Anderson County Review — September 29, 2020
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from September 29, 2020. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
O N E M E A S I LY U . S . D O L L A R
September 29, 2020
Probitas, virtus,
integritas in summa.
The
official
newspaper
of of
record
forfor
Anderson
County,
KS,KS,
and
itsits
communities.
The
official
newspaper
record
Anderson
County,
and
communities.
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Upcoming Lake Garnett Grand Prix
Revival keeps local tradition alive
The 7th annual LGGPR
has become one of the
regions premier events
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Sixty-one years
after race cars first roared
into the small Kansas town of
Garnett, a dedicated group of
passionate individuals is once
again bringing horsepower to
the heartland. The seventh-annual Lake Garnett Grand Prix
Revival (LGGPR) will see vintage
race cars, classic sports cars, and
modern performance automobiles descend on the North Lake
Park on Oct. 9th-11th, 2020, along
with thousands of enthusiasts
and their families.
The Revival has become one
of the premier vintage and sports
car events in the region, with a
multi-day format that includes
high-performance driving exhibitions around the old 2.8 mile
race track, the EKAE autocross at the Garnett Municipal
Airport, the Hagerty Revival
showcase car show in downtown
Garnett, a road tour & cruise,
and the chance for spectators to
get a ride around the track in one
of 40-different high-performance
cars during the Charity Rides.
The track sessions offer a little something for everyone, with
a multitude of speed-regulated
classes that allow for drivers
of every experience level to get
some seat time behind the wheel
of their own classic cars. New
in 2020 is the Rookie run group,
which will allow drivers ages
16-17 who possess a valid drivers
license to drive the track in their
own dedicated class. Rookies
will need to be accompanied by
a legal guardian age 25+ and the
group will be limited to 60mph,
but it will allow younger drivers
with a passion for older cars the
opportunity to participate without the pressure of some of the
more experienced run groups.
SEE REVIVAL ON PAGE 3B
Federal COVID money will
cover Garnett airport project
Much needed airport
project will replace portion
of 40 year old runway
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-29-2020 / DANE HICKS
A scarecrow stands watch over the entrance to Lake Garnett Park as one of Garnetts telltale
signs of fall. The Friends of the Prairie Spirit Trail has undertaken the community decor project
in the local area for more than 20 years.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT COVID-19 funding
from the federal government
is having far-reaching impacts
across the country and sometimes far disassociated from
healthcare like the Garnett airport.
Some $400,000 in federal money
through the Coronavirus Aid,
Recovery and Economic Security
Act will pay for a replacement of
pavement apron at the Garnett
Airport, where aircraft move to
and from the refueling area. The
portion of pavement was laid
there about 40 years ago, said airport manager Pat Schettler, and
parts of the stretch had degraded
to gravel not a good thing for
prop-driven aircraft.
Schettler said Garnett City
Manger Chris Weiner and engineer Caleb Coltrane were able to
secure the funding through the
Federal Aviation Administration
to cover 100 percent of the project
cost.
Its something weve needed
for a long, long time, Schettler
said. But the costs were always
so prohibitive. It was something
that probably wasnt going to
happen if we didnt find some
help somewhere.
The funding was part of a
three trillion dollar aid package
approved by Congress in May
that has funded everything from
direct cash payments to individuals to extended unemployment
benefits to various public works
projects, all designed to alleviate
economic damage caused when
businesses across the country
shuttered in the wake of the
virus.
Garnetts airport encompasses 154 acres with a 2,660-foot
long paved runway and notes
the citys official elevation at 989
SEE AIRPORT ON PAGE 2B
James Akes to seek ACHS grad builds a career in the sky
write-in for sheriff
GARNETT A Linn County
Sheriffs Deputy and former
Anderson County businessman says hell mount a write-in
campaign for Anderson County
Sheriff in the November general
election.
Forty-three year-old James
Akes said he
had hoped
to be selected for an
undersheriff
role in the
event another potential
local candiAkes
date
filed,
but that filing
never
took place. He said the need
for change in the department
and for more focused policing
led him to his decision. But he
said his effort wasnt a mounted
campaign against sitting sheriff
Vern Valentine, the only other
candidate so far in the race.
It isnt a run for sheriff
because I dont like Vern, Akes
told the Review Its a run for
sheriff because people want a
change. I feel that I can make
that change.
A Spring Hill High School
graduate, Akes family owns
Mid-American
Hydraulic
Repair in LaCygne, where he
worked after high school. He
then went out on his own to form
Eastern Kansas Equipment and
Sales in Greeley which operated
from the former Machine Shed
Restaurant. His work with the
Greeley volunteer fire department led him to pursue his EMT
certification, Akes said, and
on a run to Linn County one
night he was approached about
an open deputy position there.
He later underwent Kansas Law
Enforcement academy training
and has served as a deputy there
for the past five years. He also
worked for a short period as an
Anderson County Jailer under
former sheriff Jeff Hupp.
We have a really good opportunity in Anderson County,
Akes said. When you have
officers who want to specialize, I think you should let them
specialize and make the most
of that. Thats what I mean by
focused policing.
Akes,
a
registered
Republican, presently resides
near Centerville, and must
become an Anderson County
resident prior to being allowed
to serve the post should he win.
He said he and his wife currently own and are restoring a house
in Garnett. Their six children
all graduated from Anderson
County High School, he said.
RICHMOND Patrick Traul
guided his 1946 Piper Cub low
over the treeline and banked a
little as he made his approach at
a stretch of his parents cleared
pasture west of Richmond. It
was a beautiful fall day a
great day for flying and in a
few minutes, it would be time
to pick up his passenger for the
afternoon.
His 95 year-old grandmother.
The 2003 Anderson County
High School graduate-turned
aviation company owner had
taken Dora Mae Traul flying
any number of times in several
other aircraft, but this ride was
kind of special. The Piper Cub
was, after all, one of the planes
her husband, World War II
naval aviator Clarence Traul,
trained in as part of his combat flying career some 70 years
ago.
In a few minutes theyd loaded grandma into the somewhat
precarious front seat through
what are most generously
called doors more open air
than not and with a little help
from his dad spinning the prop,
the Cub fired to life.
Its a great way to fly,
Patrick Traul said. You dont
fly as high and you dont fly as
fast, but you get a view that is
phenomenal.
The view was always appeal-
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-29-2020 / DANE HICKS
Patrick and Dora Mae Traul posed for photos recently when she
accompanied him on a flight in his 1946 Piper Cub, a plane her
husband, also a pilot, trained in during World War II.
ing, Traul said. He started
taking lessons as a senior at
ACHS, but never imagined hed
make a career out of aviation.
I always looked at it as a
hobby a I just want to enjoy
this kind of thing, he said.
But after earning a business
degree from Fort Hays State
University and taking a
short-lived job with an ethanol development company,
he started to look for flying opportunities that paid.
In 2007 he found one in a
company called Great Lakes
SEE AVIATION ON PAGE 2B
2A
NEWS IN
BRIEF
LICENSE PLATE RENEWALS
License plate renewals for all
individuals, whose last name
begins with P, Q, and R, are
due by Wednesday, September
30th, at the Anderson County
Treasurers Office.
MODEL T CLUB
The East Central Kansas Model
T Ford Club, the ECKTS, will
meet at 6:30 pm., Thursday
October 8th in the Conference
Room at the Burlington Library
located on Hwy 75. Members
are asked to bring a side dish
to compliment Beef Lasagna
which will be eaten before the
meeting. The ECKTs is a family organization and a chapter
of the not-for-profit, National
Model T Ford Club of America.
Owning a Model T is not a
requirement for membership.
All meetings are open to the
public, please feel free to visit.
For more information call Bud
Redding 785-733-2124.
BOOK DISCUSSION
Please join us for our next
Book Discussion via Zoom on
October 7th, 2020 at 7pm. This
book discussion will be about
Jojo Moyes The Giver of Stars, a
novel about Eleanor Roosevelts
new traveling library. Set in
Depression-era America, in the
state of Kentucky, 5 women are
committed to their job : bringing books to people who have
never had any, arming them
with facts that will change their
lives. If you would like an email
invite, please email Andrea at
garnettlibrary@yahoo.com, or
call us at 448-3388. You can
pick up a copy at the library!
BINGO AT VFW
Tuesday night Bingo is back at
the Garnett VFW Hall in Crystal
Lake Park. Bring your friends
and make a night of it, and you
might just win $$. Starts at 6:30
p.m., everyone welcome.
LIONS NEED KIDS
The Garnett Lions Club is looking for some high school students from any of the local
school districts who need community service hours to help
with a highway trash pickup
on U.S. 59 north of Garnett
on October 10. About 90 minutes work and well take you
to breakfast at Dutch Country
afterwards. Email Jon Pamilla at
jp.ammo.17@gmail.com.
GARNETT SENIOR CENTER
SEEKING DONATIONS
The Garnett Senior Center is
seeking donations of used
medical equipment such as:
walkers, wheelchairs, scooters,
beds, shower chairs, etc. You
may drop off at the center from
9:30 1:30, Monday-Friday or
call 448-6996 for the item to be
picked up.
SUICIDE AWARENESS
GROUP MEETINGS SET
SAM – Suicide Awareness
Members, a division of SASSMoKan – meets on the first
Tuesday of the month from
6:30-7:30 at the Anderson
County Hospital Conference
Room A&B located at 421 S.
Maple in Garnett. The facilitator is Lu Ann Nichols, who
may be reached at lu.ann.
nichols.1956@gmail.com.
KS-VINE AVAILABLE
Kansas VINE: Kansas VINE
is free and anonymous and
provides victims of crime and
the general public the ability to
search for an offender housed
in a county jail and receive
notifications.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 29, 2020
RECORD
ANDERSON COUNTY COMMISSION
SEPTEMBER 21, 2020
Chairman Jerry Howarter called
the meeting of the Anderson County
Commission to order at 9:00 AM on
September 21, 2020 at the County
Commission Room. Attendance:
Jerry Howarter, Present: David
Pracht, Present: Leslie McGhee,
Present. The pledge of allegiance
was recited. Minutes from the previous meetings were approved as
presented.
Road & Bridge
Lester Welsh, Road & Bridge
Supervisor met with the commission. He presented a road permit
for Kansas Gas Service to replace
a line on 1000 Rd in Welda. The
permit was signed by Chair Howarter.
The State of Kansas and Railroad
has been doing a study on a crossing on Tennessee Rd near Greeley.
They are wanting to put arms at the
crossing and could be installed in the
spring of 2021. Discussion was held
on concerns that Anne Marie Strobel
brought to Commissioner Howarters
attention regarding a light at Scipio
Rd and Highway 59. KDOT thinks the
county can apply for a permit to install
a light at the corner but Lester hasnt
heard of any county who has done
that but will check.
County Audit
Rodney Burns, Auditor, met with
the commission. He presented a
review of the 2019 budget. The county was in compliance with all auditing
practices. He recommended keeping
a balance of the commissary account
in the jail. Rodney presented contracts
to complete the 2022 budget and
2020 audit in 2021. Commissioner
McGhee moved and Commissioner
Pracht seconded to hire Rodney M.
Burns, CPA, LLC to complete the
2020 audit for $16,800.00 and the
2022 budget for $1,400.00. All voted
yes.
Solid Waste
Scott Garrett, Solid Waste
Supervisor, met with the commission. Discussion was held on how
to proceed with a free dump week
in the future. Commissioner Pracht
moved and Commissioner McGhee
seconded to start a voucher system
for 1 free dump of 250lbs during the
2021 year. The vouchers will be put
in tax statements and will be reevaluated in September of 2021. All voted
yes. Scott is working on whether that
can be accomplished and what that
process looks like for his department.
Department Head Meeting
Department heads met to discuss
possible procedures if employees
should contract COVID-19. The
Commissioners recommended to follow KDHE guidelines and allow each
building/department to set their own
guidelines on whether to close until
testing can be completed. Due to
department sizes a uniform policy will
not work for everyone.
Adjourn
Meeting adjourned at 12:00 PM
due to no further business.
ANDERSON COUNTY
DOMESTIC CASES FILED
Gary Nixon, Scranton, has filed a
Petition for Divorce against Nina Tufts,
Scranton.
Anna Miller, Greeley, has filed
a Petition for Divorce against Ted
Stinnett, Welda.
Allyssia Rogers, Topeka, has filed
a Petition for Divorce against Alex
Rottinghaus, Topeka.
Dustin Rhynerson, Blue Mound,
has filed a Petition for Divorce against
Ketturah Rhynerson, Blue Mound.
ANDERSON COUNTY LIMITED
ACTION CASES FILED
The Kansas Department of
Revenue has filed a State Tax Warrant
against Clark Dennion in the amount
of $7,021.06 for sales tax from August
2018 – April 2019.
The Kansas Department of
Revenue has filed a State Tax Warrant
against Clark Dennion in the amount
of $2,908.95 for sales tax from
October 2018 – January 2019.
The
Board
of
County
Commissioners of Anderson County,
KS have filed suit against Scott
Construction Co. Inc., Jarrod Scott, in
the amount of $24,218.94 for failure to
pay fees for waste disposal..
Midland Credit Management, Inc.
has filed suit against Chen Chao in
the amound of $2,386.70 plus costs
for unpaid goods.
Newton Healthcare Corporation
has filed suit against Christina HarperHead and David Harper-Head in the
amount of $406.18 for unpaid goods
and/or services.
Midland Credit Management, Inc.
has filed suit against Shelly Sills in the
amount of $810.53 for unpaid goods.
Midland Credit Management, Inc.
has filed suit against Kyle Crist in the
amound of $640.03 for unpaid goods.
Jeanna Schallert has filed a Petition
for eviction and damages for defaulted
rent against Debbie Suires.
Nebraska Furniture Mart has filed
suit against Christena Powell in the
amount of $1,212 plus interest for
unpaid goods.
ANDERSON COUNTY CRIMINAL
CASES FILED
On September 14, William Brown
was charged with domestic battery.
On September 16, Andrew
Marshall, was charged with possession of marijuana, possession of
methamphetamine and possession of
drug paraphernalia.
On September 16, Stacie Miller was
charged with possession of methamphetamine, possession of marijuana,
possessession of drug paraphernalia,
driving while suspended, no proof of
motor vehicle liability coverage and
expired or no vehicle registration.
On September 21, Joshua McAuley
was charged with unlawfully hosting
minors consuming alcoholic liquor or
cereal malt beverage and furnishing
liquor or malt beverage to a minor.
On September 21, Raven Maley,
was charged with purchase or consumption of alcoholic beverage by a
minor.
ANDERSON COUNTY ACCIDENT
REPORTS FILED
On August 8, a vehicle driven by
Jacob Elliss was traveling southbound
on Colorado Road when it struck a calf
that entered the roadway. Functional
damage was done the vehicle.
On September 1, a vehicle driven
by Joshua Westmoreland was driving
southbound on Indiana Road when
it struck a vehicle driven by Larry
Bontrager, which was traveling northbound on Indiana Road.
