Firth gas leak repaired

Transcription

Firth gas leak repaired
MorningNews
Tuesday, August 18, 2015 » 75¢
am-news.com
Volleyball
practice
Sun and clouds
80 / 48
...page 2A
...page 7A
Firth gas leak repaired
By LESLIE MIELKE
[email protected]
FIRTH — A contractor
working in Firth hit a gas
line between 4-4:30 p.m.
on Monday that caused a
gas leak. The gas line that
was hit is on Park Street
between West Center and
Lincoln.
An Intermountain Gas
crew from Idaho Falls was
en route to Firth to repair
the line in the afternoon.
Intermountain Gas services the Firth area.
At 5 p.m., Intermountain
Gas spokesperson Laura
Lueder said, “There is no
lack of service.
Morning News – Leslie Mielke
“The crew is just An Intermountain Gas crew from Idaho Falls works to repair the gas line that was damaged in Firth on Monday. The yellow hose on the right of the photo is a temporary gas
See LEAK, 2A line.
First day of school Two
concerts
in the
park this
week
Courtesy photo
Blackfoot High School teacher Heidi Graham works with
teammates to get ammo cans across a rope bridge during
the USMC Educators’ Workshop at Camp Pendleton, Calif.
last week.
Teacher trains at
USMC workshop
By BOB HUDSON
[email protected]
BLACKFOOT
—
Entering her seventh year
of teaching, Blackfoot High
School’s Heidi Graham
is ready to try some new
things to help her students
prepare for the challenges
of the 21st century.
Graham, the head of the
physical education department at BHS, has the challenge of teaching students
to develop their reading,
problem-solving and critical thinking skills in the
gymnasium or on the playing fields.
Recently she learned
how the U.S. Marine
Corps is helping its recruits
develop those skills when
she attended the USMC
Educators Workshop at
Camp Pendleton, Calif.
She was among 28 educators from Idaho, Utah and
Nevada at this particular
workshop. Other Idahoans
included two teachers
from Pocatello, two from
Boise and two radio personalities from Southeast
Idaho.
“It gave us an opportunity to see how they mold
young men and young
women and make them
into one unit,” Graham
said of the workshop.
She learned that their
methods have changed
with the times. Her hus-
By LESLIE SIEGER
[email protected]
band Marcus, an exMarine, told her about
his experience and it was
greatly different from what
she saw.
“I saw how Marines try
to get the best out of every
recruit,” she said.
“That’s what I’m trying
to do with my students
and with the members of
my teams,” she added.
Graham is the head cross
country and head track
coach for the Broncos.
“Today’s Marines are
highly encouraged to get
further education,” she
said. “They teach them
how to problem-solve and
leadership skills that tie
right in to Common Core.
“As an educator, I want
to make sure my students
get the best experience
they can when they leave
high school,” she continued.
Sgt. Daniel Wetzel, who
served as spokesman for
the program locally, said
it’s purpose was to show
educators what the Marine
Corps has to offer graduates.
“We want them to come
back and tell them to look
at the Marines,” Wetzel
said.
“Every one of them
loved it,” he said of the
educators. “We challenged them with obstacle
BLACKFOOT — This
week residents of Blackfoot
will get a double scoop
of “Music in the Park.”
Wednesday at 6:30 p.m.
the popular Lyle Albertson
“Straight Country Band”
will play for “Music in the
Park,” and Thursday night
Doug Wareing’s
“Jazz
House Big Band” will play
a make-up concert for the
Wednesday, Aug. 5 concert, which was rained out.
See MUSIC, 3A
Man dies
in vehicle
rollover
Morning News — Leslie Mielke
Zach Taylor started first grade at A.W. Johnson Elementary in Firth on Monday. “He is
excited,” his mom said. Zach’s entry into first grade was a little hard on his mom.
Reward offered after theft
MORNING NEWS
BLACKFOOT — A local businessman
is offering a reward for the return of a fire
safe containing keys to the various equipment boxes at his carwash. Scott Chidester
is offering a $300 reward for the return of
the keys, no questions asked.
See GRAHAM, 3A
According to Scott, an individual bur-
glarized his business about 4 a.m. Sunday.
He took the Sentry fire safe containing the
keys and over $3,000 in cash.
Anyone who may recognize the individual shown in the video at am-news.
com should call the police at 785-1234.
To collect the reward, contact Scott at
680-6001 to arrange return of the safe.
Good morning Mike Faler of Blackfoot.
Call 785-1100 today to claim two free Paramount Theater movie tickets!
Vol. 111, No. 197. Copyright 2014. All Rights Reserved.
MORNING NEWS
BLACKFOOT — A
Richfield man is dead
following a rollover on
Highway 26 on Sunday
night.
According to the police
report, about 7:11 p.m.,
the Bingham County
Sheriff’s Office responded
to a one-vehicle rollover
on Highway 26 at 1500
West. When officers
arrived, there were four
people in a 2004 Hyundai
SUV. The driver, Marina
Bartell, was westbound
See CRASH, 3A
For Home Delivery
Call 785-1100
2A
LOCAL
Tuesday, August 18, 2015
LEAK, continued from 1A
finishing repairs [about
9:30 p.m.],” she said.
“They have also installed
gauges to monitor gas levels and methane levels in
the air.”
What happened?
“Construction workers
were installing new services in the street when they
hit a gas line,” said Firth
Fire Chief Bruce Anthony.
“It started leaking, putting
out (venting) some gas to
the outside.
(At 8 p.m., one could
still smell the gas.)
“We evacuated teachers [in the high school],
students and coaches
involved in athletics,
the seminary building
and homes downwind
on Center, Lincoln and
Roosevelt Streets,” said the
fire chief. “We also put up
a safety perimeter.
“Natural gas is lighter
than air and not nearly
as dangerous as what
propane would be,” he
said. Twelve firemen and
Bingham County Sheriff’s
deputies help get the areas
evacuated and diverted
traffic,” said Anthony.
“The gas leak is
shut off,” he said. [The
Intermountain Gas crew]
has dug holes on each side
[at the corners of Center
and Lincoln] and is digging up the line to find the
problem and repair it.
“[The Intermountain
Gas crew] has put in a temporary bypass,” Anthony
said. “They are going to get
the main problem found
and fixed by morning.
By 8 p.m., the crew was
digging in front of the LDS
seminary building just east
of the high school.
“Sometimes we err on
the side of safety to protect more people than you
need to,” said Anthony.
“This time we could say it
was well worth it.”
“I’m glad we’ll be
in school tomorrow,”
said Firth School District
Superintendent Sid Tubbs.
am-news.com
MorningNews
Cheerleaders get ready
Send in your news
The Morning News welcomes news from the community. Send your items to
[email protected]. Or
call Bob Hudson at 7851100.
Morning News — Meg Matsuura
Nichole Hardiman, Erika German, Yesenia Sanchez, Dalicia Garcia and Megan
Shipley are members of the Blackfoot High School freshman cheerleading team and
spent their Monday afternoon walking around the BHS tracks in preparation for the
upcoming season.
Northern Idaho wildfires destroy 42 homes
BOISE (AP) — Strong
winds continued to fuel
wildfires ravaging across
Idaho on Monday, where
multiple blazes have
resulted in the destruction
of 42 homes and at least
79 buildings up north near
the town of Kamiah.
Currently, 15 large
wildfires are burning in
496 W
Hwy 39
Idaho, blackening nearly
545 square miles as of
Monday, according to
the Boise-based National
Interagency Fire Center.
However, so many other
smaller blazes are burning
in Idaho that officials even
officially named one the
“Not Creative Fire” after
trying to keep track of mul-
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tiple wildfires starts over
the weekend.
Near Kamiah, more
than 700 firefighters along
with 40 fire engines and
four helicopters are fighting the blazes trying to
protect homes. But residents along an 11-mile
section of U.S. Highway
12 have been told to be
ready to flee. The group of
lightning-caused fires has
scorched about 70 square
miles of mainly forest and
is 15 percent contained.
Wind patterns near
Kamiah were expected
to slow down slightly on
Monday, giving firefighters
a break from the previously constant 25-mph gusts
that pushed the fire dangerously close to homes,
said Ryan Greendeer,
It’s Not Quite
A House Call,
But It’s The Next
Best Thing.
Cardiology
a spokesman for the
Clearwater Complex fire.
“But naturally, we
are a little bit wary of
what’s going to happen,”
Greendeer said.
The large concentration of wildfires not
only in Idaho but also in
Oregon, Washington and
Montana has resulted in
prolonged unhealthy air
quality for counties in
southwestern and northern Idaho, according to
the Idaho Department of
Environmental Quality.
Primarily, people with lung
and heart diseases are at a
greater risk to ozone exposure.
The agency has also
enforced mandatory bans
on outdoor burning and
heating homes with wood.
On the Idaho-Oregon
border, about 800 firefighters had a 443-squaremile wildfire 70 percent
contained. Yet even after
finally managing to contain most of the flames,
fire officials warned that
strong winds and low
humidity were expected to hit southern Idaho
throughout
most
of
Monday, which can cause
extreme fire activity.
As a result of potential
volatile fire conditions, fire
crews were prepositioned
along the Highway 78
corridor, while others had
prepped hose positions to
protect structures.
The week-old fire killed
27 wild horses out of two
different herds, officials
with the U.S. Bureau of
Land Management said.
The federal agency opened
a gate for the animals to
escape, but the flames
overtook the animals
before they could get out
of the herd area.
Because
the
fire
destroyed the herd’s habitat, the bureau will launch
an emergency effort to
gather more than 200
horses in the near future.
The fire also scorched
grassland needed for cattle
and primary habitat for
sage grouse, a bird under
consideration for federal
protections.
Idaho Gov. C.L. “Butch”
Otter issued a disaster
declaration for Owyhee
County over the weekend
so the region’s predominantly farming community
could get help immediately once the fire is contained.
PortMed.org
Portneuf Doctor’s Clinic
It’s difficult to tell from the outside, but Portneuf’s recently remodeled Doctor’s
Clinic here in Blackfoot is all ready to provide you with a new, elevated level of
care from an expanded team of physicians. It’s the same outstanding personal
attention that you receive at Portneuf just a little closer to home.
Doctor’s Clinic
Portneuf Medical Center is jointly owned with physicians
1441 Parkway Drive, Blackfoot, ID • (208) 239-1730
Urology
Oncology
Dr. Antonelli will be on site to help treat heart related
Dr. Jones addresses issues that include prostate health,
Dr. Ririe and Dr. Francisco provide sensitive and effective
issues. You can receive one-on-one personal consultation
kidney stones, bladder & kidney infections and even
oncology care, which now includes chemotherapy
and cardio diagnosis and assessment.
vesicoureteral reflux. Receive the latest information
treatments and IV infusions right at the clinic.
regarding urological conditions and treatment options.
Lisa Antonelli, MD
CARDIOLOGY
Peter Jones, MD
UROLOGY
David Ririe, MD
ONCOLOGY
Michael Francisco, MD
ONCOLOGY
MorningNews
LOCAL
am-news.com
Tuesday, August 17, 2015
3A
Obituary
Myrtle ‘Mickey’ Ester Fowler Grubb, 85
Tuesday, August 18
• The Sound of Music at the Blackfoot Performing
Arts Center (BPAC). Tickets are $10.
• Blackfoot Elementary School registration
• Blackfoot High School New Student Registration
from 9 a.m. - 1 p.m.
• Free lunch for ages 1-18 at Jason Lee Methodist
Church, 11:30-12:45 and Stalker Elementary, 11:1512:30. Sack lunches will be served Monday-Friday,
through Aug. 21, in conjunction with the Blackfoot
School District 55 Child Nutrition Program. For information, call 785-3611.
Wednesday, August 19
• First day of school for all students in Snake River
• Snake River School Board Meeting at 7 p.m. at
the District Office.
• The Sound of Music at the Blackfoot Performing
Arts Center (BPAC). Tickets are $10.
• Southeastern Idaho Public Health grand reopening at the Bingham County office located at
145 W. Idaho Street in Blackfoot. A Chamber of
Commerce ribbon cutting will take place at noon. It
is open to the public.
• Bingham Memorial Hospital 65th year celebration from 6-8 p.m. at the hospital located at 98 Poplar
St. There will be delicious food, drinks, live entertainment, and a kid’s zone complete with a face painter,
balloons, and a bouncy house. There will also be
several exhibits with beautiful hospital memorabilia
on display and an extraordinary documentary about
the history of the hospital.
• Free lunch for ages 1-18 at Jason Lee Methodist
Church, 11:30-12:45 and Stalker Elementary, 11:1512:30. Sack lunches will be served Monday-Friday,
through Aug. 21, in conjunction with the Blackfoot
School District 55 Child Nutrition Program. For information, call 785-3611.
• CDT Education Class from 12:30-1:30 p.m. at
the Blackfoot Community Pantry, 245 W. Sexton.
