Anderson County Review — September 26, 2024
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from September 26, 2024. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
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Probitas, Veritas,
Integritas In Summa
C O P Y P R I C E O N E M E A S LY U . S . D O L L A R
September 26, 2024
SINCE 1865 158th Year, No. 36
The
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Member FDIC Since 1899
(785) 448-3111
Commissioners try to quash
county fire, EMS head rift
Bad blood culminates in
letter to commissioners,
meeting to put an end to it
BY DANE HICKS
Lightning from a passing storm provided an extra
light show for the Cornstock audience in 2023.
Saturdays weather forecast calls for partly cloudy
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-26-2024 / ARCHIVE PHOTO
skies throughout the day with a high temperature
expected of 79 degrees and a low of 58.
Cornstock set for music, food, fun
Schedules, FYIs relayed
as 4-band lineup gets set
for toe-tapping Saturday
BY SUSAN WETTSTEIN
SPECIAL TO THE REVIEW
GARNETT With fingers crossed
for good weather The Anderson
County Corn Festival Board of
Directors and over 100 volunteers
are laying the final groundwork
for the 19th Annual Cornstock
Music Festival this Saturday,
September 28th at Lake Garnett,
with a variety of entertainment
from new country hit makers to
90s country legacy matrons; from
a legendary red dirt singer/songwriter to classic rock. The schedule for the music is as follows:
Gates Open
3:15 PM VIP Entry
3:30 PM Gates Open to the Public
Please note: Clear Bag or Search
Policy.
Stage Announcements
4:30 PM Announcements
4:45 PM National Anthem
The Music Begins
5:00 PM Clevermax
6:30 PM Pam Tillis
8:00 PM Stoney LaRue
9:30 PM Dylan Scott
*Lineup and times approximate,
subject to change.
About the Show
Headliner Dylan Scott hails from
Bastrop, Louisiana. He is 33 years
old and an ACM-nominated,
multi-Platinum singer who has
notched 4 Number 1 hits. Most of
his hits reign from the Livin My
Best Life album and include songs
he wrote himself, Nobody, My
Girl, and Hooked, Dylan Scott
recently released a new album,
Youd Think I was A Cowboy.
Stoney LaRue is a Lone Star
State born and Oklahoma
raised singer/songwriter who
is known as a Red Dirt music
legend. Stoneys career spans
twenty years and includes several hits including Oklahoma
Breakdown, Feet Dont Touch
the Ground, Down in Flames
and Hill Country Boogaloo.
Pam Tillis is known as Mel
Tillis daughter. But shes much
more than that in her own
right, with 6 Number 1 singles
and nearly 20 Top 10 hits. She
is a 2x Grammy winner and has
won 3 CMA awards. Her most
notable songs include Maybe
It Was Memphis, Shake the
Sugar Tree, Mi Vida Loca and
When You Walk in the Room, to
name a few.
Clevermax is a favorite classic rock band whose members
SEE CORNSTOCK ON PAGE 11
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT County Commissioners
took a stab at resolving an apparent personality conflict between the
countys ambulance service director and its chief
of
Emergency
Management
during Mondays
r e g u l a r
Commission meeting, hoping to
bring an end to a
feud involving key
areas of local law
Armstrong
enforcement and
county emergency
services.
Commissioners met with newly-hired Anderson County Hospital
Administrator Pat Patton to discuss the issue which has apparently continued to simmer between
ambulance director Troy Armstrong
and Anderson County Emergency
Management director Mark Locke
since the culmination of the August
Republican primary election for
Anderson County Sheriff. Armstrong
was a vocal supporter of Anderson
County Undersheriff Wes McClain,
who defeated Locke in that election
garnering some 80% of the primary
vote.
Commissioners presented a document for Pattons review in the open
session of the meeting believed to
be a letter from Locke to Armstrong
followed by guarded comments
regarding apparent issues the document entailed. Commissioners gave
no overall narrative to the discussion, but commission chairman Les
McGhee did note
to Patton that we
dont condone any
of this and that
the sender had no
authority to send
such a letter, apparently in an official
capacity.
Locke
They both need
to do their jobs and
get along, McGhee
commented. Patton noted he would
address the issue on his end, presumably with Armstrong.
It wasnt clear from the public
discussions who sent or received the
letter.
The countys EMS employees are
hired and managed by St. Lukes
Health System, which has a management contract with Anderson
County Hospital. Facilities and
equipment used by EMS are funded
SEE RIFT ON PAGE 11
Davids votes to keep federal dollars flowing
for services to illegals in sanctuary cities
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
WASHINGTON D.C. Kansas 3rd
District Congresswoman Sharice
Davids and other Democrats last
week failed to stop a bill which
would strip certain federal funding
from so-called sanctuary cities and
other jurisdictions that aim to use
those dollars to aid and abet illegal
immigrants.
HR 5717 passed 219 to 186 on a
roll call vote Friday morning with
12 Democrats joining Republicans
in the majority. All nay votes
were Democrats. Davids is the only
Democrat in the Kansas congressional delegation. Congressmen Estes,
LaTurner and Mann all voted for the
measure.
As of Sunday neither Davids nor
her staff had returned emails from
the Informer seeking comment on
her vote.
With Democrats dominating the
U.S. Senate and Senate Majority
Leader Chuck Schumers near ban
on most legislative initiatives coming from the Republican-led House,
the bill has little
chance of ever
becoming law. But
it does focus attention on Congress
members political
leanings regarding
the hot button issue
of illegal immigraDavids tion and federal
funding to support
it, as three years of
Biden/Harris Administration mismanagement of the nations southern
border and a massing illegal immigrant crisis in the country presses
on voters heading into the November
general elections.
SEE SANCTUARY ON PAGE 11
No uncounted ballots here, clerk says
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Despite recent revelations that as many as 1,000 ballots in Kansas werent counted
in the August primary because
they were delivered late or were
mishandled by the U.S. Postal
Service, Anderson County Clerk
Julie Wettstein says local elections
werent impacted by late mailed
ballots in August.
Still, she said, there are precautions individual voters can take to
bypass that possibility.
Kansas Secretary of State Scott
Schwab said in a letter last week
to U.S. Postmaster General Louis
DeJoy 1,000 ballots didnt get
counted by local election offices
because they either arrived late
or lacked a postmark one of the
requirements of state law for ballot envelopes arriving by mail to
confirm they actually were sent
through the mail system.
SEE BALLOTS ON PAGE 11
U.S. 169 project to begin September 30
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT
The Kansas
Department of Transportation
expects to begin a guardrail
replacement project on U.S. 169
in Anderson County September
30. The road work, which also
includes a culvert repair, starts
just north of 1900 Road and continues northeast for 10 miles.
Construcdtion manager Ian
Stringham said temporary signals
will direct one-lane traffic through
the work zone. Drivers should
expect delays of 15 minutes or less.
Weather permitting, the project
should be finished by mid-November.
The project was originally
planned to begin last week, but
Stringham said it was delayed
due to scheduling conflicts. The
area between Garnett and Greeley
received more than three inches
of rain from Thursday through
Monday of last week, as a welcome
dousing of precipitation gave some
respite to thirsty lawns and pastures and temporarily stymied late
SEE GUARDRAIL ON PAGE 11
Anderson County Corn Festival (Cornstock) Board of Directors
and members of the Anderson County Flywheelers with the
Garnett City Commission were recognized this week for community promotion efforts surrounding agriculture and the communitys ag heritage, with a proclamation declaring Sept. 28
Oct. 5 as Agricultural Heritage and Community Spirit Week in
the City of Garnett, Kansas. Back row from left: Commissioner
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-26-2024 / SUBMITTED
Mark Locke, Mayor Jody Cole and Commissioner Nate Wiehl;
Third row: Brad McGregor, A.C. Modlin, Allen Modlin; Second
row – Jessica Mills, Helen Norman, Jodie Beets, Susan
Wettstein, Elmer Beachy, Rick Feuerborn, Rick Feuerborn;
Front Row: : Mike Norman, Jennifer Brummel, Christine Harris,
Scott Garrett and Gordon Stegner.
2
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, September 26, 2024
RECORD
NEWS IN
BRIEF
SCIPIO KNIGHTS OF
COLUMBUS CORNHOLE
The Scipio Knights of Columbus
will be hosting a Cornhole
Tournament on Saturday,
October 12 at the Knights Hall
in Scipio (32292 NE Norton
Road, Garnett KS). There will be
a Set-Teams Double Elimination
bracket played at 11 a.m. followed by a Blind Draw bracket. Entry for both brackets is
$40 per team. Lunch Provided.
Registration Opens at 10 a.m.
Bags Fly at 11!
SENIOR CENTER CONCERT
There will be a concert at the
Senior Center on October 12th
from 6-8 pm. The band The
Odds & Ends will perform classic country, western swing, and
old time rock & roll. Free admission. Snacks will be served.
Come join us for a fun evening
with friends.
KANSANS FOR LIFE LIFE
CHAIN OCT. 6 IN GARNETT
The Pro-Life organization
Kansans For Life will conduct its
annual Life Chain nationwide
public witness for life through
peaceful prayer on Sunday,
Oct. 6, throughout Kansas. A
Garnett prayer and signing
event has been scheduled at
Dutch Country Cafe parking lot
in Garnett at 1:45 p.m. The Life
Chain will then extend along
Maple Street from Park Road to
4th Avenue from 2 p.m.-3 p.m.
ANDERSON CO. HISTORICAL
SOCIETY TO MEET
The monthly meeting of the
Anderson County Historical
Society will be held on Thursday,
October 3 at the Community
Building in the North Park The
meeting will start with a potluck
dinner at 6:30 ,p.m. and the
program by Gayla Corley will
follow. Everyone is welcome to
attend
PANCAKES & PLANES
On Satuday, October 5 from 7
a.m. – 10:30 a.m., the Garnett
Church of the Nazarene Youth
Group is hosting a breakfast at
the Garnett Industrial Airport.
Pancakes, sausage, coffee and
juice will be served. $5 donation requested.
ST JOHNS CHURCH SALE
St Johns Church, Greeley, KS
will have a garage and bake
sale on Saturday, October 5th.
From 7 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. at 406
S Prairie St. Two buildings full!
Something for everyone.
COLONY CITYWIDE SALES
Colony Citywide Yard Sales,
Oct. 4 & 5. Maps at local Colony
businesses.
CONCERTS IN THE PARK
This Thursdays Concerts in the
Park series live music will be
provided by Adam Caylor on
Thursday from 6 p.m.-8 p.m. at
Donna Harris Park in downtown
Garnett.
AMERICAN LEGION BINGO
Bingo at American Legion Post
48 Garnett will be held every
Tuesday, starting time at 6:30
p.m.
CORNHOLE TOURNAMENTS
Everything Thursday their will
be a cornhole tournament at the
Garnett VFW, 1507 S. Elm St. It
is a family friendly event open
to everyone. Registration begins
at 6 p.m., tournament begins at
6:30 p.m. Entry fee is $15.
ANDERSON COUNTY COMMISSION
SEPTEMBER 16, 2024
Chairman Leslie McGhee called
the meeting of the Anderson County
Commission to order at 9:00 AM
on September 16, 2024 at the
Anderson County Commission Room.
Attendance: Leslie McGhee, Present:
David Pracht, Present: Anthony
Mersman, Present. The pledge of
allegiance was recited. Minutes from
the previous meeting were approved
as presented.
Road & Bridge
Ethan Lickteig, Road & Bridge
Supervisor, met with the commission.
He explained that motor grader #305
is in the shop. Upon inspection, the
motor grader will need to go to the
CAT repair shop in Topeka to remove
the rear end so a chain and bearings can be replaced. The rear end
may need to be replaced as well but
will not know until it is taken apart.
The quote from CAT is $29,928.06
for the repairs. The Commissioner
approved for Ethan to send the grader
to Topeka for repair. Anderson County
has been selected by the State of
Kansas to participate in the Local
Bridge Improvement Plan. The state
program will pay for 90% of a bridge
repair with the county pay 10%. The
bridge that will be fixed is on Nevada
Road north of 2100 Road with approximate total project costs of $650,000.
Emergency Management
Mark
Locke,
Emergency
Management Director, met with the
commission. He would like to begin a
reimbursement program for firefighters who take the training courses to
become certified. The Commissioners
agreed to reimburse the cost of the
training once the course has been
passed. Firefighters must take a
hazmat course then firefighter 1 and
2 to become completely certified.
Executive Session
Commissioner Pracht moved and
Commissioner Mersman seconded
to enter into executive session for
20 minutes for non-elected personnel regarding performance review. All
voted yes. Commissioners and Mark
Locke, Emergency Management,
were included. Commissioner Pracht
moved and Commissioner Mersman
seconded to re-enter into open meeting. All voted yes. No action taken.
Executive Session
Commissioner Pracht moved and
Commissioner Mersman seconded
to enter into executive session for
45 minutes for non-elected personnel regarding performance review. All
voted yes. Commissioners; James
Campbell, County Counselor; Julie
Wettstein, County Clerk were present. Commissioner Pracht moved and
Commissioner Mersman seconded to
re-enter into open meeting. All voted
yes. No action taken.
Adjourn
Meeting adjourned at 12:00 PM due
to no further business.
Unified School District No. 365
Board of Education
Regular meeting held: Thursday,
September 5th, 2024, 7:00 p.m., Ray
Meyer Gym Board Room.
Members present: Adam Caylor
(President presiding), Brian Schafer,
Sonya Martin, Gina Witherspoon,
Michael Richards, Roger Shilling and
Matt Self.
Staff present: Dr. Ryan Most
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approval of the state assessment and
building needs assessments information at the August 1st, 2024 Board of
Education meeting and after the Board
of Education adopted by roll call vote
the resolution (23-24-16) to exceed
the Revenue Neutral Rate, I move the
Board of Education adopt the 20242025 USD #365 school district budget.
Caylor, Witherspoon, passed 7-0.
Building Needs Assessment and
State Assessments were reviewed and
approved at the Board of Education at
the July 11, 2024 meeting. These
assessments and other information
are used in developing the budget and
establishing goals and priorities of the
district.
Reports:
Dr. Russell Miller with KASB
addressed the board of education.
Motion to take 6-minute break and
resume regular meeting in this room at
9:55pm. Caylor, Martin, passed 7-0.
Executive session:
Motion that the board of education go into executive session to discuss the individual employee status,
applicants for employment pursuant
to the non-elected personnel exception under KOMA with Superintendent
Most and that the board will resume
the open meeting in this room at 9:55
p.m. Caylor, Schafer passed 7-0.
T here was no action taken during
executive session.
