7-9-16 - The Echo
Transcription
7-9-16 - The Echo
• Competitive rates • Multiple discount options • Exceptional, responsive claims service 24/7 • Rated A- (Excellent) by A.M. Best Company Insurance covers decks and patio hail damage Home of Jennifer Fest, San Antonio TEXAS Marion Haby Insurance Agency habyinsurance@gmail.com 14893 Bandera Rd Ste 4 www.habyinsurance.com Helotes, Tx 78023 210-695-5588 helotes leon valle y gre y forest northwest bexar count y leon springs alamo ranch THE AREA’S LEADING COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER SINCE 1961 75 cents per copy July 9- July 15, 2016 Vol. 54 No 37 Dallas the latest mayhem; the Leon Valley to hold special meeting to discuss ADA complaint Nation mourns The Leon Valley City Council will meet for a special meeting on Monday, July 11. The meeting will take place at City Council Chambers located at 6400 El Verde Road. There are two items on the agenda for the special session. Council will meet in closed session to start the meeting to discuss two items. The first item is to consult with the City Attorney about possible litigation and settlement from an investigation by the US Department of Interior regarding a complaint of Title II American’s with Disability Act regarding the Leon Valley Natural Area Trails. The second item on the agenda is the discussion of the possible sale or lease of property located near the right-away located at Shadow Mist. Council has also posted the possibility of returning to open session after the closed session to take action on the two agenda items. Council is prohibited from taking any action inside closed session. The meeting is open to the public and it will start at 5:30. The citizens of Leon Valley are encouraged to attend. Former O’Connor graduate is crowned Miss Texas United States Country Elegance expressed support for law enforcement in face of the Dallas attacks. The deliberate targeting of America’s police officers continued this past week when a lone shooter in Dallas decided to attack police officers while rallies were being held in other parts of the country to protest the killings of citizens by police officers. I have watched these and other events unfold throughout the country each time I become even more dismayed by parts of society’s reaction and the political leaders who have reacted to these events. Both sides of my family have been involved in law enforcement. I grew up watching as my great uncle was named and served as the first City Marshall in my hometown. Although he was a product of the “Old South”, I never heard him mention someone’s race when talking about people or an incident in the community. My great uncle on my mom’s society served until mandato- ry retirement with the Texas Department of Public Safety. He never expressed “hatred” or a belief there were different classes of people. For both of those individuals there were only two classifications—those who obeyed the law and those who did not. Our police officers have a difficult task. A task that in recent months has almost become insurmountable. Each day they pin their badge to their shirt, our police officers are placing a bull’s-eye on their chest. Whether it is being accused of being over zealous in enforcing the laws, or a charge of bigamy or racism. I will be the first to admit that there are those police officers that overstep their boundaries, or their attitude in exercising their profession create more hardship than necessary. However, most law enforcement agencies take steps to identify those individuals and rid them from the rank and file that serve the community. What I find appalling is the political leaders and others in society refuse to examine the root cause of the problem. I spent fifteen years in a career in which I watched as young people developed a dangerously low degree of respect for authority or those who represent the establishment necessary to provide law and order. Many of those young people now have children who are teenagers that have fed off the “anti establishment, stick it to the man” mentality of their parents and lowered the bar of respect for authority to the point a worm could no longer pass under. Recently I watched a political leader stand and charge toward one of his colleagues during a meeting threatening Mayhem continues on page 3 On May 29th Alayah Benavidez was crowned Miss Texas United States 2016. The pageant took place in Richardson, Texas at the Eismann Performing Arts Center. Alayah is an O’Connor High School graduate who’s previous titles include Miss Helotes 2012, Miss San Antonio Texas Teen 2013 and Greater Helotes Texas Ms 2015. Since graduating from O’Connor she has obtained an associates degree in teaching, signed with 3 modeling agencies nationwide, become a brand ambassador for Vienna Prom and had started her own campaign focusing on childhood called “Read The Way”. Alayah will be traveling to Las Vegas, Nevada July 30th - August 4th ������� to represent the state of Texas at the Miss United States competition. Photo submitted 5560 N. Loop 1604 E San Antonio, Texas (210)-451-0352 www.golfcarsetc.com Why Go Anywhere Else? Anyone can provide advice. At Edward Jones, our goal is to provide advice and guidance tailored to your needs. That’s why we live and work in your community. When it comes to your financial needs and goals, we believe you deserve face-to-face attention. You talk, we listen, and we get to know you. 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CALL 210-569-3509 Congratulations Class of 2016! • • GRADUATION SPECIALS: Gowns $6.75 each 20% off Dry Cleaning for Teachers & Staff (Must present ID for discount) Hours: Monday - Friday 7 to 7, Saturday 9 to 3 Tel: 210.695.4343 12682 FM 1560 North, Suite 104 (Located Across from CVs, next to municipal Offices) 7am-5pm Mon-Fri 8am-7pm Sat-Sun Fresh Baked Goods made daily!! Locally Roasted Coffee!! 14743 Old Bandera Rd, in OldtownHelotes next to Wine 101 Mention this ad for 20% off your next purchase!! P 04 O 16 LO N P N S ER N M O 210-372-9556 D R TH LO AR D. O O DER A BAN C H A R LE S W IL LI A HELOTES 12800 BANDERA RD. STE. 400 W AVAILABLE ALL DAY & HOT-N-READY® 4-8pm Plus tax where applicable. Available at participating locations. ©2016 LCE, Inc. 53595 53595_al-5x6-Pizza Z_KTimk_4c.indd 1 3/9/16 11:01 AM Authorized Dealer of Club Car and Yamaha New or Pre-owned / Gas or Electric 2015 Model Parts and Accessories Year Close-Out Service on all major brands Sale!! New location, same great service! 5560 N. Loop 1604 East 78247 | 210-451-0352 | www.golfcarsetc.com The Echo • July 9 -July 15,, 2016 • 3 Tips to discuss recent tragedies with children Older children may want more information about the cause of the tragedy or want to talk about how it could be prevented. Share what is appropriate for your child. Be mindful about the personality of your child. Your child may be a 6-year-old who laughs at monsters in movies and can handle the truth about bad guys being a reality of life. Or your child may be a 10-year-old who cannot handle scary movies, and gets emotional when people are hurt. When answering your child’s questions about tragic news events, let the unique personality of your child be your guide. Let your child know it is ok to talk to you about the tragedy. Spend time talking with your child. Let them know that they are welcome to ask questions and express their concerns and feelings. You might not know all the answers and it is OK to say that. At the same time, don’t push them to talk if they don’t want to. Let them know you are available when they are ready. WASHINGTON – With recent tragedies in the news, many children, including those challenged with special needs, are exposed to trauma through the media and in conversations. The Episcopal Center for Children (ECC), a nonprofit school serving children with special needs ages 5-14 in the Washington, DC area, offers some advice on how to talk with your child about tragedy. “Children hear information from other children and from the activities around them. Your child will pick up information very quickly after a traumatic event happens,” said Dodd White, president and CEO of ECC. “It’s important for parents and guardians to set a tone of openness and support with their children, and to re-assure children that they are safe.” Dodd and the staff at ECC offer the following tips and advice: Use age appropriate language. Talk with your child about the tragedy in a way that is appropriate for his or her age. Elementary schoolers may have questions about their own safety and security. ECHO Be calm. Your child will look to you for cues about how to react. It’s OK for children to see adults sad or crying, but consider excusing yourself if you are experiencing intense emotions. Reassure your child about his or her own safety. Point out factors that ensure your child’s immediate safety and the safety of the community. Review your family’s plans for responding to a crisis. Assure your child that he or she is safe and loved. Limit media exposure. Constant exposure to coverage of a tragedy can heighten anxiety. Do not allow young children to repeatedly see or hear news coverage of a tragedy. Even if a young child is engrossed in play, he or she is likely aware of what you are watching on television – and can become confused or upset. Older children might want to learn more about a tragedy by reading or watching TV. However, avoid repetitive loops of news information once you have the facts. Avoid placing blame. Be careful not to blame a cultural, racial or ethnic group, or people who have mental illnesses. Maintain your family routines. ������������������ Continue your family’s usual routines for waking up, dinnertime, and bedtime. The familiarity