spellmeier remains in jail.
4B
Saturday,
September 26
– Cornstock 2015 –
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 22, 2015
LOCAL
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 22, 2015
On the Hill
at
Lake Garnett
Park
Come have fun
2×3 at the Cornfest!
Stop by and see us.
barneys
Repeat.
Country music fans know
Atkins best for his past work,
including Farmers Daughter
and If Youre Going Thru Hell.
These songs can also be found on
his Greatest Hits collection.
The east Tennessee native
has an impressive track record
of hitting on sentiments that
strike a chord with country listeners. As an all-volunteer led
country music festival, we are
deeply proud of Rodney Atkins
answering the call to play here,
says Gina Witherspoon, ACCF
Chairman. Atkins is credited
for being quite the volunteer
himself.
The Cornstock community of
Anderson County also welcomes
Texas red dirt musics most popular band, the Randy Rogers
Band. The son of a preacher,
Randy Rogers was raised by his
parents in Cleburne, Texas. .
Rogers learned to play the piano
from his grandmother at the age
of 6. By age 11 he was writing
songs and teaching himself how
to play the guitar. His love for
music grew over the years as
he listened to artists like Merle
Haggard, Willie Nelson, Don
Williams, and yet enjoyed The
Beatles and even Pearl Jam.
From garage band to sideman,
Rogers has played and sang harmony vocals for many years on
his rise to fame.
Down in Texas, folks have
known Rogers had the goods
that would take him the distance
long before he even cracked the
regional radio charts. Today
the Randy Rogers Band plays
to sold-out crowds from coast
to coast. The band includes
Randy Rogers, Geoffrey Hill, Jon
Richardson, Brady Black and
Les Lawless. Their discography
includes Kiss Me in the Dark,
In My Arms Instead, Steal
You Away, One More Good
Bye, to name a few.
Opening for the Cornstock
Concert on the hill is Ottawa
native Travis Marvin. Marvin
recently released single Again
Someday hit radio with huge
success and tells a story that hits
close to home for so many fans.
Driven to share more of what he
loves with country lovers everywhere, Travis is currently working on a new album projected
for release later this year. I just
cant wait to share it with everyone, he says, This is going to
be really cool when its all sang
and done.
The Cornstock Concert on the
Hill gates open at 5 p.m. Travis
Marvin will take the stage at
5:30 p.m., Randy Rogers Band
at 7 p.m., followed by Rodney
Atkins.
Added fun to the concert
includes special appearances by
nationally recognized radio personalities Big D and Bubba and
Taste of Countrys Sam Alex.
Free parking and free bus
shuttle makes this concert venue
an enjoyable affair. Cheaply
priced camping makes for an all
around fun weekend at this park
(campsite reservations required
through city hall, 785-448-5496).
The days events provide a
variety of fun for the whole family, including a 5K run, pickleball tournament, cornhole
tournament, Corn Dog Doxie
Derby, Miss Cornstock Pageant,
Little Niblets Playland and see
Cabelas and the Kansas Mobile
Aquarium at the Great Kansas
Outdoor Fun Show, all within
the festival grounds. Tickets are
required for the concert with
advance tickets sold at a discount at more than 30 outlets in
20 cities. Visit www.accornfest.
com for information.
Join us for the
Pedal Tractor Pull
Saturday, September 26
11:00am
Football Field at Cornfest.
1×3
a n c o
f a r m
bureau
FATHER
energetic
WDQGUH
the fun. M
2×5
state farm
Anderson County
Farm Bureau Association
Mike & Cathy Barnes
313 S. Maple Garnett
120 S. Maple,
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-0099
(785) 448-3815
Come & enjoy the
Anderson
County Corn Festival!
2×3
Thank you to all area dairy producers!
AD
DEPENDABLE and
KNOWLEDGEABLE
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looking for real
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term RELATIONSHIP.
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SINGLE, ARTSY LADY SEEKS
SINGLE ARTSY GUY. If you love
painting, decorating, baking and knitting,
Sponsored by
Rodney Atkins, Randy Rogers Band, Travis Marvin to perform
GARNETT – The Anderson
County Corn Festival presents Rodney Atkins, live at the
Cornstock Concert on the Hill,
located in Garnetts North Lake
Park on Saturday, September
26th. The concert also includes
performances by the Randy
Rogers Band and regional performer Travis Marvin.
This is the 11th annual running of the One day of corn,
music …& fun! and culminates
with an outdoor lawn chair
concert that overlooks Lake
Garnett.