Personnel:
Motion to approve the resignation
of Lanette Wood as title paraprofessional. Caylor, Witherspoon, passed
7-0.
Motion to approve the recommendation of Janet Stegner for the
Greeley Food Service position. Caylor,
Shilling passed 7-0.
Motion to approve the recommendation of Emily Moyer for a bus aide
position. Caylor, Martin, passed 7-0.
Motion to approve the recommendation of Angie Linn to be compensated for 10 days at her daily rate for work
related to the Local Consolidated Plan
(LCP) Title reporting, and other state
and federal reporting duties performed
for the district. Caylor, Witherspoon,
passed 7-0.
Adjourned: 9:58 p.m. Caylor, Martin
passed 7-0.
ANDERSON COUNTY LAND TRANSFERS
Earl D Farmer and Evelyn D Farmer
to Mark Duane Farmer and Heather
Jean Farmer: Lots 9, 10, 11 & 12 blk 15
Railroad Addition to Town of Welda.
Floyd Keim and Lorene Keim to
Floyd Keim Trustee, Lorene Keim
Trustee and Floyd & Lorene Keim
Revocable Living Trust Dated 8-292019: E2 nw4 23-20-18 & w2 nw4
23-20-18.
Joseph L Miller and Cheryl K Miller
to Joseph L Miller and Cheryl K Miller:
The w/2 of the ne/4 and the se/4 of
4-23-18.
Harold L Gilbreth Jr and Katie R
Gilbreth to Weston E Gilbreth and
Maria S Wright: The e/2 of the sw/4 of
16-22-20.
Jeryl D Carr to Garrett Michael Krum
and Kaylea Alexis Krumm: Lots 13, 14
and the w/2 of lot 15 in block 37 in the
City of Garnett.
Terrie A Berg to Dale A Berg Trustee,
Cheri J Berg Trustee and Berg Family
Revocable Trust Dated 6-23-2020: An
undivided 1/3 interest in the following
described real estate: sw4 subject to
hwy r/w of 11-23-18 less the following
described tract: com at swcor sw4 said
section; thence s 893614e on south
line of said sw4 to pt on east r/w line
of former hwy 169 and pob a distance
of 57.91 feet; thence n003518e on
said east r/w line a distance of 1013.38
feet; thence n895931e a distance
of 1243.77 feet; thence s001209w
to south line of said sw4 a distance of
1014.87 feet; thence n895614w to
east line of said r/w and pob a distance
of 1250.69 feet; & less the following
described tract: com at swcor sw4 said
section; thence s895614e on south
line of said sw4 to pob a distance of
1318.50 feet; thence s895614e on
south line of said sw4 to secor said
sw4 a distance of 1331.96 feet; thence
n001423e on east line of said sw4 to
necor said sw4 a distance of 2649.88
feet; thence s895750w on north line
Call (785) 448-5711 text (785) 204-1382
of said sw4 a distance of 1333.69 feet;
thence 88s001209w to south line of
said sw4 to pob a distance of 2647.58
feet.
Adam Kichler to Allen Edgerton and
Connie Edgerton: Beg at pt 2430 north
of swcor 31-22-21, thence north along
section line 475, thence east 680.5,
thence south 561, thence in a straight
line in northwesterly direction 688 to
pob containing 8.14 acres more of less.
Jared Redyke and Brandy Redyke
to Joseph Flowers: Commencing at
the nw corner of the nw/4 of 25-21-20,
being marked with a 1 square iron bar;
thence north 875039east 536.11
feet to a 1/2 iron bar on the north line
of said nw/4, and the true pob; thence
north 875039east 2119.87 feet to
the ne corner of the nw/4 being marked
with a 1/2 iron bar, thence south
005700east 2299.12 feet on the
east line of said nw/4, to a 1/2 iron bar;
thence south 880536west 385.31
feet to a 1/2 iron bar; thence north
005304west 1469.74 feet a 1/2
iron bar; thence south 881559west
1736.91 feet to a 1/2 iron bar; thence
north 005305west 814.95 to the
pob, containing 53.00 acres more or
less.
ANDERSON COUNTY LIMITED
ACTION CASES FILED
LVNV Funding LLC has filed suit
against Brian Hill in the amount of
$697.58 for unpaid goods and/or services.
Credit Management Sercices, Inc.
has filed suit against Taylor Waltrip
in the amount of $1,414 for unpaid
goods and/or services.
LVNV Funding LLC has filed suit
against Brandon Palmer in the amount
of $1,671.68 for unpaid goods and/or
services.
Midland Credit Managment, Inc has
filed suit against Stephani L Boykin in
the amount of $5,839.90 for unpaid
goods and/or services.
LVNV Funding LLC has filed suit
against Donavon Milliken in the
amount of $632.62 for unpaid goods
SEE RECORDS ON PAGE 5
Were sweet on the Chiefs!
Daily
Lunch
Specials:
Mon: Southwest Chicken Taco Salad, or BLT Salad
Tues: Homemade Lasagna, green beans, w/
toast drizzled in garlic butter
Wed: Philly Cheesestake wrap w/sauteed onions
SO
ARE UPS
B
SEP ACK
T. 3
0!
and mushrooms
Thurs: Fried Chicken served w/roll, homemade mashed potatoes & gravy
Fri: Meat Loaf dinner w/ homemade mashed potatoes & gravy, green beans, dinner roll
Sat: Chicken Fried Steak Dinner w/ homemade mashed potatoes & gravy, dinner roll
Banque t Facilitie s Mee ting Rooms Catering
Dutch Country Cafe
Traditional Pennsylvania Dutch Cooking
Saturday Breakfast Buffet 7:30-11:30
2×5
Sonic
TDOTW
Top Dog
of the
Week!
Max
Chrisjohn
Expert Surgical
Care Close to Home
Megan Morriss, MD, is a
board-certified general surgeon
with specialized training in
laparoscopic surgery, gastrointestinal
surgery, and hernia surgery.
The Central Heights Viking defender accounted for 15 tackles
in the teams 26-14 win over
Uniontown on Friday.
Top Dog of the Week wins a $10 Sonic gift card and our
special recognition vehicle window decal. Watch for
them on the road, and each week in
Megan Morriss, MD
UNPLANNED PREGNANCY
Advice & Aid Pregnancy Center in
Overland Park helps women and
their families make an educated decision about an unplanned
pregnancy by providing evidence-based, medical information about parenting, adoption
and abortion. Call (913) 962-0200
or visit www.adviceandaid.com.
(Superintendent), Jerrica McCarty
(Clerk), Marshall Nienstedt (Principal/
ACJSHS), Dan Ackland (GES
Principal), Chrystal Wittman (Assistant
GES Principal), Angela Linn (Principal/
GRE and WES), Nicole Stevenson
(Curriculum Director) and Brett Linn
(Technology Director).
Others present: Daisy Reyes,
Nathan Reyes, Dr. Russell Miller
(KASB), Mark Powels, and Ron Bruce.
Call to order: 7:00 p.m. by Caylor
Recognitions: Angie Linn recognized Greeley and Westphalia staff,
Dan Ackland recognized Mr. Lollmans
efforts in the band program, Nicole
Stevenson recognized the teachers
efforts, Chrystal Wittman recognized
the reading and curriculum teachers,
Marshall recognized Steve Lyon,
Vestal Teeter, Phil LeVota and EMS
Staff, and Brett Linn recognized
Hayden Hermann.
Public Comment: None
Ordering and approval of agenda:
Motion to approve the agenda as
presented. Richards, Schafer. passed
6-0.
Consent Agenda: Motion to
approve the consent agenda. Martin,
Self, passed 6-0.
Approved minutes of August 1st
regular meeting.
Approved minutes of August 15th
special meeting.
Approved payment of claims.
Approved monthly treasurers
report.
Approved credit card statements.
Approved school activity fund
statements.
Budget transfers.
Action Item:
Motion to accept the grant award
of $50,000 from the ThrockmortonRiser Foundation to be used to support the Star Dawg program. Richards,
Martin, passed 6-0
Gina Witherspoon joined the meeting. 7:10pm.
Motion to recess the regular meeting and resume the regular meeting
at the end of the budget hearing.
Richards, Schafer. Passed 7-0
Motion to enter into the hearing on
exceeding the revenue neutral rate.
Caylor, Richards. Passed 7-0 7:15pm
Mark Powels, Daisy Reyes and Ron
Bruce address the Board of Education.
Motion to approve Resolution
23-24-16 to exceed the Revenue
Neutral Rate for the 2023-2024 school
district budget pursuant to K.S.A
79-2988. Caylor, Richards, passed
7-0. Roll Call Vote:
Richards yes
Self yes
Martin yes
Witherspoon yes
Schafer yes
Schilling yes
Caylor yes
Resolution 24-25-16 attached to
minutes.
Motion to close the exceeding the
revenue neutral rate hearing. Caylor,
Witherspoon. Passed 7-0
Motion to enter into the budget
hearing. Caylor, Richards. Passed 7-0
7:30pm.
Motion to close the 2024-2025
budget hearing. Caylor, Martin,
passed 7-0.
Motion the board of education
resume regular meeting. Caylor,
Martin, passed 7-0.
Action Item:
Motion: After consideration and
She understands the benefits that
come with staying close to home
for surgical care and recovery
and provides individualized
recommendations, giving comfort
and support every step of the way.
2×4
EKAE
Learn more
saintlukeskc.org/RegionalSurgery
785-204-8002
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, September 26, 2024
WYCOFF
DECEMBER 7, 1931 – SEPTEMBER 13, 2024
Jessie Kathrine Wycoff,
age 92 of San Antonio, Texas,
and formerly
of Garnett,
passed away
September
13th, 2024, at
the Personal
Care Home in
San Antonio.
She was born
December
Wycoff
7th,
1931,
in Garnett
to Allen Brown and Lavonna
Smith Brown. She graduated Garnett High School in
1949 and was married to Jess
Charles Wycoff in 1949.
Jessie was a stay-at-home
mom for five kids until her
youngest was in high school.
She then worked for Tandy
Corporation, in their Merribee
warehouse, then moved to
Tandy Leather and finally the
Sears Roebuck Store.
She loved oil painting,
ceramics, crochet, embroidery,
and sewing. She was a fan of
TCU football and watching her
daughter Kathy in the band at
halftime. She loved watching
golf and horse racing on TV.
She always tried to attend
Class of 1949 class reunions
and loved meeting with girl
classmates while she lived in
Garnett.
In later life her husband
Jess worked for the Anderson
County Review. They both
enjoyed going to casinos as well
as going to the many sales and
auctions in the Garnett area.
When her husband passed
away she returned to Ft. Worth
where she lived with her daughter Kathy. After Kathys death
she moved to San Antonio to
live with her son Jessie, Jr.
She was predeceased by her
husband Jess Wycoff, daughters Lavonna Grace Gadd,
Becky Sue Prescot, and Kathy
Ann Smith; both parents and
two brothers, Clyde Brown and
Eddie Brown.
She is survived by her
son Jessie Wycoff, Jr., of San
Antonio, son Tracey Wycoff of
Lake Worth, Texas, 12 grandchildren, 14 great-grandchildren and 9 great-great-grandchildren.
Services will be held
September 28, 2024, at 11
a.m. at the Central Christian
Church, 3205 Hamilton Ave in
Ft Worth, with a reception to
follow. Interment will be in the
Garnett Cemetery.
Wards family rule
Senior Center pitch
September 19th turned out
to be a family affair. Jan Wards
took top honor winning eight of
10 games; Ray Wards won the
50/50 and their son Kyle had
the most perfect hands of 13
points with two; and Mike Kilet
won the least number of games.
Come join us for 10 games
of 13-point pitch at the Senior
Center on Thursday evening
promptly at 6 o'clock to enjoy
cards and snacks.
Jan Wards reporting.
Colony Christian
Church 9/22 review
Pastor Chase Riebel spoke
from Joshua chapter 7. God
gave Joshua a mission to attack
Jericho and it was successful
because it was from God. When
Joshua went to attack the next
city it was not at God's command and so they were defeated because they had also disobeyed God.
Lexy Langworthy led worship
accompanied by Ben Prasko on
keyboard and Steve Prasko on
percussion. The songs were
"Great are You Lord," "How
Great Thou Art" and "10,000
Reasons."
Noah Gordon gave communion meditation on the Chinese
Historical Timeline. When
James Legge, a Scottish missionary to China in the 1800's,
was translating the Chinese
language he realized that their
word Shangdi referred to the
monotheistic Christian God.
Other Chinese characters represented Bible history. The
character for boat is represented by the words vessel and
eight and people. The character
for righteousness is represented by the word lamb over the
word me.
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3
OBITUARIES
What does it take to be a leader?
We are all looking for a leader. Whether it is the leader
of the nation, a business, or a
community leader. And the
more out of control things feel
the more we long for a leader
who can promise us hope and
security. When Jesus began
his ministry he brought a type
of leadership that was contrary
to the ruling majority. He
offered hope and security to
those who had no hope or security because the ruling leadership was concerned only with
their own welfare.
People in leadership used to
be defined by words like honesty, dependability, integrity.
These traits were evident in
politics, the workplace, schools
and the home. There was division as well but not to the extent
that unity was destroyed. Unity
is the one thing we lack today.
We have to ask to what can
this be attributed? If we dont
have unity the overriding characteristic you have selfishness.
Everything has become self.
This is one of the chief causes
of dissension in the home.
Offering the alternative of
selflessness Jesus got himself
crucified. There is no danger of being crucified today
by being selfless but there is
sure a chance you are going
WEEKLY DEVOTIONAL
BY DAVID BILDERBACK
to get run over. So where do
we start with realigning our
thinking? People have to see
that even though we may be
selfless that does not mean we
are weak. Quite the opposite
is true. Selflessness is strength
under control. There is nothing weak about a person who
acts with integrity, who cares
more about others than themselves, a person whose values
are different than those held by
the world.
In order to be this type of person it takes courage and conviction. Courage to face adversity and perhaps mistreatment.
Conviction that Jesus Christ is
the Son of the Living God, who
came to earth to die on a cross
for your sins and was raised
on the third day and ascended
into heaven. Once you have
courage and conviction trust
me you are selfless.
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4
Awarded more than 60 times for excellence in news, opinion and advertsing by
newspaper professionals across the country but our highest honor is your readership.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, September 26, 2024
OPINION
Of course Iran wants Kamala to win
The Iranians have made their choice in our
presidential election and, no surprise, it is
Kamala Harris.
After four years of reversing our policy of
maximum pressure and instead coddling Iran
and allowing them to enrich their economy with
oil sales and direct U.S. cash transfers, the Biden
administration has endeared itself to one of the
most anti-democratic regimes in the world.
