Snake River board talks opportunities

Transcription

Snake River board talks opportunities
MorningNews
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Snake River board talks opportunities
By LESLIE MIELKE
[email protected]
THOMAS — Scouts,
teachers, staff and patrons
attended the April school
board meeting Wednesday
evening at the Snake River
High School.
SRHS Principal Ray
Carter reported on the
expanded opportunities at
the high school.
“It’s time we moved
from a 3A school to a
5A school,” he said. “That
stands for Academics,
Activities,
Agriculture,
Arts, Athletics.
“There are about 550
students at SRHS who participated in over 720 activities at the high school,”
Carter said.
Four students competed
in speech and debate with
Blackfoot High School;
one qualified for state in
Congress.
The dance team placed
fifth at state competition
and a health occupation (HOSA) class will be
offered during the 2016-17
school year.
Other course additions
include certified nursing assistant, competitive
debate, competitive drama
and another high school
science teacher, pending
certification.
“It’s been a really good
year,” Carter said. “We’re
coming back.”
Carter
credited
Superintendent Dave Kerns
with the change.
Trustees unanimously
approved a fee of $550
per year for each member
of the junior high dance
team. The team will be
made up of sixth, seventh
and eighth graders.
Christy Gardner, the
Moreland crash damages street sign
dance coach, said auditions for the dance team
are in May. Both girls and
boys are welcome to try
out. To get gym time, practice will take place in the
morning.
“Not all people are
financially equal,” said SR
school board chair Kent
Miller. “Is there help for
students?”
“We do fundraisers and
try to help as much as
possible,” Gardner said.
“People can set up a payment plan. As long as they
keep up with the payments,
there is no problem.”
The dance team will
perform at junior high
games and sometimes with
the high school team.
The fee to participate
in the high school team is
$800 per dancer. This fee
See BOARD, A2
Relay For Life
team ‘Shines’
By LESLIE SIEGER
[email protected]
BLACKFOOT — Relay
for Life team Monkey
Shine will host a silent
auction and raffle, from
3-9 p.m. Saturday, April
23 at the Blackfoot Elks
Lodge, to raise money
for the American Cancer
Society Relay for Life.
Dinner will be pulled
pork sandwiches. Items to
be raffled and auctioned
are Hogle Zoo passes, a
night’s stay at the Black
Swan Inn (Pocatello) and
Destinations Inn (Idaho
Falls), a one night stay and
dinner for two at Cactus
Petes and so much more.
The
Monkey Shine began
as team Sunshine nine
years ago, however after
Denise Bone passed away
from cancer her friends
and family changed the
name to Monkey Shine.
“Denise used to call
her kids little monkeys,”
said Denise’s mother
Vickie Merle. “When the
team became made up of
See SHINES, A2
Morning News — Greg Eichelberger
A 2014 Nissan Altima hit a street sign at 740 W and 200 N (Parks Road) during a two-car accident on Wednesday afternoon at approximately 4 p.m. The other vehicle involved was a 1984 Ford F150 pickup, below. There were no injuries
in the incident, although the Altima’s airbag did deploy.
Morning News — Greg Eichelberger
An employee of Idaho Power trims branches before replacing wires on a power pole near the Blackfoot Apartments,
1090 S. Broadway. One of the frayed wires began arcing
Wednesday, causing residents to call the Blackfoot Fire
Department.
Electrical line sparks at
Blackfoot Apartments
Blackfoot man cited for school bus crash
BLACKFOOT — Idaho
State police say they
have cited the bus driver
involved in a two-vehicle
injury crash in Bingham
County on Monday afternoon.
Blackfoot resident Larry
Smith, 67, was cited for
inattentive/careless driving, which is a lesser
offense than reckless driving, but is still considered
a misdemeanor, according
to state police.
Smith was driving
a Snake River School
District bus in the area of
West 600 South and State
Highway 39, near Pingree,
on Monday when he failed
to yield at a stop sign,
according to police. The
bus subsequently struck a
2015 Ram van, driven by
Rexburg resident Braden
Wanner, 22.
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None of the six students
on the bus were injured in
the incident, but Wanner
was transported by ground
ambulance to Eastern
Idaho Regional Medical
Center in Idaho Falls and
Smith was taken by private
vehicle to a local clinic.
By GREG EICHELBERGER called the fire department.
[email protected] I was really afraid for a few
minutes.”
Some residents also
BLACKFOOT — An
thought
that the electrical
arcing electrical wire was
problem
had originated
reported to the Blackfoot
Fire Department around from the sign advertising
1:30 p.m. Wednesday the apartments, but the
in front of the Blackfoot property manager said that
Apartments, 1090 S. sign has not had power
Broadway.
Firefighters for more than 25 years.
arrived on the scene min- According to the BFD, the
utes later, shut off the arcing was from a frayed
power and maintained a wire leading to a light
cordon line to keep pass- located on a nearby power
pole. “We were able to
erbys out of the way.
“I heard some popping, shut off the power and
like firecrackers,” said notify Idaho Power,” said a
one of the residents of the spokesman for the departcomplex. “Then, someone ment.
Thursday, April 21 at 6:30 pm
Liberty Hall Event Center
325 W. Benton, Pocatello
register at www.EIRMC.com or (208) 227-2778
Good morning Curtis Driscoll of Blackfoot.
Call 785-1100 today to claim two free Paramount Theater movie tickets!
Vol. 112, No. 90 Copyright 2016. All Rights Reserved.
For Home Delivery
Call 785-1100
The Morning News – Bingham County’s news source
Thursday, April 21, 2016
10A
COMICS & ADVICE
frank & ernest
Zits
Hi & Lois
Size up your situation and
be forceful when setting a high
standard. Make the changes
necessary to execute your
practical plans. Don’t wait for
someone to come along and
do things for you. Relying on
others will lead to disappointment. Stay focused on the
finish line.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- You have some good
ideas. Discussing options
with friends, peers or someone who needs help will put
you in demand. Use charm in
order to get the help you need.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
-- Do whatever it takes to get
fit. Personal projects geared
toward perfecting your image
will pay off, as long as you
stay within your means. Don’t
promise something you cannot deliver.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
-- A problem with a loved one
will surface if you are preoccupied. A unique offer will help
mend any broken promises or
oversights. Keeping the peace
is in your best interest.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -Do whatever it takes to lift
your spirits and build your
confidence. Participate in a
challenge that tests your skills.
BLondie
BaBy BLues
B.C.
GarfieLd
HaGar
tHe
HorriBLe
for Better
Dear Annie: I'm 55 and
have been married to the
same man for 27 years.
Before we met, my husband had been living with
"Miranda" for six years.
Although Miranda has had
many relationships since,
she never married.
All these years, my mother-in-law and two sisters-inlaw have maintained a relationship with this woman,
often meeting for lunch. They
support and attend all her
charity events. What really
is galling is that they do all
these things behind my back.
No one even had the respect
to tell me that Miranda was
invited to my sister-in-law's
wedding. I was a bridesmaid
and was shocked to see her
name on a place card for the
reception.
I have always been close
to my husband's family. We
all live in the same town,
while my family is out of
state. I am constantly hosting
holiday and birthday dinners
for them, and helping their
families with whatever arises.
I have tried being the dutiful daughter and sister-in-law,
but my patience is wearing
or
April 21, 2016 2011 - 7B
am-news.com
MorningNews
Kathy
Mithchell
&
Marcie
Sugar
Annie's Mailbox
thin.
My husband doesn't
attend these events, but he
does email Miranda occasionally. I found out that my
in-laws drove hours to get to
her brother's funeral when
my husband mentioned in
passing that his sister's car
broke down on the way.
I am so hurt that this is
going on after all these years.
One day, my sisters-in-law
treat me like their BFF, and
the next day, they spend time
with Miranda. Not only have
I become distrusting of them,
I have taken a major step
back from our previously
close relationship.
Am I too sensitive and
insecure, or is the situation
just weird? —Stressed
Eugenia
Last
Astro-Graph
Invest in your surroundings or
visit a destination that excites
you.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-- A window of opportunity
must not be ignored. An intelligent offer will be your ticket
to an unusual investment with
plenty of potential. A promise
will lead to a new beginning.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
-- Disagreements will end in
a stalemate. Put your reputation first and avoid a situation
that can make you look bad.
Accept an inevitable change
and make the most of it.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- Focus on your home
and family, and make some
unusual changes to the way
you live. A good workstation
or entertainment center will
add harmony to your environment and personal relationships.
DEAR DOCTOR K: I
know that the Mediterranean
diet is supposed to improve
heart health. Recently I heard
it also improves brain health.
Is that pretty well established? Of all the organs I
want to protect, my brain is
“numero uno.”
Ask Doctor K
DEAR READER: I agree
with your priorities regarding
organs: My brain is “numero
uno,” too. And I do think
the evidence is strong that
the Mediterranean diet does
protect the brain. This diet
emphasizes fruits, vegetables, grains, beans, nuts, fish,
poultry, olive oil and wine.
Most of the evidence
about the health benefits
of the Mediterranean diet
comes from observational studies. In such studies,
large numbers of people are
followed for many years.
Information about their lifestyle and any diseases they
may have developed is collected. Most such studies
have found that people who
follow the Mediterranean
diet have a lowered risk of
developing Alzheimer’s disease.
However, observational studies that link a lifestyle behavior to a disease
(or to protection against a
disease) can’t prove causation. That is, it may be true
that people who follow a
Mediterranean diet do have
a lower risk of Alzheimer’s,
but that doesn’t mean that
the diet is the reason for the
lower risk. Something else
about people who follow the
Mediterranean diet may protect them from Alzheimer’s.
To prove causation, scientists must conduct randomized controlled trials. Such
studies are not often done to
test the effect of lifestyle on
health; they are very expensive and impractical. To
prove that the Mediterranean
diet reduced the risk of
Alzheimer’s, scientists would
need to have thousands
of people assigned at random to either follow the
Mediterranean diet or not
-- for 20 to 30 years. And
the scientists would need
to ensure that those tens of
thousands of people really
were eating the way the
study told them to eat.
Smaller and shorter randomized trials are more
practical, but less likely to
Dr.
Anthony
Komaroff
Dear Stressed: Actually,
had your in-laws stopped
contact with Miranda and
then picked it up again after
27 years, we'd find that
weird. But since they have
been in touch the entire
time, we'd say you shouldn't
try to dictate their friendships
— even with ex-girlfriends.
You believe that your in-laws
are untrustworthy because
they haven't told you, but we
think they are sparing your
feelings. They obviously tell
your husband, who chooses
not to transmit the information to you, likely for the
same reason.
Your in-laws have been
friends with Miranda longer
than they have known you.
We suggest you tell them
how hurt you are that they
feel they must hide their
contact with Miranda and,
although you don't need to
know the details, you'd prefer
not to be kept in the dark.
As long as they aren't trying to undermine your marriage, you have no cause for
concern, and it would be
a shame to let this wreck
the good relationship you've
built over the years.
SAGITTARIUS
(Nov.
23-Dec. 21) -- Changes you
initiate at home will enhance
an important relationship.
Don’t get involved in rumors
or deal with institutions or government agencies. Delays or
confusion while traveling can
be expected.
CAPRICORN
(Dec.
22-Jan. 19) -- If you voice your
opinion and share your ideas,
you will be offered valuable
information. Keep the peace
when dealing with close
friends, children or loved ones.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) -- Discuss your ideas
and plans with a loved one.
Reuniting with old co-workers
will resurrect a plan or project
that still interests you.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
-- Keep an open mind but
don’t be too trusting when
dealing with peers, groups or
clubs trying to change your
beliefs, values or life direction.
Do your own thing.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
-- Diplomacy will help you
avoid a breakdown of communication. Listen carefully and
put a positive twist on whatever you contribute. Romance
will help you keep the peace
with someone you love.
provide definite answers.
One such study was reported
in 2013. About 300 people
in Spain were assigned to follow either the Mediterranean
diet or a low-fat diet for
about four years. Intensive
tests of thinking were performed at the start of the
study and after four years.
The people who followed
the Mediterranean diet had
a modest improvement in
several measures of thinking. Those who followed the
low-fat diet had a slight deterioration.
In 2015, a novel observational study was reported.
About 700 people, with an
age range of 65 to 90, had
magnetic resonance imaging
(MRI) performed to examine their brains. Those who
followed the Mediterranean
diet had larger brains, or
brains that had shrunk less
since they were young. They
had brains that were the size
of people five years younger,
compared to people who did
not follow the diet. The specific factors in the diet that
seemed most closely tied to
larger brains were eating lots
of fish and little red meat.
I’m not arguing that the
Mediterranean diet has been
proven to protect the brain.
But the evidence is strong
enough that I have long since
adopted the diet myself.
Worse
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2A
LOCAL
Thursday, April 21, 2016
Man arrested in connection
to IF Walgreens’ hold up
MORNING NEWS
IDAHO
FALLS
—
The Bonneville County
Sheriff's office arrested
Kyle Richard Gneiting, 34,
of Ammon on a robbery
warrant. He was arrested
at on Tuesday, April 19.
Bonneville
County
Deputies went to the
3600 Block of John Adams
and served the warrant.
Gneiting is being held in
the Bonneville County
Jail. He has a $75,000.00
bond.
This warrant was in reference to the Walgreens
Pharmacy robbery in
Ammon, in the early
morning hours of October
4, 2015. The investigation is still ongoing. The
Bonneville County Sheriff’s
Office arrested an Ammon
man in connection to a
robbery at Walgreens in
that city last year.
Sgt. Jeff Edwards with the
Bonneville County Sheriff’s
Office said Gneiting was
arrested in the 3600 Block
of John Adams Parkway,
and he is being held in the
Bonneville County Jail.
Bond in the case was
set at $75,000.
The Walgreens at 3475
E. 17th Street was robbed
at gunpoint in the early
morning hours, and the
robber took several pharmaceutical drugs.
The store was the scene
of a second robbery on
March 31. That robbery
also happened in the early
morning hours, and again
the robber brandished a
gun and made off with
pharmaceutical drugs.
During the second robbery, the gunman concealed his face with a
white fabric, and Edwards
said Gneiting has not been
charged in connection to
that robbery.
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MorningNews
Idaho residents may have unclaimed property
BOISE — Have you ever
reached into an old coat
pocket and found some
cash? Most of us have
and it’s a great surprise
– and one that doesn’t
happen often enough. You
can relive that feeling by
reaching into the State of
Idaho’s unclaimed property database and see if
they are holding money
you didn’t know you had.
Right now the Idaho
State Treasurer’s Office
Unclaimed
Property
Program has approximately $13 million in newly
submitted lost or forgotten money for Idahoans
to claim.
This
money
was
turned over to the State
in January, so even if a
person has checked for
their name in the past and
didn’t find money, their
name could be there now.
Businesses and organization that cannot locate
rightful owners annually
submit abandoned money
to the state. What is the
source of the money?
A few examples are
overpaid bills, utility
deposits, inactive savings
and checking accounts,
life insurance policies,
stocks, and bonds.
“We find it very rewarding when we see people
filing claims and getting
money sent to them that
they didn’t know they
had.
It really is the best
feeling of satisfaction,”
says Cozette Walters,
Unclaimed
Property
Program Administrator.
The State makes it
easy for citizens to search
for their lost or forgotten money. With a new
user-friendly website and
web address, yourmoney.
idaho.gov, Idahoans can
search for their names and
file a claim online.
Searching and claiming
lost money is always free
and confidential.
BOARD continued from 1A
Morning News — Leslie Mielke
The Chamber Singers from Snake River High School sang two pieces for the Snake River
School District trustees and patrons during the April school board meeting Wednesday
evening.
does not include the
activity fee paid by each
student in both the junior
and senior high schools.