Concert Entertainment:
Rodney Atkins released his
Greatest Hits album earlier this
year, boasting 11 songs including Take a Back Road, These
Are My People, and Watching
You. It also features his latest
single, Eat, Sleep, Love You,
5B
LOCAL
Ryan Disbrow CLU, Agent
504 W. Redbud
Garnett, KS 66032
Bus: 785-448-1660
ryan.disbrow.my1p@statefarm.com
M-W-F 8:30-5:30
T-Th 8:30-7:00
Weekend by Appointment
Look no further.
Having one special person for your
car, home and life insurance lets
you get down to business with the
rest of your life. Its what I do.
GET TO A BETTER STATE .
CALL ME TODAY.
1×2
AD
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company,
State Farm Indemnity Company, State Farm Fire and Casualty Company,
1101201.1
State Farm General Insurance Company, Bloomington, IL
See you at Cornstock!
Have a great time at Cornfest!
2×2 Auto Farm Industrial
Mostelectric
units same-day service.
sj auto
New &
Rebuilt units available.
S. J. AUTO ELECTRIC
Call us for Starter, Generator & Alternator Repair
3×9
mcconnell machinery
Steve Spangler
103 S. Maple Garnett, KS 66032
Che
Rodney Atkins.
ETHANOL
3×5
ekae
Fueling a new generation.
Enjoy the Family Fun at Cornfest!
Check out the new inventory
at Beckman Motors.
3×6
The Randy Rogers Band.
Travis Marvin and band.
(785) 448-6364 Home: (785) 448-6569
Now featuring 2015 Buicks, Chevys and Fords!
beckman
3×5.5
qsi
2015 Chevy Silverado
2015 Ford Superduty
2015 Chevy Colorado
We welcome you to
join us for the fun and
celebration at the
Corn Festival this
Saturday!
Join the fun at
2×3
Cornfest 2015!
AD
Remember us for your next set of tires!
Outstanding Performance in
GM Sales for all of Kansas
BECKMAN MOTORS
North Hwy. 59 in Garnett, KS (785) 448-5441 800-385-5441
www.beckmanmotorsinc.com
Proud Sponsor of
2x3Cornstock 2015!
AD
Were proud to be a part of the
agricultural community in Anderson County,
and we appreciate your patronage.
2×3
valley rBring your family
and help make Cornfest a success!
AD
CORPORATE CONCERT SPONSOR
2×3
Cornstock 2014
2015
gssb Hope to see you
at Cornfest!
E-statements and online Banking
601 South Oak
Garnett
785-448-3212
We look forward to
seeing you at Cornstock 2015!
2×3
2015 Buick Encore
MCCONNELL MACHINERY CO
1111 E. 23rd St.
Lawrence, KS 66046
785-843-2676
www.mcconnellmachineryco.com
AD
2×3
AD
Spray Tans
by Kimmie King
by appointment only
starting Sept. 10th
620-719-9088
703 North Maple
Garnett, KS 66032
(785) 448-3241
lizer
Aaron Lizer
valleyragriservice.com
Come and enjoy the Cornfest activities
and the Cornstock concert!
2×3
Come out and enjoy
2x3all the Cornfest
activities and the
farm
bureauConcert!
Cornstock
We welcome everyone to
Garnett for the 2015 Cornfest.
2×3
ks corn growers
6th Ave Boutique & Bronze
Use ethanol blended fuels.
Clean fuel from Kansas farms.
Hours : Mon. – Fri. 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. Sat. 10 a.m. – 3
427 W. 6th Ave. Garnett (785) 448-2276
Garnett 785-448-6922
www.kscorn.com
120 S. Maple Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6125
Enjoy all the great activities
and concert at Cornfest!
2×3
sandras
Sandra & Terry Zook
24963 NE 169 Hwy
Junction 59/169 Garnett
(785) 448-6602
Proud
shuttle sponsor
2×3
of Cornfest
lybarger
oil 2015!
www.lybargeroil.com
(785) 448-5512 or Toll Free 1-877-592-2743
Have a
2×3
great
brummel
time at
Cornstock!
BRUMMEL
Farm Service
8th & Oak St. Garnett, KS 66032
785-448-5720
6B
LOCAL
FOR RENT
Two bedroom house and garden in the country, close to
Bush City. Call evenings (785)
448-5893.
ag11tfn
REAL ESTATE
1×3
REAL ESTATE
1820 Miller Drive, Lawrence,
$99,900. 3 bedroom, 1 bath
remodeled in (02). Just updated with new HVAC, new paint
inside and out, carpet thu-out,
kitchen floor plus lots more.