The payback? A hack of the Trump campaign by
the Iranians fed directly to Biden-Harris campaign operatives.
Foreign meddling in our elections is nothing short of an attack on our democracy, yet
the Biden-Harris administration is once again
proving it is unequipped to defend America. By
favoring a weak response rather than one that
punishes our adversaries, they invite further
attacks and, if anything, threaten to undermine
the rights of the American people and our very
democracy.
The Democrats cast themselves as the supposed protectors of democracy? Perhaps more
accurately, they are the protectors of autocrats
and dictators.
Last week, the Office of the Director of
National Intelligence, Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI), and the Cybersecurity and
Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) released
a joint statement acknowledging that the Iranian
regime has been working to undermine former
President Trumps re-election campaign in several different ways.
This follows reports that China and Russia
have also been pushing their own influence
efforts affecting both national races and
down-ballot elections across the country.
This threat goes far beyond deep-fake videos and memes on X, and it is a bipartisan
issue. During the 2022 midterm elections, the
Chinese Communist Party sought to undermine
or support certain candidates on both sides of
the aisle depending on their policy positions
around China and Taiwan, and this same thing
is occurring in our current elections.
As Iran continues to wage war across the
Middle East against American interests, it is
focusing its efforts to ensure Harris and the
Democrats absurd policies of Iranian appeasement remain in the Oval Office even going so
far as to try and assassinate President Trump, as
well as former Trump officials.
The Kremlin, meanwhile, has developed a
sophisticated and deep network through which
to push its propaganda into every corner of the
American media. The real threat to our democracy is from these nefarious foreign actors, and
GUEST COMMENTARY
MIKE POMPEO FMR. U.S. SEC/STATE
it could come through much worse acts than a
few memes or mean tweets on the internet.
I saw these threats up close during the Trump
administrations tenure, and we responded to
them by taking actions that reinforced a model
of deterrence which kept Americans safe.
During my time as secretary of state, we shut
down the largest spy ring in American history
when we kicked the Chinese Communist Party
(CCP) out of their consulate in Houston, which
they had been using to coordinate massive levels
of industrial espionage and intellectual property
theft.
Confucius Institutes pushing CCP propaganda had proliferated on college campuses; we
responded by designating the organization that
ran them as a foreign mission, which led to the
closure of nearly every Confucius Institute in
America.
We didnt tolerate Irans attacks and influence peddling within America; we put maximum
pressure on the regime, nearly bankrupted it by
driving its oil exports down to around 400,000
barrels a day, and took out Qasem Soleimani, its
top general.
In short, we established deterrence with
Americas adversaries using every tool at our
disposal and made sure that our adversaries
understood no interference in our elections
would be tolerated or go without retribution.
Unfortunately, the Biden-Harris administration has proved unequal to the task of defending
America. Within months of them taking office,
Russian-aligned groups successfully attacked
the Colonial pipeline, which carries gas to communities all across the Southeastern United
States. Bidens response? He said that 16 potential sectors of our economy were off limits
while leaving many more open to future attacks.
SEE POMPEO ON PAGE 11
The Anderson County Reviews
PHONE FORUM
Record your comments on the topic of your choice
at (785) 448-2500. You do not need to leave your
name. Comments may be published anonymously.
Calls may be edited for publication or omitted.
I think I know now whats in my wallet. Its Big
Government. Vote for change.
Based on the yard signs Im seeing, Kamala
Harris will finish in third behind Donald Trump
and Garage Sales.
Just another example of the Democrat Party
all out war on working Americans. The Biden/
Harris Administration has mandated starting
January of next year that all new air conditioning systems for homes must use a new flammable coolant, making them extremely dangerous
and unaffordable.
In addition to the over 20 million illegals that
the Democrats have flooded into this country
with their open borders policy, Biden/Harris
are flying in hundreds of thousands more directly from their home countries like Haiti and
Abortion pills, Kamalas lies killed women in Georgia
Vice President Kamala Harris used her short
appearance in Atlanta Friday afternoon to falsely blame Georgias lifesaving pro-life law for
the deaths of at least two women. The untimely
passings of Amber Thurman, Candi Miller, and
their babies, however, had nothing to do with
the Peach States protections and everything to
do with Democrats and corporate medias dangerous abortion rhetoric.
ProPublica, an outlet known for doing
Democrats dirty work, resurfaced Thurmans
and Millers 2022 passings this week in an
attempt to vilify pro-life laws ahead of the 2024
election. The womens deaths were both the
direct result of a drug regimen responsible for
more than half of the nations abortions. Still,
ProPublica skipped past the sometimes fatal
complications and a significant number of emergency room visits associated with mifepristone
and misoprostol to insist that the women lost
their lives because they and the doctors responsible for treating them were scared out of it by
pro-lifers.
Shortly after the articles publication, Harris
posted a four-part statement to X falsely claiming Trump Abortion Bans prevent doctors
from providing basic medical care.
Women are bleeding out in parking lots,
turned away from emergency rooms, losing
their ability to ever have children again, she
wrote. Survivors of rape and incest are being
told they cannot make decisions about what
happens next to their bodies. And now women
are dying. These are the consequences of Donald
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
JORDAN BOYD THE FEDERALIST
Trumps actions.
According to an unnamed senior Harris campaign official, the Democrat will echo these
accusations about Trump many of which she
lobbed at him unchecked during the Sept. 10
presidential debate in her Friday speech.
States that limit when life in the womb can
be ended do not criminalize treatments for
spontaneous loss or complications like those
experienced by Thurman and Miller. In fact,
every single pro-life law including the one
in Georgia contains carveouts for abortion
procedures like dilation and curettage when
they are deemed necessary to save the life of the
woman.
Yet, Democrats, with the help of their media
allies like ProPublica, routinely assert that doctors are no longer permitted to treat complica-
tions, ectopic pregnancies, or miscarriages.
As SBA Pro-Life Americas State Policy
Director Katie Daniel noted in a press conference Friday before Harris speech, the exceptions built into red-state legislation limiting
abortion rarely changed from the laws preDobbs to the laws post-Dobbs.
The test used reasonable medical judgment in most states, good faith judgment in others is the test that was used before and is the
test thats used in many others, she said, noting
that physicians had no problems interpreting
those exceptions for years, but somehow, mysteriously two years ago, they stopped being
familiar with that test.
Harris, like many Democrats in recent years,
has made abortion a hallmark of her 2024 campaign. Shes tried multiple times on her short
time on the campaign trail to claim that Trump
has deceived voters by, as ABC News put it,
flip-flopping on signing federal abortion limits into law, even though the Republicans 2024
abortion platform explicitly states decisions
about ending life in the womb should be left up
to the states.
Its Harris extremism disguised as ambiguity, however, that is deceiving voters, who are
more pro-life than politicians and the media
credit them for.
Shes refused numerous times to say whether
she supports abortion through all nine months
of pregnancy and lied about the prevalence
SEE BOYD ON PAGE 5
Trump flame throwing masks the real problem in Springfield
In what ranks as one of the most memorable debate moments in recent history, Donald
Trump said that Haitian immigrants are eating
peoples pets in Springfield, Ohio.
No one has yet turned up evidence that this
is true, although there is an audio recording of
a man reporting that he witnessed four Haitian
immigrants absconding with geese from a local
pond.
Since everyone is always happy to see geese
go someplace else, this call hasnt made much
of an impression on the debate over Trumps
comments, which, true to form, were the most
incendiary thing he could say about Springfield.
Even if Tabby and Fido arent on the menu
in the small Ohio town, the fact remains that
a place with a population of 60,000 has seen an
influx of 15,000 to 20,000 Haitian immigrants
since 2020, making the new arrivals a wildly disproportionate share of the population in short
order.
Prior to this point, Springfield had nothing
to do with Haiti, and looking at the map, a town
located between Columbus and Dayton would be
one of the least likely places to have anything to
do with Haiti. It is very far from Little Haiti in
Miami, and it had no pre-existing Haitian population or an infrastructure to provide services to
Haitian Creole speakers.
No matter. Under the Biden administrations
open-handed immigration policies, every place
in the country has become subject to sudden,
disruptive demographic change. Weve seen it
in big cities, where Democratic mayors have
complained of the associated burdens, and now
we are seeing it in a small city. To match in
relative terms whats happened in Springfield,
more than 2 million migrants would have had
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
to arrive in New York City in the past several
years.
Numbers matter. No one would care if there
were 150 new Haitian migrants in Springfield
since 2020, or 1,500. But 15,000 is a different proposition. Quantity, as they say, has a quality all of
its own.
To be clear, Haitian immigrants (many permitted here legally under Biden policy) didnt
begin showing up in Springfield hoping to filch
unsuspecting domestic short hairs. Rather, they
were looking for work in a city that was seeing
something of an economic revival. Thats all
well and good, but people are more than cogs to
be plugged into warehouses or manufacturing
operations.
They come with families and with needs
for housing, health care and education. They
have pre-existing cultural predilections different from ours (Haiti and the United States are
very different places), and if they dont speak the
language, that makes everything even more difficult. Nor are resources unlimited. Health care
facilities, schools and the housing stock have all
been strained in Springfield.
The New York Times reports that consultations began to take three times as long at the
local community health center. The head of the
clinic told the paper: We lost productivity. We
had huge burnout of staff. It hired six Haitian
Creole speakers, and annual spending on translation services increased from $43,000 in 2020 to
$436,000.
The school district, according to the Times,
has had to hire two dozen new English-as-asecond-language instructors and several interpreters.
The city manager, Bryan Heck, wrote a letter to U.S. senators saying that the influx is
putting a significant strain on our resources
and ability to provide ample housing for all of
our residents. The Haitians also tend to be
poor drivers. Ohio Governor Mike DeWine has
pledged help from the state highway patrol.
News reports often dismiss the concerns of
residents as ill-informed or xenophobic. Their
complaints about the costs and disorder associated with the wave of immigration are legitimate, though, and the sense that the town has
undergone a large-scale change that no one was
consulted about is very real. Who signed up to
become a laboratory for Bidens experiment in
permitting Haitians to come to and stay in the
United States?
The cats and dogs may be safe and sound, but
all is not right in Springfield.
Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.
illegally granting them legal status and resettling them in poor working class small towns,
where the schools and social services are overwhelmed and the crime rate source and property taxes rage to fund all of them. If Democrats
win in November, eventually Garnett itself will
be targeted as Democrats turn this country into
a Third World hellhole.
Dane Hicks, you are a piece of work and your
newspaper editorials and news stories are an
embarrassment to your profession. I can tell
which articles you write without seeing your
name because they are sarcastic and condescending with your little added innuendos.
Your cutesy remarks are not needed to tell the
story. Last weeks editorial was the worst yet.
I think you need to do a little more research
before writing such a line of bull. Maybe come
November when your con man loses the election you wont be so full of yourself. Oh, and by
the way, your music sucks, so screw you Dane
Hicks.
I love that we do Cornstock in Garnett. Id like
to see a rock festival similar to this. There are
a lot of bands touring that I think would come
if you had something like this here. You would
have to start small but I know for a fact there
are lesser known bands around like Emporia,
Wichita, Pittsburg and Manhattan that would
do a festival like that here. Thank you.
Contact your elected leadership:
President Joseph Biden
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500
(202) 456-1111
Governor Laura Kelly
300 SW 10th Ave #241s,
Topeka, KS 66612
(785) 296-3232
email form:
www.governor.kansas.gov
Senator Roger Marshall
Russell Senate Office Building
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-4774
Senator Jerry Moran
2202 Rayburn House Office
Building
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-6521
3rd Dist. Congressman
Sharice Davids
1541 Longworth House Office Bldg.
Washington, D.C., 20515
(202) 225-2865
12 Dist. Sen. Caryn Tyson
300 SW 10th St. Rm 236-E
Topeka, Ks. 66612 (785) 296-6838
P.O. Box 191 Parker, Ks. 66072
(913) 898-2366
caryn.tyson@senate.ks.gov
9th Dist. Rep
Fred Gardner
State Capitol Room512-N
Topeka, KS 66612
Office: (785) 296-7451
fred.gardner@house.ks.gov
Congress shall make no law respecting
an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging
the freedom of speech, or of the press; or
the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a
redress of grievances.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, September 26, 2024
5
HISTORY
Dry ground halts digging Author Jim Heiman to discuss Whitcomb recognized
My digging days have
came to a halt. My last time
out was 7 Sept., a visit to my
new site.
This site is small and metal
detecting only. Upon arriving
at this site, I soon found out
the ground was so dry and
hard, it was like digging thru
concrete. Almost impossible
to metal detect. I couldnt get
any ground penetration with
my dectector and if I found a
target, I had to chip it out. As
you can see I did manage to
find these four artifacts in 1
1/2 hours.
So until we get some good
soaking rain, I guess Ill just
sit and complain.
#1 – A really nice two hole
mother-of-pearl button. I
found it on the surface in a
small washed out area.
#1
DIGGING UP THE PAST
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 504-4722 for
local archeology information.
#2 – Really nice example of
a slate pencil. Found on the
surface not far from the button.
#3 – An old square nail,
minus its point. (Dug up)
#4 – Iron harness buckle.
(Dug up)
Respectfully submitted by:
Henry Roeckers. 16Sept2024
#3
book at Richmond Museum
The name Otto Higgins was
well-known in the Kansas
City area when he reported on
World War I for the Kansas
City Star, returned home
to write stories about Harry
Truman, Tom Pendergast others, and eventually became the
citys chief of police.
But what happened next
was nearly unbelievable!
Higgins life will be discussed
by author Jim Heiman at
the Richmond Community
Museum on Sunday, October
6th at 2 oclock. His book about
Higgins is FRONT LINES to
HEADLINES and covers the
1910s through the 1930s.
Since theres no Chiefs game
that day, youll have time to
come early to the Museum to
browse through the displays.
Then, Heimans PowerPoint
presentation will tell some
things about Kansas City
youve probably never heard.
The Richmond Museum
is closed for the winter but
will open anytime on request.
Its a good meeting place for
for KDOT service
Roy Whitcomb of Kincaid
was recently recognized
by the Kansas Department
of Transportation for 20
years with the department.
Whitcomb is a Highway
RECORDS…
FROM PAGE 2
and/or services.
ANDERSON COUNTY CRIMINAL
CASES FILED
Jeremy D Lankard was charged
with criminal possession of a weapon
by a felon and theft.
small groups who can then tour
the museum. Youre encouraged to go to the Richmond
Community Museum Facebook
and read the fascinating stories
posted by Dennis Peters.