Job Skills Workshop taught by Cheryl Keller from the
Department of Labor. Class this week is: a well written resume will give you an edge at selling yourself to
an employer - how to make your resume a marketing
tool. Maximize your job search. For more information
visit www.communitydinnertable.org.
• Friends of the Library will meet at the Blackfoot
Public Library at 6 p.m. Anyone who is interested in
joining the group is welcome to attend.
• Bingham Academy School Board Meeting will
take place at 7 p.m. at the Bingham Academy
Campus.
Thursday, August 20
• First day of school for all students in Shelley
• Blackfoot School Board Meeting at 6 p.m. at the
District Office
• Shelley School Board Meeting at 7 p.m. at
District Service Center in Shelley
• The Sound of Music at the Blackfoot Performing
Arts Center (BPAC). Tickets are $10.
• Free lunch for ages 1-18 at Jason Lee Methodist
Church, 11:30-12:45 and Stalker Elementary, 11:1512:30. Sack lunches will be served Monday-Friday,
through Aug. 21, in conjunction with the Blackfoot
School District 55 Child Nutrition Program. For information, call 785-3611.
Friday, August 21
• Night Golf Tournament at Journey’s End Golf
Course in Shelley. It is a 4-person scramble starting at
8:30 p.m. Entry fee is $35 per person. Call 357-3700
for more information.
• Free lunch for ages 1-18 at Jason Lee Methodist
Church, 11:30-12:45 and Stalker Elementary, 11:1512:30. Sack lunches will be served Monday-Friday,
through Aug. 21, in conjunction with the Blackfoot
School District 55 Child Nutrition Program. For information, call 785-3611.
• The Sound of Music at the Blackfoot Performing
Arts Center (BPAC). Tickets are $10.
• Camping World and Good Sam Grand Opening
Celebration will begin Friday Aug. 21st and run
through Saturday Aug. 29th. The new supercenter
is located at 1355 Tara Street in Idaho Falls. The
Camping World of Idaho Falls facility is a re-location
from the OK Trailer RV dealership formerly located at
480 North State Street in Shelley, Idaho.
• Ribbon Cutting for Broulim’s in Shelley will
take place at 10 a.m. located at 570 S. State St. The
ceremony will take place in celebration of the new
addition to the store.
Saturday, August 22
• Escape From The Zombies run at Fast Eddy’s
Course located at 629 W. 100 S. in Blackfoot. You
must first choose.... Will you sign up to be a human,
zombie, or both? Cost is $20 for runners, $30 for
zombies and $10 for a spectator pass. Prizes for “best
costume,” “best time,” and “zombie with most flags.”
The run will start at 10 a.m. with waves of runners
starting every 15 minutes. Call Jeff at (208) 221-2845
for more information.
• The Sound of Music at the Blackfoot Performing
Arts Center (BPAC).
• SRHS Class of 1960 will be having their 55th
class reunion at Stinger’s. For more information,
please call Coleen at 680-5018 or Phil at 523-6614.
Monday, August 24
• Dial pressure canner gauge checks at the
University of Idaho Extension Office at 583 W.
Sexton, on the following dates: August 24 and 31,
2015. Bring gauges to the office by 11 a.m. and they
will be ready at 2 p.m.
Myrtle “Mickey” Ester
a momentous celebration
Fowler Grubb, 85, of
in heaven with her Savior
Emmett, Idaho, passed
and the Heavenly Hosts.
away at home with her
She was a loving wife,
family present and went
mother, grandmother and
to be with her Lord and
friend who will be truly
Savior on August 17, 2015.
missed on earth.
She was born Myrtle
She is survived by sevEster Gray on May 23,
eral children, grandchil1930 in Parma, Idaho. She
dren, and great-grandchilwas preceded in death
dren who all loved her
by all of her siblings and
dearly!
now joins them and her who passed away just 10
Funeral services will be
late husband, George, days before she did, in held at 1 p.m. on Friday,
Local briefs
Academy
trustees meet
on Wednesday
By LESLIE MIELKE
[email protected]
BLACKFOOT — The
Bingham Academy trustees will meet at 7 p.m. on
Wednesday, Aug. 19 on
the school’s campus.
A public forum is on the
agenda.
Board training about
elections is scheduled.
Under new business
are:
° Bus Routes
° Safety Busing
° Review of Boar Seat
Designation
° Board Elections
° Discipline Policy/
Student Handbook
° Business Letters
Administrative Reports
to be presented are
Financial Report and
Academic Progress.
The next school board
meeting for Bingham
Academy is scheduled at 7
p.m. on Wednesday, Sept.
16.
I.F. police
investigating
homicide
IDAHO
FALLS
—
The Idaho Falls Police
Department continues to
investigate the homicide of
31-year-old Deraek Patrick
Larson.
Larson
was
found
dead Sunday morning at
Tautphaus Park.
The police department
responded to the park
around 10 a.m. that day
after a passerby discovered
Larson’s body at a playground north of the tennis courts and east of the
skateboard park.
Detectives began their
investigation by processing
the scene with the collection of evidence and taking
photographs. Processing
of the scene included the
dismantling of the playground equipment which
will be furthered processed
for evidence. Idaho State
Police assisted in the investigation.
The incident was ruled
a homicide around 4 p.m.
based on initial evidence
collected at the scene.
Police believe Larson was
specifically targeted by the
perpetrator(s).
Larson was positively
identified around 5 p.m.
An autopsy was scheduled to be conducted on
Monday.
Detectives are continuing to look into any information and leads which
could possibly result in
solving this homicide. The
police department continues to ask assistance from
the public in reference
to information regarding
Larson, his death or suspicious activity at Tautphaus
Park between Saturday
night and Sunday morning.
ISU professor
named Fellow
POCATELLO — Idaho
State University chemistry Professor Joshua Pak
is one of 78 scientists
named to the 2015 class
of the American Chemical
Society Fellows.
Death Notice
Marcus ‘Boone’
Richcreek, 36
Marcus
“Boone”
Richcreek, 36, of Richfield,
Idaho passed away Sunday,
August 16, 2015 from injuries sustained in an automobile accident. Funeral arrangements
are pending and will be
announced by Hawker
Funeral Home in Blackfoot.
785-1320
Our
Family
serving the
families
of this
community
since 1935
for more info visit
hawkerfuneralhome.com
Summer Tree Services
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Bret J. Rodgers, M.D., F.A.C.S.
Double Board Certified
CRASH, continued from 1A
on Highway 26 when she
drifted off the right side
of the roadway, then overcorrected and rolled the
vehicle. Marcus Richcreek, 36,
the passenger in the front
seat, was pronounced
dead at the scene. The ACS honors scientists who have demonstrated
outstanding
accomplishments in chemistry and made important
contributions to ACS, the
world’s largest scientific
society. This year’s class of
ACS Fellows represents a
wide range of disciplines
and geographic locations,
from 30 of the Society’s
technical divisions, 57
local sections and 23
national committees.
The 2015 Fellows will
be recognized at a ceremony and reception on
Monday, Aug.17, during the Society’s 250th
National Meeting and
Exposition in Boston.
According to the ACS,
Pak was selected because
he has advocated for highquality research experiences for undergraduates
and high school students
in the areas of organic and
inorganic materials.
Pak also served as chair
of the ACS Committee on
Project SEED, the ACS’s
summer research program for economically
disadvantaged students
to expand their education and career outlook.
August 21, 2015 at the
Potter Funeral Chapel in
Emmett, Idaho. Graveside
services will be held at 2
p.m. on Saturday, August
22 at the Grove City
Cemetery in Blackfoot,
Idaho.
We have all lost a tremendous and loving person, while Heaven has
acquired a spirit that will
shine bright among them
all!!
The driver and two
juveniles were transported to Bingham Memorial
Hospital.
All occupants were
wearing their seatbelts.
Richcreek was partially
ejected out the passenger
window.
Otolaryngology
Head & Neck Surgery
Facial Plastic &
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Specializing in: Sinus Disease • Nasal Surgery
Eyelid Surgery • Botox/Facial Fillers • Other Facial
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Skin Lesions • Adult & Pediatric Care
of the Ears, Nose, & Throat
As a Blackfoot native,
Dr. Rodgers has been seeing
patients locally for over 10 years.
Now serving patients at
Parkway Surgery Center
MUSIC, continued from 1A
Wareing’s band will by Bingham
play at 6:15 p.m. Thursday. Hospital.
Keisha Petersen, Jeann
Marie Blackman Harlow,
and Melissa Nielson will
sing with the band along
with many of Wareing’s
former students and
regional musicians who
now perform in the band
with him. Harlow will sing
“Blue Skies” and “It’s Only
a Paper Moon.”
Bring your blankets,
lawn chairs and a picnic
dinner and enjoy two evenings this week of Music
in the Park sponsored
Memorial
www.BRodgersMD.com
1441 Parkway DrIVE, Blackfoot IDaHo 208-680-5096
Step Right Up
Ladies & Gentleman...
FREE Tickets!
GRAHAM, from 1A
courses, fitness tests and a
confidence course.”
Wetzel said all high
school teachers in East
Idaho are eligible to apply
for next year’s workshop.
They can contact the
Marine Corps recruiters in
Idaho Falls or Pocatello for
more information.
Graham is a graduate of Middleton High
School. She has a bachelor’s degree in health and
physical education from
BYU-Idaho and a master’s degree in educational
leadership from Arkansas
State. She and her husband
have three children.
Subscribe to the Morning News for six months and get
a free ticket to the Eastern Idaho State Fair, sign-up for
a year and get two free tickets, plus the Morning
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MorningNews
www.am-news.com
4A
Tuesday, August 18, 2015
OPINION
www.am-news.com
MorningNews
SICOG important
to SE Idaho
The Southeast Idaho
Dan
Council of Governments,
Cravens
or SICOG, is a non-profit
organization established
in 1975, serving Bannock,
Bear Lake, Bingham,
Caribou, Franklin, Oneida
and Power counties.
It is charged with
“improving the quality of life and serves as a catalyst
for change in Southeast Idaho by building bridges
to communities,” Susan Lorenz, SICOG’s economic
development director said.
SICOG is involved in many projections and projects ranging from community development, the
Area Agency on Aging and the Adult Protection,
Case Management, Aging and Disabilities Resource
Center to information and assistance, the Long-Term
Ombudsman and the Caregiver Support Program.
Despite its diversity of services and programs, one
of its most critical functions is economic development.
The agency provides economic development services
to individuals, communities and businesses that are,
“honest, accurate, effective and tempered with kindness and humor,” Lorenz said.
Beyond working with businesses and local governments, SICOG works directly with state and federal
agencies to direct their resources into projects fostering economic development. Currently, the agency
is working on projects in Lava Hot Springs, Malad,
Franklin City, Paris City, Bingham County and Franklin
to improve the local infrastructure.
Among SICOG’s key goals, Lorenz said, is working with local partners to “make, adopt and extend an
economic development plan for the area” by:
• Studying the public service needs.
• Coordinating existing public service activities.
• Formulating recommendations for legislative and
other state and federal action to implement economic
strategies.
• Coordinating plans that improve the regional
economy through adequate employment activities,
prosperous agriculture and wise use of natural and
human resources.
• Furnishing general and technical aid to member
governments and individuals to further economic
development.
SICOG has been successful in creating new jobs
and retaining existing employment opportunities. Hess
Pumice Products in Oneida County is a case in point.
Hess is one of the largest employers in the Malad
area, providing the rural community many higher
wage jobs. But the operation was threatened by economic downturns in a major industry it served.
Recognizing that the loss of this major employer
would be a devastating blow to the region’s economy,
SICOG worked with the company and several other
local partners to retain the business. It secured a grant
from the Idaho Department of Commerce to improve
the Malad City Industrial Park so it could accommodate the needs of Hess. A second grant allowed the
park to expand making room for another company to
move into the area. Combined, the efforts of SICOG
were instrumental in retaining 85 quality jobs while
creating 50 new ones at the new site.
Additionally, SICOG operates a loan fund that can
be a valuable source of financial capital to new businesses and those seeking to expend in Southeastern
Idaho.
SICOG has helped local communities across the
region build industrial parks and the infrastructure
required to support private industry.
Thanks to its business development loan fund,
SICOG has assisted many startup and existing businesses with its expansion and upgrading its equipment
and infrastructure. These loans can be in partnerships
with bank loans and can be up to $150,000 so they
can be a very helpful.
Despite its lack of visibility; SICOG is an important
economic development force in the region.
Dan Cravens is a regional economist in Southeast
Idaho for the Idaho Department of Labor. He lives in
Blackfoot.
WRITE TO US: The Morning News welcomes letters to
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to other writers. We reserve the right to edit for length and
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The views and opinions expressed here are those of
the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the
Morning News.
