Anderson County Review — September 6, 2016
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from September 6, 2016. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
ONE U.S. DOLLAR
September 6, 2016
Probitas,
virtus, integritas
in summa.
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Contents Copyright 2016 Garnett Publishing, Inc.
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proclamation.
ACHS Crimson Dancers
bring home awards.
See page 2B.
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Boy Scouts have a
summer of adventure.
See page 1B.
Member FDIC Since 1899
(785) 448-3111
Rain likely helped crops
Soybeans thriving in
recent rains, but not
all plants like it wet
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-6-2016 / Vickie Moss
A field of soybeans south of Garnett grows large and green thanks to a series of recent rains.
Past due property
taxes total $300K
Delinquent property
taxes still mostly on
decline since 2010
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – Property owners owe the county more than
$300,000 in delinquent property
taxes this year, slightly higher
than the amount owed last year
but continuing a trend of mostly lower past-due taxes since
2010.
Property owners for a total
of 489 parcels of property were
included in this years list of
delinquent property taxes
with a total amount due of
$304,718.32. The past-due taxes
range from a low of 46-cents
due for an individual property
up to $6,112.54 for one property.
The current roster of delinquent property taxes reflects
the amount owed for 2015. It
is not the same list as those
whose past-due property taxes
put them at risk of having their
property sold to recoup years
worth of delinquent taxes.
Properties are eligible for the
tax sale after the list has been
published three times, and if
the property has been on the
list three years. A delinquent
tax sale is planned for the near
future, and will follow a 2013
sale that helped the county
clear delinquent taxes up to
about 2006. The next sale will
get the county caught up to
about 2011.
Here are the amounts of
delinquent property taxes in
recent years:
2014, $270,003.49.
2013, $309,297.42.
2012, $295,539.
2011, $334,061.23
2010, $372,347.12.
The treasurers office offers
a payment plan to help people
get caught up on delinquent
property taxes. Staff will work
with property owners to find
a workable payment plan. For
more information, call the
office at (785) 448-5824, or stop
by the office at the Anderson
County Courthouse in downtown Garnett.
To view the complete list for
2015, go to www.garnett-ks.com
and click on the link.
USD 365 attorney
answers question
about open meetings
Citizen asks board to
change policy of using
catch-all statement
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – An attorney
reassured USD 365 Board of
Education members the way
they conduct secret, executive
sessions is within the law, but
cautioned them about potential pitfalls with the way they
introduce such sessions after a
citizen questioned their procedure last month.
Jason Sheahan, a citizen
who regularly attends school
board meetings, questioned the
way the board introduces executive sessions at its monthly
meetings. The board typically
uses a blanket statement, such
as saying it will go into secret,
executive session for the purpose of: discussing non-elected
personnel to protect the privacy interests of the individuals
to be discussed; to protect the
privacy interest of a student(s),
and/or for discussing negotiations to protect the public interest in negotiating a fair and
equitable contract. To discuss
the purchase of real property.
The Kansas Open Meetings
Act allows governmental entities to close meetings to the
public in order to discuss those
matters and few others. They
are required to state the purpose of the discussion, and they
have to say when and where
the public meeting will resume.
No binding action can be taken
during the session. Most governmental bodies typically
specify one reason for the session, such as to discuss personnel.
Sheahan pointed out that
its unusual and misleading to
use a blanket statement that
covers all possible reasons a
governmental body might meet
in closed session. During an
Aug. 10 meeting, he submitted
a letter to the board and a copy
of the state statute regarding
open meetings. He asked the
SEE MEETINGS ON PAGE 3A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – Although predictions call for above average
crop yields this fall, a local agriculture agent cautions farmers,
ag businesses and others not to
get too excited just yet.
Until its in the elevator or
maybe just the combine, maybe
be careful about claims about
best ever, Shannon Blocker,
an agent with the Frontier
Extension District in Anderson
County, said.
Blocker and agriculture
experts around the country are
expecting to see good yields
after a summer that brought
plenty of rain alternated with
hot, sunny days during important growing stages. Soil in the
local region typically holds
water only for a couple of
weeks, so the recent pattern
that dropped rain every few
days was especially beneficial
to Anderson County, Blocker
said.
But because commodity
prices are relatively low right
now, its unlikely farmers will
see significant revenue even
with good yields. Still, Blocker
pointed out, high yields and
low prices are better than low
yields and low prices.
Farmers have to do the best
they can with what they are
given, she said.
Soybeans are expected to
benefit most from the current
rainy pattern. Grain sorghum,
also known as milo, also will
benefit but farmers plant very
little sorghum in this area.
Corn benefitted from previous
SEE CROPS ON PAGE 3A
SPECIAL ASSIGNMENT:
Catch that pest
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-6-2016 / Vickie Moss
East Central Kansas Academy paraprofessional Kelly Mildfelt, far left in back, and social studies and science teacher Todd
Mildfelt, far right in back, and students stand in front of an ash tree at the school at 212 S. Pine St., Garnett, to display a series
of funnels designed to trap Emerald Ash Borer pests. The bugs eat and destroy ash trees and most likely are headed toward
Anderson County. Theyve been found as near as Johnson and Douglas counties.
Students hunt tree-killing pest
Emerald Ash Borer threat
provides a unique learning
opportunity for area students
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – Todd Mildfelts students
at East Central Kansas Academy in
Garnett hope to fail their latest assignment: Capturing the Emerald Ash
Borer.
The students are learning about the
invasive pest as part of their environmental science studies. The bugs lay
waste to ash trees, and theres very
few ways to stop them. Students will
hang a special funnel device to trap the
bug and determine if the Emerald Ash
Borer has made its way to Anderson
County. They hope to come away empty-handed when the project ends for
the season, likely sometime in October
after the first frost.
The Emerald Ash Borer, a tiny green
beetle-type of pest, is native to China
and likely migrated to the United States
inside wooden shipping pallets. It burrows into ash trees to lay eggs that feed
on the tree when they hatch, effectively
starving and killing the tree. The pests
have few predators in the U.S., and topical insecticides can slow an infestation
but cant stop it.
The borers were discovered in the
U.S. in the Detroit area in 2002 and
have since destroyed an estimated 60
million ash trees. The borer spread
to Kansas in 2012 and so far has been
found in Douglas, Jefferson, Johnson,
Leavenworth and Wyandotte counties,
according to the Kansas Department of
Agriculture. Counties where the borer
have been discovered are considered
under quarantine, which restricts
movement of ash trees, lumber, firewood and other products that could
spread the problem. Infected trees are
destroyed to help contain the pest.
Its only a matter of time before the
borer spreads to Anderson County,
Mildfelt said. Because containment is
the best way to stop the spread, its
important to catch the problem early.
Weve been tracking its progress
since 2011. I knew it was coming to
Kansas, Mildfelt said about his science
classes at ECKA. Were hoping for
failure, but I suppose its just a matter
of time.
The borers are not yet confirmed in
Anderson County, although its possible they are here but not yet discovered. Frontier Extension District
Agent Shannon Blocker said some ash
trees do have other types of borers,
like the lilac borer, but those borers
do not destroy trees and simply are
opportunistic creatures that feed on
ash trees that already are under stress
or dying. Ash trees recently cut down at
the Anderson County Courthouse lawn
are an example of trees with that type
of borer. Emerald Ash Borers attack
healthy trees.
Mildfelt and his students are determined to find the destructive borers.
They researched the types of methods
available to capture the pest. The most
common method used previously was
a prism-shaped, purple sticky trap
SEE SCHOOL ON PAGE 3A
Custom printed BUSINESS CARDS – Call the Review today (785) 448-3121
2A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 6, 2016
LOCAL
NEWS IN
BRIEF
VFW BREAKFAST
VFW Post 6397 will have a
breakfast Saturday, Sept. 10,
from 7 a.m. to 9 a.m. Menu
includes biscuits and gravy,
Belgian waffles, bacon, sausage and eggs.
GREELEY FALL CLEAN-UP
Greeley Fall Clean-Up is Sept.
12-13. Items will be hauled off at
no cost. Items msut be placed
by curb and be bagged and
bundled. Burn barrels and tires
will not be hauled off. Please
call City Hall at (785) 867-2440
for large items (i.e. appliances).
CHRISTMAS PARADE INFO
The Garnett Area Chamber of
Commercie is accepting Grand
Marshall nominations until 5
p.m. Oct. 28. Submit online or at
the office. www.chamberofgarnettks.com/christmas-parade.
html
HOLIDAY BOUTIQUE
The Garnett BPW is looking
for vendors to register for the
groups Holiday Boutique from
noon to 4 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 4
at the Kirk House, in conjunction
with the Garnett Library Homes
Tour. For more information or to
register, contact Helen Norman
at (785) 448-3826. Proceeds
help fund the BPW scholarship
program.
CELEBRATE RECOVERY
Celebrate Recovery, a Biblebased Christ-centered recovery
program for those who struggle with lifes hurts, habits and
hang-ups, meets each Monday
evening at the Garnett Church
of the Nazarene. It begins at 6
p.m. with meal and fellowship,
followed by worship service and
small groups until 8:30 p.m.
Childcare is provided. Recovery
is for a variety of lifes hurts, not
just those with alcohol or drug
problems. Call (785) 433-3118
for information.
SUICIDE AWARENESS GROUP
A new group, SAM – Suicide
Awareness Members, a division of SASS-MoKan – meets on
the first Thursday of the month
from 6:30-7:30 at the Garnett
Library located at 125 W 4th
Ave in Garnett. This group is
for family and friends who have
lost a loved one to suicide.
All are welcome to attend. The
facilitator is Lu Ann Nichols,
who may be reached at lu.ann.
nichols.1956@gmail.com.
CAREGIVER SUPPORT
Anderson County Caregiving
Support will meet the fourth
Monday of each month at Park
Plaza North Club House, 105
Park Plaza North, Garnett. For
more information, call Phyllis
at ECKAAA, (800) 633-5621 or
(785) 242-7200.
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 (785) 204-2148.
1×2
AD
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
ANDERSON COUNTY BOARD OF
COMMISSIONERS AUGUST 22
Chairman Jerry Howarter called
the meeting of the Anderson
County Commission to order at
9:00 AM on August 22, 2016 at
the County Commission Room.
Attendance:
Jerry Howarter,
Present: Eugene Highberger,
Present: Leslie McGhee, Present.
The pledge of allegiance was
recited. Minutes of the previous
meeting were approved as presented.
Road and Bridge
Lester Welsh, Road Supervisor
met with the commission. He is
looking at an auction company to
sell a couple graders that he did
not trade in. They will not sell it
unless they bring at least a certain
amount. Commission approved
proceeding with trying to sell them.
Lester gave the commission data
on the traffic count on 7th St road.
He has one employee who has
turned in his two week notice and
he will be hiring a replacement.
They have completed the road to
the reservoir.
Budget
Rodney Burns, Auditor met
with the commission. Discussion
was held on the salaries presented by the elected officials.
Commissioner Highberger moved
to publish the budget as presented. Commissioner McGhee seconded. Approved 30.
BG Consultants
Eric Hethcoat and David
Devore, BG Consultants met with
the commission. Commissioner
Highberger moved to approve
change order No. 1 for bridge
U.524.7 Morgan Bridge to
extend the completion date.
Commissioner McGhee seconded. Approved 30. They are
working with Regional Planning to
submit a new CDBG application
for a new elevator in the courthouse.
Health Insurance
Gavin Steketee, CBIZ met
with the commission. He presented proposals for the county
health insurance. Commissioner
Highberger moved to proceed
with United Health Care and
have CBIZ work on a plan not
to exceed 10% cost increase.
Commissioner McGhee seconded. Approved 30.
Meeting adjourned at 12:00 AM
due to no further business.
LAND TRANSFERS
August
25,
Daniel
H.
Womelsdorf And Carolyn L.
Womelsdorf To William J. Moore
And Linda Moore Lots 1 & 2 Block
7 Pinegars Second Addition To
City Of Colony.
August 26, Cody Daniel
Mcclellan, Caitlin M. Mcclellan,
And Caitlin M. Vaughan, AKA To
Joseph M. Johnson And Glenda
M. Johnson The East 39 Feet Of
Lot 19 And All Of Lots 20 And 21
In Block 14 In The City Of Garnett.
August 26, Lacy L. Feuerborn
To Gordon Brown And Pamela
Brown Commencing 473 Feet
West Of the Northeast Corner of
the Northeast section 4 25-20-19,
Thence West 100 Feet, Thence
South 200 Feet, Thence East 100
Feet, Thence North 200 Feet To
Point Of Beginning & West 100
Feet of Lot 7 Block 1 In Baileys
Orchard Park Addition To City Of
Garnett.
DOMESTIC CASES FILED
August 30, Tiffany Duncan vs.
Charles Lee Duncan, petition for
shared custody and visitation. .
August 31, Honey M. Renyer
vs. Daniel Eugene Renyer, petition for divorce and child support.
$231 fine.
Dennis R. Hiner, guilty plea,
$153 fine.
Jay Jay Johnson, guilty plea,
$153 fine.
Timothy Ryan Lanzone, guilty
plea, $207 fine.
Jacob E. Leach, guilty plea,
$171 fine.
Jacob S. Potter, guilty plea,
$189 fine.
Lisa D. Sherwood, guilty plea,
$153 fine.
Jacob D. Walker, deferred adjudication, $87 fine.
Kristen M. Weide, guilty plea,
$207 fine.
Morgan Marie Wright, guilty
plea, $153 fine.
Seat Belt violations:
Dennis R. Hiner, guilty plea,
$10.
Other:
State of Kansas vs. David L.
Slife, domestic battery, dismissed
with diversion and $643 fine and
costs.
State of Kansas vs. Taylor Paul
Brown, driving under the influence, dismissed with diversion
and $1,515 fine and costs.
State of Kansas vs. Tracy A.