Note the date of Heimans
program is changed from one
published earlier. Just as a
reminder, it is now October
6th.
BOYD…
FROM PAGE 4
#2
of late-term abortions. Harris
has long lamented life-saving
laws and even co-sponsored
the original version of the
Womens Health Protection
Act, which seeks to codify
abortion through birth. Shes
even called the pills that
caused Thurman and Millers
deaths safe and effective.
#3
Harris radical abortion rhetoric is tricking women everywhere into believing pro-lif-
ers are gatekeeping maternal
care. Because of her lies,
women like Thurman and
Miller believe the abortion
pills made even more readily available to them under
the Biden administrations
expansions will do them no
harm. In reality, the pills can
cost them their lives.
Jordan Boyd is a staff writer at The Federalist and producer of The Federalist Radio
Hour. Follow her on X @jordanboydtx.
Please dont eat the newspaper. You name it,
Business Cards Car Magnets
Project Bid Forms More!
Read it instead.
Subscribe today by calling (785) 448-3121
or email admin@garnett-ks.com.
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ANDERSON COUNTY TRAFFIC
CASES FILED
Edin Alexander Ferrera Hernandez
was charged with speeding 90 mph in
a 65 mph zone and operating a motor
vehicle without a valid license.
ANDERSON COUNTY CIVIL
CASES FILED
Discover Bank has filed suit against
Jacob A Hollman in the amount of
$1,949.36 for unpaid credit card bill.
ANDERSON COUNTY ACCIDENT
REPORTS FILED
On August 15, a vehicle driven by
Jami Lee Ann Slyter, Garnett, was
traveling east on Hwy 59 when she
noticed smoke coming from under the
hood.
On August 18, a vehicle driven by
Davion J Harris, Shawnee, was driving south on Hwy 169 in the area of
1100 Rd when the vehicle hit a deer.
On August 20, a vehicle driven by
Brecken Nichole Collins, Chanute,
was eastbound on K58 Hwy approximately 1/2 mile west of Colorado Rd
when the vehicle struck a deer that
was attempting to cross the highway.
On August 24, a vehicle driven by
Dominic John Tanner, Osawatomie,
was southbound on Texas Rd when
as the road turns to gravel the driver
lost control and went into the east
ditch.
On August 27, a vehicle driven
by Robert A Demaranville, Mound
City, was northbound on Nebraska Rd
approximately 1/4 mile south of Hwy
169 when he struck a vehicle driven
by Leonard I Davison, Garnett, which
was parked partly in the roadway due
to mechanical issues, in the rear.
On August 28, a vehicle driven by
Marsha L Hirt, Garnett, was traveling
west on Hwy 31 when a deer entered
the roadway and was struck.
On August 29, a vehicle driven
by Makenzie Paige Howey, Garnett,
was traveling north on 59 Hwy
when she was struck on the drivers
Maintenance Supervisor with
KDOT.
Whitcomb was among 18
KDOT workers recently recognized for service terms
between 10 and 35 years.
side by a vehicle driven by Dalton
James Turner, Garnett, while he was
attempting to pass. The collision
occured 1 mile north of Homerun Dr
near Garnett Elementary School.
On September 3, a vehicle driven
by Bo David Miller, Garnett, was traveling east on 1400 Rd when a deer
entered the roadway and was struck
by the car.
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL ROSTER
(as of August 21, 2024)
Joseph Wilper was booked into jail
on October 20, 2023.
Chester Casida was booked into
jail on April 5, 2024.
Kevin Labelle was booked into jail
on April 25, 2024.
Joshua Caddell was booked into
jail on May 12, 2024.
Christopher Mosley was booked
into jail on May 22, 2024.
Shawn Harris was booked into jail
on May 23, 2024.
Lee Roberts was booked into jail
on June 24, 2024.
Jason Boothe was booked into jail
on June 26, 2024.
Chad Kammerer was booked into
jail on July 5, 2024.
Stuart Wieland was booked into jail
on July 21, 2024.
William Vendenberg was booked
into jail on July 25, 2024.
Ryan Brown was booked into jail
on August 12, 2024.
James Chambers was booked into
jail on August 15, 2024.
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL FARM-INS
(as of August 21, 2024)
Jason Marnell was booked into jail
on February 23, 2024.
Julio Guzman was booked into jail
on May 21, 2024.
Dawson Paine was booked into jail
on June 3, 2024.
James Baber was booked into jail
on June 27, 2024.
Rhonda Nicandor was booked into
jail on July 22, 2024.
Amelia Murtagh was booked into
jail on July 22, 2024.
Sarah Crawford was booked into
jail on July 24, 2024.
Timothy Brown was booked into jail
on July 26, 2024.
Destiny Peters was booked into jail
on August 5, 2024.
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Service Sales Installation Repairs
Garage Doors & Openers
242 E. 5th, Garnett
(785) 248-9800
albrandes@alsdoorcompany.com
6
LOCAL
Corn harvest good, but prices ugly
Corn harvest is ramping up
across Kansas and while every
field will be different, reports
from across the state range
from better than expected to
a great crop. Prices, however,
are just ugly. As the calendar
marches toward October, soybean harvest and wheat planting will make already crowded
schedules even busier.
In Finney County, Kyle
Deaver had started shelling
dryland corn. Irrigated fields
are still ripening but soybeans
are getting close to being harvest ready. Rain showers were
a welcome benefit last week
that will help with wheat planting.
Deaver believes the corn
crop in his area will have a
solid, average year, but its a
lower price than Id like to see,
he says. Corn prices have been
trending down since topping $8
a bushel in 2022, and theyve
fallen about 60 cents a bushel
since the beginning of the year.
Its now hovering just above $4
as harvest rolls though Kansas.
On the eastern side of the
state, Ottawa Coops Waverly
location manager Mike Beying
said a rain would still help
soybeans in the field and hed
welcome a slowdown in corn
harvest to free up some more
storage.
Space is tight, he says.
KANSAS COMMENTARY
GREG DOERING, KANSAS FARM BUREAU
When the corn is coming, its
coming fast.
Beying says his location has
received corn from four counties so far, and some of those
loads were around 250 bushels
per acre, significantly above
the usual target of 130 to 140
bushels per acre for the area.
Well be above that average
in a lot of places, Beying says.
It just depends on where the
rain happened to fall.
The rain didnt fall on the
fields of Marion County farmer
Nick Peters. He reported there
was no measurable rain in his
area from July 3 to Aug. 13. For
the second straight year, a lack
of moisture meant the corn
died early and Peters finished
up harvest earlier than usual.
If there had been any type
of moisture then it could have
really made a difference,
he says. It was better than
last year. It wasnt our best
crop, but it was better than
we thought it was going to be.
Considering all the factors,
were happy.
Peters says hes staying
busy with spraying and waiting for soybeans to dry down
for harvest. Hes hopeful for
some moisture to help with
wheat drilling and to give a
boost to his double crop beans.
Prices are a little rough
right now, Peters says.
Overall, we definitely could
be worse off. Well survive and
advance.
The eternal optimism of
farmers never ceases to amaze
me. A better than expected harvest after six weeks of no rain
isnt easy to deal with. And the
excitement from a bumper crop
is still dampened by low prices. Its a testament to the faith
growers have in the weather,
markets and their own ability
to look beyond todays results
and believe tomorrows will
be better. Whether corn harvest is just starting or already
wrapped up, one things for certain. Theres always next year.
"Insight" is a weekly column
published by Kansas Farm
Bureau, the state's largest farm
organization whose mission is
to strengthen agriculture and
the lives of Kansans through
advocacy, education and service.
Advertise.
Call (785) 448-3121 or email review@garnett-ks.com
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, September 26, 2024
Ed Britton Memorial Optimist
Scholarship application available
Applications are now available for the Ed Britton Memorial
Optimist Scholarship. The $500
scholarship is awarded annually to an upper-level college
student. The requirements
for applicants include the following: 1) be a graduate from
high school in USD 365; 2) have
completed at least 60 semester
Goal Busters
met on 9/9
Princeton Goal Busters
4-H Club met on September
9th, 2024 at The Princeton
Community Building.
The roll call was What is
one thing that you learned in
4-H this year?. The roll call
was answered by 10 members.
There was also 1 leader. There
were also 6 parents present.
On October 1st the club will be
participating in enrolling for
the new 4-H year.
For the programs Jotham
Meyer and Karlie Stinebaugh
did a talk on Citizen
Washington Focus (CWF).
Josiah Meyer did a talk on
How to Make Zucchini Bread.
Elizabeth Meyer did a talk
on the 4-H Horse Panorama.
Branson Saylor did a talk on
how you can do anything in
the Self-Determined project.
Gibson Sayler did a talk on
printing art. Refreshments
were served by The Saylers.
hours of course work at the
time of application in a recognized four-year university and/
or junior college; 3) be carrying
at least 12 hours per semester
during the scholarship year;
and 4) have a minimum grade
point average of 2.5 during the
most recent thirty hours of
study. Application forms may
be picked up at area banks and
the USD 365 District Office.
The due date for applications
is November 1, 2024. Anyone
having questions concerning
the scholarship should contact
Kenny Kellstadt at 448-6261 or
Stacey Hedges at 448-4443. If
an electronic application is preferred, contact Stacey Hedges.
community
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, September 26, 2024
Garnett Pharmacist, Casey Smith,
PharmD, awarded Pharmacy
2024 Preceptor of the Year
CALENDAR
Thursday, September 26, 2024
2:00 p.m. – Emergency Food
Assistance Program (Harvesters)
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – 13-Point Pitch & Snacks
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Friday, September 27, 2024
8:45 a.m – AM Yoga
Monday, September 30, 2024
8:00 a.m. – Movement Mondays Fitness Court
8:45 a.m – AM Yoga
9:00 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission Meeting
5:30 p.m. – TOPS Meeting
6:00 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery
6:00 p.m. – Hot Yoga with Jenelle
Tuesday, October 1, 2024
10:00 a.m. – Storytime For
Preschoolers
12:00 p.m. – Rotary International
Club Meeting
5:30 p.m. – Garnett Community
Foundation Board Meeting
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:30 p.m. – American Legion Bingo
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Wednesday, October 2, 2024
8:45 a.m – AM Yoga
1:00 p.m. – Duplicate Bridge
3:30 p.m. – Tinkering & Tech hosted
by the Garnett Public Library
5:30 p.m. – Bulldog Booster Club
Meeting
5:30 p.m. – Garnett Elementary Site
Council
5:30 p.m. – Zumba Class
6:00 p.m. – GES PTO Meeting
7:00 p.m. – Colony Lions Club
Meeting
7:00 p.m. – Kincaid Lions Club
Meeting
Thursday, October 3, 2024
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – 13-Point Pitch & Snacks
6:30 p.m. – USD 365 Endowment
Association
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
7:00 p.m. – USD 365 Board of
Education Meeting
7
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 09-26-2024 / SUBMITTED
Tracy Modlin, president of the Lake Garnett Grand Prix Revival, presented a check from the Garnett
Community Foundation for the LGGPR donation fundraising efforts in the amount of $90,428.60 to the
Garnett City Commission to go towards the lake road project. The resurfacing was completed Tuesday.
Worlds Fair Remnants in Kansas presentation
by Four Winds, DAR and Humanities Kansas
Please join the Four Winds
Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution and the
Humanities Kansas with the
informative
presentation,
the World's Fair Remnants in
Kansas, by Thomas Prasch.
Thomas is a professor and
chairs the history department
at Washburn University.
This special event will be
on Saturday, October 5, 2024 at
10:30 a.m. in the Archer Room
of the Garnett City Library. The
address for the Garnett Library
is, 125 W 4th Ave, Garnett, KS
66032. Any questions call Donna
Roberts, 913-271-4230.
Ice
cream
cones. Ferris
wheels. Hot
dogs. Cotton
candy.
All
these
iconic
items
were
first
introduced
Prasch at
world's
fairs held in
America. The very first international exposition, known
commonly as a worlds fair,
launched in London in 1851 at
the Crystal Palace. Since then,
innovations in architecture,
engineering, foods, and futur-
6x12ACHS Homecoming
istic visions have debuted at
fairs across the globe, including ones held in the United
States. Oftentimes lasting legacies remained, such as Seattles
Space Needle, Forest Park in
St. Louis, and the US Open site
in New York. Surprisingly,
Kansas, which has never hosted
an international exhibition, is
home to at least four striking
legacies of significant worlds
fairs. This talk will share the
history and significance of international exhibitions worldwide
and focus on the wonders held
today in the towns of Lawrence,
Lindsborg, and Wamego.
A u B u r n
P h a r m a c y
is excited to
announce that
Garnett pharmacist, Casey
Smith, PharmD,
has been honored with the
prestigious
Preceptor of the
Year Award for
2024 in Retail
Pharmacy
by
the University
of
Kansas
(KU) School of
Pharmacy. This
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 09-26-2024 / SUBMITTED
esteemed recognition is award- Casey Smith, left, is pictured alongside Logan
ed to only four Miner who just graduated from University of
preceptors out Kansas School of Pharmacy and who will be
of a pool of 1,200, joining the AuBurn Team.
underscoring
Caseys exceptional contributions and impact on the next been an invaluable resource
generation of pharmacists.
for students, providing guidThe Preceptor of the Year ance, knowledge, and practiAward is a significant acco- cal experience in the realm of
lade, voted on by graduating retail pharmacy. His ability to
pharmacy students who have combine clinical expertise with
experienced firsthand the ded- a supportive teaching approach
ication and excellence of their has earned him the admiration
preceptors. Casey has demon- and respect of both students
strated outstanding mentor- and colleagues alike.
ship, commitment to student
The Preceptor of the Year
development, and a profound Award highlights the critical
impact on the education of role that preceptors play in
future pharmacists.
shaping the future of pharmacy
Casey remarked on his practice. By providing excepaccolade, stating I am very tional mentorship and fosterhumbled to even be nominated ing a learning environment
for such an award and have that bridges academic and
absolutely loved teaching all of practical knowledge, Casey has
our students that pass through set a high standard for excelGarnett.
lence in the profession.
Throughout his tenure at
AuBurn Pharmacy, Casey has
8
CORNSTOCK
Saturday,
September
28th
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, September 26, 2024
– Cornstock 2024 –
On the Hill
at Lake
Garnett
Park
Dylan Scott to headline 2024 Cornstock
Curb Records recording artist Dylan Scott is a triple threat
a powerful vocalist with a
deep, unmistakable drawl;
an old-soul songwriter with
a young spirit; and a family
man with a tender heart. The
ACM-nominated, multi-Platinum singer has notched four
No. 1 singles at radio (My
Girl, Nobody, New Truck,
and Cant Have Mine), as
well as Top 5 hit Hooked.