MorningNews
www.am-news.com
(ISSN 08933812)
Leonard C. Martin, Publisher, [email protected]
Robert Hudson, Managing Editor, [email protected]
Wayne Ingram, Advertising Director, [email protected]
oe Kimbro, Circulation Manager, [email protected] R. Koontz, Production Manager
•••
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Be a light at the end . . .
You have heard of the
light at the end of the tunnel? That brightness and
light which symbolizes
relief from a darkness, difficulty, and trouble.
What if there was to
be no positive outcome.
What if the battle’s end
is not escape, but death?
People with terminal illnesses on hospice or palliative care are traveling
a difficult path, and they
need moments of brightness and cheer in a hard,
dark time. YOU can be the
light at the end for a patient
with a terminal illness and
their family, bringing help,
hope, and compassion to
the suffering.
Compassion is a sign
of a civilized people. The
anthropologist Margaret
Mead was asked about the
earliest evidence of civilization she had found.
Her answer was a healed
femur. She explained that
if survival of the fittest was
the rule of the day, no
one would have survived
a serious broken leg, for
they would not have been
able to hunt or gather
food, obtain water, shelter,
or escape from dangers.
Someone had shown compassion, caring for them
until their injury healed
and they could care for
themselves. Here civilization began.
Compassion and mercy
are hallmarks of people of
faith. Jesus told this story
to his disciples, providing them a picture of His
expectations:
Matthew 25:35-45
35 ‘For I was hungry,
and you gave Me something to eat; I was thirsty,
and you gave Me something to drink; I was a
stranger, and you invited
Me in;
36 naked, and you
clothed Me; I was sick,
and you visited Me; I was
in prison, and you came
to Me.’
37 “Then the righ-
teous will answer Him,
‘Lord… When did we see
You…?
40 “The King will
answer and say to them,
‘Truly I say to you, to the
extent that you did it to
one of these brothers of
Mine, even the least of
them, you did it to Me.’
James, leader of the
early church in Jerusalem,
described the religious
faith to live out:
James 1:27 (KJV)
27 Pure religion and
undefiled before God and
the Father is this, To visit
the fatherless and widows
in their affliction, and to
keep himself unspotted
from the world.
There are worse things
than sickness, Mother
Teresa said. “The biggest
disease today is not leprosy or tuberculosis, but
rather the feeling of being
unwanted, uncared for, and
deserted by everybody.”
That is why visiting and
helping those who are suffering, even doing simple
tasks, makes a difference.
Again, Mother Teresa said,
“Let us touch the dying,
the poor, the lonely and
the unwanted…and let us
not be ashamed or slow
to do the humble work…
We cannot do great things
on this Earth, only small
things with great love.”
Hospice agencies need
volunteers to help them. It
is a mandatory part of the
patient care we provide.
The Federal government
requires a certain match
of volunteer hours to staff
hours. Helping those in
need like this is hugely
rewarding. Free training
is available for those who
may be interested in ministering hope, mercy, and
compassion to those going
through challenging times.
As a member of a
community of faith, as a
compassionate, civilized,
human being, or as people
sharing a community with
one another, we each can
look beyond ourselves and
be a light at the end for
someone else.
Donald L. Hammer is
coordinator of Client and
Volunteer Services for
Avalon Home Health and
Hospice.
soldiers wielding axes and
metal pikes attacked U.S.
and South Korean soldiers.
In 1983, Hurricane
Alicia slammed into the
Texas coast, leaving 21
dead and causing more
than a billion dollars’
worth of damage.
In 1988, Vice President
George H.W. Bush accepted the presidential nomination of his party at
the Republican National
Convention
in
New
Orleans.
In 1995, Shannon
Faulkner, who’d won a
2 1/2-year legal battle to
become the first female
cadet at The Citadel, quit
the South Carolina military
college after less than a
week, most of it spent in
the infirmary.
Ten years ago: Cindy
Sheehan, who’d started
an anti-war demonstration
near President George W.
Bush’s Texas ranch nearly two weeks earlier, left
the camp after learning
her mother had suffered a
stroke, but told supporters
the protest would go on. A
judge in Wichita, Kansas,
sentenced BTK serial killer
Dennis Rader to 10 con-
secutive life terms, the
maximum the law would
allow.
Five years ago: General
Motors filed the first batch
of paperwork to sell stock
to the public again, a significant step toward shedding U.S. government
ownership a year after the
automaker had filed for
bankruptcy.
One year ago: Missouri
Gov. Jay Nixon ordered
the National Guard to
Ferguson, a suburb of St.
Louis convulsed by protests over the fatal shooting of an unarmed black
teen. Former Vermont U.S.
Sen. James Jeffords, who
in 2001 tipped control of
the Senate when he quit
the Republican Party to
become an independent,
died in Washington; he
was 80. Don Pardo, 96,
a durable radio and television announcer whose
booming baritone became
as much a part of the U.S.
cultural landscape as the
shows and products he
touted, died in Tucson,
Arizona.
Today’s
Birthdays:
Former first lady Rosalynn
Carter is 88. Movie direc-
tor Roman Polanski is
82. Olympic gold medal
decathlete Rafer Johnson
is
80. Actor-director
Robert Redford is 79.
Actor-comedian Martin
Mull is 72. Rhythm-andblues singer Sarah Dash
(LaBelle) is 70. Comedian
Elayne Boosler is 63. Actor
Denis Leary is 58. Actress
Madeleine Stowe is 57.
Former Treasury Secretary
Timothy Geithner is 54.
ABC News reporter Bob
Woodruff is 54. Actor
Adam Storke is 53. Actor
Craig Bierko is 51. Rock
singer-musician
Zac
Maloy (The Nixons) is 47.
Rock singer and hip-hop
artist Everlast is 46. Actor
Christian Slater is 46. Actor
Edward Norton is 46. Actor
Malcolm-Jamal Warner is
45. Actress Kaitlin Olson is
40. Actor-comedian Andy
Samberg (TV: “Saturday
Night Live”) is 37. Actress
Mika Boorem is 28. Actress
Maia Mitchell is 22.
Actress Parker McKenna
Posey is 20.
Thought for Today:
“Memory is more indelible
than ink.” — Anita Loos,
American author and
screenwriter (1888-1981).
Donald
Hammer
Today in history
Today is Tuesday,
August 18, the 230th day
of 2015. There are 135
days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On August 18, 1587,
Virginia Dare became
the first child of English
parents to be born in
present-day America, on
what is now Roanoke
Island in North Carolina.
(However, the Roanoke
colony ended up mysteriously disappearing.)
On this date:
In 1838, the first marine
expedition sponsored by
the U.S. government set
sail from Hampton Roads,
Virginia; the crews traveled the southern Pacific
Ocean, gathering scientific
information.
In 1846, U.S. forces led
by General Stephen W.
Kearny captured Santa Fe,
New Mexico.
In 1914, President
Woodrow Wilson issued
his
Proclamation
of
Neutrality, aimed at keeping the United States out of
World War I.
In 1920, the 19th
Amendment
to
the
Constitution, guaranteeing all American women’s
right to vote, was ratified
as Tennessee became the
36th state to approve it.
In 1938, President
Franklin D. Roosevelt and
Canadian Prime Minister
William Lyon Mackenzie
King
dedicated
the
Thousand Islands Bridge
connecting the United
States and Canada.
In 1963, James Meredith
became the first black student to graduate from the
University of Mississippi.
In 1976, two U.S. Army
officers were killed in
Korea’s demilitarized zone
as a group of North Korean
MorningNews
am-news.com
Financial Roundup
NEW YORK (AP) - Mon.’s closing New York
Stock Exchange selected prices:
Stock ............................Last ............... Chg
AT&TInc.....................34.23............... +.18
AerojetR.....................22.64............... +.09
Alcoa............................9.43............... +.02
Altria..........................55.67..............—.09
AEP............................58.35............... +.15
AmIntlGrp..................64.30............... +.05
ApldIndlT...................40.56..............—.21
Avon.............................5.70............... +.10
BPPLC........................35.53..............—.24
BakrHu.......................56.76..............—.57
BkofAm......................17.77............... +.07
Boeing......................144.44..............—.65
BrMySq......................63.47............... +.39
Brunswick..................55.27............. +1.16
Caterpillar..................78.54............... +.05
Chevron.....................83.23............—1.69
Citigroup....................57.77............... +.18
CocaCola...................41.35............... +.10
ColgPalm....................67.66..............—.13
ConocoPhil................49.56..............—.21
ConEd........................66.71............... +.04
CurtisWrt....................68.86............... +.35
Deere.........................94.18..............—.16
Disney......................109.05............. +1.89
DowChm....................45.47............... +.57
DuPont.......................54.27............... +.41
Eaton..........................60.33............... +.37
EdisonInt....................61.74............... +.60
ExxonMbl...................78.77............... +.41
FMCCorp....................47.72............. +1.22
FootLockr...................74.04............... +.82
FordM........................14.68..............—.10
GenDynam...............152.85............. +1.24
GenElec......................26.21............... +.13
GenMills....................59.29............... +.03
Hallibrtn.....................41.29..............—.70
HeclaM........................2.24............... +.07
Hess...........................58.78..............—.30
HewlettP....................28.61..............—.10
HonwllIntl................106.28............... +.20
Idacorp.......................64.37............... +.68
IBM..........................156.31............... +.56
IntPap.........................48.16............... +.85
JohnJn.........................99.87............. +1.06
LockhdM..................213.02............. +1.06
Loews.........................38.82..............—.17
LaPac..........................17.02............... +.40
MDURes....................18.90............... +.24
MarathnO...................17.36............... +.17
McDnlds..................100.66............. +1.39
McKesson.................216.29............. +1.01
Merck.........................59.71............... +.53
NCRCorp....................27.74............... +.22
NorflkSo.....................82.15............... +.41
NorthropG................174.71............... +.53
OcciPet......................73.74............... +.34
Olin............................21.21............... +.25
PG&ECp.....................54.27............... +.19
Penney.........................8.92............... +.40
PepsiCo......................99.86............... +.63
Pfizer..........................35.50............... +.18
Praxair......................114.00............... +.01
ProctGam...................75.53..............—.09
Questar......................21.85............... +.21
RockwlAut................117.00............... +.83
SempraEn.................106.38............... +.25
SouthnCo...................46.30..............—.03
Tegna.........................25.78............... +.34
Textron.......................43.71............... +.14
3MCo.......................149.24............... +.96
TimeWarn...................79.40............. +1.17
Timken.......................33.21............... +.25
TriContl......................21.16............... +.06
UnionPac...................92.74
Unisys........................13.98..............—.20
USSteel.......................19.00..............—.27
VarianMed..................87.30............... +.39
VerizonCm.................47.52............... +.03
ViadCorp....................28.79............... +.55
WalMart.....................71.91..............—.47
WellsFargo.................57.35............... +.02
Weyerhsr....................31.08..............—.11
Xerox..........................11.37............... +.32
YumBrnds...................85.03............. +1.44
Intermountain Grain & Livestock
POCATELLO, Idaho (AP) — Idaho Farm
Bureau Intermountain Grain and Livestock
Report Monday, August 17. Bids are subject
to change.
BLACKFOOT __ white wheat 5.10, up 10;
11.5 percent hard red winter 4.35, down 24;
14 percent spring 4.95, down 3; hard white
4.55, down 4;
BURLEY __ white wheat 5.14, down 1; hard
red winter 4.17, down 4; 14 percent spring
4.92, down 8; feed barley 6.00, unchanged;
hard white 4.77, down 4;
OGDEN — white wheat 5.50, down 12;
hard red winter 4.52, down 7; DNS 5.53,
down 15; barley 6.35, unchanged; corn
7.75, down 35;
PORTLAND__ soft white 5.55, down 4;
white club 5.55, down 4; hard red 5.425.73, down 7; DNS 6.14, down 5; corn
4.49-4.54, down 1; oats 265.00/ton or
3.8475 bushel, unchanged;
NAMPA— Soft white new crop 8.91,
unchanged cwt; 5.35, unchanged bushel.
LIVESTOCK AUCTION__ Burley Livestock
Auction on August 13. Boning & breaker
cows 90.00-107.50; canners & cutter 85.0090.00; shelly & light 60.00-75.00; feeder
cows 88.00-93.00; heiferettes 110.00160.00; slaughter bulls 122.00-127.00;
thin & light 90.00-110.00; holstein steers:
heavy 140.00-170.00, light 130.00-160.00;
feeder steers: heavy 175.00-224.00, light
220.00-268.00, stocker 290.00-349.00;
feeder heifers: heavy 160.00-213.00, light
204.00-262.00, stocker 240.00-265.00;
Remarks: Market steady.
BUSINESS/IDAHO
Tuesday, August 18, 2015
Family fun at the park
Onions and Potatoes
IDAHO FALLS Shipping Point Prices as of
17-AUG-2015
Provided by: F. ruit and Vegetable Market
News, Federal - State Market News Service,
USDA.