On September 13, a vehicle driven
by David Harper-Head was traveling
eastbound on SE 200 Rd. when a
deer ran into the drivers side of the
vehicle.
ANDERSON COUNTY TRAFFIC
CASES FILED
Dana Hull has been charged with
speeding 75 mph in a 65 mph zone,
$153.
Crystal Dalsing has been charged
with speeding 86 mph in a 65 mph
zone, $222.
Raidel Alarcon has been charged
with official traffic control devices;
required obedience, $258.
Katherine Huggins has been
charged with speeding 78 mph in a 45
mph construction zone, $588.
Hunter Peacock has been charged
with speeding 45 mph in a 30 mph
zone, $183.
William Kabel has been charged
with speeding 85 mph in a 65 mph
zone, $213.
Randy Sandberg has been charged
with speeding 65 mph in a 45 mph
construction zone, $318.
Lisa Johnson was charged with
speeding 75 mph in a 65 mph zone,
$153.
Austin Karns has been charged
with speeding 75 mph in a 65 mph
zone, $153.
Michael Torrence has been charged
with speeding 77 mph in a 60 mph
zone and no drivers license, $330.
Brian Gamboa-Rodrigue has been
charged with no valid drivers license,
$243.
Caitlyn Alterman has been charged
with basic rule of governing speed and
no seatbelt, $213.
Paul Rothers has been charged
with improper backing, $153.
Joel Rucker has been charged with
speeding 60 mph in a 45 mph construction zone, $258.
Nicholas Levy has been charged
with an expired drivers license, $168.
Jose Fuentes has been charged
with Municipal/County violation, $258.
Yousuf Dabow has been charged
with official traffic control devices,
required obedience, $183.
Glenn Nabors has been charged
with official traffic control devices,
required obedience, $183.
Shelly Stephens has been charged
with speeding 77 mph in a 65 mph
zone, $165.
Austin Green has been charged
with failure to yield at a stop or yield
sign, $183.
Delmar Metcalf has been charged
with speeding 76 mph in a 60 mph
zone, $189.
Amy Miller has been charged with
speeding 80 mph in a 65 mph zone,
$183.
Madilyn Vyhidal has been charged
with speeding 88 mph in a 65 mph
zone, $240.
ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS
DEPARTMENT ARRESTS
On September 11, Gary Reiter,
Kincaid, was arrested for promote
obscenity to minors and lewd and
lascivious behavoir.
On September 11, William Brown,
Garnett, was arrested for domestic
battery.
On September 11, Michael
Torrence, Pittsburg, was arrested for
violation of offender registration act.
On September 12, Brian GamboaRodriguez, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma,
was arrested for not having a valid
drivers license.
On September 12, Landon Lyons,
Greeley, was arrested for possession
of certain hallucinogenic drugs.
On September 12, Kenneth
Burgoon, Kincaid, was arrested for
failure to appear.
On September 13, Jesse Guerrero,
Kansas City, was arrested to serve a
court ordered sentence.
On September 13, Alicia Stofko,
Ottawa, was arrested for failure to
appear.
On September 15, Anthony
Tomblin, Garnett, was arrested for
failure to appear.
On September 15, Stacie Miller,
Osawatomie, was arrested for possession of certain stimulants with one
prior conviction, possession of certain
hallucinogenic drugs, no valid drivers
license, non-driver ID cards.
On September 15, Justin Nichols,
Lawrence, was booked as a hold for
the Douglas County Sheriffs Office as
he was arrested for kidnapping.
On September 15,
Andrew
Marshall, Osawatomie, was arrested
for possession of opiates/opium/narcotic drugs and certain stimulants and
possession of certain hallucinogenic
drugs.
Dalton Martin, Garnett, was arrested for driving while suspended.
Kevin Barnett, Garnett, was arrested to serve a court ordered sentence.
On September 16, Nocholas
Robinson, Garnett, was arrested to
serve a court ordered sentence.
On September 16, Lane Morrison,
Lane, was arrested for failure to
appear.
On September 17, Kennth
Burgoon, Kincaid, was arrested for
failure to appear.
On September 18, Eric Brooks,
Garnett, was arrested for three counts
of failure to appear.
On September 18, Alek Mansfield,
Coffeyville, was arrested for failure to
appear.
On September 18, Angela Jones,
Garnett, was arrested for violation of
protection order and interference with
a law enforcement officer.
On September 18, Eric Brooks,
Garnett, was arrested for license
restrictions and no vehicle registration.
On September 19, Nicholas
Thompson, Kansas City, Missouri,
was arrested for driving under the
influence, possession of certain hallucinogenic drugs and possession of
drug paraphernalia.
On September 19, Alan Young,
Garnett, was arrested for failure to
appear.
On September 21, Jamie Olsen,
Garnett, was arrested for three counts
of failure to appear.
On September 21, Stacy Dietrich,
Colony, was booked as a hold for the
City of Iola as she was arrested for
failure to appear.
On September 21, Earl Best,
Osawatomie, was arrested for a probation violation.
On September 22, Noah Falk,
Lawrence, was booked as a hold
for the Douglas County Sheriffs
Department as he was arrested for
possession of opiates/opium/narcotic
drugs and certain stimulants.
On September 22, Jacob
Greidanus, Topeka, was arrested for
failue to appear.
On September 22, Rachel Miller,
Garnett, was arrested for failure to
appear.
The benefits of cooperation
Jackie Mundt, Pratt County
farmer and rancher
If I were putting together
a Sunday Drive Edition of a
scavenger hunt, it would most
certainly include the CO-OP
emblem. You probably know
what one I mean: an outline
of a red circle and blue circle overlapping and the letters
C-O-O-P stamped in the middle.
No matter where you go in
the Midwest, you can likely
spot this classic symbol. Its
in obvious places like on the
side of a grain elevator, gas
tank or a business sign. And in
more subtle places like old feed
buckets, oil drums, clocks and
utensils in a grandmothers
kitchen, or on hats and jackets
kept by old farmers.
The logo, which was almost
universally used by agricultural cooperatives in the 1980s and
earlier, has slowly faded from
use as modern cooperatives
have opted to use their own
brands to build recognition
and loyalty, which is a smart
move from a business perspective.
The nostalgic side of me is
a little sad to see the once unified look of cooperatives drift
into obsolescence. It makes
me think about all the people
who are rapidly moving further away from the complex
story of how American agriculture came to grow of the safest,
most abundant food supply in
the world.
Cooperatives played a vital
role in that story, and since
October is National Co-ops
month, I want to share briefly about how co-ops helped
build American agriculture
into what it is today and how
they continue to keep our rural
communities strong.
Cooperatives have their
roots in agriculture. A group of
farmers in England who were
getting a raw deal from their
suppliers formed the first cooperative several centuries ago.
They were paying too much for
a terrible product. Eventually
the farmers got so frustrated
that they decided they could
do much better themselves.
They pooled their resources to
create a business but ended
up creating an new framework
and guiding principles for
cooperatives, which are busi-
ness collectively owned and
operated by their members,
who then share in the benefits
and profits of the organization.
A century ago, that same
model started to make a lot of
sense in small remote communities across the Midwest. As
farmers began to grow excess
grain, they needed somewhere
to take it. A group of neighbors could form a cooperative,
which allowed them to team up
and build an elevator for storage and have an organization
that could take care of selling
and shipping grain to larger
markets. Cooperatives helped
farmers make a better living
for themselves and their neighbors.
Through the decades, these
small community cooperatives
have grown and merged with
other cooperatives to create
more efficiency and adapted
to provide new services for
their members. However, the
guiding principles of serving
members and their communities have stayed the same.
The people who started
those cooperatives probably
were not that different from
you and me. They were trying
to build a business, make a
living and support their families. What made them special
was the willingness to do something risky. They joined their
neighbors, taking a chance
together in hopes it would fix
their problems.
In the spirit of cooperatives
and the pioneers who built
them, I challenge you to look
around at your community.
What problems need solving?
No one is going to solve them
for you. You do not necessarily
have to start a cooperative to
fix every problem but working
together with your neighbors
and investing in your community are great places to start.
And if you do have a local
co-op, remember support them
is just like supporting your
neighbors and community.
"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.
Anderson County
news DAILY
at 8 a.m.
10.37 FM 1220 AM
Health Services
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Back or Neck
Pain?
Carissa May
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Sandi Otipoby, DDS
Schedule your cleaning today!
(785) 448-2487
Family Care
Eye Care
Ask how the
Triton
DecompressionTraction Therapy
can help.
A non-surgical
approach for
chronic sufferors.
(785) 448-6988
Ross Kimball, M.D.
Sarah Nuessen, P.A.
312 S. MAPLE GARNETT
Ottawa, Kansas
Call (785) 242-3116 to
schedule your exam.
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The Anderson
County Review
(785) 448-3121
or email
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Garnett, KS
SAT 8:30am-2pm
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We accept all Medicare drug plans.
(785) 448-6122
To advertise in this
guide, contact
The Anderson
County Review
(785) 448-3121
or email
review@garnett-ks.com
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 29, 2020
ACKMANN
SEPTEMBER 21, 2020
Dolores Ackmann 80, of
Nortonville
Kansas, went
to her heavenly home,
M o n d a y
September
21, 2020. A
visitation
with the family will be at
Ackmann
1 to 2 oclock,
followed by
the funeral, Saturday, October
3, 2020, at Trinity Lutheran
Church, Atchison, Kansas,
with the Rev. Robert M Ziegler
officiating. Memorials are suggested to the Trinity Lutheran
Church Dream Fund 3.
She
married
Herman
Ackmann on February 2, 1958,
in Zion Lutheran Church
Vassar, Kansas.. They have
been blessed with 62 years
of marriage.
She is a member at Trinity
Lutheran Church, Atchison,
Kansas.
Survivors include her husband, Herman of the home,
her children Peggy and Steve
Lackey, Greg Ackmann, Julie
and Oliver Liebermann, all of
Nortonville, and Kathy Scott
of Lancaster. She was blessed
with 10 grandchildren and 16
great grandchildren.
She was preceded in death
by her parents, two sisters, and
five brothers.
Will it be blessing
or judgment?
WEEKLY DEVOTIONAL
BY DAVID BILDERBACK
or receiving punishment. That
is the same reason they had
all of the other altars. They
did not have an understanding of the one true God. Paul
preached Jesus Christ resurrected either for blessing or for
judgment depending on your
relationship with him.
Not much has changed since
those days in Athens. Many
people take the low road and
try to fill their lives with pleasure. Others try to take the
high road and suppress pleasure for rigid discipline. The
question each of us has to
answer at the end of the day is
are we heading in the direction
of blessing or judgment?
Jesus said, Narrow is the
gate and straight is the road
that leads to life, and only a
few find it. (Matthew 7:14)
At some appointed time my
clock and your clock will stop.
Time will be no more. Will
we enter blessing or face judgment?
Ministry on the Holiness of God.
Author of the book,
On the Other Side of the Door
Like David Bilderback on FB
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620-363-5005
Emporia Location:
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Emporia, KS 66801
620-342-5573
Ottawa Location:
233 W 23rd St.
Ottawa, KS 66067
785-229-0684
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Obituary Charges/Policy
Full obituaries are published as submitted in the Review at
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Death notices are published free and include name, date
of birth and death, name of parents, spouse and service
information. A photo may be added to a death notice for a
$10 fee.
Obituaries, jpeg photos and death notices may be emailed
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Questions? Call (785) 448-3121.
Colony Christian Church
Cherry Mound 4-H minutes
– Resurrection Power
The September meeting of
the Cherry Mound 4-H Club
was called to order by President
Jayden Teter on September 20,
2020 at 6:00pm.
Roll call was What was your
favorite memory of this last
summer? This was answered
by 9 members and 2 leaders.
Minutes from July and
August meetings were read and
approved.
The
reporter
Reagan
Witherspoon also reported that
the report was in last months
Anderson County Review.
Treasurer report was given
by Huck Young and we have a
balance of $889.98 in checking
and $1558.86 in savings.
New business was disussed
to have the members vote now
if they were wanting to adopt
angels again this year. Motion
was made by Austin Teter to go
ahead and approve this so we
are ready for when Christmas
comes around. It was seconded
by Reese Witherspoon. Motion
was passed.
Leaders report reminder
that KAP was due to the extenstion office on September 23rd
along with Reporter, Historian,
and Secretary books.
Cherry Mound is also supposed to help Dynamite 4-H
club with setting up the lights
on 4th Avenue for 4-H Week.
Birthdays for September
were recoginized. Happy birthday to Chance Witherspoon.
Songs were from Austin and
Jayden Teter, the club sang
Row, Row, Row your Boat.
Program was turned over
to Vice Preseident Reese
Witherspoon.
Program was a demostration/illustration talk and it was
given by Alex Brownrigg. He
demostrated the proper way to
mount your pictures for the
fair.
The program was then
turned back over to Jayden
Teter.
Officer Elections were
held. New officers for 20202021 are as follows President
– Hayden Newton, Vice
President- Reese Witherspoon,
Secretary
and
Reporter
-Austin Teter, Treasurer
– Riley Young, HistorianChance Witherspoon, and
Parlimentarian- Hank Newton.
Congratualtions to the new
officers. Next meeting is new
members meeting and it will be
held on October 4, 6:00 p.m
Reporter Reagan Witherspoon
Larry Wittmer gave the
Communion Meditation over
the Messianic prophesies in
the Old Testament. These are
prophesies that the men writing didn't even fully understand. The Messiah would be
a man born of a woman, yet
he would be eternal. He would
be exalted, yet he would be
scarred. He would be a suffering servant, yet a mighty king,
seated on the throne of David.
He suffered for our sin, yet he
will return to reign over the
earth. Our job is to trust, and
someday he will reveal all to
us. (Ref: Isaiah 9, 52 & 53)
Pastor Chase Riebel gave
the sermon on "Resurrection
Power". Jesus appeared to
Peter after his resurrection
and told him three times "feed
my sheep", i.e. make disciples. Without the resurrection, there would be no need
to make disciples. There are
7 truths to the resurrection:
1. Resurrection of Jesus: He
showed himself to hundreds,
the resurrection proves he was
the Christ, and it proved to
his disciples that he was truly
alive. 2. Resurrection Hope: If
Christ was not raised, our faith
is useless and all would be lost.
3. Resurrection of the Dead:
All die because they belong to
Adam, but those who belong
to Jesus, have eternal life. 4.
Resurrection of the Body: Our
new bodies will be perfect, without pain, disease and illness. 5.
Resurrection Mystery: We will
not all die, but will all be transformed. 6. Resurrection Song:
Death where is your victory?
Death where is your sting? 7.
Resurrection Incentive: Be
strong and immovable, enthusiastic for the Lord. (Ref:
1 Corinthians 15; John 21;
Acts 1:3; Romans 5:10; 1 John
3:2; Isaiah 25:8; Hosea 13:14;
Revelation 22:12) Check out all
of our sermons on our website at www.colonychristianchurch.org.