Following his first career
nomination for Best New
Country Artist at the all-genre
iHeartRadio Music Awards
and a coveted spot among
Country Radio Seminars New
Faces of Country Music, his
Platinum-certified ode to his
wife, Nobody, earned him
a 2021 CMT Music Award for
Breakthrough Video of the
Year. Dylan presented the CMT
Breakthrough Video of the
Year Award at the 2022 CMT
Music Awards on CBS. Scott
earned a 2023 ACM nomination in the category, New Male
Artist of the Year. Alongside
Jason Crabb, Scott won his
first GMA Dove Award in 2023
for the song, Good Morning
Mercy. With career streams
exceeding 2.5 billion, the
Louisiana native has provided
tour support for Garth Brooks,
Luke Bryan, and Chris Young,
among others, cementing him
as an in-demand live act. Livin
My Best Life, the latest album
from Scott, features fiery, #1
lead single New Truck; along
with viral TikTok ballad, RIAA
Certified Platinum, #1 radio
single, Cant Have Mine (Find
You A Girl).
Come & enjoy the
2×3
Anderson
County Cornstock!
Beachner Grain
FATHER
energetic
WDQGUHD
the fun. M
2×5
state farm
DEPENDABLE and
KNOWLEDGEABLE
agent seeks customers
looking for real
PROTECTION and long
term RELATIONSHIP.
ADVENT
seeks adv
be employ
Especially
tuxedo ca
answered
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GRANO
LOVING
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SINGLE, ARTSY LADY SEEKS
SINGLE ARTSY GUY. If you love
painting, decorating, baking and knitting,
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
We look forward to
2×3
seeing you at Cornstock 2024!
Farmers State
Bank
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.
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
Have fun
at the show!
2×2
D&M Mini Barn
www.fsbkansas.com
(785) 504-9625
24751 N Highway 169, Garnett
www.dmminibarns.com
Thanks for supporting
Cornstock 2024!
Please be safe and responsible as you enjoy the
event, and dont forget to say thanks
to the organizers, workers and sponsors.
Come have fun
2×3 Cornstock!
at
Maple
StopSt.
by and see us
for
all your pre-party needs.
Liquor
2×2
Yutzy
Come on out and
support this amazing
event celebrating our
agriculture heritage! www.yutzyconstruction.com
1-800-823-8609
2×3
Brummel Farm
Corporate Concert Sponsor
2×3
Cornstock 2024
GSSB
Hope to see you
at Cornstock!
2×3
6th Ave
Come see whats
new for fall and
pick out a new outfit
for Cornstock.
6th Ave Boutique & Western Wear
Hours : Mon. – Fri. 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. Sat. 10 a.m. – 3 p.m.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, September 26, 2024
Saturday,
September
28th
CORNSTOCK
– Cornstock 2024 –
9
On the Hill
at Lake
Garnett
Park
Stoney LaRue hits the Cornstock stage
Throw away any preconceived notions you might
have about country singers
especially ones from Texas
because Stoney LaRue smashes
them all. Over a nearly 20-year
career, the Lone Star-born and
Oklahoma-raised LaRue has
transformed himself into an
unlikely Renaissance man. He
is a deft songwriter, informed
traveler and self-aware philosopher, a troubadour who
converses just as easily about
Indian yogis and gurus as he
does about Texas barbecue
and dance halls. LaRue highlights all facets of his complex
persona on the inspiring new
album Onward.
The title itself is reflective of
his outlook on life if LaRue
has a mantra these days, its
keep moving forward. His
first album since 2015s Us
Time, Onward captures the
husky-voiced singer looking
not only ahead, but inward.
This is a man unflinchingly
shining a light into some dark,
uncomfortable corners of his
psyche and bettering himself
in the process.
You want to test your bones
and see where they break,
he says, dropping one of the
many bon mots that pepper
his conversation. This record
is wading through all the mud
and storms to hopefully come
out on the other side with a
wisdom that you didnt have
before. Its a brighter way to
look at things.
Before there can be redemption, though, there must be a
conflict, and LaRue dives into
that head-first in the album
opener Fallin and Flyin.
One of 10 songs co-written
by Onwards producer Gary
Nicholson, the track was
famously performed by Jeff
Bridges in the 2009 country
music drama Crazy Heart. In
LaRues hands, its a humble
admission, part of his journey
toward self-improvement. I
never meant to hurt no one/I
just had to have my way/if
theres such a thing as too
much fun/this must be the
price you pay, he sings.
Likewise, he lays bare his
soul in You Oughta Know
Me by Now, a song that
Nicholson and his co-writer
Shawn Camp wrote especially
for LaRue. While its framed
around a mans shortcomings and bad habits, it also
conveys a precious honesty,
like much of the vulnerable
Onward does. Gary told me,
Youre getting a chance with
this album to show people
who you truly are, LaRue
says. It might be too blatant
90s country star Pam Tillis
to perform at Cornstock
for some people, but if youre
that blatantly honest, thats a
direct path to someones spirit, you know?
Forging connections with
his fans is paramount for
LaRue, who plays more than
200 live shows a year. His
base is a fiercely loyal one,
and not just within the Red
Dirt region. He regularly tours
throughout the entire country
and has fans in some unexpected places. Chalk up his
mass appeal to the way he
sells his songs both onstage
and on record to listen to
LaRue sing the nostalgic, Bob
Seger-esque Drowning in
Moonlight on Onward is to
hear someone with whom you
share an experience.
I thought that song would
be something thats very relatable. You want to think about
your first kiss overlooking the
city with the top down, he
says. Theres something so
sexy and romantic about that
song. Its dark, but its light at
the same time.
LaRue further explores
that idea on Meet Me in the
Middle, a gritty duet about
compromise with the legendary Tanya Tucker. Its about
the idea of reciprocity in a
relationship, of yin and yang.
You want to think that everythings supposed to be equal
and find the balance, but it
never turns out that way,
does it? Its always a shift of
power, he says.
While the bulk of Onward
exists in that musical sweet
spot of rock and twang for
which LaRue has become
known, a pair of songs evokes
a more Dixieland vibe. Evil
Angel, featuring the magnif-
Local group Clevermax
has been reborn and
kicking off Cornstock
Clevermax was born in the
heartland of Kansas. Raised on
cheerios, rock and roll, KY-102,
and 61 Country. They have
spun phonographs, plugged in
8 track tapes, and popped in
cassettes, all while watching
their TVs go from 13 black
and white screens to 85 High
Definition.
Theyve entertained hippies,
cowboys, baby boomers, millennials, the Me generation,
and everyone in between.
Their love is great music,
and passion is playing it and
have the belief music has no
genre.
Clevermax was started by
high school best buddies, Dave
Bailey and Larry Burkdoll
back in the early 1980s. They
rocked hangar parties where
the local kids would come from
miles around to hear the band.
As the years went by and life
began to happen, Clevermax
took a backseat to wives, kids,
and families. However, a resurrection was always in the
works and Clevermax came
back to life several times over
the next 30 years with occasional appearances in eastern
Kansas.
Finally, after decades of
being on hiatus, Clevermax
is back and running at 100%
capacity rocking the stage like
icent McCrary Sisters on gospel vocals, is a jaunty barroom
piano sing-along, and Worry
Be Gone a Nicholson song
written with Guy Clark and
Lee Roy Parnell is a New
Orleans ode to saying to hell
with it all and sparking one up.
We got trouble with the air,
we got trouble with the water/
and people aint treating one
another like they oughta/give
me just one more puff of that
worry be gone, LaRue sings.
Its all going on around
us from politics to religion
and we think about those
things so much that we dont
want to be a part of it, says
LaRue. As my grandpa used
to say, Dont sweat the petty
stuff and dont pet the sweaty
stuff.
LaRue pays tribute to his
grandparents on Onward by
cutting their favorite song:
Merle Haggards Lets Chase
Each Other Around the
Room. They used to dance
and drink homemade wine
and put on the record, he
recalls. Of course, us boys
would be in there on the piano
and the guitars and whatever
we could find to make noise
with. Wed be just smiling at
them, having a blast in their
late ages whenever they still
could.
Its a faithful version of the
Haggard and Freddy Powers
tune, but one that LaRue still
manages to push to the fringe
by increasing the tempo and
swagger.
Even on the requisite declaration of Texan pride, Hill
Country Boogaloo, he taps
into nontraditional country
funk and forgoes lyrical tropes
in favor of fresh allusions.
Everybody throws in
Shiner Bock or a Texas
wind in songs about Texas,
but theyre not being specific. Theres too many generalities, he says. Its an homage
really. I figured that Ive been
so serious my whole life, lets
take the paint off, see what it
looks like bare board and have
fun.
For LaRue, who has sold
more than one million albums
and singles in his career, fun
means being on the road and
playing live, tapping into a
vast catalogue that includes
influential LPs like 2005s The
Red Dirt Album and his exhilarating 2007 live document Live
at Billy Bobs Texas. Now, hes
excited about taking Onward
to fans around the country and
reminding them that not only
is he still here, he isnt going
anywhere.
You have to be willing to
live it. Thats the only way to
make it, and the way that Ive
made it, says LaRue of his
remarkable longevity. But
Im not haphazard in what Im
writing or singing anymore.
Im more focused and looking ahead to what I want to
achieve.
In other words, Stoney
LaRue is looking Onward.
2×3
ValleyBring
R your family and
never before. Folks that have
followed the band from its
inception say this version of
Clevermax is the best EVER!
3×5
EKAE
help make Cornstock a success!
As the daughter of Country
Music Royalty, Pam Tillis was
determined from a young age
to find her own way in music
as a singer and songwriter.
After many false starts with
her own recording career,
including a pop single on
Elektra and 1984s Above And
Beyond The Doll Of Cutey for
Warner Brothers, Tillis came
to the attention of Tim Dubois
who headed up the Nashville
office of Arista records. After
much soul searching, Tillis
made the commitment to make
an honest country record. The
album Put Yourself In My
Place yielded 2 number ones,
2 top five singles, and one top
twenty hits and in its first year
the album was certified gold.
Tillis followed with 3 platinum
albums on Arista Homeward
Looking Angel in 1992,
Sweethearts Dance in 1994
and an Arista Greatest Hits
in 1997. Tillis achieved 6 number 1 songs during this time
including Shake the Sugar
Tree, Mi Vida Loca, When
You Walk In The Room, In
Between Dances Dont Tell
Me What To Do and Maybe
It Was Memphis while 14 of
Pams other singles landed in
the top ten and top twenty.
Pam Tillis fell in love with
music at an early age. Band,
chorus, talent shows, church
and the creative community of
Nashville all helped to shape
the young singer. Growing
up, Pam was in a variety of
bands, spanning from jazz and
alternative country to top 40.
She sang demos and lent her
voice to many national jingles including Coke, Country
Time Lemonade and a Coors
Silver Bullet with country
superstar, Alan Jackson. At
the same time, Tillis worked
as a staff writer for Elektra
Asylum Publishing and later
took a job writing for Warner
Brothers Publishing, which
resulted in her songs being
recorded by some of the biggest
names throughout all genres
of music, including artists like
Chaka Khan, Juice Newton,
Dan Seals, Gloria Gaynor,
Conway Twitty and the top ten
Someone Elses Trouble Now
for Highway 101.
Pam has performed on the
stages of Broadway in New
York, modeled on the pages
of Glamour Magazine and is a
proud member of The Grand
Ole Opry. Some of Pams most
memorable award moments
are being a 3-time CMA award
winner including the prestigious 1994s Female Vocalist
Of The Year Award, and being
nominated multiple times
for Grammys Best Female
Country Vocal Performance
in 1993 for Maybe It Was
Memphis, in 1996 for Mi Vida
Loca and in 1998 for All The
Good Ones Are Gone. Pam
is also proud to be a 9-time
Academy of Country Music
Award nominee, a 2-time
Grammy award winner and
6-time Grammy nominee, and
an American Music Awards
nominee. Most recently, Pam
has celebrated an IBMA award
win in 2004 for Recorded Event
Of The Year Livin Lovin
Losin and most recently a 2012
IBMA Song Of The Year nomination for co-writing, Dale Ann
Bradleys Somewhere South
Of Crazy.
Though Pam has rolled easily with the tides and has drawn
something from every new
twist the ever-changing country music world has shown
her, Pam Tillis has always
insisted on writing and cutting
songs that speak from the soul.
The results have been records
that emanate an almost painful beauty. With more than
30 singles charting on US
Billboard charts, 10 studio
albums including her favorite,
the critically acclaimed 2002
Its All Relative (a tribute
to her father, the great Mel
Tillis), and 3 other releases
Rhinestoned, Recollection
and Just In Time For
Christmas off her own label,
Stellar Cat Records. In 2012
Red River Entertainment
released Dos Divas a Country
Duo album with fellow superstar Lorrie Morgan under the
name Grits and Glamour.
Whether its on the elaborate stages of the Grand Ole
Opry or in the intimate setting of Nashvilles Bluebird
Cafe, you will experience that
feeling of delight that comes
from Pam Tillis singing exactly what she is meant to sing at
that moment.
Pam Tillis star continues
to shine brightly in the 3rd
decade of her career and is
currently touring extensively
on her own as well as with
her Grits And Glamour tour
partner, country star, Lorrie
Morgan.
Proud
2×3 Sponsor of Cornstock.
Come
and have a great
Tom
Adams
time at the concert!
Tom Adams Construction
(785) 448-3997
Residential Commercial Municipal
We welcome you to
join us for the fun
and celebration
at Cornstock
this Saturday!
Enjoy the Fun & Music
2×2
at Cornstock this Saturday!
ACR
112 W. 6th Ave. Garnett (785) 448-3121
10
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, September 26, 2024
LOCAL
Public Notice
Notice of suit – Metcalfe vs Shelley, Funk, Etc.
(First published in The Anderson County Review,
Thursday, September 26, 2024.)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
CRYSTAL METCALFE and JUSTIN METCALFE,
Plaintiffs,
vs
KAY SHELLEY, a/k/a LINDA KAY SHELLEY;
HARRY S. FUNK III; CONNIE J. FUNK; FORD
MOTOR CREDIT COMPANY; FORD MOTOR
CREDIT COMPANY, LLC; the unknown spouses
of them, and any of them; and the heirs, administrators, executors, devisees, trustees, creditors
and assigns of such of them as are or may
be deceased; and, the unknown successors,
assigns, creditors, receivers or other like agents
of such; and if such be a corporation and said
corporation or other company or entity, or any
successor be dormant, then the officers and
directors of any such corporate defendants as
have become or are dormant; and, with respect
to any such officers and directors as may be
married, the unknown spouses of them and the
heirs, administrators, executors, devisees, trustees, creditors and assigns of such of them as are
or may be deceased; and the unknown guardians,
conservators trustees or other like representatives
of such of the defendants as are minors or are in
any wise under legal disability,
Defendants.