Phone: ....... .(208) 525-0166
Fax: ........... .(208) 525-5546
Prices represent open (spot) market sales
by first handlers on product of generally
good quality and condition unless otherwise
stated and may include promotional allowances or other incentives. .No consideration
is given to after-sale adjustments unless
otherwise stated. B
. rokerage fees paid by the
shipper are included in the price reported.
Delivered Sales, Shipping Point Basis
excludes all charges for freight.
IF—FV130
The Following Terms when used by Market
News will be interpreted as meaning: Occasional 1 to 5%, Few 6 to 10%, Some 11 to
25%, Many 26 to 50%, Mostly 51 to 90%,
Generally 91 to 100%
Twin Falls, ID Clear 59/86 Patchy Smoke
Ontario, OR Clear 62/90 Patchy Smoke
IDAHO AND MALHEUR COUNTY,
OREGON
Sales F.O.B. Shipping Point and/or Delivered
Sales, Shipping Point Basis
2015 Season
---ONIONS DRY: DEMAND MODERATE.
MARKET WHITE HIGHER, YELLOW AND
REDS LOWER.
Yellow Spanish Hybrid U.S. One 50 lb sacks
Super Col 13.00-14.00 mostly 14.00 occas
lower
col 11.00-12.00 mostly 11.00
jbo 9.00-10.00
med 5.00-7.00 mostly 6.00
White U.S. One 50 lb sacks
jbo 14.00-15.00 mostly 14.00
med 12.00
Red Globe Type U.S. One 25 lb sacks
jbo 12.00-14.00 mostly 13.00
med 8.00-10.00 mostly 9.00-10.00
TWIN FALLS-BURLEY DISTRICT & WESTERN IDAHO
Sales F.O.B. Shipping Point and/or Delivered
Sales, Shipping Point Basis
2015 Season
---POTATOES: DEMAND BALED GOOD,
OTHERS MODERATE.
MARKET BALED SLIGHTLY HIGHER,
CARTONS SLIGHTLY LOWER, OTHERS
ABOUT STEADY.
Russet Norkotah U.S. One 2” or 4-oz Min
baled 5 10-lb mesh sacks non sz A 4.005.50 mostly 4.00-4.50
baled 5 10-lb film bags non sz A 3.50-5.00
mostly 3.50-4.00
baled 10 5-lb mesh sacks non sz A 5.006.50 mostly 5.00-5.50
baled 10 5-lb film bags non sz A 4.25-6.00
mostly 4.25-5.00
50 lb cartons
40s 11.50-13.00 mostly 11.50-12.00 occas
lower
50s 11.50-13.00 mostly 11.50-12.00 occas
lower
60s 11.50-13.00 mostly 11.50-12.00
70s 11.50-13.00
80s 9.00-10.00 mostly 10.00
90s 7.00-9.00 mostly 8.00
100s 6.00-7.00 mostly 7.00
U.S. Two 50 lb sacks
6 oz min 6.00-8.00 mostly 6.00
10 oz min 11.00-12.00 mostly 11.50-12.00
Morning News — Meg Matsuura
Christian, Daniel, Ivan, Miguel, Sofia, Delaza, Axel and Juan were spotted at Jensen Grove on Monday afternoon playing football and spending time with family members.
Around the state
Children’s home
caretakers
accused of
abusing girls
EAGLE (AP) — A southwestern Idaho couple has
been charged with felony
sexual abuse after police
said they molested two
girls at a group home for
homeless and at-risk children.
The Ada County Sheriff’s
office says Michael Paul
Magill and Jennifer Nicole
Magill were arrested Friday.
The two worked as house
parents at the Children’s
Christian Ranch in Eagle, a
private group home for kids
up to age 18. The sheriff’s
office says the two victims
in the case, a 14-year-old
girl and a 17-year-old girl,
lived at the home under
the Magills’ care.
The Magills are each
charged with two felonies
— sexual battery of a minor
and sexual abuse of a
minor. According to online
court records, the Magills
have not yet entered a
plea. It was not immediately known if they had
an attorney. An administrator at Christian Children’s
Ranch said the couple was
no longer employed by the would spend a few days
training this week before
organization.
they are sent to a wildfire.
It’s the first time NIFC
has called mobilized the
military for fire suppression efforts since 2006.
The troops will be divided into 10 crews with 20
BOISE (AP) — The people each, and will work
National Interagency Fire on the same blaze startCenter is calling in 200 ing Sunday, Aug. 23. NIFC
active duty military troops managers haven’t decidto help fight roughly 95 ed which fire that will be
wildfires burning across yet, but more than 1700
square miles combined
the West.
Officials
with
the are burning in Oregon,
Idaho,
Boise, Idaho-based agency Washington,
California,
made the announcement Montana,
Monday, saying the troops Nevada and Colorado.
National fire
center brings in
troops to fight
Western fires
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5A
6A
Tuesday, August 18, 2015
FACES & PLACES
am-news.com
MorningNews
Morning News — Leslie Mielke
Morning News — Meg Matsuura
Chloe Anderson does some tumbling during cheer Schools opened in Firth on Monday. Getting off the school bus are (from left) third grader Rachel Jacobsen; fourth grader
practice at the Blackfoot High School football field on Macie Mecham; and second grader Ebony Molbert.
Monday.
Morning News — Leslie Sieger
BELOW: George Ortiz-Partita demonstrated the alternate ways of sliding down the slide
of the bouncy house at the Kermes/Festival hosted by St. Bernard Catholic Church at
Jensen Grove Sunday afternoon. The event was a fundraiser for the church.
Courtesy photo
Blackfoot High School teacher Heidi Graham is ready for combat during the USMC
Educators’ Workshop at Camp Pendleton, Calif. last week.
Debra Baron Wallace submitted this photo. “Blackfoot is beautiful.”
MorningNews
am-news.com
SPORTS
Tuesday, August 17, 2015
7A
Labor board rejects Panthers prepare for season
athletes’ union bid
CHICAGO (AP) — The
National Labor Relations
Board
on
Monday
blocked a historic bid by
Northwestern University
football players to form
the nation’s first college
athletes’ union, dealing a
blow to a labor movement
that could have transformed amateur sports.
In a unanimous decision, the board said the
prospect of union and
nonunion teams in college could lead to different standards at different
schools — from how much
money players receive to
how much time they practice — and create competitive imbalances on the
field.
The new ruling annuls a
2014 decision by a regional
NLRB director in Chicago
who said scholarship football players are employees
under U.S. law and thus
entitled to organize. But
Monday’s decision did not
directly address the question of whether the players
are employees.
Some observers said the
ruling effectively ends any
chance to establish labor
unions in college athletics.
“This puts the nail in the
coffin of organizing college players,” said Ronald
Meisburg, a former NLRB
general counsel and onetime board member.
Tim Waters, of the
United Steelworkers union,
which helped bankroll the
union drive, disagreed.
“It is a bump in the
road,” Waters said.
The face of the unionbuilding effort, former
Northwestern quarterback
Kain Colter, also expressed
disappointment. But he
said the push for unionization had already pressured
the NCAA to take athletes’
grievances more seriously.
“It turned out to be the
right thing to do, and I
don’t regret it,” Colter said.
The labor dispute goes
to the heart of American
college sports, where uni-
versities and conferences
reap billions of dollars by
relying on amateurs who
are not paid. In other
countries, college sports
are small-time club affairs,
while elite youth athletes
often turn pro as teens.
The biggest factor in
how it ruled, the board
said, was the NLRB’s jurisdiction, which extends
only to private schools like
Northwestern, the sole private institution in the Big
Ten. The board repeatedly
cited the need for standardization of rules and
policies in sports and said
giving the green light to
just one team to collectively bargain would disrupt
that uniformity.
NLRB rules do not offer
the losing side the option
to appeal. But Ramogi
Huma, a former linebacker at UCLA who worked
closely with Colter, said
he has not given up on
bringing unions to college
football.
“The door’s not closed,”
he said.
The board seemed to
leave open the possibly
of taking up the unionization issue again if it
involved other schools or
if conditions change for
Northwestern football.
But Meisburg said the
way the ruling highlights
the challenges of organizing sports at private and
state schools means the
board is unlikely to consider another union petition from a college team.
“I don’t see those institutional problems going
away,” Meisburg said.
Northwestern became
the focal point of the labor
fight in January 2014,
when Colter announced
plans to form the first U.S.
labor union for college
athletes. He appeared at
a news conference for the
College Athletes Players
Association.
Three months later,
regional NLRB Director
Peter Sung Ohr issued
his
decision,
saying
Northwestern
football
players should be able to
unionize. A month later,
players cast secret ballots
on whether to unionize.
Those ballots were sealed
during the appeal and will
now be destroyed without
being counted.
While NLRB decisions
sometimes split along party
lines, the three Democrats
and two Republicans on
the board all agreed.
Under U.S. law, an
employee is regarded as
someone who receives
compensation for a service
and is under the direct
control of managers. In
Northwestern’s case, Ohr
concluded coaches are
the equivalent of business
managers and scholarships
are a form of pay.
On Monday, Waters
criticized the NLRB for
sidestepping the most sensitive question: Are scholarship players employees?
“It’s like they had a hot
potato tossed into their
laps, and they took a year
and a half of deliberations
and said, ‘We’re going to
toss it back,’” he said.
The board’s decision
was welcomed by the
NCAA, which has been
fighting lawsuits from former athletes over everything from head injuries to
revenue earned from their
likenesses in video games.
In a statement, the
Indianapolis-based NCAA
portrayed the board’s ruling as recognition that it’s
trying to improve conditions for athletes.
“This ruling allows us
to continue to make progress ... without risking the
instability to college sports
that the NLRB recognized
might occur,” it said.
Northwestern’s
vice
president for university
relations, Alan Cubbage,
also welcomed the ruling.
And he applauded prounion players “for bringing
national attention to these
important issues.”
Morning News — Meg Matsuura
Kinsley Polatis and Bailey Sensenbach warm up together before volleyball practice on
Monday at Snake River High School. Shaunee Martin is the head coach and has high
hopes for the team. “This is my first year coaching and I know that I am walking into a
strong program,” said Martin. “I know that if we work hard as a team and focus on the
basics, everything will fall into place.”
Jazz sign free agent
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) —
The Utah Jazz have signed
free agent guard/forward
Treveon Graham.
The team announced
the move Monday, but
details were not released,
per team policy.
Graham completed his
fourth season at Virginia
Commonwealth in the
spring, averaging 16.2
points, 7.1 rebounds and
1.6 assists. He was not
drafted.
The
6-foot-6,
220-pounder was voted
first team All-Atlantic 10
as a junior and senior and
was No. 8 in conference
scoring during his final
year. The Rams advanced
to four consecutive NCAA
Tournaments with Graham
on the team.
The Jazz are expected
to tweak the roster after
point guard Dante Exum
tore the anterior cruciate
ligament in his left knee
while playing for the
Australian national team
on Aug. 4.
SHEBOYGAN,
Wis.
(AP) — In his eighth year
on the PGA Tour, Jason Day
reached a major pinnacle
of his career by winning the
PGA Championship.
And he could be sure that
Tiger Woods was watching.
“Game over, very happy
for Jason. Great dude and
well deserved. Hats off to
Jordan, incredible season.
Calling it early,” Woods
tweeted, adding in another
tweet that he was watching from his new restaurant
in South Florida. Always a
commercial plug.
Day and Woods have
become good friends on
the golf course, but the fact
Woods tuned in to the final
round at Whistling Straits
brought to mind Day’s rookie
season when he was filled
with big talent, big goals and
some big talk.
Going into that year, he
was asked during a conference call with Australian
writers if he thought Woods
was aware of him.
“I can’t say for sure, but I
think he is,” said Day, who
was 20 at the time. “If I was
him, I would be. I watch
everyone. He watches a lot
of golf. He has so much time.
He played 16 events — what
does he do with his time?
He’d be aware of me. He’d
be saying, ‘Here’s another kid
coming up.’”
It was a slow climb.
Now 27, he idolized the
work ethic of Woods when he
was growing up in Australia
and honed that powerful
swing under Colin Swatton,
his current caddie. No one
ever questioned his ability,
only the trophies. It took him
three years to win his first
PGA Tour event at the Byron
Nelson Championship, and
four more years before he
picked up another title at the
Match Play Championship.
Along the way were
more nagging injuries than
he cares to remember, along
with whispers that he was an
underachiever.
All that has been put to
rest.
This is a new Day, who
has matured into one of the
top three players in the world
and figures to stay there.
“As long as I am healthy, I
feel like I’m going to be there
a long time,” Day said. “I
still want to accomplish that
No. 1 goal of mine, which
is to be the best player in the
world. I’m still motivated and
still very hungry for that, even
after this win. Stuff like this
is just the icing on top of the
cake when you work so hard,
and being able to achieve
something like this.”