of these routines will help your child. Promote selfcare. Encourage your child to drink enough water, eat regularly, rest, and exercise. And follow this advice for yourself too! Spend extra time together. Spend a little more time reading to your child. Take a few extra moments when tucking him or her in at night. If your child is having trouble sleeping, allow him or her to sleep with a light on or to sleep in your room for a short time. Extra hugs and cuddles are good too. All of these actions can improve your child’s sense of security. Watch for signs of stress and anxiety in your child. Look for hyperactivity, irritability, regression, stomach aches/ headaches, and separation anxiety. Take steps to relieve stress and anxiety. Get physical. Exercise can relieve stress and help you and your child get a better perspective. Pay close attention to your child if he or she has emotional problems, learning challenges, is going through major changes at home, or has experienced trauma in the past. Children can merge a new trauma and it can heighten their anxieties. If your child has suffered a loss, is facing special challenges, or been exposed to other trauma, he or she may be at greater risk of a severe reaction to a new tragic event. Watch your child closely for any changes in mood or behavior. Do not dismiss or minimize your child’s feelings. Your child might worry that someone will come and hurt him or her. Rather than saying she’s being silly or that such things will never happen, help your child put things in perspective. Say how rare such things would be, and explain how unlikely they are. Address each concern. Point out that many children and parents out there have the same worries and we can instead focus on the definite “will happens” (fun things to do at home and at school and with friends and family) rather than on the very unlikely “might happens.” Encourage the expression of feelings. Explain that it’s OK to be upset. Let your child write about or draw what he or she is feeling. Physical activity might serve as an outlet for feelings or frustration. If your child is acting out, explain that there are other ways of coping. Do something for those affected by the tragedy. Focusing on what can be done to help others, can help children feel less anxious and more secure. Consider ways that you and your child can help victims and their families. You might take your child to your place of worship, light a memorial candle, or write thankyou notes to first responders. Get help if needed. If your child is still exhibiting signs of anxiety after a week or two. Seek out a school counselor, therapist, a member of the clergy, or any other spiritual leader or mental health professional. Tips adapted from the Mayo Clinic, SpecialNeeds.com, and the National Child Traumatic Stress Network. Helotes Area Spotlight Valley Mart is family owned and operated Valley Mart in Helotes offers all kinds of items a person would need when out on the road, heading to work, or going to a picnic. The convenience store offers gas, soda, beer, ice, and all kinds of snacks, just what you’d expect. But what you may not expect is a family-owned and operated store that acts like a neighborhood store. “We talk and laugh with our customers,” Kim Greene, store manager, said. “We take pride in our awesome customer service.” The store has been under the current ownership for the last 29 years. “We try to say hello to everyone who walks in the door,” Greene said. “It is very much a family store.” So what do they offer? Let’s start with Valero-branded gasoline and diesel at all pumps as well as motor oil, transmission fluid, booster cables, bulbs and plastic gasoline containers.Need Valley Mart, at the center of Helotes, has been on Bandera Road some drinks? They’ve got beer, soda, bottled water and for the last 29 years. candy. Also cigarettes and ice. On the shelf is coolers to AlamoCityAutoRepairandTires.com NATURAL GAS THE MONEY SAVING ENERGY. Grey Forest Utilities... Real People Who Care Grey Forest Utilities • (210) 695-8781 PO Box 258 Helotes, Texas 78023 J & C’s Auto Service Complete Brake & A/C Service Welding & General Automotive Warranty on parts and labor F amily O wned & O perated O ver 30 y ears OF e xperience Benefits Of Dealing With Family-Owned And Operated Businesses ASE Certified Technicians 2 Years/24,000 Miles Warranty On All Parts And Labor. Nationwide Warranty! We’ll Pick You Up And Take You To Work OPEN SATURDAY 10% Discount with Military ID NEW We Do Paint & Body Now! Call for Details: 210-680-3016 A/C & Heating Alignments Brakes Computer Diagnostics Oil Changes Maintenance Tire Service Roadside Assistance North West Baumann Complete Auto Repair Center 7860 Mainland San Antonio Baumann Automotive & Collision Center 210-520-6117 210-680-3016 Open: Mon - Fri 8 am - 6 pm Towing Available! 10470 Culebra Rd San Antonio Baumann Complete Auto Repair Center 2151 Cincinnati San Antonio 210-735-8081 Complete professional Care (210) 695-3111 11725 LESLIE RD HELOTES BoB manDer 14297 olD BanDera rD. Helotes, tX 78023 Valley Mart #7 15¢ Copies ~ ATM ~ Family Owned & Operated Now Pay At The Pump 24 Hours With Your Debit or Pulse Card State Of The Art Repair Equipment Courteous Staff And A Clean Facility (210) 695-2255 monDay-friDay 8:00am - 5:30pm FREE DELIVERY TO HELOTES! contact us for information Sun-Thurs 6 am - 11 pm • Fri & Sat 6 am - Midnight 12998 Bandera Rd., Helotes 695-2567 Benefits that last a lifetime. ©2013 Kumon North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved. FREE PLACEMENT TESTING Kumon Math & Reading Centers: HELOTES SAN ANTONIO - DE ZAVALA 12910 Bandera Rd. Helotes, TX 78023 12770 Cimarron Path, Ste. 110 San Antonio, TX 78249 210.695.4454 210.558.3644 many varieties of wholegrain / specialty / sweet breads cookies • scones • muffins • pepperoni rolls tote those cold items around. Snacks include chips, sunflower seeds, all kinds of peanuts, jerky, and sausage. They have made-on-site sub sandwiches and pizza that you can get for lunch or supper. For breakfast, they have biscuits and breakfast pizzas. There’s fountain drinks, Alligator Ice, cappuccino, and Douwe Egberts coffee. The coffee is fresh with every cup and it is not instant coffee. Picnic supplies include charcoal. Other items include sandwiches in the cooler, lottery sales, newspapers, copies for 15 cents, and an ATM when you are a little short of cash.The store is located at Circle A Trail and Bandera Road. The open at 6 am every day and stay open until 11 p.m. Sunday through Thursday and they are open until midnight on Friday and Saturday. The address is 12998 Bandera Road, Helotes, and their phone number is 210-695-2567. Helotes Pizza Hut 12730 Bandera Rd. Helotes, Tx 78023 (210) 695-4570 ALL 3 ITEMS Daily Noon Buffet 4 $ .99 Mon-Fri 11:30-1:30 Available dine-in only at participating Pizza Hut® restaurants. Please mention coupon when ordering. Limit two buffet purchases per coupon. Not valid with other offers. Expires Oct 31, 2014. Days & times may vary. Code: YP ©1999 Pizza Hut, Inc. 1/20 cash redemption value. The Helotes Echo $ 20 Large Pizza 3 Toppings or Specialty 16 Wings 2 L. Soda Exp. 10-31-14 Available at 12730 Bandera Rd. and 7103 N. Loop 1604 W. Helotes FREE Collision LifEstimates Warranty e m i et Center Carl Monaco’s 11634 Rainbow Ridge 695-9038 Wendy Gideon, MD Laura Tamayo, MD Shannon Bartell RN, CPNP (210) 372-0505 11085 Bandera Rd, Suite #102 San Antonio, TX 78250 also at a farmer’s market near 210.481.7849 greatharvestsatx.com 20079 Stone Oak Parkway, San Antonio TX 78260 Advertise in the Helotes & Leon Valley Area Spotlight and we’ll feature your company with a write-up and photo! Chec� u� ou� onlin� or faceboo� o� u� k� Li (210) 695-3613 www.helotesecho.com JUST FOUR PAWS GROOM & BOARD MIKE & JULIE ROSSMAN Professional Grooming & Boarding (210) 695-9035 FM 1560 @ Bandrea Road, across from CVS The Echo •July 9- July 15, 2016 • 4 News from Casa Helotes It was another busy week at the Casa. We would like to thank Dr. Ruth Grubesic and the UTHSC Nursing Students for coming out again this past week to provide free health screenings to our seniors. The health screenings included blood pressure, glucose, and cholesterol screenings along with health education sessions and presentations. Casa has an exciting event coming up; we will have our 1 st Annual Golf Tournament and Silent Auction in honor of our 30 year anniversary on Saturday, September 10 th at 8:00 a.m. The entry fee per player is $50.00 and includes lunch at noon, prizes will be awarded. All proceeds to benefit senior activities at Casa Helotes. If you would like to sign up please send a check or money order payable to: Casa Helotes Senior Center, 12070 Leslie Road, Helotes, TX 78023, C/O Judy Zipp, Coordinator. Please consider supporting our Silent Auction by donating gift certificates, merchandise or services. In exchange, you will receive excellent community exposure and advertising. Your name/company name, address, phone number and donation will be listed in the local media. Your donation is tax deductible and we would be happy to provide our Tax ID number upon your request. We will gladly pick up your donation, make arrangement for delivery, or you may drop it off at Casa Helotes at 12070 Leslie Road, Helotes, TX 78023 during our office hours 9:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m. If you have any questions please do not hesitate to contact us at (210) 695-8510. Thank you in advance for supporting Casa Helotes Senior Center! If you are planning a luncheon, dinner, conference, party, or simply need a larger space to hold any type of event, keep the Casa in mind. Our website includes additional information about renting our