Anderson County Review — September 3, 2013
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from September 3, 2013. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
Probitas,
virtus, integritas
in summa.
Bush City, Colony, Garnett, Greeley, Harris, Kincaid, Lone Elm, Mont Ida, Scipio, Selma, Welda, Westphalia KANSAS
www.garnett-ks.com |
Contents Copyright 2012 Garnett Publishing, Inc.
FALL HARVEST
HARVEST
FALL
SPECTACULAR
Published as a supplement to The Anderson County Review | Tuesday, September 3, 2013
Whats happening
this fall? See the
special section inside.
Whos got spirit?
Check out the new bus.
See page 6A.
YOUR GUIDE TO FALL HAPPENINGS AND EVENTS IN ANDERSON COUNTY
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CELEBRATING A 150 YEAR NEWS HERITAGE
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(785) 448-3111
Jail seeks to reduce
health care costs
Sheriffs new plan would
make inmates reimburse
county for medications
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – Local inmates who
need medical treatment with
prescription or over-the-counter drugs likely will soon have
to reimburse the county for the
cost of those medications.
Sheriff Vern Valentine last
week asked county commissioners for a resolution that
would allow him to assess the
costs of medications against jail
inmates. Many other jails have
similar policies, he said, and it
would help the jail recoup some
of its considerable health care
expenses. Perhaps even more
importantly, Valentine said, the
new policy might deter some
inmates from taking advantage of the system and using
the county as a source of free
health care.
The new policy would charge
the cost of prescriptions and
other medications to the inmate.
The jail currently submits those
and other health care claims to
the inmates health insurance
company, if the inmate has coverage. But many inmates do not
have health insurance or coverage for prescription medications, and the county is stuck
with the bill for any care needed
during incarceration. Under the
new policy, if an inmate fails to
pay the county for the expenses,
the bill can be sent to a collection agency.
County counselor James
SEE JAIL ON PAGE 3A
City finalizes plans
for street repairs
A handful of streets
picked over expensive
Park Road repair
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 09-03-2013 / Vickie Moss
From left, Garnett Elementary School fifth grade students Anna Luedke,Lilly Gruver, Abbie Weisner and Lexi Modlin burn off
some energy during recess Friday morning. Despite high temperatures last week, students were still able to enjoy recess and
get some fresh air.
Area avoids dangers from heat; crops vulnerable
Rain, storms could hit soon,
would be welcome in area
soybean, corn fields
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – Ninety-degree temperatures are not unusual in Kansas in
August. It is unusual, however, that
those hot temps didnt hit the area until
the month was nearly over.
Local residents saw the first real
heat wave of the summer last week, as
temperatures soared into the mid-90s
and a summer that had previously been
abnormally wet and cool turned hot
and dry seemingly overnight.
Despite the sudden heat wave, most
area residents seemed unaffected by
the hot weather. Garnett Police Chief
Kevin Pekarek said there had been no
heat-related incidents or accidents.
At Garnett Elementary School, students benefited from air conditioning
throughout the 1-year-old building.
Even so, students still were able to
enjoy recess every day. Principal Krista
Hedrick said recess is only 15-minutes
long, and even though it may be hot, its
still good for kids to get out in the fresh
air.
Temperatures were expected to
remain hot throughout the Labor Day
weekend, but with a chance of thunderstorms that could bring some relief to
the area. Temperatures this week were
expected to be in the mid-80s, but could
increase toward 90 by the end of the
week, according to forecasts from the
National Weather Service in Topeka.
Rain could really help local crops
right now, especially soybeans, Shannon
Blocker, agriculture agent for K-State
Research and Extension in Anderson
County, said. Local soils need a good
soaking rain at least every two weeks,
and theyve dried out after a wet summer. The lack of moisture and high
heat could be troubling for soybean
crops, depending on where they are at
in their growth cycle. Soybeans have the
ability to sort of shut down until they
get enough moisture, but temporary
periods of drought can damage the crop
at some stages of development.
The outlook is more promising for
corn fields, although again it depends
on the corns development. Most of the
corn is past the danger zone, and the
recent heat wave wont affect it much.
She said some farmers may start harvesting the corn as early as this week if
rain doesnt fall this week.
Every year, we go through periods
of temporary drought, Blocker said.
If we can get that rain, I wont worry
too much.
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT And the winners
are: Eighth Avenue, Walnut
Street, Oak Street, Lake Ridge
Road … and maybe 12th Avenue
and Park Road.
City staff and commissioners revealed their plans for
street repairs this fall, agreeing to spend about $80,000 more
than expected in order to fix
more streets. But not everyone
will be happy with the streets
that made the cut, Garnett City
Manager Joyce Martin said.
These are the worst streets
right now, Martin said. But I
know thats open for discussion.
Well never get (all bad streets)
done in one year.
The cost to repair the streets
will be about $223,000. The city
initially budgeted about $150,000
for street repair this year, so the
projects will be about $80,000
more than expected. Martin
said the city can cover the additional cost by using money from
a sales tax passed more than
a decade ago to construct the
baseball complex, remodel the
library, and improve streets.
Martin said Eighth Avenue
and Lake Ridge Road from U.S.
59 to Lakeview Drive were in
very bad shape. Walnut Street,
from Park Road to First Avenue,
also needs repairs because it
was damaged by large trucks
during demolition of the former
Garnett High School. Thats
also part of the reason Oak
Street needs repairs, but crews
will repair it all the way from
Park Road to Fourth Avenue.
Twelfth Avenue is a very short
SEE STREETS ON PAGE 3A
Rec center fees to increase Oct. 1
Daily use fees up to $3,
monthly fees up by
$5 in each category
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Now that the
new has worn off the Garnett
Recreation Center, city leaders
decided to increase user fees to
make up the difference left by
decreasing donations.
In its third year of operation
and with the recent addition
of air conditioning throughout the building, the Garnett
Recreation Center collected just
about $1,000 in gifts and donations. Aside from the initial
start-up donations, the center
collected about $9,000 in donations each of its first two years
in operation.
To make up the difference,
city commissioners approved
increasing admittance fees
between 25 and 50 percent. City
manager Joyce Martin said the
goal of city staff always has
been to make the recreation
center support itself, without
relying on taxpayer money.
The past two years, the center was able to avoid using
taxpayer money because of a
combination of user fees and
donations. Now that donations
have slacked off, the center will
rely more heavily on user fees.
Martin and Recreation Director
Phil Bures said that is a better long-term strategy, because
staff wont need to rely on the
fickle nature of donations.
Martin said the Garnett
Community Foundation Board
The Garnett Recreation Center and Goppert Wellness Center.
considered a letter-writing
campaign to encourage more
donations, but decided against
it because fall is a busy time for
events and activities that rely
on donations from local busiTHE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 09-03-2013 / Vickie Moss
nesses. The board members
didnt want to ask too much of Trinity Barnett and Hailey Gilbert look over some of the baked goods
local businesses, Martin said. at the Bauman Farms booth at the Garnett Farmers Market in downSEE REC CENTER ON PAGE 3A
town Garnett. The Farmers Market is open from 4:30 p.m. to 7 p.m.
each Thursday until October.
2A
NEWS
IN BRIEF
ACHS TAILGATE PARTY
The Garnett Optimst Club will
have their annual Tailgate Party
Friday night Sept. 6, the day
of the first home football game
for the Anderson County High
School team. Sponsored each
year by the Optimists and local
businesses in the area, it will
serve from 6 p.m. to 7:15 p.m.
They also feed both teams,
cheerleaders, band and dance
team. Featured will be free hot
dogs, chips and drink for everyone who attends the game.
COMMUNITY DINNERS
Community dinners are back
at the First Christian Church.
Open to the public for free will
donations. Note: Time change to
4:45 p.m. to 6:15 p.m. Starting
Wednesday, Sept. 28.
BIBLE STUDY, DISCUSSION
Reverend Marianand Mendem,
Pastor of the Westphalia,
Wavery, Emerald and Burlington
Catholic churches will lead a free
Bible study and discussion on
The Gospel of St. Luke on Sept.
3, 10 and 17, from 7:00 p.m. to
8:30 p.m. at St. Francis Xavier
parish hall. Rev. Mendem has
a Doctorate in biblical Theology
and welcomes everyone to
attend these evenings. Please
bring your Bible, a notebook and
a writing utensil. The parish hall
is located at 214 Juniatta St.
Burlington.
YOUTH HUNTING EVENT
Youth Outdoor Day will teach
youth about habitat conservation,
hunting, fishing and other outdoor
activities. It will be from 8:30 a.m.
to 4:30 p.m. with check-in at 7:30
a.m. Sept. 14 at Lake Garnett for
youth ages 8-18. Register online
at ntnlyouthhuntingevents.webs.
com.
URGENT NEED FOR BLOOD
Community Blood Center, the
provider of blood services to
local hospitals, will be conducting a blood drive on Wednesday,
September 11 from 1:30 p.m.
to 5:30 p.m. at Central Heights
High School in Richmond at 3521
Ellis Road to help local hospital
patients in our area that depend
on life saving blood donations.
You may make an appointment
at www.esavealifenow.org and
use the code CENTRALHEI
or contact Lindsay Nichols at
&(785)869-3555. T-Shirts for all
registered donors.
SEVERE WEATHER ALERT
Anderson County residents who
want to get National Weather
Service severe weather warnings by phone via the countys
CodeRed system should register
online at www.andersoncountyks.
org, click Public safety/emergency management, or pick up
registration forms at the county
annex, Garnett City Hall, Garnett
Library, Welda Post office,
Westphalia Co-op, Greeley City
Hall, Kincaid City Hall or Colony
City Hall. You must be registered
to receive the severe weather
warnings by landline or cell
phone. For more information contact AC Emergency Management
at (785) 448-6797.
HELP FOR ANIMALS
Anyone willing to donate kitty
litter, canned dog food or canned
cat food, dog and cat toys, paper
towels., laundry and cleaning
supplies, or newspaper to help
support Prairie Paws Animal
Shelter can contact Lisa at 785204-2148.
CARE GIVER SUPPORT
Anderson County Caregiving
Support meets the fourth Monday
of each month from 1-2 p.m. at
theSoutheast Kansas Mental
Health Center conference room,
519 S. Elm St., Garnett. For
more information call Phyllis at
ECKAAA, (800) 633-5621.
AD
1×2
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 3, 2013
RECORD
ANDERSON COUNTY BOARD OF
COMMISSIONER AUGUST 29
Chairman Eugene Highberger called
the meeting of the Anderson County
Board of Commissioners to order at
9:00 a.m. on August 29 at the County
Commission Room. All present. The
pledge of allegiance was recited.
Minutes of the previous meeting were
read. Correction made that landfill fees
were waived up to $700 for the GAPP
Project. Minutes approved as corrected.
Road and Bridge
Lester Welsh, Road Supervisor, met
with the commission. He reported the
chip seal will be complete today. Don
Harden, BG Consultants, joined the
meeting. He presented a quote for the
bridge replacement on 1000 Road to be
used as a bypass road for the Highway
169 Project. Cost of bridge replacement
estimated to be $267,905.00 which will
be refunded by the state. The bridge
could be replaced any time before 2017,
when the state will work on the highway.
Lake Region RC&D
Don Stottlemire, Lake Region RC&D,
met with the commission. He updated the
commission on RC&D and recognized
Anderson County for being involved for
40 years.
Health Insurance
Steve Euston, Bukaty Co., met with
the commission on the county health
insurance. Commissioner Johnson
moved to adapt the Aetna OAMC 100%12 Managed Choice through Bukaty.
Commissioner Howarter seconded.
Approved 3-0. Discussion was held on
the deductible. Employees who have
already met deductible this year will
be credited. The plan will be designed
so employees will pay the first $500 of
deductible and then 50% of charges until
total out of pocket is met. Discussion
was held on establishing a wellness
program.
Sheriff
Sheriff Valentine met with the commission. They are setting up the new
consoles. They will now be able to tell
who has an open mike and will contact
the individual to notify them. Discussion
was held on thefts that have occurred
recently. Sheriff Valentine stated he has
signed up for TRACE which send out
a tracer on stolen vehicles across the
state.
Severed Minerals
Commissioner Johnson moved
to withdraw the prior decision of the
County Commission, and that as of
January 1, 2014, all severed mineral
interest shall be carried on the tax rolls
and taxes levied as required by Kansas
statute, there being no way to retroactively assess the taxes not levied, if
any should have occurred, they are forgiven. Commissioner Howarter second.
Approved 3-0.
Emergency Management
JD
Mersman,
Emergency
Management Director, met with the commission. He reported the governor listed
Anderson County in a disaster declaration, however, after checking, JD did
not feel there was very much damage
in the county. He reported he will be
absent from the county several times
for the next few weeks. Commission
questioned who is in charge when he
is absent. JD stated by law the sheriff
is in charge. Commissioner Johnson
suggested the possibility of paying a fire
chief to be in charge when he is absent.
No final decision was made. JD reported
he had to have the brakes repaired on
a county fire truck. He presented a bill
for $1,193.46. Commissioner Johnson
moved to approve the repair of the fire
truck by Beckman Motors at a cost
of $1,193.46. Commissioner Howarter
seconded. Approved 3-0.
Executive Session
AD
1×2
Commissioner Johnson moved to
recess into executive session for 20 minutes for the discussion of non-elected
personnel with James Campbell, County
Counselor, in attendance. Open meeting to resume at 12:00. Commissioner
Howarter seconded. Approved 3-0. No
action after executive session.
County Wide Clean-up
Commissioner Howarter moved
to approve a county wide clean-up
September 16-21.
Commissioner
Johnson seconded. Approved 3-0.
Health Insurance
Discussion was held on the employees contribution to the health insurance.