“Mrs. Gardner and Mrs.
Phillips have done a great
job the past couple years,”
said high school principal
Carter. “They help promote
more kids to participate
in activities and that help
them in their academics.”
The bus in the accident
near Pingree last Monday
was totaled. “We are thankful there were no serious
injuries,” Kerns said.
The trustees approved
purchasing
another
72-passenger bus. Western
Mountain Bus Sales stated
it would sell the district a
third bus at the same price
as the other two. This bus
bid is $77,517.
Trip requests were
approved. Seniors can
travel to Lagoon on
Saturday, May 7. One bus
is scheduled to make this
trip. It will be first come,
first served.
Tickets are on sale at
the high school for $50.
This price includes lunch
at Lagoon Fun Park.
SHINES, continued from 1A
family members we
changed the name to
honor Denise.”
The Relay for Life event
will take place from noon
to 10 p.m. Saturday, May
21 on the track field at
Blackfoot High School.
This year everyone in attendance will have a chance
to win an iPad. To receive
that opportunity, attendees
can go to the Mission Tent
in the center of the track
and pick up an entry form.
They will then take that
form to each team site and
find the cancer fact and
number.
Write something about
the cancer fact on the line
next to the number on the
entry form.
Once you have visited
every team’s site and collected all the cancer facts,
turn in the completed
entry form to the Mission
Tent.
A winner will be drawn
at the closing ceremonies
and must be present to
win.
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MorningNews
am-news.com
LOCAL
Thursday, April 21, 2016
3A
Obituaries
Richard D. Stephenson, 76
Richard D. Stephenson,
76,
died
peacefully
Monday, April 18, 2016,
in Pocatello, after an 11
year battle with cancer and
health problems.
Born November 16,
1939, in Preston, Idaho, he
was the third of five children of A.D. Stephenson
and Allida VandenAkker.
He attended school in
McCammon, Clearfield,
Utah, and, Marsh Valley
High School in Arimo,
Idaho, where he was active
in sports. His father worked
construction and ranched
near McCammon, Idaho
while his Mother worked
at Garrett Freight Lines for
many years in Pocatello.
He married Joyce C
Helmandollar in 1958,
and the wedding was later
solemnized in the Idaho
Falls, Idaho, LDS Temple
in 1959.
Rich and Joyce moved
to Inkom in 1960, where
they have lived since that
time. Richard got a job
at Idaho Portland Cement
where he became the Plant
Engineer and worked for
46 years, before retiring
in 2004. He loved working there and enjoyed his
many life-long friendships
he made there.
Rich was involved in the
community and became
extremely active in the
LDS Church, where he
served in many positions.
He loved scouting and was
a long time Scout Master,
and recipient of the Silver
Beaver Award. He served
many years as a Bishop
and Stake President.
Rich loved gardening
and was a carpenter. He
built their home in 1964 as
well as many others in the
Inkom area.
He loved sports, the
local teams, especially
the Marsh Valley Eagles.
He and Dennis Whitworth
announced the football
games as the voice of the
Eagles, as well as the ISU
Bengals for several years
on the radio.
He loved life and he
especially loved people.
He will truly be missed by
all their great friends and
family.
Rich is survived by
Joyce, his wife of 57 years;
his children, R. Craig
and Julie Stephenson,
Blackfoot, Debbie and
Phil Nickel, Inkom, Leslie
and Tom Foltz, Pocatello,
Kristin and Mike Jones,
Pocatello; a brother, K.V.
and Patsy Stephenson,
Blackfoot; a sister, Delores
Orton, Twin Falls; a sister, Deana and John Price,
Rigby; a brother, Steve
and Linda Stephenson,
Farmington, New Mexico;
12 grandchildren; 5 greatgrandchildren; a multitude
of nieces and nephews;
and more relatives, good
friends and neighbors,
than you can shake a stick
at. He is preceded in death
by his father and mother.
A viewing will be held
on Friday, April 22, 2016
from 6-8 p.m. at the LDS
Rapid Creek Ward Chapel,
973 N. Rapid Creek Rd.
Inkom, ID 83245.
Funeral services, with
Bishop Ernie Moser conducting, will be held on
Saturday, April 23, 2016
at 2 p.m. with a viewing
from 12:30-1:30 p.m. prior
to the service also at the
church in Inkom.
Interment will follow at
the Inkom Idaho Cemetery.
Colonial
Funeral
Home 2005 S. 4th Ave.
Pocatello, Idaho 83201,
208-233-1500, is caring
for Richard’s family and
condolences may be made
online at www.colonialfuneralhome.com.
Martinsen, North Salt
Lake, Utah, five grandchildren and 91/2 greatgranddaughters. There to
meet her on the other side
were her parents, Israel
and Vinnie Call, brothers: John, Bowen, and
Elton Call, and sisters
Leone Shipley, Genevieve
Bendixsen, May Adamson,
and Mildred Sauer along
with their spouses. Also
welcoming her are her
in-laws, Frank and Viola
Martinsen and Robert’s
mother Geneva Smith
Martinsen.
There will be a viewing at Myers Mortuary,
5865 South 1900 West,
Roy, UT. Thursday, April
21 from 6-8 p.m. There
will also be a viewing
Saturday, April 23 from
10-10:45 a.m. prior to the
funeral to be held at 11
a.m. in the Garfield Ward
Building 74 North 3700
East, Rigby Idaho.
Myra’s final resting spot
will be in the Grant, Idaho
Cemetery.
Send condolences to
the family at: www.myersmortuary.com.
Myra Call Martinsen
Myra Call Martinsen
was born in Chesterfield,
Idaho June 11, 1926 to
Charlotte Vienna and
Israel Bowen Call. She
started
school
in
Chesterfield, and continued her education in
Osgood, Grant, Midway
and Ricks College. Robert
Dean Martinsen and Myra
met in Grant and upon
his return from military
service were married July
23, 1947. Robert and spending 32 years in the
Myra lived in several Moreland area.
Robert and Myra were
communities
throughout Southeastern Idaho sealed in the Idaho Falls
Temple in 1955. Mom
believed that it was this
event that allowed them,
after 9 years, to have children. Kevin joined the family in 1956, Janae in 1958,
and Denise in 1964. Her
children, grandchildren,
and great grandchildren
were the joy of her life.
Myra had many interests, cooking, candy making, sewing, reading, tolepainting, and quilting. She
was an avid fisherman and
usually caught the most
fish. Myra was a spectacular dancer and loved to
dance with her father-inlaw, Frank Martinsen. She
taught school for many
years, helped run the
farm, and ran a quilt shop.
She worked in the Young
Women, Relief Society,
Cub Scouts, Primary, and
Sunday School Programs.
Myra Passed away April
14, 2016 in Ogden, UT
and is survived by her
husband of 68 years,
Robert, son, Kevin (Teresa)
Martinsen,
Blackfoot,
ID,
daughters
Janae
(Gary) Hudman, Roy,
UT, and Denise (Darcie)
Larry E. Van Orden, 84
Thursday, April 21
• Ken Lavigne at the BPAC at 7:30 p.m. Tickets range
from $5-$20. Joined by a four-piece ensemble, Lavigne
will take his audience on a riveting and enchanting
journey, retelling his personal campaign to sing at
Carnegie Hall with the New York Pops in his current
touring show, The Road to Carnegie Hall.
• Atrial Fibrillation: Options for Treatment &
Management free presentation at 6:30 p.m. at Liberty
Hall Event Center at 325 W. Benton in Pocatello. Dr.
Alejandro Perez-Verdia will discuss Atrial Fibrillation,
a common arrhythmia affecting an estimated 2.5 million
people in the United States. This seminar will explore
many treatment options available today, including new
blood thinners and ablation therapy. Register at eirmc.
com or 227-2778.
• Blackfoot Workshop of Idaho Writers League
meeting from 6-8 p.m. every Thursday at the Emanuel
Lutheran church at 1110 Parkway. Come and share your
talents, or find them. Call Gary at 785-7062, or Lynn at
681-3466 for information.
• Ribbon cutting for newly remodeled weight room
at Firth High School at 12 p.m.
• Shelley School Board meeting at 7 p.m. in the
District Service Center in Shelley.
• Blackfoot School Board meeting at 6 p.m. at the
Fort Hall Elementary School on B Street.
• Parent/Teacher conferences at Snake River High
School and Snake River Junior High will host the third
trimester Parent-Teacher conferences from 4:30-8:30
p.m. in each building.
Friday, April 22
• Military Ball at ISU from 7-10 p.m. at the Pond
Student Union Ballroom. Guests will enjoy dinner,
dancing, no-host bar, raffle, silent auction, special ceremonies, guest speaker and a formal photograph sent
to an email address. Dinner includes a choice of prime
rib, chicken or vegetarian lasagna. Tickets are $25 and
can be purchased online at http://www2.isu.edu/veterans. Participants who want to support the Students
Veterans and be recognized in the program can buy at
table of six for $300. For more information contact the
Veteran Student Services at 208-282-4245.
• “The Drowsy Chaperone” opens at 7:30 p.m. at the
Nuart Theater. Tickets are $7 per person. For tickets visit
blackfootcommunityplayers.com.
• Irish Hooley from 6-10 p.m. at the Bannock
County Veterans Memorial Building at 300 N. Johnson
Ave. in Pocatello. The Hooley is a community festival
with food, music, and art that helps to fund the Irish
language program in Pocatello and at ISU. Individual
tickets are $30 or you can purchase a table that seats
eight for $200, which is a $40 savings. Tickets can be
purchased at The College Market located at 604 South
8th Avenue in Pocatello or contact Garth Lambson at
851-1147 or by email [email protected] to reserve
your tickets.
Saturday, April 23
• Bingham’s Got Talent at 7 p.m. at the BPAC.
Winners receive $100 and a trophy. For more information call 785-3183. All proceeds go to Relay For Life
and the American Cancer Society.
• Free photography seminar from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m.
at the Blackfoot Senior Center at 20 E. Pacific St. The
purpose of this seminar is to present basic ideas and
information to take better digital pictures. Formal presentations will be given by local experts in the following
categories:
•
Photography technique (taking the initial pic-
Larry E. Van Orden,
84, of Blackfoot, Idaho
passed away Tuesday,
April 19, 2016 at Bingham
Memorial Hospital following a valiantly fought battle
with cancer.
Larry was born October
5, 1931, in Moreland,
Idaho, the son of Edmund
Orlando Van Orden and
Mae Irene Liljenquist Van
Orden. In his youth he
attended school in Pingree
and Rockford and graduated from Snake River High
School.
He married JoAnne
Fackrell on April 20,
1950, in the Idaho Falls
Temple. She preceded him
in death on February 13,
1971. Larry later married
Paunie Thomas Burgon on
July 6, 1971, in the Idaho
Falls Temple.
Larry served his country
in the U.S. Army Reserves
for a couple of inductions. Other than a year
he worked at Kennecott’s
Bingham Mine near Salt
Lake City, Ut., Larry lived
his life in the Blackfoot
area. He loved gaining
knowledge and was continually taking courses and
traveling to international
seminars to increase his
knowledge in financial
affairs.
Larry had worked at the
Atomic Energy Commission
site for ten years and also
helped his father on the
family farm. Larry ultimately purchased the farm
from his father and continued a successful farm-
ing career. He was also a
founding partner in Modern
Mills, Inc. grain elevator in
Rockford. He along with
friend, Dan Polatis, later
started Osgood Grain.
He was an active member of the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter day-Saints
where he currently was
serving as a High Priest. He
had enjoyed working in
the young mens organization. He and wife Paunie
had also served a mission
for the church to Australia.
Larry loved being outdoors where he enjoyed
fishing, hunting, riding
4-wheelers and driving his
jeep. He loved his toys
and was looking forward
to taking his new RZR riding this spring with his
friends. Larry was very
generous to those who
were in need.
Survivors include his
wife Paunie of Thomas,
ID, his children Karla
(Dale) Bergevin, W. Valley,
UT, Kay Chalk, Apache
Junction, AZ, Michelle
(Tim) Williams, Pingree,
Tauniaa (Clinton) Wheeler,
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Vernal, UT, Wendy (Mark)
Duff, Mesa, AZ, Sevell
(Bonnie) Van Orden,
Saratoga Springs, UT,
and Troy (Kathy) Burgon,
Kansas City, MO., 38
grandchildren and 79
great grandchildren. Also
surviving are his siblings,
Shirley (Gary) Seamons,
Moreland, Elaine Belnap,
Idaho
Falls,
Clarice
Ziebarth, Pingree, and
Myrna (David) Fillmore,
Nampa, ID and sister-inlaw Carolyn Van Orden of
Pingree.
He was preceded in
death by his wife JoAnne,
his parents Orlando and
Irene, his daughter Gayle,
brother Eugene, and
brothers-in-law Lamoyne
Ziebarth and Darrell
Belnap and son-in-law,
Fred Chalk.
Funeral services will be
held at 11 a.m. Saturday,
April 23, 2016, at the
Blackfoot West LDS Stake
Center. The family will
meet with friends on Friday
evening from 6-8 p.m. at
the Hawker Funeral Home,
132 S. Shilling Ave. and
again on Saturday at the
church from 10-10:45 a.m.
Interment will be in
the
Riverside-Thomas
Cemetery where military
honors will be provided
by the Stewart Hoover Post
#23 and the Idaho Honor
Guard. Condolences can
be sent to the family at
[email protected].
785-1320
ServiceS
Larry E.
Van Orden
Funeral Services:
11:00 a.m. Saturday,
April 23, 2016, at the
Blackfoot West LDS
Stake Center
Viewing:
6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.
Friday, April 22, 2016
at the Hawker Funeral
Home and again one
hour prior to services at
the church
for more info visit
hawkerfuneralhome.com
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5:30pm-8:00pm
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4A
Thursday, April 21, 2016
OPINION
www.am-news.com
MorningNews
Community Caring Corner
Your weekly guide to area volunteer and in-kind
giving opportunities — Search for more opportunities at www.seidahovolunteer.org
Columnist Beth Estopinal
Caring Hearts Needed: Alliance Hospice is seeking
volunteers to visit with hospice patients in the Blackfoot,
Pocatello, and Downey areas. Volunteers must be at least
18 years old. Call Danny for details, at 478-6677.
Junior Achievement of Idaho Inspire to Hire: On May
2nd, at Idaho State University from 8 a.m. - 3 p.m., there
will be a career exploration event for Middle & High
School students. To volunteer, you can follow the link
below (2 hour time commitments) and read descriptions
for each volunteer need: https://www.volunteerspot.com/
login/entry/378029508050. If you have any questions,
please contact the Junior Achievement office at 208-3755243 or email Alice Pyle [email protected]
Take Pride in our Valley: The Pocatello Community
It used to be that you
Wide Spring Cleanup is slated for Saturday, May 7. It
couldn’t
get anyone who
will begin at the NeighborWorks Pavilion at Caldwell
worked
in
an office in
Park with a free hot breakfast from 8:30-10 a.m. Garbage
the
city
on
the
phone on
bags will be provided, gloves are recommended. Call the
Friday
afternoons.
All the
Pocatello/Chubbuck Chamber of Commerce at 233-1525
bigwigs
leave
town
early
to reserve your cleanup site!
to
go
to
their
weekend
There’s something for everyone to do here! SEICAA is
looking for volunteers to help stock shelves in their food homes. Between Memorial
bank, prepare emergency food boxes and commodities, Day and Labor Day, the
to help with office cleaning, to help with events, food movers and shakers were
drives and fundraisers. Call 232-1114 to get information. all working four-and-aSPINDERELLA: A ladies’ only cycling ride that is put half-day weeks.
