Son held in mother`s death

Transcription

Son held in mother`s death
ElkCityDailyNews
El
The
Serving
Western Oklahoma
Since 1901
Thursday, February 14, 2013
Son held in mother’s death
Police contend another woman
kept against her will in the
house where woman was shot
Larissa Graham
Staff Reporter
An Elk City man is jailed
on complaints of first-degree
murder and kidnapping after
his mother was shot to death at
their Elk City residence.
At 10:03 a.m. Wednesday,
police were called to a possible
shooting at 609 W. Avenue D,
Police Chief Eddie Holland
said. When officers arrived,
they found Karen Stigleman,
56, dead inside the house from
a gunshot wound to the head,
Holland said.
Additional officers arriving on-scene found a nude
man – later identified as Aaron
Mitchell Stigleman, 26 – running from the back of the house
through an alley. Officers
chased him on foot, cornering
him in a nearby carport. After
he refused to lie on the ground,
police used a Taser to force
him to comply, Holland
said.
The police radio log
indicated another person
was inside the residence
at the time of the shooting. The person told dispatch Aaron Stigleman
walked into his mother’s
room and the two got
into a fight. Aaron
Stigleman then shot his
mother, the caller stated,
and the caller ran across
the street.
Holland said today
Stigleman
that after the shooting
woman who called police
the woman was held
is where the kidnapping
against her will inside the
complaint leveled against
house for about an hour. She
Aaron Stigleman stems
was able to escape and ran
Officers hold a discussion in the doorway of the house where Karen Stigleman, 56, was shot
from.
through the snow to get to a
and killed Wednesday morning. Police contend Stigleman’s son, Aaron Mitchell Stigleman, 26,
Stigleman was arphone and call 911, he said.
shot and killed her while holding another woman against her will. Staff photo by Larissa Graham.
rested on complaints of
“She (the caller) is a victim,
first-degree murder and
too, so we are going to treat
added, were found inside the
of the shooting, Holland said,
tion. Holland said today the
kidnapping. He was taken to
her like one,” Holland said this
house. The handgun used in
crime scene was still secured
and no students were endanthe Elk City Police Department as the investigation continued.
morning. He added that the
the shooting will be processed
gered during the incident.
pending further investigation
for evidence and ballistics at
A search warrant was exeChelsea Stigleman, 20,
and will eventually be transcuted on the house Wednesday. the OSBI Crime Lab in OklaKaren Stigleman’s daughter,
ported to the Beckham County
Though Holland did not say
homa City.
called The Elk City Daily News
Sheriff’s Office, Holland said
Wednesday
morning’s
shootexactly
what
type
of
firearm
Wednesday on her way to Elk
today.
was used in the shooting, he
ing prompted a lockdown of
City from Stillwater.
For several hours, Avenue
the Elk City Middle School,
said it was believed to be a
“I’ve already forgiven (my
D from Oliver to Walker was
“large caliber handgun” that
which is about two blocks
brother),” she said. “I’m asking
roped off with crime scene
was found in the house.
south of the house. The lockpeople to pray for him and for
tape while officers began the
Additional guns, Holland
down was due to the proximity
Chelsea Stigleman early stages of the investigaSee Death, p. 2
“I’ve already forgiven (my
brother). I’m asking people
to pray for him and for him to
forgive himself.”
OSBI investigates Sayre death
27-year-old man died of gunshot wound
Larissa Graham
Staff Reporter
The shooting death of a
27-year-old Sayre resident
has been deemed suspicious,
prompting Oklahoma State
Bureau of Investigation involvement.
Jacob Trevathan was found
dead inside a relative’s apartment, a press release issued by
the OSBI stated.
The apartment is located in
the 500 block of North 5th in
Sayre.
Several people were inside
the apartment at the time of
Trevathan’s death, the release
stated, and OSBI is in the
process of interviewing those
individuals.
Sayre Police Chief Ronnie Harrold said today police
contacted OSBI Wednesday
morning to assist in the investigation because of the nature of
Trevathan’s death.
“It looked suspicious,” Harrold said. “We don’t have the
“It looked suspicious.
We don’t have the
resources OSBI does.”
resources
OSBI does.”
Trevathan
was found
with a gunshot wound,
Harrold
Sayre Police Chief Ronnie Harrold
added. An
autopsy has
medical examiner will perbeen ordered.
form an autopsy on the body to
“Overnight, agents collected
determine cause and manner of
possible evidence from the
death.”
scene to be tested at the OSBI
A call to OSBI spokeswoman
Forensic Science Center,” the
Jessica Brown was not returned
OSBI press release stated. “The
by deadline.
Sweetheart Day
Above, Daisy Ramirez perfects a floral arrangement at Hylton’s
Flowers Wednesday afternoon. Staff photo by Larissa Graham.
At left, recent snow made for a picture-perfect Valentine
wreath. Photo by Bridget Carpenter.
Weather
tomorrow
46/28
Vol. 109, No. 32
50 cents, 8 pgs.
Felon gun
bill held
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — A plan to allow some convicted felons to have the right to own a firearm restored
was derailed Wednesday in a House committee after
numerous objections to what kind of criminal may be
allowed to carry a gun.
Rep. Todd Russ, R-Cordell, agreed to lay over his
bill in the House Public Safety Committee after several
members of the committee raised questions and suggested they would vote against it. By laying the bill
over, it can still be amended or brought back before the
committee for a vote.
The bill would allow individuals convicted of a nonviolent felony who have completed their sentence and
probationary period to have their right to own a firearm
restored, including their ability to apply for a handgun
permit.
“Multiple young dads and moms have contacted me
pleading with me to address this issue,” Russ said.
“They can’t even take their young sons bird hunting.”
Russ said he’s learned of many people who have received felony convictions for crimes like writing bogus
checks or larceny who will never be allowed to own any
type of firearm without a full pardon for the governor, a
process he said is difficult and rare.
“Oklahoma is one of the most notorious states in the
nation for incarceration. You can’t hardly sneeze without getting a felony,” Russ said. “These are people who
made a mistake that they took a felony plea on, and now
they’re in a situation where they can’t grow up with
their children and their family and enjoy hunting and
wildlife activities that most people in my area enjoy.”
But Rep. Leslie Osborn, R-Mustang, said she was
surprised to learn that under Oklahoma law, there are
dozens of serious crimes that are considered nonviolent
offenses, including drug trafficking, child pornography,
bombing and abuse of a vulnerable adult.
“These are serious offenses,” Osborn said. “I was
horrified when I saw in our statutes that these were
considered nonviolent offenders.”
Jimmy Bunn, Jr., chief legal counsel for the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation, testified that under
current law, those convicted of a nonviolent felony can
have the right to own a gun restored if they receive a
pardon from the governor. But Russ said receiving a
pardon from the governor was a “monumental” task
and that pardons are rarely granted.
The bill also was opposed by the District Attorneys’
Council, a group that represents state prosecutors at
the Capitol.
Rep. Fred Jordan, R-Jenks, encouraged Russ to consider narrowing the scope of his bill or perhaps adding
a judicial review to ensure that the law wouldn’t end up
“putting a gun in the hand of a drug trafficker.”
Russ said he hoped to redraft the bill to address some
of the members’ concerns and bring it up in committee
again next week.
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Pa ge 2
The Elk City Daily N ews • Elk City, Oklaho ma
’Round
town
Weatherford event
marks retirement
of ODOT exec
Friday
Chamber of Commerce
Breakfast Club, 7:30 p.m.,
Clarion Inn.
Ridley still transportation secretary
Beckham/Roger Mills
OREA, 11:30 a.m., Elks
Lodge, 108 Blue Ridge.
Last day to make reservations for WOHS annual
dinner meeting at 6:30 p.m.
Monday. Call 225-5757
or email Womack.2e@
sbcglobal.net.
Catfish fry, 5:30 p.m.
to 7:30 p.m., St. Matthew
Catholic Church, 3001 E. 66
Access Road. Fundraiser,
$10 adults, $6 children.
Saturday
Elk City 4-H and FFA
Livestock Show, opens 8
a.m. Convention Center
barn.