Case #AN-2024-CV-000027
NOTICE OF SUIT
The state of Kansas to each of the above and
within named defendants and to all other persons
who are or may be concerned:
the owner in fee simple absolute of the real estate
described in said petition; that the court require all
of the defendants herein named, individually and
and by class, and each of them, to come into court
and disclose the precise nature of any claim which
they have, or which they may have, or which they
pretend to have in said real estate; that the court
proceed to determine such adverse claims; and
that plaintiffs title to said real estate be quieted as
against said defendants, and that defendants and
all persons claiming by, through or under them, or
any of them, be forever barred and excluded from
any estate or interest, right, title, lien, claim or
other estate in or against said real estate; and for
other relief as more particularly specified in said
petition.
You and each of you are hereby required to
plead to the petition on or before the 7th day of
November 2024, in the above court at Garnett,
Kansas. If you fail to plead, judgment and decree
will be entered in due course upon said petition.
CRYSTAL METCALFE and
JUSTIN METCALFE
Plaintiffs
TERRY J. SOLANDER #7280
503 S. Oak St. P.O. Box 348
Garnett, KS 66032-0348
785-448-6131; FAX: 785448-2475
solander@embarqmail.com
Attorney for Plaintiffs
sp26t3*
You and each of you are hereby notified that
a petition has been filed in the above-named court
by plaintiffs praying that they be adjudged to be
Notice of annual meeting for the Anderson County Fair Board
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Thursday, September 19, 2024.)
PUBLIC NOTICE
ANNUAL MEETING ANDERSON
COUNTY FAIR BOARD
PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given in accordance
with Anderson County Fair Board Constitution
and By-Laws, that on Monday, October 7, 2024,
in the meeting room at the Frontier District
Office, 411 S. Oak, Garnett, KS 66032, beginning at 7:00 p.m., the members of the Anderson
County Fair Board shall meet for the purpose of
electing three members to the board.
Kirby Barnes
President
Anderson County Fair Board
sp19t2*
Notice of hearing – Carpenter Estate
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Thursday, September 19, 2024.)
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS
CONCERNED:
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
On this day, it is ordered that the Petition to
Close Estate filed by Marie-Eve Carpenter
in the Estate of Michael Lee Carpenter,
deceased, be set for hearing on October 16,
2024, at 9:00 o'clock A.M. by the Court in
Anderson County, Kansas, and that notice of
the time and place of hearing shall be given
pursuant to K.S.A. 59-2209.
/s/Marie-Eve Carpenter
In the Matter of the Estate of
Michael Lee Carpenter, Deceased
Case No. AN 24 PR 3
Petition Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 59
NOTICE OF HEARING
Marie-Eve Carpenter, Petitioner
/s/ R. Scott Ryburn
R. Scott Ryburn, #12690
ANDERSON & BYRD, LLP
216 S. Hickory ~ P. O. Box 17
Ottawa, Kansas 66067
(785) 242-1234, telephone
(785) 242-1279, facsimile
sryburn@andersonbyrd.com
Attorneys for Petitioner
sp19t3*
The Anderson County Review is the official newspaper of
record for Anderson County, The City of Garnett, USD 365,
and the other incorporated cities in Anderson County.
Notices published here meet all required
statutory legal parameters.
DID YOU
KNOW?
The Anderson
County Review is
the longest
continuously
operating
business in
Anderson County,
founded in 1865?
FLY-IN
BREAKFAST
2×4
Drive or fly, come out to
enjoy pancakes and planes!
Pancakes, sausage,
coffee & juice.
$5 suggested
donation for
breakfast.
Church of the
Nazarene
Health Services
4×6.5 Health
D IDirectory
RECTORY
Dentistry
Family Care
(785) 448-6988
Ross Kimball, M.D.
Sarah Nuessen, P.A.
Your contributions benefit
the Garnett Church of the Nazarene
Youth Group.
K68 GARNETT INDUSTRIAL AIRPORT
OCT. 5TH 7-10:30 A.M.
Commercial
Equestrian
Hobby Shops
Nebraska & Iowa
Eastern Wisconsin
719-822-3052
402-426-5022
712-600-2410
920-889-0960
Kansas &
Missouri
Western Wisconsin
816-858-7040
608-988-6338
S T R U C T U R E S
www.GingerichStructures.com
427 S. Oak
Garnett
Eye Care
Pharmacy
Dr. Glenn D. Bauman
Chiropractic Physician
120 S. Maple Garnett
785-448-2422
M/W/F: 8:30 a.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Ottawa, Kansas
Call (785) 242-3116 to
schedule your exam.
Hospice
Feel
better! (785) 448-6590
312 S. MAPLE GARNETT
Agricultural
Garages
And More!
Eastern CO
Chiropractic
MON-FRI 8:30am-7pm
Maple & Hwy. 31
Garnett, KS
SAT 8:30am-2pm
Next to Country Mart
School Physicals $35
DOT Physicals
National Registered &
Certified Medical Examiner
Drug/Alcohol tests available.
We accept all Medicare drug plans.
(785) 448-6122
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, September 26, 2024
The Anderson County Flywheelers Gas
Engine and Tractor Show Oct. 4-5 Schedule
The
Anderson
County
Flywheelers present the Third
Annual Gas Engine and Tractor
Show to be held Friday and
Saturday, October 4-5 at the North
Lake Park in Garnett. This is a
free admission event. No vendor
fees or participation fees, except
to enter antique tractor pull on
Saturday. The schedule of events
are as follows:
Steam engine and Minneapolis
Moline Prairie tractor exhibition
times on Friday and Saturday are
TBA at event.
Friday, October 4
8:00 a.m. 5:00 p.m.
**Education Day for school age
students. Area schools have confirmed 550 students and staff to
attend.**
The public is welcome to enjoy
the festivities any time of the day!
Free admission.
Exhibitors, demonstrations,
flea market, vendors, food vendors, East Shelter area. Hot
Breakfast Served! Enjoy homemade donuts cinnamon rolls,
breakfast burritos, and more!
8:30 a.m. -Tractor Displays and
Swap Meet Open.
8:55 a.m. – National Anthem
sung by Brayden Friend.
9:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m. Education
Day for school children, East
Shelter area. Students in elementary and high school, homeschooled children, teachers and
parents, can watch antique farm
equipment demonstrations and
participate in activities.
9:00 a.m.-Threshing machine
demonstration, followed by
baling, courtesy of Elmer
Schmucker.
10:00 a.m.- Crest FFA lead
groups of kids to activity stations: Shingle making, corn
shelling, rope making, cider
press, presentations by Anderson
County Historical Society (how
the North Park was created) and
Tarry Miller talks about honey.
Also, old fashion photo booth and
more. See map available at event
for locations.
11:00 a.m.-Tractor Parade lineup begins. Find your parade viewing spot! (Bring lawn chairs)
11:30 a.m.-Tractor Parade
11
LOCAL
Scott Garrett doing a demonstration at the 2023 Flywheelers Exhibit.
around Lake Garnett.
(Traffic limited access on
North Lake Rd during parade.)
12:00 p.m.-Lunch Time! Food
vendors on site.
1:30 p.m.-Threshing machine
demonstration, followed by
baling, courtesy of Elmer
Schmucker.
School students load onto
buses per their schedules.
Saturday, October 5
8:00 a.m. 5:00 p.m.
The public is welcome to enjoy
the festivities any time of the day!
Free admission.
Exhibitors, demonstrations,
flea market, vendors, food vendors, East Shelter area. Hot
Breakfast Served! Enjoy homemade donuts cinnamon rolls,
breakfast burritos, and more!
8:30 a.m. -Tractor Displays and
Swap Meet Open.
8:55 a.m. – National Anthem
sung by Brayden Friend.
9:00 a.m.-Threshing machine
demonstration, followed by
baling, courtesy of
Elmer
Schmucker.
10:00 a.m.-Activities open to
the public:
Shingle making, corn shelling, rope making, cider press,
presentations by Anderson
County Historical Society (how
the North Park was created) and
Tarry Miller talks about honey.
Also, old fashion photo booth and
more. See map available at event
for locations.
11:00 a.m.-Tractor Parade lineup begins.
11:30 a.m.-Tractor Parade
around Lake Garnett.
(Traffic limited access on
North Lake Rd during parade.)
12:00 p.m.-Lunch Time! Food
vendors on site. Food available
includes cheeseburgers, chicken
strips, fries, chips, pie, ice cream,
coffee, hot chocolate, pop, water
and iced tea.
1:30 p.m.-Threshing machine
and baling demonstration courtesy of Elmer Schmucker.
2:30 p.m. Pedal Power Tractor
Pull for Kids. Prizes for all!
Antique/Classic Tractor Pull,
Saturday, October 5 at Pulling
Track, North Lake Park
Participant registration begins
at 11 a.m. and ends at 12:30 p.m.
$15 per hook. Thirty-two possible
classes with cash awards. Tractor
Pull begins at 1 p.m. Free admission to spectators. Concessions
will be available on site. Bring
lawn chairs.
For more information, please
visit the Anderson County
Flywheelers Facebook page
or contact the Garnett Area
Chamber of Commerce, 785-4486767.
CORNSTOCK…
FROM PAGE 1
and who have been rockin the local scene
since the 1980s. Started by high school
best buddies, Dave bailey and Larry
Burkdoll, people gathered from miles
around to hear Clevermax at the legendary hangar parties. After adulthood
happened (wives, kids, etc.) the band resurrected and has been rocking stages life
never before.
Things to Know About Cornstock 2024:
The Cornstock Music Festival is an
outdoor event. Bring lawn chairs unless
you upgrade to VIP. Bring lawn chairs
unless you prefer to upgrade to VIP. VIP
upgrade gives individuals access to the
VIP Tent (3:30-6:30 PM), VIP Seating near
front and center of stage where white
chair seating is provided on a first come,
first serve basis. VIP upgrade is $100
above the general admission ticket price.
Tickets are available at local outlets
and online through 12 PM on Saturday.
Tickets will be sold at the gate. General
admission tickets for the full show are
$65 per person. Kids accompanying adults
ages 0-5 years old are admitted free.
Parking is $5 per vehicle.
The FOOD!
Food vendors include Big Bs BBQ,
Kansas Snack Shack, Queen Pins, Sweet
Kernals, Garnett Optimist Club and
Carolyns Kitchen. These vendors specialize in a variety of burgers, sandwich,
fried treats, roasted corn, Mexican food,
barbecue, popcorn and refreshing lemonades, old-fashioned sodas and more.
Outdoor FUN MALL
Shop the Cornstock Outdoor Mall
including KwiKom Communications, 6th
Avenue Boutique, Circle R Hats, Perrys
Pork Rinds, Passion 4 Bling, Rebel Rose
Designs, Better Half Hat Company, Elk
Creek Outpost, T-Mobile, Hague Quality
Water KC and more. Radio stations 92.9
The Bull, KOFO Radio, and Ad Astra
Radio (KIKS) will be hosting booths and
pre-show live remote broadcasts. The
Anderson County Hospital and SEK
Multi-County Health Department will be
providing displays, a first aid station,
baby changing station and other amenities.
All bands will have merchandise and
the Cornstock merchandise tent will have
a variety of official Cornstock apparel.
When arriving at 3:30 PM it is wise to let
the shopping and eating begin!
The Westphalia Knights of Columbus
will be serving beer and beverages on
the beer side of the concert area. ID
required to enter the beer side and you
must be over 21 years of age. Beverages
available include Miller Lite, Coors
Light, Coors Banquet, Blue Moon Light,
Simply Spiked Lemonade and Limeade,
Yuengling Lager, Yuengling Flight.
CHARITY CORNHOLE TOURNAMENT
Join in the fun on Friday evening,
September 27, for the Cornstock Charity
Cornhole Tournament on the East Shelter
Soccer Field. Registration begins at 4 PM.
Play begins at 6 PM. Entry is $40 per 2-person teams with 60% payout in cash prizes
with other prizes to be given away. This
years charity is the 4-H Council. There
will be music and Snack Shack food truck
will be on site. Bring your lawn chairs
and enjoy the evening for charity.
Please visit www.cornstock.net for
information, including FAQ-Things
to Know, or contact the Garnett Area
Chamber of Commerce, 785-448-6767
during regular business hours.
Cornstock-The Anderson County Corn
Festival is a 501c4 non-profit organization with a 15-member Board of Directors
and over 100 hard-working volunteers.
Cornstock is made possible by East
Kansas Agri-Energy, AuBurn Pharmacy,
KwiKom Communications, and many
valuable partners and sponsors, whom
without their support Cornstock would
not be possible in the heartland of Kansas.
GUARDRAIL…
FROM PAGE 1
corn harvests.
The section of U.S. 169 involved in the
project carries more than 2,700 vehicles
a day on average according to KDOTs
2022 traffic count, with more than 1,000
of those being heavy commercial truck
traffic.
KDOT awarded J&J Contractors, Inc.,
Iola, the $653,424 construction contract.
Check KDOTs updated traveler information website, www.kandrive.gov,
for more highway condition and construction details. Those with questions
may contact Construction Manager Ian
Stringham at (785) 433-6116 or Public
Information Officer Priscilla Petersen at
(620) 902-6433.
it was Russian disinformaTo keep them from doing
BALLOTS…
POMPEO…
so, week
we dont need an ever-exGet the Review intion.
your
mailbox
every
SANCTUARY…
In 2019, Kamala Harris panding set of safeguards
in which police in Joplin and
stated that if you profit off enforced by the federal
AND the email link
sent
toactyour
phone,
tabletandorwe should The Postal Services failure
Kansas City Missouri were
bureaucracy,
of hate,
if you
as a megaSpecifically, HR5717 makes piecing together events that
phone for misinformation or always resist undermining
to deliver as promised has disenIn response
to Irans
belliger- cyber
a state or political subdivi- began with the Joplin carjackdesktop
computer
the
morning
of publication
our constitutional freedoms
warfare,
if you dont
franchised at approximately 1,000
ence and threats, the Biden- police your platforms, we are in order to respond to foreign
sion of a state ineligible for ing murder of a 63 year-old
voters in Kansas, Schwab wrote.