Ahring, domestic battery, dismissed with diversion and $493
fine and costs.
State of Kansas vs. Travis R.
Ahring, domestic battery, dismissed with diversion and $493
fine and costs.
State of Kansas vs. Ross
William Johnson, operating a
vehicle without an ignition interlock device, dismissed with diversion and $458 fine.
Teresa J. Sparks, basic rule
governing speed of vehicles,
guilty plea, $183 fine.
Jacob D. Walker, possession
of hallucinogenic drugs, deferred
adjudication, $493 fine.
Jacob D. Walker, use/possession with intent to use drug paraphernalia, deferred adjudication,
no fine.
GARNETT POLICE REPORT
Incidents
On August 25, a report of DUI,
unlawful acts: e.g., registration,
Liquor, minor in consumption,
and transporting an open container in the 300 block of West 6th
Avenue. Seized property includes
an open beer in koozie, Ruger
SR9C Handgun, and two orange
Methamphetamine 30 mg pills.
On August 27, a report of DUI
and transporting an open container in the 100 block of West 5th
Avenue.
On August 28, a report of possession of opiates/opium/narcotic
drugs, driving under the influence,
and use/possession of drug paraphernalia in the 400 block of
North Maple Street. Seized property includes 6 smoking/snorting
apparatus, a black digital scale, a
butane stick lighter, razor blades,
a blood vial, and a bindle containing white crystals.
ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS
REPORT
Accidents
On July 31, a vehicle driven
by Sebastian Michael Ashworth,
25, Independence, traveling east
on 5th Street, flipped over and
crashed into the blacktop when
the driver lost control. Passenger
Brianna Denee Brockman, 27,
2×5
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109 S. Main
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Suttons Jewelry
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785-242-6655
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SEE RECORDS ON PAGE 3A
W E R E R E A DY T O S E RV E YO U I N
CRIMINAL CASES RESOLVED
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FARM-INS
James Reisinger was booked
into jail June 24 for Douglas
County.
Joel Sanchez was booked into
jail June 29 for Miami County.
Brad Gilchrist was booked into
jail June 30 for Miami County.
Martin Wilson was booked into
jail July 27 for Douglas County.
Rhonda Jackson was booked
into jail July 27 for Allen County.
James Myers was booked into
jail July 27 for Allen County.
Devian Miller was booked into
jail July 28 for Miami County.
Eric Fabert was booked into jail
August 5 for Douglas County.
Dr. Glenn D. Bauman-Chiropractic Physician
805 N. Maple (Inside Baumans) Garnett
785-448-2422 Fax 785-448-2427
M/W/F 8:30 a.m. – 5:30 p.m.
LIMITED ACTION RESOLVED
6.5% for 4 years
CDs, IRAs, 401Ks and
Roth IRAs are welcome!
JAIL ROSTER
John Miller was booked into jail
March 11 for Anderson County.
Bond set at $2,500.
Bruce Henry was booked into
jail June 14 for Anderson County.
Bond set at $10,000.
Jeffrey Garcia was booked into
jail June 17 for Anderson County.
Now has four warrants. Total
bond set at $22,750.
Kaylee Schuster was booked
into jail June 25 for Anderson
County. Bond set at $5,000.
Preston Kern was booked into
jail May 14 for Anderson County.
Bond set at $500,000.
Brian Anderson was booked
into jail July 16 for Anderson
County. Bond set at $10,000.
Michael Jason Kinder was
booked into jail July 26 for
Anderson County to serve a sentence.
Colton Sobba was booked into
jail August 5 for Allen County.
Court Appearance.
Matt Daly was booked into jail
August 16 for Anderson County.
No Bond.
Christopher Bosler was booked
into Jail August 19 for Anderson
County under Warrant for arrest.
Bond set at $5,000.
Wayne Kirkland was booked
into jail August 19 for Anderson
County. Court Appearance.
WM. Danny Travis was booked
into jail on August 31 for Anderson
County. Bond set at $5,000.
No Popping No Cracking No Twisting
Leiszler Oil Company vs.
Joshua Bruce, judgment for
$1,622.03 plus costs and interest.
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schulte7% for 5 years
On August 31, William Daniel
Travis, Olathe, 51, was booked
into jail by Anderson County
Sheriff on suspicion of probation
violation. Bond set at $5,000.
On August 31, Jacci Marie
Hays, Louisburg, 26, was booked
into jail for warrant for arrest. No
bond set.
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CIVIL CASES RESOLVED
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JAIL BOOKINGS
On August 24, Billy Joe Johnson,
Lawrence, 39, was booked into jail
by Douglas County Sheriff for failure to appear. Bond set at $560.
On August 24, Phillip Dewayne
Proctor, Garnett, 38, was booked
into jail by Anderson County
Sheriff on suspicion of criminal
trespass. Bond set at $1,000.
Released August 28.
On August 25, Kaylan Danielle
Burgoon, Garnett, 20, was
booked into jail by Garnett Police
Department for failure to appear.
Bond set at $350. Released
August 25.
On August 25, Andrew Jake
Duncan, Gardner, 19, was booked
into jail by Linn County Sheriff
on suspicion of aiding a person
charged as felon, Non-Bondable,
and possession of depressants/
stimulants. No bond set.
On August 25, Patrick Clarence
Crawford, Gardner, 18 was
booked into jail by Linn County
Sheriff on suspicion of aiding a
felon. Non-Bondable.
On August 26, Tanner Michael
Smith, Waverly, 22, was booked
into jail by Garnett Police
Department on suspicion of transporting an open container. Bond
set at $250. Released August 26.
On August 26, Landon Dean
Thacker, Garnett, 19, was
booked into jail by Garnett Police
Department on suspicion of driving under the influence, bond set
at $750, liquor: purchase by a
minor, no bond Set, and Vehicle;
unlawful acts; e.g. registration, no
bond set. Released August 26.
On August 26, Courtney Dawn
Scheckel, Richmond, 21, was
booked into jail by Anderson
County Sheriff on suspicion of driving while suspended or revoked.
Non-Bondable. Released August
31.
On August 27, Marie Mae Slife,
Colony, 29, was booked into jail by
Anderson County Sheriff on suspicion of criminal trespass, bond set
at $1,000, harassment by telecom
device, no bond set. Released
August 27.
On August 27, Angela
Tumeishawn Guy, Grandview,
Mo, 41, was booked into jail by
Anderson County Sheriff on suspicion of driving while suspended. Bond set at $150. Released
August 27.
On August 27, Reuben William
Wolken, Garndner, 29, was
booked into jail by Garnett Police
Department on suspicion of transporting an open container, bond
set at $250, and driving under
the influence, bond set at $1,500.
Released August 27.
On August 28, Jake Alexander
Magner, Garnett, 22, was booked
into jail by Anderson County
Sheriff on suspicion of driving
under the influence, no bond set,
possession of certain stimulants,
bond set at $1,500, and use/possession of drug paraphernalia, no
nond set. Released August 31.
On August 28, Daniel Leonard
Kratzberg, Garnett, 25, was
booked into jail on suspicion of
driving under the influence, bond
set at $1,500, and possession of
opiate, narcotic or certain stimulant, bond set at $500. Released
August 28.
On August 29, Scott Daniel
Hobbs, Garnett, 34, was booked
into jail by Garnett Police
Department, on suspicion of disorderly conduct, No bond set,
and criminal threat, no bond set.
Released August 30.
Dont Turn Your Back On Pain
Valley R. Agri-Service, Inc., vs.
John Mader, judgment by consent
for $4,110.77 plus costs and interest.
Speeding violations:
State of Kansas vs. Cary Odell,
dismissed with diversion and $364
fine.
State of Kansas vs. Joseph
David Schoech, dismissed with
diversion and $382 fine.
State of Kansas vs. Tripp K.
Wright, dismissed with diversion
and $333 fine.
Edgar Leo Blango, guilty plea,
$153 fine.
Clay L. Burnett, guilty plea,
Colony, was injured and taken to
the hospital in a private vehicle.
This accident was not reported.
On August 7, a vehicle driven by Beverly C. Honn, 36,
Williamsburg, hit a coyote while
traveling southbound on US
Highway 169. Neither driver nor
passenger injured.
On August 16, a vehicle driven by Isia Escobar-Cardenas, 40,
Gardner, lost control and went into
the ditch on the east hand side
of the roadway, while traveling
southbound on NE Mitchell Road.
This is reported as a hit and run.
On August 19, a vehicle driven
by David Lee Slife, 29, Colony
pulled into a field on the South
side of 350 road. A vehicle driven
by Taylor Lane Davis, 21, Colony,
traveling Eastbound on 350 road,
ran into the side of the first vehicle. Neither driver, nor passenger
was injured.
On August 23, a vehicle driven
by Janelle Marie King, Iola, struck
an unknown object while driving
Southbound on Highway 59 from
2100 Road. The object struck the
gas tank and breached that item.
On August 24, a vehicle driven by Payton C. Feuerborn, 19,
Garnett traveling Southbound
through the roundabout on US
Highway 169 was struck in the
right rear quarter panel by a vehicle driven Northbound on US 59,
by Carol O. Wesley, 89, Neosho
Falls, when Wesley failed to yield.
No one was injured.
On August 26, a vehicle driven
by Allen C. Hartley, 37, Chanute,
struck the back of a vehicle driven by Stephen S. Lowery, 39,
Garnett, while both were traveling southbound on US 169,
when Lowery slowed to make a
right hand turn onto 1180 Road.
Hartley was injured, and taken
to Anderson County Hospital by
Ambulance.
Incidents
On July 5, a report of theft of
property or services was reported
near 27000 NW Mitchell Road.
Reported stolen was a silver custom made belt buckle valued at
$14,000.
On August 27, a report of
harassment by telecom device
and criminal trespass was reported in the 300 block of East 5th in
Colony, Ks.
Property managed by
Kay Management Company.
To advertise your
business in this
directory contact
Stacey at
785-448-3121.
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LOCALLY-OWNED NEWSPAPERS
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email: review@garnett-ks.com
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 6, 2016
SCHOOL…
BIBENS
AUGUST 24, 1924-AUGUST 8, 2016
Calvin Rafael Bibens, 91,
of St. Joseph, passed away
Monday, August 8, 2016, at
Mosaic Life Care.
Calvin was born August 24,
1924, to Samuel and Florence
(Ballard) Bibens, in Welda,
Kansas.
H
e
m a r r i e d
Mary
Ann
Hammons
in Jefferson
C i t y ,
Missouri, on
October 11,
Bibens
1953.
Calvin proudly served in the US Army
during World War II (19421945) where he was in the
Field Artillery with the 103rd
Infantry Division with the
Seventh Army and was in combat in France, Germany and
Austria.
Calvin attended Kansas
University, where he graduated
in 1949 with a Bachelors degree
in Architectural Engineering.
Calvin co-founded Midland
Steel Company in 1980. Calvin
served as President then
Chairman of Midland Steel
Company from 1980 until his
death. Even after he formally retired, Cal continued to
have an office at Midland Steel
Company, until he was 90.
He was preceded in death
by: his parents; two sisters,
Rowena Pearl Spencer and
Irma Edith Adam; and one
brother, Walter Bibens.
Calvin is survived by: his
wife, Mary Ann Bibens; and
his three sons, Conrad Bibens
(Becky), of Humble, Texas,
Douglas Bibens (Sarah), of
Clarksdale, Missouri, and
Roger Bibens (Joyce), of Platte
Woods, Missouri.
He also is survived by:
five grandchildren, his sister,
Frances Moore (Richard), of La
Jolla, California, and numerous nieces and nephews.
Farewell Services were
August 21, 2016 at Meierhoffer
Funeral Home & Crematory.
DYSART
JUNE 5, 1923-AUGUST 31, 2016
Mildred (Millie) Brady
Butler Dysart, age 93, of
Garnett, died Wednesday,
August 31, 2016, at Lawrence
Memorial Hospital.
She
was
born
near
Osawatomie on June 5,
1923, to Stama L. and Sylvia
(Townsend) Brady.
She married Frank Butler.
She later married Walter
Dysart on July 21, 1979. Walter
preceded her in death in 2009.
Survivors include two sons,
Dave and Beverly Tiny
Butler, Greg and Kerri Butler;
and numerous grandchildren
and great grandchildren.
Funeral services will be
held at 10:30 AM, Tuesday,
September 6, 2016 at Feuerborn
Family Funeral Service Chapel,
Garnett. Burial will follow
in the Centerville Cemetery,
Centerville, Kansas. The family will greet friends from 9:30
-10:30 AM, Tuesday, prior to the
service.
LICKTEIG
APRIL 4, 1923-AUGUST 28, 2016
Francis James Lickteig,
age 93, passed on August 28,
2016 at Overland Park, Kansas.
Francis was born April 4, 1923,
and recorded by the State of
Kansas as April 5, 1923, near
Greeley, Kansas.
Francis was predeceased
by his wife
Mildred
Esther Miller
Lickteig in
2003. He is
survived by
his children
Theodore
(Ted) (Sheryl)
Lickteig,
Lickteig
Anne (Jerry)
Lormis and
David Lickteig. He is also
survived by six granddaughters, Rebecca (Paul) Ledgard,
Hannah Lickteig, Rachel and
Kylie Lormis and Jessica and
Grace Lickteig, and by two
great-grandsons, Lucas Edward
Ledgard and Remington Gage
Lormis.
All of Francis siblings predeceased him. He had five
brothers: Raymond, Alfred,
3A
LOCAL
Dominic, Fabian, and Jerome.
Fabian became Father Bernard
of the Carmelite order. Jerome
followed him into the order and
became Father Fergus. They
remain our holy ghosts. One
brother, Lester, died before
Francis was born. He had four
sisters, Agatha, Beatrice, Irma
and Elizabeth.