Not much in life has come
easily for Day.
His father died of cancer
when Day was 12, and if not
for the sacrifices of his mother
to get him to a golf academy,
and the nurturing of Swatton,
there’s no telling where he
would be now. Day once
shopped for used clothes at a
store where for $5 he could
stuff as much as he could
into a bag.
“I remember not having
a hot water tank, so we had
to use a kettle for hot showers,” he said. “We would put
the kettle on and go have a
shower, and then my mom
would come bring three or
four kettles in, just to heat
them up. And it would take
five, 10 minutes for every
kettle to heat up.”
He had every reason to
expect a hard road along the
rugged terrain of Whistling
Straits on Sunday afternoon.
Day had a share of the
54-hole lead at the U.S.
Open, where he showed
remarkable strength to even
finish while coping with
symptoms of vertigo. He
faded to a 74. A month later,
he shared another 54-hole at
St. Andrews and missed the
playoff at the British Open
by one shot when he left a
30-foot birdie attempt a foot
short.
This time, he had least
had a two-shot margin,
along with pressure not to let
another chance get away. He
feared there would be emo-
tional scars if he didn’t finish
this one. And if that wasn’t
enough, he was paired with
Masters and U.S. Open
champion Jordan Spieth, the
new No. 1 player in golf.
Ultimately, that’s what
made it so special. Spieth’s
plan was to catch Day somewhere along the front nine,
though he could tell early
that Day was smashing the
driver and would be tough
to beat. Day really put the
Texan in a hole by making a
50-foot birdie putt on No. 7.
No one got closer than
two shots to Day the entire
round.
“He played like he had
won seven or eight majors
before,” Spieth said.
The highest praise for Day
came in the scoring trailer,
when he said Spieth told him,
“There’s nothing I could do.”
“It’s a good feeling when
someone like Jordan, who
is playing phenomenal golf
right now, says that,” Day
said. “Because it means that
he left everything out there
on the golf course and my
play this week was just so
much better — well, better
than everyone else. And that
feels good to me, because I
was the last man standing.”
The Wanamaker Trophy
was all he wanted. Only after
it was over did Day realize he
had broken a major championship record by finishing at
20 under par. The previous
mark belonged to Woods,
who was 19 under when he
won the 2000 British Open at
St. Andrews.
Woods watched him do
it Sunday. He saw a mature,
married man with a son
and another child due in
November, and someone
now with six PGA Tour wins
that include a major.
He’s not just another kid
coming up. He arrived.
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The Morning News – Bingham County’s news source
Tuesday, August 18, 2015
8A
COMICS & ADVICE
MICKEY MOUSE
ZITS
HI & LOIS
BLONDIE
BABY BLUES
B.C.
HAGAR
THE
HORRIBLE
FOR BETTER
BORN LOSER
OR
WORSE
MorningNews
Dear Annie: My husband and I are in our 60s.
Recently, he hugged a new
neighbor and kissed her on
the cheek. She is our age
and divorced. We don't
know her well at all. I was
shocked, embarrassed and
angry.
I commented later,
asking my husband if he
hugged and kissed any of
the other women (all married) in our group of friends.
He thinks I'm being ridiculous. But he has done similar things times in the past
whenever there's a new
female around. It's like he
can't help it. He becomes
completely obsessed with
the "new girl."
We've been married a
long time. I told him he
should always act like a
married man and that his
flirtatious behavior makes
me feel terrible and I don't
want to experience it anymore. I'm in shape and
attractive. I've thought
about doing something to
make my husband jealous
to see how he reacts. Right
now, I'm fed up and considering a divorce so I can
in your marriage? Do the
pros outweigh the cons?
Kathy
Would you be willing to
Mithchell
get counseling (with or
without him) to work on
&
the issue? Do you really
Marcie
want to leave him over
this? Often, the decisions
Sugar
we make when we are
angry or frustrated turn out
Annie's Mailbox
to be regretted.
Please give the situaenjoy the rest of my life. tion a great deal of thought
What's the deal? — Fed Up before you act, and conin Music City
sider your options carefully.
You have done all of the
preparation, and now it’s
time to get moving with your
plans. Learning from the past
will help you deal with what
lies ahead. Careful budgeting
will be a must. Serious contemplation and discipline
will help keep your momentum going.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- A
romantic relationship looks
promising. Don’t think you
can coast along professionally without putting in extra
effort. Involvement in social
or business events will provide you with future prospects.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-- It’s fine to be cautious,
but spending too much time
laboring over a new proposal
is likely to lead to regret.
When the deal is right, act
quickly or you will lose out.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
-- Self-improvement projects will lead to unexpected
compliments and offers. You
will have a few options and
will need to trust your intuition to guide you down the
right path. Nothing ventured,
nothing gained.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- Your plans will be put
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) -- Don’t let self-doubt
limit what you can accomplish. Others trust in your
abilities, and getting ahead
financially will be possible if
you take on added responsibilities without complaint.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) -- Be assertive, not
aggressive, if you want to
avoid conflict. You can make
your point heard if you
remain cool and present your
arguments in a practical and
controlled manner.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- Making the final touches on unfinished projects will
free you to start something
new. You will be able to get a
lot accomplished if you avoid
distractions and work alone.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
-- Love is in the air. Positive
advancement is quite possible, so stop second-guessing
your every move. Staying in
the background while hoping
for something to happen will
not bring you good results.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
-- You won’t get far if you try
to force others to do things
your way. Do as much as you
can on your own in order to
come out ahead.
DEAR DOCTOR K: I have
pain in my shoulder when I
raise my arm above my head.
My doctor says it’s caused by
“impingement.” What does
that mean, and what can I do
about it?
GARFIELD
August 18, 2015 2011 - 7B
am-news.com
DEAR READER: You know
the wide variety of things your
shoulder allows you to do
-- such as reach for a box of
cereal, swing a golf club and
wash your hair. Its wide range
of motion makes all these
things possible. However, the
design of a joint that lets you
do all of that also leaves the
joint vulnerable to injury.
Joints are places where
two or more bones meet. The
shoulder joint is where three
bones meet: the clavicle (collarbone), the scapula (shoulder blade) and the humerus
(upper arm bone).
The shoulder is a highly
mobile ball-and-socket joint.
The top of the humerus is a
ball of bone that sits in the
bony socket formed by the
clavicle and scapula. The
ball-and-socket construction
allows the arm to move freely.
It moves when muscles, tendons and ligaments tug on the
bone to move it. That group
of muscles, tendons and ligaments is called the rotator cuff.
(I’ve put an illustration on my
website, AskDoctorK.com.)
Shoulder impingement
Dear Fed Up: It sounds
like your husband is feeling his age and finds that
something "new" makes
him feel young and frisky
again. This is only threatening to your marriage if he
acts on these impulses with
more than hugs and cheek
kisses, and the woman
reacts with equal interest.
The next step is entirely up
to you.
You cannot force your
husband to change unless
he recognizes the need and
is willing. So, knowing that
these flirtations go no further, can you tolerate them?
Is this the only sore spot
Eugenia
Last
Astro-Graph
on hold, as unfolding events
will require your attention.
You will come out on top if
you roll with the punches
and don’t overreact.
SAGITTARIUS
(Nov.
23-Dec. 21) -- You can’t do
everything yourself, so don’t
be afraid to ask for help if you
need it. No matter what you
are working on, others will
gladly pitch in.
CAPRICORN
(Dec.
22-Jan. 19) -- Conditions
around you will be uncertain
and unsettling. Stay out of the
line of fire and work on your
own projects at your own
pace. Love and romance are
highlighted.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) -- It would be best to
make the first move. Traveling
for business will be to your
advantage. You will make a
stronger impression if you
meet face-to-face.
Dr.
Anthony
Komaroff
Ask Doctor K
occurs when the rotator cuff is
weakened or torn and cannot
hold the humerus in its proper
place when you lift your arm.
As a result, the arm bone gets
slightly dislodged and pinches
the tendons and ligaments
against another of the shoulder
bones. This can cause a pinching sensation, pain or weakness when you raise your arm
above your head.
Impingement can cause
inflammation and swelling in
the tendons. This narrows the
space between the arm bone
and the shoulder blade. As the
space shrinks, the arm bone
can’t rotate fully in the socket.
It gets harder to lift your arm
above shoulder level.
When
impingement
occurs suddenly, it’s usually
a result of overworking your
shoulder. If you are a professional baseball pitcher, you’re
at high risk. (By the way, if you
are, and if you’re really good,
my Boston Red Sox need you
as soon as your shoulder gets
fixed!) But even if you’re just
playing 18 holes of golf after a
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please email your
questions to [email protected], or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, c/o
Creators Syndicate, 737
3rd Street, Hermosa Beach,
CA 90254. You can also
find Annie on Facebook at
Facebook.com/AskAnnies.
To find out more about
Annie's Mailbox and read
features by other Creators
Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators
Syndicate Web page at
www.creators.com.
winter away from the course,
you can develop the condition. Impingement can also
develop slowly as tendons
tighten with age or arthritis
develops.
If your shoulder pain
came on suddenly, try treating it with rest and ice.
Avoid reaching overhead.
But don’t immobilize your
shoulder by wearing a sling.
Apply ice packs every few
hours to reduce inflammation.
Over-the-counter medications
like acetaminophen (Tylenol),
ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin) or
naproxen (Aleve) can help
relieve pain.
The longer you have pain,
the more likely it is that your
shoulder movement gradually will become limited.
Eventually you may not be
able to lift your arm over
your head. It’s called a “frozen shoulder.” Your doctor
can refer you to a physical
therapist. He or she will help
you adjust your movements
to strengthen your rotator cuff
muscles and loosen the tendons and ligaments.
If you catch it early, shoulder impingement can usually
be improved or cured. On
occasion, surgery is required.
When your condition is
improved, you’ll look back in
appreciation of all the things a
healthy shoulder lets you do.
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Building Lot in Swan Valley!!
#200122 • $36,000
1.64 Acres
Call
Karen Batten
D
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Great 3 bed 2 bath home on quiet st. New carpet, paint,
windows & updated bath. Fenced, sprinklers, GFA/AC
MLS#197575 • $134,00
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Secluded 3+ bed, 1.5 bath on 2 ac.
$137,900 • MLS 200332
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MLS 198308 • $219,000 Granite &
Remodeled! 5 bdrm 2 bath home.
2 car garage, 1 bed apt. & bonus rm. Granite, Tile, Hardwood. Near Golf Course tile
in kitchen. Formal living, great room New tiled baths & kitchen w/ appliMLS#193824 • $339,000.
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Call Ann 208-680-6063.
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$224,500.
lighting. egress. Call Ann 680-6063
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681-3494
65 E 100 N, Blackfoot
Idaho High Plains Realty www.idahohighplainsrealty.com
MLS 199662 $279,900.
4000 sq ft. 6 bedrooms, 3.5 baths, on
6 irrigated acres Spacious, great yard.
MLS 197381
$224,900
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Quality Twin Home For Sale
RiveRside Real estate
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Lot is the largest on the block.
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• 680-6063 •
Broker
611 N. Broadway Blackfoot
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Information & Pictures for every home listed in Southeast Idaho @ www.JustIdaho.com
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317-2360
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604-3058
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#200160 HISTORIC BEAUTY! $150,000
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#199893 Opportunity Knocks
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commercial. Call Susan 680-3325
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In the heart of Blackfoot. 1 Bdrm Upstairs, 3 Bdrm/2 Bath on Main, 2 Bdrms
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#192988 Beautiful Home! $349,900
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#197490 Beautiful! $159,900 #195661
3 bdrms, 2 baths, open floor plan,
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unfinished basement. Sold “As Is”
great view, yard & patio/decks Great home for handyman.
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197378 Move in Condition! $95,000
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#198913 Mountain Retreat $115,000
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acres w/shop, barn, chicken coop
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Newer manufactured home in good
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Subscribe to The Morning News • 785-1100
#198466 $695,000 Landmark Estate
4 bdrm, 3.5 bath executive home on
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DU
RE
3 Bdrm, 3 Bath with room to grow
in the framed & wired basement!
2710 sq ft just over 1 acre Lots of
extras! Landscaped,sprinkler system
MLS#198970 • $229,999
000 Homes For Sale
W!
RE
Ann Ogden
Assoc. Broker
• 604-6100 •
!
!
Wonderful 3 bdrm 2 bath Home
Basement can be an apartment
& has kitchen!
MLS#200106 • $115,000
!
!
NEW
"Don’t Just Put a Sign
In Your Yard! Call Us
To Get Results!!"