In corporate America,
on yearly as a non-profit fundraising event. Without good
there
was a new unofficial
volunteers, the event doesn’t happen. On June 17th, we
holiday:
Friday afternoons
do a lot of setting up and getting things ready. On June
in
the
summer.
18th, (the day of the tour) we have more set up and other
Then, a few years ago,
help needed. Group volunteering is encouraged! Contact:
it
started
getting difficult to
Steve Young at 221-9301 or [email protected]
get
anyone
on the phone
Speaking of bicycles: Brandon Brown sponsors the
all
day
Friday
during the
annual P.A.S.S. program, giving bikes to 5th graders in
summer.
“Why
bother
School District #25 who end the year with 100% attento
come
in
Friday
morndance. He needs help getting the bikes assembled in time
ing?”
must
be
the
thinking.
to deliver to awardees. Please contact him at 232-0029 or
“Why sit through traffic
by email at [email protected].
just to leave three hours
In-kind Needs (item donations):
Family Services Alliance: At this time our in-kind needs later?”
Not long after that, it
are large diapers (size 4-6), laundry detergent, toilet paper,
started
getting hard to snag
dish soap, body wash, men’s shampoo/conditioner. You
an
exec
on the phone on
can drop off items at our office: 355 S. Arthur, Pocatello.
Thursday
afternoon. If
Area Agency on Aging: If you have any assistive mediyou’re
not
going
to work
cal equipment that you no longer need (items such as
on
Friday,
you
might
as
but not limited to; walkers, wheelchairs, scooters, canes,
well
beat
the
traffic
and
crutches, shower chairs or other adaptive equipment). These items can be donated to the Area V Agency on drive up to the weekend
Aging to assist an individual in our community. You can house Thursday night, am
bring your donations to the Area Agency on Aging at 214 I right? So then, the people
you couldn’t get on the
E. Center in Pocatello or call 208-233-4032.
Beth Estopinal, Margaret Ganyo, Joan Hansen and Kim phone Friday afternoons,
Hirning staff the United Way of Southeastern Idaho and
encourage you to search for more opportunities at www.
volunteerunited.org. To request or offer in-kind donations
send an e-mail to [email protected] or call 232Today is Thursday, April
1389.
21, the 112th day of 2016.
There are 254 days left in
the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On April 21, 1926,
Britain’s Queen Elizabeth
II was born in Mayfair,
London; she was the first
child of The Duke and
Duchess of York, who later
became King George VI
and the Queen Mother.
Christened
Elizabeth
Alexandra Mary, the princess became monarch
upon the death of her
father in 1952, beginning a
64-year-old reign surpassing that of Queen Victoria.
On this date:
In 1649, the Maryland
Toleration Act, providing
for freedom of worship for
WRITE TO US: The Morning News welcomes letters to all Christians, was passed
the editor. Letters must contain your home address and a by the Maryland assembly.
telephone number where you can be reached during the
In 1789, John Adams
day. Letters must be shorter than 500 words as a courtesy was sworn in as the first
to other writers. We reserve the right to edit for length and vice president of the
clarity. E-MAIL: [email protected]. MAIL: 34 N. Ash United States.
St. • P.O. Box 70, Blackfoot, ID 83221.
In 1816, Charlotte
Bronte, author of “Jane
Eyre,” was born in
Thornton, England.
In 1836, an army of
Texans led by Sam Houston
www.am-news.com
defeated the Mexicans at
San Jacinto, assuring Texas
independence.
(ISSN 08933812)
In 1910, author Samuel
Langhorne Clemens, better
Leonard C. Martin, Publisher, [email protected]
known as Mark Twain, died
Joe Williams, Managing Editor, [email protected]
in Redding, Connecticut,
Wayne Ingram, Advertising Director, [email protected]
Joe Kimbro, Circulation Manager, [email protected]
at age 74.
Kelly R. Koontz, Production Manager
In 1930, fire broke out
•••
inside the overcrowdThe Morning News is published daily except ed Ohio Penitentiary in
Sundays and Christmas Day by Horizon Columbus, killing 332
Blackfoot Publications. Periodicals postage paid inmates.
at Blackfoot, ID 83221. Postmaster send address
In 1960, Brazil inauchanges to the Morning News, PO Box 70, gurated its new capital,
Blackfoot, ID 83221. Legal notices required Brasilia, transferring the
by law or court order are carried in Friday edi- seat of national governtions. Publisher reserves the right to reject, ment from Rio de Janeiro.
edit or cancel any advertising at any time
In 1976, clinical trials
without liability. Publisher’s liability for error of the swine flu vaccine
is limited to the amount paid for advertising. began in Washington, D.C.
34 N. Ash/P.O. Box 70, Blackfoot, ID 83221
In 1986, a rediscovTelephone: 208-785-1100 • Fax: 208/785-4239 ered vault in Chicago’s
Business Hours: Monday-Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Lexington Hotel that was
Casual Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday
you also couldn’t reach on
Thursday afternoons.
They’re at their weekend
houses, relaxing. Relaxing
from what? A three-and-ahalf-day work week? And
it’s not like their life in the
city is so harsh.
“Oh honey, it’s so hard
living on Park Avenue,
telling the servants what
to cook for dinner and
what to clean,” one can
imagine them saying. “It’s
such a chore. I’m tired of
going to plays and movies
and fancy restaurants and
museums. Let’s get away
for the weekend and just
do nothing. Do you want
to go to the beach house
or the mountain house?
Should you tell Jeeves to
make the arrangements or
should I? Will we need the
downstairs maid?”
Since they’re planning to leave the office
at lunchtime on Thursday,
the modern executive
wonders if there is really
any point in driving to the
office at all on Thursday.
The latest trend is to leave
for the weekend house
Wednesday night. Right
after the board meeting.
The board meeting that
voted to raise the executives’ salaries once again,
to give them more stock
options and an even more
glittery golden parachute.
Now, almost anyone
in a position of power is
working, tops, three days
a week. But really, does it
take three days a week to
drive a company into bankruptcy? No, of course it
doesn’t. That’s why they’ve
started to take Mondays
off, too. Fight that awful
Sunday night traffic back
into the city? You’ve got to
be kidding. So now they’re
not in the office Mondays,
Thursdays or Fridays.
But they are putting in
full workdays on Tuesdays,
and half of Wednesdays.
On those two days, they
are totally committed to the
company. Totally committed to laying off workers,
approving pay cuts, cutting pension plans, replacing older workers, cutting
health benefits, thinking
up words like “downsiz-
ing” and “rightsizing” and
redecorating their corner
offices. It’s on Tuesdays
and Wednesdays that they
buy the motivational posters for the company cafeteria that emphasize the
value of cooperation and
hard work like “There is no
‘I’ in ‘Teamwork.’”
Maybe not, but there is
a big fat “I” in “Laid Off.”
Then came the Summer
Paradox. If you do answer
the phone on Friday, you
must not be important
enough to talk to. So some
office workers who don’t
have summer homes, who
don’t make very much and
who work five days a week
have stopped answering
their phones on Mondays,
Thursdays and Fridays so
people will think they are
executives. Which works
out fine. They can actually get some work done
because they’re not on the
phone, and the boss isn’t
around to interfere with
the company business.
By the way, I’ll be in
the office Tuesday and
Wednesday morning this
week, if you need me.
(Contact Jim Mullen at
[email protected].)
linked to Al Capone was
opened during a widely
watched live TV special
hosted by Geraldo Rivera;
aside from a few bottles
and a sign, the vault turned
out to be empty.
In 1996, oddsmaker
Jimmy “The Greek” Snyder
died in Las Vegas at age
77.
Ten years ago: Nouri
al-Maliki was nominated
by the Shiites as Iraq’s
prime minister after outgoing Prime Minister
Ibrahim al-Jaafari gave up
his bid for another term.
Chinese President Hu
Jintao wrapped up his
U.S. tour with a visit to
Yale University in New
Haven, Connecticut. Miss
Kentucky Tara Elizabeth
Conner was crowned Miss
USA during the pageant in
Baltimore.
Five years ago: President
Barack Obama announced
the Justice Department was
assembling a team to “root
out any cases of fraud or
manipulation” in oil markets that might be contributing to $4 a gallon-plus
gasoline prices. Sen. John
Ensign, R-Nev., announced
he would step down amid
a developing ethics probe
over how he’d handled
an admitted extramarital
affair with a former staffer
and whether he tried to
illegally cover it up. (The
Senate Ethics Committee
referred the case to the
Justice Department, which
decided not to prosecute
Ensign.)
One year ago: An
Egyptian criminal court
sentenced ousted Islamist
President
Mohammed
Morsi to 20 years in prison
over the killing of protesters in 2012. An Indonesian
court found an American
couple, Tommy Schaefer
and Heather Mack, guilty
of premeditated murder and sentenced them
to prison in the death of
Mack’s mother, Sheila von
Wiese-Mack, on the resort
island of Bali. The head
of the Drug Enforcement
Administration, Michele
Leonhart, announced her
retirement in the wake
of allegations that DEA
agents had attended sex
parties with prostitutes.
Pope Francis accepted
the resignation of U.S.
Bishop Robert Finn, who’d
pleaded guilty to fail-
ing to report a suspected
child abuser. Mary Doyle
Keefe, 92, the model for
Norman Rockwell’s iconic 1943 Rosie the Riveter
painting, died in Simsbury,
Connecticut.
Today’s
Birthdays:
Singer Iggy Pop is 69. Actor
Tony Danza is 65. Actor
James Morrison is 62.
Actress Andie MacDowell
is 58. Actor John Cameron
Mitchell is 53. Actor Toby
Stephens is 47. Singer Glen
Hansard (The Frames) is
46. Actor Rob Riggle is 46.
Comedian Nicole Sullivan
is 46. Football player-actor
Brian White is 43. Olympic
gold medal pairs figure
skater Jamie Sale is 39.
Musician David Brenner
(Theory of a Deadman) is
38. Actor James McAvoy
is 37. NFL quarterback
Tony Romo is 36. Actor
Terrence J is 34. Actress
Gugu Mbatha-Raw is 33.
Actor Christoph Sanders
is 28. Rock singer Sydney
Sierota (Echosmith) is 19.
Thought for Today: “I try
to avoid looking forward
or backward, and try to
keep looking upward.” —
Charlotte Bronte (18161855).
Jim
Mullen
Today in history
MorningNews
MorningNews
am-news.com
IDAHO
Thursday, April 21, 2016
5A
Groups eye legal action against mining company
BOISE, Idaho (AP) —
Two environmental groups
say they’ve told a Canadian
mining company they plan
to take legal action based
on records showing the
company continues to pollute the Boise River system despite a federal court
order to stop.
The Idaho Conservation
League and the Northwest
Environmental Defense
Center earlier this week
informed Atlanta Gold
Corporation of their intent
to reopen the court case
due to continued violations of the court order and
the Clean Water Act.
A federal court in 2012
penalized the company $2
million for its failure to
follow clean water laws
and not doing enough to
staunch the flow of arsenic
and iron into a tributary of
the Boise River.
Justin Hayes of the Idaho
Conservation League said
the groups didn’t act sooner because the company
installed equipment and
stopped the flow of pollution after the court order.
Over the years, he said,
problems would occur that
resulted in pollution again
entering the river.
“By giving them this
much time, what it demonstrated is they’re not really
making a commitment to
clean water,” Hayes said.
“I think, frankly, this is not
a priority for them.”
Atlanta Gold didn’t
immediately respond for a
request for comment from
The Associated Press on
Wednesday.
The company as part
of its permit must report
discharges into the Boise
River system to the U.S.
Environmental Protection
Agency. The federal agency on its website shows
the company since 2012
has reported multiple vio-
lations of the permit due to
high levels of arsenic.
The company obtained
an interest in the site in
1985 and for years has
conducted
exploratory
drilling and excavation,
but has yet to extract and
process any gold.
As part of its exploration process, the company
reopened 200 feet of a
mine adit first drilled in
1917.
The timing for when
the environmental groups
might take legal action
isn’t clear.
“It kind of depends on
if and when we hear back
from Atlanta Gold,” said
Bryan Hurlbutt, an attorney with Advocates for
the West, representing the
environmental
groups.
“I’d think within the next
couple months we’d want
to get this going if it looks
like things aren’t being
addressed adequately.”
Around the state
Idaho clears final hurdle on paying legal bill
Homeowners say woman
squatter finally moves out
BOISE, Idaho (AP) —
Gov. C.L. “Butch” Otter
and other top Idaho elected officials have signed
off on the final hurdle to
pay a $280,000 legal bill
using funds intended to
help Idaho navigate state
sovereignty conflicts with
the federal government.
The
Constitutional
Defense Fund Council
unanimously approved the
payment on Wednesday
— a day after the bill
was also approved by the
Idaho Board of Examiners.
Deputy
Attorney
General Brian Kane said
the original legal bill
was closer to $374,000,
but the state was able to
negotiate the final amount
down by nearly $100,000.
Idaho was ordered to
pay the legal fees after
losing a lengthy lawsuit
involving unions.
Idaho
lawmakers
in 2011 approved the
Fairness in Contracting
NAMPA, Idaho (AP) —
Authorities say an Idaho
woman living in a couple’s vacant home without their permission has
agreed to move out.
Nampa
Police
Department spokesman
Sgt. Tim Riha says the
46-year-old claims she
signed a lease and paid
$1,500 to someone to rent
the house. Homeowners
Brian and Renae Prindle
say they don’t know that
person and were not renting to anyone.
Riha says the Prindles
were unable to evict the
woman because of a
state law protecting renters tricked into signing a
lease.
The Prindles say they
were able to reach an
agreement
with
the
woman and Nampa police
on Tuesday: In exchange
for her voluntary moveout, the Prindles would
pay for a storage unit for
three months.
Nampa officers used
their vehicles to help
move Smith’s belongings
into storage Tuesday.
Preschooler left on bus
ends up at wrong school
AMMON, Idaho (AP) —
An Idaho school district is
investigating after a preschooler missed his bus
stop on his way to school,
woke up alone in a bus
barn, then made his way
to the wrong preschool,
where he spent the rest
of the day without anyone
realizing what had happened.
Bonneville
School
District spokesman Phil
Campbell tells KIFI-TV
that about 50 transportation workers searched
Tuesday afternoon for the
3- to 4-year-old boy when
he failed to return home
and was reported missing.
Campbell says the boy
apparently fell asleep on
the bus and after awaking
found his way to a special
preschool hosted by the
Bonneville High School
Early Childhood education program.
The Bonneville County
Sheriff’s Office conducted
a door-to-door search in
the neighborhood until
the boy was found at the
high school and returned
to his parents.
Teen charged in dumping
case that led to shots fired
TWIN FALLS, Idaho
(AP) — A teenager is facing
a second-degree attempted
murder charge in a case of
trash dumping on private
property that resulted in
shots fired.
The Times-News reports
the 17-year-old boy is set
for a Thursday preliminary
hearing. He’s in juvenile
detention on a $250,000
bond.
Jerome County Sheriff
Doug McFall says the
boy and two others were
unloading junk when the
property owner told them
to clean up and leave.
McFall said the group
collected the garbage
before one of them drew
a weapon and fired three
shots.
The farmer was not
injured.
Jerome Sheriff’s Lt. Dan
Kennedy said in a statement that an 18-year-old
was not charged in the case
and had been released.
The statement says
a 15-year-old is facing
charges of driving without privileges and eluding
police.
Officials: Idaho prison
inmate dies after collapse
BOISE, Idaho (AP) —
Officials say a 58-year-old
man convicted of aggravated driving under the
influence died in a hospital where he was taken
for treatment from a state
prison near Boise.
The
Idaho
State
Department of Correction
said in a news release
Tuesday that Gabino Villa’s
cellmate alerted prison
staff on Sunday night that
Villa had collapsed and
fallen out of bed.