Mens Bible study, Tuesday
mornings at 7:00 in the church
basement. Womens Bible
study, Tuesday mornings
at 9:00 at the parsonage. The
Mary & Martha's life group,
Tuesday evenings at 6:00. Meal
Wednesdays at 5:30, Adult Bible
study (Psalm 119) following the
meal at 7:00 in the parsonage,
with the youth group at 7:00
in the church. New Men's and
Mom's life groups will be starting up soon.
Distracted Driving: Its not just cell phones
No life is worth losing to
driver distraction. In Kansas,
98 people died in distracted driving crashes in 2018,
according to the latest data
from National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration.
Nationwide, nearly 3,000
people are killed in crashes
involving a distracted driver,
contributing to the 36,560 lives
lost to crashes on U.S. roadways in 2018. There is no text
message or Snapchat worth
reading or sending when injuring or killing someone is the
potential cost.
Distractions include more
than texting. Anything that
diverts attention from driving
eating and drinking, adjusting navigation, talking to other
SUBSCRIBE!
While Paul was waiting for
Silas and Timothy in Athens
he went to the synagogue and
reasoned with the Jews and
God-fearing Greeks. While he
was in the synagogue a group
of Epicurean and Stoic philosophers began to dispute with
him.
The Epicureans believed
that seeking happiness or pleasure was the primary goal of
life. By contrast the Stoics
placed thinking above feeling
and they tried to live in harmony with nature and reason, suppressing their desire
for pleasure. Thus they were
very disciplined. All these
men spent their time talking
about and listening to the latest ideas.
When Paul had entered the
city of Athens he had noticed
hundreds of alters where pagan
worship was practiced. So
when he was asked to speak to
the meeting of the Areopagus
he was well prepared. Paul
began to preach to them concerning one of the altars he
had seen as he entered Athens.
The inscription was TO AN
UNKNOWN GOD. Paul said
to them, Now what you worship as something unknown I
am going to proclaim to you.
Paul then began to preach
Jesus Christ.
The question we are left to
wonder is, why would they
have an altar to an unknown
god? The best explanation I
have ever found stated they
built an idol to an unknown
god for fear of missing blessing
3A
REMEMBRANCES
passengers, or talking or texting on the phone can result
in tragedy.
Despite what some drivers
may think, hands-free is not
risk-free. Even with your eyes
on the road and your hands
on the wheel, you are not safe
unless your mind focuses on
the drive. Looking away from
the road for just two seconds
doubles the risk of a crash.
Avoid distractions while
driving by setting vehicle systems like GPS, seats and sound
systems before hitting the
road, as well as finishing dressing and personal grooming at
home before you leave.
The consequences of alcohol-impaired driving and texting while driving could be
the same, so AAA urges drivers: Dont Drive Intoxicated.
Dont Drive Intexticated. Put
aside electronic distractions
and never use text messaging,
email, video games or internet
functions, including those built
into the vehicle, while driving.
Stow your smartphone away,
turn it to airplane mode, or
activate call/text blocking features.
Drivers should always stay
focused and avoid anything
that diverts attention. Be sure
to actively scan the road, use
mirrors, and watch out for
pedestrians and cyclists. Enlist
passengers help as a designated texter. Ask them to answer
your calls, respond to texts and
program navigation.
Know and abide by state
and city distracted driving
and driver mobile phone use
laws to avoid costly citations
or worse a life-changing or
deadly crash.
Plain and simple – focused
drivers save lives. AAA urges
all drivers to pay attention and
focus on the road during this
National Distracted Driving
Awareness month and all year
long. For more information,
visit AAA.com/dontdrivedistracted.
Shawn Steward
AAA Kansas
Wichita
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4A
Selected by newspaper professionals nationwide for 43 Awards of Excellence
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 29, 2020
OPINION
Lessons from A Social Dilemma
At this stage in the game with the lost
friendships, social media bullying and previously uncharacteristic animosity weve all
seen from social media platforms like Facebook
and the like, the new documentary The Social
Dilemma explains the additive buzz we get
there and how tech giants make billions exploiting our habit.
And how its taken control of us.
The documentary now running on Netflix is
a must-watch for everyone whos ever wasted
time on Facebook or Twitter which they know
they should have been spending doing something else, and more seriously for anyone with
kids even more addicted to the platforms than
their parents.
The gist is this: Tech giants at Facebook
and Google track every single search, like,
post, comment, or other interaction you make
on their platforms nary a keystroke goes
ignored by the megalithic supercomputers and
their software algorithms that track your every
move, building a profile of you and billions
of others. Every recipe, every car part, every
like on a cat video, every Facebook search
of an old girlfriend they know, and they use
that info to position you for advertising from
companies that have defined you as a possible
customer.
As the documentary explains with the help
of former Facebook and Google executives
turned whistleblowers, its not so much the
record keeping that makes the system so sinister. The more frightening aspect is the psychological manipulation the platforms use to keep
us coming back for the cheese at the end of the
maze.
Its that little feel good buzz of affirmation you get when someone likes your post
on Facebook or Twitter. Kids get it in spades,
so much so that theyre constantly scrolling
down to see what new truffle might be downloading onto their SnapChat. Dopamine that
pleasure chemical so important to our brains
and even the bare perpetuation of our species
is the object of buy/sell/trade on social platforms to keep us in the herd.
Lay off Facebook for a while, and the algorithms know youre gone. An illustration in
The Social Dilemma relays how Facebook
begins prompting you when it realizes you
havent been active in a while friend suggestions or reminders that you have 19 new
notifications all designed to pique your dopa-
REVIEW COMMENTARY
DANE HICKS, Publisher
mine craving and get you back onto the screen.
Because its that screen that matters to the
social media platforms and money and absolutely nothing else. Former execs interviewed
for The Social Dilemma recount how both
they and others among their colleagues tried to
sound the alarm when their consciences began
to get the best of them. The result? Nothing.
The technology for tracking you and directing
advertiser messages to you based on your history only gets better.
We should be concerned for two reasons.
First, that the more we play the game the more
we get played. Fake News of all kinds gets
gobbled up and regurgitated without a second thought to checking its content. Is it any
wonder that you only see social media posts
from political posters that you agree with? For
me, Ive seen every Trump toy and conservative-themed t-shirt out there. My biases and
prejudices are constantly reinforced. And Im
constantly fed advertising that snuggles right
up to my biases.
Which leads to the second point. In a world
where so much of our lives, particularly for
young people, is consumed in an on-screen
reality that has so coddled us to reaffirm everything we believe, what is the expectation when
we encounter something we dont agree with?
Protests and counter protests? Crazy rumors
that President Obama plans to limit ammunition production? Violent racially charged riots?
A president who tweets from the White House
at 3 a.m.? Any sudden stoppage to a dopamine
SEE DILEMMA ON PAGE 1B
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.
Regardless of what political party you are dont
listen to the idiots in your party trying to
tell you about their knowledge about voting
because they dont know. Stephanie Sharp gave
incorrect information in Johnson County and
told people if they requested a mail ballot to
vote it and send it in and not show up at the
polls to vote too because provisional ballots
only get counted if the results are very close.
Wrong, provisional ballots get counted as soon
as the canvass decides if theyre eligible or not.
If you mailed in a ballot and then you showed
up to vote anyway, well then it dont count and
thats voter fraud on your part because you
only get to vote once (deleted). If youve got
questions about your voting go ask your country clerk and dont listen to idiots who think
they know. Thank you.
Okay noble Americans take note. The Democrat
scheme is to take Republican arguments and
COVID funds will expand Kansas internet
In the next few weeks, were going to see
the start of dramatic expansion of access to the
Internet from border to border in Kansas.
And surprisingly — or disappointingly — it
is largely due to the COVID-19 pandemic and
about $1 billion in federal funds from which
more than $100 million will be spent by Dec.
30 on connectivity, getting fast and reliable
Internet access to everyone in Kansas that
should have taken place years ago.
Now, thats probably not what most of
us were thinking about when the pandemic
struck the nation this spring. We were drawn
first to the hundreds of Kansans who are dying
of COVID-19, and the thousands who lost their
jobs and their access to food and shelter, and
the concern about how children would spend
their time away from school and how parents
would care for them from home while trying
to maintain their paychecks remotely.
The first instinct was to help those Kansans.
To make sure that our first-responders would
be safely masked- and gloved-up to find those
ill citizens, get them to health-care facilities,
and to boost the supplies at those hospitals so
that care-givers could save more lives.
But we also started to take a unified, statewide look at just what communications, and
were talking Internet, services would be
available to allow parents to work from home,
for businesses to expand their reach, for the
economy to grow so that we have the facilities
to care for ill Kansans.
It quickly became apparent that increased
Internet access and speed and volume were
STATE COMMENTARY
MARTIN HAWVER, At The Rail
going to be keys to not only dealing with the
current health problems but the economic
crises that they spawned.
With issues ranging from how to educate
children at schools where conventional teacher-student contact suddenly became dangerous to providing tele-health services so that
rural Kansans dont have to drive for hours to
get simple check-ups or have illnesses defined
and treatment started, Internet connectivity quickly became essential to every town
and every suburb and even every city where
crowded living conditions and tall office buildings stymie the new age of communication.
Look for millions of dollars of contracts
to be made in the upcoming weeks, largely
through the governors Strengthening People
and Revitalizing Kansas (SPARK) task force
which is dispersing that $1 billion-plus in federal pandemic assistance.
The connectivity assistance will range from
subsidized Internet connections for the poor
and their children to high-speed and high-volume connections that will allow rural Kansas
to become part of the international economy and the intellectual marketplace to tap
Kansans with technical skills that will provide
high-paying and sought-after industries and
jobs.
Nope, thats not what most of us were thinking about back in the spring, when the pandemic opened. But thats the way for Kansans
to not only get health care to those who need
it, to track where COVID-19 cases are being
detected, but to allow Kansans to keep their
jobs when crowding tech-savvy workers in
offices isnt safe anymore.
Expect, of course, that the Legislature is
going to be reading those contracts, considering whether the expenditures are actually
going to increase Kansas ability to respond to
catastrophes and make the state less likely to
see the spread of health dangers and prepare
for whatever arises next.
Strange that a pandemic that has cost hundreds of lives and thousands of illnesses will
likely see an expansion of Internet services
that for many is just a frill. But it clearly isnt
a frill in this economy, and the health aspects
of that communication ability is likely to be
also an economic boost for the state.
Syndicated by Hawver News Company LLC
of Topeka; Martin Hawver is publisher of
Hawvers Capitol Report www.hawvernews.
com
Democrats pursue strategy of ideological vengeance
Constitutional revolution is going mainstream.
If the Republican Senate confirms a Trump
appointee to fill Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburgs
Supreme Court seat right before or after the
election, progressives say Democrats, if they
sweep in November, should retaliate by packing the Supreme Court.
None of this comes out of the blue. The
left is disenchanted with our country, and
especially its governing institutions, which
it believes are shot through with racism and
deeply undemocratic. Democrats have gone
from assuming a few years ago that they have
a permanent majority to assuming that they
cant possibly win under such a rigged system.
They no longer want to live under a government that checks majoritarian passions,
recognizes the importance of states in our federal system and features a Supreme Court that
is supposed to render independent judgments
based on the law and the Constitution. All of
this, once a matter of basic civics, is now for
suckers.
Before its new fashion, court-packing used
to be notorious, the ill-considered move that
President Franklin Roosevelt couldnt see
through even at the height of his power.
For good reason. To add a bunch of new
seats to the Supreme Court explicitly so a
Democratic president could fill them would
radically diminish the Courts standing. It
would invite Republicans to counter with their
own bout of court-packing when they again
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
return to power. The Court would become
merely a partisan plaything and essentially
an adjunct to the legislative branch — all that
would stay the same would be the black robes.
And for what? To compensate for a duly
elected Republican Senate acting on its prerogatives to block one Supreme Court nominee
(Obama nominee Merrick Garland) and potentially confirm another (Trumps nominee to
fill the RBG seat).
The Senate itself is now an affront because
small states get equal representation with
large states. Never mind that this arrangement was at the center of the deal that gave
us the Constitution. Never mind that the
Constitution stipulates that this provision
is unamendable. Never mind that prior to
2014 the Democrats controlled the Senate and
didnt seem overly concerned about the bodys
alleged lack of legitimacy.
Its not a failing of our constitutional design
that Democrats have made themselves so hateful to rural voters that they despair of reliably
holding the Senate going forward. As a corrective, they are threatening to eliminate the
filibuster to allow them to add Washington,
D.C., and Puerto Rico as states to boost their
number of senators, a maneuver that smacks
of pre-Civil War era power politics.
All of this talk is an awkward fit for Joe
Bidens candidacy. We are told that Biden is
an inoffensive institutionalist and committed
moderate, but if Republicans defy his wishes
on the RBG seat, he will respond by blessing
outlandish changes to our system passed by
narrow majorities.
And, by the way, Biden better win. Shadi
Hamid of The Atlantic wrote a piece expressing his worry that Trump will win reelection
and Democrats and others on the left will be
unwilling, even unable, to accept the result.
He raises the possibility of mass unrest and
political violence across American cities.
Accepting the result of an election is a pretty important norm — unless youve convinced
yourself you live under a hideously undemocratic regime with no legitimacy.
Rich Lowry is editor of the National
Review.
falsely turn them back on them. The crybaby,
abortion loving, building burning, police abolishing communist that called in to complain
about our newspaper having a GOP sign in the
window is awesome proof of this. What about
the New York Times, the Washington Post and
the Kansas Star? Need I say more? Trump 2020.
The entire misnamed Black Lives Matter movement is founded on a big lie. Incited by their
incendiary rhetoric like marching and chanting what do we want, dead cops, when do we
want it, now, the followers have assassinated
police officers across the nation, like the massacre of five police officers during a black lives
matter march in Dallas, Texas by Mica Xavier
Johnson. And as officers are forced to retreat
from the black neighborhoods they protect,
violent armed gangs have free rein and the
homicide rate soars, costing thousands of black
lives. This is an evil, deeply racist movement
exploited by the ignorant and cynical Democrat
Party purely for political power, not caring how
many black lies are lost in the process.
Can you believe the childish gall of these
Democrats in Washington? Saying if Trump
appoints a supreme court pick, as the
Constitution declares, that theyll take their
next opportunity to pack the supreme court?
I dont think Ive ever seen a bigger group of
spoiled brats in my life. Not worthy of the offices they hold and they show the American people
more and more every day exactly why. Im a
Libertarian, but I believe this election is going
to be a blow out for Republicans and I think we
can all understand why. The Democrats did this
to themselves.
About that trench out in front of the funeral
home. I cant say how long thats been there
but my cars got to where it swerves all by itself
everytime I drive down Oak. Must be something
important theyre afraid theyll lose if they
cover it up.