785-4000
220 N. Meridian
Blackfoot
reALTOr®
Jared@
Jared Taylor.net
Owner/BrOker
Jed@
JedTaylor.com
R
Maintenance Free Stucco Finish
$99,000
MLS 199850
1,716 sq ft, 4 bedrooms, 2 Full Baths
new roof & Flooring, Privacy Fence
Call Jed at 681-4000
reALTOr®
email@
Candrarisa.com
Perfect Home, Ready for New Owner
$128,900
MLS 196745
1,790 sq ft, 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms
new Appliances, wH & Gas Furnace
Call Angela at 757-9538
d!
ce
R
Home & 10 Country Acres
$110,000
MLS 196133
2,536 sq ft, 4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms
west of Blackfoot-near Site Bus Stop
Call Jed at 681-4000
Beautiful, High Quality Construction
$175,000
MLS 197146
1,582 sq ft, 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms
no Maint.Yard! Full wheelchair Access
Call Jed at 681-4000
R
d!
Home on 3 Acres
One Level Country Home on 8.75 Ac. Amazing Home &4000 sq ft Shop
$330,000
MLS 196052
$399,000
MLS 199396
$300,000
MLS 197112
3,696 sq ft, 4 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms 3,200 sq ft, 4 bedrooms, 3.5 bathrooms 4,000 sq ft, 6 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms
Includes dwelling used as Beauty Salon Open Floor Plan, Formal Lvng& Dn rm water rights for 2+ Acres of Beauty
Call Angela at 757-9538
Call Jed at 681-4000
Call Jed at 681-4000
785-6685
Buying or Selling? Call us today
for a Free Market Analysis!!
Tami Fairchild
681-6646
Valerie Duran Lindsay Fairchild Sharlyn Piggott Kathy Rhead
680-1815
681-6643
317-3171
260-0933
!
NEW
!
NEW
Nice Brick Home
2022 Sq Ft home
3 Bedrooms, 1 Bathroom
Unfinished Basement
MLS#200462 - $127,900
!
Country Living Close To Town
2676 sq ft home w/5 bdrm, 1 3/4
bath, 1.379 acres w/water rights
MLS#192727 • $179,000
NEW
Beautiful Home In The Country
3526 Sq Ft home w/ 6 bed, 3 bath
1 Acre Lot, 3 Car Garage
24 X 24 shop
MLS#200717 • $315,000
Wonderful Home in Pingree
2838 sq ft home on 2.123 Acres
3 bdrm 3 bath, open floor plan
2 car garage & outbuildings
MLS #195315 • $189,000
NEW
Waterfront Property
5.13 acres in Shelley
Build your dream home here
MLS#200045 • $229,000
G!
NDIN
PE
Gorgeous 2 Story Home
3084 Sq Ft/3 Bed-2.5 Baths
Built in 2008-Lots of upgrades
MLS#197878 • $264,900
E!
RIC
P
TED
PDA
U
Newer Town Home
985 Sq Ft w/2 bed, 1 bath
Single Car Garage
MLS#197916 • $112,000
l!!
Dea
Custom Home in Atomic City
2 bed 2 bath 2500 sq ft on 0.42 ac
2500 sq ft shop
MLS#183047 • $120,000
E!
P
TED
PDA
U
Wonderful Brick Home
2202 Sq Ft w/5 Bed, 2 Bath
Brand New kitchen
MLS#200454 - $134,900
ed
Pric
Newer Home in Wapello
3020 Sq ft home on 1.075 Acre
4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms
MLS#200566 - $229,000
RIC
!
NEW
at
Gre
Luxury Home on 4 Acres
$850,000
MLS 197162
6,095 sq ft, 6 bedrooms, 4.5 baths
Great room with 2 Story window
Call Jed at 681-4000
John Fairchild
Broker
70 S. Spruce
!
Beautiful Brick Home
$189,900
MLS 199406
3,020 sq ft, 4 bedroom, 3 bathrooms
extensively remodeled, newer roof
Call Jed at 681-4000
ce
u
ed
Home isWhere
The Heart Is
Home In The Country
2000 sq ft w/4 bdrms, 2 baths
Ready to move in & Priced to sell!
MLS#183597 • $167,500
ell!
To S
Cute Home Close To Schools
1131 Sq Ft home, 3 Bed, 1 bath
New carpet, tile, paint
MLS#198715 • $118,000
!
NEW
Great Starter Home
1351 sq ft w/ 2 bdrm 1 bath
Unfinished Basement
MLS# 195679 • $63,000
B
Beautiful Home In The Country
2600 Sq Ft home
3 Bed, 2 Bath Unfinished bsmnt
MLS#197086 • $203,000
!
NEW
Cute Home
808 Sq Ft w/2 bed, 1 bath
Some new paint, Flooring, etc
Attached 1 car garage
MLS#199361 • $84,900
ot!
ul L
tif
eau
Gorgeous Building Lot
on the River
MLS#180683 • $129,000
!
NEW
Fantastic Open Floor Plan
2795 Sq Ft home5 Bdrm, 3 Baths
12 x16 deck overlooks beautiful yard
MLS#200510 • $210,000
6 bed, 4 bath, 5100 sq ft
3.839 Ac.of private setting
MLS#190734 • $369,000
E!
RIC
P
TED
PDA
Great Location For Business
3920 sq ft building. Great for retail,
office or investment. Owner will
carry w/acceptable offer & down pmt.
MLS# 182434 • $169,000
E!
RIC
P
TED
PDA
Beautiful Custom Home
U
TED
PDA
U
U
Wonderful Brick home
2711 Sq Ft / 4 Bed, 2.5 Baths
Open Floor Plan & Lots Of Storage
MLS# 189137 • $172,500
3 bdrm 4 bath Townhome!
MLS#199237 • $119,500
Fenced Yard, Low Maintenance Siding
$139,000
MLS 199071
2,298 sq ft, 4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms
Convenient-keyless entry + Security Sys
Call Angela at 757-9538
u
ed
Home w Shop on 2.77 Acres
$156,000
MLS 199879
2,128 sq ft, 4 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms
Commercial Possibilities’ on Hwy 26
Call Angela at 757-9538
!
reALTOr®
Angela@
AngelaMPalmer.com
ed
uc
d
Re
!
NEW
be a More
Affordable
Time to
Buy a
Angela Palmer
757-9538
Candra Risa
681-6102
d!
R
There
May Never
Place your ad and
with
5picture
bed 1 & 1/2
bath,
the country.
The In
Morning
News
MLS#200762 • $134,900
at 785-1100
ce
u
ed
Fully Fenced, Lrg Mature Yard
$98,500
MLS 197416
1,241 sqft, 3 bedrooms, Large bath
Gas F/A Heat, Updtd Flring &Paint
Call Angela at 757-9538
Jared Taylor
557-9595
Jed Taylor
681-4000
D!
CE
U
ED
New Listing
Coming
Soon!
!
Heather
Callister
244-2706
2,350 sq. ft. finished area
4 bdrms, 3 baths, Fenced and
landscaped. 2300 Windsor Court
MLS#197892 • $184,900
Comfortable 3 Bdrm 2 Bath Home
$69,000 • MLS#189940
With potential of having
4.4 acres Great horse property
2 additional Bedrooms and Bath
Great 4 acre bldg lot in country!
MLS200235 • $199,900
NEW
Elias
Trejo
716-7007
NEW
Beautiful 5 Bdrm 3 Bath Home
Over 3,300 sq. ft. finished
Two Car Garage
MLS#198471 * $219,900
NEW
Spacious!
3 bedroom, 2 bath
on 1 acre in the country
MLS#200446 • $135,000
Manuel
Garcia
680-2664
!
NEW
2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths
1,113 sq. ft. Owner/BrokerMLS#199460 • $124,900
New listing! 2 bdrm, 1 bath
A great buy at only
$69,999
Team 208
!
!
NEW
NEW
3 Bdrm, 3 Bath Country
Home in Pingree!
Has 2 out buildings and corrals
MLS#199833 • $115,000
Kim Wolfley
Broker, GRI
• 680-2678 •
785-3494
Blackfoot, Idaho
idahowestern
realty.com
See more information on these and additional listings at:
www.IdahoWesternRealty.com
NEW
Five Acres in Fort Hall
$37,500
000 Homes For Sale
!
5 bdrm 3 bath, 2624 sq ft
Newly remodeled ready to move
into on just under 3 acres!
MLS 198405 • $195,000
Lot For Sale
NE
000 Homes For Sale
000 Homes For Sale
ED
C
DU
2 bdrms 1 bath 865 sq ft
Very clean! Nice back yard
MLS 193801 • $80,000
MorningNews
www.am-news.com
Spacious Building
3034 sq ft w/6+ Offices
20+ off street parking
MLS#189924 • $149,900
!
NEW
Beautiful Home On 2 Acres
3875 Sq Ft, 5 Bed, 3 1/2 Bath
Spacious Open kitchen
Main Floor Master
MLS#200324 • $310,000
G!
DIN
PEN
Cute Home
840 sq ft w/2 bdrms, 1 bath
1 car garage attached
MLS#197759 • $71,000
CE!
PRI
Beautiful Home!!
3072 sq ft w/5 bdrms, 3 baths
3 car garage.
This home has all the extras
MLS#178128 • $208,000
LOTS FOR SALE
Great Country Subdivision
1-2.47 ACRE LOTS
Natural Gas, Power,
Phone to lot.
Pressurized Irrigation
FOR MORE INFO
CALL TAMI AT
681-6646
TRy OUR QR code
TO CONNECT TO
OUR WEBSITE.
LOOk FOR SIGNS
WITh ThE QR
COdE FOR ThAT
hOME!
Nice Brick Home
2004 Sq Ft w/3 Bed 1 & 3/4 Baths
Well Maintained-ready to move in
MLS#196836 • $121,000
!
NEW
Home on 1 acre
2160 Sq ft w/ 4 bed, 2 bath
Lots of updates
MLS#198569 • $139,000
!
NEW
Well Maintained Home
1276 Sq ft home
2 Bed, 1.5 Baths
MLS#200654 • $69,900
MorningNews
CLASSIFIEDS
www.am-news.com
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
Tuesday, August 18, 2015
000 Homes For Sale
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000 Homes For Sale
$136,500.00 WOW !! What A Great Home,
Clean and Ready To Move Into. 4 bdrms,
2 bath, gorgeous kitchen with all the extras, large
living room, formal dining room w/built in hutch.
Beautiful yard with auto sprinkler.
#
1
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Kathy
Broker, GRI
208-681-2474
• 684-3919 •
$160,000
Beautiful Victorian
6 bdrms 2.75 baths
One of a kind
2 car oversized
finished garage
Priced to sell
$380,000
MLS # 199820 Country Escape in
Groveland Area
7.8 + acres, private pond and custom
landscaping
2 story home with 2 shops / shed
5 bdrms, 3 baths, covered patio
rice!
ted P
Upda
$375,000
Custom built
on river front
acreage.
6 bdrm beautiful home with a
priceless view.
Town & Country Real Estate
785-2474 - 710 W. Bridge
000 Homes For Sale
030 Lots - Acreage
Lots and Acreage
• A Great lot in a well developed Subdivision ready to build on.
Utilities are on the lot. Sale of the lot is contingent on Loosli
Construction Inc being the builder and construction to begin
within 120 days of purchase of the lot. $30,000 Call Renette
604-3058 MLS #178836
• Bare Ground ranging from 1 acre to 23 acres priced
from $10k to $58K located North of Moreland
• #195446 Hard to find R3 Lot in the City $17,500
Call Andy: 681-7444
• Priced to Sell! 6.76 lush irrigated acres on the edge
of town. Great building site for horse or cattle lovers
or for single family subdivision (Zone R1).
Only $75,000 MLS#199663 Call Carrie 681-7555
Commercial
000 Homes For Sale
Aberdeen • $99,500
Must see! Aberdeen. • $158,500
ed!
uc
Red
d!
uce
W!
Aberdeen! $286,500
NE
Red
mLs#200468 - spacious 2653
sQ.FT. Brick home on 2 1/2
Acres. 5-6 bedroom, 2.5 Baths.
1 car garage, plus shop.
Auto sprinklers.
MLS #194005 - 3 bdrm, 1 bath w/
Incredible 5420 sq ft custom brick
separate extra walk-in shower. New
home on 5 acres! 5 bdrm, 4 bath,
carpet & paint! Lrg. orchard, 1 acre! office, exercise room, 2 bonus rooms,
Call
Terry Lebrecht
681-1191
terrylebrecht@
gmail.com
2 family rooms, 3 fireplaces & indoor
Hot Tub. Chef’s kitchen w/pantry.
Water rights, sprinkler system, &
Much More!! MLS#199346
$75,000 • 199510
2 bdrm 1 bath, 760 sq ft
One car garage.
Cindy
Schroeder
681-5552
!
NEW
$89,900 • 199188
3 bdrm 1 bath, in Basalt
Won’t last long!
W!
NE
4 bdrm, 2 bath Home. 1800 sq ft
Remodeled from top to bottom!!
MLS#200424 • $129,000
W!