Monday
GFWC-OK Arimathaea,
1:30 p.m., Geneva Farris’
home. Program by Dr.
Treva Graham.
Tuesday
Friends of Library, 7
p.m., Carnegie Library.
Program on Rivers Edge
Art Society by Suzanne
Hylton.
FFA Labor Auction, Convention Center.
Thurs day, February 14 , 2013
Elk City police stand inside the crime scene area marked by police line tape on Avenue D
Wednesday after a woman was shot to death and her son was arrested. Staff photo by J.B.
Bittner.
Death
From p. 1
him to forgive himself.”
Chelsea Stigleman was enroute from Stillwater, where
she attends college.
“(My mother) meant so
much to so many people’s
lives,” she said.
Chelsea Stigleman added
that “Satan may have meant
(the death) for bad, but God
would use it to save many
lives,” referencing Genesis
50:20, which states, “But as
for you, you meant evil against
me; but God meant it for good,
in order to bring it about as it is
this day, to save many people
alive.”
“My God’s right here with
me,” she said.
An Avenue D neighbor,
Richard Wilmoth, said all
was quiet in the neighborhood when he took his wife to
an appointment Wednesday
morning.
But when he returned a
short time later “all the police
cars and ambulances were
everywhere.”
Two ambulances were at the
scene, Wilmoth said, and he
feared the worst when he overheard an exchange between
a police officer and an emergency medical worker.
“I heard a cop say ‘there’s no
need to go in,’” Wilmoth said.
Wilmoth said the son and
mother had had run-ins before.
“He tore that house all to
pieces a couple of months ago,”
he said of Karen Stigleman’s
bricked mobile home where,
he said, Mitch Stigleman lived
“off and on with her.”
On Jan. 31, police contend,
Aaron Stigleman went to his
mother’s store to pick up his
mail and ran out the door with
the store’s bank bag.
At the time, Officer Sammy
Weygand stated in a narrative,
Stigleman showed signs of
being intoxicated. He told another officer the bag belonged
to him, but when asked he said
he didn’t have any ownership
in the business.
Karen Stigleman told police
she had called her son to pick
up his mail at the shop, but that
he took her bank deposit bag
and tried to leave.
After a struggle, he ran out
the front door of the business.
Karen Stigleman told officers she chased her son and
stopped him while he was in
his truck.
For that incident, Stigleman
has been charged with seconddegree robbery and actual
physical control of a motor
vehicle.
WEATHERFORD - A
retirement celebration will
be held for long-time transportation executive Gary M.
Ridley on Monday, March 4,
at Southwestern Oklahoma
State University in Weatherford.
Ridley is retiring in March
as the Director of the Oklahoma Department of Transportation and the Oklahoma
Turnpike Authority.
He will remain Gov. Mary
Fallin’s Secretary of Transportation.
The banquet will be held
at 6 p.m. in the Memorial
Student Center Ballroom and
will recognize Ridley for his
long service to Oklahoma
transportation.
RSVP’s for the event are
being taken through SWOSU
President Randy Beutler’s
office at 580-774-3766 or at
randy.beutler@swosu.edu.
Tickets are $17 per person to
cover the cost of the meal.
Ridley has held the
positions of director of the
Oklahoma Department of
Transportation (ODOT) since
August 2001 and director of
the Oklahoma Turnpike Authority since October 2009.
Ridley was appointed
decretary of transportation
by Gov. Brad Henry in May
2009, and in November 2010,
Fallin announced she would
retain Ridley as Secretary of
Transportation in her administration.
Ridley’s journey up
through the ranks provided
him with first-hand insights
into the whole spectrum of
department operations.
His ODOT service dates
back to 1965, when he joined
the department as an equipment operator.
He moved up to maintenance superintendent at
Kingfisher in 1970 and traffic
superintendent at Perry in
1979.
In 1983, he became field
maintenance engineer at
Perry and then advanced to
ODOT Division Five maintenance engineer at Clinton in
1986.
Ridley became the division
engineer at Clinton in 1995.
He was named assistant director for operations in January 2001 before becoming
ODOT director that August.
At the national level,
Ridley chaired the committee that celebrated the 50th
anniversary of the interstate
highway system.
He has been asked to testify to Congress on several occasions about the challenges
faced by state transportation
officials.
Wednesday
Stories of the Elders,
3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m., Washita
Battlefield National Historic Site, one mile west of
Cheyenne on Highway 47A.
Call 580-497-2742.
Thursday, Feb. 21
Singing Churchmen of
Oklahoma, 6:15 p.m., First
Baptist Church, 1600 W.
Country Club. Free.
Friday, Feb. 22
Catfish fry, 5:30 p.m.
to 7:30 p.m., St. Matthew
Catholic Church, 3001 E. 66
Access Road. Fundraiser,
$10 adults, $6 children.
Saturday, Feb. 23
Saltfork Craftsmen
Artist-Blacksmith Association, 9 a.m., Route 66
Blacksmith Shop, Elk City
Museum Complex. Trade
item, bending fork.
Wednesday, Feb. 27
Stories of the Elders,
3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m., Washita
Battlefield National Historic Site, one mile west of
Cheyenne on Highway 47A.
Call 580-497-2742.
Push for PTSD treatment
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) —
Oklahoma must bridge a gap
in mental and physical trauma
treatment for its 10,000 National Guard members, a state
senator told a Senate panel
Wednesday.
The Senate Veterans and
Military Affairs Committee
approved without opposition
a proposal from Sen. Brian
Crain, R-Tulsa, that calls for
training guard members’
caregivers to better treat posttraumatic stress disorder and
traumatic brain injuries.
“I’ve got a concern that others have brought to me that
we are not doing enough to
provide the full attention that
those National Guard members
need and certainly deserve,”
Crain told The Associated
Press after the hearing. “We
want to make sure that people
that are providing care to those
National Guard members have
the training, have the support,
know what resources are available.”
Specifically, Crain’s bill calls
on the Oklahoma Health Care
Authority’s medical advisory
committee to launch and oversee pilot training programs
for caretakers, even if they’re
simply family members or
neighbors of guardsmen.
According to Pentagon data,
more veterans died by suicide
than in combat in Iraq and
Afghanistan last year, a yearslong trend that has intensified
interest in military mental
health screening and treatment. Multiple studies also
have found National Guard
members are especially at risk
for PTSD and other mental
health problems.
“Because National Guard
soldiers return to civilian
status following their deployment, they do not have the
same uninterrupted access
to military medical care as
Active Component soldiers,”
researchers at the Walter Reed
Army Institute of Research
wrote in a June 2010 study on
PTSD among returning active
and reserve Iraq veterans.
The study, published in the
Archives of General Psychia-
Friday, March 1
Catfish fry, 5:30 p.m.
to 7:30 p.m., St. Matthew
Catholic Church, 3001 E.
66 Access Road.
Area deaths
Rose Stills
Bible
thought
Rev. Terry Koehn
United Methodist Church
SCRIPTURE: Ephesians
3:18 (New Living)
“May you have the
power to understand, as all
God’s people should, how
wide, how long, how high,
and how deep God’s love
really is.”
PRAYER: Loving God,
thank you that your care
and concern for us knows no
limits. Amen.
THOUGHT: God’s love
is…wide: covering every
aspect of life; long: going
with us through our whole
life; high: even greater
than our own love; and
deep: able to uproot ‘weeds
of sin’ in our lives.
Funeral services for Rose
Stills will be conducted Saturday, Febuary 16 at 10:30 a.m.
from the First Baptist Church
of Elk City with Dr. Russell
Duck officiating. Interment will
be in the Fairlawn Cemetery
under the direction of the Martin Funeral Home.
Mrs. Stills died on Febuary
12 at the age of 70.
A full obituary will be
printed when available.
An online registry is available at www.martinfhok.com.
try, also pointed to other differences, including stress from
reintegrating into the civilian
workforce after combat.
Lt. Col. Max Moss, a spokesman for the Oklahoma National
Guard, called the proposal
“promising.” He said 19
guardsmen had been killed in
combat and almost as many
— 16 — had died from suicide
since 2001.
Nine of those suicides were
within the previous two years,
pushing the Guard to increase
its mental health efforts, but it
doesn’t appear PTSD or combat were consistently the cause
of those deaths, Moss said.