Commissioner Howarter moved that
employees will pay $20 towards a single
policy, the county will pay the single portion of the employees, employee/child,
and a family policy will be split 50/50.
Commissioner Johnson seconded.
Approved 3-0.
Air Conditioning/Annex
Commissioner Howarter moved
to approve the purchase of a Lennox
Air Conditioner Unit with Coleman
Condensing Unit for the south half of
the annex at a cost of $3,857.96 from
Plumbing and Heating Unlimited out
of Courthouse General. Commissioner
Howarter seconded. Approved 3-0.
Meeting adjourned at 12:15 p.m.
LAND TRANSFERS
No land transfers this week.
CIVIL CASES FILED
Wells Fargo Bank National Association
vs. Cynthia Randall, Rickey R. Randall,
University National Bank and unknown
occupant, asking $58,055.64.
Midland Funding LLC & Corp of
Aspire Visa vs. Mary Williams, asking
$1,451.03.
CIVIL CASES RESOLVED
Bank of America, NA vs. Richard
McCullough, Jane Doe, John Doe, Asset
Acceptance LLC, Jason McCullough,
Jodie L. Allnut, Patricia McCullough,
unknown spouse of Jason McCullough,
unknown spouse of Jodie McCullough,
unknown spouse of Patricia McCullough,
and USA Internal Revenue Service,
$31,535.32 plus interest and costs.
OConner Company, Inc. vs.
Hometown Heating and Cooling, LLC,
dismissed.
DOMESTIC CASES FILED
Steven Travis Lickteig vs. Lilly
Kaufman, petition for protection from
abuse.
Melanie D. Smith vs. Eric Smith, petition for protection from stalking.
Janon Elisabeth Gordon vs. Jonathan
L. Gordon, petition for divorce.
Vicky L. Lytle vs. Amanda J. Lattimere,
petition for protection from stalking.
Amber McVey Green vs. Calvin
Green, Jr., petition for protection from
abuse.
DOMESTIC CASES RESOLVED
Dotti L. Hartman vs. Rex Allen
Hartman, divorce decree granted.
Tyler James Young vs. Josh Calcott,
dismissed.
LIMITED ACTION FILED
GE Capital Retail Bank vs. Marcie
Long, asking $417.67.
Commercial Group IV Inc. vs. Miranda
Julienna June Callahan, Stephen Alan
Hyden, and unknown occupant, asking
$54 rent, restitution, possession of premises, plus costs.
Saint Lukes South Hospital Inc. vs.
Mary A. Gooding and Mark Gooding,
asking $1,537.91.
LIMITED ACTION RESOLVED
Feuerborn Family Funeral Service,
Inc. vs. Susan Sanders, dismissed.
Garnett Family Dentistry vs. Rose
Peine, $115 plus interest and costs.
John F. Uhlenhake DDS vs. Eric Louis
Kueser and Linsey Tidwell, $524 plus
interest and costs.
Bobs Supersaver d/b/a Country Mark
Garnett vs. James W. Bagnall, III, $30
check, judgment for $420 plus costs.
Barclays Bank Delaware vs. Phillip
Wayne Moody, Jr., $1,645.69.
Capital One Bank (USA) N.A. vs.
Carolyn Galloway, $1,862.86.
CRIMINAL CASES FILED
Steven R. McNutt, August 23, cultivate/distribute with intent to distribute
narcotic drug x2, use or possession
of paraphernalia to cultivate controlled
substance, taxation dugs, fof marijuana
or controlled substance, possession of
hallucinogenic drugs with 1 prior conviction and possession of drug paraphernalia, appearance with counsel set for
September 17 at 9:00 a.m.
Darlen Debra Lund, August 26, battery, arraignment set for September 10
at 9:00 a.m.
CRIMINAL CASES RESOLVED
Speeding violations:
Matthew Lucas Adams, $189 fine,
unlawful vehicle registration, $60 fine.
Ethan Garrett Ross, $143 fine.
Charles D. ONeal, $159 fine.
Jeffrey Francis Simek, $165 fine.
Jacob B. Cody, $159 fine.
Carina Jade Criger, $171 fine.
Cynthia L. Stuart, $173 fine.
Gary Lee Carter, $143 fine.
Other:
Charles E. Jasper, criminal hunting
without consent from property owner,
$358 fine.
Kurt Thomas Katzer, refusal to submit a preliminary breath or saliva test,
$346 fine, boating and water lifesaving
devices.
Jason Kethal Hermreck, violation of
protection order, protection from abuse,
$403 fine.
Natasha Sioux Hedrick, domestic battery and battery, causing bodily harm,
$753 fine.
David Allen Ball, failure to stop at
accident, injury or damage over $1,000,
$381 fine.
Jason Kethal Hermreck, DWS 2nd
or subsequent conviction, $491 fine.
Edgardo W. Rodriguez, following
another vehicle too closely, $171 fine.
David John Hermreck, DWI 1st
conviction, $1,181 fine.
Kristine Courtin Haigh, possession of
certain hallucinogenic drugs and theft
of property or services, diversion, $193
fine plus 1 year unsupervised probation,
show cause set for February 24, 2014.
GARNETT MUNICIPAL COURT
Speeding and other
traffic violations:
Kenneth Jay Burgoon, Richmond,
March 17, windows must be unobstructed, $75 fine, $50 suspension; no proof
of liability insurance, $350 fine, $150
suspension, 30 days jail suspended.
Miranda J. Callahan, Garnett, July 13,
$175 fine, drivers license suspended 30
days.
Alisha Brienne Fagg, Garnett, July
25, $135 fine.
Karissa R. Fagg, Garnett, Mau 24,
drivers license in possession, $75 fine.
Tegan Ann Elizabeth Ford, Low
Moore, Iowa, May 24, $110 fine, drivers
license in possession, $150 fine, $140
suspended.
George T. Gaston, Garnett, May 24,
DWS, $400 fine, 60 days jail 55 days
suspended.
Julie M. Hartman, Garnett, August 3,
expired tag $110 fine.
Laura Aileen Jennings, McAlister,
Oklahoma, August 2, $165 fine.
Jacob Lee Johnson, Garnett, July 10,
stop lamps/turn signals required, $110
fine, $30 suspension.
Carol M. Kisner, Welda, July 10, no
proof of liability insurance, $350 fine,
$150 suspension.
Stephen J. Land, Garnett, July 21,
inattentive driving, $150 fine.
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
GARNETT POLICE REPORT
Incidents
A report was made on August 21
of computer unlawful accounts and
occurred on East 5th Terrace.
A report was made on August 21
of forgery and theft of property of 19
– $1 counterfeit bills, three gallons of
gasoline, two Pall Mall cigarettes, and
a Mountain Dew, all valued at $20 and
occurred at Short Stop located at 420 S.
Maple Street.
ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS
REPORTS
Accidents
An accident was reported on August
19 when a vehicle driven by Wyan A.
Bowman, 28, Westphalia, was transporting 16 round hay bales and traveling
North on Mitchell Road when his vehicle
ran off the road to the right causing
approximately 8 unsecured bales to fall
of the flatbed trailer causing a utility pole
to break which was owned by KCP&L,
and a fence and gate owned by Glenn
Graham. At the time of accident it did not
appear the hay bales had struck the gate
on the property, but damaged the fence
north of the gate.
An accident was reported on August
19 when a vehicle driven by John A.
Cathcard, 53, Richmond, was traveling
eastbound on NW 2300 Road when his
vehicle struck a deer that had entered
the roadway.
JAIL LOG
Steve Ray McNutt, 59, Welda, August
22, possession with intent to use simulated controlled substance, bond set at
$25,000.
John Franklin Miller, Jr., 43, Pittsburg,
August 22, failure to appear, bond set at
$1,000.
Angela Dawn Hawley, 33, Iola, August
22, failure to appear, bond set at $500.
Robert A. Gamberel, 42, Colony,
August 22, warrant arrest by LEO x2,
bond set at $1,175.
Tristen Blake Stinnett, 42, Colony,
August 22, DUI 2nd conviction, no
bond set.
Chadley Michael Mueller, 29, Kincaid,
August 23, failure to appear x2, bond set
at $1,000.
John W. Mains, 48, Lane, August 23,
failure to appear, bond set at $100.
Jeremy Scott Thomas, 30, Garnett,
August 24, failure to appear, traffic contra in correction facility, unauthorized
possession of an item, possession of
certain stimulants, bond set at $6,000.
Shannon Sandra Figgins, 28,
Centerville, August 26, giving a worthless check, prints and process.
Barton Alexander Fromme, 41,
Kansas City, August 26, DUI 4th or
subsequent conviction.
Adam Jay Deeley, 30, Westphalia,
August 26, aggravated incest, intercourse with relative under 16, no bond
set.
Lee Brock Moody, 41, Garnett, August
SEE RECORD ON PAGE 3A
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Charity K. Lankford, Lawrence, June
26, $110 fine
Joshua A. Leistra, Garnett, January
1, DWS, $550 fine, $200 suspension, 90
days jail, 85 days suspended; March 1,
DWS, $800 fine, $350 suspension, 120
days jail, 115 days suspended.
Mindi J. Lundberg, Topeka, June 15,
$255 fine.
Lori Anne Muilenburg, Lawrence,
January 20, no passing zones, $110
fine.
Susan K. Oler, Leroy, August 4, $110
fine.
George O. Perry, Washington, D.C.,
July 16, $165 fine.
Porter K. Sherman, Welda, no drivers
license on person, $150 fine, $100 suspended.
Rodney F. Wittman, Garnett, August
8, $135 fine.
Seat belt violations:
Laura L. Owens, Garnett, August 18,
$10 fine.
Other:
Jordan L. Jackman, Garnett, July 13,
possession of alcohol liquor or CMB by
minor, $175 fine, drivers license suspended 30 days.
Cassandra Marie Jewell, Garnett,
July 6, possession of alcohol liquor or
CMB by minor, $175 fine, drivers license
suspended 30 days.
Christopher L. Kirkland, Garnett, July
20, possession of alcohol liquor or CMB
by minor, $175 fine, drivers license suspended 30 days.
Eric Lee Nicol, Garnett, May 26 and
July 14, pedestrian under influence,
$150 fine x2, $100 suspension x2, 30
days jail suspended x2.
Haleigh Jenna Perkins, Garnett, July
6, possession of alcohol liquor or CMB
by minor, $250 fine, drivers license
suspended 90 days.
Joe Alan Read, Garnett, July 20,
possession of alcohol liquor or CMB by
minor, $175 fine, drivers license suspended 30 days.
Angela Marie Schroeder, Westphalia,
June 18, possession of alcohol, $250
fine.
Andria Nikhole Starr, Garnett, July 6,
possession of alcohol liquor or CMB by
minor, $175 fine, drivers license suspended 30 days.
James F. Pope, I, Garnett, June 4,
failure to register dog, $100 fin, $25
suspension; rabies vaccination required,
$50 fine, $25 suspension.
Amy B. Roberts, Garnett, May 27, disorderly conduct x2, $550 fine x2, $350
suspension x2, 30 days jail suspended
x2.
Aaron Lizer
305 N Maple
Garnett, KS
785-448-6125
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Kenneth J. Frank, M.D. | Ophthalmology
Kenneth J. Frank, M.D., sees patients and performs cataract surgery at Anderson County
Hospital Specialty Clinic. The board-certified ophthalmologist graduated first in his class at the
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 3, 2013
CLASEN
May 6, 1922-August 30, 2013
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published September 3, 2013
Margaret Anita Clasen, 91, of
Eureka, formerly of Garnett, passed
away Friday, August 30, 2013, at
the
Eureka
N u r s i n g
Center,
in
Eureka.
She
was
born
May
6, 1922, in
Marysville,
the daughter
of Harry and
Clasen
Helen West.
She attended school in Marysville and graduated from Marysville High School.
On October 28, 1939, she was
united in marriage to George Henry
Clasen in Marysville.
They published the DemocratLeader in Norborne, Mo., until 1942,
when he enlisted in the army.
The family purchased the
Florence Bulletin in Florence
on July 1, 1946. They later purchased half interest in the Garnett
Publishing Co., on October 1, 1964
and moved to Garnett, where they
published the Anderson County
Review.
In 1997, the Clasens served as the
Grand Marshals during the Garnett
Area Chamber of Commerce
Christmas Parade.
She served on the Garnett Public
Library Board and was a member of the Holy Angels Catholic
Church, in Garnett.
She was an avid bridge player.
She is survived by her son David
of Seattle, Wash.; daughter-inlaw, Rachel Clasen of Eureka; one
grandson, Robert Clasen and wife
Kelly of Belton, Mo.; four granddaughters, Kathy Schwar and husband Bill of Scottsdale, Ariz., Shari
Hendrickson and husband Jim of
Olathe, Rebecca Schultz and husband Tim of Park City and Robin
Wunderlich and husband Wes of
Eureka; 14 great-grandchildren,
Laurie, Katie, Maggie, Robbie,
Cynthia, Josh, Jeff, Michael, James,
Sarah, Julianna, Chloe, Camden
and Cooper; five great-great-grandchildren, Jennifer, Anderson,
Isaiah, Ella and Evelyn.
She was preceded in death by
her husband; parents; son, Richard
Dick Clasen and daughter,
Georgette.
Funeral services are pending
with Koup Family Funeral Home in
Eureka.
Inurnment will follow at
Greenwood Cemetery in Eureka.
A memorial has been established
with the Garnett Public Library.
Contributions may be sent in care
of Koup Family Funeral Home, PO
Box 595, Eureka, KS 67045, who are
in charge of service arrangements.
REC CENTER…
FROM PAGE 1A
Bures said staff continue to
seek donations and grants.