NE
!
d
OL
S
5 bed, 2 bath, 2184 sq ft
Perfect, affordable, &
charming updated home!!
.MLS# 199771 • $123,000
• Commercial Building with over 11,000 sq. ft.
There are 3 warehouses (2 of which are leased) and plenty
of office space for only $225,000. Call Carrie 681-7555
•2.64 acres commercial ground with 531’ of frontage.
Great access and visibility from Hwy 26. Possible Owner
carry. MLS #196547 Call Renette #604-3058.
RE/MAX
PREFERRED PROPERTIES
199 W. BRIDGE ST.
BLACKFOOT, ID 83221
785-7555
NeW Hud
2 bed, 1 bath, 1440 sq ft
HUD Home
.MLS# 200225 • $87,000
4 bdrm 2 baths Near Greenbelt.
Handicap accesibility! 2460 sq ft.
MLS#194809 • $129,900
Amanda
Scott
403-6547
Heather
Callister
244-2706
Roxie Jensen
680-4018
w
Ne
Residential lots in Atomic City!
Perfect location, city water.
MLS 186826 • $45,900
Gary Ternus
680-1901
www.garyternus.com
Justin Bair
690-9094
[email protected]
Elias Trejo
716-7007
Manuel Garcia
680-2664
Judy
Campbell
589-8247
Featured Home!!
!
29.5 Commercial Acres-Salvage Yard
Zoned M2 Heavy Industrial
MLS 188440 • $185,000
!
All Brick! 4 bdrm, 2 bath home has 2200 sq ft
Great views. MLS#197767 • $139,500
!Featured Home!!
PeN
785-1313
G!
N
dI
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P
80 Acre Farm near Driggs with
3 bed, 1 bath, 1320 sq ft home
.MLS# 196787 • $599,000
ce!
Pri
G
dIN
Fenced Corner Lot! 5 bdrm, 2 bath, 2028 sq ft
Finished basement. MLS#197540 • $115,000
NEW
Low
ed
uc
d
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Two lot(s) near Mackay for single family homes. RV’s
Okay with city approval. MLS 175369 • $12,500 each
785-3058
604-3058
1 bdrm 1 bath 560 sq ft 1 car garage 1.3 ac Atomic City
MLS 193700 • $45,000
N
Cathy
Haggard
317-6919
TOWNHOME
3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths.
Private Patio & Storage.
$62500 a month.
Both year lease.
$45000 deposit.
Water, sewer, garbage paid
No smoking, no pets.
N
!
EW
Mark Call
604-4602
Owner/Broker
Near New
3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths,
Garage, gas heat, A.C.
Private Patio
$73000 a month.
Featured Home!!
!
EW
W!
NE I.F.
In
d!
Unique Desert Oasis in Atomic City
Liquor License/inventory/living qtrs.
MLS#188394 • $59,000
**********
COTTONWOOD
COMMUNITY APARTMENTS
Beautifully Remodeled
One-bedroom – $420
Two-bedroom – $520
Three-bedroom, $620
In nice quiet cul-de-sac neighborhood.
Ask about our new, pet-friendly policy.
Call 317-7457
**********
Buy • Sell • or Trade
Morning News Classifieds
785-1100
Martha
Bermudez
589-0056
e
uc
d
Re
060 Unfurn.Apts.ForRent
EXCEPTIONAL
TOWNHOME!
$169,000 • 199482
Perfect Location!! 4 bdrm 3
bath, 2580 sq ft
Lots of Extras Don’t miss this one!
4 bed, 2 bath, 2972 sq ft
HUD Home
.MLS# 199999 • $148,000
FOR RENT - 438 E. COURT
One-bedroom, one bath apartment.
$500/month furnished or $450/month
unfurnished. Completely remodeled
with new appliances. No pets. Call
(208) 251-0866 for details.
• #196911 $95,000 Large .502 acre commercial lot
on N Broadway near the fair grounds. Ready for your
business. Call Jean: 317-2360
D!
NeW Hud
050 Furn. Apts. For Rent
3 BEDROOM APARTMENT
(Smaller Bedrooms) in Blackfoot W/D
hookups. Water, sewer, garbage paid.
Storage. $450 mo. + $250 dep.
Call to see: 221-5249
If You Want More, You Want Us!!
Featured Home!!
**********
TWO-BEDROOM BRICK
Near MVMS
Unfinished basement - gas heat - nice
yard. Call 785-5520.
**********
12,000 sq ft on main thoroughfare. Only $125,000
Bring all offers seller motivated.
MLS 193511 Call Carrie:#681-7555
E
UC
D
RE
$75,000 • 199514
2 bdrm 1 bath, 760 sq ft
One car garage.
• Great Downtown Location with high visibility! Over
000 Homes For Sale
Linnea
Real Estate
Agent
• 680-1996 •
Call or email Kathy or Linnea today for a list of all of the homes in
your price range today! [email protected] [email protected]
030 Lots - Acreage
000 Homes For Sale
3B
Cozy, 2 bdrm 1bath 1137 sq ft
with 27x14 building next to home
MLS 193459 • $86,499
745 W Bridge
Suite B
www.IdahoanRealty.com
am-news.com
Property is being sold “as is”
5 bdrm, 3 bath, 2860 sq ft MLS#198132 • $65,000
!
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3 bdrm 1 bath Great starter home. 1400 sq ft. Fenced yard w/fruit trees!
MLS#187631 • $99,500
am-news.com
4B
CLASSIFIEDS
Tuesday, August 18, 2015
060 Unfurn.Apts.ForRent
060 Unfurn.Apts.ForRent
070 Homes For Rent
SUNNYRIDGE APARTMENTS
r o o f t o p
1615 Camas Street - Blackfoot
NOW TAKING APPLICATIONS FOR...
real estate
management
TWO-BEDROOM
APARTMENTS
•Two bedroom one bath Home
Call 522-roof to make an appointment or
check it out online at rooftoprentals.net
(208) 782 2111
For information &
Applications call...
This Institution is an
Equal Opportunity Provider and Employer
060 Unfurn.Apts.ForRent
130 Notices
AA HAPPY HOUR
MEETINGS
Jason Lee
Methodist Church
168 S. University
Wednesdays & Saturdays
6 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Sunday mornings
9 a.m. to 10 a.m.
Will Sign Court Cards.
070 Homes For Rent
One & two bedroom apartments
for Senior Citizens in Aberdeen,
Blackfoot & Firth. Appliances
furnished. Deposit required.
Rental assistance available.
Bingham Housing, Inc.,
P.O. Box 781, Blackfoot
**********
2, TWO-BEDROOM
MOBILE HOMES
For rent at Town & Country Mobile Home Park. New carpet.
$425 plus deposit. No pets. Call
785-1581, leave message.
***********
785-9639
CUTE AND CLEAN
140 Personals
Two-bedroom, one bath home. $600
AL-ANON/ALA-TEEN
plus $350 deposit. No smoking. Call
IN GROVELAND
Sundays:
Very nice, three-bedroom, one bath 785-6685 or 681-6646.
7 p.m. to 8 p.m.
apartment with garage, dishwasher, all
Bingham Memorial Cafeteria
NEWER HOME FOR RENT
appliances. Landlord pays water/garThree-bedroom, two bath home with Tuesdays and Thursdays:
bage. $650. Call 317-1133.
7 p.m. to 8 p.m.
two-car garage - on one acre.
IN TOWN
St. Paul’s Episcopal Church
$1,200/month plus $600 deposit. Call
One and two-bedroom apartment. $350 785-6685 or 681-6646.
72 North Shilling
and $425 plus deposit. Call 785-3560.
522-4947 or 785-2541
*Equal Housing Opportunity*
IN TOWN
STUDIO APARTMENT
With electric heat. $235/month plus deposit. Call 785-3560.
NEWLY-REMODELED
STOUT STREET APTS.
Two-bedroom, one bath in excellent
location near schools. No pets.
Fridge/stove included. Washer/dryer
hookups. $435 plus $400 deposit.
Call 680-0377.
**********
ONE AND TWO-BEDROOM
Daily, weekly and monthly rates.
All utilities plus cable included. Call
Paul, 406-7744.
ONE-BEDROOM
BASEMENT APT.
Clean and roomy. All utilities paid. No
pets or smoking. $395 plus deposit 141 S. Birch, Blackfoot. Call 317-1362.
ROOM FOR RENT
$300/month plus $150 deposit.
Utilities included. Call 680-3876 or
text.
THREE - ONE-BEDROOMS
All utilities paid. $550 plus deposit.
Also two-bedroom by Rupes. $600.
Call 240-0419
THREE-BEDROOM
APARTMENT
Heating, a.c., washer/dryer, appliances. $620 plus deposit. Call (208)
971-9199.
**********
NICE, two-bedroom, one bath.
Washer and dryer, dishwasher, one-car
garage. Call 690-9195.
**********
130 Notices
150 Lost & Found
We accept
MasterCard, VISA,
and Discover.
Place Your
Classified
Ad Today!
MorningNews
www.am-news.com
785-1100
Notice
For more information and
assistance regarding the
investigation of financing,
business opportunities,
The Morning News
urges its readers to contact the
Better Business Bureau of
Eastern Idaho, Inc.
by writing
425 N. Capital
Idaho Falls, ID 83402
or call 523-9754.
Find it fast...
785-1100
070 Homes For Rent
Check out the
Animal Shelter for
your lost pets.
L o st p e ts a re
o n ly h e ld
th re e to five d a ys.
199 Frontage R d.
785-6897
180 Help Wanted
180 Help Wanted
********
Home Guard Siding
Is needing help for Siding,
Roofing, Windows. Experience preferred but will train.
Call 233-2171.
********
Booth Lease Available. Also nail
tech needed. Call Stephanie at
208-785-0682.
DRIVER NEEDED
Local route, full time. Must have clean
driving record. Class A - CDL. Bring resume to or pick up application at:
518 W. Highway 39
Blackfoot, Idaho
FREE
Ham Fried Rice
Firth School District #59
Has Bus Driver Positions Open.
Apply at : www.firthschools.org or call:
346-6815
with the purchase of a Morning News classified ad
GOLDEN CHINA
RESTAURANT
180 Help Wanted
MorningNews
180 Help Wanted
POWER COUNTY HOSPITAL
Is looking for a:
LEAD RN
In our long-term care department.
Apply online at: www.pchd.net
Or email your questions or resumes to:
[email protected]
Phlebotomy Class
August 20, 21 & 22
At the Hampton Inn on Channing Way
In Idaho Falls. Cost: $250.
Call Wendy 932-5300
Now Hiring:
Day Shifts
Apply in person at:
814 S. Broadway
Blackfoot
Cannon
Builders is
currently
hiring
Concrete
Construction
Workers
Wage DOE
$12 to $25 an hour
Please Fax resume
to (208) 785-4775
~DENTAL ASSISTANT~
Needed starting August 28. Experience
preferred. General practice three days
per week. Send or bring resume to:
2407 Teeples Drive
Blackfoot, Idaho 83221
Dawn Enterprises, Inc.
Cedar Center
NOW HIRING
Dependable and Responsible Person to Assist
Individuals with Disabilities.
First aid, CPR and Medication Certification preferred.
Various Shifts. Part-Time Hours.
Please apply in person at:
280 Cedar Street
EOE
DRIVERS WANTED!!!!
REWARD LOST MINI-PINCHER
Male no collar Went missing in
Blackfoot area 7-25-15 Please call
208-598-2308 or 402-319-7931
www.am-news.com
Classes Start Weekly
Day or Evening
*5-Week-Day Session Available
*One-On-One Driver Training
*Job Placement Assistance
*$30 to $40,000 per year
*Good Jobs Available
SAGE TECHNICAL
80 Doud Street
Blackfoot, Idaho
www.sageschools.com
782-2282
Buy & Sell
the easy way
with the
Morning News
Classifieds
785-1100
Southeastern Idaho
DevelopmentalCenter
Therapy Aide/Tech
FT/PT positions available in Blkt/Poc area teaching
life skills to children, youth, and adults with developmental disabilities. No experience required. Flexible
PT hours. May be able to work around school, work
schedules, etc. Must be at least 18 with GED. Background check upon hire, valid driver’s license, and
good driving record. Position DOE. Apply at 765 W.
Judicial, Blackfoot, Idaho 782-1301.
POWER COUNTY HOSPITAL
Is looking for an:
MDS Coordinator in Long Term Care
Please apply online at: www.pchd.net
Or email your resume to:
[email protected]
NEW TODAY
Harvest
Positions
Hiring for the following Harvest Positions
Now !
g
Hirin
• Cellar Crew Laborers and Sorters
• 10 Wheel Truck Drivers. (Must have a clean driving record).
• Tractor and Farm Equipment Operators
• Semi-Truck Drivers
Positions will last four to six weeks &
offer competitive wage DOE.