He said the proposal would
be helpful for guardsmen who
experience PTSD symptoms
— which can take months to
surface — after leaving the
military system.
“If you walk into a military
hospital, that’s going to be
one of the first things they ask
about and look for,” Moss said.
“What I think is promising
about this particular bill is that
it will help train members of
the civilian medical community to be more aware of the
symptomology around PTSD
and traumatic brain injury.”
Whatever the causes of
mental health concerns among
guardsmen, addressing them
falls to the states, Crain said.
“We want to make sure those
citizen-soldiers are given every
opportunity” to get help, he
said.
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2/16/11 9:35 AM
Thurs d ay, Feb r u a ry 14 , 2 0 13
The Elk City Daily N ews • Elk City, O klaho ma
Servers cited
for beer sales
Larissa Graham
Staff Reporter
Three servers in three Elk
City businesses were cited for
serving 3.2 beer to a person
under 21, police said.
Elk City Police Officer Jeffery Miller reported that police
started the compliance check
just before 8:45 p.m. Wednesday.
They visited four Elk City
businesses – El Charro’s, Pizza
Hut, Knuckle Head Red’s and
The Longhorn Bar.
Rob Bennett with Red Rock
Behavioral Health Service,
Gina Pratt with the Alcoholic
Beverage Laws Enforcement
Commission, and a 20-yearold man conducted the check,
beginning at El Charro’s.
“The (man) ordered a 3.2
beer,” Miller wrote. “The waitress checked his Oklahoma
Driver’s License but failed to
check and see that he was under 21. (The waitress) brought
the alcoholic beverage to the
20-year-old male.”
The waitress was cited for
selling 3.2 beer to a person
under 21.
From there, the group went
to Pizza Hut, arriving just after
9 p.m., the officer reported.
Again, the 20-year-old ordered
a 3.2 beer, and the Pizza Hut
waitress checked his identification but still delivered the
alcohol to him, Miller wrote.
That waitress was also cited.
Their third stop was Knuckle
Head Red’s bar just after 9:15
p.m.
“The 20-year-old ordered
a 3.2 beer and the waitress
checked his ID but still sold the
alcohol to him,” Miller wrote.
That waitress was also cited.
Just before 9:30 p.m. the
group went to The Longhorn
bar. The 20-year-old was asked
for his identification, and after
the bartender checked the ID
the bartender told the 20-yearold that he was under 21 and
needed to leave the bar. No alcohol was sold at that location.
Erin Lee, 26, of Elk City,
Lauren Christine Garcia, 22,
of Elk City, and Christina Ann
Binion, 31, of Cheyenne were
all cited for selling 3.2 beer to a
person under 21, police said.
Committee approves
feral hog hunting bill
OKLAHOMA CITY – Legislation that would allow aerial
hunting of feral hogs has been
approved unanimously in a
House committee.
House Bill 1920, as amended
by state Rep. Dustin Roberts,
would allow a permit for any
landowner or any person
who has contracted with a
landowner to engage in the
management of depredating
animals by use of aircraft on
the land of the landowner.
“Feral hogs are a huge
problem in Southeastern
Oklahoma and lawmakers have been working to
create opportunities for
individuals hunting them. I
amended House Bill 1904 to
allow aerial hunting of feral
hogs, which is a efficient
and effective way to manage
Oil & Gas
OK Sweet
Sunoco Inc.
C. OK Sweet
OK Sour
Sunoco Inc.
Natural gas
$90.22
93.50
91.22
79.12
81.50
3.30
Stocks
Dow Jones
-35.79pts. 13,983
-0.26%
AEP
CAT
CHK
DVN
F
HAL
KO
MWE
OKE
PEP
RES
SD
SLB
T
WMT
+0.07%
-0.86%
+2.80%
+3.28%
-0.31%
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+1.68%
-0.46%
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+1.59%
+4.80%
+0.13%
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44.93
96.38
20.57
61.48
13.04
40.84
37.21
57.45
47.95
71.50
16.66
5.90
78.63
35.42
71.39
the feral hog population,” said
Roberts, R-Durant.
House Bill 1920 was approved by a 13-0 vote by the
Oklahoma House of Representatives Agriculture and
Wildlife Committee.
Adult arraignment
Larry Eugene Ault, 1/16,
harboring vicious animal,
continue 2/21
Larry Eugene Ault, 1/24,
failure to meet owner responsibility of animal, continue 2/21
Larry Eugene Ault, 1/16,
failure to vaccinate animal,
continue 2/21
Larry Eugene Ault, 1/24,
animal abandonment, continue
2/21
April Baldonado, 1/25,
speeding 11-15, paid
Laundra D Casper, 12/30,
speeding 1-10, continue 2/14
Cory Blake Grimes, 1/21,
harboring vicious animal,
continue 2/14
Christy Dawn Ham, 1/23,
failure to meet owner responsibility of animal, found guilty,
fine $500, pay by 2/21
Jeremy Scott Dwaine Keller,
11/30, operating motor vehicle
without valid driver’s license,
forfeit cash bond
Johnnie Keith Maples, 1/21,
failure to compel minor to attend school, continue 2/14
Mario Martinez, 11/1, DUI,
continue 2/21
Donald Lee Miles, 10/25,
DWI, continue 2/14
Donald Lee Miles, 10/25,
possession of narcotics, continue 2/14
Jennifer Lynn Noyes, 12/5,
animal at large, continue 2/21
Ernesto Ortiz, 1/6, encouraging minor to offend, continue
is published daily by The Elk City Daily News, Inc.
206 W. Broadway, Elk City, OK 73644-4736.
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Police dept. radio log
Feb. 13
8:25 a.m. – suspicious
vehicle(s) – 600 block of
South Howard – people going back and forth to house
– new renters moving in
8:28 a.m. – injury accident
– Highway 66 and Eastern
9:09 a.m. – non-injury accident – Randall and 3rd
9:20 a.m. – non-injury
accident – 700 block of East
3rd
10:03 a.m. – shots fired/
heard – 600 block of West
D – Karen Stigleman victim,
suspect Mitch Stigleman,
caller advised Stigleman
walked into his mother’s
room, they got in a fight
and he shot her – caller ran
across the street
10:30 a.m. – welfare check
– 100 block of Herring –
subject has been at nursing
home and is coming home
10:48 a.m. – animal call
– 100 block of Blackburn –
dead cat
10:51 a.m. – animal call –
200 block of Hoover – dog
at large
11:09 a.m. – burglary
in progress – 600 block of
South Lusk – subject was
confused and thought vehicle was his
11:23 a.m. – non-injury accident – 100 block of North
Main – no report
12:21 p.m. – non-injury
accident – 1200 block of
North Pioneer
12:49 p.m. – animal call –
7th and Main – dog at large
picked up
1:20 p.m. – animal call –
100 block of East Country
Club – dog at large – have
dog
1:53 p.m. – threats of bodily
harm – 100 block of Hunter
Hill – person attacked father
2:02 p.m. – animal call – 900
block of Wes 2nd
2:45 p.m. – animal call – 1000
block of North Randall
3:34 p.m. – request to speak
to officer
3:39 p.m. – disturbance –
2600 block of West Broadway
– subject left property
3:48 p.m. – information
– 2800 block of South Main –
vehicle released to licensed
driver
4:07 p.m. – suspicious
person(s) – Main and Washington
4:11 p.m. – harassment –
1100 block of North 34 – person
making rude comments to
caller’s daughter
4:12 p.m. – follow up – 2100
block of West 3rd – man grabbing callers’ vehicle
4:38 p.m. – suicide threat –
Ackley Park – all OK
5:21 p.m. – animal call – 1000
block of South Main – dog
picked up
5:31 p.m. – business alarm
– 600 block of Van Buren – accidental setoff
5:56 p.m. – disturbance – 700
block of West Country Club
6:12 p.m. – disturbance – 600
block of West 6th – person
drove motorcycle in yard
7:02 p.m. – animal call –
1500 block of East 7th – cow
between Bar-S and Road
7:37 p.m. – animal call – 1500
block of East 7th – steer north
of Bar-S
7:48 p.m. – domestic dispute
– 600 block of West 9th
8:19 p.m. – information –
Highway 6 and Highway 66
– caller said she heard shots a
few hours ago and wanted to
speak to officer
10:28 p.m. – firework call –
500 block of West 8th – unable
to locate – requested extra
patrol
10:36 p.m. – mental
person(s) – 400 block of West
3rd – man making cashier nervous – man left then came back
and said guys at the back door
were going to break in
Feb. 14
1:13 a.m. – fight without
weapons – 2600 block of East
Highway 66 – under control
before officers arrived
5:04 a.m. – animal call – 7th
and Eastern – calf out – unable
to locate owner
8:01 a.m. – shots fired/heard
– Walker and 10th - fireworks
8:02 a.m. – breaking and
entering – 500 block of North
Madison – someone broke into
trailer – made contact with
owner – nothing disturbed.