facility. Casa Helotes is a nonprofit organization that is primarily supported by donations and fundraisers and in part by AACOG. There is no fee for membership and all of our classes and activities are free for our senior community to enjoy. We are actively seeking contributions from our community to meet and maintain the growing demand for our programs and services now and into the future. All contributions are tax deductible. Serving our seniors serves us all. The Casa is open from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through Friday and we’re located on Leslie Rd. across from O’Conner High School. We serve a congregate meal daily at noon. Please try to call by 10 a.m. the morning of to let us know if you will be joining us for lunch. Call us at (210) 695-8510 for more information or find us on the web at www.facebook.com/casahelotes and www.casahelotes.com. Working Past Age 60 --What happens when your friends all retire and you don’t? “Women Still at Work: Professionals Over Sixty and On the Job,” by Elizabeth F. Fideler, explores why senior women are still working and what happens when we do. Fideler gathered her research from both surveys and in-depth interviews, comparing generations, economic climates and preferences. Why are senior women still working? We enjoy what we’re doing. We’re making contributions. We need the money or the health insurance that comes with the job. We’re trying to beef up our retirement nest egg. We get more out of being engaged on a daily basis with real challenges. What happens when our friends retire and we don’t? We miss opportunities for socializing, unless we take matters in hand and organize time together when we are available. We sometimes have to keep repeating answers to the question about why we’re still working, and try to explain the sense of accomplishment we get from continuing to work. This can be wearing. Instead, when the friendships no longer fit, look for socializing opportunities in new areas where you don’t have to justify what you’re doing. There is one bonus to continuing to work, despite the push to retire. Studies have shown that retiring early can shorten one’s life, especially if we’ve worked for years. Another study of 6,000 participants showed that we’ll have a 15 percent lower risk of death if we maintain a purpose in our life and keep working. Anxiety and depression can be a result of retiring when we really don’t want to. If you’re considering retiring, take a look at this book before you do. Go online to Amazon. com and you’ll find it in paperback, hard copy and for Kindle. Community Clubs and Organizations regular meetings REGULAR MEETINGS: call Edwin at 710-0786 Helotes City Council, each second and fourth Thursday at 7 p.m. at 12951 Bandera Rd. Girl Talk’s weekly meeting is every Wednesday during the school year, 6:30 p.m., at Shadrock Williams Masonry at 10047 Floore Drive. For more information, call Wendy Thiery at 210-872-1976. Helotes Planning and Zoning Commission, the first Tuesday of each month at 7 p.m., 12951 Bandera Rd. Helotes Economic Development Corporation, each third Wednesday of the month at 7 p.m. at 12951 Bandera Rd. Leon Valley City Council meeting, each Second and Third Tuesday at 7 p.m., 6400 El Verde Rd. The Helotes Lions Club holds its regular meetings on the first and third Tuesdays of the month at 7 p.m. at the club on Bandera Road near Scenic Loop. The Helotes Festival general membership meets the first Monday of each month at 7pm, at the Helotes Lion’s Club. (c) 2016 King Features Synd., Inc. Masonic Family – The Helotes Masonic Family is composed of four organizations and all meet at the Helotes Masonic Lodge at 11740 FM 1560S. The Helotes Masonic Lodge meets on the third Thursday of each month at 7 p.m. Adah Chapter 49 O.E.S. meets on the first and third Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. For more information, call 210-646-1429. The Helotes York Rite Chapter/Council meets on the second and fourth Wednesday at 7 p.m. The International Order of the Rainbow for Girls, Helotes Assembly 377 meets on the first and third Wednesday. For information on any of these organizations, call 210-656-1429 Northwest San Antonio Al-Anon Family Group, meets every Wednesday at 7pm at Zion Lutheran Church Fellowship Hall, located athe corner of Loop 1604 and Braun Rd. For more information, please Mayhem continued from page 1 TRIVIA TEST By Fifi Rodriguez --1. MONEY: What is the building depicted on the back of a $20 bill? 2. MEASUREMENTS: How many yards are in a fathom? 3. PSYCHOLOGY: What is the fear represented by pyrophobia? 4. TELEVISION: Who voiced the role of Charlie on the original “Charlie’s Angels” TV series? 5. U.S. STATES: Which three state capitals have the least number of letters in their names? 6. LANGUAGE: What are gauchos? 7. FIRSTS: Who was the first woman to receive the Distinguished Flying Cross? 8. GENERAL KNOWLEDGE: In superstitious beliefs, how many years of bad luck allegedly come from breaking a mirror? 9. MATH: What is a 20-sided shape called? 10. AWARDS: What is the award given each year to majorleague baseball’s most outstanding pitchers in the American and National Leagues? EmErgEncy & critical carE Between Bandera rd. & CuleBra Northwest Bexar CouNty & surrouNdiNg areas all Night - 7 days DEborah riDDEr - Dvm Open Mon-Thurs • 6pM-8AM Fri 6pM unTil Mon 8AM 24 hours on holidAys visA-Mc-AMex-discover 684-2105 8734 Grisson Rd. violence. If our political leaders do not respect at least the office—regardless of the office holder then normalcy and the order are doomed. Today’s media attack our political leaders and in turn attack the offices they represent to a degree which encourages our citizens to hold even the very thought of law and order in contempt. Our school systems no longer teach civic responsibility or the importance of having dialogue and discussion. No longer is recess or games offered where young people must learn to overcome difficulties and to work together or bond with one another. Now we demand that society act in a way that everyone’s self esteem is bolstered and negative comments must be banished because one may be devastated and consider themselves worthless. Establishing a standard of behavior and expectation has been replaced by the phrases of “why are you picking on me?, “why do you hate me?” No longer is failure allowed to teach a valuable lesson, disappointment no longer builds strength and character. Instead, everyone wins, everyone receives a trophy, and standards are eradicated so any behavior becomes acceptable. Cussing your parents, ignoring their direction, threatening parents with physical harm, or living your life your way becomes the norm. Parents respond to this behavior by not attempting to reestablish order but allow The Northwest Senior Citizens Center at 6427 Evers Rd in Leon Valley holds its monthly luncheon and meeting at 11 a.m. every fourth Wednesday, Lunch is $5 or bring a covered dish. Center hours are 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through Friday. For more information, call 210-522-9966. The Helotes Humane Society meets every fourth Tuesday of the month at 14398 Bandera Road, at 6:30 p.m. The Knights of Columbus Council 8306 meets the first Wednesday of the month at 7:00 pm in the Parish Hall at Our Lady of Guadulupe located at 13715 Riggs Rd., Helotes. For more information contact Don Rios at (830) 426-4121. The Historical Society of Helotes, founded in 1966, was incorporated in 2010 as a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization. The purpose of the HSH includes the discovery, preservation, and dissemination of knowledge about the history of Helotes, Texas, and the surrounding area. General meetings of the Society are held quarterly on the first Tuesday in February, May, September, and November at a time and place designated by the President. We welcome all individuals interested in the history of Helotes to attend general HSH meetings and to visit our booth at MarketPlace in Old Town Helotes the first Saturday of every month. Please visit our website: www. historicalsocietyofhelotes. org for more information. The Altar Society of Our Lady of Guadalupe meets on the first Wednesday the lines of respect to become erased. Many believe by giving their children each and every desire expressed will build responsibility. No longer do parents even consider utilizing a simple word in their vocabulary—NO. This expectation follows into the classroom—late work of course we accept it. You’re failing of course extra credit exists. I am sorry, as a teacher I am not meeting your needs—of course I will modify my instruction. These expectations follow into the workforce. Oh your friends and you spent last night celebrating your team’s victory—of course you can be late. Oh the task of removing trash is degrading—of course I will do your job for you. Oh you want to take the day off for your birthday—of course you deserve to be paid for the day. Working under supervision in an office is to tasking—please work at home. Our grandparents and great grandparents survived the depression. A time when many in society were not guaranteed a meal each day. A time when many in society were not guaranteed a shelter from the elements. A time when true law and order was circumspect in many locations. The lessons learned from this time period produced hardworking individuals who also provided assistance to their fellow citizen. I am not advocating we should have a great depression. I am advocating the end of the “Me and satisfaction/gratification” era. Parents you are in charge. It may hurt both parties to provide discipline and a simple NO sometimes. How- of each month at 7pm in the Guadalupe Room at Our Lady of Guadalupe Church located at 13715 Riggs Road, Helotes. For more information please call Nancy Keffer at (210) 695-2675. The Elks Lodge of San Antonio/Helotes meets on the 1st & 3rd Tuesday @ 8 PM. We host an Open House/Burger Night @ 6PM for the public the first Wednesday of the month. We are located @ 15650 Market Hill, San Antonio (near La Cantera Mall). 