Please Apply at Idaho Commerce & Labor
or Wada Farms, Inc. 326 S. 1400 W. Pingree, ID 83262
845 W. Bridge • 785-0100 • Blackfoot, ID
With every purchase of a paid Morning News Classified Ad.
Don’t Delay...
Place your ad today
For a limited time when you purchase a
Morning News Classified Ad, you’ll receive
a coupon good for a Free Ham Fried Rice
compliments of the Morning News and Golden
China. Limited to one coupon per person per
visit. Just place your pre-paid, one week ad in
person and we’ll give you a free coupon. No
limit to the number of coupons you can earn,
one coupon for each pre-paid week long ad.
34 N. Ash St., Blackfoot
208-785-1100
OFFER EXPIRES Sept 30, 2015
Where The
Jobs Are
MORNING
NEWS
CLASSIFIEDS
Check Us
Out
MorningNews
CLASSIFIEDS
www.am-news.com
Tuesday, August 18, 2015
210 Good Things To Eat
240 Services Offered
210 Good Things To Eat
Shoemaker’s
************
HOME TOUCH
HOUSECLEANING
SERVICE, LLC
YOUR “GREEN GROCER”
Bonded and Insured
New clients!
Susan Christiansen
380-9610
************
It’s Pickle Time!!!
Cucumbers Are Ready!!
Also: Corn, Basil, Zucchini,
Summer Squash,
Hagerman Watermelons & More!
OPEN DAILY
9 a.m. to 7 p.m.
201 N. 300 W.
• 785-6346 •
************
POGGE’S EXCAVATION
LLC
~Licensed and Bonded~
*Post Hole Digging
*Custom Grading
*Driveways, all sizes
*Water Lines
*Sewer Systems
*Homesites
*Haul topsoil & gravel
(We acept credit card on-site)
Call 684-3403, 681-1550
or 681-0582
************
220 Pets & Grooming
Place an ad..
785-1100
Blackfoot
Pet Grooming
by DeAnna
OPEN MONDAY-FRIDAY
8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.
SATURDAYS
9 a.m. to 12 Noon
785-6789 or 680-5459
Most dogs in and out
within an hour.
We Groom Large
& Small Breeds.
Cats Too!!
Walk-Ins Welcome!
240 Services Offered
240 Services Offered
Broken Arrow
Compact Tractor Work
travIs Hall
374 N 300 W
Blackfoot ID 83221
208-681-2175
230 Giveaways
FREE GUINEA PIG TO GOOD
HOME
Call: 785-1226
FREE OUTSIDE KITTENS
to good homes. Riverside Area
Call: 240-5715
180 Help Wanted
180 Help Wanted
180 Help Wanted
180 Help Wanted
5B
Dump Truck
Top Soil • Gravel • Sand
Landscaping Rock
TracTor Work
Tilling • Loader • Ditch Dyking
Leveling • Weed Mowing
Snow Blower
Asphalt Paving
• Sanding
• Pit Run
• Landscape Rock & Boulders
• Sewer Systems
• Grading
• Commercial/Residential
• Crushed Gravel
• Screened Topsoil
• Back Hoe
• Arena Sand
Delivered or Loaded
Mickelsen Construction • 684-3803 •
Hot Plant, 785-0487
We accept all major Credit Cards!!
THE AMALGAMATED
SUGAR COMPANY
Honey for Hire
Is currently accepting applications for seasonal
work at the American Falls office located at
220 Oregon Trail
There will be a company representative there
8am-10am Monday - Friday
Other times may be arranged by
phoning 226-2400.
Openings will be at the American Falls,
Aberdeen, and Liberty (Pingree Area),
Seagull Bay Receiving Stations
& Pleasant Valley Locations.
Starting wages at $10.70/hr. with
potential to work in excess of 70 hrs/wk
w/overtime paid at time and a half.
Interviews will begin in September.
Contact your local Job Service
(Commerce & Labor) for additional information
or apply at our office in American Falls,
220 Oregon Trail
Monday - Friday 8am-10am.
Appliance Repair
Home Repairs
Trash Removal
Decks & Fencing
General Labor
Framing, Painting
Chimney Cleaning
s
Reference!
Available Call Scott
339-3573
Music Lessons
Call 339-3573
KLINGLER
ASPHALT
MAINTENANCE
✩ Seal Coating
✩ Crack Sealing
✩ Asphalt Repairs
✩ Paving
✩ Parking Lot Striping
✩ Parking Lot Sweeping
✩ Backhoe/Dump Truck Service
✩ Gravel
We Are An Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F
190 Child Care
**********
UNIVERSITY DAYCARE
ICCP Certified
• Ages infants to 8-years-old
•One-on-one care
with activities
•Big fenced play yard
•Snacks & Lunch
Call now, 785-0566 or 785-3791
**********
220 Pets & Grooming
JULIE’S PET SALON
42 Years’ Experience
785-4940
Subscribe
Now!!
MorningNews
www.am-news.com
Call
785-1100
785-7494
240 Services Offered
**********
208 CONCRETE
Specialize in Residential Flatwork
Patios
Driveways
Sidewalks
Garage Floors
Stamped or Colored
Custom Concrete
FREE ESTIMATES
LOWEST PRICE GUARANTEED!!
Call (208) 406-9900 or
339-3486
**********
**********
THE SQUEEGY SQUAD
WINDOW WASHING
Specializing in “hard water removal!”
Residential and Commercial
Free Estimates
Reasonable Rates
Call 680-6467 or 317-2978
************
************
HOME TOUCH
HOUSECLEANING
SERVICE, LLC
Bonded and Insured
New clients!
Susan Christiansen
380-9610
************
Quality Service Since 1995
Denton Klingler - Owner
Bonded • Public Works Licensed
Commercial • Residential
JusT CAll BoB!
“When Bessie
Does,” Give us
DBA
A BuZZ!
Custom Fabrication & Truck Repair
• Specializing in Stretching Truck Frames
• General Fabrication • Aluminum Repairs
[email protected]
DBACustom
Manure spreading
“We do everything but stand
behind our work”
[email protected]
Been in a World of Shit Since 1999
BoB Caldwell
Ventures, Inc.
244 S 1400 W, Pingree - 221-6447 or 684-4550
6B
CLASSIFIEDS
Tuesday, August 18, 2015
240 Services Offered
240 Services Offered
785-5323
“Low Price Leader!”
Residential & Commercial
General Contractors
•RCE 11755
www.steadmanconstruction.net
WE DO:
• Concrete sidewalks
• Concrete foundations
• Concrete Driveways
• Excavation of all kinds
• Hauling
• Demolition
• Water Mains
• Septic Systems
• Top Soil
• Gravel
RCE 16241
Satisfaction Guaranteed
Quality Since 1987
Summer Is Here!!
Schedule Now While There Is Still Time!!
• Sprinklers • Landscaping • Water Features
Mike Fresh • 684-4955 • Member of the
www.mikeslawndesign.com
250 Misc. For Sale/Rent
Reach 750,000
Homes
With one call to
Jane at 208-785-1100
Pacific Northwest Newspapers Display
Ad Network
ESTABLISHED IN 1970
•Spring / Fall Cleanups
•Complete Lawn Maintenance
•Professional Tree Care
•Lawn Fertilization
•Lawn Aeration / Power Rake
Cell:(208) 680-6446
www.greenbearlawncare.com
250 Misc. For Sale/Rent
Moreland
Storage
!Repair & Restoration of your
Favorite Clock or Watch
!"#$%&'()*++,&(-+#./(
((0%.1#&2(3415#&*6,'(7,&8*.,
!7$*99(:&#;,99*#<%++2(
((=&%*<,'
!("%<'9(#<(>?@,&*,<.,(#;(
Over 50 Years
!)%/,9("#49,(-%++9
!-%++(=#'%2(1#()%/,
an Appointment
Security Fence &
Gate
10 x 10’s
10 x 15’s
10 x 20’s
10 x 30’s
210 N. 700 W.
Grover Service Centre
ABC((D,91(:#+,+*<,(E#%'
E,?F4&GH(IJ(ACKKL
New Units
Available!!
208 356-6085
-5,./(M4&(D,F(7*1,
G&#8,&9,&8*.,.,<1&,N.#O
AIR
CONDITIONING
Clean - Service - Maintain
This Summer
25 - Words rate $525
extras Words: $50 each
ad reaches
3 Million Pacific northWesterners in
30 daily neWsPaPers,
runs the 3-highest circulation days
in aK, id, Mt, or, ut, & Wa.
call Jane at 785-1100
$7,500.00
with
TODD’S
HEATING & AIR CONDITIONING
604-5444
Residential Services
24 Hour Emergency Service
Buy • Sell
or Trade
in the
Morning News
Classifieds
785-1100
Call: 680-5141
www.am-news.com
Vacation Rentals?
Franchise Opportunities!
Auctions? Training Schools?
Call:
250 Misc. For Sale/Rent
with one Slide Solar Setup
Good Condition!!
MorningNews
34 N. Ash • Blackfoot
420 Cars
420 Cars
2003 BUICK LESABRE CUSTOM
Only 49,000 actual miles, Clean Carfax, many options. If you want a beautiful, conditioned, economical, low mile,
like new car, for a low price, don’t miss
this one!
Only $6895.00
Call Von, 589-7142 or
Liquidators Unlimited
522-7142, Idaho Falls
792 E. Greenway
2014 CHEVROLET MALIBU ECO
Only 18,000 miles - 36 miles per gallon. Perfect Car Fax. Trades welcome!
Remainder of GM 100K factory warranty!
Only $17,995!
Call Allen, 589-7105 or
Liquidators Unlimited
522-7142, Idaho Falls
792 E. Greenway
2004 BUICK LESABRE LIMITED
An immaculate, beautiful, economical
car with almost all options. Includes
leather, heads up display, On-Star, etc.
85K. These cars usually give thousands and thousands of miles of beautiful driving pleasure!!
Only $8,485
Call Von, 589-7142 or
Liquidators Unlimited
522-7142, Idaho Falls
792 E. Greenway
420 Cars
2001 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX
4-door, 3.1, V-6. Power seat, cruise,
automatic. Local trade. Runs great!
Good title. Lots of car for only
$2,498
Call Allen, 589-7105 or
Liquidators Unlimited
522-7142, Idaho Falls
792 E. Greenway
2004 PT Cruiser, 196K Miles with
newer extra tires 1996 3/4 ton Ford
PU, 100k miles $1900 Each
Call: 604-2205
2014 FORD FUSION SE
Only 15K miles. Satellite radio, power
seats, microsoft sync, 35 MPG.
Hard-to-find tuxedo black paint. Perfect
car fax.
Only $18,995
Call Allen, 589-7105 or
Liquidators Unlimited
522-7142, Idaho Falls
792 E. Greenway
SECOND OWNER - LOCAL TRADE
2004 Chevy Malibu
Loaded!! Runs great! 110,000 miles.
2005 KIA AMANTI
Perfect vin check.
Only 68,000 miles. Has most options,
Only $4,995
including sunroof, etc. This car is an
Call Allen, 589-7105 or
immaculate, economical, long-lasting
Liquidators Unlimited
luxury car at a very affordable price.
522-7142 Idaho Falls
A joy to drive!!!
792 E. Greenway
Only $7,985
Call Von, 589-7142 or
Liquidators Unlimited
522-7142, Idaho Falls
792 E. Greenway
2013 LINCOLN MKZ
NEW BODY STYLE. Hard-to-find white
platinum paint. Twin turbo Eco Boost
motor, 33 MPG, factory navigation, active park assist, adaptive cruise control,
290 Sports Equipment
lane keeping, 19-inch wheels, THX
sound system, rear video camera;
2004 XT225 YAMAHA ENDURO
heated/cooled seats, sunroof, cross
Like new!! Only 1150 miles.
Has been in the garage almost its traffic. Only 25K miles! Perfect car fax.
One of the best-looking cars on the
whole entire life!!
Would like to trade for nice, 4-wheeler. road!!
Why pay $48,000 new?
Call 680-3057 or 681-0484.
Only $29,995
400 Rec. Vehicles
Call Allen, 589-7105 or
Liquidators Unlimited
PICKUP CAMPER FOR SALE!!
522-7142, Idaho Falls
10-1/2 Self Contained, Everything
792 E. Greenway
Works! See at 444 Rice St, Blackfoot
Call: 208-821-7006
684-9399
MorningNews
‘94 Hitchhicker II
30’ 5th Wheel Trailer
GREat foR CRaft oR
aRt PRojECts, PaCkinG
& tablE CovERs.
Grover Service Centre
Guaranteed
250 Misc. For Sale/Rent
Roll Ends of PaPER
foR salE $3.50/uP
240 Services Offered
Local - Reliable – Friendly - Insured
250 Misc. For Sale/Rent
www.am-news.com
Sell it
sooner
(instead of later)
with the
Morning News
Classifieds
785-1100

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