Elk City Police Department arrests
Elk City police made five
arrests Wednesday and
early Thursday.
Arrests and complaints:
Rodney Wayne Brinkley,
29, Haywood, DUI and operating motor vehicle
under suspension/
revocation/
cancellation
Omar
Daniel
Rodney
Fierro, 24,
Brinkley
Fort Worth, Texas, DUI
David Michael Orange, 30,
Elk City, disturbing the peace
by drunk and disorderly
Leon Lefay Parker, 44,
McAlester, actual physical
control
Aaron Mitchell Stigleman,
26, Elk City, first-degree murder and kidnapping.
Omar
Fierro
Leon
Parker
David
Orange
Aaron
Stigleman
Elk City Municipal Court docket
USPS # 173-020
580-225-3000
www.ecdailynews.com
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Page 3
Elizabeth (Wade) Perkinson
Publisher
J.B. Bittner
Managing Editor
Editor
Managing
Cheryl Overstreet
Design
Design Manager
Manager
Kathy James
Circulation
Circulation Manager
Manager
Calvin Stone
Production Manager
2/14
Shane Eric Snyder, 7/23,
disobeying traffic sign/signal,
plea of not guilty, trial 2/14
Shane Eric Snyder, 7/23,
failure to signal intention to
turn, plea of not guilty, trial
2/14
Shane Eric Snyder, 7/23,
speeding 1-10, plea of not
guilty, trial 2/14
Shane Eric Snyder, 7/23,
DUI, plea of not guilty, trial
2/14
Lindsey Swint, 1/24, failure
to compel minor to attend
school, plea of guilty, fine $100
Severo Zamora, 1/19, speeding 11-15, defendant failed to
appear
Adult payby
Dakota Cole Adams, 11/24,
public intoxication, plea of no
contest, warrant issued
Dakota Cole Adams, 11/24,
possession of marijuana, plea
of guilty, warrant issued
Dakota Cole Adams, 11/24,
possession of drug paraphernalia, plea of guilty, warrant
issued
Dakota Cole Adams, 1/9,
disturbing the peace by drunk
and disorderly, plea of guilty,
warrant issued
Michelle Dawn Anders, 12/5,
petit larceny, plea of guilty,
continue 2/21
Aren Castro Benavidez, 7/7,
encouraging minor to offend,
plea of guilty, warrant issued
Aren Castro Benavidez, 8/29,
petit larceny, plea of guilty,
warrant issued
Skyler Brown, 1/12, failure
to pay taxes due state, plea of
no contest, continue 2/21
Skyler Brown, 1/12, operating motor vehicle without valid
driver’s license, plea of no
contest, continue 2/21
Skyler Brown, 1/12, speeding 1-10, plea of guilty, continue 2/21
Ace Chalepah, 1/11, public
intoxication, plea of guilty,
warrant issued
Ace Chalepah, 1/11, petit
larceny, plea of guilty, warrant
issued
Kevin Earl Dixon, 11/10,
reckless driving, plea of guilty,
continue 2/14
Kevin Earl Dixon, 11/10,
leaving the scene of an accident – property damage, plea
of guilty, continue 2/14
Kevin Earl Dixon, 11/10,
failure to comply with compulsory insurance law, plea of
guilty, continue 2/14
Erin Rochelle Edwards,
12/2, operating motor vehicle
under suspension/revocation/
cancellation, plea of no contest,
continue 2/28
Stephanie Greene, 8/21,
operating motor vehicle under
suspension/revocation/cancellation, plea of guilty, warrant
issued
Christy Dawn Ham, 10/16,
animal at large, plea of guilty,
continue 2/21
Christy Dawn Ham, 10/19,
animal abandonment, plea of
guilty, continue 2/21
Christy Dawn Ham, 11/6,
failure to compel minor to
attend school, plea of guilty,
continue 2/21
Akeila Ayana Cipriana
Hernandez, 12/22, resisting an
officer, plea of guilty, continue
2/28
Doris Bettina Klein, 12/7,
DUI, plea of no contest, paid
Mark Darrell McDowell,
11/11, operating motor vehicle
under suspension/revocation/
cancellation, plea of guilty,
continue 2/21
Mark Darrell McDowell,
11/11, false representation/
harmful deception, plea of
guilty, continue 2/21
Mark Darrell McDowell,
11/11, obstructing an officer,
plea of guilty, continue 2/21
Mark Darrell McDowell,
11/16, operating motor vehicle
under suspension/revocation/
cancellation, plea of guilty,
continue 2/21
George Billy Moore, 1/9, possession of drug paraphernalia,
plea of no contest, continue
2/28
Manuel Christopher Olivas,
11/10, speeding16-20, plea of
guilty, warrant issued
Brian James Perry, 11/10,
DUI, plea of guilty, continue
2/28
Sharon Yvette Provost, 12/6,
speeding 11-15, plea of guilty,
continue 2/21
Adrian Calvario Rodriguez,
11/27, operating motor vehicle
under suspension/revocation/
cancellation, plea of guilty,
warrant issued
Todd Brian Stevens, 11/21,
public intoxication, plea of
guilty, warrant issued
Todd Brian Stevens, 1/11,
disturbing the peace by drunk
and disorderly, plea of guilty,
warrant issued
Todd Brian Stevens, 1/11,
assault and battery, plea of
guilty, warrant issued
Todd Brian Stevens, 1/11, resisting an officer, plea of guilty,
warrant issued
Todd Brian Stevens, 1/11,
assault and battery on police
officer, plea of guilty, warrant
issued
Billy Laroy Willingham,
12/8, failure to comply with
compulsory insurance law,
plea of guilty, continue 2/21
Regina Ann Yeager, 2/2,
trespassing, plea of guilty, warrant issued
Adult trial
Leslie Blackwell, 12/14, animal at large, plea of not guilty,
continue 2/14
Leslie Blackwell, 12/14, failure to vaccinate animal, plea of
not guilty, continue 2/14
Christy Dawn Ham, 1/7,
animal at large, plea of guilty,
fine $50, pay by 2/21
Christy Dawn Ham, 1/16, resisting an officer, found guilty,
fine $75, pay by 2/21
Christy Dawn Ham, 1/16,
harboring vicious animal, fine
$350
Erica Sharday Miles, 9/18,
petit larceny, dismissed.
10 things to know for today
Your daily look at latebreaking news, upcoming
events and stories that are
being talked about today:
1. How an American-US Air
merger will affect travelers.
The world’s biggest airline
may not be a reality for years,
but further consolidation is
likely to raise fares.
2. Olympian “blade runner” arrested in South Africa
shooting.
Oscar Pistorius is taken into
custody after a 30-year-old
woman was shot dead at his
home.
3. Tear gas blamed for set-
ting cabin ablaze.
A sheriff says his deputies
didn’t intentionally burn down
the building where fugitive
ex-LAPD officer Christopher
Dorner is believed to have
died.
4. Washington’s most powerful Republican pulls back.
John Boehner says the
House will consider proposals
brought to them, rather than
try to push new ideas.
5. A long journey’s end for
stranded cruise ship.
Carnival’s Triumph, carrying more than 4,000 passengers who describe dismal
conditions aboard, is docking
in Alabama later today.
6. Israel acknowledges
‘Prisoner X.’