Recreation center fees will
increase to $3 for daily use of
the facility, up from the current
rate of $2. Monthly fees will
increase by $5 across the board:
for people ages 11-18, fees will
be $15 instead of $10; ages 1954 will increase to $25 instead
of $20; seniors (55 and older)
will increase to $15 instead of
$10, and the monthly fee for a
family pass will increase to $35
instead of $30. Annual passes
will increase by $50.
The increase is expected
to generate between $3,000
and $4,000 from October to
December, and should generate
an additional $8,000 next year.
Memberships have been steady
or growing since the facility
opened, and attendance tends
to peak when temperatures are
really hot or really cold, Martin
said.
Annual expenses at the rec
center tend to be between $45,000
to $50,000, mostly because of
staff salaries, Martin said. Now
that the facility is three years
old, some of the equipment has
aged to the point of needing to
be repaired or replaced, Bures
said. The additional money
generated by the fee increase
should cover those needs as
well, he said.
City commissioners said they
were reluctant to increase fees,
but agreed that the increase
was necessary for the centers
long-term viability.
I hate raising rates, but
spreadsheets dont lie, commissioner Preston Peine said.
Martin originally asked the
change to be effective Sept. 1,
but commissioners said they
would like to give loyal patrons
an opportunity to purchase
memberships at the lower rate.
The change will take effect Oct.
1. Until then, rec center memberships can be purchased at
the lower rate. Mayor Greg
Gwin said he hopes the extra
month will encourage people to
purchase annual memberships;
if someone purchases an annual membership before their current membership expires, the
new membership will begin at
the end of the current one.
3A
REMEMBRANCES
RECORD…
FROM PAGE 2A
28, manufacture controlled substance
or analog.
Eugene Granger, 31, South Houston,
Texas, August 28, failure to appear x2,
bond set at $10,000.
JAIL ROSTER
John Miller, Jr., was booked into jail
on August 22 for Anderson County, bond
set at $1,000.
Travis Blackmon was booked into jail
on July 10 for Anderson County, bond set
at $5,000.
Wesley Dietrich was booked into jail
on August 16 for Anderson County, 90
days – hold for Linn County also.
Brandon Hopkins was booked into jail
on August 15 Garnett Police Department,
bond set at $15,000.
Shannon Hicks was booked into jail
on June 13 for Anderson County, bond
set at $2,500.
Eric Spurgeon was booked into jail on
July 26 for Anderson County, finish 90
days.
Kristen Yeager was booked into jail on
February 4 for Anderson County, bond
set at $10,000 hold for KCMO.
David Olson was booked into jail on
March 6 for Anderson County, multiple
ANCO warrants.
Mark Brewer was booked into jail on
October 4, 2012 for Anderson County for
12 months.
Levi West was booked into jail on
August 3 for Anderson County for 90
days/will do work release.
Tyson Adams was booked into jail
on June 10 for Anderson County for 90
days/will do work release.
Jason Hermreck was booked into jail
on June 20 for Anderson County, bond
set at $5,000.
Dustin Young was booked into jail on
May 31 for Anderson County, bond set at
$40,000.
Jesse Hunter was booked into jail on
August 13 for Anderson County, bond set
at $150,000.
Chadley Mueller was booked into jail
on August 23 for Anderson County, bond
set at $1,000.
Barton Fromme was booked into jail
on August 26 for Anderson County for a
5-day writ + extra 5 days.
Adam Deeley was booked into jail on
August 26 for Anderson County, hold for
doc.
Brock Moody was booked into jail on
August 28 for Anderson County for 24
hour writ.
Eugene Granger II was booked into
jail on August 28 for Anderson County,
bond set at $1,000.
FARM-INS
Michael Ortego was booked into jail
on August 21 for Linn County.
Shawn Weers was booked into jail on
August 2 for Linn County.
Kenneth Bevins was booked into jail
on August 2 for Linn County.
Steven Burton was booked into jail on
August 15 for Miami County.
Brian Romero was booked into jail on
August 15 for Miami County.
Jose Java was booked into jail on
August14 for Linn County.
Jeff Wecker was booked into jail on
April 30 for Linn County.
Demetrius Cornelius was booked into
jail on July 26 for Linn County.
Charles Turman was booked into jail
on August 21 for Linn County.
Shannon Hogelin was booked into jail
on July 16 for Linn County.
Bo Evan was booked into jail on
August 21 for Miami County.
Bryce Biggs was booked into jail on
August 27 for Miami County.
Ronald Reninger was booked into jail
on August 28 for Linn County.
Chet Brown was booked into jail on
August 21 for Miami County.
Kyle Kjose was booked into jail on
August 21 for Miami County.
Stephen Thompson was booked into
jail on August 8 for Linn County.
Michael Pearce was booked into jail
on August 15 for Miami County.
Dylan Guinn was booked into jail on
August 2 for Linn County.
Andrew Buckman was booked into jail
on July 26 for Linn County.
Seth Daniels was booked into jail July
11 for Linn County.
Matt Hamel was booked into jail on
August 27 for Miami County.
Billy Thomas was booked into jail on
July 23 for Linn County.
David Bohlken was booked into jail on
April 19 for Linn County.
Matthew OConnell was booked into
jail on August 27 for Miami County.
John Simons was booked into jail on
April 17 for Linn County.
Electrolux, Frigidaire Appliances and LG TVs
ynn appliance
2×3
STREETS…
FROM PAGE 1A
stretch of road with just three
residences, but it is in such disrepair that it practically has
reverted back to a gravel road,
Martin said.
City staff initially planned
to make repairs to Park Road,
but estimate to fix that road
alone came to $138,000. Martin
said she would rather see more
streets get repaired. Staff with
Killough Construction, which
will do the work, said they probably could repair some of the
bumpy spots with leftover millings.
Some residents had asked
the city to include Cleveland
Street on its list of repairs, but
Killough said the street wasnt
in very bad shape and its crews
could show city street crews
how to do temporary repairs
until the city can afford to fully
fix the road, Martin said.
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JAIL…
FROM PAGE 1A
Campbell said there didnt
appear to be a downside to instituting such a policy, because
even if the bill is sent to collections the county likely will
recoup some of the expense.
Under the current system, the
county pays the full amount not
covered by the inmates insurance.
Skyrocketing health care
costs have plagued many governments, but the county jail
especially has come under
fire in recent years because of
inmates in need of expensive
health care. In 2012, 46 year-old
Connie McCormick claimed to
have a diagnosis of liver cancer
while she was incarcerated on
charges relating to the traffic
death of her teenage niece. Her
efforts for a reduced sentence
never included firm proof of the
diagnoses, and after $6,000 in
initial bills McCormick finished
her year-long sentence without
major additional expense.
Last month, Anderson
County Attorney Brandon
Jones warned commissioners
of possible expenses related to
the sentence of an 84-year-old
sex offender, Donald Tipton,
who was sentenced for his
third conviction of lewd and
lascivious behavior for exposing himself to a woman in his
neighborhood. Jones told commissioners there were few
sentencing options for Tipton
because of the health care cost
risks Tipton and inmates like
him could mean to the county.
Tipton was given a 6 month jail
sentence, but it was suspended
and he was placed on probation
and ordered to seek treatment
for his sexual obsession.
YOUR LIFE IS A STORY.
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4A
Selected by newspaper professionals nationwide for 43 Awards of Excellence
in editorial, column writing, photography and advertising.
EDITORIAL
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 3, 2013
The content of
their character
The Anderson County Reviews
Phone Forum
Record your comments on the topic of
your choice at (785) 448-2500, press
option 1. You do not need to leave your
name. Comments will be published anonymously. Calls may be
edited for publication or omitted.
What would Dr. King say
about violence, abuse,
victimhood in black culture?
Last weeks 50th anniversary of
Dr. Martin Luther Kings I have a
dream speech brought hours of wistful remembrance but little in the way
of critical dissection of the ails that still
plague black culture in America.
Those under the age of 60 in this
country dont remember a nation of the
kind of prejudice that King and his contemporaries stood against in the 1950s
and early 1960s.
Dr. King would
EDITORIAL
indeed be justifiably amazed to see
the leaps blacks
have made in the
U.S. in 50 years
the second term of
the nations first
black president;
blacks in places
of prominence as
CEOs of major
by Dane Hicks,
companies, politiPUBLISHER
cians, professional
sports, teachers,
lawyers, engineers, doctors and medical professionals, movie stars and news
anchors, to name only a few. Moreover,
King would celebrate the general level
of tolerance and inclusion practiced by
whites in the new millennium not just
of blacks but other races as well.
Without doubt, many were the
transgressions. Without doubt, much
has been gained.
But can we imagine Kings disdain at the plague of black on black
violence that scourges his people in
our day? How would King react to the
predominance of unwed motherhood
within Americas black culture; to the
celebration of abuse and objectification
of women through the pornography of
rap music; to the default to victimhood
in lieu of personal responsibility kept
alive by the race-baiting likes of Kings
one-time contemporaries Al Sharpton
and Jesse Jackson; to the neglect by
Sharpton, Jackson, et. al., in addressing
black cultures overall nemesis anemic rates of school attendance and education?
Those points didnt escape moderate black journalist Juan Williams in
an interview with Bill OReilly last
week. Williams called out Sharpton and
Jackson and as well as the special-interest organizations that fund them like
the NAACP, the American Federation
of Teachers and the National Education
Association. Instead of sending a blunt
message of personal responsibility,
Williams said, Sharpton and Jackson
would rather count dollars and come
up with excuses.
Its about courage, and sometimes
courage requires that you speak to people who you love in ways that challenge
them, Williams said. What were seeing now is that the civil rights leadership is all too happy to take the money
and shut up and then pretend somehow
they are speaking to the interest of
those children or to the community. In
fact, they are not. In fact what they are
doing is selling out and allowing money
to shut their mouths. And that is corruption and its corruption of a great
movement.
Williams is right in that the civil
rights movement has acquired far more
in terms of rights than it has embraced
in responsibility. Dr. King would have
challenged that course; would have
challenged the content of their character among the likes of Jackson and
Sharpton and confronted the thuggery
of black culture.
How sad that there is no one left to
wear that mantle.
Our freedom can be measured by the
number of things we can walk away from.
VERNON HOWARD
Last weeks caller about the limbs
growing into the alleyways to where
you cant get through, whos responsible, I dont know that either but I
do know that the trees growing in
the easements in the city is the citys
responsibility and theres limbs hanging down to where if there is a halfway
decent sidewalk to walk on you cant
get through. Also it blocks the signs to
whether theres a stop or yield sign up
ahead. We have more employees at city
hall but less is getting done. It must be
in the management. We keep paying
out and paying out and nothing seems
to be getting done. Its a mess.
Ted Cruz, traitor to his class
BY RICH LOWRY
NATIONAL REVIEW
Henry Adams said that politics is the
systematic organization of hatreds. For
the left in the past year, it has seemed at
times to be the systematic organization
of hatred of Ted Cruz.
The freshman senator is not the first
Texan to be so honored.
In fact, the state isnt
holding up its end if, at
any given moment, it
isnt throwing onto the
national scene at least
Lowry
one Republican reviled
by the other side.
The partys highest-profile Texans,
George W. Bush and Rick Perry, tended
to match inarticulateness with cowboy
swagger and lend themselves to mockery as intellectual lightweights. Bush
went to Yale and Harvard Business
School, yet no one naturally thinks of
him as an Ivy Leaguer. The two Lone
Star State governors played into the
lefts stereotypes so nicely that if they
didnt exist, the New York Times editorial board would have had to invent
them.
Cruz is different — a Princeton and
Harvard man who not only matriculated
at those fine institutions but excelled at
them. Champion debater at Princeton.
Magna cum laude graduate at Harvard.
Supreme Court clerkship, on the way to
Texas solicitor general and dozens of
cases before the U.S. Supreme Court.
Cruz is from the intellectual elite,
but not of it, a tea-party conservative
whose politics are considered gauche
at best at the storied universities where
he studied. He is, to borrow the words
of the 2008 H.W. Brands biography of
Franklin D. Roosevelt, a traitor to his
class.
Democrats and liberal pundits would
surely dislike Cruz no matter where he
went to school, but his pedigree adds an
element of shocked disbelief to the disdain. Princeton and Harvard should be
disgraced, former Pennsylvania Gov.
Ed Rendell exclaimed on MSNBC, as if
graduating a constitutionalist conservative who rises to national prominence
is a violation of the schools mission
statements.
One of the lefts deepest prejudices is
that its opponents are stupid, and Cruz
tramples on it. At hearings, Cruz has the
prosecutorial instincts of a … Harvardtrained lawyer. Watching Attorney
General Eric Holder try to fend off
Cruzs questioning on the administrations drone policy a few months ago
was like seeing a mouse cornered by a
very large cat.
Cruz hasnt played by the Senate
rules that freshmen should initially be
seen and not heard. At another hearing, as Cruz says that the highest commitment of senators should be to the
Constitution, another senator can be
heard muttering that he doesnt like
being lectured. Chairman Pat Leahy
(probably the mutterer) eventually cuts
him off and informs him he hasnt been
in the Senate very long.
None of this is to endorse all of
Cruzs tactical judgments or to deny
he can irk his own side at times. His
push to defund Obamacare this fall is a
grass-roots-pleasing slogan in search of
a realistic path to legislative fruition.
It is no secret that Cruz has presidential aspirations. Even if he ascends no
higher, though, he will be a force in the
Senate. He could spend decades making
liberals recoil at what Princeton and
Harvard hath wrought.
Rich Lowry is editor of the National
Review.
Thank you MTV for a new high in
your intellectually challenging caliber
of programming. A breeding baboon
dance act featuring Miley Cyrus.