The wake will be Thursday
from 6 p.m. until 8 p.m. with a
rosary at 8 p.m. at Amos Family
Funeral Home in Shawnee,
Kansas. The funeral mass will
be Friday at 10:30 a.m. at Good
Shepherd Catholic Church in
Shawnee, Kansas with burial
to follow at Shawnee Memory
Gardens in Shawnee, Kansas.
The family hopes that those
who loved, cared about him
or enjoyed his friendship can
attend. Freud said humans
need love and work. Francis
had both in abundance.
In lieu of flowers, the family encourages contributions to
the Good Shepherd council of
the Knights of Columbus.
Anderson County
news DAILY
at 8 a.m.
KOFO 1220 AM
FROM PAGE 1A
that uses glue to secure the
bugs. Mildfelt sought advice
from forestry officials and discovered a new method gaining
in popularity. It uses a series of
green funnels and a pheromone
lure. The pheromones attract
the borers to the green funnels,
and the bugs fall into a trap at
the bottom. Most traps use a
chemical similar to antifreeze
to kill the pests, but Mildfelt
said his class wanted to use
something less toxic. Theyll
fill the bottom with Dawn dish
soap instead.
Mildfelt has rigged a pulley
system to allow students to easily monitor the trap. Theyll
check it every two weeks for
about two months, until the
first hard freeze.
The project has many ben-
efits for students at ECKA,
Mildfelt said. It can help forestry and agricultural officials identify the Emerald Ash
Borers presence in Anderson
County, if and when it arrives.
It also provides a great, handson
learning
experience,
Mildfelt said.
ECKA, located at the former
Irving Primary Center at 212
S. Pine St. in Garnett, is a special education day school that
serves four counties and eight
area school districts: Anderson
County, Prairie View, Paola,
Pleasanton,
Louisburg,
Osawatomie, Jayhawk Linn
and Central Heights. It offers
alternative placement that
allows students to work on
behaviors so they can transfer
back to their home program,
principal Mike Harvey said.
All of our kids have so
many gaps in their learning,
Harvey said. These types of
hands-on programs fill many of
those gaps.
In a non-traditional learning environment, hands-on
programs offer students more
flexibility to examine a topic
from different angles.
I do believe it sticks with
you more if youre able to touch
it and feel it, Mildfelt said.
For example, when students
learned about the Emerald Ash
Borer, they also learned how to
identify ash trees from other
types of trees. They read a childrens book, The King, The
Mice and the Cheese (about a
king who brings in more and
more animals just to stop the
mice from eating his favorite
food), so students could discuss
unintended consequences that
could happen if scientists intro-
duce foreign predators like
Asian wasps to attack the ash
borers.
In addition to the Emerald
Ash Borer lesson, Mildfelts
students also tag Monarch butterflies and track their migration into Mexico.
Mildfelt said he likes to use
such lessons to reach students
who have difficulty learning in
a standard classroom environment. Because many of the students at ECKA have struggled
in school, they also may have
a low opinion of education and
their own abilities. When they
approach education in a different way, they could develop
a desire to learn and discover
personal strengths and advantages.
We all bring something to
the table, Mildfelt said.
expect considering storms
dropped more than 7 inches of
rain in August, about 3 inches
more than normal. Because the
rains fell consistently, the soil
was able to absorb the steady
supply of water.
For local gardeners, however, the rain has been a mixed
blessing. Most gardens are
irrigated in some way, so the
steady rainfall has meant less
reliance on irrigation, Blocker
said. She specializes in horticulture, and said the rains have
increased disease pressure on
gardens and trees. Diseases
spread with high humidity
and moisture, and theres been
plenty of both.
Blocker said gardeners
particularly have complained
about poor quality tomatoes,
but she said she doesnt have
enough information about the
various scenarios that could
have affected the garden and
cant attribute all the damage
to heavy rain.
Area lakes, ponds and
streams also have developed
problems with algae in some
spots, particularly with the
dangerous blue-green algae.
Blocker said that is somewhat
unexpected; algae likes hot
temperaturs and humidty, but
doesnt usually thrive with a
lot of rain.
and the State of Kansas that
offers guidance on open meetings laws.
With those documents,
youll know as much as I
know, Tetwiler told the board.
He said the boards blanket statement was legal, but
suggested the board instead
announce which of the specific
exemptions it planned to discuss. For example, he cited a
lawsuit in which the opposing
legal counsel asked how much
time was devoted to discussing
an employee. If the board discussed several matters at once,
it could not prove how much
time was devoted to discussion
of personnel. The board is not
required to name the employee
it plans to discuss.
Tetwiler also gave some
general advice to the board
regarding open meetings, such
as encouraging them to maintain confidentiality outside
executive session. The law
does not prohibit attendees
from publicly discussing what
was said in a closed meeting,
though Tetwiler said it could
cause problems if board members were not on the same page
about what kind of discussion
was appropriate outside the
meetings.
USD 365 board members
did not discuss Sheahans
letter at either the August or
September meetings. However,
the September agenda listed
the reasons for executive session to discuss personnel and
protect student privacy, which
appears to be its first departure
from the blanket statement in
recent years. The August meeting agenda included the blanket statement.
CROPS…
FROM PAGE 1A
rain, but ongoing rains arent
likely to have much impact at
the current growth stage. Its
a little early to plant wheat,
but if storms continue they
could delay planting of wheat
or some cover crops.
Ponds and other types
of livestock water supplies
are plentiful, Blocker said,
although there hasnt been
as much runoff as one would
MEETINGS…
FROM PAGE 1A
board to review and change
the way it opens executive sessions.
Attorney Lee Tetwiler,
who took over legal counsel
for the board after the death
of previous board attorney
Steve Doering, attended the
Sept. 1 meeting to talk about
Sheahans concerns. Tetwiler
provided board members
with copies of the state statute on open meetings, as well
as literature from the Kansas
Association of School Boards
Vikings cross country
kick off season strong
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
BURLINGTON Head Coach
Troy Prosser was very pleased
with his teams results at the
Burlington Cross Country
Invitational.
The teams won a combined
10 medals, which was nearly
double what the team had won
a season ago at this same meet.
Several runners also shaved a
minute or more off their times
from last season, which excites
Prosser.
The 6th/7th grade girls
started the season off great,
and after an 86-5 season a year
ago they are perfect so far in
2016 finishing first as a team,
Prosser stated.
Prosser went on to say,
This group is young and has
a lot of potential, but we have
a lot of work to do to get where
we want to be. I am excited to
see how the next few months
play out.
Lily Meyer won the 6/7th
grade girls 1 mile and Tyler
Sevenson also won gold in
the high school junior varsity
event.
Results:
6/7th Grade Girls 1 Mile
1st – Lily Meyer
3rd – Taryn Compton
4th – Alexis Haynes
8th – Anneleese Thao
14th – Jacey Clancy
17th – Lydia Burbank
18th – Emma Jumet
6/7th Grade boys 1 Mile
9th – Max Cannady
12th – Jessy Stalford
21st – Carson Wood
8th Grade boys 2 Mile
4th – Orvel Broce
15th – David Craft
High School Boys JV
1st – Tyler Stevenson
6th – Mason McCurry
10th – Sam Wood
13th – Landen Compton
35th – Coyd Gardner
High School Girls Varsity
26th – Sarah Wood
High School Boys Varsity
5th – Alex Cannady
8th – Kyle Cardin
13th – Matt Ashwill
21st – Caleb Meyer
34th – Bryce Sommer
RECORDS…
FROM PAGE 2A
Philip Soref was booked into jail
August 9 for Linn County.
James Aiken was booked into
jail August 10 for Miami County.
Patrick Stoneking was booked
into jail August 12 for Douglas
County.
Nathan Vickers was booked
into jail August 12 for Douglas
County.
Garnel M. Williams was booked
into jail August 15 for Douglas
County.
Trey Alford was booked into jail
August 17 for Douglas County.
Dwight Lane was booked into
jail August 18 for Miami County.
Leland White was booked into
jail August 22 for Douglas County.
Tyler Snipes was booked into
jail August 22 for Linn County.
Billy Joe Johnson was booked
into jail August 24 for Douglas
County.
Andrew Duncan was booked
into jail August 25 for Linn County.
Patrick Crawford was booked
into jail August 25 for Linn County.
Jacci Hays was booked into jail
August 31 for Miami County.
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 6, 2016
LOCAL
Will color protect Kaepernick
from getting Dixie Chicked?
Its going to be interesting to watch the way
the National Football League handles the Colin
Kaepernick affair and compare it to the way
the country music industry handled the Dixie
Chicks disaster.
I suspect were going to see that, in music or
in football, timing is everything.
As youll recall, Natalie Mains of the Dixie
Chicks told a concert crowd in England during
the run-up to the 2003 Iraq War that the Chicks
were on the right side with Europeans who
were protesting the American-led push for an
invasion of Iraq, and that they were ashamed
President George W. Bush was from Texas. Cue
the nationalist firestorm, the banishment from
country music and the resulting decade plus of
effective Dixie Chick exile.
Now 28 year-old Kaepernick, the bi-racial QB
of the 49ers who brims with Black Lives Matter
bravado, refuses to stand during the playing of
the National Anthem during a pre-season game
says he cant respect a country that oppresses
the Black Man, or apparently in his case half a
black man. And hes brought his protest into the
presidential race as well:
You have Hillary who has called black teens
or black kids super predators, Kaepernick said
at a 49ers Sunday media session. You have
Donald Trump whos openly racist. We have a
presidential candidate who has deleted emails
and done things illegally and is a presidential candidate. That doesnt make sense to me
because if that was any other person youd be in
prison. So, what is this country really standing
for?
Interestingly, mainstream media outlets and
the Associated Press carried Kaepernicks comments about Donald Trump being a racist, but
didnt report his assertion that Clinton should be
in prison. Guess the AP ran out of ink or something.
We can dissect and debate the opinions ad
infinitum, but its more interesting to look at
how these organizations dealt and will deal with
the consternation that arises when their members disrespect their country.
Forget any wailing about them being protected by the First Amendment. Of course they are
and no one in local, state or federal government
has fined them or jailed them or otherwise prosecuted them because of their opinions. But as the
Dixie Chicks will tell you, no such law applies to
the ticket-buying public and the pressure fans
REVIEW COMMENTARY
DANE HICKS, Publisher
might exert on the organizations and corporate
sponsors these folks depend on for a living.
The Chicks, afterall, got torpedoed by country
music fans who made their own voices clear to
the industry and then the industry shut down
on them. Its different in the National Football
League, where a lot of the money the 49ers make
comes from corporate sponsorship. Those corporations have traditionally been far more sensitive to minority issues, particularly because
of the unity with which minorities especially
blacks exert in such protests. The only core
of supporters the Chicks apparently had were
Europeans, who apparently dont buy a lot of
country music.
America is a charged debate environment
right now particularly in the area of race. Would
the situation be different if Kaepernick was
white? Would the situation in 2003 have been
different if the Dixie Chicks were black?
In the conjecture there are a handful of facts:
1) BLM supporters dont care about facts; details
of hands up dont shoot from Ferguson and
other high profile incidents have proven black
victims of police shootings are more likely to
get killed because theyre thugs than because
theyre black, but BLM couldnt give a hoot about
details; and 2) By far most Americans, Democrats
and Republicans and those in between, respect
the country despite its faults enough to stand for
its anthem.
There are many means of protest and there
are many ways to support causes we believe in,
whatever they are. We all have the right to have
the wrong opinion. To believe that right comes
at no cost is naivety.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEWS
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Record your comments on the topic of your choice at (785) 448-2500, press option 1. You do not need to
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Whats wrong with the squirrels in
Garnett? Theyre all so skinny. They look
undernourished. Is there a nut shortage in
Garnett or something?
I read the proposed published county budget and the line item for new hospital bond
and interest caught my attention. I am not
an accountant, but it appears the mill levy
is approximately 5 and the ad valorem
property tax for property owners is over
$453,000 for that item. I earlier read that
county government had been offered at
least $500,000 a year for probably 30 years
for a proposed wind farm in southeast
Anderson County that in addition to
the temporary permanent jobs, payments
to landowners, etc. That proposal would
appear to pay for the new hospital and
much more. This seems to be a logical
Obamacare stumbles and sputters on
For years, Obamacare supporters have
been telling critics of the law to shut up and
fall in line. Now, they are urging them to come
to its rescue.
A key part of President Barack Obamas
domestic legacy is sputtering so badly that
even the laws boosters are admitting that
the federal government needs to do more to
prop it up. The Obamacare exchanges were
supposed to enhance choices and hold down
costs — and are doing neither. Abandoned by
more and more insurers, the exchanges — once
billed as robust marketplaces — are becoming pitiful shadows of themselves.
In most or all of states like Alaska, Alabama,
Arizona, Florida, Missouri, Oklahoma, North
Carolina and Tennessee, probably only one
insurer will offer insurance through the
exchanges next year, reports The Wall Street
Journal. One large county in Arizona may
have no exchange insurer at all. An analysis
by the Kaiser Family Foundation finds that 31
percent of counties in the U.S. will have one
insurer, and another 31 percent will have just
two.
It isnt Republicans who are hobbling the
law. It isnt the greedy insurance companies,
which were overoptimistic about the exchanges at the outset and are now paying the price.
It is fundamental economic forces that the
laws architects blithely ignored. But econom-
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
ic incentives will not be mocked.
Obamacare regulations make health insurance more expensive and keep insurers from
conducting their business on a rational basis.
This means the exchanges are less attractive
to younger and healthier people and therefore
less economical for insurers. The mandate
was supposed to force healthier people to
buy insurance anyway, but it has proven too
weak, and subsidies were supposed to cover
the higher costs for poorer people, but they
are only a Band-Aid on spiraling costs.
The exchanges have created perverse
insurance products that feature the worst of
all worlds: They have high premiums and
high deductibles and copays, and limited networks of doctors. No wonder the exchanges
have attracted half as many people as they
were expected to. Leave it to the federal government to create a market so unappealing
that it is borderline unsustainable.