An Australian-Israeli citizen
mysteriously died in prison in
2010 after an apparent career
in Israel’s spy agency.
7. What 1 in 9 women do the
morning after.
A study of sexually active
women aged 15 to 44 say they
have taken the morning-after
pill to end pregnancy after
sex.
8. Long-married Valentines
share their secrets.
Murray Redlitz, who has
been married to Esther for 66
years, says the key is pretty
simple: compromise, compromise, compromise.
9. Investigated ref denies
fixing soccer matches.
The AP reports referees
like Ibrahim Chaibou are
tempting targets for matchfixers because their decisions are crucial to a game’s
outcome.
10. There she is, back on
the boardwalk.
The Miss America pageant
is headed back to Atlantic City
after spending the past seven
years in Las Vegas. -AP
Sports
Page 4
Heads
up
Today
Leedey basketball vs.
Crossings Christian (Girls)
1:30 p.m. Leedey
Hammon vs. Duke (Boys)
3 p.m. at Elk City
Leedey basketball
vs. Dover (Boys), 3 p.m.
Hammon vs. Duke (Girls)
6:30 p.m. at Elk City
Friday
Elk City Wrestling
at Regionals
Weatherford High School
Sayre basketball vs.
Mangum (Girls) 6:30 p.m.
Sayre basketball
vs. Mangum (Boys) 8 p.m.
Merritt High School
Erick basketball
vs. Big Pasture 6:30 p.m.
Altus High School
Saturday
Elk City basketball
vs. Woodward (Girls)
6:30 p.m. Pioneer Center
Elk City vs.
Woodward (Boys)
8 p.m. Pioneer Center
Elk City High
School tennis
schedule
Elk City High School
head tennis coach Gina
Curtis and athletic director
Bill Weatherly released the
ECHS boys and girls tennis
schedule Wednesday.
The Elks and Elkettes
open the regular season
against Lawton Macarthur
High School March 12. Elk
City will travel to Oklahoma
City for a Class 4A tournament at Oklahoma City Tennis Center March 29.
Elk City will play host
to two tournaments during
the 2013 season - the ECHS
Tournament April 1 and the
ECHS Tennis Classic April
19.
The girls’ state tournament will be held at the
Oklahoma City Tennis Center May 3 and 4. The boys’
state tournament will be
May 10 and 11 at the same
location.
The Elks finished 10th
at state last season. The
Elkettes were fourth.
Follow us on
Twitter @
ECDNSports
The Elk City Daily News • Elk City, Oklahoma
Thursday, February 14, 2013
Elkettes, Boomers poised for postseason collision
Blake Colston
Sports Editor
Chicago Cubs Hall of Fame
outfielder Ernie Banks coined
the phrase, “Let’s play two.”
That’s exactly what the Elk
City Elkettes and Woodward
Boomers planned to do this
week, but Mother Nature had
other ideas.
Elk City and Woodward’s
district playoff appetizer set
for Tuesday was canceled
after a winter snowstorm
blanketed western Oklahoma.
Elk City head coach Tim Ellison was looking forward to the
Tuesday matchup before Old
Man Winter intervened.
“We haven’t seen them in
person since December,” he
said. “So I was kind of hoping
to just go play a little bit to see
their speed and quickness.
Because it’s hard to really see
that on film.”
Now both teams’ sights are
set on Saturday night’s game
at the Pioneer Center. It’s not
a winner take all matchup.
Both teams will advance to
Area play win or lose. But Ellison says Elk City wants to win
for seniors Erin Hutchinson,
Courtney Jacks and Nicole Lamar, who’ll play the last home
game of their Elkette careers
Saturday.
“To lose that last game, I’d
feel bad for them,” the coach
said. “I’m hoping we come out
and play strong, the seniors
play strong and hopefully we
come out with a win for them.”
It was Hutchinson’s play
down the stretch of the first
and only Elk City-Woodward
game this season that propelled ECHS to a 52-49 overtime victory over the Boomers
at the Pioneer Center Dec.
14. The senior post player hit
the game-tying shot with 25
seconds left in regulation and
scored 6 points in overtime.
The Elkettes won despite
trailing for most of the game
and struggling to make shots
inside the paint.
“I bet we had 25 shots from
inside four feet and I bet we
didn’t make 20 percent of
them,” the coach said.
Since the early season
matchup, Woodward and Elk
City have gone in opposite
directions. The Elkettes found
their stride and enter the
game with a 13-8 record. The
Boomers, meanwhile, (5-15)
have been mired in a seasonlong slump but will come into
Saturday’s contest as winners of two of their past three
games.
“They’re not doing anything
different. They’re running
the same zone defense. They
mainly want to keep the score
in the low 40s,” the coach
said. “I don’t think anything’s
changed.”
Because the Boomers’
zone defense is forcing teams
to make outside shots, the
Elkettes have put added emphasis on moving the ball well
and knocking down 3-pointers
in practice this week.
“It seems like we’ve
struggled against the zone
some this year,” Ellison said.
“And you’re going to struggle
against the zone if you don’t
move the ball and shoot it
well.”
ECHS practiced for two
hours Tuesday and Wednesday, but today will only have a
light shoot around before taking their minds off basketball
for a little while.
The prescription: A team
road trip to the indoor water
park in Clinton.
“We just kind of want to get
them together, laughing and
having a good time,” Ellison
said. “We want to be in a good
mindset before we go play
Saturday.”
Saturday’s postseason
opener won’t ever be far from
the Elkettes’ minds, and for
good reason.
“We’ve had a good week of
practice so far and I think it
will continue,” he said. “Because they know everything
we’ve worked for, the reason
why is coming up.”
MiKayla Harrison goes up for a shot over a Cache defender. Photo by LeAnn Harrison.
Elks ready to put ‘hay in the barn’
Blake Colston
Sports Editor
Cody Williamson, Kamran
Coulter, Tyson Brown, Tyler
Gifford, Gavyn Smith and Briar
Boling are ready.
“This is what they’ve been
waiting for,” ECHS wrestling
head coach Kevin Mincher said
of his team’s trip to the regional
tournament in Weatherford
tonight.
The top four finishers in
each weight class at regionals
advance to the state tournament in Oklahoma City. Going
to state is something none
of the six Elk City wrestlers
heading to regionals have accomplished. They’d all like to
change that, especially the four
seniors: Boling (106 pounds),
Coulter (152 pounds), Gifford
(170 pounds) and Williamson
(132 pounds).
Williamson’s been close. So
have Boling and Gifford. Each
of the trio has finished one spot
away from qualifying for state
in their careers.
Mincher and assistant coach
Matt Pena moved Williamson
from his customary slot at 126
pounds up to the 132-pound
class because they think it
gives the senior a better shot to
make it to OKC.
“One twenty-six is just a
snake pit,” Mincher said.
“There are a lot of good kids
at ’26 and I’m not saying there
won’t be good ones at 132, but
we feel like that gives him a
better chance.”
The coach says Williamson’s
been the glue that’s held a
developing Elk City wrestling
program together.
“Cody’s kind of been the
heart and soul for this group,”
Mincher said. “Even going
back to when the program
started when he was a seventhgrader. He was always there
with a smile on his face. So you
want to see him succeed.”
While the six-man team
Mincher will take to Weatherford may not have much state
tournament experience, it
has plenty of regional experience. The four seniors all have
extensive experience and, a
junior now, Smith won matches
at the regional tournament as
a sophomore. Smith’s battled
multiple injuries this season,
including a sprained MCL and
hyperextended elbow, but is
healthy enough to qualify for
state, Mincher says.
“I was worried (the injuries)
would slow him down, but they
don’t seem to have done that,”
he said.
Freshman Tyson Brown
is the lone ECHS wrestler
without postseason experience,
but the two-time tournament
champion this season has the
pedigree to make up for it, his
coach says.
“Tyson’s a kid that’s been
wrestling since he was 5 years
old,” the coach said. “He’s
been looking for this moment
forever.”
As a coach, Mincher admits
regional week is different from
any other week.
“The nerves are starting to
kick in. This is different from
any other tournament,” he said.
Perhaps his nerves have
been calmed by his team’s
preparation lately.