Besides the pointlessness of so much
Hollywood bilge in which sluttiness
and bad behavior supplants talent and
hard work in competition for the publicity machine, I have to wonder what
has happened to the fathers of this
country that allow their children and
especially their daughters to behave in
such a fashion? Had I ever entertained
the thought of such a performance,
my father would have jumped onto the
stage and pulled me off by my hair, no
matter how old I was. I take heart that
such uncleanliness of spirit is a pop
culture aberration and not the norm,
but I challenge the fathers of our community to discipline your children as
to right and wrong and lead lives worthy of example for them. Our nation
depends on it.
I have a couple of things Id like to
talk about. First I see the city storehouse down by Holy Angels is gone, it
needed it. Im real happy about that.
But Id like to know why they have not
done something about that house right
before you get to the ethanol plant. Its
a fire trap, its a hazard place and a
banker used to own it so maybe thats
why.
Hey whats the deal? Is there Viagra
in the water fountain down at the
Garnett Police Department?
I recently noticed a Jayhawk, as in
the KU mascot, on top of the Welcome
to Garnett sign on highway 59. If it is
to remain, Id like to see equal representation as in a K-State Wildcat or a
Pitt State Gorilla or an Emporia State
Hornet, etc.. Otherwise replace it with
the Kansas state bird, the meadowlark,
or perhaps a Bulldog. Thank you.
Contact your legislator
Senator Pat Roberts
302 Hart Senate O.B.,
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-4774, Fax (202) 224-3514
e-mail pat_roberts@roberts.senate.gov
Senator Jerry Moran
2202 Rayburn House Office Building,
Washington, D.C., 20515
(202) 225-2715 Fax (202) 225-5124
www.moran.senate.gov
5th Dist. Rep Lynn Jenkins
130 Connor House Office Building
Washington, D.C., 20515
(202) 225-6601
President Barack H. Obama
1600 Pennsylvania Ave.,
Washington, D.C., 20500
(202) 456-1414 Fax (202) 456-2461
Kepler helps scope things into perspective
BY BOB FRANKEN
KING FEATURES SYNDICATE
By now youve probably heard the sad
news: NASAs awesome Kepler space telescope is ending its mission. No longer will
it be peeping into the far reaches of the universe trying to find other worlds and giving
new meaning to the exclamation Faaaaar
out. It has had a gyroscope failure, which
means it cant aim its lenses in the minutely precise way necessary to chart the cosmos. So the guys back at headquarters are
soliciting ideas for ways to continue using
Kepler.
First of all, thanks for asking, NASA. I
know I speak for all Americans in saying
that. Actually, they were seeking input
from scientists and engineers, but surely
they will welcome suggestions from those
of us who are not experts … us Dumbos.
And sure enough, heres one that is ridiculously obvious: Why not turn the whole
thing over to the National Security Agency,
spin it around and point the powerful lenses not at other planets, but at our own
— specifically at the United States, where it
can spy on us. Consider it a supplement to
the existing programs, detailed by Edward
Snowden.
For that matter, it also can be rented to
major league baseball as it goes where every
other sport has already gone before with
instant replay. What? You havent heard?
MLB is proposing a huge expansion of its
existing but very limited program to allow
for video second-guessing the umpires. It
wont be used for balls and strikes, but for
most other calls. Whatever, if you rely on a
recording, you will need a camera. Kepler,
taping overhead, would be the perfect fit.
Its a match made in the heavens.
You know who probably has some brilliant suggestions for utilizing Kepler? Newt
Gingrich, of course. This is the man, after
all, who as a presidential candidate pledged
that if he was elected, there would be a
lunar colony established by the year 2020.
Ultimately, he projected that there would
be 13,000 Americans living on the moon. At
that point, he went on, they can petition
to become a state. That probably frosted
all the people here in Washington who
have unsuccessfully fought for District of
Columbia statehood, but Newt himself says
we need grandiose ideas, such as his. So
using a space telescope equipped with a
recording device to keep track of his every
comment on Crossfire makes sense.
Its easy to make fun of Gingrich, but
his grandiose thinking has gotten him
a gig co-hosting the program, which not
only will pay him big bucks but also will
position him for another presidential run.
Its just one of our unofficial revolving
doors, like the one that departing members
of Congress use to get lucrative lobbying
work or the one that spins finance guys
between the big banks and the Treasury
Department. Similarly, failed presidential
candidates gravitate to TV and keep their
name recognition high until its time to
make another run.
Clearly, using Kepler to observe this
country is an appropriate new assignment.
It has been trying to scope out worlds way
out there, so why not focus on our leaders
here, who are definitely from some other
planet.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 3, 2013
5A
LOCAL
Quartet to perform at Greeley
4 His Love, a Southern Gospel quartet based in Kansas City, MO, will
be appearing at Greeley Elementary
School, 101 South Mary Street in
Greeley, Kansas on Saturday, October
26th at 7:00pm, sponsored by the Greeley
United Methodist Church.
4 His Love first took shape in the
mind of tenor Dan Roberts after the
dramatic changes God made in his life
as a young man in his 20s in Lodi, CA.
That first group toured the west coast
for 1 1/2 years before Dan followed the
call of God to relocate to the Midwest.
Settling in the Kansas City area, Dan
sang with veteran baritone Bob Smith
in a local quartet. The two later joined
forces to recreate the ministry of 4 His
Love in 2009.
The current group represents more
than 75 years of experience in Christian
music. They have shared the stage with
Brian Free & Assurance, Karen Peck
& New River, The Dove Brothers, The
Nelons, Jeff & Sheri Easter and many
others. Together, they bring excitement
and enthusiasm to every performance
without giving up a heart for true person-to-person ministry of the gospel.
As they share their testimonies and
the stories of what God has done in
the lives of 4 His Love, audiences will
be challenged to believe for what God
WANTS to do in THEIR lives. Whether
you are a fan of Southern Gospel music
or not, you will certainly enjoy 4 His
Love! Their ministry bridges all generations, bringing enjoyment to traditional settings as well as contemporary
ones. Their song selections will always
have a current sound, including original compositions from within the group
while still showcasing vintage favorites.
Come to this very special event, listen
to what they sing and what they say,
and you will quickly become a fan of
one of the true up-and-coming quartets
in Southern Gospel today 4 His Love.
There is no admission charge for
this concert; a free-will offering will be
received.
4 His Love
Dont miss the
13th Annual
GREELEY SMOKEOFF
Sept. 6-7
in Downtown Greeley
Come and join us for
Greeley
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Patriots Bank Bldg., Princeton, Kansas
785-937-2269
Sheri, Vicki, Sarah & Jim
126 E. Central, Richmond, Kansas
785-835-6161
dornesinsurance@aceks.com
www.dornesinsurance.com
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Downtown Greeley, KS 785-867-3540
See ya at The Greeley Smokeoff!
Have fun
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Greeley
Smokeoff!
BRUMMEL
Farm Service
8th & Oak St.
Garnett, KS 66032
785-448-5720
Stop by and see us
greeley
quick shop
while enjoying
the smokeoff!
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Greeley Quick Shop
& Greeley Liquor
On Hwy. 169 at 445 S. Main Greeley 785-867-9952
QSHOP: M-Sat 7a-9p, SUN Noon-4p / LIQUOR: M-Sat 9a-9p, SUN Noon-4p
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Open Thursday Nights till 7pm
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Visit our used car/truck online showroom www.beckmanmotorsinc.com
See dealer for current incentives.
Come join us at the
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greeley
13th Annual Greeley Smokeoff!
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Greeley, Kansas
(785) 867-2858 cell (913) 294-6150
Give us a call for all of your excavating needs.
Cliff & Karen Feuerborn
1312 S. Maple
Garnett, KS 66032
122 N. Perry Ave.
Greeley, KS 66033
208 N. Iron St.
Paola, KS 66071
6A
Grant to test community
coaching to reduce obesity
MANHATTAN A coachs role
is familiar he or she calls the
plays to win.
And, while coaching often
is associated with athletics,
a Kansas State University
researcher has proposed a
similar strategy community
coaching to help create an
environment in which children
are better able to choose healthpromoting foods and physical
activity.
The goal is to help youth
maintain a healthy weight
and active lifestyle, said Paula
Peters, who along with her team
landed a five-year, $4.5 million
research grant from the U.S.
Department of Agricultures
National Institute of Food and
Agriculture (NIFA) to test community coaching as an effective
method in reducing obesity in
youth in seven states.
Doing so also should help
reduce the incidence of chronic
diseases, including diabetes,
heart disease and some cancers, that are associated with
obesity, she said.
Peters was first hired as KState Research and Extensions
childrens nutrition specialist,
and now serves as assistant
director of Extension, Family
and Consumer Sciences.
In seeking an answer to a
perennial question: How can
we teach children to make better choices?, Peters and her
team suggested a comparative
study in which two communities with similar demographics
are awarded funding ($5,000 a
year for four years) to improve
nutrition and physical activity
education, resources and policies in their community.
The grant effort is targeting four-year olds who are at
an age when they are beginning to make some of their own
food and activity choices, Peters
said.
The grant process will
involve working with people
making the decisions about the
opportunities available to this
age group, and not the children,
she said.
Participating communities
were selected through an application and review process. Each
community will be provided a
grant-developed tool kit, and
asked to choose one plan of
work to enhance nutrition education and one plan of work
to encourage health-promoting
physical activity.
Both will be expected to work
with community coalitions
(others who provide services to
youth within the community),
but one also will have a community coach added to their team.
Pre- and post-program testing will be conducted over a
four-year period for communities with and without a coach
as a comparative review of the
value of intervention, and also
the value of intervention with
the addition of a community
coach.
Were hoping to make a difference, said Peters, who is
working closely with Sandy
Procter, a K-State Research and
Extension nutrition specialist
and state coordinator for the
USDAs Expanded Food and
Nutrition Education Program
[EFNEP] and Family Nutrition
Programs, as the grant project
coordinator for Kansas.
Procters responsibilities
also include working with the
six other participating states
— Indiana, Michigan, North
Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota
and Wisconsin to ensure consistency.
To date, she has worked with
the states to develop the application forms, selection and other
grant processes, and nutrition
and health tool kits for participating communities.
According to Procter, the
grant is a good fit for extension,
which has a history of sharing relevant resources from the
university with citizens and
building successful community
coalitions.
Peters and Procter also have
been working with Dan Kahl
to orient and train community
coaches.
front row sports
2×4
coffey health
3×7
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 3, 2013
SPORTS
Whos Got Spirit?
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 09-03-2013 / Photo Submitted
USD 365 took possession of its new spirit bus last week. The bus was included in a new fleet of buses after the district took
over its own transportation services. It will be used to transport students to and from out-of-town games, as well as field
trips.
K-States tomato grafting work aims
to enhance Great Plains production
OLATHE Great Plains states
are well known for wheat, sorghum and cattle production.
Fruits and vegetables, not
so much. But a Kansas State
University researcher may have
a hand in changing that.
Cary Rivard, assistant professor of horticulture and a
team of K-State researchers
from K-States Plant Pathology
and Biological Sciences departments have been awarded
$158,434 to develop grower recommendations for tomato grafting, a process relatively new to
U.S. vegetable production.
The three-year project,
funded by the North Central
Region Sustainable Agriculture
Research and Education
Program, will identify tomato
rootstocks that can be used to
increase profitability for growers in the Great Plains, develop
grafting propagation methods
and increase producer knowledge about those methods. The
team will also investigate the
role that rootstocks play in soil
microbial ecology.
Tomato grafting fuses stem
tissue from two plants, so that
the two stems grow together, reconnecting internal plumbing
systems within the plant. One
plant is selected for its roots
(rootstock) and the other for its
stems, leaves, flowers or fruits
(scion).
Because grafting can bring
desirable traits from two different cultivars for example
disease resistance from one
and the preferred tastiness
of another together to form
one plant, it has the potential
to significantly increase crop
yield and farm profit for tomato
growers in the Great Plains,
said Rivard, who is a fruit and
vegetable specialist with KState Research and Extension,
based in Olathe, Kan. As part
of this project, well introduce
growers to grafting technology
as well as assisting in the development of an industry that will
supply grafted plants.
Traditionally, high-value
crops like tomatoes have
been grown in regions such
as Florida and California and
shipped long distances. That
renfest
3×10.5
model, he said, is becoming less
sustainable because consumers are increasingly looking for
local and organic produce.
In the case of tomato, high
tunnel production has been
quickly adopted in the Great
Plains because they reduce risk
from crop damage due to wind,
cool spring weather, and storm
damage, Rivard said. They
also help to increase the season
length and generally provide
a more stable production environment.
The researchers will study
tomato rootstocks that will be
grown in high tunnels, both in
university and on-farm locations, including the Wichita
and Olathe areas. The trials
will include heirloom tomatoes
known as Cherokee Purple, and
hybrid (BHN 589) scions. Both
cultivars are already widely
grown in Kansas and throughout the United States in more
traditional growing situations.
As part of the project, the
research team will pass along
its findings to growers and others through K-State Research
and Extension workshops, field
demonstrations, publications, a
website and videos.
More information about
the research project is available by contacting Rivard at
crivard@ksu.edu.
COMMUNITY
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 3, 2013
CALENDAR
Tuesday, September 3
GES School pictures
8:45 a.m. to 10 a.m. – TOPS at
Garnett Methodist Church,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club
at Garnett Inn and Suites
1 p.m. – ACHS girls golf at Piper
4 p.m. – ACJH volleyball at
Wellsville
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Optimist
Club at Mr. Ds Pioneer
Restaurant
7 p.m. – Legion Bingo at VFW
Wednesday, September 4
Greeley School pictures
5:30 p.m. – USD 365 Booster Club
7 p.m. – ACHS Senior Parent Night
7 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
7 p.m. – Garnett Saddle Club at
the Garnett Riding Arena
7 p.m. – Colony Lions Club at
Colony Methodist Church
7 p.m. – Kincaid Lions Club at
Kincaid-Selma United
Methodist Church
Thursday, September 5
Westphalia School pictures
4 p.m. – ACHS cross country invite
4:30 p.m. – ACHS freshmen/soph.
football at home with Iola
4:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. – Garnett
Farmers Market
5 p.m. – ACHS JV volleyball at
Chanute
5 p.m. – ACHS varsity volleyball at
home
5:30 p.m. – 13 Point Pitch and
Carry In Supper at the Garnett
Senior Center; pitch at 6 p.m.