When Aetna announced last month that it
was exiting all but four state exchanges, liberals charged that the company was exacting
revenge on the Obama administration for
blocking its hoped-for merger with Humana.
But what accounts for UnitedHealthcare pulling back, and all the other exoduses? All
these insurers made a go of it on the exchanges before reality slapped them in the face.
Analysts expect the remaining insurers to ask
for big premium hikes next year.
The answer to this turbulence, the laws
supporters say, is yet more subsidies. But it
obviously makes no sense for the government
to make a product more expensive with one
hand and then to subsidize its cost with the
other. This was pointed out at the time the
law was being debated. But the Obama administration and its allies were too transfixed
with making history. And so they did — by
passing an Affordable Care Act that is one of
the great misnomers in the history of major
American legislation.
Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.
State will see new Supreme Court nominees this year
Kansas state governments equivalent of
the Catholic College of Cardinals may be moving into the spotlight this year.
What?
Yes, just as the College of Cardinals names
the Pope, and its announcement is marked by
a puff of white smoke rising above the Vatican,
the less well-known Kansas Supreme Court
Nominating Commission selects three candidates for open slots on the Kansas Supreme
Court, andwithout the puff of smokesends
those names to the governor who selects from
them a new member of the states highest
court.
Yes, we know the names of the four governor-appointed and five lawyer-selected members of the commission, but they vote in
secret, or at least have until the next vacancy
on the high court occurs. A law passed this
year will make public who voted for whom
for the governor to choose from for that black
robe and ultimate law-defining job.
So, whats the news?
Well, that lawyers in the 3rd Congressional
District have a new representative on the commission after Matthew Keenans term expired
and Lenin V. Guerra, of Olathe, was named
to fill the vacancy. He was the only candidate
nominated for the post and because there was
no opposition he was put on the commission
without a vote of the districts lawyers, and
very little is known about him.
That new appointment mightor might
notproduce a different trio of nominees for
high court seats. The might or might not
business is because nobody knows the vote of
STATE COMMENTARY
MARTIN HAWVER, At The Rail
commissioners on the last slate of nominees
handed the governor, back in 2014, when Gov.
Sam Brownback chose his former chief counsel, Caleb Stegall, for the court after the commission put him in a three-candidate bucket
for the governors selection.
For all of us who, when buying a new car,
tell the salesman that we dont need to see the
engine because we drive with the hood down,
this changes things.
Five Supreme Court justices stand for
retention election in November, and if any
of them is not retained, the Supreme Court
Nominating Commission gets to interview
candidates and send that list of three nominees to the governor for his selection.
There are campaigns under way to defeat
Supreme Court justicesthough the conservatives like Stegalland the composition of
the nominating commission will to a large
degree determine who might be new justices
who will interpret the law on issues including
the death penalty, school finance, abortion,
tax law, nearly every scrap that makes its way
from the district court to the court of appeals
to the high court.
And, there is a campaign under way to
retain the five justices so that the Supreme
Court Nominating Commission, and of course,
then the governor, doesnt change the makeup
of the high court.
The political presumption has always been
that the governor appoints nominating commission members who think like he does,
and lawyers elect their representatives who
think like they do. Weve never known for
sure because of the secrecy of the vote on the
commission, but thats the halltalk.
Soif you like the court and its decisions,
you want to keep those on it now, and vote to
retain them. If you want something different,
you mightor might notget it depending
on the legal/political tilt of the nominating
commission and the candidates it sends to the
governor.
All of a sudden, it looks like were going
to have to look at the motor of that new car,
though we probably arent going to be sure
what were looking at. It was simpler in the
day when we just chose cars by their color.
Syndicated by Hawver News Company LLC
of Topeka; Martin Hawver is publisher of
Hawvers Capitol Reportto learn more about
this nonpartisan statewide political news service, visit the website at www.hawvernews.com
approach to easing the tax burden property owners are facing in the future. It also
seems so strange that the same individuals
who supported a new hospital are now fighting a proposed wind farm.
I am appalled at the actions of this city
commission regarding the city manager.
Election time cant get here soon enough.
Whose name can we write in?
Perhaps if the Phone Forum utilized caller
IQ rather than caller ID thered be far fewer
fatuous phone calls.
Ill tell you what. If I was the city manager
and had put in 50 years working for this city
and putting up with all the guff you have
to when youre a city employee and everybody in town thinks theyre your boss, and
my city commissioners had just cast what
amounts to a no confidence vote in me, I
think Id be tempted to resign and walk out
the door and leave the whole damn thing
in their laps. Joyce Martin wont do that
because she is a person of integrity, but she
has every right to. Thank you.
This is in regard to the city manager and
the city commissioners. I thought the city
commissioners were to be representatives
of the citizens of the city? I guess since they
appointed each other at one time or another they would probably be sneaky and go
behind peoples backs. I am a citizen and
Im totally against their behavior and how
theyve done this. Shame on you.
Anderson County Commissioners: Enough
fire trucks already. What we really need are
some mowers and some people that know
how to use them on our county ditches and
intersections. These intersections are an
accident waiting to happen. Thank you.
We read the letter from an unhappy Garnett
Housing Authority resident, and we would
just like to say that we have lived in Park
Plaza North for more than four years now
and that we are quite happy with the Garnett
Housing Authority administration. We find
them efficient, cooperative, kind and helpful. We find that Park Plaza North accommodations and services are top notch. Its a
joy to live in this place. Garnett has a real
gem in this place for senior citizens.
How typical of Garnett, shoot your mouth
off in the Phone Forum before you have
done any research or have any backing
for your opinion whatsoever. To do that
would make you have to ask someone for
an answer, which would mean they knew
you asked the question, which would identify you to them, wouldnt it? Much better
to hide behind the Phone Forum and be an
ignorant idiot anonymously. The man in
question was volunteering, not getting paid
by the city or some under the table deal by
his wife. Try bothering to get some facts
before you shoot off your mouth. Thank
you.
To the man who wrote the letter last week
about how bad the housing authority manager is at Parkside Place. If you have your
panties in a wad at your landlord, heres a
tip for you: move out.
FORMERLY THE GARNETT PLAINDEALER, THE ANDERSON
COUNTY REPUBLICAN, THE REPUBLICAN-PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT
JOURNAL PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT REVIEW, THE GREELEY GRAPHIC,
THE ANDERSON COUNTIAN.
Published each Tuesday by Garnett Publishing, Inc.,
and entered as Periodicals Class mail at Garnett, Ks., 66032,
permit number 214-200. Copyright Garnett Publishing, Inc., 2016.
Postmaster: Send address corrections to:
The Anderson County Review
112 W. 6th Ave. P.O. Box 409 Garnett, KS 66032
(785) 448-3121review@garnett-ks.com
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 6, 2016
5A
LOCAL
Four Winds DAR Announces Junior American Citizen Contest
The Four Winds Chapter of
the Daughters of the American
Revolution is announcing the
Junior American Citizen (JAC)
contest that is open to all preschool through 12th grade students in public, private, or parochial schools, and in sanctioned
home study programs. Each
grade will be judged on three
levels: gifted, general, and special needs so that every child
may enter regardless of ability.
The contest is conducted without regard to race, religion, sex,
or national origin. However,
pre-school and kindergarten
students may participate only
in the banner and group community service project contests.
Youth groups, scout troops, 4-H
clubs, and other organizations
may submit entries. Entries do
not have to be done at school.
All entries must follow the
theme and meet the specifications of the category entered.
Students may enter as many
contests as they desire. Only
one individual entry per student
will advance to the State Level.
A group entry is three to five
students working together. The
average grade level of the group
will be used if group entries are
of different grade levels. Every
grade level is judged separately
within the three levels. The
ability of the student is never
disclosed.
Last year, as you may
recall, we had 40 local winners advance to the state competition, 15 won first place in
Kansas state competition, seven
won the South Central Division
(KS,MO, AR,OK,TX, and LA),
and all seven placed at the
National Level. What an honor
to have National Winners from
our chapter! We are looking
forward to the competition this
year Our National Parks: 100
Years of Service to America.
The Art Contest includes
four categories: poster, banner, stamp, and photographic
essay. A winner will be selected
in each grade level and category. Students may compete
as individuals only in poster,
stamp, and photo essay; in the
banner category groups of 3-5
students may enter. Art generated on the computer using clip
art, cut and paste technique, or
scanned images is not allowed.
Preschool and kindergarten
may participate in the banner
category only.
The Creative Expression
Contest includes two categories: poetry and short story.
Students compete as individuals only group entries are not
allowed. Pre-school and kindergarten students may not compete in the Creative Expression
Contest.
The Community Service
Project can be an individual
entry or a group entry (3-5 students) for students in pre K-12.
The 2016 theme is Our
National Parks: 100 Years of
Service to America. Students
are encouraged to think how
National Parks have been
so important in the life of
Americans for 100 years now.
The National Parks Service
(NPS) is an agency of the U.S.
Department of Interior which
has 412 parks, monuments, landmarks, battlefields, memorials,
and other sites in the United
States and U.S. Territories.
There are ten sites managed by
the NPS in Kansas. Students
may research and use any of
these sites in the contest of their
choice. How have these sites
been welcoming Americans for
100 years? What is special about
it? Why was it set aside for all
Americans to enjoy? How do
they help us celebrate America?
Be creative and have fun!
Lets get those creative juices flowing and let everyone
see what the future of America
looks like through the eyes
of the younger generations of
American Citizens! All budding
artists, creative photographers,
and aspiring writers now is
the time to enter this contest!
All entries are due by Nov. 17.
Local winners will advance
to the Kansas State Contest,
and winners keep advancing
through the SC States, and then
on to the national level. There
are awards at each level.
For more information and
the specific guidelines please
contact: Connie Becker, Four
Winds DAR JAC chair, 785-4892449 or csbrltiks06@wildblue.
net. All entries will be appreciated and will be returned to the
owner at the end of the contest.
Dont miss the 16th Annual
Greeley Smokeoff
Sept. 9-10 Downtown Greeley
Come join us at the
2x2Annual Greeley Smokeoff!
16th
bank greeley
4×9
greeley smokeoff
Stop by and see us
2×2
while enjoying the smokeoff!
greeley quick s
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
Enjoy the great BBQ and fun at the Smokeoff!
2×2
mike weiderhol
1110 E. 23rd St
Lawrence, KS
Cell (785) 760-5054
Office (785) 843-8444
www.heritagetractor.com
Michael Wiederholt
Salesman
mwiederholt@hertitagetractor.com
Legendary Products. Extraordinary Service. Thats Our Heritage
Have fun
2×2
at the
brummel
Greeley
Smokeoff!
BRUMMEL
8th & Oak St.
Garnett, KS 66032
785-448-5720
Farm Service
Good Luck BBQ Teams.
2×2
Enjoy the Smokeoff!
sandras
Sandra & Terry Zook
24963 NE 169 Hwy
Junction 59/169 Garnett
(785) 448-6602
Come and enjoy
2×2 the Greeley Smokeoff!
taylor forge
122 N. Perry Ave.
Greeley, KS 66033
Enjoy the fun & BBQ
2×2
at the Greeley Smokeoff!
page electrical
913-898-4722
Parker, Kansas
Get Caught Smokn at the
2×2 Greeley Smokeoff
gpi
2×2
dornes
Enjoy the Greeley Smokeoff!
111 E. 4th Ave.
Garnett, Kansas
785-448-2284
Patriots Bank Bldg.
Princeton, Kansas
785-937-2269
Dornes Insurance Agency
dornesinsurance@aceks.com
www.dornesinsurance.com
Proud to Support the Greeley Smokeoff!
2×2
r&r equip
114 E. Brown St. Greeley, KS 785-867-2600
2355 Locust Rd. Fort Scott, KS 620-223-2450
16242 S. 1700 Rd. Nevada, MO 417-448-1745
208 N. Iron St.
Paola, KS 66071
See us AS USUAL for seed this fall!
2×2
greenbush
Peoples Choice – Vote Saturday from 12 – 2 p.m. in City Hall
Enjoy the great food & fun
2x2at the Greeley Smokeoff!
page enterprise
Enjoy the Greeley Smokeoff!
2×2 Open Thursday Nights till 7pm
beckman
BECKMAN MOTORS
North Hwy. 59 in Garnett, KS (785) 448-5441
Visit our used car/truck online showroom www.beckmanmotorsinc.com
See dealer for current incentives.
6A
Crimson Dancers
attend dance camp
The ACHS Crimson Dancers
Dance Team attended the
Universal Dance Association
dance camp in Coffeyville July
17-20th and turned in a stellar performance! The dancers
brought home a total of 2 trophies, A Leadership Award, 27
Blue ribbons, Spirits Sticks,
and All-American and Pin It
Forward Awards.
The squad of 10 dancers
was voted the recipient of
the 2016 Leadership Award
, an honor given to a squad
by other teams attending for
demonstrating leadership and
good sportsmanship all week.
They were also presented with
a Blue Ribbon and second place
trophy for their home routine
performance. Additionally, the
Crimson Dancers received a
Superior Trophy for earning all
Blue ribbons on their individual performances. These ribbons are earned during last day
on individual evaluations for
routines learned every day of
camp. Each dancer is responsible for learning 3 routines
and is expected to then perform
each of those for the instructors. The instructors then
award a blue, red or white ribbon based on that performance.
Each ribbon color is given a
point value. All the ribbons
are then added up and an average ribbon point is then given
to the team as a whole. The
teams with the highest average
receive a Superior trophy.
Other awards the squad
received were the Camp
Spirit Stick and the traditional Spirit Sticks. The Camp
Spirit Stick is given the first
night of camp by the instructors and gets passed on to a
different team each night. The
Crimson Dancers were the
first to receive the Camp Spirit
Stick this year. The traditional
Spirit Stick is awarded at the
end of every day of camp by
the instructors to squads who
have shown great teamwork,
respect, and attitude. The
ACHS Dance Team received
Spirit Sticks every evening of
camp.