Vacant and move-in-ready. Not
a drive by. Diann Lutackas,
KW Legacy Partners, Inc. (785)
633-4333, text: 80354 to 79564.
**jn16**
Osage City Building – for sale
or lease, 8500 sq. ft. Great commercial or retail location. (785)
841-3902 or (785) 979-1008.
**jy7**
364 E 1750 Rd, Baldwin City
$330,000. 4 bedrooms and 3 bathrooms on 5 acres in the country
but close to town. The outbuilding has 3 parking areas and
a studio area upstairs with a
furnace and shop downstairs.
Patty Wiseman, ReeceNichols
Preferred Realty 913-709-0963
**ap21**
4 buildable lots, a house
can be built on each lot. SW
of Wichita in Harper, Kansas.
$20,000 talkes all. taxes are low,
1 lot has cave. Harper is at
Hwy. 2 and 160. Iris Faucett,
(620) 491-0936.
**jn30**
Owner will finance – 49 acres
pasture and hunting, rural
water. 1/2 mile south of 1200
Road and Tennessee, Garnett.
(913) 669-1873.
ag11t4*
1×3
1×3
MOBILE HOMES
1994 16×80 – 3 bedroom, 2 bath,
above average condition, new
shingled roof, new AC. $9,500.
(785) 448-4602. sp15t2*
HELP WANTED
1 x 4
richRN
mond
Mon. – Fri. 2-10 p.m.
A leader in the healthcare
industry, Genesis HealthCare
is now hiring at Richmond
Healthcare and Rehabilitation
Center located in Richmond, KS
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
Want to hire – part-time carpenter and/or roofer. Must
have own transportation & be
dependable. (913) 526-2600.
sp15t2
Seeking – experienced landscaper to build paving stone
path, perform flower garden
cleanup, water garden maintenance and leaf removal. (785)
248-3632.
sp25t2
Butler Transport Your
Partner In Excellence. CDL
Class A Drivers Needed. Sign
on Bonus. All miles paid. 1-800528-7825 or www.butlertransport.com
Convoy Systems is hiring
Class A drivers to run from
Kansas City to the west coast.
Home Weekly! Great Benefits!
www.convoysystems.com Call
Lori 1-800-926-6869 ext. 303.
Can You Dig It? Heavy
Equipment Operator Career!
We Offer Training and
Certifications
Running
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Part-time help needed on
Saturdays and possibly weekdays. Must have own transporation. Duties include mowing,
trimming, painting, carpentry
work. (913) 530-9298.
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CHIEF
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2×3
Bachelors Degree in Business Administration and/or Accounting,
CPAsek
preferred. cfo
Training and experience in computerized Management
Information Systems including budgeting, accounting, accounts
receivable and statistics. Computer knowledge in updating and/or
changing the Management Information System as required by local,
state and federal mandates. Required to maintain confidential
information and files. Three to five years of experience in a medical or
mental health setting. Non-profit public accounting would be a plus.
Send resume to:
Robert F. Chase, Executive Director
Southeast Kansas Mental Health Center
P.O. Box 807 Iola, KS 66749
Find us on Facebook for a job description.
bstanley@sekmhc.org
EOE/AA
ANDERSON COUNTY APPRAISAL TECH I
Anderson County is accepting applications for the
position of Appraisal Technician I. Responsibilities
include ownership record and appraisal data management,
field inspections of properties, running query reports,
assisting the general public and performing general office
duties. Must be able to work independently and exercise
initiative and good judgment. High school diploma or
equivalent required. Minimum entry level salary of
$13.02 per hour. Anderson County is an EOE, VPE.
Applications and job descriptions are available at the
County Appraisers Office, 100 E. 4th Ave., Garnett, KS
66032. 785-448-6844. Applications will be accepted until
5:00 p.m. September 30th, or until position is filled.
2×4
kpa insurance
1×3
(913) 594-2495
Estate Sale – 2nd Release
2×2
kpa log home
Model # 101 Carolina $40,840
BALANCE OWED $17,000
Model # 202 Topeka $34,050
BALANCE OWED $14,900
Model # 203 Georgia $49,500
BALANCE OWED $22,900
NEW – HOMES HAVE NOT BEEN MANUFACTURED
Make any design changes you desire!