1:30 p.m. – Colony United
Methodist Women at Colony
United Methodist Church
6 p.m. – GES Band Night
6 p.m. – USD 365 Endowment
Association
7 p.m. – USD 365 School Board
Friday, September 6
Greeley Smokeoff
ACHS football at home with
Burlington
7 p.m. – Texas Hold Em at VFW
Saturday, September 7
Greeley Smokeoff
9 a.m. – GES PTO Walk/Run 5K
Monday, September 9
9 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission at the Anderson
County Annex
4 p.m. – ACJH volleyball at home
with Burlington
4:30 p.m. – ACHS JV football at
Burlington
6 p.m. – Greeley PTO Site Council
6:30 p.m. – American Legion,
Sons of American Legion at
Garnett VFW
7 p.m. – Kincaid City Council at
Kincaid City Hall
7 p.m. – Lake Garnett Sporting
Club at the Lake Garnett
Shooting Range
8 p.m. – Westphalia Lions Club
at St. Teresa Catholic Church
Tuesday, September 10
8:45 a.m. to 10 a.m. – TOPS at
Garnett Methodist Church,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club
at Garnett Inn and Suites
Sterling 6
1×2
Plaza Grill
1×2
1802 1/2 East St.,
IOLA
More information:
(620) 365-2255
or visit
www.bbtheatres.com
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1×2
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
1B
LOCAL
City committee plans summer photo contest
The City of Garnett Branding
Committee is hosting a Summer
2013 Photo Contest. Deadline for
photo entries will be September
16th with public viewing of
the entries to be held during
the September 28th Anderson
County Corn Festival. Display
location: Community Building.
About The Photo Contest:
The Committee is looking for
the perfect city/county photographs to compliment our new
brand identity for Garnett and
Anderson County. The photos
can range from cultural, atmospheric shots to sporty, historic
or exotic; just show us what
living in the city/county means
to you and submit your best
photos! A jury will select the
twenty best photos. The winning entries will become part
of the Garnett Brand Identity
and will be used for marketing of the City of Garnett and
Anderson County.
Summer Spectacular: From
farms & forests, historic downtown and trails, lakes and recreation . . . photographers are
requested to search out the best
and most beautiful summer
locations for the award-winning
submissions! The photographs
should capture our distinctive
regional heritage and showcase
the living landscape of natural,
cultural and historic treasures
that define the City and County.
The 20 winning images will be
exhibited for all to see and will
be used in any/all of the Garnett
Brand Identity program.
Eligibility: Anyone with
images of the City of Garnett
and/or Anderson County.
You need not live here to participate (although preferred).
Individuals, who are at least 18
years old at the time of participation, are entitled to take part.
Possible Categories
People & Places. People
make places special, and special places matter to people for
different reasons. Photographs
submitted to this category are
of people engaging with our
City/County.
Urban Landscapes. Images
representing the rhythm of
life in the Garnett/Anderson
County Area. Photographs submitted to this category focused
on built environments in population centers, streetscapes,
and/or diverse architectural
details found in our downtown
and surrounding areas.
Experiencing the Prairie
Spirit Rail Trail. Photographs
that represent the best of what
users experience along the
Prairie Spirit Trail.
Green Spaces. Images that
represent the varied green
spaces and natural resources
– from picturesque parks and
the woodland trails of the area,
Roeckers
family has
reunion
Fishing Buddies
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 09-03-2013 / Vickie Moss
Larry Wolken, of Iola, left, and Louis Tady, of Garnett, try their luck at fishing at Crystal Lake (commonly referred to as the
South Lake) in Garnett Thursday afternoon.
Kansas State Fair
begins Sept. 6
HUTCHINSON The Kansas
State Fair is having a birthday
party you dont want to miss.
Named one of the American
Bus Associations top 100 events,
the Kansas State Fair celebrates
its 100th birthday with special
events from birthday cakes
to presents that offer something for everyone. The 2013
Kansas State Fair takes place
September 6-15 in Hutchinson.
Dont bother bringing presents to this party. The Kansas
State Fair is the one giving the
birthday gifts. The first 500
fairgoers each day will receive
a commemorative 100th birthday collectible at the Fairs
Information Center, so get there
early. But if you still want to
bring something, donate nonperishable food items at the
Information Center. Your donation will enter you to win the
daily $100 giveaway at the Ron
Diamond performances at Bretz
& Young Lawyers Arena, 5
p.m./5:30 p.m. shows. If youre
feeling lucky, pick up a commemorative 100th birthday
Kansas Lottery ticket at participating locations or at the
Lottery Building during the
Fair.
The 100th Birthday Parade
kicks-off the celebration on
Sept. 2 at 3 p.m. The parade
will begin at the Hutchinson
intersection of 12th and Main,
and end at the Kansas State
Fairgrounds, followed with
entertainment at the Lake
Talbott Stage. Some of the many
special Fair-time events include
highlights such as the unveiling of the Centennial Icon on
Saturday, Sept. 7 at 10:30 a.m. in
the Oz Gallery. And mark your
calendar for the Time Capsule
Opening Saturday, Sept. 7
at 3 p.m., located north of the
Administration Building at the
Information Center as well
as many other birthday-themed
competitions, events and displays. While youre enjoying
the corn dogs, funnel cakes and
other favorite Fair food, make
sure you grab a piece of deepfried birthday cake.
To close out the Fair, attend
the groundbreaking ceremony
of the Lair White House on
Sunday, Sept. 15 at 3 p.m. Part
of the Kansas Fairgrounds
Foundations mission statement
is to raise funds for the renovation, preservation and beautification of the historical Kansas
State Fair which perfectly exemplifies the Lair White House
project, said Mary Alice Lair,
for whose family the house is
named. Any foundation has to
have a goal when theyre raising
money and this groundbreaking
ceremony will be the first step
in seeing that goal achieved.
to the rolling pasturelands and
open fields of rural farms that
help to define the character of
our region and provide sanctuary to residents, visitors, and
wildlife.
Award: The selection of
your photograph for use in the
Garnett Brand Identity program will be honored by the
use of your image in numerous
marketing materials and your
credit will be acknowledged
when/wherever possible.
Entry forms are available
at Garnett City Hall, Garnett
Public Library, Santa Fe
Depot, and online at www.
ExperienceGarnettKS.com.
About 80 descendents of the
Henry J. and Lena (Steinbach)
Roeckers family gathered
Aug. 18, 2013, at the Richmond
Community Building for the
familys biennial reunion.
Those attending enjoyed a
potluck lunch and then honored
military veterans of the family,
Vernon and Evelyn (Roeckers)
Pickert for their 60th wedding
anniversary, and Kyle Bures and
Amanda Domnanish for their
upcoming wedding.
Keyboard entertainment was
provided by Lauren and Lindsey
Hart, and all joined the Roeckers
Reunion Choir in singing God
Bless America and The Battle
Hymn of the Republic. Family
updates were given by a descendant of each of the five children who reached adulthood.
Those five were Clara (Roeckers)
Wolken, Hilda (Roeckers) Hart,
Emma (Roeckers) Wiesner,
John H. Roeckers and Arnold
Roeckers.
A great deal of visiting followed the organized program.
Planning of this years reunion
was headed by Joe Hart, with
assistance from Louis Hart,
Louise (Hart) Miley, Loretta
Sobba and others. The next
reunion will be planned by
the descendants of the Arnold
Roeckers family.
Many of the attendees visited
the Richmond Museum before
returning home.
Richmond history is a part
of the familys history as Henry
and Lena owned and operated
Roeckers Red & White Grocery
Store in Richmond for many
years.
Airman completes
basic training
Air Force Airman Quincy J. Hodges graduated
from basic military training at Joint Base San
Antonio-Lackland, San Antonio, Texas.
The airman completed an intensive, eight-week
program that included training in military discipline and studies, Air Force core values, physical
fitness, and basic warfare principles and skills.
Airmen who complete basic training earn four
credits toward an associate in applied science
degree through the Community College of the
Air Force.
Hodges is the son of Tammara Conner of
Centerville, and Joseph Hodges of Claremore,
Okla.
He is a 2010 graduate of Jayhawk Linn High
School, Mound City.
Air Force Airman Quincy J. Hodges
Toll free legislative hotline available
TOPEKA With the 2013 special session of the Kansas legislature about to begin, Kansas
residents can ask questions
about legislation, legislative
procedure, state government
and more by calling 1-800-4323924. Calls are answered by
experienced reference/research
librarians at the State Library
of Kansas and kept confidential. Lines are open weekdays 8
a.m. to 5 p.m.
Callers can also leave brief
messages to be delivered to legislators as well as request copies of bills, calendars, journals,
committee agendas, voting
records, and other legislative
documents.
In addition to calling the hotline, residents can text questions to 785-256-0733 (standard
text message rates may apply),
instant message at www.kslib.
info/ask-a-librarian, or visit
the State Library. The State
Library is located in the north
wing, on the third floor of the
Kansas Capitol Building.
The Anderson County Review
online at www.garnett-ks.com
SUBSCRIBE TO THE REVIEW BY CALLING (785)448-3121
2B
2003: Forgotten
dam plans revisited
Sept. 9, 2003
Its almost forgotten history
now, but for two decades it dominated debate in rural America
and in Anderson County. It was
the great Dam Debate. Early
settlers on the Great Plains discovered that along with drought,
tornadoes, prairie fires and
wolves, they also had to deal
with floods. During the 1940s, the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,
charged with maintaining navigation on the nations rivers, completed a study on flooding in the
nations heartland. The report
was controversial, calling for the
acquisition of farmland and the
construction of large dams to
control floods. Then came the
summer of 1951, and the floods
that devastated large areas of
Kansas and Missouri. Congress
passed the Flood Control Act of
1954, authorizing construction of
a series of dams on the Missouri,
Kansas and Osage Rivers. The
list of proposed lakes included
one on Pottawatomie Creek in
Anderson County.
The $768,000 new track facility which will be under construction this fall at ACJSHS
wont solve glaring inadequacies
and maintenance at some of the
districts school buildings, and
the USD 365 school board will
begin a goal-setting process this
semester, to which among other
things, may outline a course of
action on those problems.
Sept. 9, 1993
The
Anderson
County
Commission approved spending
$33,573 Tuesday during the regular commission meeting with
Sprint/United Telephone to have
a new phone system installed
for the Anderson County
Courthouse offices. The agreement calls for a one-time fee of
$3,900 for the purchase of some
20 new touchtone phones, and a
five year $29,583 contract for the
service.
With just one month until the
Anderson County landfill will
no longer be of service to handle household wastes collected
in the county, the Anderson
County Commission anxiously
awaits word concerning a pos-
by Vickie Moss
Staff Writer
sible extension for small landfills, such as the one operated by
the county. The commission has
not made final plans on what
will occur if the extension is not
granted or if it doesnt contain
wording to allow for continued
operation of the local landfill
during the time extension.
An investigation meeting to
start the process of finalizing
construction on the ACJSHS
will be set up in the near future
to address the issue of water
leakage at the facility The water
problems have been noticeable
ever since the facility opened,
and the district had hoped they
would be solved before the second year of school was held.
Sept. 12, 1983
The drought that has left the
are without significant moisture
since July 4 has caused not only
the loss of crops for farmers,
but has caused a downturn in
businesses that depend on agriculture sales. The full affect of
the drought will be measured
in October or November when
farmers traditionally assess
their yield and make the trip
to the bank to either pay on
loans or renew existing ones. An
area banker said loans are down.
Farm implement sales also are
down, area dealers said. People
in the feed and grain business,
however, said that feed sales
had increased because of the
drought.
School for the USD 365 district ended early Friday because
of the heat in the buildings. The
superintendent said the heat
would be monitored on a daily
basis in the future to determine
if school would be let out early.
Temperatures in the buildings
have been from 90 to 95 degrees.
Chaney gets kdan
top CPA score 1×2
Daniel Chaney, an accounts
payable analyst at Flint Hills
Resources, Wichita, earned the
top score in the April-May 2013
PA exam in the state of Kansas.
He is the grandson of Virginia
Massey of Garnett and the late
Paul Massey.
AD
2×5
Sell to
customers
for only
Bowie knife uncovered after 150 years
Do any of you remember
when I started writing my articles on the Kansas Archaeology
Training Program Field School
2013 and I mentioned finding
a very special artifact. Well,
here is a picture of that find. A
mid-1800s Bowie knife. Most
likely it was used as a Buffalo
Hunters skinning knife. Its
hard to believe this knife had
been lost and became covered
over with dirt and debri for
over 150 years ago.
I sure
bet someone was hopping mad
when they discovered it missing. I for one would love to
by Henry Roeckers
Contact (785) 448-6244
for local archeology information.
know the history of this knife.
A Bowie (Boo-ee) was originally made as a fixed blade
fighting knife first popularized
by Colonel James ( Jim) Bowie
in the early 19th Century.
James Bowie was born
April 10, 1796 in Logan
County, Kentucky-died March
6,1836, San Antonio, Texas.
He was known as a pioneer,
soldier,smuggler,slave trader
and a land speculator, who
played a prominent role in the
Texas Revolution, culminating
in his death at the Battle of the
Alamo.
Bowies daring and courage have become legendary
through Western song and
ballad. His name is associated with the Bowie Knife, a
weapon (sometimes called the
Arkansas Toothpick) invented
by either him or his brother
Rezin.