Senior and Co-Captain,
Katelyn Alley and Junior,
Lexee Feuerborn were chosen
as All-Americans. Only 10%
in attendance at each camp is
selected as an All-American.
Both have been invited to participate in the London New
Years Day Parade before one
million spectators lining the
parade route. Katelyn and
Lexee as well as Lakin Katzer
were Pin It Forward Recipients
receiving the pins from fellow
dancers for their hard work,
friendliness and helpfulness
toward other dancers.
We are extremely proud of
these young ladies. They set
many goals and have pushed
themselves very hard this summer with choreography and
technique. They think and
act like a team and it showed
in their performance at camp.
For all their hard work, they
deserve these awards. We are
all excited to have started the
school year and to begin performing.
This years squad has 5
new and 5 returning members.
New Indoor Range
2×2
NOW OPEN
gun guys uns
Ladies Day
Every Tuesday!
es of G
ALL Mak Ammo
r
Arche y sses
CC H C la
785-418-0711
412 S. Main St.,Ottawa
Mon-Fri 10-8 Sat 10-6 Sun 12-6
thegunguys@yahoo.com
6×10.5
ach
LOCAL
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-6-2016 / Photo Submitted
The Anderson County High School Crimson Dancers Dance
Team, pictured above, includes, front row from left: Katelyn Alley
and Kelsey Riley; back row: Grace McAdam, McKenzie Evans,
Cami Burns, Lakin Katzer, Alison Owens, Caitlin Weirich, Lexee
Feuerborn and Elly Trumbly. At right are All-American Dancers,
co-captain Katelyn Alley at left and Lexee Feuerborn.
Captains are Senior Katelyn
Alley and Junior McKenzie
Evans.The Crimson Dancers
practice throughout the year
and perform at every high
school Varsity Boys football
and basketball half time and
other high school and commu-
nity events. They also conduct
an annual youth dance clinic
for Grades K-6. This is Eileen
Burns fourteenth year coaching the dance team and Renee
Duke returns this year to pick
up on her fourth year.
Business Cards Car Magnets
Project Bid Forms More!
You name it,
we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 6, 2016
1B
B
Section
CALENDAR
Tuesday, September 6
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club
at Garnett Inn and Suites
1 p.m. – ACHS girls golf at Piper
4:30 p.m. – ACHS JV football
at Prairie View
5 p.m. – ACHS volleyball at home
with Nevada, Fort Scott
5 p.m. – Crest volleyball at
St. Paul
5 p.m. – Central Heights volleyball
at home with West Franklin
5 p.m. – Central Heights JV
football at home with
Mission Valley
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Optimist
Club at Mr. Ds Pioneer
Restaurant
7 p.m. – Mont Ida Open House
Wednesday, September 7
10:30 a.m. – Kincaid Community
Library Family Story Time
1 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
5:30 p.m. – USD 365 Booster
Club
5:30 p.m. – GES Site Council
6 p.m. – GES PTO
7 p.m. – Colony Lions Club at
Colony United Methodist
Church
7 p.m. – Kincaid Lions Club at
Kincaid-Selma United
Methodist Church
Thursday, September 8
3 p.m. – ACHS Cross Country
at Santa Fe Trail Invitational
4 p.m. – ACJH football at Santa
Fe Trail
4 p.m. – ACJH volleyball at home
with Osawatomie
4:30 p.m. – ACHS freshmen
football at Prairie View
4:30 p.m. Central Heights MS
volleyball at Lyndon
4:30 p.m. Central Heights MS
football at Lyndon
6 p.m. – 13 Point Pitch and
snacks at the Garnett
Senior Center
7 p.m. – Westphalia Open House
Friday, September 9
7 p.m. – ACHS football at home
with West Franklin
7 p.m. – Central Heights football
at home with Eureka
7 p.m. – Crest football at Marmaton
Valley
Saturday, September 10
8 a.m. – ACHS freshmen volleyball
at Prairie View Invitational
8:30 a.m. – ACHS varsity volleyball
at Iola Invitational
8:30 a.m. – Crest JV volleyball at
Marmaton Valley
9 a.m. – ACHS cross country at
Wamego Invitational
Monday, September 12
9 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission at the Anderson
County Annex
9 a.m. – 2:30 p.m. – Friendship
Quilters at the Kincaid-Selma
United Methodist Church
4 p.m. – Greeley PTO/Site Council
4 p.m. – ACJH volleyball at home
with Santa Fe Trail
6 p.m. – ACHS JV football at
West Franklin
6 p.m. Central Heights PTA
6-8:30 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery,
Garnett Church of the Nazarene
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Lions Club
at VFW
6:30 p.m. – Webelos 1 & 2
(fourth & fifth grades) Den Club
Scouts meeting
7 p.m. – Crest School Board
7:30 p.m. – Kincaid Masonic Lodge
No. 338
Tuesday, September 13
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club,
at Garnett Inn and Suites
5 p.m. – Crest volleyball at
Marais des Cygnes Valley
5 p.m. – Central Heights volleyball
at Mission Valley
1802 1/2 East St.,
IOLA
More information:
(620) 365-2255
or visit
www.bbtheatres.com
Americas
Oldest
Cinema
community
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 6, 2016
Boy Scouts have Summer of Adventure
Boy Scouts of Troop 126,
Garnett are closing out a full
summer of activities and
adventure!
Summer pursuits started in
May with a contingent of Troop
126 Mic O Say representatives
attending the annual Tribal
Celebration weekend at the H
Roe Bartle Scout Reservation
near Osceola, Missouri. The
weekend of fellowship for the
Tribesmen kicked off the 2016
camping season on the reservation.
The troop continued their
annual Memorial Day flag service project, placing over 200
flags on military veterans
graves at the Garnett Cemetery.
In June, seventeen scouts
and five adult leaders returned
to the Bartle Scout Reservation
to spend ten days in Camp
Sawmill. Troop 126 Scouts
earned over 70 merit badges
while expanding their confidence and proficiency in outTHE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-6-2016 / Photo Submitted
Scouts take time out of their busy schedules to pose at their camp
site
entrance at H Roe Bartle Scout Reservation.
Nathan Wiltsey (left) completes his Eagle Scout Service Project along the Prairie Spirit Trail with the
help of his fellow Eagle Scouts.
door skills. Paint elevations/
duties in the Tribe of Mic O
Say included one Brave, five
Warriors, one Tom-Tom Beater
and one Keeper of the Sacred
Bundle as well as two new
Foxmen from Troop 126 while
attending first session.
Also in June, five Scouts and
three adult leaders piloted the
Headwaters of the Mississippi
River to complete the 50 Miler
Award. The five day, four
night trip covered 73 miles
through waterways and lakes
of Minnesota.
July proved a very busy
month for our troop as well
as individual Scouts. Nathan
Wiltsey
completed
his
Eagle Scout Service Project,
Scoutmaster Conference and
Board of Review to earn his
Eagle Rank. The troop camped
at the Red Jacket Corner
Campsite and provided the flag
ceremony, concessions support
and clean-up for the Tractor
Pull. They also marched in the
Fair Parade along with Cub
Scout Pack 3126. Troop 126
sponsored a weekend Leave No
Trace/Tread Lightly Trainers
School for Twin Rivers District.
Seven Scouts and three adult
leaders earned their LNT/
TL Trainer certifications as
well as Outdoor Awareness
Awards. Three scouts complet-
ed the Mile Swim
patch in July, while
others completed
a fifty mile ride on
the Prairie Spirit
Trail to finish their
Cycling merit badge.
Merit
Badge
Conferences were
attended by various troop members traveling to
St Louis, Missouri;
Springfield,
Illinois; Little Rock,
Arkansas; Kansas
Sea Base at Blue
Valley Yacht Club,
and the Tecumseh
Conference
at
Shawnee Heights
High School. Troop
126 has also continued to complete rank
advancements and
perform community service projects
throughout the summer.
The troop will
close out their summer schedule kayaking, canoeing, swimming and camping at
Hillsdale Lake. We Scouts travel the rails to earn their
welcome boys ages Railroading merit badge.
11 (completed 5th
grade)-18 to join us
at our next scheduled meeting the Garnett Optimist Building
at 1pm on September 11th at – North Lake.
Tenderfoot Scout Ty Hedrick practicing the Scout Law of Reverance
while placing flags at the Garnett Cemetery.
Scouts end their journey on the Mississippi Headwaters at Cass
Lake, MN.
Library to discuss The All-Girl Filling Stations Last Reunion
The Garnett Public Library
will hold their book discussion on Wednesday, September
28th at 7 p.m. in the Archer
Room at the library. They are
held on the fourth Wednesday
of each month. This months
book is The All-Girl Filling
Stations Last Reunion by
Fannie Flagg. Flagg author of
Fried Green Tomatoes at the
Whistle Stop Caf, Cant Wait
to Get to Heaven, and I Still
1×2
AD
Movie MuseuM open 1-4 p.M.
For show times visit our website
plazacinemagicexperience.com
209 S. Main, Historic Downtown Ottawa
Cinema Line 785.242.0777
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
Dream About You, is at her
hilarious and superb best in
this new comic mystery novel
about two women who are
forced to reimagine who they
are. Leading our discussion
will be Paulabeth Henderson.
Mrs. Sookie Poole of Point
Clear, Alabama, has just married off the last of her daughters and is looking forward to
relaxing and perhaps traveling with her husband, Earle.
2×2
diy
The only thing left to contend
with is her mother, the formidable Lenore Simmons
Krackenberry. Lenore may be
a lot of fun for other people,
but is, for the most part, an
overbearing presence for her
daughter. Then one day, quite
by accident, Sookie discovers a
secret about her mothers past
that knocks her for a loop and
suddenly calls into question
everything she ever thought
she knew about herself, her
family, and her future.
Fabulous, fun-filled, spanning decades and generations, and centered on a little-known aspect of Americas
twentieth-century story, The
All-Girl Filling Stations Last
Reunion is another irresistible novel by the remarkable
Fannie Flagg. The books are
available for checkout at the
library. Notification is posted
in case of cancellation.
Garnett Area Chamber of Commerce
CITY WIDE GARAGE SALES
Saturday, September 10, 2016
2×3
Get maps at the Chamber Office, 131 W. 5th, Garnett & on the website www.garnettchamber.org
gacc
Hastert – 21243 NW Hwy. 31
Sjorlund + – 22586 NW 1840 Rd.
McAdams + – 809 S. Westgate Rd.
Simpson – 809 W. 3rd
Barnes – 307 N. Cleveland
Patterson + – 61 Leewood Lane
Donovan + – 225 W. 4th Ave.
Hermann + – Quonset Hut
Hicks – 105 Park Plaza North, Apt. 20
Simpson – 315 Jackson
Houston – 345 E. Monroe
Threewitt – 235 N. Orange
Benjamin – 315 N. Orange
Hodgson – Corner of Park Rd. & Spruce
Stoltzfus – 601 E. Park Rd.
Lytle/TLC – 1662 S. Maple
Tucker + – 24896 S. Hwy. 169
Bauman + – 57868 NW Kentucky Rd.
2B
Ball is 1-Mile Champion at run
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 6, 2016
BUSINESS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-6-2016 / Photo Submitted
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-6-2016 / Photo Submitted
Lisa Ball of Welda was the 1 mile Champion in the Border Queen
Run at the Sumner County Fair on August 7 in Caldwell.
Garnett Mayor Greg Gwin read a proclamation proclaiming September 16, 2016 as National POW/MIA Recognition Day as members of
the local VFW Post 6397 looked on. Pictured left to right: Clarence Hermann, Paula Scott, Mayor Gwin, and Mark Magner.
Scholarship available to pay
How to become for ACHS vocational classes
word of mouth
Ive heard for decades that
word of mouth advertising is
the best kind. I dont know
that its the best because it
takes so long to reach a huge
audience, but it certainly is
more likely to directly generate a sale. So how do you
become a business customers
love to speak well of? I gleaned
these tips from Janet Attard at
Businessknowhow.com:
Basically it comes down to
making people love you.
1) Your product or service
has to be outstanding. Know
what youre doing, and dont
allow someone to represent
you who doesnt. Under promise and over deliver to every
customer, no matter what.
2) Dont be a Scrooge. You
have to be friendly, even when
you dont feel like it. If people
dont like you, theyll always
minimize your recommendation no matter how good you
are. If you dont have charisma
or cant fake it, put yourself in
the back of the shop and hire
someone bubbly to work with
customers.
3) Return calls promptly.
Dont answer questions with
facts and technical talk thats
above your customers head.
Apologize when customers complain, even if theyre
wrong.
4) Always say thank you.
Do it over the counter, make
sure your employees say it, and
boost the magic with a handwritten card to new or returning customers.
Ho
HOW TO SELL STUFF
USD 365 Endowment plans
support of the vocational classes offered at ACHS.
USD 365 students enrolled
in CNA, HVAC and Welding
classes will be able to apply for
a scholarship that will fund the
enrollment fee.
The following have pledged
their support:
5) Communicate with your
customers regularly via email.
Dont spam them with sales
pitches all the time look for
interesting notes about your
industry or theirs or more general news events that apply
to them like new legislation
affecting business or possible
economic news from which
they can benefit. At the bottom, ask them to share the
email with anyone they think
it might help.
6) Dont be shy to ask if
you may use a customers
comments in your promotions
when someone praises you, and
make the most out of any positive publicity your company
receives add footnotes about
it to your billing invoices,
email, letterhead, voice mail,
etc.
Dane Hicks is president of
Garnett Publishing, Inc., and
publisher of The Anderson County
Review. Comments or questions
may be directed to him at review@
garnett-ks.com or (785) 448-3121.