Officials say Villa was
found by staff to be unresponsive and say he died
at a Boise hospital early
Monday morning.
The Ada County Sheriff’s
Office is investigating the
death, officials say, due to
the fact that staff wasn’t
there when Villa became
unresponsive.
Villa had been serving
a five- to 20-year sentence
as a persistent violator for
driving under the influence
in Canyon County. His earliest date of parole was
June 23, 2019.
Prisoner facing charges
for meth found in bra
IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (AP) — Authorities say a
Bonneville County woman arrested over the weekend
for driving drunk and crashing a truck is facing new
charges after jail officers found methamphetamine in
her bra.
The 30-year-old Bernadette Nugent faces a felony
charge of conveying major contraband in a correctional
facility for the Monday incident.
She had initially been arrested Saturday after police
say she stole a truck and crashed into the vehicle’s
owner, who had been following her in a 2007 Chevy
Tahoe.
Police spokeswoman Joelyn Hansen says officers suspected Nugent had been driving under the influence.
She is expected to appear in court April 29.
Act, which made it illegal for unions to subsidize union contract bids
to make them competitive with non-union
contractor bids. At the
time, Attorney General
Lawrence Wasden’s office
warned that the bill was
illegal.
After the law was
passed, Wasden’s office
defended the law as
required under the Idaho
Constitution.
A federal court eventually ruled the state law
isn’t valid because it preempts the federal National
Labor Relations Act, and
the 9th U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals agreed.
Idaho Building and
Construction
Trades
Council and Southwest
Idaho
Building
and
Construction
Trades
Council sued and attained
a preliminary injunction
before the law went into
effect.
The
Constitutional
Defense Fund hasn’t
paid for a winning case
since 1996, when Idaho
reached a settlement
with the federal government over nuclear waste
storage and cleanup. The
fund is overseen by Otter,
Wasden, House Speaker
Scott Bedke and Senate
President Pro Tem Brent
Hill.
Earlier
this
year
the Idaho Legislature
approved adding $2 million after Otter requested
a boost to the depleted
fund.
“They followed my
advice on that,” Otter said
jokingly.
Once Tuesday’s payment is processed, the
new fund balance will be
$1.95 million.
Museum of Idaho receives $100K donation
The Museum of Idaho
is one step closer to funding its expansion thanks to
a $100,000 donation.
The recent donation
combines with several
other grants to make for a
total of $250,000 toward a
planned expansion.
Linda
Montgomery,
Museum of Idaho Board
chairwoman, said the
donation was a surprise.
The family of Hazel
Rose, a longtime supporter of the museum, showed
up with a $100,000 check
in hand.
“It really was out of
the blue. The family
St. Luke’s
violated
federal law
St. Luke’s Regional
Medical Center — the
health system’s Treasure
Valley operations — was
found to have systemic
violations of the federal Family and Medical
Leave Act, the U.S.
Department of Labor
said Wednesday.
After the department’s Wage and Hour
Division investigated,
St. Luke’s “immediately
remedied the violations,”
the department’s news
release said.
“Employers want to
do the right thing, and
they want to make sure
they’re abiding by federal standards,” Thomas
Silva, district director
for the Wage and Hour
Division in Portland, said
in an interview. “The
times when they’re out
of compliance, they may
not understand what
the requirements are or
they’re listening to other
people who may not
understand.”
Silva
emphasized
that St. Luke’s “was very
cooperative.”
St. Luke’s “failed to
ensure that all employees
on FMLA-covered leave
received all the protections due to them under
the law,” according to
the department.
The news release said
St. Luke’s failed to maintain employees’ benefits while they were on
FMLA leave and did not
ensure that employees
were reinstated.
showed up and said she
just loved the museum,”
Montgomery said.
Rose died last year. The
donation from her family, as well as a $25,000
contribution from Battelle
Energy Alliance, matches
a dollar-for-dollar grant
of $125,000 pledged by
the Bill Maeck Family
Donation for a total contribution of $250,000, a
museum news release said.
The recent contributions bring the expansion
fund to near $2.9 million, said interim Museum
Executive Director Nick
Gailey.
The funds will go
toward the projected $3.6
million expansion of the
museum to provide space
to showcase many of the
artifacts and exhibits now
in storage.
This $250,000 contribution comes on the heels
of a National Endowment
of the Humanities matching grant for $500,000.
The museum is now eligible for the first $200,000
of the Endowment grant.
“This
donation
is
so
extraordinary,”
Montgomery said. “It
couldn’t have been better
timing.”
Montgomery said a
building committee is organizing and hopes to break
ground on the expansion
by summer 2017.
“We want to get far
enough along to go out
to the public so they can
see the impact of their
money,”
Montgomery
said.
“I know that she
would be proud that
her $100,000 donation
will help in expanding
this important educational and cultural organization,” Linda Wilkins,
Rose’s daughter, said in
the release.
Send in your news
The Morning News welcomes news from the community. Send your news items to
[email protected]. Or call Joe Williams at (208) 785-1100 or you can send us a
message on our Facebook page.
Blackfoot
PERFORMING ARTS CENTER
6A
Thursday, April 21, 2016
HEALTH
am-news.com
MorningNews
Blackfoot woman battles genetic disease
By LESLIE MIELKE
[email protected]
BLACKFOOT — April
is recognized as World
Primary Immunodeficiency
Awareness Month and April
22-29 is for World Primary
Immune
Deficiency
Awareness.
P r i m a r y
Immunodeficiency Disease
(PI) is a group of more
than 250 different types of
widely misdiagnosed rare,
genetic diseases. These
occur in patients (mostly
children) in which part of
the immune system is missing or functions improperly.
Blackfoot
resident
Lorraine Merrell said she
for eight years and then,
“because of the AIDS epidemic in the 1980s, the
medication was canceled.
It was because it was a
blood product.
“I was 65 years old
before a doctor was able to
test me for PI,” Merrell said.
“I would get a lot of infections that didn’t go away. I
would get everyone’s ‘bug,’
especially in the winter.
If she received a skin
abrasion, like a cut, it
would turn into boils. She
also had chronic bladder
and sinus infections.
“I am susceptible to
picking things up that
Kevin and Lorraine Merrell
affects the mucus lining of
was diagnosed with PI school. She received med- internal organs, like sinus,
while she was in high ication for her condition ears, lungs, bladder, kid-
ney, intestines; all have a
music lining, Merrell said.
She is particularly concerned about children who
may have this condition
but it is not diagnosed.
“If a child is sick all the
time or gets chronic upper
respiratory infections, like
pneumonia, more than
three times each year, he
or she may need to be
checked for PI,” she said.
“People are born with this
condition; it’s genetic.
Idaho is one of the first
states to start screening for
PI.
Merrell said she now
receives plasma that is
made up of the immunities
of 10,000 people.
“That’s gives me about
50 percent protection,” she
said.
Treatments, but not
cures, are available for
most types of PI.
“I have spent my entire
life fighting infection after
infection and being on a
nearly continuous cycle
of antibiotics for URIs and
UTIs,” Merrell said. “If this
sound familiar, I want you
to know that there is a light
at the end of the tuner.
“There are treatments
available for may types
of PI,” she said. “With
the treatments I am now
receiving, I am able to live
a fairly normal life.”
For more information
about PI, visit primaryimmune.org.
Better preemie pain relief sought amid call for action
OAK LAWN, Ill. (AP)
— It happens every day to
the most vulnerable infants
in hospital intensive care
units: fragile babies born
way too soon are poked,
prodded and jabbed as part
of medical care meant to
help them survive — and
it can be heart-wrenching
to watch.
Heel sticks for blood
tests, inserting IV tubes,
adjusting
breathing
machines — even the
gentlest jostling to remove
a bandage from translucent skin can cause kittenlike whimpers and tiny
arms and legs to suddenly
jerk. Sometimes there’s no
sound at all — just a dip on
the heart rate monitor.
It used to be thought
that these infants were too
young to feel pain. But
even now, experts say,
pain relief for newborns
and especially preemies is
often inadequate, despite
evidence that low-tech
comforting methods and
medication can both be
effective.
The American Academy
of Pediatrics has new
advice — and an admonishment.
Pain in newborns “continues to be inconsistently
assessed and inadequately
managed,” the academy
says. Remedies “are currently underused for routine minor yet painful procedures.”
Preventing and reducing pain, particularly in
preemies, is important
because of the potential
consequences for infant
development, the academy
said in a policy issued in
February.
Research
suggests
repeated bouts of pain leave
infants prone to potential
long-term ill effects including changes in nerve structures and brain development, and hypersensitivity
to touch and stress — and
it’s the smallest and sickest
babies who experience the
greatest number of painful
procedures.
Pain assessment can be
a significant challenge in
preemies, said newborn
specialist Erin Keels, the
policy’s lead author and
a nurse at Nationwide
Children’s Hospital in
Columbus, Ohio.
Preemie’s pain cues
aren’t always obvious.
They often have multiple
health problems that need
attention, and in busy
intensive care units, pain
relief for every day minor
procedures can sometimes
get overlooked, she said.
The new guidance was
prompted in part by recent
research showing benefits
from alternatives to medication, Keels said. These
include sugar-dipped pacifiers, tight swaddling and
skin-to-skin contact with
moms and dads. Newer
ways to measure infant
pain also are being test-
ed, including measuring
brain waves and electrical
impulses in the skin.
Pain management during surgery and other
major procedures typically requires medication,
often opioids including
morphine. Short-term side
effects of these drugs may
include a slowed heart
rate, low blood pressure,
and drug dependence.
Some small studies have
linked use of these drugs
in extremely premature
babies with slowed weight
gain, smaller head size and
behavior troubles later in
childhood, but research
on appropriate doses and
potential long-term effects
“is woefully lacking,” the
academy says.
It urges more research
on using these drugs and
other medications in
infants.
“While we want to manage pain appropriately, we
also have to pay attention
to not going too far in
the other extreme,” said
Dr. William MacKendrick,
medical director of the
infant special care unit
at NorthShore Evanston
Hospital in Evanston,
Illinois. He was not
involved in the policy.
U.S.
hospitals
are
required to assess patients’
pain in order to be accredited, and it’s an issue
newborn specialists are
increasingly paying attention to.
In the gap: Friends struggle without insurance
BURLEY, Idaho (AP) —
Layne Andrews first felt the
pain in his left foot four
years ago as he made the
long walk from Wal-Mart
to his home.
“When I got back, I laid
down and the pain was just
really intense,” he said, as
he waited to see a doctor
Tuesday in Twin Falls.
Andrews, 25, hasn’t had
health insurance since the
pain developed. It got to
the point where, after two
or three hours, Andrews
would have to either hop
around or stop moving. The
gout in his foot developed
into tophi, deposits of uric
acid crystals that damage
bones and cartilage when
gout is untreated.
Andrews applied for
Social Security but was
rejected because he was
told he didn’t qualify; he
could still work a sit-down
job. He tried that, working
at McCain Foods in Burley
for about 2 1/2 months,
and had to quit because
the pain in his foot was so
intense he couldn’t concentrate.
Still, Andrews said, he’s
in good health compared
with his close friend Krista
Smith, who came with him
Tuesday and who is in the
same boat when it comes
to health insurance. She
was born with myelomeningocele spina bifida, the
most severe form of the
birth defect, and has other
medical problems including a shunt in her head
and a kidney infection that
goes untreated because
she can’t get medicine.
The last time she was
in severe pain and had to
be hospitalized, Andrews
had to convince her to go
get checked out. Because
she has no income and
owes more than $100,000
in hospital bills, she said,
Cassia Regional Medical
Center won’t see her anymore. So Andrews took
her to St. Luke’s Magic
Valley Medical Center in
Twin Falls. Doctors found
she had, as well as the
untreated kidney infection,
an ulcer from a colostomy
tube that was put in six
years ago. They removed
the tube and the ulcer will
heal, but Smith is stuck
trying to find natural ways
to keep her bowels unobstructed, since she can’t
afford medicine.
“I’m tired of going to
the hospital and not getting taken care of and just
getting more debt,” she
said.
Andrews and Smith
are two of the estimated
78,000 Idahoans who fall
into the “Medicaid gap”
— they don’t qualify for
Medicaid, but without
any incomes, they can’t
buy insurance on the state
exchange either.
“That’s why Idaho has
to expand Medicaid,” said
Layne’s mother, Cathleen
Andrews.
The
possibility
of
expanding Medicaid has
been before the Legislature
for the past few years, but
it hasn’t gone anywhere.
This year’s session started with a proposal from
Gov. C.L. “Butch” Otter to
use state money to extend
primary care coverage
to the uninsured, and a
Medicaid expansion bill
got a first-ever committee
hearing. The session ended
with the House killing a
proposal to authorize the
state Department of Health
and Welfare to apply for
a federal waiver to implement a state-designed
Medicaid expansion plan,
although Speaker Scott
Bedke, R-Oakley, has said
he intends to appoint a
work group of legislators
to study the issue during
the interim.
Idaho Democrats typically favor expansion and
Republicans are split, with
some favoring some sort
of hybrid state-designed
expansion plan and others who oppose creating a
new government program
for fear the federal government wouldn’t continue to
cover most of the cost of
expansion as it has promised.
It took a couple of years
for Andrews’ gout to get
diagnosed correctly, and
longer than that to get
the surgery to remove the
tophi. One doctor, he said,
told him not to walk on the
foot if he wanted it to stay
usable.
At first, Andrews said,
he had been working
with the hospital’s assistance program to pay for
his care, but his surgery
cost too much for that. His
first scheduled surgery had
to be canceled because
he had no way to pay. In
February, Cassia County
Social Services approved
his application for assistance, and he is required
to repay at the rate of $50
a month.
Andrews got surgery
earlier this month, but only
time will tell if any permanent damage was done
from going untreated for
so long. He wants to go
to college and become a
dental hygienist, but he
worries about taking on
more debt now.
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MorningNews
Telfair declares for NBA
POCATELLO (AP) — In
a surprise move, Idaho
State junior point guard
Ethan Telfair declared
for the NBA Draft on
Wednesday. ESPN’s Jeff
Goodman first reported the
news via Twitter, and the
ISU Athletic Department
confirmed the report.
Telfair and head coach Bill
Evans were not available
for comment.
Idaho State junior guard
Ethan Telfair (20.2 ppg) has
declared for NBA Draft,
but will not hire an agent,
Bengals coach Bill Evans
told ESPN— Jeff Goodman
(@GoodmanESPN) April
20, 2016
Telfair will not hire
an agent, a decision that
allows him to retain his
amateur status. Telfair can
maintain his NCAA eligibility by withdrawing from
the draft by May 25.
In January, the NCAA
made a series of decisions
regarding player eligibility. Student-athletes who
declare for the NBA Draft
and do not hire an agent
will remain eligible to
return to play for their college the following season if
they withdraw by the May
25 deadline. Prospective
pros can also enter the
draft multiple times without jeopardizing eligibility and may participate in
the draft combine and one
tryout per NBA team per
year. Last season, players
were forced to make their
decision by April 16. The
extended deadline allows
players like Telfair, who
have collegiate eligibility remaining, to test the
waters at the draft combine and gain a feel for
how scouts assess them
and their potential NBA
future. The 2016 NBA
Draft combine is May
11-15 in Chicago, and the
NBA Draft will be held
June 23 in Brooklyn.
Players are invited to the
combine based on a vote
by NBA teams. Sixty-two
players were invited last
year. A player’s invitation
to the combine is generally
a decent indicator of NBA
teams’ interest in pursuing
that player. Sixty players
are selected in each draft.