“I feel like the last two weeks
have been the best two weeks
of practice we’ve had this
year,” he said. “I think we’re
going to go out and wrestle better than we have all year long.”
Tonight’s the night.
“They’re ready to put the hay
in the barn and go get after it,”
Mincher said.
Williamson, Coulter, Brown,
Gifford, Smith and Boling are
ready.
We want your photos!
sports@ecdailynews.com
Community
Thursday, February 14, 2013
The Elk City Daily News • Elk City, Oklahoma
Legals
LPXLP
IN THE
COURT
INDISTRICT
THE DISTRICT
COURT
IN AND
COUNTY
IN FOR
ANDBECKHAM
FOR BECKHAM
COUNTY
STATE
OF OKLAHOMA
STATE
OF OKLAHOMA
Chase Bank
HomeofFinance
LLC;
Plaintiff,
America,
N.A.,
Successor by Merger to BAC
Home Loans Servicing, LP fka Countrywide Home
vs. Loans Servicing, LP; Plaintiff,
Ronaldvs.Wayne Webb, Jr. And Gina R. Webb; et al.,
Defendants.
Brady L. Swenhaugen and Mikela Swenhaugen; et al.,
Case
No. CJ-2010-148
Defendants.
IN THE DISTRICT COURT
Doug
INJudge
AND Haught,
FOR BECKHAM
COUNTY
Kivell, Rayment and Francis
A Professional Corporation
Jason Howell, OBA #19128
Triad Center I, Suite 240
7666 East 61st Street
Tulsa, Oklahoma 74133
(918) 254-0626
Facsimile (918) 254-7915
e-mail: jhowell@kivell.com
Attorneys for Plaintiff
(Published in the Elk City Daily News February 14
and 21, 2013.)
STATE
OF OKLAHOMA
Case No.
CJ-2012-37
NOTICE
OF SALE
OF
Judge
Haught,
Doug
NOTICE OF HEARING
FINAL ACCOUNT AND PETITION
FOR ALLOWANCE OF FINAL ACCOUNT,
DETERMINATION OF HEIRS,
LEGATEES AND DEVISEES,
AND DISTRIBUTION
Bank
of America,
N.A.,
Successor by Merger to BAC
LAND
UNDER
EXECUTION
Home Loans Servicing, LP fka Countrywide Home
NOTICE
OF SALE OF
LP;TO
Plaintiff,
THIS Loans
IS ANServicing,
ATTEMPT
COLLECT A DEBT
LAND UNDER EXECUTION
AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE
USEDvs.
FOR THAT PURPOSE.
THIS
IS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT
Notice is hereby given that on the 19th day of
BradyANY
L. Swenhaugen and Mikela
Swenhaugen;
et al.,
OBTAINED
March,AND
2013, atINFORMATION
10 o’clock a.m.,
(location WILL
at BE
Defendants.
USED
FOR
THAT
Courthouse or
Room
#), PURPOSE.
Lobby, of the Beckham
Notice is hereby
given Oklahoma,
that on the 19th
County Courthouse
in No.
Sayre,
the day of
Case
CJ-2012-37
March,Sheriff
2013,willJudge
atoffer
10Haught,
o’clock
a.m.,
at
undersigned
for
sale and
sell for(location
cash
Doug
Courthouse
or
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#),
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of
the
to the highest and best bidder, subject to real estate Beckham
ad
County
Courthouse
in
Sayre,
Oklahoma,
NOTICE
OF
SALE OF
valorem
taxes, superior
special
assessments
and all the
LAND
UNDER
EXECUTION
undersigned
Sheriff
will
offer
forMortgage
sale and sell
interests
of record,
if any,
except
the
andfor cash
to
the
highest
and
best
bidder,
subject
to
real estate ad
interests foreclosed herein on the following described
THIS IS taxes,
AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT
valorem
real property,
to-wit: superior special assessments and all
AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE
interests
of record, if any, except the Mortgage and
USED FOR THAT PURPOSE.
interests
foreclosed
herein
onSouthwest
the
described
A tractNotice
of
landislying
in the
hereby
given
thatfollowing
on the 19th
day of
real
property,
to-wit:
Quarter
(SW/4)
Section
Thirty-one
March, 2013,
atof 10
o’clock
a.m., (location at
(31), Township
Eleven
North,
Courthouse
or Room
#), (11)
Lobby,
of the Beckham
County
Courthouse
ininWest
Sayre,
Oklahoma,
the
Eleven (11)
Block
(5) of
RangeLot
Twenty-one
(21)
ofFive
the
undersigned
Sheriff will
offer for
sale and
Eastland
Addition
(1978)
to sell
thefor cash
Indianthe
Meridian,
Beckham
County,
toState
the highest
and
bestCity,
bidder,
subject
to real estate ad
of
Oklahoma,
according
to the
City
of
Elk
Beckham
County,
valorem
taxes, superior
special
assessments and all
U.S. State
Government
Survey
thereof,
of Oklahoma,
according
to the
interests of record, if any, except the Mortgage and
described
by metes
boundscommonly
as
recorded
plat and
thereof,
interests foreclosed herein on the following described
follows
known
as
202
Sycamore
Avenue,
Elk
real property, to-wit:
Commencing
the Southwest
corner
City, Okat73644
(the “property”)
of saidLot
Southwest
Quarter
(SW/4);
Eleven (11) in Block Five (5) of
thencethe
North
00 degrees
05'30"
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Eastland
(1978)
Sale
will
beAddition
made
pursuant
a Special
City
ofthence
Elk City,
Beckham
County,
1566.65
feet
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89issued
degrees
Execution
and
Order
of Sale
out
of the office
State
of
Oklahoma,
according
to
the
54'
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2279.05
feet
for
a
point
of
of the Court Clerk in and for Beckham County,
recorded
plat
thereof,
commonly
beginning;
thence
South
degrees
Oklahoma,
and
pursuant
to89said
judgment reserving
known
as 202
Sycamore
Avenue, Elk
54'right
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feet;
thence
South
the
of257.00
Plaintiff
to (the
recall
said
execution by oral
City,
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“property”)
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feet;
thence
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announcement and/or order of the Court, prior to the
49'
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sale, saidSale
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in and
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pursuant
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announcement and/or order of the Court, prior to the
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Court in
Sale
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said action accrued
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Countrywide
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applicable,
until
paid;
advances
for
taxes,
insurance
Webb, et al., Defendants, to satisfy:
Countrywide
Home
Loans
Servicing,
LP,
inaccruing;
the sum
and
preservation
expenses,
accrued
and and
First:
The costs
of
said action
accrued
of $126,501.19
with interest
thereon
at the
rate of
abstracting
expenses,
accrued
and
accruing;
accruing;
7.5% per annum from October 1, 2010, as adjusted,
bankruptcy
fees
and
costs,
if
any;
and
an
attorney’s
Theuntil
judgment
and firstforlien
of the
ifSecond:
applicable,
paid; advances
taxes,
insurance
fee,
plus
costs,
interest
thereon
the same
rate,
Plaintiff,
homewith
Finance
LLC,
in theatsum
of
andChase
preservation
expenses,
accrued
and
accruing;
until
paid.
$176,805.21
with interest
thereon
at the rate
abstracting
expenses,
accrued
andof 7%
accruing;
Persons
orand
other
entities
per annum
from
May
1, costs,
2010,
ashaving
adjusted,
if in the
bankruptcy
fees
if any;
and interest
an attorney’s
fee, plus
interest
at
the
same rate,
property,
including
those
whose
actual
addresses
are
applicable,
untilcosts,
paid;with
advances
forthereon
taxes,
insurance
until paid. and
and preservation
expenses,
accruing;
unknown
persons accrued
or other and
entities
who have or
Persons
or
other
entities
having
interest
in
the
abstracting
expenses,
andandaccruing;
may have
unknownaccrued
successors
such unknown
property,
those
whose
actual
bankruptcy
fees including
andarecosts,
if any;
and an
attorney’s
successors
hereby
notified
are:addresses
Brady are
L.
unknown and persons or other entities who have or
fee, plus
costs, with interest
thereon at the Occupants
same rate, of the
Swenhaugen;
Mikela successors
Swenhaugen;
may have unknown
and such unknown
until paid.