Col. James Bowie married
Ursula de Veremendi, daughter of a Mexican Governor in
1831. Two children were born
to this union. His wife and two
children died in an 1832 cholera epidemic. Thus, there are
no direct descendants of Col.
James Bowie.
I hope you have enjoyed my
adventure to Hays, Kansas as
much as I did and to me this
was the hi-lite of my trip.
ller
2×5
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COUNTY
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
On-the-Farm Service Alignments
ANDERSON
business direct
Check your local area businesses first – keep your local dollars at home!
4×8.5
Ad Start Date:
601 South Oak
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3212
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Reach 29,000 readers in Anderson, Franklin and
Douglas counties – and beyond – when you run your
For Sale, Services, Auction or Help Wanted ad
in The Anderson County Review and
The Trading Post. Its almost a GUARANTEED sale,
and all for just $6.95 for 20 words (larger ads cost a
little more). Just drop by our ofce at 112 W. 6th in
Garnett or use the handy form below to print your ad
and mail with your payment.
Heading:
This mid-1800s Bowie knife was uncovered after 150 years during the recent Kansas Archaeology Training Program Field School 2013
in Hays. The knife likely was used as a buffalo hunters skinning knife.
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
29,000
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 3, 2013
LOCAL
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Current Rebate
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 3, 2013
3B
LOCAL
50th anniversary
Doing what is right in the eyes of the Lord
Uzziah reigned as king in
Judah from 792-740 B. C. At
age 16 the people took Uzziah
and made him king after his
father Amaziah was killed in
a conspiracy. Amaziah had
foolishly engaged in a battle
with Joash king of Israel and
Judah was defeated.
Uzziahs 52 year reign
was greatly blessed by God.
Why was Uzziah so greatly
blessed? We see the answer
in 2nd Chronicles 26:3-5. In
verse four we read Uzziah did
what was right in the eyes of
the LORD. God blesses obedience. Obedience to God really
involves not doing what we
know God does not want us to
do. When we are continually
in opposition to the will of God
he can not bless us.
As with all things obedi-
Weekly
Devotional
by David Bilderback
ence to God begins a step at a
time. We should not expect or
worry that God will give us a
task we are not equipped for.
When we complete the task
we may not be able to measure our success in any other
way than the fact we know
God wanted us to do a particular assignment and we did it
to the best of our God given
ability. The blessing may be
entirely ours or others may
reap the benefit as well. As
we learn the blessing and reassurance that comes with doing
what is right in the eyes of
the LORD something else will
happen. We will begin to seek
the LORD. In verse five Uzziah
set himself to seek God. It is
important to understand here
that God is not lost. We are. If
we are not doing what is right
in the eyes of the LORD we
have lost our way. Uzziah by
seeking God was able to get
Judah back on track and he
was blessed in international
conflict, domestic affairs and
military strength.
God is the sovereign ruler
of the universe and as such
may harden the hearts of
those who refuse to do what
is right in his eyes. God said
to Moses, I will have mercy
on whom I will have mercy
and I will have compassion
on whom I will have compassion. Rom. 9:15 The assertion
of Gods absolute sovereignty
is basic to biblical belief. The
vision of God reigning from
his throne occurs over and
over in biblical text. Gods
dominion is total: He wills
as he chooses and carries out
all that he wills and none can
stay his hand or thwart his
plans. God will exercise his
will in the form of blessing or
curse depending on whether
we are doing what is right in
his eyes.
David
Bilderback:
A
Ministry on the Holiness of
God.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 09-03-2013 / Photo Submitted
Local quilt guild recaps winners, prizes from fair
Minutes of the August 22,
2013 Meeting of the Pieces and
Patches Quilt Guild
Pieces and Patches Quilt
Guild was called to order by
President, Judy Stukey, at 9:30
AM in the meeting room of the
K-State Extension Office. Roll
call was answered by twentytwo members. There were no
guests. Judy Stukey reported
that Delores Truelove provided
the flowers for the tables.
The minutes of the July
25 meeting were approved as
printed in the Newsletter.
The Treasurers report was
given by Lynda Feuerborn.
Lynda reminded us that she is
now accepting $15 dues for the
new quilt club year.
Committee Reports
Charity Quilts _ Phyllis
Gordon reported that she
delivered six quilts to Golden
Heights, 5 to Long Term Care
and 5 baby blankets to Dr.
Cederlind for a maternity ward.
There is only one charity quilt
that has not been distributed.
It is a large quilt, too large for
Nursing Homes or Assisted
Living. It was suggested that
Long Term Care might want
it to use as a raffle fund raiser. There were several charity
quilts donated at todays meeting; see the items later under
Show and Tell.
Audit Committee – Rose
Dennison reported that she and
Phyllis audited the books and
found everything in order.
2013 Anderson County Fair
_ Members gave Joen Truhe a
round of applause for all her
hard work at the County Fair.
Joen Truhe provided the following report.
Chairman: Joen Truhe
Committee members:Violet
Holt, Carolyn Bennett, Marcella
Skidmore, Rose Dennison, Pat
Douglass, Oneda Grimes, Joyce
Buckley, Jeannette Gadelman
and Terrie Gifford.
I want to thank every one
for all their hard work and long
hours to make this years fair a
success.
Thanks to all those who
helped enter and display the
quilts. Also a special thanks
to all who set with the quilts.
I know that can get very long.
Since we had a extra day this
year it made it even harder to
cover all the times needed.
We had 38 entries from 10
members and 8 non members.
Non members who entered were
Darissa Maley, Judy Ryman,
Joann Richardt, Judy McGraw,
Lorenza Stolle, Jo Tucker, Mary
Fagg and Marikay Bures.
Prizes donated by the local
merchants and the winners
were:
AuBurn Pharmacy-$25.00Lorenza Stolle
maloans
2×3
Schulte Bulldog CarWash$20.00 worth of car wash tokens
– Oneda Grimes
Josephines-Bird Flower
Water Indicator – Kay Roeckers
Country Fabrics- 2 bundles
of fat quarters- Joan Reichardt/
Marikay Bures
Dairy Queen -Combo meal
– Judy Ryman
Subway- 3 dozen cookies-Tammie Schaffer,Sharon
Bowman,Violet Holt
True Value HardwareCoffee-Judy McGraw, Carolyn
Bennett
Lindas House of Hair
Design- shampoo- Darlissa
Maley
Visitors name drawing prizes were won by the following:
Halloween Wall hangingBetty Jasper
Hot pad mitts-Duane
McGraw
Tree skirt patterns- Kenneth
McMillon/Marty Dehn
I think every one likes the
idea of using the quilts racks on
tables to display the quilts.
Awards were as follows:
Hand Quilted Grand
Champion-Judy
McGraw,
Hand Quilted Reserve Grand
Champion -Kay Roeckers,
Machine
Quilted
Grand
Champion-Judy
Ryman,
Machine Quilted Reserve Grand
Champion-Sharon Bowman
Challenge Blocks: Phyllis
Mundell-Grand Champion,
Violet Holt- Reserve Grand
Champion, Carolyn Donlop- 3rd
place, Sally Crane- 4th place,
Violet Holt- 5th Place, Arlynn
Wawrzewski -6th place, Terrie
Gifford- 7th place, Phyllis
Mundell- 8th place.
Nancy Schuster would like
to have any changes or suggestions discussed and I will hand
them in to her after next meeting.
Kay Roeckers asked that we
figure out a way to ensure that
everyone knows they need to
pick their quilts up by 4 PM on
the last day of the fair.
Opportunity Quilt 2014:
The 2014 Opportunity Quilt
was displayed at the July meeting after Carolyn Crupper
completed the quilting. This
meeting it was reported that
Lynn Wawrzewski completed
the binding. Carolyn will take
it home and put on the label.
Programs: Charlotte Lutz
reported that Patricia Knoechel
will be giving her Quilt in a Day
presentation on Wednesday,
September 11 at 1 PM at the
Community Building at the
North Lake Fairgrounds. Judy
Stukey asked for a volunteer
to help her chair the program.
Marilyn McDonald agreed to
help. Charlotte Lutz volunteered to be in charge of the
refreshment table again this
$9.99*
PRIME RIB Friday & Saturday Night
785-448-2616
year. Judy and Marilyn will
need help setting up starting at
11 AM. Cost to attend for members is one dozen cookies, $2.00
for non-members. The book featured this year is Quilts from
Els Kitchen and the book contains recipes. We encourage
attendees to bring any quilts
made from a Quilt in a Day pattern for display; Patricia always
likes to look at them. Carolyn
Crupper will bring the 2014
Opportunity Quilt to display
and raffle tickets will be sold.
Old Business:
Florence
Milliman has asked for a 3 year
subscription to our Newsletter
in lieu of any contribution
from us for her program on
Miniatures.
New Business: There was
no new business.
Secret Sister Gifts: Janie
Paxton received a secret sister
gift.
Show and Tell: Show and
tell began with the display of
several new charity quilts:
Carolyn Crupper donated one,
Cynthia Fletcher donated 6 that
she made from fabric squares
that were donated to the club,
Sharon Bowman donated 2 (one
of which was this years Block
of the Month). Then Ruth Theis
showed a completed UFO that
she began in a Femmage class
taught by Terry Thompson in
1995. It was a wallhanging collage using items representing
the female side of her family
tree. Charlotte Lutz awarded
her the Challenge Traveling
Trophy following the meeting.
Joen Truhe showed two wall-
hangings that she is donating
as prizes for next years Square
Fair Quilt Show. She also
showed two double wedding
ring quilts that had been quilted by Neda Marvin. Charlotte
Lutz showed some double wedding ring blocks made of actual
1930s feedsacks and fabrics
that were found while cleaning out her Grandmothers
home in Denton, Texas. Jan
Elsasser showed her progress
on her Block of the month.
Joyce Buckley showed a Log
Cabin Quilt. Cynthia Fletcher
showed a quilt she is making for a girlfriend she hasnt
seen in 25 years. Violet Holt
showed a purse, a 10-minute
block with the addition of many
hours of work to put appliqued
flowers on it, a Snowman
bag, and the block she made
for Judy Stukeys Presidents
Block. Phyllis Gordon showed
a block she made to enter into
the Parker Days Quilt Contest,
and a pinwheel pattern quilt
she made with her daughter
Connie.
The meeting was adjourned
followed by Installation of
Officers and our Annual
Luncheon.
Phyllis Gordon did the installation of Officers, keeping true
to Nancy Kreibachs written
words and instructions. It was
a very inspiring and serious
ceremony. Nice job by both
the writer, Nancy, and the presenter Phyllis.
with Barbaras mother, Ruby
Schuster.
The couple also has lived in
Hugoton, Kan., Solomon, Kan.,
and Ottawa, Kan.
Bill was a longtime educator in Ottawa and Baldwin City.
Barbara worked as a registered
nurse and a hospice nurse. They
are loved dearly and respected
by their children and grandchildren. Bill and Barbara are truly
role models of love, marriage
and family.
Bill Ratliff and the former
Barbara Schuster were married
Aug. 31, 1963, at First Christian
Church in Garnett.
schainost
2×4
Minutes recorded by
Terrie Gifford, Secretary.
superior masonry
2×3
AD
1×2
Ottawa
W E R E R E A DY T O S E RV E YO U I N
ottawa guide
4×6
Dales Body Shop
785-242-6225
E S TA B L I S H E D 1 9 7 6
424 S. Main Ottawa
Rod Ball
Suttons Jewelry
FRAMES & DECOR
OTTAWA PAINT
Corners one Bookstore
The Anderson County Review
online at www.garnett-ks.com
Bill and Barbara Ratliff,
Garnett, celebrated their 50th
anniversary Aug. 31, 2013.
Their children are Paula
(Ratliff) Wilson and her husband, Paul Wilson, Sun City,
Ariz.; Tom Ratliff and his wife,
Miriam Ratliff, Heidelberg,
Germany; Josh Ratliff and his
wife, Susan Ratliff, Overland
Park; and Beth (Ratliff) Novak
and her husband, Nick Novak,
Sun City, Ariz.
They have nine grandchildren, Russell, Marlee, Jenna,
Whitney, Elsa, Jax, Max, Levon
and Caroline.
The Ratliffs also celebrated
their anniversary
4B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 3, 2013
Notice to sell Ellison property
Notice to sell Lickteig property
(First Published in the Anderson County
Review, August 20, 2013)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
BANK OF GREELEY,
Plaintiff,
vs.
Case No. 12CV40
Proceeding Under Chapter 60
STEVEN TRAVIS LICKTEIG;
JESSICA (LICKTEIG) CARRIGER;
CHRISTINA S. LICKTEIG;
MICHAEL A. LICKTEIG;
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA; and
STATE OF KANSAS,
DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE,
Defendants.
NOTICE OF SHERIFFS SALE
By virtue of an Order of Sale issued out
of the said District Court in the above entitled
action, I will on the 12th day of September,
2013, at 10:00 a.m., at the West Door of
the Courthouse, 100 E 4th Avenue, Garnett,
Anderson County, Kansas, offer for sale at a
public auction and sell to the highest bidder
for cash in hand the following described real
property situated in Anderson County, Kansas,
to-wit:
Lots Twenty (20), Twenty-one (21), Twentytwo (22), Twenty-three (23), Twenty-four (24),
and Twenty-five (25) in Block Forty (40) in the
City of Greeley, Anderson County, Kansas.
together with all fixtures and appurtenances
thereunto, to satisfy the judgment in the aboveentitled case. The sale is to be made without
appraisement and subject to the redemption
period as provided by law, and further subject to
the approval of the Court.
DATED this 20th day of August, 2013.