Telfair averaged 20.2
points and 5.4 assists per
game in his first season
at IdahoState after transferring from Redlands
Community College. He
was tabbed the Big Sky
Conference Newcomer of
the Year and a unanimous
first-team all-conference
selection. His older brother, Sebastian Telfair, was
the 13th overall pick in the
2004 draft and played 10
seasons in the NBA.
If he’s drafted in June,
Telfair will be the 16th
ISU ever player selected.
The most recent was Mike
Williams in the ninth
round of the 1984 draft.
Of the 15 Bengals drafted, five appeared in an
NBA game. Ron Boone had
the longest NBA career of
any ISU player, spanning
1,041 games from 196981.
Morning News — Jason Enes
Broncos’ Demaryius Thomas
looks for a bounce-back season Bronco tennis splits with Century
Blackfoot’s Josh Kelly serves during his mixed doubles match with Century Wednesday
afternnoon.
ENGLEWOOD, Colo.
(AP) — Demaryius Thomas
is no longer bogged down,
and it’s not only from losing
a couple of pounds since
winning the Super Bowl.
Unlike a year ago, the
Denver Broncos’ alpha
receiver is free from worries about his contract, his
mother’s incarceration and
the need to play catch-up
in a new offense.
Now, he can focus sole-
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ly on football.
“That’s it,” Thomas said
Wednesday as the Super Bowl
champs wrapped up their first
few days of offseason work. “I
don’t have to worry about my
mom. She’s good. The contract
is over with. I’m here now.
I’m trying to learn what I need
to learn so I won’t be rushing
it when” training camp rolls
around.
Only this time, it’s his QB
who might be making all the
adjustments.
Newcomer
Mark
Sanchez and Trevor Siemian,
who took one snap as a
rookie last year, are the only
quarterbacks on Denver’s
revamped roster.
Brian Hoyer, who was
recently released by the
Texans, is expected to
visit with Broncos general manager John Elway
on Thursday, the latest
chapter in Denver’s ongoing quarterback quandary that began when
Brock Osweiler bolted to
Houston 48 hours after
Peyton Manning’s retirement.
MORNING NEWS
BLACKFOOT — The
Blackfoot boys tennis team
earned award fought draw
with top ranked Century at
Blackfoot High School on
Wednesday.
The boys tied 3-3, while
the girls fell 6-0.
Landon Evans defeated
Century’s Brian Zhu 6-1,
6-2 for the lone singles
win.
Scott Cannon and Ryan
Kunz won the boys doubles match over Century’s
Seth Hatch and Austin
Klutsch 1-6, 6-3, 6-2.
Blackfoot also earned
a point in mixed doubles thanks to Ally Pack
and Braxton Bird who
earned a 6-3, 6-2 win
over Christian Jepsen and
Aubrey Sutton.
Blackfoot takes the court
again April 28 against
Sugar-Salem.
PHILADELPHIA (AP) —
Desperate for a franchise
quarterback,
the
Philadelphia
Eagles can get their
man. Soon.
Th e
Cleveland
Browns will wait for
t h e i r g u y.
Th e E a g l e s a c q u i r e d
the No. 2 overall
p i c k i n n e x t w e e k ’s
draft from Cleveland
in exchange for five
p i c k s o n We d n e s d ay.
Th e B r o w n s a r e g e t ting
P h i l a d e l p h i a ’s
first-round pick this
year (No. 8), a thirdround pick (No. 77)
and fourth-rounder
(No. 100), plus a
first-rounder in 2017
and a second-rounder in 2018.
Cleveland
also
sends a fourth-round
pick in 2017 to the
Eagles.
“ I t ’s
a
tough
p r i c e t o p a y,” s a i d
Howie
Roseman,
P h i l a d e l p h i a ’s e x e c u tive vice president of
football operations.
“ W e ’r e
very
sure
w e ’r e g o i n g t o g e t
t h e p l ay e r w e w a n t .
We ’v e s p e n t a t o n
of time investigating these guys and
l o o k e d a t t h e q u a rterback market going
forward, and this is
a rare opportunity
w e ’r e i n .”
Th e t r a d e a l l o w s
Philadelphia
to
select one of the top
quarterback
prosp e c t s , C a r s o n We n t z
of
North
Dakota
State or Jared Goff of
California at No. 2.
Th e L o s A n g e l e s R a m s
a l r e a dy a c q u i r e d t h e
top overall pick from
Te n n e s s e e f o r a s l e w
of picks and have
indicated they will
take a quarterback.
It is the fourth time
the top two select i o n s i n t h e d r a f t h av e
been dealt.
“ Th e s e g u y s a r e
p r e t t y e v e n ,” E a g l e s
c o a c h D o u g Pe d e r s o n
s a i d o f We n t z a n d
G o f f . “ Fr o m a l l t h e
p hy s i c a l t o o l s , b o t h
of them are extremely
gifted.
Good
arm strength, good
m o b i l i t y. O b v i o u s l y,
Carson is a little bigg e r, m a y b e a l i t t l e
better athlete right
n o w.
T h e r e ’s
not
much
separating
t h o s e t w o .”
Th e E a g l e s s i g n e d
Sam Bradford to a
$35 million, two-year
contract in March.
Roseman said he’ll be
t h e s t a r t e r. Th e y a l s o
signed backup Chase
Daniel to a $21 million, three-year deal.
B u t R o s e m a n c o u l d n ’t
resist an opportunity to move up after
acquiring the No. 8
pick from Miami for
cornerback
Byron
Maxwell, linebacker
Kiko Alonso and the
13th overall pick.
“ W e ’r e g o i n g t o
invest
in
q u a r t e rb a c k s ,”
Roseman
s a i d . “ Th e k e y t o
being championship
caliber over a long
period of time is
q u a r t e r b a c k s .”
Th e l a s t t i m e t h e
Eagles
drafted
a
quarterback in the
first round was 1999
w h e n A n dy R e i d t o o k
D o n o va n M c N a b b a t
No. 2. McNabb led
Philadelphia to five
NFC
championship
games and one Super
Bowl appearance.
Th e B r o w n s w e r e
in position to finally
land a quarterback
after more than a
decade of futility and
failure.
Cleveland
has had 24 starting
quarterbacks
since 1999, when
i t c h o s e Ti m C o u c h
ahead of McNabb.
B u t t h e c l u b ’s n e w
f r o n t o f f i c e wa s n ’t
enthralled with Goff
o r We n t z a n d d e c i d e d
to get more picks to
help first-year coach
Hue Jackson build a
w i n n e r.
Cleveland
may
still be able to get a
quarterback — possib l y M e m p h i s ’ Pa x t o n
Ly n c h — i n t h e d r a f t ,
b u t i t w o n ’t b e o n e
of the top two guys.
After the Rams leaped
from No. 15 to No. 1,
the Browns were no
l o n g e r g o i n g t o h av e
their choice of Goff
o r We n t z .
Th e B r o w n s r e c e n t ly
signed
Robert
Griffin III, making it
easier to trade the
second pick. Griffin
s i g n e d a t w o - y e a r,
$15 million contract
and was viewed as
a “bridge” QB until
the team develops a
y o u n g p l ay e r.
Th e B r o w n s ’ n e w
front office led by
Sashi
Brown
has
p l a c e d h e av y e m p h a sis on analytics in
preparing for this
y e a r ’s
draft
and
putting
together
C l e v e l a n d ’s
r o s t e r.
With so many needs,
the Browns chose to
accumulate as many
picks as possible to
fill holes on both
sides of the ball.
“ Th e s e p i c k s w i l l
p l ay a m a j o r r o l e i n
building our team for
long-term sustained
s u c c e s s ,” B r o w n s a i d .
“ We w a n t t o a s s e m ble a young nucleus
of talented players
and this trade positions us really well.
Th e r e i s a g o o d d e p t h
of talent in the first
round and we felt we
could make a larger
impact to our roster
by adding more draft
p i c k s a n d t h a t ’s w hy
we made the decision
t o t r a d e d o w n .”
Cleveland now has
12 selections in this
y e a r ’s d r a f t , i n c l u d ing six of the top 100
picks.
Th e E a g l e s h o s t t h e
Browns in the season
opener on Sept. 11.
Previous years in
which the top two
picks were traded,
a c c o r d i n g t o S TAT S :
—1967, when New
Orleans sent the top
spot to the Baltimore
C o l t s , wh o t o o k B u b b a
Smith, and the Giants
sent the second pick
to Minnesota, which
grabbed Clint Jones.
—1975,
when
Atlanta got the No.
1 selection from the
Colts and took Steve
Bartkowski,
while
Dallas acquired No.
2 from the Giants to
t a k e R a n dy W h i t e .
—1997, when the
Rams got the top spot
from the Jets to draft
O r l a n d o Pa c e , a n d
the Saints sent the
No. 2 selection to the
Raiders, who picked
Darrell Russell.
Eagles acquire No. 2 overall
draft pick from Browns
MorningNews
SPORTS
am-news.com
Thursday, April 21, 2016
9A
Local calendar
Thursday, April 21
High school baseball
High school rodeo
Shelley
at
South
District 5 rodeo at
Fremont, 4 p.m.
American Falls, 7 p.m.
High school softball
Shelley
at
South
Fremont, 4 p.m.
Saturday, April 23
High school baseball
Shelley at Snake River,
11 a.m.
High school track
Firth
at
Preston
Firth, Shelley at Sugar Tournament, TBA
Invite, 1 p.m.
High school softball
High school golf
Shelley at Snake River,
Blackfoot at Madison
11 a.m.
Firth at Tiger/Grizz
Friday, April 22
Tournament, TBA
High school baseball
Madison at Blackfoot,
High school tennis
4:30 p.m.
Blackfoot at Highland,
Firth
at
Preston 11 a.m.
Tournament, TBA
Snake River at Marsh
High school rodeo
Morning News — Jason Enes
District 5 rodeo at
Blackfoot’s Alx Martinez dives for an errant throw as a Preston runner slides into third base Wednesday afternoon at Valley, 4 p.m.
American Falls, 11 a.m.
Blackfoot High School.
High school softball
Snake River at Marsh
Football
Valley, 4 p.m.
Stampede at Anarchy, 4
Firth at Tiger/Grizz p.m.
Tournament, TBA
It wasn’t pretty, but Broncos down Preston,
10-4, to remain unbeaten in district
CB Norman a free agent, Panthers
By JASON ENES
[email protected]
BLACKFOOT
—
Sometimes during the
course of a season a team
is going to have a game that
is going to make coaches
and fans just shake their
head.
Good teams can make
the best of a subpar effort,
great teams find ways to
make the plays necessary
to overcome it.
That describes the
Blackfoot Broncos afternoon against Preston on
Wednesday.
After a slow start filled
with some miscues, the
Broncos scored four runs
in the sixth inning using
just one hit to blow the
game open and defeat the
Indians 10-4 at Blackfoot
High School.
“At some point during
the season you are going
to have a game that just
makes you shake your
head, today was that
game,” Blackfoot head
coach Liam Pope said.
“Despite the miscues and
not getting the big hits, we
rescind franchise tag offer
Morning News — Jason Enes
Blackfoot’s Konner Robinson slides into third base Wednesday afternoon.
pulled together and got the
win. It was a great game.”
The Broncos managed
to score 10 runs in the
game but the had just six
hits.
After the three-run second in which the Broncos
got an RBI single from
Konner Robinson and
another RBI hit from Rhys
Pope, the Broncos managed just two hits, both
from sophomore Caleb
WIlson.
Wilson had a heck of
a game going 2-for-2 and
scored three runs on the
day.
“You have to give the
boys credit their plate
discipline was fantastic,”
Pope said. “We may not
have hit the ball well, but
when we needed a runner
moved or driven in we
found a way to do it.”
Blackfoot drew 10
walks in the game and
used six Preston errors to
plate their runs.
“The biggest thing for
us right now is 4-0,” Pope
said. “We are undefeated
in district and that is big
going forward.”
The Broncos head out
of conference for the final
time this season when they
host Madison on Friday.
Blackfoot 10, Preston 4
Preston.100 030 0 — 4 5 5
Blackfoot.031 114 x — 10 6 5
Preston — Porter, Hollen (4)
and Beardall. Blackfoot — Rhys
Pope, Taylor Pearson (5) and Jode
Stephenson. 2B — Porter (PHS),
Parker (PHS), Hobbs (PHS).
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)
— The NFL free agent cornerback market just got
more interesting.
Josh Norman, one of
the league’s top corners,
became an unrestricted free
agent Wednesday after the
Carolina Panthers surprisingly rescinded their nonexclusive franchise tag offer
to the All-Pro and wished
him well — someplace else.
Norman, 28, elected
not to sign the franchise
tag offer from the Panthers
which would have paid him
$13.9 million in 2016 while
holding out for a long-term
contract. The two sides
could never agree on monetary compensation.
Now Norman can sign
with any team.
“After a number of conversations with Josh’s agent
we realized that a longterm deal was not attainable,” Panthers general
manager Dave Gettleman
said in a release. “We have
decided to rescind the
franchise tag freeing Josh
to immediately become a
UFA. We thank Josh for all
his contributions and truly
wish him well.”
A former fifth-round
draft pick, Norman had
a career-high four interceptions and helped the
NFC champion Panthers
lead the NFL in interceptions (24), takeaways (39),
points off turnovers (148)
last season. He also had
16 passes defensed, three
forced fumbles and two
fumble recoveries.
Norman didn’t want
to discuss the Panthers
decision when reached
Wednesday night.
“Man, I just don’t feel
like talking about it right
now,” Norman told The
Associated Press.
Essentially, Norman was
gambling on himself by
not signing the team’s franchise tag offer — believing
he can get more money on
the free agent market.
Norman’s absence creates a huge void in the
Panthers secondary.
Last year’s other starter
Charles Tillman also is a
free agent, leaving nickel back Bene Benwikere
and journeyman Robert
McClain as the only cornerbacks with significant
NFL experience.
Norman, a four-year veteran, had been in and out
of the starting lineup for
the Panthers for two-and-ahalf seasons before emerging as a potential star late
in 2014. He started off last
season like gangbusters
with four interceptions in
four games, including two
for touchdown returns.
He sealed Carolina’s
early-season win over New
Orleans with an interception in the end zone as the
Panthers bolted to a 14-0
record and a third straight
NFC South title.
Carolina lost 24-10 to
Denver in the Super Bowl.
Norman was so good
at covering his side of
the field that teams rarely
threw his way.
3 Month Student
Membership for $99 PIF
Health  Happy = The Good Life
Getting in shape during summer break has never been
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1250 West Bridge Street, Blackfoot
785-4338 goldsgym.com/blackfootid
Morning News — Greg Eichelberger
Blackfoot’s Kelcey Wright throws a pitch during Game 2 of the Broncos doubleheader
with Century on Wednesday.
Lady Broncos sweep doubleheader
from Diamondbacks, 9-6, 8-1
MORNING NEWS
BLACKFOOT
—
Ashlyn Beers smacked
her first career home
run
and
Hadlie
Henderson and Kelcey
Wright each pitched
complete games to help
propel the Blackfoot
La dy B ron cos to a
d o u b l e h e a d e r sw e e p
of Century Wednesday
afternoon.
Blackfoot
took
game one 9-6 after
Henderson struck out
nine D-backs hitters.
Henderson also added
a double and a home
run in the game one
win.
Madie Rigby added
a pair of doubles and
Beers added one more
double as the Broncos
pounded out 11 hits.
In game two Wright
held the Diamondbacks
to five hits and one
run in the circle, while
Beers crushed her first
career home run.
Henderson and Sami
Macfee each doubled
and Macfee added a
triple later in the game.
Blackfoot
hosts
Rigby on Wednesday.
Blackfoot 9, Century 6
Century.000 012 4 — 6 11 1
Blackfoot.233 001 x — 9 14 0
Century — M. Kriner and T.