Premises.
successors are hereby notified are: Brady L.
Persons
or other
entities
interest
in the of
The
property
has having
been duly
appraised
in the
the
Swenhaugen;
Mikela
Swenhaugen;
Occupants
property,
including
those whose actual addresses are
Premises.
sum
of $135,000.00.
unknown and Witness
persons
or other
who
have
or in the
The
property
has entities
been
duly
appraised
my
hand
this 8th
day
of February,
sum unknown
of $135,000.00.
may have
successors and such unknown
2013.
hand are:
this Ronald
8th day Wayne
of February,
successors areWitness
hereby my
notified
2013.
Webb, Jr.; Gina R. Webb; Occupants of the Premises;
Scott Jay
Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems,By:
Inc.,
asHelling
Jan
Scott
Jay
Nominee for Gateway Mortgage Group LLC; IrwinDeputy
By: Jan Helling
Mortgage Corporation; Robert L. Ramsey, Jr. A/k/aDeputy
Robert L. Ramsey a/k/a Robert Ramsey, Charlean
O’Neal, as Trustee of the Charlean O’Neal Living
Kivell, Rayment and Francis
Trust Kivell,
dated March
15,and
2004;
Mortgage Electronic
Rayment
Francis
A Professional
Corporation
A Professional
Registration
Systems,Corporation
Inc.; Midland Funding LLC.
K.
Renee’
Davis,
OBA# 15161
K.
Renee’
Davis,
15161
The
property
hasOBA#
been duly
appraised in the
Triad Center
Center I, Suite 240
sum ofTriad
$160,000.00.I, Suite 240
7666 East
East 61st
61st Street
Street
7666
Witness my
hand this 8th day of February,
2013. Tulsa, Oklahoma 74133
(918)
(918) 254-0626
254-0626
Facsimile
Facsimile (918)
(918) 254-7915
254-7915
Scott Jay
e-mail:
e-mail: rdavis@kivell.com
rdavis@kivell.com
By: Jan Helling
Attorneys for Plaintiff
Attorneys for Plaintiff
Deputy
(Published in the Elk City Daily News February 14
(Published
in the Elk City Daily News February 14
and 21, 2013.)
and 21, 2013.)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT
IN AND FOR BECKHAM COUNTY
STATE OF OKLAHOMA
Chase Home Finance LLC; Plaintiff,
vs.
Ronald Wayne Webb, Jr. And Gina R. Webb; et al.,
Defendants.
THIS IS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT
AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE
USED FOR THAT PURPOSE.
Notice is hereby given that on the 19th day of
March, 2013, at 10 o’clock a.m., (location at
Courthouse or Room #), Lobby, of the Beckham
County Courthouse in Sayre, Oklahoma, the
undersigned Sheriff will offer for sale and sell for cash
to the highest and best bidder, subject to real estate ad
valorem taxes, superior special assessments and all
interests of record, if any, except the Mortgage and
interests foreclosed herein on the following described
real property, to-wit:
A tract of land lying in the Southwest
Quarter (SW/4) of Section Thirty-one
(31), Township Eleven (11) North,
Range Twenty-one (21) West of the
Indian Meridian, Beckham County,
State of Oklahoma, according to the
U.S. Government Survey thereof,
described by metes and bounds as
follows
Commencing at the Southwest corner
of said Southwest Quarter (SW/4);
thence North 00 degrees 05'30" West
1566.65 feet thence South 89 degrees
54' East 2279.05 feet for a point of
beginning; thence South 89 degrees
54' East 257.00 feet; thence South
237.08 feet; thence North 87 degrees
49' West 257.17 feet; thence North
227.74 feet to the point of beginning,
commonly known as 110 Indian River
Road, Elk City, OK 73644 (the
“Property”)
Sale will be made pursuant to a Special
Execution and Order of Sale issued out of the office
of the Court Clerk in and for Beckham County,
Oklahoma, and pursuant to said judgment reserving
the right of Plaintiff to recall said execution by oral
announcement and/or order of the Court, prior to the
sale, said judgment entered in the District Court in and
for said County, State of Oklahoma, in Case No. CJ2010-148, entitled Chase Home Finance LLC,
Plaintiff, vs. Ronald Wayne Webb, Jr. And Gina R.
Webb, et al., Defendants, to satisfy:
First: The costs of said action accrued and
accruing;
Second: The judgment and first lien of the
Plaintiff, Chase home Finance LLC, in the sum of
$176,805.21 with interest thereon at the rate of 7%
per annum from May 1, 2010, as adjusted, if
applicable, until paid; advances for taxes, insurance
and preservation expenses, accrued and accruing;
abstracting expenses, accrued and accruing;
bankruptcy fees and costs, if any; and an attorney’s
fee, plus costs, with interest thereon at the same rate,
until paid.
Persons or other entities having interest in the
property, including those whose actual addresses are
unknown and persons or other entities who have or
may have unknown successors and such unknown
successors are hereby notified are: Ronald Wayne
Webb, Jr.; Gina R. Webb; Occupants of the Premises;
Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., as
Nominee for Gateway Mortgage Group LLC; Irwin
Mortgage Corporation; Robert L. Ramsey, Jr. A/k/a
Robert L. Ramsey a/k/a Robert Ramsey, Charlean
O’Neal, as Trustee of the Charlean O’Neal Living
IN THE DISTRICT COURT
Trust dated
March 15, DISTRICT
2004; Mortgage Electronic
2ND JUDICIAL
Registration
Systems,
Inc.;OKLAHOMA
Midland Funding LLC.
BECKHAM
COUNTY,
COURTHOUSE,
SAYRE,
OKLAHOMA
The property
has been
duly appraised in the
sum of $160,000.00.
The State of Oklahoma, Petitioner,
Witness my hand this 8th day of February,
vs. 2013.
1998 Cadillac Deville VIN/1G6KD54Y0WU719828;
and Jay
Scott
One Hundred Eighty-Six Dollars ($186.00)
Cash,
By: Jan
Helling
Respondent.
Deputy
NOTICE OF FORFEITURE
Edwin McComas, OBA #5898
Attorney at Law
P. O. Box 849
Elk City, Oklahoma 73648
West
Side
Jets
Mahala Spillers of Elk
City, center, Carson
Guthrie, John Stroud
and KC Whitmire of
Clinton, and Joel McCoy
of Weatherford are part
of the Jets gang in the
Southwest Playhouse
production of West Side
Story. Faron Buttry of
Elk City is the father’s
voice and stagehand in
the production. Show
times are 7:30 p.m.
today through Saturday
and 2 p.m. Sunday. The
production continues at
7:30 p.m. Feb. 21 through
Feb. 23 with a 2 p.m.
matinee Feb. 24 at 609
N. 6th, Clinton. Photo
provided.
(Published in the Elk City Daily News February 14
and 21, 2013.)
DISTRICT COURT
STATE OF OKLAHOMA
BECKHAM COUNTY
In the Matter of the Estate of Evelyn Cecilia Jan
Wallen, a/k/a Janice C. Wallen, Deceased
PB-2012-69
AMENDED
ORDER AND NOTICE FOR
HEARING FINAL ACCOUNT,
PETITION FOR DETERMINATION
OF HEIRS, LEGATEES AND DEVISEES
AND FOR DISTRIBUTION
The Personal Representative of the above estate
having filed in this Court the Final Account of the
administration of said estate, and a Petition for
determination of heirs, legatees and devisees and for
distribution, the hearing of the same is hereby fixed by
the undersigned Judge of said Court on March 4th,
2013, at the hour of 8:30 a.m. in the Courtroom of the
District Court, Sayre, Beckham County, Oklahoma.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that notice by
publication and mailing be given as required by law to
all persons interested in said estate to then and there
appear and show cause, if any they have, why said
account should not be settled and allowed, the heirs,
legatees and devisees determined and said estate
distributed to the heirs, legatees and devisees.
DATED January 31, 2013.
/s/ Michelle Kirby Roper
Judge of the District Court
IVESTER, IVESTER & IVESTER PLLC
ATTORNEYS
SAYRE & ELK CITY
800-891-2319
(Published in the Elk City Daily News February 7
and 14, 2013.)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT
2ND JUDICIAL DISTRICT
BECKHAM COUNTY, OKLAHOMA
COURTHOUSE, SAYRE, OKLAHOMA
The State of Oklahoma, Petitioner,
vs.