210.697.3331, www. sanantonioelks.com South Texas Area Farm & Ranch 3rd Thursday of every month (except Feb) at 11:30 a.m. at Aggie Park, 6502 West Avenue, San Antonio, TX 78213 V.F.W. Post 7108 holds its General Meeting every second Monday of the month at 7pm. 8795 FM 1560 N San Antonio TX. For more information, call 210.688.9312 Leon Springs Business Association, holds regular monthly meetings, typically on the third Thursday of every month. This month’s gathering will take place on June 19th and will include an After Hours Mixer and Karaoke. 6:00 - 8:00 PM at Silver Fox. Check their website for contact information and to RSVP. Leon Springs Trail Foundation, holds regular monthly meetings, typically on the fourth Thursday of every month. Please contact Leon Springs Trail Foundation for time and location. Visit the Leon Springs Trail Foundation on facebook. The Leon Valley Historical Society board of directors meets the 3rd Thursday of each month at 6:30 p.m. at the Leon Valley Public Library, 6425 Evers Road. Members and visitors are always welcome. ever, the lesson taught—the standard established will last a lifetime. Teachers you are in charge. Take back the classroom. This is a war for our future. Forget the standardized tests and achievement tests, teach our children responsibility. Fill in the gaps for those parents who are afraid to disappoint their children and bruise their ego. Teach them failure is not devastating but a lesson—a building block to a successful future. Our society must recognize our police are in charge too. There are procedures and safeguards that exist to check the power of the law. However, if one respects the law then the law will work to create a better society. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. used dialogue and discussion to change the fabric of America. Dr. King faced tyranny from law enforcement and political leaders; however, he maintained respect for “the office and the constitution” and used those instruments to create opportunity and changed political reality in America. He never advocated violence, even in the days before his death. Let us learn this lesson of respect. Let join together for a solution instead of drawing lines in the sand and placing blame. I refuse to believe the great thinkers and diplomats that existed in our country during its infancy have become extinct. I believe in a new dream, a dream where responsibility and accepting consequences become the norm and our desire to appease everyone becomes extinct. Answers 1. The White House 2. Two (six feet) 3. Fear of fire 4. John Forsythe 5. Salem, Oregon; Dover, Delaware; Boise, Idaho (five letters) (c) 2016 King Features Synd., Inc. 6. South American cowboys 7. Amelia Earhart 8. Seven 9. An icosagon 10. Cy Young award The Echo • July 9- July 15, 2016 • 5 1776 Was Amexit --Two hundred and forty years before Brexit, there was Amexit, also known as the American Revolution. In terms of historical consequence, the Brexit vote and the American Revolution don’t occupy the same universes, but they are connected by a belief in popular sovereignty and a refusal to be governed by a remote authority with only an attenuated mechanism -- if that -- for representation. In Brexit, the British people decided that their Parliament should trump the governing machinery of the EU, and in our Revolution, we decided that our Colonial assemblies should trump the governing machinery of the British Empire. Both acts exhibited a punctiliousness about government by consent that struck critics as unreasonable and even dangerous. The Revolution fed off popular passions that shocked and embarrassed some Colonial elites who were more cautious about separating from Britain, in an echo of the elite reaction to Brexit. John Adams pushed back against the “sneers and snubbs” directed at “the multitude, the million, the populace, the vulgar, the mob, the herd and the rabble, as the great always delight to call them.” (I’m in the debt of the magisterial new book “Toward Democracy,” for this and other quotes.) The Founders sought to protect the bedrock principle that the people, again the words of Adams, are “the Source of all Authority and Original of all Power.” Alexander Hamilton wrote that “the only distinction between slavery and freedom” is whether man is governed either “by the will of another,” or “by the laws to which he has given his consent.” By this standard, the case against the British Parliament was highly intuitive: Members of Parliament didn’t live in the Colonies, and the colonists didn’t elect them. Benjamin Franklin wrote as early as 1768 that either “parliament has the right to make all laws for us,” or “it has the power to make no laws for us.” History didn’t come full circle, but it did look over its shoulder when a leading advocate of Brexit, the Tory politician Michael Gove, cited the American Revolution as inspiration for Britain’s separation from the EU. Of course, the circumstances are vastly different. The EU didn’t suspend the British Parliament. It isn’t sending a fearsome fleet across the Channel to crush all resistance and to hunt down Nigel Farage, leader of the U.K. Independence Party, and have him hanged (although some EU officials might harbor this fantasy). Britain obviously didn’t become a newly independent nation upon the passage of Brexit. But the Brexit vote is a reminder that the threat to self-government never truly abates; it just takes different (and more or less benign or noxious) forms. This is why self-government always needs to be jealously and zealously guarded -- something our forefathers understood and acted upon. Levi Preston, a captain at the Battle of Concord, explained decades later why he had fought: “What we meant in going for those redcoats was this: We had always governed ourselves, and we always meant to. They didn’t mean we should.” It’s a sentiment as relevant now as it was more than 200 years ago -- and will always remain so as long as men yearn to be free. Like us on our Facebook page and stay in the know www.facebook.com/helotesecho Publisher James Lee Managing Editor John Rhodes PO Box 900 Helotes, Texas 78023 7205 Bandera Rd. San Antonio, Texas 78238 T: (210) 875-3148 F: E: helotesecho@gmail.com The Helotes Echo (USPS #01) is published weekly at 7205 Bandera Rd. San Antonio, Texas 78238. Single copy news stand price 75 cents. Layout Editor Lucy Butler Staff Writers James Lee Pat Turner Secilie N. Villareal Webmaster Your Elected Officials President US Representative District 20 Barack Obama Joaquin Castro The White House 212 Cannon House Office Building 1600 Pennsylvania Ave Washington, DC 20515 (512) 463-0646 US Representative District 23 Bexar County Judge Washington, DC 20500 www.whitehouse.gov/contact Vice President Will Hurd 17721 Rogers Ranch Road PKy St 120 Washington, DC 20501 State Senators vice_president@whitehouse.gov Carlos I. Uresti Columnists Nancy Smith Rob Phelps Cynthia Massey Kevin Barton U.S. Senator San Antonio TX 78232 Nelson Wolff Paul Elizondo Tower 210-335-2626 Josh Garza Executive Office Building 14607San Pedro, Ste. 180 101 W. Nueva 10th Floor Josh Garza Graphic Designer Lyle Larson San Antonio, TX 78258 Joe Biden 2530 SW Military Drive, Suite 103 San Antonio, TX 78224 San Antonio, TX 78205 Helotes Mayor Tom Schoolcraft (210) 932-2568 12951 Bandera Road 3133 General Hundnell Dr., Suite # 120 Donna Campbell 210-695-8877 Sports Photographer San Antonio, TX 78226 P.O. Box 12068, Capitol Station Julie Jumper Ed Garcia Phil Forister Miguel Esparza Roland Cervantes Phone: (210) 340-2885 Austin, TX 78711 Grey Forest Mayor U.S. Senator State Representatives 18502 Scenic Loop RD John Cornyn Philip Cortez 517 Hart Senate Office Bldg Room E2.812, Capitol Extension Washington, DC 20510 P.O. Box 2910 202-224-2934 Austin, TX 78768 www.cornyn.senate.gov (512) 463-0269 Secretary Nancy Martin DEADLINES Friday Noon For News Copy and Advertising Monday Noon For Classifieds (c) 2016 Bob Franken Distributed by King Features Synd. (c) 2016 by King Features Synd., Inc. Readers’ Forum Policy www.helotesecho.com es gun control and is certainly no friend of the NRA, calls the No Fly Lists “error-prone and unreliable,” leaving those who end up on them “without a meaningful process to correct government error and clear their names.” One can only imagine that many supporters of gun control would have a serious problem stripping away such a fundamental right as due process. However, in their frustration, people are advocating exactly that, which is a highly objectionable way to accomplish their goals. And the Republicans are rubbing it in, by floating a “compromise” that would be unworkable. The fact is, the Second Amendment does allow gun ownership to be “well-regulated.” The trick is to convince millions of Americans who adore their weapons that stringent restrictions are needed. Freedom of expression is another constitutional right, of course, outlined in the First Amendment. So go ahead and let me have it, everyone -- and I mean everyone. Words should be the ultimate weapons. Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review. www.helotesecho.com The Helotes Echo welcomes letters to the editor on subjects of interest to its readers. Short letters are most likely to be chosen for publication, but the use of any material is at the discretion of the editor. Editing may be necessary for space and clarity or to avoid obscenity, libel or invasion of privacy, but ideas will not be altered. The editor tries to inform writers of reasons for changes or rejections, but this is a courtesy, not a right. We discourage so-called “open” letters to third parties. Upon request, editors may use psuedonyms or initials but only rarely and for compelling reasons. A signed letter carries more weight with readers. Letters do not necessarily reflect the editorial policies or beliefs of this newspaper. All letters must bear the handwritten signature of the writer (unless e-mailed) and include address and phone number for verification purposes (address and phone number will not be printed). Mail to P.O. box 900 or bring to 7205 Bandera Rd. San Antonio, Texas 78238 or e-mail us at <echoeditor@satx.rr.com>. Shooting at the Constitution --Before I’m finished with this commentary, I will have incensed nearly everyone. It’s about guns. So let the fury begin: If I had my way, private ownership would be eliminated -- no pistols, no rifles, certainly no assault weapons, except in the hands of the military and law enforcement. End of story. Right now, the readers who adore their instruments of death are already seething and preparing their hateful comments and personal threats. But let’s not leave out antagonizing those who advocate controls on the nation’s private arsenal. Their heroes are the Democratic members who led a sit-in on the House of Representatives floor. It was all designed to hearken back to the public-accommodation disruptions in the 1960s, when demonstrators were breaking the back of Jim Crow. This time, they are trying to achieve a victory against a modern-day tyrant, the National Rifle Association. It’s hard to blame them. The NRA has used every political corruption and intimidation tactic imaginable to successfully crush even token efforts to regulate guns. But what our non-ragtag band of demonstrators somehow have managed to do is support a solution that is at least as noxious as the problem. What they are demanding is a “No Fly, No Buy” law. If someone is on the No Fly List or the Terror Watch List, he or she would be stopped from purchasing a gun. Makes sense, doesn’t it? Actually, it doesn’t. Gun ownership has been deemed a right in this country. That’s what the courts have decided based on what our founders suggested when they concocted the Second Amendment. Maybe they made a mistake back in the 1700s, or maybe our justices did with their interpretation. Nevertheless, it is the law of the land. But then, so is due process. The Fifth and 14th Amendments make that very clear. Their practical effect is that any deprivation of rights must be adjudicated, it can’t be arbitrarily taken away, certainly not out of public view. The No Fly List does just that. Law enforcement, acting in secret, determines just who is on that list. Regrettably, sometimes investigators make horrendous mistakes, or even occasionally act out of malice. An individual has little recourse. The American Civil Liberties Union, which endors- Founding Publisher Lucy Brown The Helotes Echo is published on Wednesdays and printed in Hondo, Texas. Any erroneous statement will be corrected if brought to the attention of the publisher. Helotes Publishing LLC, dba The Helotes Echo, will not be liable for errors in copy or in advertisements beyond the actual cost of space occupied by the error. The publisher reserves the right to reject any advertisement at any time. Ted Cruz San Antonio Office Helotes, TX 78023 Ron Reinhard Helotes, TX 78023 210-695-3261 Leon Valley Mayor Chris Riley 6400 El Verde Road Leon Valley, TX 78238 210-684-1391 The Echo July 9- July 15, 2016• 6 Community Calendar Storybook Houses—Botanical Gardens San Antonio March 5 - July 10, 2016 See kid-sized, family-friendly Storybook Houses in this spring exhibit opening March 5. A partnership with AIA San Antonio, this engaging playhouse exhibit is the fourth collaboration between the Garden and area architects and designers. Sponsored by Robert J. Kleberg, Jr. and Helen C. Kleberg Foundation, Gretchen Swanson Family Foundation, Inc, The USAA Foundation, Chipotle Mexican Grill, and Dickson-Allen Foundation. San Antonio Public Library cardholders enjoy $1 off admission. Grey Forest Grey Forest Community artists will open their studios for the 21st annual Grey Forest Open Studios Art Show and sale. The different artists living in the community will have their art on display at their studios. The art will be for sale. Each of the studios will be numbered and that number will be placed on a map for those wanting to complete the tour. Hours are noon to six on October 8. Grey Forest Grey Forest Community Education Organization is hosting a presentation by Margaret Bass with the Texas A&M Agrilife Extension on pollinators. Margaret will discuss all things bees, butterflies, wasps, and birds including their importance, issues, and stewardship. Please join us Saturday, June 18th at 11:00 am at the Grey Forest Community Clubhouse. For more information contact Susan Darst at gfcommunityed@gmail.com or follow us on Facebook at www.facebook. com/GFCEO. City of Leon Valley The Flood Warning siren is out of service due to electrical issues from the recent storms. The Flood Emergency Response Plan (FERP) has a contingency measure for this. There is a mapped route, a script, and vehicle PA systems that would be used (and also door-to-door in high priority low-lying areas). . City of Helotes City of Helotes will host the monthly Marketplace at Old Town. This event happens the first Saturday of the Month. Vendors from across the City will travel to Old Town to set up booth spaces and offer their products to the people. There will be food vendors on site. Vendors will have live plants, food, farmers market, hand made goods, and other items will be available for purchase. The vendors open at 10am and will close at 5pm. City of Helotes Friday, July 2 at City Hall complex the City of Helotes will celebrate July 4. The Helotes Area Community Band will present a concert. There will be free hotdogs and apple pie. At dusk there will be a fireworks display. The event is open to the public and admission is free. City of Leon Valley Monday, July 4 the City of Leon Valley will host the third annual July 4 celebration. The celebration will include a parade, a 5k walk, concerts, food vendors, and other activities. Helotes Hills United Methodist Church 13222 Bandera Road ~ 695-3761 Knowing, Loving, Serving God Youth-6th-12th Grade Activity Night Sundays at 5:00 pm For more information see: Summer Hours Sunday School for all ages: 9:00 am Fellowship 10:00 am Worship with Children’s Church: 10:30 am HHUMC.COM Weekly Devotional But as for me, I know that my Redeemer lives. In the end, he will stand upon the earth. After my skin is destroyed, then I will see God in my flesh, whom I, even I, will see on my side. My eyes will see, and not as a stranger. Job 19:25 WEB Job is the oldest book in the Bible, except for the first ten chapters of Genesis. Wealth in this book was still measured in livestock. Yet even then, Job already knew that there was life beyond the natural, and that after his skin was destroyed, that he would see God with his own eyes. When Job went through horrible circumstances, like losing his ten children, all of his wealth, and then his health, he still clung to this hope. Job held tightly to his faith during his darkest hours. Later, it was all restored double and the end of his life, was better than the beginning. Know today, that whatever this life hands you, there is something beyond the trouble. This life is only temporary and not the final destination for us. For believers, death is not the end but merely a transition. If you cannot get the work load done, it will be OK, just do your best and don’t be stressed. When you feel the weight of the world on your shoulders, stop a moment and ask for His help. Jesus said that His yoke is easy and His burden is light (Matthew 10:30). What then have we picked up? Jesus said: ‘But take heed to yourselves and be on your guard, lest your hearts be overburdened and depressed (weighed down) with the giddiness and headache and nausea of self-indulgence, drunkenness, and worldly wor- ries and cares pertaining to [the business of] this life’ (Luke 21:34 AMP). So the cares of this world, the business of life, are heavy and can be a headache. Lighten up, look at the big picture, and I mean eternity. What eternal value does this current project have? Live a little, laugh a little, take a moment during the day to tell the Father that you love Him, and do it with a thankful smile. He will still be on the throne whether you meet the deadline or not. Our Redeemer lives. The• Echo 9 -July 24, 15, 2016 2016 •• 97 The Echo March•July 18- March Soccer teamslooking advance to the City of Helotes for firefighter playoffs. FIREFIGHTER-PARAMEDIC-FT contest with a 5-7-2 record During spring break the is12-3-1. City of Helotes an EOE Jay will play on Thursday, and district with 5-4-2. NISD soccer teams wrapped See complete job description @helotes-tx.gov The Lady Broncos finished up their district season. Many March 24. The game will be Submit to jhenckel@helotes-tx.gov at East Central High with a 17-2-1 record and 13-0 were playing a makeapplication up game played that was changed due to School stadium with a 7pm district season. The only two Bronco losses were to Reagan weather so most already knew kick-off. The Stevens Falcons will and McArthur. who they would be playing in O’Connor Lady Panthers faceMon the & third place finisher the post season. Tues ly district inaithe Clark finished as the Dis- in District 28 6A King High finished second