Contact your elected leaders:
Governor Laura Kelly
300 SW 10th Ave #241s,
Topeka, KS 66612
(202) 224-6521
email form:
www.governor.kansas.gov
Senator Pat Roberts
302 Hart Senate O.B.,
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-4774,
pat_roberts@roberts.senate.gov
Senator Jerry Moran
2202 Rayburn House Office
Building
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-6521
2nd Dist. Congressman
Steve Watkins
1205 Longworth House Office Bldg.
Washington, D.C., 20515
(202) 225-6601
First Amendment, U.S. Constitution:
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.
FORMERLY THE GARNETT PLAINDEALER, THE ANDERSON
COUNTY REPUBLICAN, THE REPUBLICAN-PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT
JOURNAL PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT REVIEW, THE GREELEY GRAPHIC,
THE ANDERSON COUNTIAN.
Published each Tuesday by Garnett Publishing, Inc.,
and entered as Periodicals Class mail at Garnett, Ks., 66032,
permit number 214-200. Copyright Garnett Publishing, Inc., 2018.
Postmaster: Send address corrections to:
The Anderson County Review
112 W. 6th Ave. P.O. Box 409 Garnett, KS 66032
(785) 448-3121review@garnett-ks.com
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 29, 2020
September 2000 – Drought
takes toll on local farmers
September 2010
Two separate wrecks in the
past week involved 15 people
but left only one person injured.
A van carrying 13 people ran
off the road and into a creek
on a rural road near Harris
on Saturday. In an unrelated
incident, a Richmond woman
was stopped to make a left hand
turn when her vehicle was
struck from behind. She was
taken to the hospital to have
her injuries treated, but was
later released.
September 2000
Ongoing heat and a bonedry summer have left collection
points in Garnett with only 16
percent of its average rainfall
for the summer. The drought is
taking a toll on local farm fields
as well as cattlemen. Anderson
County Agriculture Agent Jill
Zimmerman said local cattlemen are having to put cattle on
feed and protein supplements
earlier than usual due to the
impact on grazing pastures.
Soybeans are to the point that
they are being baled and corn
is being recorded at between 80
to 125 bushels per acre.
September 1990
Contacts with regional military reserve units have given
only hazy information as to
local area reservists who may
be called to duty to assist in
the U.S. action in the Middle
East. The U.S. has sent troops
to Saudi Arabia to protect
interests in that country after
Iraq invaded the neighboring
country of Kuwait about three
weeks ago.
THAT WAS THEN
responded by reaching for a tire
tool which he struck Guilfoyle
with. A juvenile companion of
Guilfoyle, from Garnett, joined
the fight. The Guilfoyle and his
friends proceeded to beat the
juvenile knocking him unconscious.
September 1920
Melissa Hobbs
SEND LOCAL HISTORY PHOTOS, INFORMATION TO
REVIEW@GARNETT-KS.COM
September 1980
A number of juveniles from
Garnett and Greeley were
involved in a fight following a
Greeley Days dance that hospitalized three participants.
According to Greeley Marshall
Jim Gilner, a Greeley adult,
Billy Guilfoyle, was attempting to hold a juvenile in the
juveniles car. The juvenile
5A
HISTORY
Fire at the water-works
pumping station on Cedar
Creek Saturday destroyed
the wooden building over the
pit which contained a couple
of electric motors and three
pumps and the switchboard.
One motor was destroyed and
the other damaged and the
switchboard was burned. The
cause of the fire is unknown.
The chemical fire engine was
taken out to the place, but too
late to do any good.
CALL AHEAD- PICK UP (913) 898-6211
Monday: Tacos & chicken enchiladas
Every Sunday
Tuesday: Open-face roast beef
11 a.m. – 2 p.m.
Wednesday: Fried chicken
ALL AVAILABLE
Thursday: Meatloaf
Homemade
FAMILY-STYLE!
Friday: Chicken fried steak
PAN-FRIED
or chicken fried chicken
CHICKEN
Saturday: Wings- EVERY Saturday!
1st Saturday:
Ribeye Steak
2nd Saturday:
Chicken Enchiladas
We have
3rd Saturday:
Boiled Shrimp
pizza!
4th Saturday:
Fried Catfish
5th Saturday:
Sues Choice
Three more finds at latest site
DIGGING UP THE PAST
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 504-4722 for
local archeology information.
For this weeks column I
want to share three more photos
of artifacts found at my latest
archaeological site.
#1 – This old brass lock plate
has me baffled. After all my
research, Ive turned up absolutely nothing. Note the shape of
the keyhole.
#2 – This little angel or cherub
pendant was once worn about
the neck. Its certainly not made
of any precious metal. Note the
small stone is missing.
#3 – This is the head of a solid
little girl china doll. Im hoping
to find the rest of her body one of
these days. I wonder what little
girl once owned her?
Respectfully submitted by:
Henry Roeckers 8Oct.2020
#1
#2
2×3
1-Stop
#3
Sunday: Homemade pan-fried chicken w/sides
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6A
SPORTS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 29, 2020
ACHS homecoming rescheduled
GARNETT – The Bulldogs
were scheduled to play Iola on
Friday night for their homecoming game but due to the
Iola varsity football team being
placed on quarantine through
October 2nd, the Bulldogs had
to postpone their game.
They will instead be traveling to Lyndon on Friday night
in what will be a matchup
between two (3-1) teams.
Kickoff will be at 7 p.m.
Crest football remains
undefeated with another rout
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-29-2020 / USD365 Twitter
The Anderson County Lady Bulldogs had a rough week last week dropping 3 of 4 matches. They lost a pair of matches to Santa Fe
Trail and Osawatomie on Tuesday. On Saturday at their home invitational they did open play downing Osage City before falling in their
second game to West Franklin.
COLONY – The Crest Lancers
rolled over winless St. Paul at
home on Friday night to move
to 4-0 with a dominating 54-8
victory.
It was the fourth straight
game shortened by the 45-point
mercy rule by the Lancers.
In their 4 victories, Crest
has outscored their foes by a
total of 236-36.
The most recent win over
St. Paul came to a halt with
about 6 minutes remaining in
the third quarter.
The big plays continued for
the Lancers.
Holden Barker led the way
offensively with 8 carries for 77
yards and 3 touchdowns.
Stratton McGhee matched
his 3 touchdowns on just 4 carries for 54 yards.
Quarterback
Jacquez
Coleman connected on 3 of 4
passes for 55 yards and a touchdown and also ran the ball 6
times for 73 yards.
Tyson Hermreck hauled in 2
passes for 48 yards and a touchdown.
Defensively it was Barker
and McGhee leading the way
finishing with 8 and 6 tackles
respectively.
Coleman picked off his counterpart for the only turnover
on the night.
Lancers sweep first home matches of the season Viking runners compete well at Prairie View
COLONY – The anticipation of
playing in the Crest Lancers
improved gym turned into an
exciting evening of volleyball.
They hosted both Pleasanton
and Uniontown coming away
with a JV win and two varsity
wins. JV defeated Pleasanton
25-6 and 25-16. Varsity defeated Pleasanton in two 25-18 and
25-17 and Uniontown in three
25-19, 22-25, 25-23.
The JV girls hustled, communicated well, and played
together. It was exciting to see
Sophomore Kamryn Luedke
serve 14 consecutive points
with 9 ace serves, Coach
Abigail Hermreck said.
The varsity girls played
very well together. We recovered from mistakes quickly,
trusted each other, and made
many hustle plays, Hermreck
added.
Senior Aubree Holloran
showed tremendous leadership. She served the last 4
points in a match with 3 of
them being aces. She led the
team with 8 ace serves and 18
assists. She had 7 kills and hit
the floor saving lots of plays.
Junior Lindsey Godderz
went 21/21 with 100% serving.
We really like to have her
come up in the serving order.
She has only missed one serve
all season. She had 3 ace serves
and did a really nice job passing
and digging for us, Hermreck
said.
Junior Anna Hermreck is
a steady presence on the floor.
She works hard and stays calm
throughout. She had 2 kills and
several nice attacks.
Sophomore Sydney Stephens
had several nice recovered
balls at the net. She had 6 kills,
with one being a game winning
point. She had 2 ace serves and
1 block. She went up and challenged at the net.
Sophomore
McKenna
Hammond came out swinging
tough. She had 8 kills, 2 ace
serves, and did well with digs
and free ball passing.
Sophomore Haylee Beckmon
played hard, serving 80% and
had 3 ace serves. She went
10//11 on digs, and had a blocking assists.
Sophomore Brinley McGhee
played hard and served well
at 92% with 12/13. She had 1
ace serve and a blocking assists
and 2 setting assists.
Freshman Kayla Hermreck
is becoming more of a presence
at the net. She led the team with
12 kills and 4 blocks. She served
well with 19/20 at 95% and had
4 aces.
I was incredibly proud of
the Lady Lancers and enjoyed
the enthusiasm of the crowd
cheering them on. The gym
was loud! Thanks to all that
came out to support the girls,
Hermreck added.
Next up for the Lancers
is they travel to Oswego on
Tuesday, September 29.
Lady Bulldog golf looking strong early on
The Lady Bulldogs traveled to Shawnee Country Club
on September 15th to play in
Haydens 9 hole tournament.
Maclaine Sears shot a 43,
Madison Stevens 44, Madolyn
Honn 49, and Ally Duke 51 for
a team score of 187! The team
tied Wamego, a consistently
solid, team that took 2nd place
at state last year. Wamgeo won
the tie to take first place, but
only by 3 strokes. Seniors
Maclaine Sears placed 2nd and
Madison stevens 4th.
Coach Wiehl was very
impressed by the team score
but knew they could shoot
these number this year. She
also said she was very proud of
Reese Witherspoon for shooting a 57 at her first varsity meet
this year and helping her team.
Last week the lady golfers
had 2 meets. Wednesday they
played at Paola Country Club.
Junior Ally Duke had her best
round yet, shooting a 45 and
placed 5th. Maclaine Sears shot
a 46 and placed 7th. Madolyn
Honn and Aislyn Smith helped
ensure the team a third place
finish rounding out a team
score of 202.
Thursday they traveled
to Council Grove where the
wind became a bit of a factor.
Madison Stevens finished 2nd
with a 46 while senior Madolyn
Honn shot a 50 and placed 9th.
Junior Ally Duke put a lot of
pressure on herself, but she
was still in the medals placing 15th winning a tie for her
medal. The team tied Council
Grove with a team score of 218,
but lost the tie breaker.
Both
Wednesday
and
Thursday the Lady Bulldogs
didnt have their full team, so
coach Wiehl feels confident
they will do better in the future.
As long as the team can stay
healthy, confident and work
on the short game they have a
very good chance of going to
State again this year, Wiehl
stated.
PRAIRIE VIEW – Leading the
way for the varsity runners
at Prairie View was David
Craft (18:24, 3rd place) and
Dakota Kuczmarski (18:58, 11th
place). Luke Cotter (19:29) and
Nicholas Schultze (21:07) finished 19th and 28th respectively.
JV runner Alex Sheet (26:55)
finished in 15th in the boys
run.
For the girls team, Lily
Meyer (22:32, 4th place) was
just inside the top five.
The junior high competed
as well winning a handful of
medals, their results are listed
below.
Head coach Troy Prosser
had this to say heading into the
second half of the season, As
we officially hit the midpoint of
the season, many of the usual
signs of growth and improve-
ment are starting to show in
each of our runners. Every
course has its own nuances that
pose some interesting obstacles
to overcome and Prairie View
is no exception. Although the
time on the clock becomes a
fixation for some, the improvements in technique, race strategy, and confidence were a
few of the subtle signs I was
very pleased to see. Places
where we may have lacked
the experience or opportunity the last three weeks were
present across all of our races
this week. Our middle schoolers, led by Connor, Aydan, and
Melaney, found themselves in
some heated competition and
excelled when pushed by runners in the field. The same can
be said for Lily and David in
the Varsity races. On a difficult
course, over half of the team
earning individual medals and
a handful of runners posting
their season best times only tell
part of the story. Our goal is
now to turn the page and start
the next chapter as we have a
chance to host our next meet
on October 1st.
8th Grade Girls 2 Mile
4th – Melaney Chrisjohn – 15:33
5th – Kaylee Holstine – 16:18
8th Grade Boys 2 Mile
1st – Connor Burkdoll – 13:13
5th – Cody Hammond – 14:17
7th Grade Girls 2 Mile
12th – Arabella Dunbar – 19:36
7th Grade Boys 2 Mile
2nd – Aydan Dunbar – 14:52
6th – Hunter Johnson – 15:20
16th – Aidan Howland – 17:33
23rd – Cash Miller – 19:13
Vikings football down Jayhawk-Linn
MOUND CITY – It was another solid performance on both
sides of the ball for the Central
Heights Vikings (3-1) as they
controlled the line of scrimamge and used ball control to
down Jayhawk-Linn (1-2) 24-6.
Brady Burson led the
offense with 116 yards on 16
carries and scored a pair of
touchdowns.
Quarterback Tony Detwiler
connected on 3 of 6 passes for
86 yards and a touchdown to
go along with 17 carries for 101
yards.
Cauy Newell pulled in the
big pass on the night scoring
on a 65 yard catch and run.
Newell finished the night with
2 catches for 82 yards.
Newell also paced the
defense with 16 tackles, forced
a fumble and recorded a 1/2
sack.
Treyton Smith has 12 tackles, 5 tackles for loss and also a
1/2 sack.
Dominic Lopez was a force
inside with 8 tackles, 3 tackles
for loss, 5 quarterback hurries
and 2.5 sacks.
Next up for the Vikings is a
trip north to play Horton (0-4).
Horton has struggled this season being outscored 218-24.
2×4
Yutzy
ACHS runners finish 2nd and 3rd at PV
PRAIRIE VIEW – The AC
Bulldog girls finished in 2nd
last week at Prairie View while
the boys finished in 3rd place.
The leading Lady Bulldog
runner was Rayna Jasper in
6th place.
She was followed closely by
Addie Fudge who fnished in
7th.
Other runners finishing
were Kassie Mains (12th),
Makenzie Kueser (16th), Katie
Schmit (23rd), Lanie Walter
(26th) and Orra Lutz (27th).
AC finished a distant 2nd
with a score of 54, well behind
the dominating performance
by Louisburg (19 points).
The boys had 3 runners in
the top 6. Landon Kraft (4th),
Seneca Wettstein (5th) and
Kasen Fudge (6th) led the way.
A trio of boys also finished
21st, 22nd and 23rd. In order
they were Leo Sheahan, Dylan
Cole and Orvel Broce.
Bulldogs fall flat in 41-0 defeat to Girard
GIRARD – The ACHS Bulldogs
were riding high after a 3-0
start but it came to a crashing
halt last Friday on the road in a
tough loss to Girard, 41-0.
Girard took the lead at
the midway point of the first
quarter and scored again right
before the end of the period to
go up 14-0 heading into the second.
Quarterback Bo Diliner
went down with a knee injury
before halftime, which took the
wind out of the Bulldog offense.
They struggled to sustain
2×3
The Boniface
St. Boniface Church Fall Bazaar
St.
scheduled for Sunday, October 4th has been
Church
cancelled due to COVID 19 protocols.