Comes with Complete Building Blueprints & Construction Manual
Windows, Doors, and Roofing not included
NO TIME LIMIT FOR DELIVERY
View at www.loghomedream.com – Click on House Plans
SERIOUS ONLY REPLY. Call 704-602-3035 ask for Accounting Dept.
Restore your homes value encapsulate your area today!
2×3
and co appraiser
Alcoholics Anonymous Garnett: Tues. & Thurs. 7 p.m,
510 South Oak, (620) 228-2597 or
(785) 241-0586.
nv21tf
Bill
Stanford
Tree
Trimming – and stump grinding. Free estimates. Insured
and licensed. (785) 893-2202.
sp15t4*
113 S. Mary Greeley, KS
(next to school)
(785) 214-8742 (913) 709-4677
Apply online:
www.genesiscareers.jobs
Email:
marcia.hunter@genesishcc.com
2×2
kpa dry base-
2×2
Help Wanted – FULL-TIME Farm Technician.
Located
in Harris,
Kansas (11 miles West of
thermo
fisher
Garnett). M-F 6 a.m.- 2:30 p.m. $12.50/hr.,
Benefits and paid vacation. Must have
high school diploma or GED.
Call 785-733-2229 and ask for Pat.
SERVICES
books
&
Open Now – All ages welcome
We offer competitive
compensation, medical, dental,
vision benefits, 401K, vacation
time, growth opportunity
and more.
DONT NEGLECT YOUR CRAWL SPACE
Farm Technician
Books & Balloons
2×2 Licensed Daycare
RN/LPN
FT every other weekend
MEDICAL RECORDS FT
EEO/AA, M/F, Vet, Disabled
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 22, 2015
Concrete Crew Foreman
2×3
Quality Structures, Inc., a leading provider of post-frame
buildings, is seeking a Concrete Crew Foreman to join the
QSIqsi
team in Richmond, Kansas. Job responsibilities
include: Planning, directing and coordinating concrete
work; Supervising of the concrete crew; Coordinating the
crew and the equipment involved in the concrete process.
Quality Structures, Inc. offers a generous benefit package
including: Competitive wages with bonus opportunities;
Paid Holidays; Vacation time; Company paid health
insurance; Dental; 401K.
If youre interested in working for a company that provides
you with all the tools and equipment you need to be
successful, call Kevin Pietro at 785-835-6100.
Anderson County Sheriff Office
Is now taking applications until 10-15-2015 for
Full-time Detention Officer
2×4 Starting pay $13.37 Per Hr.
Full-time
and1co
sheriffDeputy
Starting pay $14.05 uncertified $14.55 Certified
CHILDRENS
AIDE
2×3
sek childs
CHILDRENS
AIDE – aide
Working with children after
school, 15-20 hours/Mon.-Thur. Requires drivers
license and reliable vehicle. Prefer experience
w/children. Min. 18 years old.
Drug screen required.
Southeast Kansas Mental Health Center
PO Box 807
Iola, KS 66749.
Applications at 519 S. Elm.
EOE/AA.
LOCATION MANAGER
Beachner Grain, a regional agricultural company,
has2x3
an opening for the right person to manage one
ofbeachner
our facilities in rural
Eastern Kansas. A strong
grain
ag background and effective management skills are
preferred qualifications. Grain operational experience
and business management knowledge would also be
very beneficial. If you believe youre the person
were looking for, send your resume to:
careers@beachner.com, or mail to:
Beachner Grain,
Attention Human Resources
2600 Flynn Drive
Parsons, KS 67357
2×4
kpa
respite
refuels
Applications are available at the Anderson County Sheriff
Office and Courthouse Mon. – Fri., 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Must be 18
years of age or older, have a high school diploma or equivalent
and able to obtain a valid Kansas Drivers License. Must have
good people and computer skills. Applicants are subject to a
battery of tests including an extensive background check and
drug screening. Shifts are normally 12 hrs., but employees are
subject to working days, nights and holidays. Anderson
County is an Equal Opportunity Employer and the position is
Veterans Preference Eligible (VPE), State Law – K.S.A. 73-201.
DONT WAIT, BUY NOW!
SPECIAL SEPTEMBER PRICING!
2×4
kpa qsi
Specializing in Complete
Post Frame Buildings
EXPERIENCE THE QSI ADVANTAGE
Strength Durability Quality Service
CALL TODAY!
800-374-6988
MISSOURI KANSAS IOWA NEBRASKA
www.qualitystructures.com
2×4.5
yoder auction
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 22, 2015
LOCAL
How much junk…
…is in your trunk?