Ferguson. Blackfoot — Hadlie
Henderson and Madie Rigby. 2B
— S. Ihler (CHS), Madie Rigby
(BHS)2, Ashlyn Beers (BHS). HR
— Hadlie Henderson (BHS).
Blackfoot 8, Century 1
Century.000 100 0 — 1 5 1
Blackfoot.301 140 x — 8 8 3
Century — M. Kriner and T.
Ferguson. Blackfoot — Kelcey
Wright and Madie Rigby. 2B —
Armstrong (CHS), Sami Macfee
(BHS), Hadlie Henderson (BHS),
Kelcey Wright (BHS).
3B — Sami Macfee (BHS). HR —
Ashlyn Beers (BHS).
Open
Saturdays!
We Service & Detail
All Makes & Models!
Service Center Open:
www.myforddodge.com
M-F 8am-6pm Sat 9am-4pm
785-1800
180 Day
Same-As-Cash (OAC)
1090 Fordway, Blackfoot
Ann Ogden
Associate
Broker
• 604-6100 •
785-3494
Blackfoot, Idaho
idahowestern
realty.com
See all of our listings at:
www.IdahoWesternRealty.com
Kim Wolfley
Broker,
GRI
• 680-2678 •
MorningNews
CLASSIFIEDS
www.am-news.com
Thursday, April 21, 2016
1B
REAL ESTATE,
HELP WANTED,
CLASSIFIEDS,
BARGAINS & MORE!
THURSDAY
April 21, 2016
• Sterling spoon collection
• Misc. sterling pieces
• Artwork by Werner Gisin,
Jeri Ann Sabin, Blackner,
Roemer, O’Neil and more
• Lenox glass • EDelft
• Wedgewood & Florence ceramics
• Orientals • China sets
• Quality stemware
• Depression glass • Kitchen items
• Quality furniture: Sofa & loveseat
• Hide-a-bed • Dining table
• Deacon’s bench • Maple teacart
• Patio set • 1920’s Brunswick
pool table with cue sticks
• Wagon wheel • Craftsman radio
arm saw, Misc. tools • Treadmill
• Canon copier • Office supplies
• New Sony turntable
• 200 LP records • Christmas items
• Comforters
• Tons of miscellaneous items.
Dr. Bud and Minnie Miller
Inside Living
Estate/Moving
Sale!!!
Friday and Saturday
April 22-23
8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
959 W. Harmony Drive
Come check it out!!!
Don’t miss this
fantastic sale!!!
000 Homes For Sale
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Check Out All These Great Listings!!!
If You Want More, You Want us!!
Featured Home!!
5 bdrms
4 1/2 baths
5188 sq ft
Secluded
Executive
Retreat
80 acre lake
MLS 203599
$1,600,000
4 bdrm 2 bath 2280 sq ft
Beautiful home in the country
Short Sale!
MLS 201385 • $150,000
5 bdrms 2 baths on corner lot.
Has apartment in basement
MLS 203391 • $149,900
3 bdrms 2 baths 1702 sq ft
In Aberdeen-Priced to sell!
MLS 200698 • $107,900
4 bdrms 1 1/2 bath Home w/
Acreage 2576 sq ft, Grain bins,
17 irrigated acres 40x60 shop.
MLS 201159 • $344,900
Commercial!!
Open House!!!
3 bdrms 2 1/2 baths 2136 sq ft
Well cared for home in great
neighborhood. Privacy fence.
MLS 202828 • $182,900
!
th!
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2 bdrms 1 1/2 baths 1125 sq ft
Fenced, established yard!
MLS 200508 • $99,900
15 Aces in Shelley
Water rights!
MLS 201981 • $165,000
Enter to
WIN a
$50 Gift
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3 bdrm 2 bath 1360 2932 sq ft
Nice home in Idaho Falls
MLS 202486 • $190,000
4 bdrm 2 bath 1360 sq ft Great location & quiet neighborhood
MLS# 202622 • $145,900
G!
2000 sq ft Office, retail, service
business, off street parking
MLS 202784 • $129,000
G!
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3 bdrm 2 bath 3584 sq ft
All brick, over 8 acres, shop & more.
MLS 202994 • $129,900
4 bdrm 3 bath 2228 sq ft
Nice one level home. 80x80 shop.
MLS 202841 • $154,900
d!
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N
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Nearly 5 acres to build your
dream home on!
MLS 202783 • $64,900
Friday evening 5-7 p.m.
Sat. 11 a.m.-1 p.m.
561 W 10 S
Red
2 bdrms 1 bath in Chubbuck
Adorable home w/large yard
MLS 202060 • $87,525
6 bdrms 2 baths Great Investment Property in Idaho Falls
MLS 194795 • $125,000
6 bdrms 3 baths Large home in
the country. 3 car gar & 24x24
shop. Lots of extras!!
MLS 202634 • $287,000
Fantastic Business Location!
Completely paved & ready for new
business. Priced to sell.
MLS 192104 • $32,000
785-1313
745 W Bridge Ste B
Mark Call Roxie Jensen
604-4602
680-4018
Owner/Broker
Gary Ternus Cathy Haggard
317-6919
680-1901
Great 2 acre building lot with division
right in Rockford!
MLS# 204208 • $44,000
Call Karen Batten
65 E 100 N, Blackfoot
Amanda
Scott
403-6547
Justin Bair
690-9094
Judy
Campbell
589-8247
Brandon Parks
200-2562
#
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2 bed 2 bath home, 3/4 acres close to town!
4 den/office rooms, updated kitchen & bath!
MLS# 204404 • $137,500
!
LD
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$132,500.00 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.
See all of our listings at:
www.idahohighplainsrealty.com
681-3494
WE
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IT IN THE CLA
In Print & Online
www.am-news.com
#
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Now!!
www.IdahoanRealty.com
Cassidy
Wilcox
681-2124
Jammie
Matheson
313-1474
#
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$160,000 Beautiful Victorian
6 bdrms 2.75 baths One of a
kind 2 car oversized finished
garage Priced to sell!
#
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BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY
4 LEVEL HOME
$184,000
5 bdrm, 3 bath 1.39 acres,
Approx 2985 SF
New flooring, new paint
NE
GORGEOUS $305,000
$380,000 Country Escape in
Approx 1 acre of ground, Approx
Groveland Area
7.8 + acres, private pond & custom 4158 Total Sg. Ft. 6 bedrooms 3 Baths
Acasia Hand Scraped Wood Flooring
landscaping 2 story home with
2 shops / shed 5 bdrms, 3 baths,
Stainless Steel Appliances
covered patio
A MUST SEE!!
MorningNews
Kathy
Broker, GRI
208-681-2474
• 684-3919 •
Town
[email protected]
www.am-news.com
& Country Real Estate
785-2474 - 710 W. Bridge
Call
785-1100
townandcountryIVhomes.com
!
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MLS 203075 • $192,000. Nicely
MLS 203532
•
$315,000
2.3 ac. of quiet. Home has 4 bed. 1.5 bath updated 4 bdrm 2 3/4 bath home. New
roof,
newely finished basement. Granite
& irrig.Detached garage with apt., full
& tile. Extra garage/shop, GFA heat,
bath, bonus rooms. Gas heat, AC., deck.
covered deck. Call Ann 680-6063
Call Ann B to see 208-680-6063
!
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Beautiful custom home near Blackfoot
High. Over 6000 sq. ft. Lots of tile and granite.
4+ big bedrooms, 3.5 baths 3 car garage.
GFA/AC , sprinkler system, fireplaces.
Call Ann Blaser 208-680-6063
MLS 202802 • $113,500.
4 bdrm 2 bath 1856 2 story home.
Very spacious! Tiled bathrooms.
Call Kandice 540-1059
uy!
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MLS 198308 • $210,000 Granite & tile in
kitchen. Formal living, great room too. 3
bdrms 2.5 baths & laundry on main. GFA
heat, deck, fenced, sprinkler sys.
Linnea
Real Estate
Agent
• 680-1996 •
[email protected]
MLS#200941
21.4 acres Zoned
Residential/Ag.
water & division
rights!!
!
LD
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$128,500 • MLS 200332 Remodeled!
5 bdrm 2 bath home. New tiled baths & kitchen
w/ appliances. New carpet, paint, cabinets,
lighting, egress windows. Call Ann 680-6063
RiveRside
Real estate
611 N. Broadway Blackfoot
Ann Blaser
• 680-6063 •
Broker
2B
CLASSIFIEDS
Thursday, April 21, 2016
000 Homes For Sale
000 Homes For Sale
000 Homes For Sale
Aberdeen! $89,000
Aberdeen! • $105,000
MLS#203247 659 E
Washington 1860 Sq.ft.,
4 BR, 3 bath. Large dine in
Kitchen. New master bedroom/bath. Lg. family room.
New roof. nice patio,
Privacy fenced
yard. Shed.
MLS#203728 82 W Bingham.
2 BR, possible 3rd, 1 Bath. One level,
handicap accessible. Vinyl Siding.
42’x32’ shop. w/ man cave. .64 Acre lot.
Beautifully landscaped. Large fire pit
w/ benches. 2 sheds. Horseshoe pit. Out
house that’s hooked into City Sewer!
Yard totally private with 100’s of trees.
Call Terry Lebrecht
681-1191
000 Homes For Sale
A Hidden Treasure!!
$178,500
MLS#194005 2146 S 2800 W
3 BR, 1 Bath. with extra walk
in shower in Mud room. Huge
30’ x 70’ shop, with 3 overhead doors. large orchard
in the front, with many
types of fruit,
Shared well.
Underground Auto. sprinklers on on 1 Acre.
MLS#203972 382 N 7th,
MLS#199346 3155 W 1500 S.,
Aberdeen. 5 BR, 3 Bath. Beautiful Custon
Brick Ranch Style. 5420
craftsman style home, completely
sq.ft., 5 BR, 4 Bath. Huge Tile
updated! Gas heat & central air.
Kitchen.
3 fireplaces. Indoor hot
Formal Dining with Balcony. No
tub. 2 car garage, w/ basement
Maintenance siding. Country feel, access. Trex Decks. Fenced Elk
with city amenities. .40 Acre.
pasture. 3 car detached shop.
3 bedroom, 2 bath home on 1.6 acres.
Mature trees, established yard, flower beds,
30x40 shop & More!! MLS#203372
all 5 Acres!
[email protected]
000 Homes For Sale
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Aberdeen! • $72,000
Aberdeen! $275,000
!!
DING
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.40 Acre! • $169,000
MorningNews
www.am-news.com
Call Jean
208 243-1882
785-7555
199 W. Bridge St.
Blackfoot
PREFERRED PROPERTIES
Information & Pictures for every home listed in Southeast Idaho @ www.JustIdaho.com
!
NEW
Carrie Hasselbring
Broker 681-7555
Susan Caldwell
680-3325
Jean Nilsson
317-2360
Renette Loosli Andy Hasselbring
604-3058
681-7444
Tara Eppich
680-2772
Featured Home of The Week
D!
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#195468 Cute! $54,900
Great starter or investment home.
Updated wiring, ideal location,
3 bdrm, 1 bath Ready to move in.
Call Carrie 681-7555
K!
#202619 One-Level Brick
Home, east side $90,000
# 197378 Move in Condition! $95,000
3 bdrms, 1 bath w/single car garage This 3 bdrm, 1.5 bath home has gas heat,
wood stove & lovely yard w/sprinkler
& fenced yard. Won’t last long.
system. Call Carrie: 681-7555
Call Carrie 681-7555
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Wonderful Home In Pocatello
1620 Sq Ft w 3 bed, 1 1/2 baths
Lots of updates
Single car attached garage
#203963 • $115,000
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1800 Sq ft
4 Bed, 2 bath
Lots of updates
MLS#203513 - $130,700
U
785-6685
D!
#201496 Extras Galore! $189,000
#197210 Gorgeous $190,000
5 Bdrm/3 Bath, vaulted ceilings, spacious
Tons of updates including kitchen &
kitchen and large family room. Fully
2 baths!! Park like setting, greenhouse,
landscaped w/sprinkler, privacy fence & garden area and workshop. 5 bdrm/3 bath
RV parking. Call Andy 681-7444
2 car garage. Call Andy 681-7444
#203158 Newer home in desired
area! $173,000 4 bdrm/3 bath Expanded living on patio & parklike yard, many amenities.
Call Susan 680-3325
D!
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Coming
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D!
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Solid Brick Home
2690 Sq Ft Home On 1 Acre
5 Bedrooms, 2 Bathrooms
2 Car detached garage
MLS#202626 • $178,000
Home In The Country
2000 sq ft w/4 bdrms, 2 baths
4 acres with water rights.
MLS#183597 • $159,900
Country Home on 2.169 Acres
5231 Sq Ft w 7 bed, 3 1/2 baths Spacious Building Great Business
or Investment Property!
Open floor plan with lots of upgrades
walk out basement, 3 car garage 3034 sq ft w/6+ Offices 20+ off street
parking MLS#189924 • $149,900
MLS#203758 • $459,000
Cute and Clean
1188 Sq Ft MFH 3 Bed, 2 Bath,
oversized 2 car garage
Established yard & trees
MLS#202428 • $97,500
G!
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Beautiful Home On 2 Acres
3875 Sq Ft, 5 Bed, 3 1/2 Bath
Spacious Open Kitchen
Main Floor Master
MLS#200324 • $310,000
#201164 Iconic Blackfoot Motors
building $375,000 Located on main
thoroughfare near downtown.
23921 sq. ft., 2 buildings with drive
through lube area and shop. High
visibility area. Call Carrie 681-7555
Lindsay Fairchild
681-6643
Sharlyn Piggott
260-0933
!
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Beautiful Custom Home
Classic Home
1893 sq ft home
3 bed, 2 bath All brick home
MLS# 201051 • $110,000
5 bed, 4 bath, 5100 sq ft
3.839 Ac.of private setting
MLS#190734 • $369,000
NEW
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680-1815
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681-6646
John Fairchild
Broker
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70 S. Spruce
Home in The Country
3020 Sq ft home on 1.075 Acre
4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms
MLS#200566 - $223,900
R
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#204175 This Could Be the One!
#202560 Custom Accents!
#203926 Newer Country Home on
$259,000 4Bdrm/2.5 Bath w/grand
$205,000 Lovely 5 bedroom/3 bath
1.15 acres west of Moreland, Only
master suite, hardwood floors, gas fire- #192988 Beautiful Home! $349,900
newer home with countless
$234,900 Over 3400 sq ft w/3 Bdrms, 2 place, fully fenced and landscaped. 4+ 6 bdrms, 3 baths, custom kitchen &
upgrades and attention to detail.
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with Great View! Call Carrie 681-7555
galore! Call Andy 681-7444
room. Call Andy 681-7444
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Buying or Selling? Call us today
for a Free Market Analysis!!
Beautiful Acreage in Mackay
20+ Acres with water
Beautiful Views
MLS# 201608 - $75,000
#199826 Location, Location,
Location $165,000 2 acre river
frontage near Tilden Bridge.
2 Bedroom/2 bath mnfctrd home with
a great view. Call Susan 680-3325
#200293 Super Clean $115,000
Cute & Updated 4 bdrm home in Pingree.
Updated kitchen, vinyl windows, 2 sheds.
Fenced Yard & NEW roof!
Call Susan 680-3325
#200011 Great Buy! $120,000
#200444 Charming Home! $118,000
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1,836 sq ft home w/refinished hard- Bonus living room, multiple possibilities
wood floor & gas fireplace. Amazing
Updated tile, carpet and a new
backyard Call Andy 681-7444
furnace. Call Andy 681-7444
DIN
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Home isWhere
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Beautiful 10 Acre Lot
Build Your Dream Home Here
Beautiful View Of The Hills
MLS#196720 - $59,500
CE!