St. Rose School 520 E. 4th Ave.
ize plans and the application
will be available to students at
school the following week.
For questions or if you wish
to support our local students,
please call Connie Rockers
at 785-867-3503 or 785-4484347.
USD 365 Endowment
Association is a 501c3 organization.
You name it, we print it.
Dane Hicks
Review Publisher
els Church Fall Ba
g
n
A
za
ly
Genco Manufacturing
Guest Home Estates
Golden Heights
Goppert State Bank
Rockers Insurance Agency
USD 365 Endowment
Wolken Electric and
Plumbing Inc.
The Endowment will meet
Sept. 1, 2016 at 6:30 pm to final-
ar
(Handicapped parking available in the back of the school)
Dinner served from 11:00 am until 2:00 pm
Sunday, September 11, 2016
Turkey, Roast Beef, Homemade
Noodles, Mashed Potatoes, Green
Beans, Apple Salad, Sauerkraut,
Homemade Bread & Homemade Pies.
Craft/Bake Sale
$9.00 Adults $5.00 for 10 and under
$10.00 take out meals
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
ANDERSON
COUNTY
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Check your local area businesses first – keep your local dollars at home!
4×12.5
business MIKE
direct
HERMRECK
DIGITAL COPIERS
Sales & Service
COLOR PRINTERS
NETWORK PRINTERS
NETWORK SCANNERS
FACSIMILE
(785) 448-5856
110 W. 5th Ave. Garnett
Tues. – Thur. 11 a.m. – 11 p.m.
Fri. & Sat. 11 a.m. – 2 a.m.
Daily Specials
Lunch Delivery M-F
BECKMAN MOTORS
North Hwy. 59 in Garnett, KS
Current Rebate
$2000
CARPETING
SERVICE
448-3720
Carpet – Vinyl
Laminate – Hardwood
Ceramic & VC Tile
See dealer for
additional rebates.
(785) 448-6122
429 N. Maple Next to Country Mart
(785) 448-5441
Patriots Bank Bldg.
Princeton
(785) 937-2269
E-Statements &
Online Banking
The TV Shoppe
Reliable, Dependable, Consistent
Always There Always Caring
Jo Wolken E.A., A.T.A.
IRAs
Mutual Funds
Investments
Aaron Lizer
Agent
Continuing to serve
you after 31 years.
Hours:
785-448-3056
Mon. – Fri. 8:30 a.m. – 10 a.m.
www.taxtimetaxserviceinc.com
HELPING YOU PLAN
TODAY FOR TOMORROW
120 S. Maple PO Box 66 Garnett, KS 66032
Phone: (785) 448-6125 Cell: (785) 448-4428
Fax: (785) 448-5878
Garnett Colony Hepler
Ottawa Pomona
St. Paul Walnut
On-the-Farm Service Alignments
Mon – Fri
8:00am
601 South Oak
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3212
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Please call 785-448-5931
after 10 a.m. and
leave Tony a message.
Millers Construction, Inc.
Anderson
County
News
Country
Favorites
Country
Favorites
Anderson County News
Mon-Fri 8:00am.
111 E. 4th Ave.
Garnett
(785) 448-2284
Garnett, KS
Since 1980
Delden Doors & Openers
We sell & service these
brands & more.
Call for quotes & details.
Everett Miller (785) 448-6788
Rodney Miller (785) 448-3085
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Has Your Foundation Let You Down?
Serving your area since 1969
Waterproofing Epoxy Injection
Straighten & Stabilize Walls
Solid Piering & Leveling
TAYLOR BROTHERS CONSTRUCTION
Foundation Repair Residential and Commercial
785-242-7477
Ralph Taylor Ottawa, KS
To advertise in this
directory contact Stacey at
785-448-3121.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 6, 2016
I believe in happy endings
About the only TV I watch
is old westerns. They seem
to have enough suspense and
drama for me and almost
always have a happy ending.
The Bible is full of stories about
happy and sad endings. In
Acts 8:26-40 we read the story
of Philip and the Ethiopian.
Philip was told by an angel of
the Lord to leave Samaria and
go to Gaza. So Philip started
out and he met an Ethiopian
eunuch who was an important
official in charge of all the treasury of the queen of Ethiopia.
The man had gone to
Jerusalem to worship and was
on his way home riding in a
chariot. He was reading from
the book of Isaiah and was confused by what he was reading.
The man was returning home
from Jerusalem, the then religious capital of the world, but
without much understanding.
He was reading from Isaiah 53
which details the crucifixion
of Jesus. Philip asked the man
if he understood what he was
reading. The Ethiopian replied,
How can I, unless someone
explains it to me. Philip then
began with that passage of
scripture and told him the good
news about Jesus. We are told
that after explaining the passage to the Ethiopian he was
baptized by Philip and went on
his way rejoicing.
We read a very different
story in Luke 18:18-30. A rich
young ruler asks Jesus; Good
teacher what must I do to inherit eternal life? Jesus points
the man back to the commandments, (Deuteronomy. 5:1-21)
and the man confirms he has
kept them since he was a boy.
Jesus knowing the mans heart
says, You still lack one thing.
Sell everything you have and
give to the poor, and you will
have treasure in heaven. Then
come follow me. We read the
man walked away very sad for
he was very rich.
You and I are faced with a
decision. To come follow Jesus
or not. A no decision is a decision not to follow. There is
a day in our future when the
decision will matter. That is
the day we will die. Death
is the end of our time here
on earth but as Christians we
do not believe this is the end.
Model T
Club to meet
The East Central Kansas
Model T Club, a chapter of
the National Model T Ford
Club of America will hold
their monthly meeting at 6:30
p.m. Thursday, September
15 at the Burlington Library.
Please bring a snack to share
as we gather before the meeting. Owning a Model T is not
required. The public is always
welcome to join us and meet
others of like interest. For
additional information call
Bud Redding at 785-733-2124.
Wedding, Engagement,
Anniversary & Birth
Announcements
Business News
3B
LOCAL
WEEKLY
DEVOTIONAL
By David Bilderback
It is not difficult to determine
our position. Is your hand
clasped in Jesus hand, like the
Ethiopian or is it clasped tight
around something else, like the
rich young ruler? Its the difference between a happy or a
sad ending.
David Bilderback: A Ministry
on the Holiness of God.
What in the world is a squidger?
One of my latest excavation
finds sure had me stumped as
to what it was. After researching,I found it to be a squidger. What in the world is a
squidger?
How many of you remember the game Tiddlywinks?
A squidger also known as a
disc was used to shoot small
discs called winks. Winks
came in four colors: Red and
blue are always partners
against green and yellow.
There are six winks of each
DIGGING UP THE PAST
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 448-6244 for
local archeology information.
color.
Tiddlywinks is an indoor
game first played in 1888. It
22nd Annual
POWER OF
THE PAST
Antique Engine & Tractor Show
Sept. 9-11 in Ottawa
POWER
OF THE
3×5 PAST
AD
Win this 1941 Model
70 Oliver Tractor!
is played on a flat felt mat
with sets of small discs
called winks, a pot, which
is the target, and a collection of squidger, which are
also discs. Player so use a
squidger to shoot a wink
into flight by flicking the
squidger across the top of a
wink and then over its edge,
thereby propelling it into the
air. The offensive objective of
the game is to score points by
sending your own winks into
the pot. The defensive objec-
Have fun at the Antique Engine & Tractor Show!
2×3
AD
Suttons Jewelry
207 S. Main Downtown Ottawa
2×3
(785) 242-3723
ADDiamonds Rubies Sapphires
Other Gemstone Jewelry
Gold and Sterling Silver Jewelry
22nd ANNUAL
Antique Engine &
Tractor Show
Friday Saturday Sunday
September 9, 10, 11, 2016
Forest Park Ottawa, Kansas
Check out our website:
www.suttonsjewelryinc.com
Family Owned
Since 1950
Jewelry Repairs
Tues – Fri 10am – 5:30pm
done on location
Sat 10am – 2pm Closed Sun & Mon
Will open with appointment.
Featuring: Oliver Hart-Parr Tractors & Fairbanks Morse Engines
All tractor brands welcome!
HORSE DRAWN WAGON RIDES HAY BALING
HORSE-POWERED HAY BALING (SAT & SUN)
CIDER MAKING LOG SAWING
KIDDIE TRACTOR PULL (SAT Pre-registration 9:30am)
AUCTION DONATED ITEMS (SAT 10:30am) HOMEMADE ICE CREAM MAKING
CORN GRINDING THRESHING ROCK CRUSHING
MAKE WOOD SHINGLES CRAFT AND FLEA MARKET
MUSIC ON GROUNDS – Odds & Ends Band – Sat. 5-7 p.m.
tive of the game is to prevent
your opponents from potting
their winks by squopping
them: shooting your own
winks to land on top of your
opponents winks.
Tiddlywinks is sometimes
considered a simple minded,
frivolous childrens game,
rather than a strategic, adult
game. However, the modern
competitive adult game made
a strong comeback at the
University of Cambridge in
1955.
Have fun at the Antique
Engine and Tractor Show!
2×3
ADSee Rod at Dales Body Shop
No Dogs Please.
ANTIQUE TRACTOR AND ENGINE SHOW 7AM TO DUSK
Parade of Power Each Day 2 p.m.
FREE Ham & Bean Feed Friday Evening w/paid admission No setup for vendors till Sept. 8th
Church Service Sunday 8:30am Breakfast Friday, Saturday & Sunday Mornings 7-9am
ADMISSION: $3 for ALL THREE DAYS
For more information call:
(785) 418-2190; Dave, Gas Engines – (785) 241-0834
Craft Show/Flea Market – (785) 241-0834
www.powerofthepast.net
3×5
AD
Send it in…
ONLINE
Go to www.garnett-ks.com
and click one of the forms
under Submit News.*
Its quick & easy!
* Photos need to be emailed separately to
garnett-ks.com
1111 E. 23rd St.
3313 Nebraska Terrace
Lawrence, KS 66046
Ottawa, KS 66067
785-843-2676
785-242-1463
www.mcconnellmachineryco.com
for all your auto body needs!
4B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 6, 2016
LOCAL
FOR RENT
REAL ESTATE
HELP WANTED
SERVICES
SERVICES
AUTOS
4 bedroom – 2 bath, very clean,
CH&AC. $675 per month, (785)
418-5435.
ag16tf
Built in 1901 – by the town
Banker, this 3-4 bedroom,
3 bath Victorian is located at 906 Liberty in charming Oskaloosa. Wrap around
porch, new kitchen, new baths,
new siding, pcket dors, stained
glass windows, original woodwork, auxiliary wood furnace,
full dry basement, fireplace,
garage and much more. Home
has been renovated from top
to bottom in the last 8 years.
30 minutes to Lawrence and
Topeka. Dont miss this chance
of a lifetime to own this timeless beauty! See pictures at
www.piafriend.com. Darrell
Mooney, Pia Friend Realty,
(785) 393-3957.
**ap12**
Drivers – amazing pay package.
Bonuses and great home time.
Full/PT, lots of miles. Free life
insurance + new equipment.
CDL-A (855) 765-3331.
sp6t4*
Convoy Systems is hiring
Class A drivers to run from
Kansas City to the west coast.
Home Weekly! Great Benefits!
www.convoysystems.com Call
Tina ext. 301 or Lori ext. 303
1-800-926-6869.
Driver Trainees Needed!
Become a driver for Stevens
Transport! Earn $800 Per Week
Paid CDL Training! Stevens
covers all costs! 1-888-749-2303
drive4stevens.com
Tutor – all subjects, all levels.
Hourly rate negotiable. (785)
204-2002.
sp6t2
Come See Why Country Clipper
Stands Out
Westphalia, KS 785-893-1620
OPEN Mon. – Fri. Sat. by Appointment
The City of Garnett, Kansas
is taking sealed bids for a
2010 Dodge Charger Hemi
with 140,000 miles. Bids must
be received by midnight on
September 9, 2016. Submit
bids to City of Garnett, P.O.
Box H, Garnett, KS 66032.
Vehicle can be seen at
131 W. 5th, Garnett, KS.
Questions about vehicle,
call 785-448-6823
or 785-448-1641.
AUTOS
MISCELLANEOUS
REAL ESTATE
For sale by owner – 14.2 acres,
wooded, 2 water meters, electricity, fruit trees, metal barn
with concrete floor (24×40 with
10×12 overhead door on front
side and sliding door on side).
Hay shed, misc. buildings,
small pond and spring. (785)
615-1413 after 1pm $89,000.
*ag16*
Newly listed: Nice 3 BR
home on 3/4 acre—-EDGE of
Lecompton! Do you like to sit
on a big porch and listen to
birds instead of neighbors?
Do you like to grow your own
food? If so, this home could be
for you. Located on the edge
of lecompton on 3/4 acre, this
home features 3 BR, 2 bath,
big front porch, many vegetable gardens, flower gardens,
fruit trees, etc. Home also has
a wood stove in addition to
Central heat/air. Live the Self
Sustained Lifestyle you have
been dreaming about!! $132,000
Contact Darrell Mooney at Pia
Friend Realty. 785-393-3957.
More pictures at www.piafriend.com
**ap26**
1×3
schulte
MOBILE HOMES
Lenders Offering $0 down
for land owners Roll your New
Home and Land Improvements
into One Package. Discount
National Pricing on Breeze
II Doublewide and our 60th
Anniversary
Singlewide.