Place your ad to sell your items today!
7B
Its EASY to place your ad! (785) 448-3121 (800) 683-4505 admin@garnett-ks.com
Rates
Up to 20 Words………..$4.95
Each addtl word…………….55
(Commercial……65)
BONUS: Add $2 for 10,000
additional households in
Lawrence/Douglas County in
The Trading Post.
Display Ads, per column
inch………$8.50
Statewide placement available,
Call for details.
FARM & AG
ADOPTION
Little John Sherwood
Stay at home mom & devoted
dad, married 11 yrs, long to
adopt newborn. Financial security, happy home. Expenses
paid. Denise & Jason. 1-800-3922363
Farm
1 x&1Greenhouse
.5
litle Large
joh Hardy
785-835-7057
Garden Mums
Tues – Sat: 9am – 6pm
Off of 59 Hwy, 3 miles, E. on Cloud Rd., 1 mile
S. on Ohio Rd. Follow the yellow chicken.
4 Family Country Yard Sale
1×2
GS
Thursday & Friday, 24th & 25th
Washer & dryer, Harley Davidson
items, lots of puzzles, furniture,
two motorcycle helmets,
dishes, bedding.
5 1/2 miles south of Garnett. Go
to Bush City Road, turn east to
Nebraska Road, turn right 1 3/4
miles, follow signs.
Terms
Cash in advance
Visa, Mastercard, Discover
Credit to established accounts
1×3
AD
Deadline
Classied Ads: 10am Friday
Display Ads: Noon Thursday
Call or send in your ad:
(785) 448-3121
(800) 683-4505 (out of area)
FAX: (785) 448-6253
EMAIL: admin@garnett-ks.com
Mail:
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
P.O. Box 409
Garnett, KS 66032
LOST AND FOUND
Found – keys north of Dollar
General Store parking lot on
9/16. Call (785) 448-3121 to identify.
sp22t2*
Hope Unlimited offers services to victims of domestic
violence and sexual abuse. call
(620) 365-7566 or Kansas Hotline
(888) END-ABUSE (select local
option) for free, confidential
assistance.
ag24tf
Child Care – 2 openings. (785)
204-1398.
sp22t2*
1×3
1×2
Heck
Joystick or Twin Stick Steering
All Steel and Cast Iron Construction
Patented Stand-Up Deck For Easy Maintenance
5 Year Limited Warranty
NEW! Jonsered Lawn & Garden
Equipment Available
Hecks Small Engine Repair
Westphalia, KS 785-893-1620
OPEN Mon. – Fri. Sat. by Appointment
1×3
AD
COMPUTER EXPERTS
GARNETT
785.304.1843
FARM & AG
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25
or more trees. Call (816) 2326781 in St. Joseph for details.
jn9tf
Fall garden mums – Keims
Greenhouse, 10 miles west on
Hwy. 31, (785) 218-1785 or (785)
448-7108.
ag25t6
MAKE MONEY
USE THE
CLASSIFIEDS!!
AD
Happiness is . . . being a
volunteer at Anderson County
Hospital! Please join us
Wednesday, October 7th at
the Town Hall Center for our
Membership Luncheon at 12:00
p.m. We encourage everyone
interested to attend and find
out about new opportunities
that are available in the new
hospital as well as all the other
activities that we offer. RSVP
to Nancy Horn at 448-6544.
sp22t3
20 40 45 48 53 Storage containers centralcontainer.net or
785 655 9430
Hecks
2×2 Everest
Certified
his solution Wheat
$12.50/bushel
Storage Buildings
448-0319
or
204-0369
620-237-3636
620-363-0041
JB Construction
Delivery Available
Free – to good home: female
Red Heeler Australian Shepard
mix, (785) 218-1785, 9 months
old.
sp22t1*
2×2
jb construction
Decks
Siding
Pole Buildings
Joe Borntreger
(785) 448-8803 joeborntreger@yahoo.com
PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday, Oct. 3 10 a.m.
522 Hudson Burlington, KS
3×3
beckman motors
Eight
Check out our
Monthly Specials
1×3
COMPUTER
AD
WORK
2×4
news
DAILY
at 8 a.m.
KOFO
1220 AM
PETS
Come See Why Country Clipper
Stands Out
Happiness is . . . Attending the
Cornstock United Methodist
Church Community Breakfast!