d $ alS!Mus1.95 / Kids Meal c and will play the Lady trict 27 6A Champions. Jay School. King finished the seape i S purchase of adult tangs from King on Thursday, 7-11-1 and district with meal finished as the district run- son with March 24 at Cabaniss Field in ner-up, coming in at third, 5-4-1. The game will be held on Corpus Christi. The game is Stevens. Brandeis secured the final play-off spot as the Thursday, March 24 at AC scheduled to start at 6pm. The Lady Panthers finfourth place finisher in the Jones High School in Beeville. The kick-off is scheduled for ished with a 13-5-3 record and district. only had one loss to the Lady Clark will play the fourth 8pm. The final game in the Broncos in district. place finisher in District 28 Clark’s Lady Cougars will 6A. The Texans enter the con- boys play off action will be test with an 8-8-2 record and a Brandeis versus the District play East Central Hornets on 24 at South28 6A champions Southwest Thursday, district record of 3-5-2. IH-10 W 17625 Blanco Rd. 23775March School with Dragons The Clark Cougars amassed Dragons.1/2 The mile inside 1604 fin- west High at Boerne Stage Rd. a 6pm a 16-2-1 record for the season. ished the season 21-4-3 and start. The Lady Cougars enter The Cougar’s only two losses district undefeated. The game will be held on the game with a 10-4-2 record were to Boyd and district rival Burgers, Chicken, Sandwiches, Salad, Apps, and More! Jay. The Cougars ended dis- Thursday, March 24 at South- and 7-3-1 district. Home of the The Original final play off game for west High School. The game trict with a record of 12-1. the girls will be Brennan’s The game will be played starts at 8pm. Big Juicy® Lady Bears versus Southwest at Cabaniss Field in Corpus The Lady Broncos finished Lady Dragons. This game will Christi on Thursday, March the 2016 season as the Dis- be held at Farris Stadium 24. Kick-off starts at 8pm. District runner-up Jay trict 27 6A champions. They with a 8pm start. The Lady Bears finished Mustangs will play District will face fourth place District 28 6A runner up East Central 28 6A Carroll Tigers on Thurs- the season with 14-4-4 record Hornets. The Hornets finshed day, March 24. The Lady and a 8-1-4 district record. The Good Friday holiday the season 14-8-2 and the dis- Broncos will have home field advantage, as they will play made scheduling the playoff trict competition with 6-4. The Jay Mustangs finished at Farris Stadium with a 6pm games a little difficult, which “A Los Barrios is why all eight games will be the season with a 17-6-4 re- start. Family Restaurant” The Lady Tigers enter the played Thursday. cord and a district record of 492-0301 698-7766 Familia. Comida. Amor Join us for: Weekday- Lunch & Early Bird Specials Mon. & Tues. Evening- Family Fajita Nights Wednesday– HH Margaritas 3pm-Close Thursday– Longneck Night 3pm-Close 9660 Westover Hills Blvd. San Antonio, TX 78251 (210)684-9660 P (210)684-6770 F www.violasventanas.com V.F.W. Post #7108 *Free Pool Tuesday RETIRED VETERAN Offers lawn services including mowing, trimming, leaf blowing ** Services Painting at available for reasonable Northwest prices San Antonio CALL RUDY 210-216-8279 Residents** ENHANCE YOUR PROPERTY WITH A CUSTOM BUILDING • Workshops • Storage Sheds • Garages Call Mike at KLU Enterprises 210-695-2178 *Karaoke Wednesday & Friday *Double Darts Thursday • 7-? Call 210-688-9312 For More Info. www.vfwpost7108.org 8795 FM 1560 N, Helotes 11703 Bandera Rd. San Antonio, TX 78250 | 210-520-2500 www.salsalito-sa.com Drivers Wanted Spring cleaning? Need a job? Have a job opportunity? Want to leave a personal? If You are Looking for Immediate Work, We are Looking for Regional Drivers. Weekly Hometime! Detention Pay after 1 HR! No East Coast; Top Pay, Benefits; Monthly Bonuses & More! CDL-A, 6 mos Exp. Req’d EEOE/AAP 1-800-395-3331 ext. 4904 www.drive4marten.com Have a service to offer? Drivers CDL-A: Steady Year-Round Miles! Sign-On, Monthly & Annual Bonuses! Great Benefits Package! Long Haul US/Canada. 855-6457789 call 210 975 3148 Need a service? Advertise in our Classifieds. Can advertise here for less than $10 per week. or email helotesecho@gmail.com Job Offering Looking for a part time job? Looking to make extra money and work 5 hours a week? Looking for a dependable individual who has a dependable mode of transportation to take on a small delivery route. Must have a license and current liability insurance Interested candidates can call 210 875-3148 Condo for Rent in College Station • AVAILABLE 2016 FALL SEMESTER OR SOONER • LOCATED ON FRATERNITY ROW W/ ACCESS TO TAMU BUS ROUTE $1,500 • 3 BEDROOM/2 BATHROOM a month • LIVING ROOM (PARTIALLY Serious Inquiries Only FURNISHED) Call Rick Johnson 210-889-0163 • BREAKFAST ROOM (TABLE INCLUDED) • FULL KITCHEN • PATIO AREA W/ BBQ PIT • PREFERABLY NO PETS The Echo •July 9- July 15, 2016• 8 Pet of the Week from Helotes Humane Society Rita is a sweet, affectionate, calm, and polite adult mama cat (about 18 months), who was rescued by HHS along with her 5 babies. Despite not knowing her background, she’d clearly been loved and cared for because she and the babies were healthy and very well socialized. Finding a Pet Sitter --DEAR PAW’S CORNER: I love my two Corgis, but my job as a nurse is demanding with long hours, and sometimes I don’t get home to see them for over a day. My sister has been great, dropping in to feed and walk them, but her work hours are changing soon. I have to get a pet sitter, but I have no idea where to start. -Sara in Dothan, Alabama DEAR SARA: Set aside some time and start doing research on pet sitters in your area, as well as reading up on common services they offer. And ask around at work and anywhere else you socialize: Word-of-mouth recommendations are valuable. Pet sitters differ from dog walkers in that they go above and beyond a walk. They spend time in your home with the dogs -- from 30 minutes to overnight, if needed. They give them food and water, their Rita loves to be pet and greets me and purrs easily. She has been a super easygoing mama cat and is relaxed when new people come in and handle her babies. She is very comfortable around my dog, who is polite to her and gives her space. She tolerates my lively, dominant male cat and greets him nice- ly but is not interested in playing with him. Rita would do well in a home with calm dogs and cats who will be companions but not overwhelm her with a desire for wild play. She plays very sweetly and delicately with toys. To find out more about Rita, please contact us at 210-218-0835 or email us at info@hhsanimals.org All animals that are adopted out by the Humane Society are microchipped and are current on their vaccinations. If you are interested in other animals beside Joey you may log onto the Helotes Humane Society website www.hhsanimals.org and can examine the pictures of those animals that are in foster homes. Also you may check at the Second Chances Thrift Store for animals that have been surrendered by Animal Control and are at the Store awaiting for their forever home. daily medication, monitor their well-being and provide any additional services that you agree upon. Some pet sitters offer long-term care in their home or facility if you’re away for several days. Questions to ask your potential pet sitter include: How much does the service cost? Is the sitter bonded/insured? How many other pets does he/ she sit for? Will the business owner be the sitter or will an employee or contractor do the job? If so, how are they screened and trained? What happens if the sitter can’t make it? How does the sitter handle pet emergencies? You can find more extensive lists at Care.com and Pet Sitters International. Contact at least three sitters and compare prices and their responses to your questions. That will go a long way toward finding the best sitter for your Corgis. Send your tips, questions or comments to ask@pawscorner. com. (c) 2016 King Features Synd., Inc. NOW HERE’S A TIP By JoAnn Derson --* You can calm flyaways by washing and conditioning your hairbrush. Wash all types in soap and water, and if your brush has natural bristles, dip it in a cup of water with a little conditioner added. Let it dry, and brush away with no more static. * Use plastic wrap to help out on paint jobs. It can protect odd-shaped items, like unremovable lighting fixtures. You also can give your paintbrush an overnight break when you wrap it tightly in plastic wrap and stick it in your fridge -- no washing required if you’re just pausing! * “Slip a long wooden spoon into a plastic baggie. Use a hair tie to secure the bag tightly around the spoon. Now you can use the spoon to apply sunscreen or lotion to your back.” -- W.T. in Florida * Staple removers aren’t just for the office. Need to load a key ring? A staple remover will open those rings right up. * Coffee filters and used dryer sheets are both fantastic dusters for the dashboard of your car. Throw a few in the glove box for when the dash needs a quick dusting. * “You can get your shower liner clean in no time at all by throwing it in the washing machine. I do mine once a month in a load of towels for extra scrubbing.” -R.R. in Washington Send your tips to Now Here’s a Tip, 628 Virginia Drive, Orlando, FL 32803. (c) 2016 King Features Synd., Inc. Comman parasites that attack your Feline friend Whether your cat stays indoors or outdoors, all cats are at risk for internal and external parasites. Recognizing the signs of parasites and knowing their life cycles could help maintain your cat’s health. Dr. Sina Marsilio, internist and researcher at the Texas A&M College of Veterinary Medicine’s Gastrointestinal Laboratory, explained the most common parasites found in cats, including