Trade-ins Welcome!! 866-8586862
Semi driver – wanted for local
deliveries. Hazmat & CDL
required. Apply in person at
Taylor Oil, 504 Main Street,
Wellsville, KS (78) 883-2072.
ag30t4
Laborers & Operators needed – valid drivers required. Call
(913) 898-4722.
ag30t2
Low Cost Conservation Tree and Shrub Seedlings
2×2 Kansas Forest Service
Fall orders, now through October 14th.
kpa ks forest
Containerized Seedlings – Shipped to Your
1×3
Part-time
Deli & Grocery Clerks
Dales Electrical Service
dales
Richmond, KS
SERVICES
Scott Stiles
Sales Representative
BECKMAN MOTORS
2×2
kpa ksu drone
BECOME A FAA
701 N. Maple Garnett
Cell 913-731-8900
Bus. 785-448-5441
Toll Free 1-800-385-5441
www.beckmanmotorsinc.com
stantonstiles@hotmail.com
SEPTEMBER 19-23
www.KansasForests.org
$ 50.00 per
Register Today!
1-888-740-8733
Unit plus S/H
785-826-2633
polytechnic.k-state.edu/profed/suas
Photo by USFS Region 5
Do you or a loved one STRUGGLE on the stairs?
We have the AFFORDABLE solution!
2×2
kpa acorn
MENTION THIS AD FOR
1×2
garnett
Hot Water – pressure washers
new or reconditioned. See one
at R&R Equipment in Greeley
or call Wholesale Washer Co.,
(620) 583-2421.
ag23t8*
Hardy fall garden mums Keims Greenhouse, 10 miles
west on Hwy. 31. (785) 218-1785
or (785) 448-7108. Sale barn on
Tuesdays.
ag30t5
DIRECTV. NFL Sunday Ticket
(FREE!) w/Choice All-Included
Package. $60/mo for 24 months.
No upfront costs or equipment
to buy. Ask about next day
installation! 1- 800-261-7086
DISH TV 190 channels plus
Highspeed Internet Only
$49.94/mo! Ask about a 3 year
price guarantee & get Netflix
included for 1 year! Call Today
1-800-676-6809
Life Alert. 24/7. One press
of a button sends help FAST!
Medical, Fire, Burglar. Even if
you cant reach a phone! Free
Brochure. Call 800-605-3619
Anderson
County
news
DAILY
at
8
a.m.
KOFO
1220
AM
JB Construction
2×2
jb const
CERTIFIED DRONE PILOT
A PART 107 TRAINING COURSE
Hopper bottom company with regional, dedicated
runs, home on weekends. Benefits include, paid
vacation, health insurance and safety incentive bonus.
Call Dan @ 620-437-6616 or
send request for application by email to
dredding@rctruckinginc.com
Im here to find you
the perfect vehicle.
1×3
AD
MAKE MONEY
USE THE
CLASSIFIEDS!!
Units of 25 Seedlings
2×2
WELL
CDL DRIVERS WANTED!!!
rcQUALIFIED
trucking
Hecks Small Engine Repair
785-418-6050
Check out our
Monthly Specials
Printing: Business cards, custom envelopes, statements,
forms customized to your
specific needs; flyers to promote your business or event.
Custom rubber stamps, printed balloons, pens, custom wall
or desk plaques. 4 color brochures, 4 color flyers or cards
printed and direct mailed to
your most likely customers.
Anderson Countys full-service
printer for 150 years, Garnett
Publishing, Inc., 112 W. 6th in
Garnett. (785) 448-3121, admin@
garnett-ks.com. Call for a quote
today.
fb02tfn
Joystick or Twin Stick Steering
Patented Stand-Up Deck For Easy Maintenance
All Welded Steel Decks
3/5 Year Limited Warranty
Jonsered Tillers, Walk Mowers,
Tractor Mowers, Trimmers in Stock
1×4
STILES
Residential & Light Commercial
Country Mart
425 N. Maple Garnett
See store manager
for details.
House or Picked Up at Manhattan
Order online or call
(913) 594-2495
1×2
Experience preferred.
country
Apply in person at
HELP WANTED
1×3
ryter
1×2
hecks
Decks
Siding
Pole Buildings
Joe Borntreger
(785) 448-8803 joeborntreger@yahoo.com
2×4
kpa qsi
$250 OFF*
PURCHASE OF A NEW STAIRLIFT!
*Certain restrictions apply.
CALL NOW
TOLL-FREE
1-800-978-5840
Anderson County Clean-Up Week
DOING WHAT WE SAY SINCE 1935.
SEE FOR YOURSELF.
SIGN-ON BONUSES UP TO $7,500
AVAILABLE IN YOUR AREA!
Opportunities available in these divisions
VAN | INTERMODAL | DEDICATED
Team and Solo | Regional and Over-the-Road
COMPANY DRIVER BENEFITS
$6,000 tuition reimbursement | Paid orientation and ongoing training
Medical, dental and vision insurance and 401(k) plan
2×4
kpa and co
Anderson County residents will be allowed to
enginer
unload
waste at the County Transfer Station free
of charge with the following exceptions:
Regular price for tire disposal
Regular price for contractors & commercial haulers
All waste must be separated & deposited
in their appropriate locations.
Recyclable materials accepted free of charge aluminum cans, tin cans, glass, cardboard, plastics,
newspapers, magazines, junk mail, used motor oil,
lead-acid batteries and electronic waste (TVs,
computers, phones, electronic games, etc.).
See www.andersoncountyks.org for more information.
Please have proof of residency at time
of dumping,
it will
new.ads.multiple_Layout
1 10/10/12
1:24 be
PM required!
Page 8
Now Offering Clear Spans up to 150'
2×4
kpa jg wentworth
Sell to
Colo
ny
29,000
$ 695
eley
Gre
2×5
ett
GarnAD
customers
for only
dw
a
a
taw
Oska
Ad Start Date:
The New Standard in Size and Strength
Now offering Hybrid Buildings engineered for clear spans up to
150. Hybrid buildings offer the best of both worlds, aesthetic
value and insulating properties of wood, combined with the
strength and size capabilities associated with steel.
Eight offices serving Kansas
800-447-7436
2012 Morton Buildings, Inc. All rights reserved. A listing of GC licenses available at mortonbuildings.com/licenses.aspx. REF CODE 043.
ce
a
loos
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:
mortonbuildings.com
in
La
wr
en
ali
h
stp
We
Bal
Ot
ra
do
Eu
schneiderjobs.com
schneiderowneroperators.com
800-44-PRIDE | 800-28-LEASE
Monday, Sept. 12 through Saturday, Sept. 17, 2016
Anderson County Transfer Station
Monday through Friday 7:00 am 3:30 pm
Saturday 8:00 am 12:00 pm
No. times ad to run:
x$6.95 = Amount Enclosed
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 6, 2016
5B
LOCAL
If youre happy and you know it…
Place a Happy Ad!
More LOCAL customers read Review classifieds than any other newspaper!
Rates
Up to 20 Words………..$4.95
Each addtl word…………….55
(Commercial……65)
BONUS: Add $2 for 10,000
additional households in
Lawrence/Douglas County in
The Trading Post.
Display Ads, per column
inch………$8.50
Statewide placement available,
Call for details.
Terms
Cash in advance
Visa, Mastercard, Discover
Credit to established accounts
Deadline
Classied Ads: 10am Friday
Display Ads: Noon Thursday
Call or send in your ad:
(785) 448-3121
(800) 683-4505 (out of area)
FAX: (785) 448-6253
EMAIL: admin@garnett-ks.com
Mail:
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
P.O. Box 409
Garnett, KS 66032
GARAGE SALE
Hodgson Garage Sale Saturday, September 10, 8-2,
Park Road and Spruce. Large
family sale . . . clothing, baby
to very good women and mens
clothing including coats.
Household items, bike helmets,
deep freeze, 4 drawer filing cabinet, puzzles games, kitchen
stuff. . . you name it, we got it.
ag30t2
September 3 & 10 – 8:00am-?
Lots of stuff, 308 N. Cleveland.
ag30t2*
920 S. Kings Hwy, Garnett
– September 9 and 10. Wooden
kitchen table with 4 chairs,
concrete yard ornaments, adult
clothes, doors and misc. sp6t1*
Garys Garage Sale September 10, 315 N. Orange.
2-man boat, trolling motor,
shade tent, 2 adult bikes, wester books, cargo carrier, RV bike
carrier, lots of stuff.
sp6t1*
Friday
&
Saturday
8:00am-4:00pm.
Furniture,
UTV, lots of misc. 21243 NW
Hwy. 31, 3 1/2 miles west on
K31.
sp6t1*
FARM & AG
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25
or mor trees. Call (916) 232-6781
in St. Joseph for details. dc8tf
MISCELLANEOUS
Stop overpaying for your
prescriptions! Save up to 93%!
Call our licensed Canadian and
International pharmacy service to compare prices and get
$15.00 off your first prescription and FREE Shipping. 1-800981-6179
Po r t a bl e
O x yg e n
Concentrator ? May Be
Covered by Medicare! Reclaim
independence and mobility
with the compact design and
long-lasting battery of Inogen
One. Free information kit! Call
800-731-1968
FARM & AG
1×2
b a u man
Other Services
Available
LIVESTOCK
Let me start & feed – your
calves until the prices get better. Room for 500 head. (785)
448-6471, (785) 917-1229. ag30t2*
Farm
1×2& Greenhouse
l i t t l Hardy
e
785-835-7057
Garden Mums
Tues – Sat: 9am – 6pm
Off of 59 Hwy, 3 miles, E. on Cloud Rd., 1 mile
S. on Ohio Rd. Follow the yellow chicken.
NOTICES
Earn up $3,400 – Study available for Healthy Females age
18-55. Non-smoking, taking
no medications. Available for
overnight stays, you may qualify. Interested? Study 5099. Call
Quintiles! (913) 894-5533. sp6t1*
1×2
Acces
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
HAPPY ADS
Happiness is . . . Enjoying a
great dinner with great friends
at the Holy Angels Church Fall
Bazaar, Sunday, September 11.
Serving 11:00a.m. until 2:00p.m.
at St. Rose School.
ag16t4
Happiness is . . . Having your
pet groomed by Sandys, (620)
852-3068.
ag16t4*
Happiness is . . . Talented artists for window painting contest Lake Garentt Grand Prix
Revival. Prize money. Contact
Becky King, (785) 448-5934.
Deadline September 9. ag30t2
Happiness is . . . Breakfast at
the VFW. 7am-9am, Saturday,
September 10. Biscuits and
gravy, Belgian waffles, bacon,
sausage and eggs.
sp6t1
1×3
AD
General Contractor
Custom Homes
Additions
Finishing Trimwork
Remodels
Lonnie Edgecomb (785) 204-1580
within 90 days. Salary is dependent on qualifications,
estimate: $14-$14.50/hr. Employee benefits: Life/health
insurance, uniforms, paid holidays, vacation and sick leave,
KPERS retirement. Applications are available at Garnett City
Hall, 131 W. 5th Avenue, Garnett, KS 66032 or apply online at
www.HRePartners.com. Position open until filled. EOE.
PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday,
2×3 Sept. 10, 2016 9:30 A.M.
1013 2400 St. Iola, Kansas 66749
AD
Seller: Peggy Stewart
Tools, Tractors, Vehicles, Trailers,
Farm Equipment, Antiques & Collectibles
See Website for Sale Bill & Pictures
www.allencountyauction.com
www.kansasauctions.net
Allen County Auction Service
620-365-3178
YARD MANAGER
Waverly Lumber & Hardware, located in Waverly,
2×4
Kansas, is looking for a highly motivated and
talented Yard Manager to join our team.
waverly
lumber
Job Duties: Supervise daily lumber yard activities
to achieve long-term goals for profitability, sales
and customer satisfaction. Manage yard operations,
supervise employees, manage inventory and accounts
receivables, perform take-offs and provide strong
customer service.
Requirements: High School Diploma or equivalent.
Building material knowledge. Point-of-sales/related
computer experience. Good written and verbal
communication skills. Previous management or
supervisory experience preferred.
Hours include Monday-Friday and occasional
Saturdays. To be considered for this position, please
email your resume to: waverlylumber@gmail.com
or call Nick at 785-256-1260.
2×3
beckman
Outstanding Performance in
GM Sales for all of Kansas
Eight
The family of James F. (Jimbo) Craig
wishes to express its sincere gratitude
to all of our family and friends who
gave Jimbo their friendship, time and
support while he was living. We also
thank you for your many expressions
of sympathy – food, flowers, memorial
contributions and good wishes since
his passing. We particularly wish to
thank Crossroads Hospice and Guest
Home Estates for their loving care.
We thank you all so much.
1×2
craig
Wedding, Engagement,
Anniversary & Birth
Announcements
Business News
Send it in…
ONLINE
Go to www.garnett-ks.com
and click one of the forms
under Submit News.*
Its quick & easy!
Edgecomb Builders
2×2
Performs duties involved in the Citys electrical generation plant
and
water filtration
plant. Swing shift work schedule. Must
city
of garnett
reside in Anderson County or meet residency requirement
AD
Card of Thanks
Little John Sherwood
2×2
edgecomb
Power/Water Plant Operator
City of Garnett, Kansas
1×3
LAWN & GARDEN
* Photos need to be emailed separately to
garnett-ks.com
NURSE RN/LPN
Life Care Center of Burlington
2×3
Full-time and part-time positions available
life
care
burl
for all
shifts to
state-licensed nurses.
Long-term care experience preferred.
We offer great pay and benefits in a
team-oriented environment.
Tracy Bartley
620-364-2117 620-364-2013 Fax
601 Cross St. Burlington, KS 66839
Tracy_Bartley@LCCA.com
LifeCareCareers.com
An Equal Opportunity Employer 77934
CHILDRENS
AIDE
2×3
CHILDRENS
AIDE – Working with children after
sek
school, 12-20 hours/Mon.-Fri. Requires drivers
license and reliable vehicle. Prefer experience
w/children. Min. 18 years old.
Drug screen required.
Questions, call Liz at 620-365-5717.
Southeast Kansas Mental Health Center
PO Box 807 Iola, KS 66749.
Applications at 519 S. Elm
or email jobs@sekmhc.org
EOE/AA.
JAY & DOREEN NEWLAND AUCTION
Saturday, September 10 10 a.m.