We will miss visiting with you and serving
you, but hope you understand this decision.
We will, hopefully, look forward to serving
you and enjoying your support on
Sunday, October 3rd, 2021
any drives in the second half
which eventually led to a wore
down defense. Girard finally
capitalized scoring 4 touchdowns over the final 14 minutes to put the game out of
reach.
2×3
Agency West
2×5
Sonic
Top Dog
of the
Week!
Aubree
Holloran
Aubree led her team with 8 ace
serves and 18 assists and also
had 7 kills as the Crest Lancers
volleyball team downed both
Uniontown and Pleasanton.
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
1B
B
Section
CALENDAR
Tuesday, September 29
10:00 a.m. – Storytime for Preschoolers
– Online
12:00 p.m. – Rotary International Club
Meeting
6:00 p.m. – City Commission Meeting
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Wednesday, September 30
1:00 p.m. – Duplicate Bridge – Cancelled
1:00 p.m. – Alzheimers Support Group Cancelled until further notice
Thursday, October 1
9:00 a.m. – TOPS Meeting
4:00 p.m. – Emergency Food Assistance
Program (Harvesters)
6:00 p.m. – 13-Point Pitch & Snacks Garnett Senior Center
6:30 p.m. – Anderson County Historical
Society Meeting
6:30 p.m. – USD 365 Endowment
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
7:00 p.m. – USD 365 BOE Meeting
Thursday, October 2
Shop Hop sponsored by Love Whats Local
Saturday, October 3
8:00 a.m. – Kart Road Roaces
Sunday, October 4
4:00 p.m. – Kart Road Roaces
Monday, October 5
9:00 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission Meeting
9:00 a.m. – Friendsip Quilters Meeting
4:00 p.m. – Greeley PTO
6:00 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery
6:00 p.m. – Garnett Lions Club Meeting
7:30 p.m. – Kincaid Masonic Lodge No.
338 Meeting
Tuesday, October 6
10:00 a.m. – Storytime for Preschoolers
– Online
12:00 p.m. – Rotary International Club
Meeting
4:30 p.m. – Tourism Advisory Board Mtg
5:30 p.m. – Garnett Community
Foundation Board Meeting
6:00 p.m. – American Legion Bingo
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Wednesday, October 7
1:00 p.m. – Duplicate Bridge – Cancelled
5:30 p.m. – ACHS Booster Club Meeting
5:30 p.m. – Garnett Elementary Site
Council Meeting
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 8
9:00 a.m. – TOPS Meeting
6:00 p.m. – 13-Point Pitch & Snacks Garnett Senior Center
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
7:30 p.m. – Delphian Masonic Lodge
No. 44 Meeting
Friday, October 9
Lake Garnett Grand Prix Revival
8:00 a.m. – Morning Mingle – Location TBA
4:00 p.m. – Airport Advisory Board Meeting
Saturday, October 10
Lake Garnett Grand Prix Revival
Sunday, October 11
Lake Garnett Grand Prix Revival
Monday, October 12
9:00 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission Meeting
1:00 p.m. – Anderson County Caregiver
Support Group
community
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 29, 2020
2020 Kansas Hunter
Education class to
take place October 18
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-29-2020 / DANE HICKS
Corncobs on the gravel roads of western Anderson County last week were a clear sign that the 2020
corn harvest was well underway, as recent dry weather made for optimal harvest conditions. LeRoy
Coop at Westphalia reported yields from 110-135 bushel per acre.
Crest sports new look, gear after upgrades
COLONY Crest High School
at Colony has a new exterior
look and some other upgrades
which were recently completed.
Due to an $80,000 gift from
the Goppert Foundation to the
Crest Education Foundation,
the district was able to ren-
ovate the Ag Shop and bring
new tools and technology to
the classroom, said Crest
Superintendent Shane Walter.
Other projects included the
installation of air conditioning
in the Crest gym, along with
new paint, new bleachers and
new signages. All new carpet
and tile flooring in the district,
as well as new linear panel for
the shop walls, new welders
and a computerized plasma
cutting table.
New playground equipment
was also funded with a the help
of a private donation to the
Crest Education Foundation.
The monthly meeting of the
Cherry Mound 4-H for July
was called to order on July 12,
2020 at Westphalia City Park
by President Jayden Teter.
The pledge of allegiance
and 4-H Pledge were led by
Chance Witherspoon and
Max Jimenez. The Roll Call
was what is your favorite fair
food. This was answered by 10
member and two leaders.
Secretary
Reagan
Witherspoon read last months
minutes. They were approved
as written.
She also reported that the
minutes would be in the next
weeks Anderson County
Review.
Treasurer report was given
by Riley Young he reported that we have in savings
$1559.45 and Checking was
$889.00.
A July birthday was celebrated as this month was
Reagan Witherspoons birthday.
There was a motion brought
by Austin Teter to pay $48.00
to the 4-H council for awards
for the fair sponsored by our
club. It was seconded by Huck
Young.
Also, Austin Teter made
the motion for us to have our
August Meeting on Thursday,
July 30th, for the club tour to
take place at the fairgrounds.
It was seconded by Chance
Witherspoon.
Leaders report Reminder
that the Fair Setup was to take
place Saturday July 25, also to
make sure no animals were to
be taken off trailers till after
3pm and checked by the vet.
The program was then
turned over to Vice President
Reese Witherspoon for the
program.
We had made up talks by
Hayden Newton on a demonstration / illustration talk he
went over how to clean a gun.
Hank Newton gave a project
talk on how to present your
produce at the fair.
Reese then read the Agenda
for the next meeting. There
was a motion to adjourn the
meeting by Austin Teter and
seconded by Max Jimenez.
Refreshments were provided by The Jimenez Family.
The monthly meeting for
August of the Cherry Mound
4-H was called to order on July
30, 2020 at Anderson County
Fairgrounds.
The meeting was called to
order by Jayden Teter.
There were no reports or
minutes read. Ten Members
and two leaders were present
for the club tour.
Each member walked
around the fairgrounds and
talked about their projects,
and their livestock. Motion
to adjourn meeting was made
by Austin Teter and seconded
by Guy Young meeting was
adjourned.
The next meeting is to take
place on September 13, 2020
at 6:00pm at the Westphalia
Elementary School.
DILEMMA…
HOW TO SELL STUFF
Dane Hicks
Review Publisher
January-April if you prepare taxes,
etc.
These are your pulse periods,
and if youve been in business
any amount of time you probably
already have a feel for these pulses times when for some reason
youre busier or customers are
more active.
So when the fish are hungry,
thats when you need to be fishing. As you connect the dots on
your sales graph, you should also
plot points on your promotional
budget that roughly follow your
sales graph. However you promote
boosted Facebook posts, radio
advertising, sales people who go
door-to-door, industry newsletters,
etc. you want to apply more budget during the times customers
are most likely to buy. You need
to retain your customer base plus
take customers away from your
competition.
Thats because like fishing
when the fish are biting the more
hooks you have in the water when
theyre hungry the more fish youll
catch. Apportioning your budget
more generously during the times
customers are more likely to buy
means you have a better chance of
landing them. If youre not there
when the fish are biting, some
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buzz makes the addict irrational even violent. We may
be seeing the example in our
streets people so conditioned
to their own feel-good drug that
they go into violent withdrawl
when they dont constantly
receive it.
The Social Dilemma
hints at the need for regulation in order to curb these
abuses, because the evidence
will always be inconclusive, it
will take decades to affect, if
it indeed ever comes to pass at
all.
An easier solution might be
one we should enact at home:
Reduce your time on social
media by half and turn off the
Internet nightly after 8 p.m.
is required to proceed with the
rest of the course. Students failing to achieve the minimum
score of 22 will be dismissed
from the class.
Internet students are required
to complete classroom training
and participate in the Field Day
exercises. Field Day exercises;
will be much like an actual
hunt as possible with live fire
and outdoor activities (all firearms and ammunition will be
provided). It is recommended
to wear boots or walking shoes
and long pants.
Students must be 11 to
become certified and the cost
is $20.00 each student to offset
facility fees.
Students must be pre-registered to attend, face masks and
social distancing is required.
For safety, temperatures will
be taken at the door and there
will be a limited class size, due
to Coronavirus restrictions.
For questions, contact
Rockers at (785) 835-6580.
Cherry Mound 4-H July and August minutes Pieces and Patches
Reporter
Reagan Witherspoon
When should you fish for customers?
You cant catch fish in a dry
pond and you cant attract customers when they wont buy. If your
business itself is seasonal or your
products are bigger sellers during
certain times of the year, the idea of
seasonality is a concept youve got
to embrace to sell the most stuff.
It might seem like basic logic to
most of us, but Ive had business
owners try to convince me in the
past that they didnt need to promote when sales were already
good, because, hey Im already
busy enough. The time to try to sell
more, they argued, was in months
when sales had trickled off, because
those are the times when you need
to pump up sales.
The truth, of course, is exactly
the opposite, and the proof is in the
actions of your customers.
Do this exercise: Take a piece
of graph paper and chart your
sales in all 12 months of last year.
Obviously some months are better
than others, and the seasonality of
your business or your products will
be revealed by clusters of months
that are higher, say, spring/summer if youre a lawn care business,
The
Kansas
Hunter
Education internet assisted
class only will take place on
Sunday, October 18th from 9:30
a.m. until 6:00 p.m. Participants
are expected to bring their own
lunch.
The day will consist of classroom/field day and testing session.
This will all take place at
the Optimist Youth Building
located at the North Lake in
Garnett.
Internet Students must complete the online portion of the
course @ ksoutdoors.com or
(https://programs.ksoutdoors.
com/prg/Programs/HunterEducation-Certification) prior
to attending the field day.
Please read all instructions
online: students are required to
bring to class their Certificate
of Online Completion
Each student will be issued
a pre-test over the online materials. A passing score of 22 correct answers out of 25 questions
other fishermans going to go home
with your fish.
Conversely, using your budget
to push product when customers
are naturally not interested makes
your promotional dollars inefficient your return on investment
will be naturally lower than if you
bumped up your spending during
times the market is more responsive.
So the key for seasonal businesses or products is proper planning
which may take months of preparation to staff, plan promotions,
book advertising and order product
in order to be ready when the fish
start running.
Dane Hicks, President
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
The Anderson County Review
Quilt Guild Minutes
The Pieces and Patches
Quilt Guild was called to order
by President Mary Parrot on
August 27, 2020 at 9:35 AM at
the K-State Extension Office
Conference Room.
Roll call was answered by 22
members wearing masks.
Lynda Feuerborn gave the
treasurers report.
Committee Reports
Programs: Jackie Gardner
reported that our September
24 meeting will be a program
by Connie Hatch called All
About Scraps. At our October
22nd meeting we are finally
having Theresa Ward to give
a program on String Quilts.
Theresas originally planned
program was cancelled due to
Covid 19. The program will
be inspired by her book Sew,
Slice, Spin & Sash, a book that
Theresa donated to the guild
several years ago. Jackie also
asks members for ideas of programs they would like to have
during our 2020/2021 season.
Anderson County Fair:
There were three entries by
4H members in the Challenge
Block contest. Since most of
us did not participate in the
County Fair this year, any
blocks that were made and not
entered should be held to enter
into the 2021 Block Challenge
contest.
2020 Block of the Month:
Joyce Buckley presented
the next Block of the Month.
Instructions for a Pyramid
Table runner were handed
out. Instructions will also
be printed in the September
Newsletter.
2020 Challenge: We were
reminded that our Guild
Challenge projects were to be
shown at the November meeting. The rules can be found in
the June Newsletter. Bonnie
Deiter and Sandra Moffatt have
more of the blue fabric if any-
one needs it.
Audit committee:
Audit
committee members, Joleata
Kent and Vickie Hirt, are to
receive the records following
the meeting and present their
report at the September meeting.
Nominating committee and
Election of Officers: Bonnie
Deiter and Shirley Allen presented the slate of officers for
todays voting:
President,
Jeanette Gadelman, Vice
President, Jackie Gardner,
Secretary,
Vickie
Hurt,
Treasurer, Lynn Wawrzewski,
Newsletter, Connie Hatch,
Historian, Mary Parrott. Judy
Stukey made a motion to accept
the slate of officers. It was
seconded by several members.
The vote followed for the candidates and was unanimous.
New Business: Bonnie Deiter
reported that she received
150 masks from members and
delivered them to the school.
A freewill donation was collected for school supplies. Mary
Parrott asked Bonnie to deliver
the collected funds.
Old Business: The quilt
retreat at Cedar Crest Lodge is
September 28, 29 and 30. Final
payment is due.
Secret Sisters: Secret sister gifts were received by
Sharon Rich, Cynthia Fletcher,
Jeanette Gadelman and Mary
Parrott.
Show and tell: Eleven members showed 25 items.
Installation of officers: Judy
Stukey conducted the installation of officers.
The meeting was adjourned
and members enjoyed lunch
catered by the committee of
Jackie Gardner, Judy Stukey
and Sharon Rich.
Minutes recorded by outgoing
Secretary, Terrie Gifford.
Call (785) 448-5711 text (785) 204-1382
Dutch Country Cafe
Restaurant Coffee Shop Bakery Banquets
309 N. Maple Garnett Mon-Sat 6AM-2:30 PM
Traditional Pennsylvania Dutch Cooking
(785) 448-3121 FAX (785) 448-6253 review@garnett-ks.com
2×2 Did You Know:
Shopping and doing business locally results in
LoveLocal
#2
better services to you because you get to know
who you are buying from.
Facebook @
LoveWhatsLocalGarnett
lovewhatslocalgarnett@gmail.com
Daily Lunch Specials:
Monday:
Taco Salad
Tuesday:
Dutch Country Cheese Steak
Wednesday:
Hot Beef Sandwich
Thursday:
Fried Chicken
Friday:
Meatloaf
Saturday:
Chicken Fried Steak
Weekly Baked Goods Special:
Homemade
10-inch Pie!
Men
tio
ad f n this
10% or
off!
2B
LOCAL
Cancelation of states biggest attraction
puts Kansas State Fair in financial bind
By Frank J. Buchman
We did not have a Kansas
State Fair this year.
David Tobias, interim general manager of the states biggest
annual event at Hutchinson,
was most emphatic reiterating
the fact.
Like
many
activities
throughout the world, the state
fair was canceled due to coronavirus health concerns.
However, the elaborate state
fairgrounds facilities still must
be sustained without the annual income to do so.
Two hundred eighty acres
comprise the Kansas State
Fairgrounds including 70
buildings all together maintained by 26 employees.
Contrary to common belief,
the state of Kansas provides
no fiscal appropriations for
this facility which represents
a state entity. The Kansas State
Fair is a separate body unrelated to any state programs.
The Kansas State Fair is a
fee-funded agency. We do not
get funding from the state,
Tobias clarified.
Upon cancelation of the state
fair two months ago, the former general manager resigned.
With 9-years experience
working for the Kansas State
Fair, Tobias was then appointed to the interim position.