fleas, ticks, roundworms, hookworms, tapeworms, and heartworms. “The parasites most common in cats depend on where the cat lives and if it is an indoor or outdoor cat. Generally, indoor cats have fewer parasites than outdoor cats,” she said. “The most common external parasites affecting the skin are fleas and ticks. While there many different internal parasites, most of them affect the gastrointestinal tract. However, especially in Texas, we need to be aware of heartworms in cats, which mostly affect the heart and lung vessels.” All cat owners should treat their pet for fleas and ticks. If left untreated, these pesky parasites can infest not only your cat but your house and yard as well. Cats can acquire fleas from other animals, including wildlife in the backyard or another cat or dog in the household. “Fleas live in the cat’s fur where it is warm and moist,” Marsilio said. “They stick to the cat’s skin and suck blood. These bites can cause itching and cats respond by licking and scratching. The skin around the back of the neck and the top of the tail head is most commonly affected.” Severe flea infestation may lead to anemia because the fleas suck more blood than the cat can produce, especially in kittens. In addition, your cat may be allergic to the fleas’ saliva, which can lead to a condition called flea allergy dermatitis. Cats with a flea allergy may obsessively scratch, leaving the skin hairless, red, and crusty. Fleas also carry tapeworm eggs and bacteria, which can lead to other health issues. Internal parasites, such as roundworms, hookworms, and tapeworms, affect the gastrointestinal tract and can be wormlike or singlecelled microscopic organisms called protozoans. “Gastrointestinal parasites primarily cause signs of gastrointesti- nal disease, including loss of appetite, weight loss, vomiting, diarrhea, mucoid or bloody feces, and pot-bellied appearance,” Marsilio said. “Any blood loss caused by the parasite can lead to anemia. Vomiting and diarrhea can cause dehydration, which makes your cat susceptible to various other bacterial and “Even though dogs are at greater risk for a heartworm infection, they do occur in cats. Heartworm disease might be without any clinical symptoms, but when clinical signs occur, they are usually severe to even life threatening,” Marsilio said. “Cats with heartworm Congratulations GRADUATES Linda’s Pet Grooming (210) 680-6265 6505 Bandera Rd. in Seneca Plaza viral infections. Some gastrointestinal parasites may even be zoonotic, meaning they can be transferred from animals to humans.” disease may show coughing, wheezing, difficulty breathing, vomiting, or neurological signs such as falling over, collapsing or having seizures.” Common internal parasites include: If you think your cat has a parasite, including fleas and ticks, be sure to visit your veterinarian for treatment. “In general, your veterinarian is always the best source of information,” Marsilio said. “They know about you and your cat’s history and lifestyle, and they can determine the specific risks for your pet.” Roundworms Resemble spaghetti, three to four inches long Commonly infect outdoor cats from hunting and eating infected mice Adult cats can become infected from ingesting an infected cat’s feces Can be transferred to kittens through the mother’s milk Hookworms Primarily reside in the small intestine and feed on the cat’s blood An infestation can lead to life-threatening anemia, especially in kittens Can be transmitted from cat to cat through feces Tapeworms Long and flat worms, four to 28 inches in length Can be transmitted by ingesting immediate hosts, such as fleas or rodents Heartworms Larvae are transmitted via mosquitoes No proven treatment for adult heartworm disease in cats Heartworm prevention is important because treatment can be long term and expensive ### Pet Talk is a service of the College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences, Texas A&M University. Stories can be viewed on the web at vetmed.tamu.edu/pet-talk. Suggestions for future topics may be directed to editor@ cvm.tamu.edu. Dr. Sina Marsilio is currently looking for fresh fecal samples from healthy cats and cats with diarrhea or other gastrointestinal signs such as vomiting, loss of appetite, or weight loss. The Gastrointestinal Laboratory offers several tests free of charge in return for a fecal sample from your cat and a completed questionnaire. If you are interested in participating in Dr. Marsilio’s study, please contact her via email: SMarsilio@cvm.tamu. edu. Weather Whys: Heat Bursts and The Sea Q: What is exactly is a heat burst? A: It is an odd weather occurrence that happens during thunderstorms when temperatures can quickly rise 25 degrees or more in just a few minutes, says Brent McRoberts of Texas A&M University. “Heat bursts usually happen in the evening,” McRoberts explains. “It is a strong burst of hot air that is pushed down very quickly and is warmed all the way down to the surface, often originating from 20,000 feet or more. When the air reaches the ground, it is very hot – in some cases well over 100 degrees. Heat bursts are odd because usually during thunderstorms, the air will become cooler. The air in a heat burst is not only very warm, but it is very dry and sometimes this hot, dry air can create damaging winds in excess of 75 mph.” Q: How much can the temperature rise during a heat burst? A: There have been some amazing documented examples of rising temperatures caused by heat bursts, McRoberts adds. “In 1993 in Glasgow, Mont., the temperature was recorded at 67 degrees at 5:02 p.m. during a thunderstorm. By 5:17 p.m. – just 15 minutes later – the temperature had shot up to 93 degrees. In 1960, a reported heat burst in Bosque County, Texas briefly raised the temperature to a mind-boggling 140 degrees and it melted crops in the area. The intensity of a heat burst depends on the size of the thunderstorm and how much the air can heat up before descending down to the ground.” Q: What is a sea breeze? A: Sea breezes occur most commonly during the summer afternoons, when the air over land is hottest, says Brent McRoberts of Texas A&M University. “Because land heats quicker than the ocean, air over the continent becomes unstable and rises to create a relative low pressure at the surface,” he explains. “The air at the surface over the ocean is then drawn in toward the lower pressures over land, creating an onshore wind. This sea breeze brings in much-welcomed cooler air to the cities near the coast during the hottest times of the day.” Q: Can sea breezes cause rain and thunderstorms? A: In many cases, yes, but the effect varies with location, McRoberts adds. “The incoming sea breeze is cooler than the air over land. This creates a small-scale cold front called a sea-breeze front. Like most cold fronts, sea breeze fronts can create showers and thunderstorms that pop up along the frontal boundary because it lifts the warm air ahead of it, which leads to convection. Because of its long coastline, Florida is known for its sea breezes, which often lead to thunderstorms. Sea breeze storms are also common during the summer in places like Houston or New Orleans. On the West Coast, however, the air is generally too cool to support convection even with the sea breeze front, so a type of fog and drizzle known as the marine layer occurs more often in this region. “ ### Weather Whys is a service of the Department of Atmospheric Sciences at Texas A&M University The Echo •July 9- July 15, 2016 • 9 Northside collects thousands of backpacks for supply drive Casa Helotes Senior Center 1st Annual Golf Tournament Saturday, September 10, 2016 a t 8 : 0 0 a.m. Oak Valley Driving Range and Golf (Off State Hwy Entry Fee: 16) $50 Per Player Send this Form and $50.00 Check or Money Order Payable To: Casa Helotes Senior Center • 12070 Leslie Road • Helotes, TX 78023 C/O Judy Zipp, Coordinator Name: ______________________________________________________________ Address:_____________________________________________________________ City, State, Zip Code: __________________________________________________ Average Score: _______________________________________________________ Entry Fee Includes Lunch at Noon •• Prizes Awarded All Proceeds to Benefit Senior Activities at Casa Helotes Before competing at the Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, the United States Olympic Swim Team will hold training camp at the Northside Swim Center July 11-21. One training session will be open to the public but only those with advance passes will be able to attend Observation Day from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturday, July 16. All passes have been distributed and none will be available the day of the event. But in addition to Observation Day, the NISD Aquatics Department is hosting a Rio Street Fair that includes local vendors, youth sports organizations, swim gear, and Olym- pic-themed activities. Passes are not required to attend the Rio Street Fair. In order to receive advance passes, spectators donated brand-new backpacks. Those who wanted a chance to attend an autograph session with the Olympians filled the backpacks with school supplies. The thousands of backpacks and school supplies that were donated through the “Backpacking to Rio Drive” went to the Northside Benevolence Closet which distributes items to students in need. The Northside Swim Center opened in June 2013 and the state-of-the-art outdoor facility is the only one of its kind in the central United States. It is located at the Farris Athletic Complex on Loop 1604 between Bandera and Hausman roads. 