Vernon L. Valentine
Sheriff of Anderson County, Kansas
Lee H. Tetwiler
LAW OFFICE OF LEE H. TETWILER
133 South Pearl
P.O. Box 501
Paola, KS 66071
Tel 913-294-2339
Fax 913-294-5702
Attorney for Plaintiff.
ag20t3
Notice to sell Wills property
(First Published in the Anderson County
Review, August 27, 2013)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
CIVIL DEPARTMENT
Bank of America, N.A., successor by merger to
BAC Home Loans Servicing, LP fka Countrywide
Home Loans Servicing, LP
Plaintiff,
vs.
Daniel Earl Wills and Trisha R. Wills, et al.
Defendants.
Case No. 12CV46
Court Number:
Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 60
NOTICE OF SALE
Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale
issued to me by the Clerk of the District Court
of Anderson County, Kansas, the undersigned
Sheriff of Anderson County, Kansas, will offer
for sale at public auction and sell to the highest
bidder for cash in hand, at the West Door of
the Courthouse at Garnett, Anderson County,
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
In the Matter of the Estate of
SCOTT D. ADAMS
Case No: 13 PR 28
TITLE TO REAL ESTATE INVOLVED
NOTICE OF HEARING
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS
CONCERNED:
You are hereby notified that a Petition has
been filed in this Court by Cody Adams, the
heir of Scott D. Adams, deceased, praying
that the descent be determined to the following described real estate situated in Anderson
County:
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
CIVIL DEPARTMENT
U.S. Bank National Association
Plaintiff,
vs.
Brent Wayne Ellison and Christabel Dawn
Ellison, et al.
Defendants.
Case No. 13CV11
Court Number:
Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 60
NOTICE OF SALE
Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale
issued to me by the Clerk of the District Court
of Anderson County, Kansas, the undersigned
Sheriff of Anderson County, Kansas, will offer
for sale at public auction and sell to the highest
bidder for cash in hand, at the West Door of
the Courthouse at Garnett, Anderson County,
Prepared By:
NOTICE OF SHERIFFS SALE
South & Associates, P.C.
Megan Cello (KS # 24167)
Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale
6363 College Blvd., Suite 100 issued by the Clerk of the District Court in
Overland Park, KS 66211 and for the said County of Anderson, in a
(913)663-7600 certain cause in said Court Numbered 12CV41,
(913)663-7899 (Fax) wherein the parties above named were respecAttorneys For Plaintiff tively plaintiff and defendant, and to me, the
(150269) undersigned Sheriff of said County, directed, I
will offer for sale at public auction and sell to
ag27t3 the highest bidder for cash in hand at the west
Lots 5 and 6, Block 2 in the town of Welda,
in Anderson County, Kanas.
And that such property be assigned pursuant to laws of intestate succession.
You are required to file your written defenses
thereto on or before the 10th day of September,
2013. In the city of Garnett, Anderson County,
Kansas, at which time and place the cause will
be heard. Should you fail therein, judgment and
decree will be entered in due course upon the
Petition.
CODY ADAMS
Petitioner
Amy C. Winterscheid
Supreme Court Number 20828
13 South Pearl
Paola, KS 66071
Telephone: (913) 294-3400
Facsimile: (913) 294-4554
Attorney for Plaintiff
ag20t3
Ordinance No. 3958
AN ORDINANCE AMENDING TITLE IX,
CHAPTER 5, SECTION 21 (B) PROVIDING
FOR CAMPING FEE REFUNDS UNDER
CERTAIN CIRCUMSTANCES; AND TITLE IX,
CHAPTER 5, SECTION 21 (E) (2), REVISING
LENGTH OF STAY RULES FOR CAMPING,;
REPEALING EXISTING SECTIONS OF SAID
TITLE AND CHAPTER.
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE GOVERNING
BODY OF THE CITY OF GARNETT, KANSAS:
SECTION 1. Title IX, Chapter 5, Section
21 (B) of the Municipal Code, City of Garnett,
Kansas is hereby amended to read as follows:
9-5-21: CAMPING IN CITY PARKS:
(B) Payment of Fees: Payment of the fees
required for each camping unit established in
the following subsection shall be made to the
city in any manner established by the city manager and may include a system of self-pay at the
area of the camping sites. The receipt provided
by the city of such fee shall be displayed at the
campsite, either in the camping unit or in any
spaced provided by the city at the site. In any
event, such receipt shall be displayed in such a
way as to be readily visible. In event of prepayment to a reserve a site, the camping fee may
be refunded in full if at least 15 days prior to
the first reserved date the city is notified by the
campsite registrant. If notice is received less
than 15 days in advance, one nights camping
Anderson County
news DAILY at 8 a.m.
KOFO 1220 AM
REAL ESTATE
Prepared By:
South & Associates, P.C.
Brian R. Hazel (KS # 21804)
6363 College Blvd., Suite 100
Overland Park, KS 66211
(913)663-7600
(913)663-7899 (Fax)
Attorneys For Plaintiff
(153704)
ag27t3
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, September 3, 2014)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION
PLAINTIFF
-vsJEREMY A. ROBERTS, et. al.;
DEFENDANTS
No. 11CV72
Div. No.
K.S.A. 60
Mortgage
Foreclosure
NOTICE OF SHERIFFS SALE
Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale
issued by the Clerk of the District Court in and
for the said County of Anderson, in a certain
cause in said Court Numbered 11CV72, wherein
the parties above named were respectively
plaintiff and defendant, and to me, the undersigned Sheriff of said County, directed, I will offer
for sale at public auction and sell to the highest
bidder for cash in hand at the west door of the
fee shall be forfeited and the balance, if any, courthouse in the City of Garnett in said County,
refunded.
on September 25, 2013, at 10:00 a.m., of said
SECTION 2. Title IX, Chapter 5, Section 21
(E) (2) of the Municipal code, City of Garnett,
Kansas is hereby amended to read as follows:
9-5-21: CAMPING IN CITY PARKS:
2. No camping unit shall stay at the same (Published in the Anderson County Review,
campsite in any of the Citys parks for more than
Tuesday, September 3, 2013)
7 consecutive nights. Upon departure from any
site, after a period exceeding 5 consecutive
Notice:
nights, the camping unit shall not be readmitted
to any other site in the same City park until 5
Callahan/Hyden Apt. #16 Willow Apartments
additional nights shall have elapsed. The unit in Garnett, please remove your belongings
may however relocate to another site in any
other City park, unless the City Manager shall
determine that the occupant or occupants of the
said camping unit are attempting to occupy city
campsites as a permanent residence. It is the
stated policy of the City of Garnett that City park
campsites shall NOT be utilized as permanent
residences.
SECTION 3. Title IX, Chapter 5, Section 21
(B) and Title IX, Chapter 5, Section 21 (B) (E)
(2) of the Municipal Code as the same presently
exist are hereby repealed.
SECTION 4. This ordinance shall take
effect and be in force from and after its passage
and its publication in an official newspaper of the
City of Garnett, Kansas.
PASSED this 27th day of August, 2013.
AD
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AD
door of the courthouse in the City of Garnett in 1×1
said County, on September 18, 2013, at 10:00
a.m., of said day the following described real
estate located in the County of Anderson, State
of Kansas, to wit:
LOTS TWENTY-ONE (21) AND TWENTY- 403 S. G.A.R. Street Colony
TWO (22), LESS THE WEST THREE (3) 2 bedroom bungalow, 2 car
FEET OF LOT TWENTY-ONE (21), ALL IN garage w/shop, shed & barn.
BLOCK THIRTY-THREE (33) IN THE CITY OF
1/2 block lot, cheap gas.
GARNETT, ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
$36,000.(620) 852-3547
Commonly known as 211 West 4th Avenue,
for appointment.
Garnett, Kansas 66032
This is an attempt to collect a debt and
any information obtained will be used for that
purpose.
Vernon Valentine
SHERIFF OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
SHAPIRO & MOCK, LLC
Attorneys for Plaintiff
4220 Shawnee Mission Parkway – Suite 418B
Fairway, KS 66205
(913)831-3000
Fax No. (913)831-3320
Our File No. 12-004845/jm
Drivers – CDL-B: Great pay,
hometime! No-Forced Dispatch!
new singles from St. Joseph to
surrounding states. TruckMovers.
com or 888-567-4861.
sp3t4*
RN-LPN – applications being
accepted for evenings and night
positions and CNA position
for evenings and night. Gailyn
Ledom RN, Staff Development
Coordinator, (620) 364-2117 ext.
27, 601 Cross Street, Burlington,
KS 66839.
ag27t2
The Anderson County Review
– is looking for a part-time
writer to cover various sports
teams in Garnett, Crest and
Central Heights school districts this school year. Good
part-time money with every
Friday payroll, work from home
or from our office, press pass
admittance to all events. Email
Review publisher Dane Hicks at
dhicks@garnett-ks.com agtfn
Northside Cafe – now accepting
applications for a.m. wait staff.
Experience preferred. Apply in
person, 604 N. Maple. ag27t2
Wanted Cattle Hauler – Top
Wages/Equipment four state
area. Call (785) 675-3477 or (913)
533-2478, 8am-5pm M-F. ag13t4
Exp. Flatbed Drivers: Regional
opportunities now open with
plenty of freight & great pay!
800-277-0212 or primeinc.com
miller consturction
2×4
ag27t3
day the following described real estate located
in the County of Anderson, State of Kansas, to
wit:
LOTS ONE (1), TWO (2), THREEE (3), AND
FOUR (4) IN BLOCK FIVE (5) IN BRONSTON
HEIGHTS, A SUBDIVISION OF A PART OF THE
SOUTHEAST QUARTER (SE1/4) OF SECTION
TWENTY-FIVE (25), TOWNSHIP TWENTY (20)
SOUTH, RANGE NINETEEN (19), EAST OF
THE SIXTH PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN, IN THE
CITY OF GARNETT, ANDERSON COUNTY,
KANSAS, ACCORDING TO THE RECORDED
PLAT THEREOF. Commonly known as 803 S.
Hays, Garnett, Kansas 66032
This is an attempt to collect a debt and
any information obtained will be used for that
purpose.
Vernon Valentine
SHERIFF OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
SHAPIRO & MOCK, LLC
Attorneys for Plaintiff
4220 Shawnee Mission Parkway – Suite 418B
Fairway, KS 66205
(913)831-3000
Fax No. (913)831-3320
Our File No. 11-003248/jm
sp3t3
Notice to remove belongings
by 9/19/13. If not picked up the items will be
disposed of. Items can be picked up at 310
Willow. Playpen, TV, end tables, some food
items, dishes misc., stereo, treadmill, shelves,
clothes.
AD
2×4
/s/ Greg A. Gwin, Mayor
ATTEST:
/s/ Kristina L. Kinney
City Clerk
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1×1
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
Notice to sell Roberts property
City passes ordinance on
camping regulations
(Published in The Anderson County Review,
Tuesday, September 3, 2014)
Kansas, on September 18, 2013, at 10:00 AM,
3 bedroom – very clean, CH/
the following real estate:
Lots Twenty-three (23) and Lot Twenty- CA, garage, $600 monh, (785)
four (24), in Block Thirty-two (32) in the city of 418-5435.
jy2tf
Garnett,
3 bedroom – home for rent with
Anderson County, Kansas., commonly
garage. (785) 448-5893. jy23tf
known as 303 West 4th Avenue, Garnett, KS
66032 (the Property)
to satisfy the judgment in the above-entitled
case. The sale is to be made without appraise- REAL ESTATE
ment and subject to the redemption period
as provided by law, and further subject to the
approval of the Court. For more information,
visit www.Southlaw.com
Vernon Valentine, Sheriff
Anderson County, Kansas
Notice to sell Morgan property
(First Published in the Anderson County
Kansas, on September 18, 2013, at 10:00 AM,
Review, August 27, 2013)
the following real estate:
The North 114 feet of Lot One (1) in Block IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
Four (4) in BRYSON ADDITION to the City of COUNTY, KANSAS
Garnett, Anderson County, Kansas, according
to the recorded plat thereof, commonly known WELLS FARGO BANK, NA
as 136 West Park Road, Garnett, KS 66032 PLAINTIFF
(the Property)
-vsto satisfy the judgment in the above-entitled DANIEL V. MORGAN, et. al.;
case. The sale is to be made without appraise- DEFENDANTS
ment and subject to the redemption period
as provided by law, and further subject to the No. 12CV41
approval of the Court. For more information, Div. No.
visit www.Southlaw.com
K.S.A. 60
Vernon Valentine, Sheriff Mortgage
Anderson County, Kansas Foreclosure
Notice to settle Adams estate
(First Published in the Anderson County
Review August 20 , 2013)
(First Published in the Anderson County
Review, August 27, 2013)
FOR RENT
FOR RENT
20%30%
CHEAPER
sp3t1
Anderson County Sheriff Office
Is Now Taking Applications For
and
co. TIME
sheriffDISPATCHER
FULL
Until position is filled
2×4
Applications are available at the Anderson County
Sheriff Office, 135 E. 5th, Garnett, KS, Mon. – Fri. Must
have a high school diploma or equivalent, be able to
obtain a Kansas Drivers License. Applicants will be
subject to a battery of tests including an extensive
background check. Shifts are 10 hrs. and you will be
subject to working days, nights, holidays, weekends,
swings and alternating shifts. Starting pay $12.66/hr.
Anderson County is an Equal Opportunity Employer
and the position is Veterans Preference Eligible (VPE),
State Law – K.S.A. 73-201.
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5B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 3, 2013
Need a Fistful of Dollars?
Sell your items in the
Anderson County Review classieds!
HELP WANTED
Anthony, Kansas is seeking
Water/Wastewater Operator.
High School Diploma/GED and
valid drivers license required.
Applications and complete job
description: www.anthonykan
sas.org. 620-842-5434. EOE.
Open until filled.