Since 2018 legislative action,
the fair does get a percentage of
state sales tax generated on the
grounds, Tobias noted.
We live by concert tickets,
gate admissions, vendor rentals, sponsorships, and competitive entries. Obviously that has
all been very little this year,
Tobias said. About 90 percent
of our income is from fair-time
revenue in 10 days, with the
rest from non-fair building
rentals.
Due to the fair cancellation
and lack of anticipated revenue, the fairs current operating shortfall is $2.3 million,
Tobias said.
In clarification the Kansas
State Fair celebrates the best
of Kansas communities, commerce, youth and food, said
Amy Bickel.
Its also the largest gathering of Kansans every
September since the first official fair in 1913, the marketing director explained. This is
the first year the state fair has
been canceled.
It survived through the
Spanish Flu pandemic of 1918.
Nearly canceled in 1945 due to
World War II, the war ended
during August and the fair con-
Engagement Announcement
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-29-2929 / SUBMITTED
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-29-2020 / SUBMITTED
Carnival attractions traditionally light up the sky while being an important part of raising funds for the
Kansas State Fair at Hutchinson. There were no carnival or commercial vendors this year hampering
financial status of the fair.
tinued.
According to a 2018
Department of Agriculture
report, the fair has a $74.6
million annual impact on the
Kansas economy. Theres a $40
million-plus impact to a 60-mile
radius around Hutchinson,
Tobias pointed out.
We
have
contacted
Commerce Secretary David
Toland, who indicated we need
to work with Washington to
secure funding, Tobias said.
The
International
Association of Fairs and
Expositions has spearheaded
legislation for $500 million
to help preserve the fair, he
added.
We are also looking at
micro events that could help
generate some funding, Bickel
said.
While there was not a
Kansas State Fair, livestock
competitions did continue,
according to Jenn Galloway,
livestock events coordinator.
Youth including 4-H and
FFA members work all year
on projects to exhibit at
Hutchinson Kansas State Fair
during September.
The Grand Drive weekend,
our premier youth livestock
show, attracts more than 800
youth exhibitors and 3,000
entries, Galloway said.
More than 10,000 youth projects are entered annually at
the Kansas State Fair. In 2019,
that included 2,200 photography exhibits, 935 rabbits and
1,616 food entries.
In 2020, we still hosted live
the 4-H horse show, the Grand
Drive, poultry, dairy cattle and
dairy goat shows, Galloway
noted. Virtual static competitions were conducted for other
youth projects.
In a normal year, we have
4,800 open exhibitors, including both livestock and static
entries, Galloway said. Only
1,300 open exhibitors participated this year because there
were no static entries such as
baking, gardening and quilts.
However, in the open
livestock division, 652 cattle
were exhibited, the most ever,
and double a normal year,
Galloway said.
Traditionally nearly 700
vendors rent space to promote
their products at the Kansas
State Fair. About 85 percent of
them are from Kansas, Bickel
said.
Facing unparalleled challenges, our fulltime staff
remains committed to do
everything they can to continue the longstanding celebration, Tobias said. We all
hope the fair will sustain these
unprecedented times and hope
to bring the tradition back in
2021.
The Kansas Fairgrounds
Foundation is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization dedicated
to supporting special needs for
the fair. That group is offering financial assistance at this
time, Tobias credited.
Donations can be made
to the Kansas Fairgrounds
Foundation, 2000 North Poplar,
Hutchinson, Kansas, 67502.
Entire amount of donations
goes to the Kansas State Fair,
Tobias promised.
The Kansas Cares About
The Fair 2020 campaign was
developed to help in this time
of need, according to Bickel.
Individuals can give online at
KansasStateFair.com by clicking donate.
All funds go entirely to
the Kansas State Fair. Your
gift, large or small, will help
secure the future of the Kansas
State Fair for generations to
come, Bickel said. We continue Celebrating All Things
Kansas until we meet again.
Stay strong, Kansas.
Would your childs safety seat pass inspection?
WICHITA, Kan. Every day
in America, too many children
ride in car seats that have been
installed incorrectly, or are riding in the wrong car seats for
their ages and sizes. According
to the U.S. Department of
Transportations
National
Highway
Traffic
Safety
Administration
(NHTSA),
child restraint systems are
often used incorrectly. An estimated 46% of car seats and
booster seats (59% of car seats
and 20% of booster seats) are
misused in a way that could
reduce their effectiveness.
Even worse, some children ride
while completely unbuckled.
Last week, September 20-26,
was National Child Passenger
Safety Week and AAA Kansas
think its an ideal time for parents to review Kansas car seat
law, be sure children are in the
proper child seat or booster for
their age and size, avoid common mistakes, and seek expert
assistance with car seat installation.
Child Passenger Safety
Statistics
Every 32 seconds in 2018,
one child under the age of 13
riding in a passenger vehicle
was involved in a crash.
From 2014 to 2018, there
were 3,315 children under 13
killed while riding in passenger vehicles.
On average, nearly two
children under 13 were killed
every day in 2018 while riding in cars, SUVs, pickups, and
vans.
In 2018, approximately
one-third (33%) of children
under 13 killed in passenger
vehicles were not restrained
in car seats, booster seats, or
seat belts. (Source: National
Highway Transportation Safety
Administration (NHTSA))
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 29, 2020
Seven Common Car Seat
Mistakes
1. Not using a safety seat.
Whether an infant, toddler or
booster seat-age child, parents
should always use the appropriate child restraint system
every time their children are
in a vehicle.
2. Not reading safety
seat instructions. Three out
of four child safety seats are
installed incorrectly according
to NHTSA. With thousands of
combinations of child safety
seats and vehicle belt systems,
its important for parents to
read both the vehicle owners
manual and the child safety
seat instructions before installing a seat.
3. Using restraints for
older children too soon.
Parents frequently advance
their children into the stage
of safety restraints too soon.
The American Academy of
Pediatrics (AAP) car seat recommendations advises parents
to keep their childrens car
seats in the rear-facing position for as long as possible.
Infants should remain rear-facing until they reach the upper
weight limit of their rear-facing car seat. All children under
age 13 should be placed in the
back seat.
4. Installing safety seats
too loosely. When a child safety seat is properly installed, it
should not move more than one
inch in any direction. Parents
should use either the vehicles
seat belt or LATCH system
to secure the safety seatbut
not both, unless approved by
the vehicle and car seat manufacturers. If using a seat belt,
make sure it is locked to hold
the seat snugly in place.
5. Adjusting seat harnesses incorrectly. Safety
seat harnesses should always
twists. Harnesses should be
at or below the childs shoulders when rear-facing and at
or above the shoulders when
forward-facing in order to hold
the childs body upright and
against the seat. The chest clip
should be positioned at armpit
level.
6. Gadgetry: If it didnt come
with the seat (or wasnt purchased from the manufacturer
to use with the seat), it wasnt
crash-tested with the seat. It
therefore cannot be guaranteed
to be safe and should not be
used. This includes strap covers, mirrors and toys.
7. Not replacing seats
after a crash or using one
without knowing its history:
Check your manual to see if the
seat should be replaced even
after a minor fender-bender
and even if no child was in the
seat at the time. Also, never
buy a used car seat, and never
accept a free used one unless
youre sure that its never been
in a crash. Even if it looks
OK, there may be damages that
arent visible. It is safer to buy
a cheap, new seat than a highend used seat. All seats pass the
same pass/fail crash tests.
John and Karen (Gibson)
Ledom of Lawrence, KS are
excited to announce the
engagement of their daughter
Bethany, also of Lawrence,
KS to Morgan Rempel, of San
Clemente, CA. Bethany is a
2016 graduate of Lawrence
High School. She attended
Johnson County Community
College and is the property
manager for Absolute Storage
Management, Inc. Bethany is
the granddaughter of Shirley
Gibson and the late Harley
Gibson of Garnett; and Chuck
Ledom and the late Mary
Ledom of Lawrence. Morgan
is a 2016 graduate of Saratoga
High School, Saratoga, WY.
He serves in the U.S. Marine
Corps. Morgans parents are
Bruce Rempel, Belleville, PA
and Carrie Wright, Olathe,
KS.
His grandparents are
Merrill and Minna Rempel,
Chris Symmonds, and Ann
Symmonds.
A November
2020 wedding is planned in
Lawrence.
AVIATION…
FROM PAGE 1
Airlines flying 30-passenger
regional turbo prop commuter
planes. But he found out pretty
quick it was no get rich quick
business, even after he was promoted to captain.
They were an essential
service airline, Traul said,
which means theyre really
heavily government subsidized to serve remote areas.
They pay you, they just dont
pay you much. In high school
hed worked for local farmer
and pilot Glenn Caldwell, and
Traul said he kept working for
Caldwell occasionally when he
was with Great Lakes because
the local operation paid better
than Great Lakes.
I owe a lot to Glenn for his
help and encouragement along
the way, Traul said.
But as an airline crew member he was able to take advantage of jump seat privileges a
voluntary policy by most airlines to allow airline employees
to fly free on unsold seats. Traul
said Great Lakes got him lots
of flying time and experience,
and jump seat flights set him
up to meet and network with
pilots throughout the industry.
Everything he learned wasnt
always good.
They had all been furloughed at least twice, Traul
said. You had this idea that
to the airlines you were just a
personnel number. I had zero
control over my on life.
His industry connections
put him in the path of Brooks
Pettit of Topeka, who ran a private pilot service and was in
need of an extra set of hands.
In 2011 Traul left Great Lakes
and threw in with Pettit as his
first staff pilot. Later the two
expanded to form a new company that didnt just fly planes,
but adopted a mission of full
service aviation management
for companies and individuals
struggling with the complicated regulation, accounting and
other bureaucracy and safety mandates associated with
aircraft ownership. Theyve
grown to serve clients in the
Midwest, Arizona and Florida
and they still get to fly.
The market of small private
aircraft has been good lately he
said, influenced heavily by new
CARES Act rules that make
their value 100 percent depreciable on the balance sheets of
companies and individuals.
He and his wife Karla have
recently moved from Spring
Hill with their four kids,
Mason 8, Nora 6, Case 3, Oaklin
9 months, to acreage near his
parents Kansas Unlimited
outfitters operation. Hell still
commute he said, but the view
here is still better.
And every now and then, he
gets to put grandma in the front
seat.
AIRPORT…
FROM PAGE 1
feet above sea level. The facility
is base for 15-20 resident aircraft with another 2-3 transient
planes per day during good
weather, Schettler said. He said
Thursday the traffic can run
the gamut of interests.
Two planes are here
spreading seed, Schettler said.
One is here visiting his mom.
One brought his family from
Minnesota to help with the harvest in Westphalia.
Last year the airport hosted
the Kansas Air Tour, a promotional fly-in by more than 40
aircraft from around the state.
Garnett was the site of the first
Kansas Air Tour held in 1928.
Dining
&
Entertainment
4×5 Entertainment Guide
GUIDE
We welcome you to enjoy our
Farm-to-Table Country Cuisine!
Proudly Serving Locally-Raised Beef & Pork.
Hwy 59 Garnett
(785) 448-6393
(785) 448-6494
Call-ins welcome!
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
To advertise your business here
contact Stacey at (785) 448-3121
or email review@garnett-ks.com for
more information.
Scipio Supper Club
RESTAURANT AND BAR
Call ahead for large parties
Kitchen Hours: Wed. & Sun. 6 p.m. – 9 p.m.
Fri. & Sat. 6 p.m. – 10 p.m.
Bar open later
32465 NE Neosho Rd Garnett 785-835-6246
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 29, 2020
BBB and SBA in commending
small businesses through
pandemic & how you can help
National Small Business
Week (NSBW), annually sponsored by The Small Business
Administration (SBA), celebrates the best of small businesses across the U.S. It took
place on September 22-24. This
year, the programs were virtual (sba.gov/national-smallbusiness-week) because of
COVID-19 concerns. The event
was originally scheduled in
May.
The theme for NSBW is
about Recovery, Adaptation,
and Innovation. It include
devents that pay homage to
Americas 30 million-plus
small businesses that are central to the economy and their
communities.
According to smallbiztrend.com, more than half
of Americans either own or
work for a small business. And
they create about two out of
every three new jobs in the
U.S. each year. Some 99.9% of
all firms across the nation are
small businesses and employ
60 million out of 126.8 million
employees across America.
Over 97 percent of all trade
activity come from small businesses, generating one-third of
the nations $1.4 trillion earnings from exports.
Better Business Bureau
(BBB) President and CEO
Jim Hegarty stated, Small
businesses are the engine
of Americas economy, and
the BBB joins the SBA in celebrating their accomplishments during a year that has
been filled with closures, policy mandates, a decrease in
demand, health concerns and
many other factors. These
impeded their growth and in
some cases their viability.
Now, the doors are slowly
swinging back open for business, and many small businesses are being hailed as
heroes. Theyve carried on by
supporting their communities
through acts of kindness, connecting with regular customers or coming up with creative
ways to keep their own support staff employed. NSBW
is also an ideal time to build
on the trust many people feel
with small businesses in their
community, said Hegarty. I
encourage you to support them
in any way you feel comfortable.
BBB has some suggestions
for consumers to show their
appreciation to small businesses during NSBW and throughout the year:
1. Help sustain small,
local businesses: Use them
by ordering online, calling for
curb-side pick-up, or hiring a
local delivery service. You can
also order gift cards online to
use at a later time if you dont
want to shop now.
2. Reschedule, dont cancel: If youve had to push off
hair appointments or work on
your home or your car dont
just cancel them. Reschedule
at another time so the small
business owners know they
can count on you later.
3. Say thank-you: Give
your favorite local businesses
a shout-out on social media or
call them and tell them theyre
doing a good job and they are
appreciated.. Everyone enjoys
being valued.
4. Consider using a small
business first: With a big box
options to choose from, be sure
you check out local retailers.
They need your businesses too
during this difficult time.
5. ABOUT BBB: Better
Business Bureau has been
assisting U.S. consumers and
businesses since 1912. It is a
nonprofit, business-supported organization that sets and
upholds high standards for fair
and honest business behavior.
BBB services to consumers are
free of charge. BBB provides
objective advice, free BBB
Business Profiles on more than
5.3 million companies, 11,000
charity reviews, dispute resolution services, alerts and educational information on topics
affecting marketplace trust.
Please visit BBB.org for more
information.
BBB respects the resiliency
of small businesses. While the
economic impact of COVID-19
is undeniable, businesses are
learning how to adapt to a new
normal. Trust has never been
more important, and BBB is
committed to providing support
for small businesses. BBB delivers resources for small businesses at BBB.org/small business/.
REVIVAL…
FROM PAGE 1
Heartland Vintage Racing
will ensure that everyone gets
their fill of historic horsepower. Spectators can expect to
see vintage Corvettes, Shelby
GTs, and Jaguars thundering around the lake, while the
more nimble Austin Healeys,
Lotus Cortinas, and Triumphs
carve up the challenging corners. Its a wonderful opportunity for automotive and racing
fans to see cars that more and
more are relegated to museums, being driven at speed on
a historic race course.