Saturday, September 26,
7am-10am at the Community
Building.
sp22t1
Anderson
County
MISC. FOR SALE
SERVICES
GARAGE SALES
HAPPY ADS
3×5
life care center
RN/LPN – Full-time position available
for a Kansas-licensed nurse.
CNAs – All shifts
Part-time Floor Tech
1 Full-time Cook
Director of Communications
MDS Coordinator – Full-time position available
for a Kansas-licensed nurse.
Tractor, ATVs, UTVs, Trailer, Boats and Motors: Ferguson TO30 tractor, gas, serial # T0 10024, 4 cyl engine, high speed gears, excellent
rubber, nice one! 2011 Kubota RTV 900XT w/ dump bed, diesel, 589 hours;
Yamaha Rhino 500cc UTV; (2) Yamaha Raptor 80cc 4 wheelers; 2008 Kearney
16 utility trailer with end and side ramps, dual 3500lb axles, like new! 16 Lund
semi-v alum. boat, Shoreline trailer and like new (2013) 20HP Nissan 4-stroke
engine thats been barely used; 14 alum. V-bottom boat; multiple boat motors
from 40HP on down w/ some running and some for parts;
2×9
roth auction
Welding, Shop Equipment, Tools, Log Splitter, Etc.: Awesome
homemade log splitter, electric start and runs good, horizontal or vertical;
Yamaha 2800 watt generator; Briggs and Stratton 10,000 watt generator, Elite
Series, 21HP, vey good condition and starts on first turn; Subaru 2 water pump;
Multi quip 2 water pump; Millermatic Challenger 172 wire welder; Thermal
Dynamics Pak Master 50 plasma cutter; HUGE collection of welding supplies
including multiple sets of #1 and #2 leads, nickel, stoody and Jetweld LH70 rod; English sheet metal forming wheel; cutting torch set on cart; Oxweld
cutting torch head; 3 boxes of Green Diamond protective lenses; Smith cutting
torch set NIB; set of Hillman HD rollers! homemade sandblast unit; Clarke parts
washer; US General 13 HP air compressor on trailer; Jet metal lathe (nice!); Ryobi
8.5 sliding compound miter saw; DeWalt cutoff saw; dual grinder on stand;
(2) Makita 4 grinders; mult. circular saws; belt sander NIB; Skil 10 bandsaw;
Delta scroll saw; Delta upright belt sander; Craftsman planer; Craftsman 2/3 HP
drill press; vintage upright meat saw, works great! Mult. angle grinders, mult.
elec. drills; mult. pneumatic tools; HD elec. winch; 1 and 5 ton chain hoists; HD
10 ton circle straps; huge collection of electrical wire, boxes, 440 converter
etc; massive collection of sockets, wrenches, pliers, cutters including SnapOn! machinist files; vises; C clamps; pullers; 6 and 8 grinding wheels; pipe
threader and dies; taps and dies; extensive set of carpet tools; floor jacks; levels;
thousands of nuts, bolts and fasteners; drill bits; come-a-longs; #1 and #2 HD
jumper cables; System 7 chain; assorted chain and log chain; mult. chainsaws;
Stihl weedeaters; leaf blower; scaffolding and walkway; Way too much to list!
Automotive: 1949 GMC 100 pickup, 6 cyl., 4 speed, ready to restore! 1966
Plymouth Barracuda, V-8, auto, rough interior; 1983 Chevy El Camino, 305,
auto, runs but needs work; 1991 Ford F-150, 4×4, 360, auto, 165 K miles with
a crate engine installed not more than 30K miles ago, runs good; Honda 4
cylinder car engine w computer, approx. 100K miles; Chevy 4 speed trans; old
auto books and manuals; misc. motorcycle parts.
Excellent Misc.: Ricon wheelchair lift for van, great cond.; Starcraft 9 slide-
in camper, fits longbed, self contained; 500 gal. propane tank; (2) 8x8X8
fiberglass storage containers; 10×20 canopy; 10×14 canvas tent; hyd. bale
lift, no spear; Fairbanks Morse scales; lumber; assorted pipe gates; tractor radio
NIB, Case replacement unit; (3) load locks;
Lots of Fishing, Hunting, Camping and Household still to go through!
Sellers: Loy and Sharon Hall
Consignment coming from a friend as well
Vaughn-Roth Auctions
Cameron Roth, Auctioneer (785) 917-0867
vaughnrothauctions.com
Not responsible for accidents. See website or sale bill for terms and conditions.
8B
LOCAL
703 North Maple
Garnett, KS 66032
(785) 448-3241
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 22, 2015