Harris team went right back going to hold you account- threats.
any federal funds the juris- Oklahoma man and the subThat means that 2 percent of balto negotiating
a new nuclear
NO
MATTER
WHERE
LIVE.
diction intends to use to sequent car jack shooting of
able as YOU
a community.
By
Instead, we should rememlots transmitted by mail in Kansas
deal, making ransom payFROM PAGE 1
FROM PAGE 4
ments, and appeasing the
regime. Irans oil exports hit
a five-year high in 2024, with
over 1.5 million barrels of
oil a day being exported to
China.
This economic windfall has
gone right into funding Irans
terror network and is a direct
cause of the Oct. 7 attacks as
well as Irans fomenting of
antisemitic vitriol on our college campuses. So much for
establishing deterrence and
keeping America safe.
It gets worse. In 2020, the
Biden campaign openly lied
about the Hunter Biden laptop, enlisting over 50 former
national security officials
and the mainstream media
in their false narrative that
you, she meant American
citizens and companies, and
by community, she meant
entrenched bureaucrats in
the federal government deciding what Americans can and
cant say.
More recently, her running mate, Tim Walz, stated
that our Constitution provides no guarantee to free
speech. It is a good thing
Walz taught geography and
not civics. His understanding
of our First Amendment is
severely lacking.
The truth is that our adversaries have always and will
always look for opportunities
to hurt America, whether at
home or abroad, and these
alarming influence efforts are
no exception.
ber that the only valid
response to attacks from
the likes of Iran, Russia and
China is to establish deterrence. We should impose
enormous costs on them.
Only Donald Trump has
shown he has the capacity
and will to actually do this,
and if the American people
wish to keep our country safe
and strong in an increasingly
dangerous world, they should
vote for him in November.
1) Fill out the form below and mail it with your
check or money order payment to:
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
P.O. Box 409
Garnett, Ks. 66032
Mike Pompeo served in the
Trump administration as the
sixth director of the Central
Intelligence Agency and the
70th U.S. secretary of state.
He previously represented
Kansas 4th Congressional
District.
2) Call in your order during business hours :
(785) 448-3121
3) Complete
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were not counted due to USPS
administrative failures. Schwab
sent the letter the same week as
other election officers form other
states gave similar notice. DeJoy
said postal staff were doing their
best to give priority to marked
ballots.
Our letter carriers and facilities teams across the country,
the 640,000 women and men of the
Postal Service, are fully focused on
the critical mission of delivering
the nations election mail just
as we have done so excellently
through this current primary season and as we have done in the
past, DeJoy said in a statement.
We are proud to do our part to
help citizens who choose to use
the mail to vote to do so effectively.
Kansas law says advanced mail
ballots have to be postmarked by
the 7 p.m. poll closing time on election day and arrive at the intended
election office within the threeday grace period. Schwab said
multiple election officials across
the state reported they received
ballots that couldnt be counted
because they lacked postmarks or
were received after the deadline
sometimes days or weeks after the
were put into the mail. Wettstein
said mail issues werent a factor in
the Anderson Countys elections.
Anderson County did not
receive any advance ballots after
the deadline to count, Wettstein
told the Review. She said the best
way to avoid a question about your
ballot was to skip the middleman.
My suggestion if it is getting
close to Election Day and the voter
still needs to send their ballot back
hand deliver it by either coming
in during normal business hours
or dropping it in our dropbox that
is available 24/7 only during early
voting time period, Wettstein
said. The voter could also designate another person to hand deliver it to our office. If mailing is the
only option, I suggest completing
the ballot and returning as soon as
possible.
Advance voting begins October
16 and runs through noon
November 4 in Kansas for the general election. The voter registration deadline is October 15th.
FROM PAGE 1
benefit non-U.S. nationals
(i.e., aliens under federal law)
who are unlawfully present,
if the jurisdiction withholds
information about citizenship
or immigration status or does
not cooperate with immigration detainers. Funds would
be denied to any jurisdiction that has a law, policy,
or practice that prohibits or
restricts state or local governments from communicating
or exchanging information
regarding a persons citizenship or immigration status,
restricts complying with a
valid immigration detainer from the Department of
Homeland Security or prohibits the notification of DHS
about an individuals release
from custody.
The funding restriction
does not apply to a law, policy,
or practice that only applies
to an individual who comes
forward as a victim of or a
witness to a criminal offense.
The Congressional vote
came at the end of a week
a woman in Independence as
well as the pistol whipping
of another female there, all
alleged to be the work of two
brothers, Honduran nationals
ages 26 and 20, who crossed
the southern border illegally.
Both were under arrest as of
Friday.
A Kansas law pushed
by then-Attorney General
and current 2nd District
Republican Congressional
nominee Derek Schmidt that
was passed by a supermajority of Kansas Republican lawmakers in 2022 outlawed sanctuary jurisdictions in Kansas.
Prior to that time Douglas
and Wyandotte counties,
Lawrence and Roland Park in
Johnson County all had laws
defying federal authority to
investigate, detain and deport
illegal aliens in those areas
and to use immigration status
as a qualifier for benefits and
services.
Davids represents Johnson,
Anderson, Miami and parts of
Wyandotte counties.
RIFT…
FROM PAGE 1
ty, which also pays Locke as
a full time director of county
fire and emergency management.
Numerous issues arose
during that campaign in
which Locke delivered
some stern and public
criticism of the sheriffs
department operation and
some of its personnel. That
critique generated social
media rebuttals from some
McClain supporters as well
as a public statement from
Anderson County Sheriff
Vern Valentine.
Subsequent to that election, about a half dozen
members of law enforcement
from Anderson County,
Colony and USD 365 as well
as ambulance staff joined
Armstrong in his request
for an executive session
to discuss personnel with
county commissioners at
their meeting on September
3. Commissioners granted
that meeting, although the
additional personnel were
excluded.
A week later, commissioners met for a performance review with Locke in
an executive session.
The Anderson County
Review has requested a
copy of the document presented by commissioners to
Patton at Mondays meeting, but as of Wednesday
had not received one. Both
Locke and Armstrong were
contacted by email for an
opportunity to comment
for this story. No response
was received from either by
Wednesday.
12
CLASSIFIEDS
LOCAL
Creative Kids – Part 7
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, September 26, 2024
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Injured in an accident? Dont
Accept the insurance companys first offer. Many injured
parties are entitled to cash settlements in the $10,000s. Get a
free evaluation to see what your
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2×3 j & j contractors
Carsen Droddy Central Heights 4th Grade Mrs. Cutburth
Kinzy Smith Central Heights 5th Grade Mrs. Riemer
A Sad Goodbye
Leah Sutton
4th Grade, St. Rose School
Mrs. Foltz
Have you every had to tell
someone you love goodbye? It is
not a fun thing to do.
It was four in the morning
when we left. It took two hours
to get to my brothers new home.
He was starting college. While I
was waiting to get there I looked
out the car window and saw
tall buildings and traffic jams.
When we got there I was so
excited! I wanted to know what
the campus looked like, how
many churches they had, and
what my brothers room was
going to look like. I heard the
church bells ring. It was such a
pretty sound. We finally arrived
and spent the day getting him
ready to stay at his college.
When it was time to leave I
gave my brother a big hug. I
heard the church bells ring one
more time. My mom and I were
trying to hold back our tears but
we could not hold them back.
The tears were falling down our
cheeks. My brother was crying
as well.
I was so sad when we left. I
felt a cold breeze when I walked
to the car. I was sad to leave him
at his college but I know I will
see him again soon.
My Surprise Pet
Joshua Yoder
6th grade, Central Plains School
Frieda Keim, teacher
Derek Garcia St. Rose 6th Grade Mrs. Rockers
Creative Kids
– Part 7
Have you every got a mystery
gift? I have. One day when I got
home from my friend Paytons
house, my parents and grandparents followed me to my room.
I was confused that they were
following me. I saw a furry tail
behind my closet door. I wanted
to see what it was. Then I saw
it was a cat and my heart leaped
for joy.
I picked it up and hugged
it tight. His eyes were green,
he had fluffy gray and white
fur with a little black on his
back. Then I went to thank
my parents and grandparents.
After I thanked them I went
to play with my cat. We both
were really happy while we
were playing with the cat toys.
After we played with this toys
he got tired and fell asleep on
the floor. Then he woke up in
an instant and ran to the living
room where everybody was. So
we all decided on a name. His
name is Cody.
That night I was very happy and
he slept with me in my bed, I
couldnt wait to tell my friends
the next day.
Dining & Entertainment
GUIDE
Witchs Brew
Slush Float
Garnett
(785) 448-6393
Scipio Supper Club
RESTAURANT AND BAR
Kitchen Hours: Wed. & Sun. 6 p.m. – 9 p.m.
Fri. & Sat. 6 p.m. – 10 p.m.
Bar open later Call ahead for large parties
32465 NE Neosho Rd Garnett 785-835-6246
We welcome you to enjoy our
Farm-to-Table Country Cuisine!
Proudly Serving Locally-Raised Beef & Pork.
Full Menu Online: thebrandniron.com
Full Bar
Kitchen Hours:
Wed. & Thur. 4 p.m. – 9 p.m.
Fri. & Sat. 11 a.m. – 10 p.m.
1457 Hwy. 59 Princeton, KS 785-937-2225
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Advertise your restaurant or entertainment
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(785) 448-3121 review@garnett-ks.com
Call to Subscribe
(785) 448-3121
Housing Authority
Maintenance Worker
City of Garnett, Kansas
The City of Garnett is currently accepting applications for
the position of Housing Authority Maintenance Worker.
This position performs a wide range of tasks including but
not limited to cleaning of buildings in all common areas,
maintaining equipment, mowing, snow and ice removal,
trash removal form buildings, as well as minor electrical, air
conditioning, and appliance repair. This position is an 8-hour
day shift, forty-hour workweek with occasional emergency
callouts as needed.
For a complete job description and application, stop by City
Hall, 131 W. 5th Ave, Garnett, or visit www.simplygarnett.
com. Competitive salary based upon qualifications and
excellent benefits package with a
starting wage of $16.00 – $20.00.
The position will remain open until
filled. EOE
UTILITY PLANT OPERATOR
CITY OF GARNET, KS
2×4 city of garnett utility plant
operator
The City of Garnett is currently accepting applications for
the position of Utility Plant Operator. Duties include the day
to day operations of the water treatment facility, as well as
the power plant but will start at the water treatment facility.
This position works a rotational day/evening shift of ten-hour
days in a forty-hour workweek. The ideal candidate will have
a high school diploma or GED and a Class I or II Kansas
Water License. Candidate must have the ability to obtain a
Class I or II Water Operator Certification through the State
of Kansas within three (3) years if they dont already have a
certification.
For a complete job description and application, stop by City
Hall, 131 W. 5th Ave, Garnett, or visit www.simplygarnett.
com. Competitive salary
based upon qualifications and
excellent benefits package
with a starting wage of $18.00
– $20.00. The position will
remain open until filled.
www.simplygarnett.com
EOE
Fall
Consignment Sale
Saturday Oct. 19 10 a.m.
Anderson County Fairgrounds
Lake Rd., Garnett
Call with consignments
(785) 448-8200
Sale conducted by
RATLIFF AUCTIONS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, September 26, 2024
13
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MISCELLANEOUS
Place your 25-word classified
in the Kansas Press Association
and 135 more newspapers for
only $300/ week. Find employees, sell your home or your
car. Call the Kansas Press
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Edgecomb Builders
2×2
edgecomb
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Custom Homes
Additions
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Lonnie Edgecomb (785) 204-1580
Freelance Writer/Reporter
The Anderson County Review is in search of freelance writers
who can write feature stories and cover
occasional straight news assignments.
Some experience preferred but well
train you if youve got the chops. Remote
workers okay most interviews/ research
conducted online, by phone or email. Work
from home or from our office in Garnett.
Pay is by assignment. Must follow schedules
and understand what the word DEADLINE means.
Contact publisher Dane Hicks
at review@garnett-ks.com.
PUBLIC AUCTON
Sale Bill and photos on www.kansasauctions.net/hamilton
SUNDAY,
6, 2024 @ 11 A.M.
2×4 OCTOBER
hamilton
auction
28095 S. STANLEY RD., QUENEMO, KS
Directions: South of Quenemo approx. 1 mile, turn west on 277th, go
approx. 2 miles to South Stanley Rd., then south mile.
PICKUP AND BALE BED ATV
COMBINE TRACTOR LIVESTOCK EQUIPMENT SHOP
AND FARM RELATED ITEMS
GUNS ALONG
WITH GARAGE SALE
You name it,
FARM & AG
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25 or
more trees. Call (916) 232-6781 in
St. Joseph for details.
fb15tf
St. Johns Church – Greeley,
Ks. Garage and Bake sale
Saturday, October 5th 7am
to 1:30pm, 406 South Prairie
Street. Two buildings full.
Something for everyone. $2
clothes bag sale at noon. sp26t1
2×2
gate
LAWN & GARDEN
Little John Sherwood
Farm
& Greenhouse
1×1.5
lit785-835-7057
Hardy
tle john
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.
garden
Happiness is . . . Pre-ordering
your Trump/Vance yard sign at
Garnett Publishing Inc., 112 W.
6th, Garnett. $5/each.
HELP WANTED: CITY CLERK
The City of Erie is accepting applications for the position of City Clerk
until position is filled. High School diploma/GED required. Must possess
knowledge of computers, office equipment, public relations, organizational, oral and written communication skills, office management, financial accountability and reporting. Record keeping, problem solving, and
decision making skills are required. Minimum 3 years experience in supervisory position. Salary negotiable with experience.Excellent benefit
package. EOE. Send cover letter and resume to City Hall, 101 N. Main,
Erie, KS 66733, or by e-mail: cityclerk@erieks.com. For complete job
description call (620) 244-3461
PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday Sept. 28, 2024 9 a.m.
Sunday, September 29, 2024 12:30 p.m.
717 East Madison, Iola, Ks.
Seller: Eddie Johnson & Terry Warren Estate
Huge Vintage & Collectibles, Glass, Cast Iron, Pewter,
China Cabinets, Books, Prints, Pictures, Antique Furniture
Gate Greenhouse
2×2 jbGarden
construc-
tion
Fall mums are ready!
Stop by our greenhouse or visit us at
the Farmers Markets
in Garnett & Ottawa.