Spectator admission and
parking is free, and the LGGPR
group encourages families and
car enthusiasts of all ages to
come celebrate these amazing
automobiles. For the schedule
of events, covid-19 regulations,
and more information, visit
the website at www.lggpr.org.
About the Lake Garnett
Grand Prix Revival
For one weekend in October
of each year, the historic Lake
Garnett Raceway comes back
to life with the roar of powerful engines and the smell of
high-octane fuel. Comprised
of nearly 300-acres, the North
Lake Park in Garnett, KS, once
played host to one of the most
popular sports car races in the
Midwest. Official auto racing at
the facility ended in the 1970s,
but some 40-years later, a small
group of sports car enthusiasts
from the region banded together to celebrate memories of the
track and the automobiles that
once raced there. In 2014, the
first Lake Garnett Grand Prix
Revival (LGGPR) was held,
comprised of a track event,
autocross, car show, and charity rides around the 2.8 mile
road course which raise funds
for charitable organizations
around the area. Since then,
the LGGPR has become known
as one of the most fan-friendly
and reasonably-priced events
of its kind to attend, attracting
more than 300 cars as well as
thousands of participants and
spectators.
YOUR SCHOOLS
2×4 kpa
census
YOUR
PARKS
YOUR ROADS
YOUR HEALTH
YOUR COMMUNITIES
NEED YOU
COMPLETE THE CENSUS TODAY:
www.my2020census.gov
Call: (844) 330-2020
for more information
LOCAL
3B
4B
Notice of Suit
REAL ESTATE
(First published in the Anderson County Review,
September 15, 2020)
and the unknown heirs, executors, administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors and assigns
of such defendants as may bedeceased; the
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON unknown officers, successors, trustees, credCOUNTY, KANSAS
itors and assigns of such defendants as are
FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT
existing, dissolved or dormant corporations;
the unknown guardians and trustees of such of
WILBUR R. AMES,
the defendants as are minors or are in anyway
Plaintiff,
under legal disability, and all other persons who
vs. are or may be concerned,
WELLS FARGO BANK, NA, as trustee
Defendants.
for GREEN TREE 2008-MH1 by DITECH
Case No. 20MV7
FINANCIAL, LLC, fka GREEN TREE
SERVICING, LLC, a Delaware Limited
NOTICE OF SUIT
Liability Company, as Attorney in Fact;
GREEN TREE FINANCIAL SERVICING
THE STATE OF KANSAS, to the above
CORPORATION;
named defendants and the unknown heirs,
DITECH FINANCIAL, LLC;
executors, administrators, devisees, trustees,
SECURITY PACIFIC HOUSING SERVICES,
creditors and assigns of any deceased defenINC., DBA BANK OF AMERICA HOUSING dants; the unknown spouses of any defendants;
SERVICES (BAHS), A DIVISION OF BANK the unknown officers, successors, trustees,
OF AMERICA;
creditors and assigns of any defendants that
BANK OF AMERICA, NA;
are existing, dissolved or dormant corporaUS REAL ESTATE SERVICES, INC.;
tions; the unknown executors, administrators,
CHRIS BOWEN, DIANA BOWEN,
devisees, trustees, creditors, successors, and
ESTATE OF CHRIS BOWEN;
assigns of any defendants that are or were partJOHN DOE and MARY DOE (Tenants/ ners or in partnership; the unknown guardians,
Occupants)
conservators, and trustees of any defendants
1996 FUQU Mobile Home, VIN: FH469988X96 that are minors or are under legal disability; and
the unknown heirs, executors, administrators, 200 acres – Owner will finance.
devisees, trustees, creditors and assigns of any Low down. Fenced-pond, lots of
person alleged to be deceased, and all other wildlife, road on 3 sides. Will
divide to 40 acres. 1 mile east of
persons who are or may be concerned.
75 Hwy on 122 Road and 123rd.
You are hereby notified that a Petition has Coffey County. (913) 669-1873.
sp1t1yr*
been filed in the District Court of Anderson
Land for sale – 282 acres.
County, Kansas, praying for a quiet title to a cer- Pasture, tillable and recretain mobile home described as follows, to-wit: ation in Anderson County. Call
LouAnn with Kansas Property
1996 FUQU Mobile Home, VIN: FH469988X96 Place at (785) 448-4495. sp22tf
and you are required to plead to said Petition
on or before October 28th, 2020, 9:15 a.m., in
the District Court of Anderson County, Kansas.
If you fail to plead, judgment and decree will be
entered in due course upon the Petition.
/s/William C. Walker
William C. Walker, No. 11978
112 West Fifth St., PO Box 441
Garnett, KS 66032
(785) 448-3747
FAX: (785) 448-5529
walkerlaw66032@yahoo.com
Attorney for Plaintiff
sp15t3*
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
In the Matter of the Estate of
Timothy E. Weldin, deceased
No. 20PR22
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS
CONCERNED:
You are notified that on September 8,
2020, a Petition for Issuance of Letters of
Administration was filed in this Court by
Angela Ingram, an heir of Timothy E. Weldin,
deceased.
All creditors of the decedent are notified to
exhibit their demands against the Estate within
the latter of four months from the date of the
first publication of this notice, under K.S.A.
59-2236 and amendments thereto, or if the
identity of the creditor is known or reasonably
ascertainable, 30 days after actual notice was
given as provided by law, and if their demands
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 Tuesday, October 13 at
the Anderson County Extension 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 supervisors to the board.
Public Notice
(Published in The Anderson County Review,
Tuesday, September 22, 2020)
IN THE IOWA DISTRICT COURT FOR
WOODBURY COUNTY
TIFFANY DUNCAN,
Petitioner,
vs.
CHARLES DUNCAN,
Respondent.
EQUITY No. DRCV193238
ORIGINAL NOTICE
TO CHARLES DUNCAN, RESPONDENT:
You are hereby notified that there is now on
file in the office of the clerk of the above court an
Application for Modification of the above-named
parties. The Petitioners attorney is Randy S
Hisey, 701 Pierce Street # 404, Sioux City, IA
51101-1037 for the Petitioner. The attorneys
phone number is 712-222-1464; facsimile number 712-252-0202.
You are further notified that unless you
serve on or before the 1st day of December,
2020, and file within a reasonable time thereafter a written special appearance, motion, or
answer in the Iowa District Court for Woodbury
County at the courthouse in Sioux City, Iowa,
View all local properties for sale at our website:
ksprop
www.KsPropertyPlace.com
Call
(785) 448-3999
are not thus exhibited, they shall be forever
GOLD KEY REALTY
barred.
Angela Ingram
Carla Walter Owner/Broker
Petitioner
785-448-7658 (cell)
gold ke
Jesse T. Randall
Attorney at Law
512 Main Street, P. O. Box 301
Mound City, Kansas 66056
913-795-2514
Attorney for Petitioner
sp15t3*
judgment by default will be rendered against
you for the relief demanded in the petition.
CLERK OF COURT
Woodbury County Courthouse
Sioux City, Iowa 51101
Note: The attorney who is expected to represent
the respondent should be promptly advised by
the respondent of service of this notice.
sp22t3*
PARTNER WITH US!
SO DOES KANSAS
Help to ensure local newspapers are able to continue the
important work that they do. PARTNER WITH US!
www. knf.column.us
National Newspaper Week October 4-10, 2020
The Garnett Public Library
– is accepting applications for a
permanent part-time janitorial
position. Please apply at the
Garnett Public Library. sp22t2
Heavy equipment operators.
Travel expenses paid. Great
earning potential for skilled
operators. Mid West work
area. Apply at www.laforge.
KanEquip
is
hiring
Agricultural, ATV, Experienced
Agricultural
and
Light
Construction
Technicians,
Light Industrial and Outside
Sales. Competitive pay and
excellent benefits. Apply online
at www.kanequip.com
Donate your car to charity. Receive maximum value
of write off for your taxes.
Running or not! All conditions
accepted. Free pickup. Call for
details. 844-268-9386
Lowest Prices on Health
Insurance. We have the best
rates from top companies! Call
Now! 855-656-6792.
Attention
Medicare
Recipients! Save your money
on your Medicare supplement
plan. Free Quotes from top providers. Excellent coverage. Call
for a no obligation quote to see
how much you can save! 855587-1299
Best Satellite TV with 2 Year
Price Guarantee! $59.99/mo
with 190 channels and 3 months
free premium movie channels!
Free next day installation! Call
316-223-4415
Get
A-Rated
Dental
Insurance
starting
at
around $1 per day! Save 25% on
Enrollment Now! No Waiting
Periods. 200k+ Providers
Nationwide. Everyone is
Accepted! Call 785-329-9747 (M-F
9-5 ET)
B a t h r o o m
Renovations. Easy, one day
updates! We specialize in safe
bathing. Grab bars, no slip
flooring & seated showers. Call
for a free in-home consultation: 855-382-1221
Steel
Cargo/Storage
Containers available In
Kansas City & Solomon Ks.
20s 40s 45s 48s & 53s Call
785.655.9430 or go online to
chuckhenry.com for pricing,
availability & Freight. Bridge
Decks. 40×8, 48×86, 90 x
86 785.655.9430 chuckhenry.
com
Are you behind $10k or more
on your taxes? Stop wage &
bank levies, liens & audits,
unfiled tax returns, payroll
issues, & resolve tax debt fast.
Call 855-462-2769
Full Time Truck Driver
HELP WANTED
sp29t2*
Journalists shed light on vital issues that may otherwise be kept
in the dark. They expose problems and give citizens the tools
they need to make informed decisions about issues that affect
everyday life in their community.
MISCELLANEOUS
www.goldkeyrealtyks.com
Kirby Barnes
President
Anderson County Fair Board
AMERICA NEEDS JOURNALISTS
HELP WANTED
MISCELLANEOUS
Now offering
Public Notice of county fair board meeting
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, September, 29, 2020)
1×3
Auction
Services!
Notice to creditors – Weldin Estate
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, September 15, 2020)
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 29, 2020
FALL SPORTS
Anderson County Solid Waste & Landfill is taking applications for a full-time truck driver position, open until filled.
Applicant must have at least 6 months verifiable class A
CDL experience to apply. Applicant will be required to
work every third Saturday (8-12:00) plus Monday
through Friday 7:00 -3:30 p.m. Position has full county
benefits, insurance, vacation and sick leave.
2×4 anderson
county landfill
STATEWIDE
1×2
ADVERTISING
AD
Send your ad to more
than 100 Kansas
newspapers for as little
as $300. Ask about
other states too!
(785) 448- 3121
Applicant will run all heavy equipment on site, required
to obtain 24 hrs. of initial training for waste building and
refresher course of 8 hrs. annually, training is provided.
Applicant will be required to climb, balance, reach, crawl
& move up to 50 lbs. Applicant will be exposed to moving
mechanical parts, high precarious places, fumes or airborne
particles, toxic or caustic chemicals. A full job description
and application are available at the County Road Dept. Office, 823 W. 7th, Garnett, KS and also at the Landfill. Questions please call Scott @ 785-448-3109. Anderson County is
an Equal Opportunity Employer and position is Veterans
Preference Eligible (VPE), State Law – K.S.A., 73-201.
CONSIGNMENT AUCTION
6th Annual Farm Consignment Auction
Saturday, October 3 10 a.m.
Yoders Country Store
(2 miles west of Garnett on Garnett/Burlington Rd.)
EQUIPMENT
22 Field cultivator
Bush Hog 2400 quick
attach loader
Servis 8 blade
IH 4500 field cultivator
JD 307 brush mower, 6,
pull type
Ford 951 Special brush
mower, 5, 3 pt
IH 1050 Grinder mixer w/
swing away auger
Case IH 12 disc, very
nice
2- 653 row heads
60 bushel auger wagon
IH 6 row cultivator
VEHICLES
99 Dodge Ram V8 Magnum 4WD, extended cab,
heavy half ton, 183k
miles, like new tires,
engine has less than 3k
miles, tranny & transfer
case have appr. 1500
miles w/ warranty left
2002 Chrysler Town &
Country, 210k miles,
almost new tires, cold air,
runs good
MISCELLANEOUS
500 gal. Propane tank
3- JD 13.6×38 rims,
original antique rims
25 bales alfalfa
Rubbermaid 5×3 shop
dolly, like new
ATVs
E2007 JD 620i Gator,
manual tilt bed, good
rubber
LAWNMOWERS
Bad Boy 72, 27 hp Kawasaki motor, nice
TRACTORS/COMBINES
JD 4420 Combine, 3900
hrs. Diesel
1957 Ford 850, good
condition, good rubber
TAKING CONSIGNMENTS UP UNTIL AUCTION DAY
Lunch served
Restroom available
Nothing removed from premises until paid for.
Cash, check and now accepting credit & debit cards w/ 3% per transaction fee.
Auction Company not responsible for theft, accident or loss
Statements made day of auction take precedence over printed details
Pictures and sale bill on KansasAuctions.net
Yoder Auction Service
Auctioneers: Ben Yoder (785) 448-4419 Jr. Miller (620) 200-3007 James Yoder (620) 228-3548
Part-time Attendant Needed
Currently seeking a part-time attendant to assist active, working, stay at
home woman/wife/mom who is in a wheelchair and has a disability.
Requirements: Experience is NOT necessary, but must be willing to learn.
Has to have great listening skills, pay great attention to detail, and willing
to take directions as well as taking initiative when needed. Must be eager
to help and have an easy-going, positive and fun attitude. Non-smoker,
reliable transportation, and MUST be very dependable. Must be at least
18 years of age. Several shifts open, flexible schedules, pay rate increase
based on job performance. To inquire more about job details,
text (785)204-2308, or email ccgaines13@yahoo.com
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 29, 2020
FALL SPORTS
Happy Ad!
5B
If youre happy and you know it…
Place a
Its EASY to place your ad! (785) 448-3121 (800) 683-4505 admin@garnett-ks.com
Rates
Up to 20 Words………..$4.95
Each addtl word…………….55
(Commercial……65)
BONUS: Add $2 for 10,000
additional households in
Lawrence/Douglas County in
The Trading Post.
Display Ads, per column
9.54
inch………$8.50
Statewide placement available,
Call for details.
Terms
Cash in advance
Visa, Mastercard, Discover
Credit to established accounts
Deadline
Classied Ads: 10am Friday
Display Ads: Noon Thursday
Call or send in your ad:
(785) 448-3121
(800) 683-4505 (out of area)
FAX: (785) 448-6253
EMAIL: admin@garnett-ks.com
Mail:
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
P.O. Box 409
Garnett, KS 66032
GARAGE SALES
GARAGE SALE
Estate Sale – 920 S. Kings,
Hwy., Garnett. Friday, October
2, 10am-?; Saturday, October
3, 10am-2pm. Wooden kitchen
table, china hutch, dresser,
rocking chairs, heater, lots of
misc.
sp29t1*
At Quonset Hut – Friday,
October 2nd noon to 6:00pm
and Saturday, October 3, 8am to
noon. Barnes multi-family. Lots
of clothing, women and kids;
furniture/household items
including bar stools, toys, lots
of misc.
sp29t1
LAWN & GARDEN
Dogtober Spooky
Specials!