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#201497 Amazing One Level
Home in Moreland $200,000
2 Bdrm/2 Bath with rustic oak
cabinets, sun room, hot tub, shop and
family room with gas fireplace.
Call Carrie 681-7555
#203508 Prepare to be Impressed $209,000 Attractive 3
Bdrm/2 Bath home has custom cabinetry, hardwood
floors and gas fireplace. Definitely one of the most
beautiful yards located in a great neighborhood.
Call Andy 681-7444
#203241 Beautifully updated home
$116,000 3 bdrms/1 bath has newer
vinyl windows & siding, new interior
paint, wood look tile flooring. Vinyl
fenced yard & huge covered patio!
Call Carrie: 681-7555
203009 Wonderful 4 Bdrm/2 Bath
home on East side! Only $132,500
#202638 2-Story Brick Home
Entire interior is freshly painted, main
$159,900 4000 sq ft, 5 bdrms/
has new carpet & hardwood floors.
Large bdrms, fireplace, GFA, Cvrd
in quiet area. Priced to sell.
Patio, Fenced Yard, Garage & more! 3.5 baths
Call Carrie 681-7555
Call Carrie 681-7555
TED
PDA
SOL
#201967 Check out the
Updates! $110,000 Fully renovated
3 bedroom home with 36x24 shop,
on large lot with water rights.
Call Andy 681-7444
D
SOL
#203316 Duplex w/Great Rental History
$115,000 2 Bdrm/1Bath in each unit. Each
has updated kitchens, tile flooring, paint &
carpet. A shared double garage and laundry.
Call Carrie 681-7555
D!
D!
SOL
LOO
NEW
#203831 Clayton, ID Only $70,000
Older school house on 1.629 acres is bordered by a creek, & beautiful mountain
view. Over 1900 sq ft w/endless possibilities….could easily accommodate 2-3
bdrm/1-2 baths plus huge living area.
Call Carrie 681-7555
NG!
DI
PEN
Affordable Lot In The Country
1.4 Acres
Rockford Area
MLS#202826 - $29,000
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
!
NEW
Adorable Home
1897 Sq Ft w/4 bed, 2 bath
Newer paint, carpet and roof
Oversized detached 2 car garage
MLS#204142 • $121,500
Great Deal! Fully Finished!!
3072 sq ft w/5 bdrms, 3 baths
3 car garage.
This home has all the extras
MLS#178128 • $196,900
TED
PDA
U
Beautiful Log Home
3504 Sq ft home w/2 Bed, 3 Bath
home on 22.88 acres
Oversized 2 bay garage
MLS#201205 • $379,000
D!
SOL
Home on 1 acre
2160 Sq ft w/ 4 bed, 2 bath
Lots of updates
MLS#198569 • $139,000
CE!
PRI
Beautiful Home All On 1 Level
1364 sq ft home
3 bed, 2 bath, lots of updates
MLS# 202009 - #134,500
TRY OuR QR CODE
TO CONNECT TO OuR
WEBSITE. LOOK FOR
SIGNS WITH THE
QR CODE FOR THAT
HOME!
Beautiful Custom Home
3550 Sq ft home
3 Bed, 2 Bath
Full unfinished basement
MLS#201010 - $239,900
MorningNews
CLASSIFIEDS
www.am-news.com
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
000 Homes For Sale
Thursday, April 21, 2016
3B
000 Homes For Sale
000 Homes For Sale
NO FEE
15 & 30 YEAR MORTGAGES*
CONTACT OUR
MORTGAGE
CENTER
TODAY
FOR
DETAILS:
4BR/2BA BLACKFOOT
Home for sale by Owner.2,164 sq ft.
Well built home in quiet neighborhood,
close to town. Peaceful setting in this 4
bedroom 2 bath home, two gas fireplaces, hardwood floors throughout
most,new tile in kitchen, pantry,
updated bathrooms. Additional family
room with large windows to view the
gorgeous backyard, mature trees
surrounding. Sunroom, deck, Sprinkler
system. Pre Approved and by appt
only. 339-5754. Or 243-6322
$158,900
208-339-5754
[email protected]
060 Unfurn.Apts.ForRent
Rose Park Place
Apartments
55 + Senior Community
Currently Available
1 Bdrm/1 Bath
Rent $460
1-800-574-5626
OR
208-552-1035
1385 Meggan Street
Blackfoot, Idaho
1-208-782-0085
Must income qualify.
Washer/dryer & Garage
with each apartment.
Rental Assisted
Households welcome.
*ALL LOANS OAC
In Pocatello or Blackfoot
Patie Davis Molder at 233-0725
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
785-9639
*Equal Housing Opportunity*
GREAT LOCATION!!!
One-bedroom - $410 per month
plus $300 deposit. Laundry facilities,
no pets. Call 760-3030
000 Homes For Sale
000 Homes For Sale
NEWER 2 bedroom country duplex
All Appliances W/D N0 pets, Smoking
or drinking. $500 604-2205
000 Homes For Sale
Place your ad and
picture with
The Morning News
at 785-1100
How You Can Save Thousands
with 20th Century Homes
One thing that makes 20th
Century Homes special is our
unique financing process.
030 Lots - Acreage
Instead of requiring 2 loans–
a construction loan, and later
a final mortgage–and therefore
forcing you to pay 2 loan
origination fees, we are one
of only a few dealers who will
help you bypass the construction
loan.
NICE, three-bedroom, one bath with
central a.c. No smoking, no pets.
$600 plus deposit. One year lease.
Call 782-0673.
070 Homes For Rent
IN TOWN . . .
Two-bedroom home with two-car attached garage and sprinkler system.
$700 plus deposit. Call 785-3560.
030 Lots - Acreage
Lots and Acreage
• A Great lot in a well developed Subdivision ready to build
on. 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. $32,000
Call Renette 604-3058 MLS #202919
• Bare Ground ranging from 1 acre to 23 acres priced
from $10k to $58K located North of Moreland
• 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
• 203452 Premium 1 Acre Building Lot in
Groveland with Water Rights. Only $29,000
Call Carrie 681-7555
Groveland Area – Six new home acreages
2.3 to 3.5 acre lots, prices vary (start at $47,500),
water rights, utilities to lots and covenants.
Call Susan 680-3325
We’ll be glad to explain the details in person, so be sure to ask how we make
financing your new home simpler, and save you thousands at the same time.
Call or Email Today to Get Started
My name is Bill Agado, General Manager of 20th Century Homes. Please call, text,
or email me at your earliest convenience to start your project.
Together, we can and do make dreams come true!
208-251-6704
www.20thcenturyhomes.com
Commercial
• Great Downtown Location with high visibility! Over
785-4000
220 N. Meridian
Blackfoot
Jed Taylor
681-4000
Owner/BrOker
Jed@
JedTaylor.com
Jared Taylor
557-9595
reALTOr®
Jared@
Jared Taylor.net
Candra Risa
681-6102
reALTOr®
email@
Candrarisa.com
Angela Palmer
757-9538
reALTOr®
Angela@
AngelaMPalmer.com
W!
NE
Amazing Original Hardwood Floors
$99,900
MLS 203110
1,928 sq ft, 3 bedrooms, 1 bathroom
All Brick Home, Dbl Carport w/shed
Call Angela at 757-9538
!
ed
uc
d
Re
Fenced Yard, Low Maintenance Siding
$135,000
MLS 199071
2,298 sq ft, 4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms
Convenient-keyless entry + Security Sys
Call Angela at 757-9538
Many Updates to Home on 1 Acre Perfect Home, Ready for New Owner
$105,000
MLS 201779
$124,999
MLS 196745
2,270 sq ft, 2 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms 1,790 sq ft, 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms
Lg Cvrd Deck, Huge 3 Car Garage/Shop new Appliances, wH & Gas Furnace
Call Angela at 757-9538
Call Jed at 681-4000
W!
W!
NE
Updated 6+ Bedrm Home
$154,900
mls 203333
2,642 sqft, 6+bedrms, 2.5 baths
Fenced Garden, Gas/Central A/C
Call Angela at 757-9538
Must See ALL the Updates
$135,000
MLS 201294
2,742 sq ft, 4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms
walk-out entrance to Back Yard
Call Jed at 681-4000
NE
Adorable Country Home!
$162,000
MLS 202571
1,858 sq ft, 4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms
1.25 Irr. Acres w nice Fenced Pasture
Call Angela at 757-9538
3.9 Irr Ac. & 30X50 Shop
$245,000
mls 203390
2,697 sqft, 4 bedroom, 3 full baths
Log Pole Barn, Set-up for Horses
Call Jed at 681-4000
12,000cesqd!ft on main thoroughfare. Only $95,000
du
Bring all offers seller motivated.
Re
MLS 193511 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.
•Commercial Building with over 11,000 sq. ft.
There are 3 warehouses (2 of which are leased) and
plenty of office space for only $200,000.
Call Carrie 681-7555
RE/MAX
PREFERRED PROPERTIES
199 W. BRIDGE ST.
BLACKFOOT, ID 83221
785-7555
060 Unfurn.Apts.ForRent
060 Unfurn.Apts.ForRent
COTTONWOOD COMMUNITY
APARTMENTS
BEAUTIFULLY, REMODELED
Home on 3 Acres
$275,000
MLS 197112
3,696 sq ft, 4 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms
Includes dwelling used as Beauty Salon
Call Jed at 681-4000
Cntry Home in Silver Leaf Subdvsn
$355,000
MLS 201468
4,282 sq ft, 5 bedrooms, 4 bathrooms
Vaulted Ceilings, Open Floor Plan
Call Jed at 681-4000
Amazing Home &4000 sq ft Shop
$375,000
MLS 199396
4,000 sq ft, 6 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms
water rights for 2+ Acres of Beauty
Call Angela at 757-9538
Beautiful 5 Acre Equestrian Estate
$650,000
MLS 201839
4,664 sq ft, 5 bedrooms, 3.5 bathrooms
Heated Barn, Indoor Arena, Salt water Pool
Call Jed at 681-4000
1Bedroom - $420, 2 bedroom - $520,
3 bedroom -$620
In nice, quiet cul-de-sac neighborhood.
Ask about our new, pet-friendly policy
Call 317-7457
4B
CLASSIFIEDS
Thursday, April 21, 2016
100 CommercialProperty
130 Notices
180 Help Wanted
NOW HIRING
Dependable & Responsible Person to Assist
Individuals with Disabilities.
High School Diploma or GED Required.
First Aid, CPR, and Medication Certifications
Preferred.
Various Shifts
urges its readers to contact the
by writing
MULTI-FAMILY YARD SALE!!!
Friday and Saturday
8 a.m. to 12 noon
441 W. 100 N.
(On Pioneer Road, Groveland)
Furniture, table/chairs; baby toys,
clothes, items; home decor, motorcycle
gear, books, few antiques, children’s
trampoline; bed frames, toddler bed
with mattress, lots more!! Don’t miss!!!
We accept
MasterCard, VISA,
and Discover.
Place Your
Classified
Ad Today!
MorningNews
www.am-news.com
785-1100
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.
Part-Time Hours
Apply in Person at 280 N. Cedar
425 N. Capital
Idaho Falls, ID 83402
or call 523-9754.
DID YOU KNOW
Newspaper-generated content is so
valuable, it’s taken and repeated, condensed, broadcast, tweeted, discussed, posted, copied, edited, and
emailed countless times throughout the
day by others? Discover the Power of
Newspaper Advertising In FIVE
STATES, with just one phone call.
For free Pacific Northwest Newspaper
Association Network brochures, call
916-288-6011 or email
[email protected]
Dawn Enterprises, Inc.
Apparel Manufacturing
Positions Available
Applications are being accepted for individuals
with one or more of the following skills:
•Sewing
•ProductInspection
•QualityAssurance
•PatternDesign
•Product/ProductionLine
Management/Supervision
•Product/ProductionPlanning
Mustbeteamorientedwhileensuringcompany
policies, procedures and regulations are upheld.
Obtain an application @ www.dawnent.org or at
280CedarStreet,Blackfoot,Idaho
PositionscloseonMay1,2016
SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY
BENEFITS. Unable to work? Denied
benefits? !We Can Help! !WIN or Pay
Nothing! Contact Bill Gordon & Associates at 1-800-879-3312 to start your
application today!
Xarelto users have you had complications due to internal bleeding (after
January 2012)? If so, you MAY be
due financial compensation. If you
don’t have an attorney, CALL
injuryfone today! 1-800-594-2107
522-4947 or 785-2541
ELIMINATE CELLULITE and inches
in weeks! All natural. Odor free.
Works for men or women. Free month
supply on select packages. Order now!
Call -844-609-2759
Meet singles right now!
No paid operators, just real people like
you. Browse greetings, exchange
messages and connect live. Try it free.
Call now: 1-877-955-5505.
Full Time
Position available for
A Seasonal
Feeder/Folder
Paid holiday and vacation
Medical plan, 401K
Closing Date:
4/28/16 at 4:30 pm
Apply on line at
careers.alsco.com
American Linen is an
EOE/AAE/M/F/H/V Employer
210 Good Things To Eat
~RASPBERRY STARTS~
10 for $10
Call 604-2205
220 Pets & Grooming
Blackfoot
Pet Grooming
240 Services Offered
************
LAWNMOWING
In Blackfoot
Reasonable rates
Call Mike
(208) 716-2648
************
************************
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
************
**********
M.A.TREE TRIMMING
*REMOVAL OF TREES
Free estimates
Reasonable rates
Call 681-6478 or
680-2611
************
by DeAnna
OPEN MONDAY-FRIDAY
Paper delivery person needed that has ability
to walk and read a route list. This commitment
would be limited to one or two days per week
during daylight hours. The expectation would
be porch delivery. Pay would be based upon #of
papers thrown. The goals would be to expose
nonreaders to our product and increase our paid
circulation base. If you have a penchant for selling and want to earn additional money for taking
new orders a commission could be negotiated.
Please contact Joe at the
Morning News
(208) 785-1100.
www.am-news.com
MorningNews
150 Lost & Found
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
NOW HIRING
Sell your structured settlement or annuity payments for CASH NOW. You
don't have to wait for your future payments
any
longer!
Call
1-800-914-0942.
YARD SALE!!
1040 Barrett Drive Saturday-4/23
140 Personals
8am to 2pm
AL-ANON
All Must Go!! Float Tubes, Antiques,
Sundays:
Miscellaneous. TOO Many to List!!
7 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Bingham Memorial Cafeteria
130 Notices
Tuesdays and Thursdays:
7 p.m. to 8 p.m.
St. Paul’s Episcopal Church
72 North Shilling
190 Child Care
Cedar Center
Better Business Bureau of
Eastern Idaho, Inc.
DR. BUD and MINNE MILLER
INSIDE LIVING ESTATE/
MOVING SALE!!!
Friday and Saturday, April 22-23
8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
959 W. Harmony Drive, Blackfoot
Sterling spoon collection, misc. sterling
pieces, artwork by Werner Gisin, Jeri
Ann Sabin, Blackner, Roemer, O’Neil
and more. Lenox glass, Delft, Wedgewood and Florence ceramics - orientals, china sets, quality stemware, depression glass, kitchen items.
Quality furniture: sofa and lovesedat,
hide-a-bed, dining table, deacon’s
bench, maple teacart, patio set, 1920’s
Brunswick pool table with cue sticks,
wagon wheel. Craftsman radial arm
saw, misc. tools, treadmill, Canon copier, office supplies, new Sony turntable,
200 LP records, Christmas items, comforters, tons of misc. items. Don’t miss
this fantastic sale!!!!