2015 was the “Year of Swimming” in Northside as the Swim Center hosted three national and one international championship competitions, including the Phillips 66 National Championships which brought the most-decorated Olympian of all time, Michael Phelps, to Northside. For more information, call 397-7525. Any vendors that wish to participate in the Rio Street Fair, e-mail shelagh. wurth@nisd.net. Petals and Paws, LLC “Love for all of your living things” • • • • Pet Tech CPR and First Aid Certified Caring for Pets needs Water indoor/outdoor plants Bring in your mail or newspaper Holly Templeton, Owner 210-259-5572 holly.templeton@hotmail.com The Echo •July 9- July 15, 2016• 10 The Echo •July 9- July 15, 2016• 11 The Echo •July 9- July 15, 2016• 12 Grey Forest Open Studios Artist Profile Debbie Wright Swisher will be a participating artist in the 21st Annual Grey Forest Open Studios Art Show/Sale to be held Saturday, Oct. 8th from noon to 6 p.m. Her art will be on display at 18318 Bluebonnet Dr. and Park Road. Debbie’s exhibit is titled WRIGHT ART: Vibrant, Expressive: original oil & acrylic paintings, prints, note cards & totes. Swisher holds a Commercial Art Degree from Texas plains “the influence for artistic endeavors comes from her grandmother, Artist Maria Lilia Ramos Salinas. And further states “My passion is the serenity derived from the beauty in nature, animals, people and architecture. I love looking at. It really get the creative juices flowing for me. I believe State University. we were created to Her work has been be creative” exhibited in several galleries in AusNot only a wife, tin and San Anto- mother and artnio, and in ist, Debbie Wright numerous pri- Swisher has also vate collections. dedicated many hours to commuSwisher current- nity service by volly resides in Grey unteering at the Forest, with her Children’s Shelhusband James ter, Boy Scouts of and teenage son, America and Oak Damon who has de- Hill Church for veloped a love for many years. sketching characters from his imagF=or updates inination “a budding formation, and hisartist” quips his tory of Grey Forest mom . Open Studios visit www.greyforestoDebbie was born penstudios.com and grew up in Laredo. Debbie ex- Missions overpower Tulsa, 6-4 – The Missions found enough pop in their bats to power their way to a 6-4 win over Tulsa Thursday night. After two frustrating nights where the Missions blew leads in the late innings, Thursday’s outing was a breath of fresh air, thanks to the three home runs smacked during the contest. Nelson Ward provided the first round-tripper by following Franchy Cordero’s triple with a two-run blast in the third. Cordero then smacked his first Double-A home run in the fifth, while Luis Tejada went solo in the sixth for a 5-1 lead. Tulsa came back with two runs in the eighth, but the Missions added a run in the bottom of the inning on Jose Rondon’s RBI single. The key for the Missions was finishing things off in the ninth. Closer Jason Jester, who blew the save against Springfield Tuesday night by allowing four runs in the ninth, was back in his usual form against Tulsa. He still had his trying moments after Tulsa tagged him for a run. However, Jester overcame the trouble to put a clamp on the win and earn his 10 th save. Missions starter Dinelson Lamet had another strong performance, allowing two hits and striking out eight while allowing a run in six innings. Patio/ BackYard Living Room/Kitchen MAGNIFICENT!!!MASTER RETREAT DOWN FEATURES BAY WINDOW, LUXURIOUS BATH**GOURMET ISLAND KITCHEN WITH BUTLER’S PANTRY, GRANITE COUNTERS, GREAT STORAGE PLUS IS OPEN TO LIVING ROOM**COUNTRY VIEWS FROM THE MANY DRAMATIC WINDOWS**BR 5 IS MEDIA ROOM WITH SURROUND justcallstevie.com SOUND**GAMEROOM UP, THOUGHTFULLY PLACED OVER GARAGE FOR SOUND CONTROL**OVERSIZED ...lifetime Helotes Resident PATIO, OUTDOOR COVERED KITCHEN WITH FIREPLACE, FIRE PIT, AND TOWERING TREES CREATE BACKYARD 2007,2008,2010,2011, PARADISE ON GREENBELT**PRESTIGIOUS YET SMALL 2013, & 2015 “Best Realtor” SUBDIVISION FOR LOW TRAFFIC Stevie Seitz 210-382-2923 People’s Choice The Echo •Thursday, March 26, 2015 • 20 The Echo •July 9- July 15, 2016• 13 Medical Directory INTERNAL MEDICINE 12002 Bandera Rd, Suite 111 Helotes, Texas 78023 (210) 695-9002 PHONE CARLOS E. LICON, FAX (210) 695-9044 Board Certified Family Medicine / Se habla español. HelotesMed.com FREE Bone Dexa Screen $80 Value - Expires 12/31/13 CHECK YOUR BONE STRENGTH TODAY! Primary Care Exactly Se Habla Español Accepting Most Insurances Medicare Accepted WHERE YOU NEED IT WALK-INS & NEW PATIENTS WELCOME OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY MEDFIRST HAUSMAN 8230 N. Loop 1604 W., Ste. 218 Medicare Welcome San Antonio, TX 78249 Phone: (210) 453-1199 ALEJANDRO ARIZMENDI, MD Schedule your appointment Board Certified Internal Medicine, Geriatric Medicine, at Med1st.com Hospice & Palliative Care personal med clinic Maria Najera, MD DENTISTS Your health, taken personally sarah kinard,dds Dr.Welcoming Laura Houston, M.D. Now New Patients! Family Medicine Accepting New Patients 210-521-6328 www.PersonalMedClinic.com 10103 W Loop 1604 N, Ste 101 www.PersonalMedClinic.com San Antonio, Texas 78254 1604 @ Braun Rd 210-521-6328 ORTHODONTIST donna gottwald, dds 12740 bandera road helotes, tx 78023 | dgfamilydentistry.com Cosmetic Dentistry 210.695.1200 f a m i® l y d e n t i s t r y Invisalign Deborah Keepers, D.D.S. Kristine E. Hynes, D.D.S. Family Dentistry Caring, Gentle Staff. Children Always Welcome. 15876 Bandera Rd. 210-695-2888 Tooth Whitening C OWisdom SM ETIC DENTISTRY Teeth Teeth Whitening Implants Wisdom Teeth Crowns Root Canals Bridges Dentures Dentures Julie Cruz, D.D.S. Implants Crowns Bridges Veneers 11866 Bandera Road Helotes, TX 78023 Invisalign Veneers (210) 695-1105 ~ Phone (210) 695-1106 ~ Fax Root Canals Helotes Family Dentistry Dr. Jose Brigman, DDS 12415 Bandera Rd., Ste. 110 Helotes, TX 78023 OPTOMETRIST THE EYE CLINIC Tel: 210-372-9454 Celeste Acosta, O.D. www.HelotesFamilyDentistry.com Therapeutic Optometrist Optometric Glaucoma Specialist Full Service Eye Clinic • Contact Lenses • Eye Glasses PEDIATRICS 11864 Bandera Rd • Helotes, Tx 78023 • Bandera Trails Shopping Ctr. (210) 695-2222 for appointment • www.theeyeclinic-online.com Eye Werks Dr. Mark Delgado, O.D. Optometrist Wendy Gideon, MD Laura Tamayo, MD Shannon Bartell RN, CPNP Keith A. Blalock, D.D.S., M.S., P.A. Specialist in Orthodontics & Dentofacial Orthopedics www.bracesbyblalock.com 12340 Bandera Rd, Suite 102 Helotes, TX 78023 FAMILY MEDICINE Therapeutic Massage NORTH HILLS for YOUR health & well being! FAMILY MEDICINE Schertz, Stone Oak & Westover Hills Call www.northhillsfamilymedicine.com 512-924-2147 to set WESTOVER HILLSan 210.681.5747 appointment 11212 State Hwy 151, Bld 2, Ste 201 San Antonio, TX 78251 Affordable services, experience and dedication with each service, and gift certificates available! SCHERTZ STONE OAK 210.481.6800 210.481.6800 5000 Schertz Parkway, #600 150 E. Sonterra, Ste 220 Schertz, TX 78154 San Antonio, TX ,78258 Located in the office of M. Jirka at 5979 Babcock Rd S.A. TX, 78240 JW Prestidge R.N. , R.M.T. (210) 372-0505 11085 Bandera Rd, Suite #102 San Antonio, TX 78250 ACCEPTING Dr. Sheila Hernandez-Dum NEW PATIENTS! Pediatric Dentist ...and most private insurance plans! FIRST STEPS PEDIATRICS PLLC Bruce R. Lantry, M.D. NEWLY RELOCATED! 9910 W. Loop 1604 N, Suite 124 San Antonio, TX 78254 (at theLoop corner of1604 Braun and Loop 1604 behind Starbucks) TX 78249 | 8202 North | W. San Antonio, 210-692-0358 Office: 210-694-2700 |www.fspediatrics.com Fax: 210-694-2708 Our Office Has Moved To 10350 Bandera Rd. #130 Town & Country Shopping Cntr. Bandera Rd. & Old Prue Rd. 1 Mile inside Loop 1604 210.680.4107 Eyewerks.net Eyewerks Vision & Medical Eye Examination for Treatment Glasses, Contacts, Lasik Evaluations. Accepting: VSP, VCP, Eye Med, Avesis, Boon Chapman HEARING HEALTHCARE Family Owned & Operated Carlos Oliveira is an industry expert who has been providing hearing healthcare for over 20 years! If you or someone you love could benefit from a FREE hearing evaluation, call (210) 257-8341 today and receive: FREE Hearing Evaluation! FREE Video Otoscopy! Se Habla Español Carlos T. Oliveira, R.Ph., R.N. Hearing Instrument Specialist FREE Product Demonstration! 10350 Bandera Rd. Old Prue, Suite 300 San Antonio, Texas 78250 (Town and Country Offices) www.SanAntonioEars.com The Echo •July 9 - July 15, 2016• 14 Amazing Communities. Oustanding Locations. 18931 Bandera Helotes, Texas 78023 Beautiful six acres overlooking Bandera Hwy!!!!!!!!!!! Rare find in Helotes.. Great building sites...bring your own Builder!!!!!!!! $165,000 17119 Terra Rosa Helotes, Texas 78023 Unique 3-bedroom-2-1/2 bath...Rock home w/Metal roof...Wood floors thru out first floor; Shutters thru-out; New A/C/Heat, Stainless steel appliances w/Granite countertops (2014). Beautiful painted walls by Interior Decorator; View Views!!!!!Watch Fiesta Texas Fireworks from the front deck!!! Lots of Privacy.... Sprinkler system & great yard This is a Must see....NOT LIKE ANOTHER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! $349,000 121 Sping Valley Cove Boerne, Texas 78006 Awesome Canyon Views!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Beautiful & Unique Custom 4-Bedroom on 5.3 acres.......... Open plan with soaring ceilings and huge windows opens the home to the outdoors and the views of the Canyons!! Massive granite bar wraps around kitchen ...Massive deck serves as the entertainment spot!!! Home is like new with new roof, A/C. & new Landscaping..Game Room w/1/2 bath only room up.....This is a “Must See” for serene living... $555,000 Doris Young & Co. Realtors Helotes Homes and Lots 210-695-2861 14239 Old Bandera, Helotes, TX 78203 | www.dorisyoung.com
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