Little John Sherwood
*FREE*doggie wine
& costume dress-up
Farm
Greenhouse
lil &john
lawnLarge Hardy
785-835-7057
Garden Mums
Tues – Sat: 9am – 6pm
Offof59Hwy,3miles,E.onCloudRd.,1mile
S.onOhioRd.Followtheyellowchicken.
FARM & AG
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25
or more trees. Call (916) 2326781 in St. Joseph for details.
mc10tfn
Lease your farm for hunting. Prepaid annual lease payments. $5M liability insurance.
We handle everything for you.
Base Camp Leasing 1-866-3091507 www.basecampleasing.
com Promo Code: 360
$5 off regular price
in the month of October
29167 NE Wilson Road
GREELEY, KS
(OFF 2000 ROAD)
785-521-5858
Suttonvalleydogboarding.com
Open 24/7 By appointment
NOTICES
Alcohol Anonymous meetings. Tuesdays and Thursdays,
7 p.m. 510 S. Oak, Garnett.
(785) 241-0586.
tfn
2×5
BUY 3, GET 1
AD
HAPPY ADS
Happiness is… Having the
Reviews EagleEye News
Drone do aerial photography
or videography for your wedding, special event, property
survey, promotional video,
high-altitude equipment or
building inspection, etc. Realtime view from up to 400 feet
elevation, up to nearly 1 mile
range. Contact the Anderson
County Review at (785) 448-3121
for more info.
oc11tfn
Happiness is… Resolving
tax problems. Owe IRS? Call
Tax Time Tax Service, Inc. for
help with liens and levies and
audit reconsiderations. Let Jo
Wolken, EA help you solve tax
problems. (785) 448-3056. jy28t12
FREE
Id like to thank everyone
for all of the cards, flowers,
hospital visits & prayers for
me during my illness. Also,
thanks to everyone who
brought food to the house.
Id especially like to thank all
of the nurses & all the staff at
Anderson County Hospital for
the wonderful & professional
care that I received.
Everyone, including the
doctors, were very thorough,
professional & caring. We
in Garnett need to be very
thankful that we have such a
wonderful hospital. May God
bless all of you.
Garden
garden
gateGate Greenhouse
Fall mums are ready!
Stop by our greenhouse or visit us at
the Garnett Farmers Market
on Thursdays, 4:30- 7 p.m.
mundel
Driveway Repair Custom Hauling
Pasture Clearing Excavation
Gradework Gravel Top Soil
(785) 448-8186
Call for a quote.
ryter
The entire family of
Walter B. Lickteig
Spray Foam Insulation and more
(785) 448-3121 FAX (785) 448-6253 review@garnett-ks.com
Mundell Outdoors, LLC
For all that you have done, we
truly love you.
Mary Hamilton
and Open Cell Insulation
precision Closed
foam
Attic Blown Fiberglass Insulation
Batt Insulation
Licensed and Insured
Foam Insulation
SEVICES
The family of Dorothy L.
Lickteig is forever grateful for
the thoughtfulness and many
acts of kindness. The beautiful
flowers, plants, plaques, cards,
food, and generous donations
for Dorothys memorial have
been a blessing to all of us. We
send a very special thank you
to Greeley First Responders,
Anderson County Hospital,
Feuerborn Funeral Home,
Greeley Knights of Columbus,
and St. Johns Altar Society for
the most compassionate and
heartfelt care of our family in
time of need.
Card of Thanks
ON CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ADS!
JD Yutzy
785-448-8727
Call today for all your insulation needs
Quality and customer satisfaction is #1
CDL DRIVERS
builders choice
Builders Choice Concrete is looking for CDL drivers
to drive a Ready Mix truck at our Garnett Plant.
Wages start at $18/hour and we offer a
full benefit package.
10003 NW 1600 Rd Westphalia
(from 7th St. in Garnett west 15 miles.
(785) 489 -2483 Hrs: Tues-Fri 9-6 Sat 9-4
To apply to go
www.cst-bc.com/employment
Guest Home Estates
(913) 594-2495
1×2
edg
Check out our
Monthly Specials
Edgecomb Builders
edgecomb
Happiness is… subscribing to
the Anderson County Review!
Call (785) 448-3121.
my19tf
Saturday, October 3 – St.
Johns Hall, 7am-1pm. 11:30am
special sales! Lots of misc. and
new clothing.
sp29t1*
MISCELLANEOUS
Medical Billing & Coding
Training.
New
Students
Only. Call & Press 1. 100%
online courses. Financial Aid
Available for those who qualify. Call 888-918-9985
Recently diagnosed with lung
cancer and 60+ years old? Call
now! You and your family may
be entitled to a significant cash
award. Call 866-327-2721 today.
Free Consultation. No Risk.
New Authors Wanted! Page
Publishing will help you
self-publish your own book.
Free
author
submission
kit!
Limited offer!Why
wait? Call now: 855-939-2090
SERVICES
General Contractor
Custom Homes
Additions
Finishing Trimwork
Remodels
Lonnie Edgecomb (785) 204-1580
guest homes
is looking for full-time CMAs, shift varies, who are
wanting to work with our team.
We offer Health Insurance and Competitive Wages.
If you are interested in this position,
please contact Sandra Johnson
at 785-448-6884
or come by our home
at 806 West 4th, Garnett.
We are excited to meet with you.
Display Advertising
Network
SHARING information
at an ECONOMICAL rate
ACROSS the state!
JB Construction
jb const
Decks Siding
Pole Buildings Garages
Joe Borntreger
Contact us TODAY for more information!
(785) 448-8803 joe.borntreger@yahoo.com
You name it,
we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
785-448-3121
Public Auction
October 10th 1:30 p.m.
Jeffs Towing & Recovery LLC
1110 East 4th Terrace, Garnett, KS.
Unclaimed, Abandoned, Wrecked, and/or consignment vehicles to be sold AS IS for cash only.
For more information:
Call: (785) 448-5830, (785) 448-7770, or (785) 213-1669
3×4 gates
Gates Corporation
1450 Montana Road Iola, KS
will be holding open interviews on
Tuesday, September 29th from 2 p.m. – 6 p.m.
Everyone that comes will receive an interview.
You may call (620) 365-4106 if you have questions.
Masks will be required and temperatures will be taken.
Drug screens, Background checks, Physical Ability testing and COVID 19 testing will be required.
EOE
1950 Chevy 4 Dr. (??????)
1964 Chevy Sport 4 Dr. (41839S248479)
1970 Pontiac (62900p219422)
1976 Ford Mustang (6R034165970)
1983 Chevy 1500 (1GCGC24M3DS103924)
1985 Chevy 2500 (1GCEK14H5FF307420)
1993 GMC Jimmy (1GKDT13W6P2501251)
1994 Ford Ranger (1FTCR14X5RPA94736)
1996 Ford Taurus (1FALP53SOTA112109)
1996 Toyota Camry (4T1BG12KOTU949162)
1997 Chevy Camaro (2G1FP22K6V2140858)
1998 Ford Taurus (1FAFP53S2WA273837)
1998 Jeep Cherokee (1J4FJ68SXWL168653)
1999 Dodge 1500 (3B7HF13Y7XM504920)
1999 Chrysler 300 M (2C3HE66G8XH719549)
1999 Toyota Tacoma (4TAWN74N8XZ437515)
1999 Mitsubishi Eclipse (4A3AK44YXXE124552)
1999 Dodge 1500 (1B7HC13Z1XJ600556)
1999 Ford Explorer (1FMZu34E9XUA93800)
2000 Mercedes (WDBRF64J81F0216228)
2001 Mitsubishi Eclipse (4A3AC44G71E082496)
2001 Dodge 2500 (1B7KC236X1J518849)
2001 Mustang (1FAFP45XX1F143982)
2001 Cavalier (1G1JC12417270031)
2001 GMC Sonoma (1GTCS195618171057)
2001 Pont Transport (1GNDU0619ST204557)
2001 Ford F350 (1FTSW31S41EB64218)
2002 Toyota Celica GT (JTDDR32T620132666)
2002 Ford Taurus (1FAFP55U5G276589)
2002 Chrysler Sebring (4C3AG52H72E081250)
2002 Chevy Malibu (1G1ND52J72M527910)
2002 Saturn L (1G8JS54F52Y549329)
2003 Nissan Sentra (3N1CB51D34L856832)
2003 GMC Envoy (1GKES16S536239273)
2003 Jeep Liberty (1J4GK58K33W608960)
2004 Chevy Classic (1G1ND52F14M616743)
2004 Land Range Rover (SALME11434A162756)
2004 Toyota Avalon (4T1BF28B94U386968)
2004 Nissan Quest (5N1BV28U14N320770)
2006 Ford Taurus (1FAFP56U17A102995)
2006 Chrysler 300 (2C3KA53G26H230076)
2007 Pontiac G6 (1G2Z658B774258206)
2007 Mazda 6 (1YVHP840075M23167)
2008 Nissan Verse (3N1BC13E28L369053)
2009 Dodge 1500 (1D3HB13T59S742332)
2011 Honda Passenger (2HGFA1F59BH513151)
Auctioneer Col. Ben Ernst (620) 364-6786
6B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 29, 2020
LOCAL
Local student a semifinalist
for Merit Scholarship
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-29-2020 / SUBMITTED
Natures Touch, owned by Irene and Frank Tastove, was honored at
the Kansas Business and Professional Womens Convention held
at Acorns Resort at Milford Lake on Saturday, September 19th.
Irene and Frank attended and were honored at the convention.
Garnett BPW honored Natures Touch at their local meeting in
February and submitted their entry to Kansas BPW for an additional
recognition.
FREE
BUY 3, GET 1
ON CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ADS!
(785) 448-3121 FAX (785) 448-6253 review@garnett-ks.com
EVANSTON,
ILLINOIS
Recenty officials of National
Merit Scholarship Corporation
(NMSC) announced the names
of approximately
16,000
Semifinalists in the 66th annual National Merit Scholarship
Program. These academically
talented high school seniors
have an opportunity to continue in the competition for
some 7,600 National Merit
Scholarships worth more than
$30 million that will be offered
next spring. To be considered
for a Merit Scholarship award,
Semifinalists must fulfill several
requirements to advance to the
Finalist level of the competition.
Local semifinalist is Dylan
Cole, son of Jody and Craig Cole.
Steps in the 2021
Competition
Over 1.5 million juniors
in about 21,000 high schools
entered the 2021 National Merit
Scholarship Program by taking the 2019 Preliminary SAT/
National Merit Scholarship
Qualifying
Test
(PSAT/
NMSQT), which served as
an initial screen of program
entrants. The nationwide pool
of Semifinalists, representing
less than one percent of U.S.
high school seniors, includes
the highest-scoring entrants
in each state. The number of
Semifinalists in a state is proportional to the state's percentage of the national total of graduating seniors.
To become a Finalist, the
Semifinalist and a high school
official must submit a detailed
scholarship application, in
which they provide informa-
tion about the Semifinalist's
academic record, participation
in school and community activities, demonstrated leadership
abilities, employment, and
honors and awards received.
A Semifinalist must have an
outstanding academic record
throughout high school, be
endorsed and recommended by
a high school official, and write
an essay.
From the approximately 16,000 Semifinalists, about
15,000 are expected to advance
to the Finalist level, and in
February they will be notified
of this designation. All National
Merit Scholarship winners will
be selected from this group of
Finalists.
National Merit Scholarships
Three types of National Merit
Scholarships will be offered
in the spring of 2021. Every
Finalist will compete for one
of 2,500 National Merit $2500
Scholarships that will be
awarded on a state-representational basis. About 1,000
corporate-sponsored
Merit
Scholarship awards will be
provided by approximately 220
corporations and business organizations for Finalists who meet
their specified criteria, such as
children of the grantor's employees or residents of communities
where sponsor plants or offices
are located. In addition, about
180 colleges and universities
are expected to finance some
4,100 college-sponsored Merit
Scholarship awards for Finalists
who will attend the sponsor
institution.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-29-2020 / SUBMITTED
Saturday, September 19th, Jenny Myers, Garnett, KS was installed
as Kansas Business and Professional Womens State President.
Her installation was at the Acorns Resort at Milford Lake. Also,
installed as President-Elect was Miranda Naylor formerly from
Garnett.These ladies will bring such great leadership to the Kansas
BPW this year.
Business Cards Car Magnets
Project Bid Forms More!
You name it,
we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
GET IT DONE
For professional help on your
home or work project, look to
these quality local contractors
who are anxious to help.
GUTTERING
ELECTRICAL
PERFORMANCE ELECTRIC SOLUTIONS
206 North Oak Ottawa, KS (785) 242-5748
www.performance-electric.com
CONSTRUCTION
GARAGES HOBBY SHOPS
AGRICULTURAL EQUESTRIAN
Specializing in
Complete Post Frame
Buildings
A complete residential electrical service company
Rural Electrical Service
Transfer Switch & Generator Connection
Bucket Truck
7-Block Certified
Licensed Electricians
Bonded Insured
Free Estimates
(620) 363-4327
GLASS
Quality Service For
Over 20 Years.
Serving Anderson
& Franklin Counties.
TRUSS SUPPLIERS
Richmond, KS
Monday~Friday
8am~5pm
785-835-6100
QualityStructures.com
GAS PROPANE
BLDG. MATERIALS
Construction Supply
Contractors, Residential & Farm
Garnett Home Center
& Rental
410 N. Maple
Garnett, KS
785-448-7106
Post-frame
buildings
Hobby
Shops
Garages
Equestrian Commercial Homes
FLOORING
704 N Maple St. Garnett
All
your propane
needs.
785-448-5512
or 1-877-592-2743
(620)
625-3151
www.mfaoil.com
www.yutzyconstruction.com
HEATING & AC
ROOFING
METAL ROOFING
Specializing in
Complete Post Frame
Buildings
SEPTIC, ETC.
Richmond, KS
D&S Sanitation LLC
DONT SEE
YOUR CATEGORY?
Have us designate it when
you place your ad
Place your ad here.
(785) 448-3121
Richmond, KS
Monday~Friday 8am~5pm
Brian Falk
Lumber Posts Metal
Windows Garage Doors
785-214-4647
GARAGE DOORS
LIME/LIMESTONE
SIDING & WINDOWS
Monday~Friday
8am~5pm
785-214-4647
QualityStructures.com
DONT SEE
YOUR CATEGORY?
Have us designate it when
you place your ad
Service Sales Installation Repairs
Garage Doors & Openers
242 E. 5th, Garnett
(785) 248-9800
albrandes@alsdoorcompany.com
To advertise in this directory, call (785) 448-3121 or email review@garnett-ks.com
Place your ad here.
(785) 448-3121