Heavy Equipment Operator
Training! Bulldozers, Backhoes,
Excavators. 3 Weeks Hands
On Program. Local Job
Placement Assistance. National
Certifications. GI Bill Benefits
Eligible. 1-866-362-6497
Partners In Excellence OTR
Drivers APU Equipped Pre-Pass
EZ-pass passenger policy. 2012
& Newer equipment. 100% No
touch. Butler Transport 1-800
528-7825
Drivers: CDL-A. Train and work
for us! Professional, focused
CDL training available. Choose
Company Driver, Owner
Operator, Lease Operator or
Lease Trainer. (877) 369-7885
www.CentralTruckingDrivingJo
bs.com
Drivers: Transport America
has Dedicated and Regional
openings! Variety of home time
options; good miles & earnings.
Enjoy Transport Americas great
driver experience! TAdrivers.
com or 866-204-0648.
AD
1×7.5
MISC
HELP WANTED
Good used – trombone and saxophone. Both played last year in
band. Teresa Young, (785) 2292000.
jy30tf
Wanted – Owner-operator to
pull 50-foot cattle pot. 4-state
area, must have insurance and
permits. Call 8am-5pm M-F @
(785) 675-3477 or (913) 533-2478
ag20t4
Position Available
Leroy Coop
1×3
LeRoy Coop has a FullTime opening at the
Westphalia Branch for a
Grain Elevator Laborer/
Nurse Truck Driver. Must
have or be able to obtain a
CDL. Health insurance,
retirement and 401K
offered. Applications are
available at the Westphalia,
LeRoy and Gridley Coop
Office or online at
www.leroycoop.coop.
Applications will be
accepted thru
September 6th.
620-964-2225
GARAGE SALES
GARAGE SALES
September 5 & September 6 noon – 6pm; September 7, 8am-?
1201 East 4th, 5 families, large
aluminum dolly, antiques, snare
drum and accessories, furniture,
household, clothes baby and
adult, play pen, holiday and gift
items.
sp3t1
Garnett: Tues. & Thurs. 7 p.m.,
105 1/2 East 4th Ave., (620) 2282597 or (785) 241-0586. nv21tf
Hope Unlimited offers services
to victims of domestic violence
and sexual abuse. Call (620)
365-7566 or Kansas hotline
(888) END-ABUSE (select local
option) for free, confidential
assistance.
ag24tf
Mobile Home Insurance. We
have great rates on mobile homes
that are less than 15 years old.
Archer Insurance Agency, 118 E.
5th Street, P.O. Box 307, Garnett,
Ks. 66032 (785) 448-3841.
my23tf
I would like to help ambulator
lady or couple on Tuesdays and
Thursdays. No heavy lifting or
scooting furniture. 448-5761 or
204-2082.
ag13t4*
MISC. FOR SALE
Advertise where people read.
RYTTER
1×1
BAUMANS REPAIR
Hydraulic Cylinders
Bottle and Service Jacks
Hydraulic Hose Assemblies
After Hours Hydraulic Hoses
No Sunday Sales
Thaddeus Bauman
(785) 448-8555
COMPUTCOMPUTER
ER EXP
1x2WORK
COMPUTER EXPERTS
GARNETT
785.304.1843
bennet
1×1
Check out our
Monthly Specials
LAWN & GARDEN
LAWN AND GARDEN
Need a good source – for grass
hay without fescue. Would purchase every winter. Prefer large
round bales but would also do
square bales. (785) 448-4437.
Leave message, usually at work
and cant pickup, but will call
you back.
sp3tfn
Lawn Service – mowing, trimming, dethatching, leaf removal,
grass catcher (optional). Byron
Knaus, (785) 204-2911 cell; (785)
448-6777 home.
ag6t8*
Fall garden mums. Keims
Greenhouse, 10 miles west on
Hwy. 31, (785) 218-1785 or (785)
448-7108.
ag27t5
HAPPY ADS
FARM & AG
Happiness is . . . Playing Texas
Holdem! Friday, September 6,
7pm at the Garnett VFW Post.
sp3t1
Fall Crossbred – bottle calves.
Nichols Dairy (620) 344-0790,
office (785) 489-2456. ag27t10*
Card of Thanks
FARM AND AG
AD
1×1
LOST & FOUND
LOST AND FOUND
Happiness is . . . Thanking the
Garnett Fire Department for
their quick response and friendly service. We are fortunate to
have such a great fire department. Mary Setter.
sp3t1*
I wish to thank everyone who
AD
has been so kind to us through
my illness. God Bless you all.
1×1
June Cleveland
AD
1×2
southern care
2×2
Becky Hiles
Community Relations Specialist
Cell (785) 304-2038
Office (913) 906-9497
Fax (913) 906-9493
Rebecca.Hiles@southerncareinc.com
RICHMOND HEALTHCARE 2×2
Little John Sherwood
AD & Greenhouse
Farm
785-835-7057
1×1.5
HARDY
MUMS
Tues – Sat: 9am – 6pm
Off of 59 Hwy, 3 miles, E. on Cloud Rd., 1 mile
S. on Ohio Rd. Follow the yellow chicken.
AD Wanted Vw
2x2I am a Volkswagen nut looking for these:
Van, Bus, Pickup, Beetle or Thing From the 50s or 60s
In the barn, in the pasture, Any Condion!
Finders fee Paid in cash! Call, Text or Email Troy @
(620) 910-7257 vdubnutks@yahoo.com
joe borntrager
2×2
LAWN & GARDEN
AD
SERVICES
1×2
Alcoholics Anonymous –
to develop and maintain relationships with
AD
professionals working with the aging
2×3
population in a six county area; provide
education to consumers, family members
and professionals concerning services offered
by the area agency. High School diploma and
3 years related experience required. Bachelor
Degree preferred. Contact East Central
Kansas Area Agency on Aging, Ottawa,
785-242-7200 for complete job description
and application. Applications accepted until
September 20, 2013.
Did you know junk mail
mass mailings have as little as
a 2% response rate with customers?
AD
SERVICES
Marketing and Outreach Specialist:
%
2
SERVICES
kpa qsi
2×4
kpa morton buildings
2×4
beckmans 3×3
Eight
(785) 448-3121
6B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 3, 2013
LOCAL
New cook joins Crest school
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 09-03-2013 / Photo Submitted
Swapan Saha, Kansas Division of Emergency Management, presents an award to J.D. Mersman,
Anderson County Kansas Local Emergency Planning Committee at an Emergency Planning and
Preparedness Conference in Overland Park, Kan., on July 27, 2013.
Anderson County recognized for
Outstanding Emergency Planning
The Anderson County, Kan.,
Local Emergency Planning
Committee (LEPC) was recognized for outstanding achievement in planning for chemical
emergencies at an Emergency
Planning and Preparedness
Conference July 25-27, 2013,
at the Overland Park, Kan.,
Marriott, hosted by EPA
Region 7, FEMA Region 7, and
the International Association
of Fire Chiefs. The purpose
of the conference was to help
prevent accidental chemical
releases and minimize community risks when they occur.
Representatives from fire
departments, law enforcement,
emergency medical service
agencies, private industry, city
and county emergency management officials, and state and
federal agencies attended.
Awards were presented
to local emergency planning
committees and to industry
for their achievements in furthering chemical emergency
planning and preparedness.
The Anderson County LEPC
received the Outstanding LEPC
Award for communities of less
than 20,000 residents.
Karl Brooks, EPA regional
administrator; Beth Freeman,
FEMA regional administrator;
and Timothy Butters, deputy
administrator, U.S. Dept. of
Transportations Pipeline and
Hazardous Materials Safety
Administration, delivered opening remarks. Steve Taylor, executive director of the Missouri
Agribusiness
Association,
spoke on July 27. His main focus
was the role of agricultural
retailers and local emergency
responders in preventing and
reducing the risk from chemical accidents.
Calendar
August 31-17th Annual
Colony Day Celebration, begins
7 a.m. 5 p.m. supper, followed by
talent show and announcement
of grand prize winner; 106th
Annual Colony/Crest Alumni,
registration 5:30 p.m. banquet,
7 p.m., Crest Auditorium; Sept.
2-Labor Day holiday, all businesses closed; cemetery board
meeting, city office, 7 p.m.; 4Lions Club, United Methodist
Church basement, 7 p.m.; fire
station meeting, 7 p.m.
School Calendar
31-high school volleyball at
Pleasanton, 9 a.m.; Sept. 2
Labor Day, no school; 3-high
school volleyball at Madison,
4 p.m.
Senior Meals
30-chef salad with chicken and
cheese, lettuce, fruit mix, wheat
roll, cookie; Sept. 2-Closed. For
meal reservation phone 620852-3479. For Prescription Drug
Program, phone Area Agency
at Ottawa 800-633-5421.
Church Services
Scripture presented August
25 at the Christian Church was
John 6. Pastor Mark McCoy
presented 40 Days in the Word-Application–Bringing Gods
Work Into My Life. Mens
Bible study at the church, 7
a.m. Tuesdays; 9 a.m.-every
Sunday. Prayer Time; 9:30-every
Sunday- Cross training 40 Days
in the Word for teenagers and
adults.
Sept. 8-Cross training breakfast, 9:30 a.m. at the church; Sept
11-Working Wonders Christian
Womens Council, 7 p.m. at the
church, all women are welcome;
Sept. 14-Introduction to The
Story party 6-8 p.m. west of
the church; Sept 15-beginning
of The Story(31-week walk
through the Bible).
Scripture presented at the
United Methodist Church
August 25 service was Psalm
71:1-6, Jeremiah 1: 4-10, Hebrews
12:18-29 and Luke 13:10-17.
Pastor Dorothy Welch presented the sermon Any Time, Any
Where. The United Methodist
Womens September challenge
is Pet care. Items will be donated to ACARF, LaHarpe.
Crest Cooks
Cindy Adams Rhodes is head
cook at Crest this year. Cindy is
a Kincaid girl. She graduated
from Crest in 1979. Prior to that
midwest hearing
2×4
AD
2×2
by Mrs. Morris Luedke
Contact (620) 852-3379 or
colonynews@ckt.net
with Colony news.
she was head cook at Kincaid
School for 15 years. She and her
sister then operated the Two
Sisters Caf in Kincaid. Other
cooks are Peggy Rogers and
Dixie Ward.
Library Board
Discussion was held Aug.
20 to fill the vacancy on the
Library board due to the death
of Delene Lindberg. Members
are purchasing six books in her
memory. She will be greatly
missed. Other purchases will be
the James Patterson for Young
Adult series, the seventh book
in the Diary of a Wimpy Kid
Series and Lego Ideas Book.
Ideas for Colony Day were discussed. Charlotte Wallace was
scheduled to attend the Summer
Readying Wrap-Up meeting at
Iola Library Aug. 23.
Around Town
Easton Walker King celebrated his 3rd birthday August
18 with a Thomas the train
themed party. Guests helping
celebrate the special day at the
home of his parents Kenton and
Denise King and big brother
Blaine were grandparents
Dennis and Cathy Allen, Uncle
Denny and Aunt Kerry, cousins,
Kaylee, Aubrey, Grady, Lynnex
and Jorden Allen, Colony;
great-grandmother
Phyllis
Meredith-Shetlar, Iola; grandmother Karen King-Moore,
Uncle Mitchell King, Aunt
Kellie Hallacy, cousin Melanie
Hallacy, great grandmother
Billie King Humboldt and
friend Marie Nolan, Raymond
of Nebraska. Everyone had
a good time visiting, playing
games and enjoying the Kings
newly re-modeled home.
Ralph and Evelyn Bunnel,
Jay and Virginia Dutton, and
the Duttons daughter, Jayne
Miller, Garnett drove to Lees
Summit, MO August 17 to attend
the 90th birthday celebration of
Francette Veteto. She was surprised and very happy to see
them.
Sympathy is expressed to
Debbie West and husband,
Gary at the loss of her brother,
Darrel Harris, 59, Kincaid. He
died August 19 at his home.
Debbie served as receptionist
at the doctors clinic in Colony
until they were moved to the
Iola Clinic. Cremation took
place and a memorial service is
to be held at a later date.
Sympathy is also expressed
to Casey Calloway at the death
of his father, Steven Callaway,
53, Chanute who died Aug. 17 at
his home and also to his sister
Carol Settlemyer and husband
Rick. Cremation took place.
Memorial services were Friday,
Aug. 23 at Waugh-Yokum &
Friskel Chapel, Iola.
AD
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Youth Outdoor Day
Saturday, Sept. 14 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
(Check-in begins at 7:30 a.m.)
Lake Garnett Park
Ages 8 – 18 yrs.
$12 per youth (until Sept. 1, 2013)
$15 per youth (Sept. 2 – Sept. 13, 2013)
$20 per youth (Day of event)
natl youth hunting
2×5
Learn about conservation of habitat, hunting, fishing
and other outdoor activities. Archery, Rifle Shooting,
Pistol Shooting, Shotgun Shooting, Fishing, Trapping,
Bird Dog Training and More.
Come join us for a day of fun-filled
outdoor activities!
Register Online Today
ntnlyouthhuntingevents.webs.com
(Limited to 100 Youth. Entries are accepted on a first-come, first-served basis.)
Event Info: Jessie.Oskvig@ntnlyouthhunting.org
Bill Dick (785) 448-8848
Ryan Disbrow (785) 448-1660
Gary Danner (913) 898-2752
Mike Schainost (785) 304-0391
Hosted by the Tri-Lakes Chapter of the National Youth
Hunting Assocation. This event is made possible through
the support of many participating sponsors and donors.
shop at home
6×6
To advertise your business
here, contact Stacey at
785-448-3121.
Make your presents felt
421 S. Oak Garnett
Tues – Fri. 10-5
Sat. 10-2
785-448-3038