10003 NW 1600 Rd Westphalia
(from 7th St. in Garnett west 15 miles)
(785) 489 -2483 Hrs: Mon-Fri 9-6 Sat 9-4
HELP WANTED
FULL-TIME
CORRECTIONS OFFICER
Starting wage $17.00/hour with increase
at 6 months and 1 year. 12 hour shifts
ALLEN COUNTY SHERIFFS OFFICE
OFFERS: FULL BENEFITS PACKAGE, INSURANCE, 15 PAID HOLIDAYS, ON THE JOB
TRAININGS, KPERS RETIREMENT PLAN,
EARNED VACATION & SICK TIME, UNIFORM ALLOWANCE
Applicants must be 18 yrs old or older. have a high
school diploma or equivalent, pass a criminal background check, drug screening, and psychologial
exam, No fel.ony or domestic charges. Applications
can be picked up In person or requested at
LSEARS@IALLENCOSHERIFF.ORG
Allen County Sheriffs Office
1 N. Washington, Iola, KS. 66749
620-365-1400
EOE/M/F/D/V
Taylor Forge Engineered Systems, Inc.
is a leading manufacturer of large custom fabricated steel products for the energy,
chemical and aerospace industries. Products include: pressure vessels, heat
exchangers, nuclear components and gas pipeline equipment. We are seeking
qualified candidates at our Greeley, KS plant for the position of:
2×4 tfes
METAL TRADES
Candidates will perform general laborer duties including: abrasive blasting,
painting, unloading pipe, stock piling, grinding, operating overhead cranes, winch
trucks and hoisting equipment, installing pipe protectors for shipping.
Job-related experience preferred. We offer a competitive salary and an attractive
benefit package. Persons seeking a challenge and opportunity to innovate are
urged to apply in person or send a confidential resume detailing experience and
salary history to: hr@tfes.com
Taylor Forge is an equal opportunity employer and all qualified applicants will
receive consideration for employment. EO/AA Employer/Veterans/Disabled.
SELLER: RANDY & SHANNON CHENOWETH
HAMILTON AUCTIONS
MARK HAMILTON
785-214-0560 C 785-759-9805 H
Monthly Specials
HAPPY ADS
Anderson County
news DAILY
WANT TO BUY
GARAGE SALES
1×2
Edgecom
Check out our
Floor
1×2
AD
we print it.
Want to buy – 4 bottom plow, 3
point hitch. (785) 937-4540, (785)
418-0691. sp26t1*
SERVICES
208 N. Iron St., Paola, KS 66071 www.tfes.com EO/AA Employer/Veterans /Disabled
Go to www.allencountyauction.com for pictures
Allen County Auction Service
Allen County Realty, Inc.
Auctioneer: Gerald Gray & Colton Heffern
(620-365-3178)
City of Garnett
Public Works Laborer
City of Garnett, Kansas
The City Garnett is accepting applications for the position of Public Works Laborer. This position is responsible for repairing streets, alleys, sidewalks, and curbing.
This position may at times be called on to assist other
divisions of the Public Works Department, to include
distribution, collections, treatment, and refuse collection as well as assist other City Departments such as
Parks & Recreation, City Hall, and Code Enforcement.
For a complete job description and application, stop by
City Hall, 131 W. 5th Ave, Garnett or visit
www.simplygarnett.com.
Salary based on qualifications, $15-$17.50/hr. The
position will remain open
until filled. EOE
FALL
CONSIGNMENT
AUCTION
Now taking consignments
for October 26, 2024 Sale
Bring your…
tractors farm equipment
vehicles tools boats,
ATVs livestock equipment, etc.
No Household, please
Sale will be held at
7th Street Grocery
22800 1700 Road Garnett, Ks.
2 miles west of Garnett on 7th Street
Yoder Auction
Service
Auctioneers:
Ben Yoder (785) 448-4419
Jr. Miller (620) 200-3007
James Yoder (620) 228-3548
Laverne Yoder (785) 204- 2700
* Consignments will need to be made before
5 p.m. Monday, Oct. 14, to be included in advertising.
14
SPORTS
Bulldog XC runs at Parsons
PARSONS The Anderson
County Bulldog cross country
squads competed at Parsons
last Thursday, finishing with
3 top 10 finishers among the
boy's team.
Brody Barnes paced the
Bulldogs finishing 8th with a
time of 22:21.52.
Following Barnes was Grant
Nienstedt (22:37.69) and Brodie
Wiesner (23:03.79) finishing 9th
and 10th respectively.
Zykin Velvick (24:21.91)
finished 13th, Wesley Mills
(24:47.16) finished 14th and
Owen Hawkins (28:19.44)
rounded out the runners with
a 25th place finish.
In girls JV action, Hope Hill
(22:50.22) finished 3rd in the
2-mile run and Rayna Kuhlman
was 10th with a time of 34:58.73.
Lady Lancers have a trio of top 10 finishers
WELLSVILLE Last Thursday,
the Crest Lancers competed at
the Wellsville Invitational and
competed very well against
some much larger schools as
they placed 3 runners in the
top 10 in the varsity girl's run.
Peyton Schmidt (21:54.85)
led the way with a 3rd place
finish.
Josie Walter (22:05.44) wasn't
far behind as she finished in
5th and Aubrey Allen (23:00.19)
finished in 10th place.
Kallei Robb (26:47.29) finished the day in 43rd place.
In the boy's varsity run,
Gunner Ellington paced Crest
with a 28th place finish with a
time of 19:56.24.
Elijah Taylor (21:59.03) finished in 52nd position, Ryan
West (23:02.45) was 66th and
Jimmy Ayers (24:07.53) was
78th.
Lancers XC runs at Humboldt
HUMBOLDT In what was
treated more of a junior varsity meet for the Crest Lancers,
they sent a handful of runners
on Tuesday to run at Humboldt.
The only varsity girl's runner was Kallei Robb (23:57.40),
who finished in 9th place.
Grady Allen (20:09.00) and
Elijah Taylor (20:14.30) finished
19th and 21st respectively for
the boys in the varsity event.
In the boy's 7th grade 2-mile
run, Lukas Taylor finished in
9th and Isaac Francis crossed
in 12th place.
Wyatt Francis finished in
13th place as the only 8th grade
boy's 2-mile runner.
The Crest Lancers dominated the girl's 7th grade event,
finishing with 6 of the top 8
runners.
Lynnex Allen was 1st, Piper
Schmidt finished 2nd and
Aidynn Edgerton was in 3rd
place.
Klaire Nilges (5th), Jorden
Allen (6th) and Bailey Boone
(8th) all finished within the top
10 on the day.
CH Vikings cross country battles
the heat at Wellsville Invitational
WELLSVILLE – Mother Nature
did her best to make conditions
as bad as possible in Wellsville
with a heat index of 103 degrees
at race time but Viking head
coach Troy Prosser said his
squad has been preparing for
all scenarios and approached
the day with confidence.
In fact, it seems like this
was the best as a whole that we
have done in those particular
elements in the last decade,
Prosser stated.
The high school boys set out
to make improvements and
tighten up their 1-5 split and
they are reacting to that challenge in a great way says their
coach.
Connor Burkdoll pushed at
or near the front for nearly
the entire race before he and
Cody Hammond pulled away
in the last 1000m with Owen
Miller and Stetson Miller not
far behind.
S. Miller ran nearly 1 minute faster than a year ago at
Wellsville and in much worse
conditions which adds another
punch to the front three from
last year.
Josiah Meyer, Jotham
Meyer and Christian McCord
have also formed their own
group and all seven boys were
in the top 11 against some very
solid competition.
For the varsity girls,
Ebony Hughes and Melaney
Chrisjohn led the way.
Its been nice to have a full
team to finish for the first three
weeks of a season in quite a
few years. We werent at full
strength for a second straight
week and the heat definitely
took its toll but the girls were
able to dig deep and place 5th
as a team, Coach Prosser stated.
The day included 13 Sseason
bests, 9 personal records and
11 of the top 15 in the JV boys
race were other highlights on
the day.
Prosser added, In all honesty, having this amount of
success in the JV races is
amazing. I cant help but feel
great for them since its easy to
overlook how good they really
are with what they have to
chase in the varsity boys.
The middle school races at
Wellsville are always so much
fun to watch, Prosser said.
Throw over 200 kids on the
line together and watch the
entire pack unfold over two
miles. We had top 10 medalists
and personal records despite
the huge number of runners.
Thats what Makenzie
(Macy), Kamden (Moon),
Emery (Hughes) and the rest
of them did on Thursday and
I couldnt be more proud of
them all, Prosser said.
Next week, the Vikings will
shift gears a little by splitting
the team between Prairie View
and Rim Rock.
Prosser
concluded,
Nearing the midpoint of the
season, weve achieved some
goals but still have many left
on the table.
Varsity Boys -5K
Team – 1st Place (21 points)
1st – Connor Burkdoll (16:55.49)
2nd – Cody Hammond (16:55.52)
4th – Owen Miller (17:31.73)
5th – Stetson Miller (17:47.66)
9th – Josiah Meyer (18:20.58)
10th – Christian McCord
(18:41.43)
11th – Jotham Meyer (18:43.88)
Late rally comes up short for AC football
LEXINGTON, MO Week 3 was
originally a scheduled game
against Osawatomie, but due
to them canceling their varsity
football due to lack of numbers
among their upperclassmen,
the Anderson County football
team traveled to Lexington,
Missouri, falling just short in a
30-28 defeat.
The teams traded scores
throughout the first half as
Lexington scored first on a 17
yard run before the Bulldogs
answered with a 14 yard run by
Landon Schillig to tie the score
at 6.
Lexington would take the
lead again 12-6 after a 12 yard
touchdown jaunt.
Aidan Steele would get AC
on the board with a 23 yard
touchdown run to knot the
score again, this time at 12.
Lexington would seize control late in the second quarter
into the third.
They scored on a 43 yard
touchdown pass late in the second to take a 18-12 lead into the
locker room.
They would open up the
scoring in the second half with
touchdown runs of 24 and 54
yards to open up a 30-12 lead.
Anderson County would try
to rally as they added a 5 yard
touchdown pass and catch from
Schillig to Aleck Smith late in
the third quarter and would
tack on the 2-point conversion
to make the deficit 20-30.
The Bulldogs would score on
a 40 yard pass from Schillig to
Christian Barnett and following the 2-point conversion the
deficit was cut to 30-28.
On the ensuing kickoff, the
Bulldogs kept the momentum
on their side by recovering the
onside kick.
Anderson County got the
ball down to the Lexington 20
yard line with 3:40 seconds left
in regulation but a fumble by
the Bulldogs at the 1:53 mark
brought the comeback attempt
to an end.
Schillig accounted for 3
touchdowns on the day completing 13 of 26 passes for 161 yards
and 2 touchdowns and rushing
for 25 yards on 4 attempts, scoring another touchdown on the
ground.
Steele would finish the night
with 91 yards on 11 carries and
scored a touchdown.
Wilson was the workhorse
with 23 attempts for 90 yards on
the night.
Smith would lead the
Bulldogs with 8 matches for 69
yards and a score and Barnett
would chip in with 2 receptions
for 50 yards and a touchdown.
The defense was led by
Steele's 10 tackles on the night.
Garret Tucker finished the
night with 7 tackles. Zach
Schaffer and Quinton King
both chipped in with 5 tackles.
King's stops included 3 tackles
for loss and a sack.
Varsity Girl – 5K
Team – 5th Place
14th – Ebony Hughes (23:43.42)
18th – Melaney Chrisjohn
(24:25.69)
41st – Caitlynn Detwiler
(26:32.50)
54th – Faith Coons (27:53.19)
60th – Maya Acebron (28:38:77)
65th – Arabella Dunbar (29:17.99)
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Thursday, September 26, 2024
Lady Vikings sweep pair of games Tuesday
MORAN Central Heights
Vikings swept both Marmaton
Valley and Yates Center to
improve their record to 8-7
after starting the season with 4
consecutive losses.
The Vikings opened with a
two set win over Marmaton
Valley 25-10 and 25-18.
The attack was led by Lyla
Hamblin and Anna Heckman
who each scored 5 kills in the
game.
Defensively Lyla Hamblin,
Jaley Ferguson and Heckman
each had 4 digs to lead the
Vikings.
Sydney Evans had 6 assists
and also took control of the
offensive effort with just 1
error in 36 attempts at setting
up the offense.
In the second game, the
Vikings won the first set 25-17
and won a hard fought second
set 27-25 to sweep Yates Center.
Hamblin again led the
offense with 7 kills in 21
attempts.
Kaylor Matile recorded a
kill on 4 of her attempts in the
match.
Evans again was key in
setting up the offense with 15
assists, committing one error
on 46 attempts.
CH Vikings score first win of the football season
UNIONTOWN After back-toback losses to open the season
at home, the Central Heights
Vikings hit the road and
picked up their first victory of
the young season by knocking
off Uniontown 26-14.
Senior quarterback Brody
Roullett led the offense completing 5 of 13 passes for 53
yards, 1 touchdown and 1 inter-
ception but also added 7 carries for 112 yards and another
score.
Reed Compton added 3 carries for 63 yards and scored
a touchdown. Ben Teegarden
also scored a rushing touchdown on 6 carries for 20 yards.
Dustin Smith hauled in the
touchdown pass by Roullett,
hauling in 3 passes for 45 yards
on the night.
Max Chrisjohn led the
defense with 15 tackles, Smith
had 8 and Landon Lopez added
7 tackles and 2 tackles for loss.
The defense forced a pair of
turnovers on the night. Colt
King picked off a Uniontown
pass and Roullett recovered
a fumble that was forced by
Lopez.
Crest football drops home opener
COLONY It was the first
home game of the season for
the Crest Lancers after opening
with back-to-back 46-0 wins on
the road, but Oswego spoiled
the season opener at home as
the Lancers fell 52-6.
Oswego jumped out to a 16-0
lead after the first quarter en
route to a 30-0 halftime lead.
Crest finally got on the
scoreboard in the third period,
but Oswego tacked on a pair of
touchdowns as well to lead 42-6
heading into the fourth.
The game came to a premature end as Oswego scored
another touchdown in the
fourth quarter, and with the
two-point conversion, it ended
the game due to the 45 point
mercy rule.
Oswego dominated the game
on the ground as they attempted just one pass and lost a yard
on it.
Conversely, they ran the
ball 24 times for 317 yards, good
for 13.2 yards per carry, and
scored 5 of their 6 touchdowns
on the ground. The other touchdown came via an interception
return by the defense.
AC golfer competes at Chanute
CHANUTE The Anderson
County Bulldog ladies golf
team consisted of a lone member in Monday's invitational
at Chanute as Rylee Hill shot
a 109, which was good for 27th
place.
The winner was Danielle
Yaghmour of St. Mary's with a
score of 84.
St. Mary's won as a team as
well with an overall score of
362, which was well in front of
second place Chanute (381).