146 Meadow View Dr., Sugar Valley Lake Mound City, KS
2×5
marty reed
As we have moved the following Shop & Tools and other items will be offered at Public Auction at 146
Meadow View Drive, Mound City, KS. Go East of Mound City on 52 Hiway about 1 mile to Paine Rd.
Go south on Paine Rd. approx. 2 miles to east Sugar Valley Lakes entrance on west side of road. Go in
entrance and take an immediate left and then an immediate right. Go mile to Meadow View Drive.
Follow signs. This property is on the east side of the dam.
AUTO – TRACTOR – Utility H Farmall with wide front with 3 pt. (non running).
FARM EQUIPMENT – 3 pt. 6 blade; 3 ft. front loader. GENERATORS – CEMENT
MIXER – RIDING LAWN MOWERS – LAWN & GARDEN – ANTIQUES – HOUSEHOLD
– APPLIANCES – HANDICAP SCOOTERS – WELDING – Oxyacetylene torch on cart
w/ bottles; Model AEAD-200 LE Miller portable AC/DC generator welder with lots
of leads and Onan engine; Small welding table; Torch hose; Welding gloves; Victor
torch regulators; Forney AC stick welding; Welding rod; Welding clamps; Chipping
hammers; Helmets and more. HUGE OFFERING OF QUALITY SHOP & TOOLS – AIR
COMPRESSOR – SALVAGE IRON – ENGINES & ELECTRIC MOTORS – MISC.
AUCTIONEERS NOTE: Mr. Newland made his living with tools,
which resulted in an outstanding tool auction.
Terms: Not responsible for accidents. Verbal statements made day of sale take precedence over written material.
For full listing and pictures visit: www.kansasauctions.net
Sale conducted by:
Marty and Beverly Read
Charley Johnson & Marvin Swickhammer,
Assistant Auctioneers
Mound City, KS 66056 913-795-2508
Real Estate, Antique, Farm, Livestock & Commercial
6B
LOCAL
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, September 6, 2016
Seekers Not Slackers 4-H Club members do well at fair
Calendar
7-Lions Club, United Methodist
Church basement, 7 p.m.
School Calendar 6- High School
volleyball at St. Paul, 5 p.m.;
12- Crest School Board meets at
board office, 7 p.m.
Meal Site
7- Meatloaf, baked potato,
Mediterranean blend veggies,
roll, cherry crisp; 9-Salisbury
steak, mashed potatoes, county
veggies, bread, cranberry juice;
12-pasta bake, Italian veggies,
broccoli and raisin salad, wheat
bread, pineapple-pudding.
Mid-America
Nutrition
Program is a comprehensive
full service program dedicated to meeting the nutritional
needs of the elderly through
home-delivered meals and
senior dining site meals. All
persons 60 years and older
and their spouses are eligible
for nutrition services. People
under the age of 60 with disabilities who reside at home
with an eligible senior are also
eligible. Check their website
at www.midamericanutrition.
org.
Christian Church
Scripture
presented
Sunday was John 15:1-16:4.
Pastor Andrew Zolls sermon Remain and Proclaim.
Sept. 11– Church potluck dinner following services at City
Hall Community Room. Our
missionary from Brazil, Phil
McAfee, will be here. Sept. 14
Working Wonders CWC at 7
p.m.. All women are welcome.
Cross training Classes 9:30
a.m. each Sunday. Mens Bible
Study-Tuesday morning, 7 a.m.
All men are welcome.
A Look Back in Time Sept. 1995 when the Colony
Christian Church celebrated
their 100th birthday. Following
is a bit more of history on the
church. The organization of
the Colony Christian Church
started in January 1884 by Dr.
and Mrs. Metcalf. Lessons were
held in homes and in 1892 property was secured for a church
building which cost $1100.
Later in 1920 a basement was
dug under the church. In the
COLONY NEWS
Mrs. Morris Luedke
Contact (620) 852-3379 or
colonynews@ckt.net with Colony news.
1950s the restrooms and entry
way were added. It has been
remodeled and reconstructed
several times; rooms have been
added, plumbing, electricity,
air conditioning and comfortable chairs that can be rearranged are in the sanctuary.
Northcott Church
Announcements:
Sept.
4 4th quarter offering for
happy helping hands for
Him; 10-Daughter of the King
Womens Retreat, 9 a.m.;
11-Heart-to-Heart will Minister
followed by a fellowship lunch
and a board meeting; 17-baby
shower for Jourdan Wilkinson
at 2 p.m.; 25-Northcott Women
of Faith meeting at 6:30
p.m.; meal choice Favorite
Recipes.
Anniversary-Sept. 15-Orville
and Ora Crouch; BirthdaysSept. 2-Spencer West; 11-Sharon
Smith, 17-Andrew Hunt;
30-Orville Crouch.
All Sundays: Bible Study, 9:28
a.m.; Worship 10:28 a.m.; Bible
Study at 6:28 p.m. on Thursday
evenings. Prayer Focus: Wilson
County Education, Presidential
Election and Church Growth.
www.facebook.com/Northcott
Church Pastor Mike Farran,
cell phone 620-363-4828
UMC
Scripture presented Sunday
at the United Methodist
Church was Psalm 81:1, 10-16,
Jeremiah 28: 4-13, Hebrews
13:1-8, 15, 16 and Luke 14:1, 7-14.
Pastor Dorothy Welch presented the sermon, At the Table – A
Teachable Moment.
Kincaid Free Fair
Mark your calendar for this
years Free Fair on Sept. 22-24.
The 24th is the big day with
Duplicate bridge played
Tom Williams and David
Leitch tied with Steve
Brodmerkle and Anita Dennis
for first and second. Tom
Peavler and Mary Margaret
Thomas came in third.
The Garnett Duplicate
Bridge Club plays each
Wednesday at 1:00 at the
Garnett Inn. All bridge players
are welcome.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 9-6-2016 / Photo Submitted
A Community Bridal Shower was held for Jessica Swift at the Community Church August 28. Jessica and Perry Kinnett will be married Sept. 10 and will reside in Burlington. Front row, from left: Heidi Walker, Linda Womelsdorf, Thomas Kinnett, Jessice Swift, Jemma
Womelsdorf, Sophia Kinnett, next to Jessica, Carolyn Womelsdorf, Shirley Cantrell, Susie Bubna; back row: Jamie Walker, Debbie
Womelsdorf, Cara Roaxh, Dixie Ramsey.
their parade. There are always
lots of bands, floats, trucks,
horses always a big and very
good parade. It is a crowd drawer.
4-H
Seekers Not Slackers members did well at the Anderson
County Fair. They won purple, blue and red ribbons.
Lots of exhibits to enter also
and Seekers were in many of
them. Members exhibiting
included Lanie, Logan and
Josie Walter; Makayla, Jerrick
and Brooklynn Jones; Hayden
AWESOME VIEW, GREAT LOCATION, COMFORTABLE LIVING
AND PRIVACY. Find it all in this 2,120 sq. ft. 2 bedrooms 2.5 baths
all-brick ranch in beautiful Lakeview Estates. Enjoy the sunrise over
the lake in front and the magnificent sunset on the back deck that
overlooks tree-filled large backyard and large field. Large sunlit
rooms. Spacious living room open to the back deck. Gas fireplace
with stained-glass lead door cabinet. Awesome kitchen has oak
cabinets, Corian counters. Wet bar with built-in ice maker and half
bath. Large master suite has walk-in closet with lots of shelving,
built-in dresser and storage. Large master bath has oak cabinet,
Corian counters, double vanity and walk-in shower. Second bedroom has private bath with tub and shower. Large laundry room.
Large 2 car garage, workshop area. To view this lovely home,
contact Sherry at Benjamin Realty, 201 N. Maple, Garnett, (785)
448-2550.
Notice of Vote Publication
In adopting the 2017 budget the Frontier
Extension District governing body voted to
Congratulations to all!
Around Town
First day of Autumn is
Sept.22. However, we have
been experiencing very pleasant autumn nights lately. Hope
this doesnt mean we will have
a big snow-covered winter.
OPEN HOUSES
Refres
hm
Serve ents
d
102 Walnut Garnett
2×5
Hostess – Carol Barnes
(785)
AD448-5300
Notice to increase Frontier
Extension District taxes
(Published in The Anderson County Review,
Tuesday, Sept. 6, 2016)
and Hank Newton; Hailey and
Tyler Gillespie; Theophilus
and Trevor Church; Kendra
and
Karson
Hermreck;
Elizabeth
and
Gunner
Ellington; Lane Yocham;
Truett Vermillion; Blaine King;
Rebecca and Kendra Sprague.
Sat., Sept. 10 10 – Noon
Beautiful, well taken care of home with all kinds of storage. 2 beautiful brick
fireplaces, one with granite hearth, 1 gas & 1 wood burning, bar downstairs, 2 sump
pumps. All appliances stay with home. Nice deck outside dining room sliding doors.
2 car detached garage with a loft for more storage. 2 lots with fenced back yard.
Close to downtown. Just bring your updating ideas! $132,500.
increase property taxes in an amount greater
than the amount levied for the 2016 budget,
adjusted by the 2015 CPI for all urban consumers. Nine members voted in favor of the budget and 0 members voted against the budget.
sp1t1
105 N. Oak Garnett
Sat., Sept. 10 10 – Noon
Sun., Sept. 11 12 – 3 pm
Hostess – Carla Walter
(785) 448-7658
Beautiful Weddings Begin With Beautiful Flowers
Residential or Awesome B & B. You need to see this beautiful Historic home
located in the heart of the small historic town. Totally renovated throughout with
top of the line finishes. Welcoming wrap-around porch. The awesome foyer is
just a glimpse of warm welcome you will feel in each & every room of the house.
Stunning staircase. Lv rm/fireplace. Formal dining rm. Magnificent kitchen with
granite counter tops, lots of cabinets with easy slide pull-outs. Also with a butlers
pantry. Breakfast rm w/lots of windows. 24×48 2 story coach house garage/shop.
Fabulous finished basement/fireplace, w/bar. Lots of storage. $249,900.
We Specialize in
Wedding Flowers – Fresh or Silk
Tuxedo Rental
Rental Accessories
Bridal Registry
2×3
garnett flowers
Carla Walter, Broker
(785) 448-7658
(785) 448-6191
114 W. 4th, Garnett
Most Experienced Design Team
Combined Over 40 Years Experience
FREE Consultation and Price Quotes
Quality Service Guaranteed!
Visit our informative website at:
www.garnettrealestate.com
You can search all
MLS listings & more.
4th & Maple Garnett (785) 448-5531 Toll Free 888-458-6353
Monday – Friday 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Saturday 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
A special thank you to all our brides and grooms for allowing us to be a part of your big day!
LIMITED TIME
2×4
baumans
Through 9/11/16
Washer/Dryer Set
$120 Mail-in Rebate*
Most
Reliable
Top Load
Washer
Model AWNE82
Washer
Model ADEE8
Dryer
*See store for details
2×5
AD
1890 bungalow located in small rural town has
beautiful original hardwood floors. 2 large sunny
bedrooms & 1 full bath. Kitchen has beautiful wood
cabinets. Large laundry room. Detached garage. Close
to park. Move in ready. $45,000.
Look at all the new. New wood flooring in living
room, hall, kitchen & dining area. New kitchen
counter tops. Some new paint. Brick fronted
ranch has 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. Native stone
wood-burning fireplace. Large 2 car garage. 1 car detached garage with workshop. RV shed. Circle drive.
Large beautiful landscaped corner lot. $159,900.
Meticulously Maintained & Restored Home offers
Historical Charm with modern amenities to include 3
bedrooms & 2 baths that were completely gutted & redone. Small cozy ranch with 3 bedrooms, 1 bath. Full
The newly renovated 1st floor bath includes the laundry. The unfinished basement. Laundry hook-ups in basekitchen was completely gutted & redone with beautiful glass ment & upstairs in garage. Large tree-shaded lot.
Storage shed. 1 car attached garage. $79,500.
fronted, lighted cabinets. Larger formal dining room. Bright
& airy living room has brick tiled fireplace, small sitting
room. 3 bedrooms with original transform windows above
the doors. Original stained glass entry door. The entrance
New
foyer boasts a beautiful original chandelier & wood carved Listing
staircase. Enjoy the screened in sun porch with tiled floor.
Large back deck for summertime fun. All hardwood has been
refinished. New plumbing, elec., new furnace & AC, new Owner Says Bring us an offer on this 1930 bungalow
water & sewer line. Original crown molding & doors with
home. Has wrap-around front porch. Inside has been
original glass knobs. New roof. MOVE-IN READY. $165,000. gutted. 930 sq. ft. Close to downtown area. Lot 40 x 140.
913-884-4500
2×5
Chris Cygan – Broker 785-418-5435
AD- Fix up this 3 bedroom, 1 1/2 bath home just the
PROJECT
way you like. Nice corner lot, siding and windows started.
Central heat & A/C is in. Perfect for your new home or rental/
investment. Only $26,500. $22,500.
GREAT MIX – 14+ Acres, close to I-35, trees, meadow, creek,
great spot to build a pond. $44,950. EZ Financing.
VIEWS-VIEWS – 10 acres, Big hillside, water meter included,
scattered trees. Opportunity Time $42,500. $34,900.
20 ACRES – Paved road, driveway, water meter, electric,
trees, meadows, creek, Central Heights schools. $99,900.
LAND BARGAIN – 9 acres, northNofD
Ottawa,
ING close to paved
E
P
E
road. Fantastic Investment
Opportunity
@ $27,500!!
SAL
BEST BUY – 7.5 Acres, just outside Ottawa, paved road,
area of nicer and newer homes. Bank Owned Bargain. Only
$22,900.
Need to sell? Just call, well get it done!
YOUR SOURCE FOR GREAT INVESTMENTS!