190 Child Care
MorningNews
Dawn Enterprises, Inc.
Notice
For more information and
assistance regarding the
investigation of financing,
business opportunities,
The Morning News
110 Garage Sales
180 Help Wanted
www.am-news.com
160 Work Wanted
FORMER MILITARY
LOOKING FOR WORK!
Will mow lawns, clean gutters, rake
leaves, clean houses / windows, anything for some cash. Call: 785-3627
ask for Jason
FREE
Whopper
with the purchase of a Morning News classified ad
1205 Parkway Dr • 785-8082 • 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 Whopper compliments of the
Morning News and Burger King. Limited to one
coupon per person per visit. Just place your prepaid, 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 May 31, 2016
180 Help Wanted
New Local
Steakhouse
!"#$%$&'"()**"+$,-"!
Experienced Cook
.//01"23"/45673
89:";<"=>?2@2A0"BC
DE0?"BC7@FGA3"*7@AC273H
EI345"J5>K",75437
L"8:M"N:8OP:P9
MLS LANDSCAPE SERVICES
Now hiring full time positions. Must
have valid driver’s license. Experience
in landscape, equipment operation and
sprinkler system installation preferred.
Applications accepted at the Dept.
of Labor (Job Service) in Blackfoot.
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!
JULIE’S PET SALON
42 Years’ Experience
785-4940
230 Giveaways
FREE BARBEQUE WITH NEW
PARTS YOU FIX AND PICK UP!
CALL: 681-5973 or 816-1647
240 Services Offered
**********
Residential and Commercial
STONE WORK
and
Brick and Masonry Repair
(208) 782-3557
FMandC.com
**********
************
HOME TOUCH
HOUSECLEANING
SERVICE, LLC
Bonded and Insured
New client Discounts!
Susan Christiansen
380-9610
************
!"#$%&'()*++++
+!+,-.*-$/
+!+0#(%&/
+!+1&.2$3+1)*2&4*
+!+5(2&#+6$7&*
+!+"$8$79
Reasonable Rates
Licensed & Bonded
Bill Bennett
681-3775
Are you in BIG trouble with the IRS?
Stop wage & bank levies, liens &
audits, unfiled tax returns, payroll issues & resolve tax debt FAST. Call
844-229-3096
DID YOU KNOW that not only does
newspaper media reach a HUGE
Audience, they also reach an
ENGAGED AUDIENCE. Discover the
Power of newspaper Advertising in five
states -- AK, ID, MT, OR, & WA. For a
free rate brochure call 916-288-6011
or email [email protected]
HOME BREAK-INS take less than
60 SECONDS. Don’t wait! Protect
your family, your home, your assets
NOW for as little as 70¢ a day! Call
A PLACE FOR MOM. The nation’s 888-673-0879
largest senior living referral service.
Contact our trusted, local experts to- SONKO CERTIFIED FAMILY HOME
NOW ACCEPTING LIVE-IN
day! Our service is FREE/ no obligaCLIENTS
604-6009
tion. CALL: 1-800-940-2081
MorningNews
CLASSIFIEDS
www.am-news.com
240 Services Offered
Thursday, April 21, 2016
240 Services Offered
5B
240 Services Offered
Grover Service Centre
ESTABLISHED IN 1970
!Repair & Restoration of your
Favorite Clock or Watch
!"#$%&'()*++,&(-+#./(
((0%.1#&2(3415#&*6,'(7,&8*.,
!7$*99(:&#;,99*#<%++2(
((=&%*<,'
!("%<'9(#<(>?@,&*,<.,(#;(
Over 50 Years
!)%/,9("#49,(-%++9
!-%++(=#'%2(1#()%/,
an Appointment
Grover Service Centre
ABC((D,91(:#+,+*<,(E#%'
E,?F4&GH(IJ(ACKKL
208 356-6085
-5,./(M4&(D,F(7*1,
G&#8,&9,&8*.,.,<1&,N.#O
250 Misc. For Sale/Rent
Moreland
Storage
Security Fence &
Gate
10 x 10’s
10 x 15’s
10 x 20’s
10 x 30’s
210 N. 700 W.
New Units
Available!!
Call:
684-9399
DID YOU KNOW 7 IN 10 Americans
or 158 million U.S. Adults read content
from newspaper media each week?
Discover the Power of the Pacific
Northwest Newspaper Advertising. For
a free brochure call 916-288-6011 or
email : [email protected]
Asphalt Paving
• Snow Removal
• 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!!
KLINGLER
ASPHALT MAINTENANCE
✩ Seal Coating
✩ Crack Sealing
✩ Asphalt Repairs
✩ Paving
✩ Parking Lot Striping
✩ Parking Lot Sweeping
✩ Backhoe/Dump Truck Service
✩ Gravel
785-7494
Quality Service Since 1995
Denton Klingler - Owner
Bonded • Public Works Licensed
Commercial • Residential
~RASPBERRY STARTS~
10 for $10
Call 604-2205
240 Services Offered
240 Services Offered
240 Services Offered
240 Services Offered
JusT CAll BoB!
• Mowing
• Power Raking
• Aerating
• Fertilization
208-705-0969
Call For A Free Estimate
Mike’s Lawn Service, LLC
will now be doing business as:
MLS Landscape Services
This name will better communicate the variety of
services we provide for you. The only change is we
will no longer service residential lawn mowing,
cleanups, or power raking. Mike will be providing the
same great service he has in the past 28 years.
MLS Landscape Services will continue performing:
Landscape design, installation and maintenance,
Sprinkler system installations and repairs,
Complete water feature installation and
maintenance, Snow removal.
As always, if you have any questions,
please call the office at 684-4955.
Thank you for your business!
www.mikeslawndesign.com
DBA
A BuZZ!
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.
www.greenbearlawncare.com
Vacation Rentals?
Franchise Opportunities!
Auctions? Training Schools?
Reach 750,000
Homes
With one call to
Jane at 208-785-1100
Pacific Northwest Newspapers Display
Ad Network
Free 30 Minute Consultation
Day, Evening & Weekend Appointments
email: [email protected]
web-page: http://arthurhoksbergen.weebly.com
PACIFIC NORTHWEST
ALASKA, WASHINGTON, OREGON, IDAHO, MONTANA, UTAH
REACH 3 million Pacific Northwesterners with just One Call!
n PNDC CLASSIFIED - Daily Newspapers
29 newspapers - 1,187,980 circulation
Number of words: 25 l Extra word cost: $10
Cost: $540 (Runs 3 consecutive days including wkds.)
244 S 1400 W, Pingree - 221-6447 or 684-4550
n PNDN 2x2 DISPLAY - Daily Newspapers
27 newspapers - 1,016,864 circulation
Size: 2x2 (3.25”x2”) Cost: 1x 2x2: $1,050
CHADWICK’S CUSTOM BUILDING & CABINETRY
All your home needs in one stop. From new
to remodels and home services.
We can help
call Chris
208-709-5764
Honey for Hire
Local - Reliable – Friendly - Insured
Guaranteed
A Mowing division of MLS, LLC.
Cell:(208) 680-6446
Office 208-785-7676
Fax 208-785-4757
291 North Broadway • P.O. Box 965
Blackfoot, Idaho 83221
Custom Fabrication & Truck Repair
• Specializing in Stretching Truck Frames
• General Fabrication • Aluminum Repairs
[email protected]
[email protected]
•Spring Cleanups
•Complete Lawn Maintenance
•Sprinkler Repair/Installation
•Lawn Fertilization
•Lawn Aeration
Arthur R. Hoksbergen,
Attorney at Law
“When Bessie
Does,” Give us
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
CAPPIE'S HOME SERVICES
All Your Home Repair & Clean Up Needs!!!
• Home Remodels
• All Your Plumbing Needs
• Painting & Restoration
• Fireplace Cleaning & Servicing
• Roto-Rooting • Roofing
CALL TODAY FOR YOUR
FREE ESTIMATE
208-681-9377
Buy • Sell • or Trade
Morning News Classifieds
785-1100
More info: [email protected] or call (916) 288-6011
250 Misc. For Sale/Rent
315 Health
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420 Cars
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2003 BUICK LESABRE LIMITED
Only 60,000 miles. Beautiful car with
almost all options. Economical 3800
V-6. Top-of-the-line transportation for a
“low price.” Getting harder to find and
will soon cease to be available.
Only $8,485
270 WantedtoBuy/Rent
Call Von, 589-7142 or
WANTED! Old Porsche 356/ 911/ 912
Liquidators Unlimited
for restoration by hobbyist. 1948-1973
522-7142, Idaho Falls
only. Any condition. Top $ paid. Call
792 E. Greenway
707-965-9546
2009 HYUNDAI SONATA
290 Sports Equipment
4-cylinder, 66K miles. Interior and exteTREADMILL FOR SALE!!
rior are immaculate. A beautiful, ecoHardly used. $100 or best offer.
nomical, long-lasting automobile.
Call: 680-5973 or 816-1647
Reduced to $7,985
Call
Von,
589-7142
or
315 Health
Liquidators Unlimited
CPAP/BIPAP supplies at little or no
522-7142, Idaho Falls
cost from Allied Medical Supply Net792 E. Greenway
work! Fresh supplies delivered right to
www.liquidatorsunltd.com
your door. Insurance may cover all
2011 FORD FOCUS SE
costs. 800-492-6449.
4-door. Excellent, very economical
Got Knee Pain? Back Pain? Shoul- transportation. Many options. Includes
der Pain? Get a pain-relieving brace traction-control, factory mag wheels,
-little or NO cost to you. Medicare Pa- etc. - 60K.
tients, call Health Hotline Now!
Reduced to only $7,748
1- 800-285-4609.
Call Von, 589-7142 or
Liquidators Unlimited
Life Alert. 24/7. One press of a button
522-7142, Idaho Falls
sends help FAST! Medical, Fire, Bur792 E. Greenway
glar. Even if you can’t reach a phone!
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Thursday, April 21, 2016
250 Misc. For Sale/Rent
250 Misc. For Sale/Rent
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420 Cars
500 Legals
2013 LINCOLN MKS
All wheel drive. Eco Boost - 365 HP.
Very hard-to-find equipped like this car!
Dual moon roofs, navigation, back-up
camera, parking assist, lane keeping.
Heated seats front and rear - heated
steering wheel, satellite radio/THX
sound, adaptive cruise. Only 24,000
miles. Factory warranty. Perfect car
fax.
Over $60,000 new price!
Our price, only $34,995
Call Allen, 589-7105 or
Liquidators Unlimted
522-7142, Idaho Falls
792 E. Greenway
www.liquidatorsunltd.com
NOTICE OF PROPOSED
CHANGE OF WATER RIGHT
TRANSFER NO. 80820
VIOLA J WARD and NEAL D
WARD and SHELLY M WARD
and DELOY Z WARD, 1305
S 2ND E, REXBURG, ID
83440; has filed Application No. 80820 for changes
to the following water rights
within
BINGHAM
County(s): Right No(s).
35-13712,
35-13714,
35-7018A, 35-8070; to see
a full description of these
rights and the proposed
transfer,
please
see
www.idwr.idaho.gov/apps/w
r/QueryNewTransfers/QueryNewTransfers.aspx. The
purpose of the transfer is to
change a portion of the
above rights as follows:
Change the point of diversion and change the place
of use. The point of diversion is in SWSW, Section
28, T01S, R34E for 1.97 cfs
from groundwater.
The
place of use is in W1/2,
Section 28, T01S, R34E for
109.6 acres.
For additional information
concerning the property location, contact Eastern Region office at (208)
525-7161. Protests may be
submitted based on the criteria of Idaho Code Sec.
42-222.
Any protest against the proposed change must be filed
with the Department of Water Resources, Eastern Region, 900 N Skyline Dr Ste
A, Idaho Falls ID 83402 together with a protest fee of
$25.00 for each application
on or before 5/9/2016. The
protestant must also send a
copy of the protest to the
applicant.
GARY SPACKMAN,
Director
2014 CHEVROLET IMPALA
LIMITED LTZ
Heated leather seats, moon roof,
300HP (V6), On Star/XM-Bose stereo;
rear spoiler, remote start - 28,000
miles. Chevrolet 100,000 mile factory
warranty. Perfect car fax. Only 28,000
miles. This car costs over $40,000
new!!!
Our price, only $17,995
Call Allen, 589-7105 or
Liquidators Unlimited
522-7142, Idaho Falls
792 E. Greenway
www.liquidatorsunltd.com
2014 CHEVROLET MALIBU ECO
36 MPG!! Only 23,000 miles. Remainder of Chevrolet 100,000 mile factory
warranty. Perfect car fax.
Only $14,995
Call Allen, 589-7105 or
Liquidators Unlimited
522-7142, Idaho Falls
792 E. Greenway
www.liquidatorsunltd.com
2015 CHRYSLER 200 LIMITED
New body style! 8.4 inch touch screen
infotainment - back up camera 100,000 mile factory warranty - 36
MPG. Only 15,000 miles. Perfect car
fax.
Only $16,995
Call Allen, 589-7105 or
Liquidators Unlimited
Published on 4/21/2016
522-7142, Idaho Falls
and 4/28/2016
792 E. Greenway
(#981)
www.liquidatorsunltd.com
NOTICE OF PROPOSED
CHANGE OF WATER RIGHT
TRANSFER NO. 80795
PERRY WARD and HOLLY
WARD, 3689 E 100 N,
RIGBY, ID 83442; has filed
Application No. 80795 for
changes to the following
water rights within BINGHAM County(s): Right
No(s).
35-13924,
35-13926, 35-7476B; to
see a full description of
these rights and the proGot an older car, boat or RV? Do the posed transfer, please see
humane thing. Donate it to the Humane www.idwr.idaho.gov/apps/w
Society. Call 1- 800-205-0599.
r/QueryNewTransfers/QueryNewTransfers.aspx. The
purpose of the transfer is to
2005 PT Cruiser
change a portion of the
4 door, Auto, Loaded,
above rights as follows:
121K miles, Very nice
Change the point of divercar, New tires
sion and change the place
2002 Pontiac Grand Prix
of use. The point of diverGTP Loaded, Leather,
sion is in NWSE Sec 22 T1N
Supercharged 3800,
R32E for 6.55 cfs from
Sunroof, 136K miles.
ground water. The place of
use is within Sec 22 and 23
2000 Mitsubishi
Eclipse GT
T1N R32E for 548 acres.
Auto, Runs great!
For additional information
concerning the property lo1999 Jeep Grand
cation, contact Eastern ReCherokee 4x4
gion office at (208)
4.0, Auto, Loaded
525-7161. Protests may be
1992 Honda Civic 4 Door
submitted based on the criAuto, 131K miles
teria of Idaho Code Sec.
Runs great.
42-222.
1985 GMC Suburban 4x4
Any protest against the pro350, Auto, Runs great,
posed change must be filed
New tires
with the Department of Wa2002 Chevy Cavalier
ter Resources, Eastern Re4 Door, Auto, Runs great. gion, 900 N Skyline Dr Ste
A, Idaho Falls ID 83402 together with a protest fee of
$25.00 for each application
on or before 5/2/2016. The
protestant must also send a
copy of the protest to the
applicant.
GARY SPACKMAN, Director
BEAUTIFUL 2012 CHEVY MALIBU
This car has been serviced and maintained on schedule. Includes service
records, etc. Very economical, 4-cylinder, 85K. Save thousands off new
car price!!
On ly $10,485
See and test drive to appreciate.
Call Von, 589-7142 or
Liquidators Unlimited
522-7142, Idaho Falls
792 E. Greenway
681-5646
1030 W. Bridge
Place an ad..
785-1100
Published on 4/14/2016
and 4/21/2016
(#975)
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