1998 Cadillac
Deville VIN/1G6KD54Y0WU719828;
and
Kivell, Rayment
and Francis
One A
Hundred
Eighty-Six
Dollars ($186.00) Cash,
Professional
Corporation
Respondent.
Jason Howell, OBA #19128
Triad Center I, Suite 240
CV-2012-65
7666 East 61st Street
Tulsa, Oklahoma 74133
NOTICE OF FORFEITURE
(918) 254-0626
Facsimile (918) 254-7915
TO:
e-mail: jhowell@kivell.com
Attorneys
for Plaintiff
Shae Michael
Cloud
Gillian Cloud
2548 E Second St
Tulsa, OK 74104-1904
NOTICE OF SALE OF
LAND UNDER EXECUTION
TO:
Michelle Kirby Roper
Judge of the District Court
9128 S. Darlington Ave
in the Elk City Daily News February 14
Tulsa,(Published
OK 74137-4005
and 21, 2013.)
Case No. CJ-2010-148
Judge Haught, Doug
CV-2012-65
Notice is hereby given that Frederick M. Scott, III,
as Personal Representative of the Estate of Owene B.
Scott, deceased, has rendered for final settlement and
filed in this court a final account and report of administration of the estate of said decedent as such Personal
Representative, and petition praying for the determination of the heirs, legatees and devisees, and for final distribution of said estate; that on the 4th day of March,
2013, at 11:00 a.m., in the Court Room of said Court in
the City of Sayre, Oklahoma, in said county and state,
has been duly appointed by said Court as the time and
place for settlement of said account, determination of
heirs, legatees and devisees, and final distribution of said
estate, when and where any person interested in said estate may appear and show cause, if any they have, why
said account and petition should not be approved and
distribution made as prayed.
Dated this 11th day of February, 2013.
Page 5
Western Swing
hosting square
dance lessons
Western Swing Square
Dance club held its monthly
dance on Feb. 2 with Kay
Martin and Bo Ray as hosts.
This was the Valentine dance
with club caller Nicky Boone
of Hollis
Bill and Alfreda Wells from
Clinton won the door prize and
Gerald and Ann Sherrill won
the honey pot.
Dance clubs participating included Altus Twirlers,
Clinton Hub City Squares, HiSteppers and Western Swing.
New officers for the year
Gillian Cloud
are
2548 Keith
E Second Stand Debbie WilTulsa, OK 74104-1904
son,
president; Bill Western
by depositing
the same
in the US Post
Office with the
and
Gelene
Schreck,
vice
postage thereon duly prepaid this 30th day of October,
president;
William
Yow
and
2012.
Beverly Petross, secretary;
Michael A. Abel
Gerald and Ann Assistant
Sherrill,
District Attorney
treasurer;
Lyle
andFebruary
Judy14,
(Published in theand
Elk City
Daily News
2013.)
Barnard,
reporter.
There will be no dance the
first Saturday in March. The
next dance will be April 6 with
Nicky Boone calling.
The club will hold square
dance lessons on at 7 p.m.
March 11 at the hut on North
Van Buren. The first three
lessons - March 11, March 18,
and March 25 – are free.
Priests sharing artifacts at SWOSU
WEATHERFORD Father Constantine Nasr,
a ninth generation Orthodox Christian priest from
Palestine, will share facts
and artifacts on Feb. 27 at
Southwestern Oklahoma
State University in Weatherford.
The 5 p.m. session is
open to the public and will
be held in Room 104 of
the Stafford Center on the
SWOSU campus. Free pizza
will be served.
Accompanying Constantine will be Father Nicholas
Aiello of the Weatherford
church. The artifacts
feature century old Bibles
and a 450-year-old chalice.
Zac Gulick, collegiate activities board director, said
Constantine will also speak
about his upbringing in the
Middle East.
For more information, contact Gulick at
580.774.3767 or gulickz@
student.swosu.edu.
Like us on Facebook for news and sports updates.
The Elk City Daily News.
Notice is hereby given of the seizure and intended
forfeiture by the State of Oklahoma of 1998 Cadillac
Deville VIN/1G6KD54Y0WU719828; and One Hundred
Eighty-Six Dollars ($186.00) Cash hereinafter referred to
as Vehicle and Cash.
Said Vehicle and Cash were seized on the 19th
day of September, 2012, relating to Possession of
Controlled Dangerous Substance with Intent to
Distribute - Marijuana. Said vehicle was seized under
Title 63 § 2-503 (A)(3) which states the following shall
be subject to forfeiture: All property which is used or
intended for use as a container for property described in
paragraphs 1, 2, 5 and 6 of this subsection. Said Vehicle
was seized under Title 63 § 2-503 (A)(4) which states
the following shall be subject to forfeiture: All
conveyances, including aircraft, vehicles, vessel or farm
implements which are used to transport, conceal, or
cultivate for the purpose of distribution as defined in the
Uniform Controlled Dangerous Substances Act, or which
are used in any manner to facilitate the transportation or
IVESTER, IVESTER & IVESTER PLLC • ATTORNEYS AT LAW • P.O. BOX 160 • SAYRE, OKLAHOMA 73662 • P.O. BOX 1950 • ELK CITY, OKLAHOMA 73648
cultivation
for the purpose of sale or receipt of property
described in paragraphs 1 or 2 of this subsection or when
the property described in paragraphs 1 or 2 of this
section is unlawfully possessed by an occupant thereof.
Said Cash was seized under Title 63 § 2-503 (A)(6)
which states the following shall be subject to forfeiture:
All things of value furnished or intended to be furnished,
in exchange for a controlled dangerous substance in
violation of the Uniform Controlled Dangerous
Substances Act, all proceeds traceable to such an
exchange and all monies, negotiable instruments and
securities used, or intended to be used, to facilitate any
violation of the Uniform Controlled Dangerous
Substances Act. By reason thereof, the said Vehicle and
Cash are subject to confiscation and forfeiture in
accordance with the laws of the State of Oklahoma, Title
63, Section 2-503 (A)(3)(4)(6).
Further notice is hereby given that within fortyfive (45) days after mailing this notice, the owner of the
above described Vehicle and Cash and any other party in
interest or claimant thereof, may file a verified answer
with the Clerk of the District Court of Beckham County,
P.O. Box 520, Sayre, OK 73662.
Further notice is hereby given that if at the end of
forty-five (45) days after this notice has been mailed and
there be no verified answer on file, the District Court of
Beckham County, Oklahoma, shall hear evidence on the
facts of the unlawful use of the above described Vehicle
and Cash and shall order said Vehicle and Cash forfeited
to the State of Oklahoma, if such facts be provided.
Issued this 30th day of October, 2012.
Dennis A. Smith
District Attorney
By: Michael A. Abel
Assistant District Attorney
ATTEST:
Donna Howell
Court Clerk
By: Mary Blevins
Deputy
CERTIFICATE OF MAILING
I certify that a true and correct copy of the above
and foregoing notice of Forfeiture was mailed by
certified return receipt to:
Shae Michael Cloud
9128 S. Darlington Ave
Tulsa, OK 74137-4005
Gillian Cloud
2548 E Second St
Tulsa, OK 74104-1904
by depositing the same in the US Post Office with the
postage thereon duly prepaid this 30th day of October,
2012.
Michael A. Abel
Assistant District Attorney
(Published in the Elk City Daily News February 14,
2013.)
Father Constantine Nasr, right, a ninth generation
Orthodox Christian priest from Palestine, holds a
450-year-old chalice and Father Nicholas Aiello holds
two century old Bibles. The two will share facts and
artifacts at 5 p.m., Feb. 27 in the Stafford Center. Photo
provided.
Classifieds
Page 6
The Elk City Daily News • Elk City, Oklahoma
Help Wanted
FT RECEPTIONIST position
available for physician’s
office. Must be able to
work well with the public.
Experience a plus but not
required. Please send
resume to: “Receptionist,”
PO Box 1009, Elk City, OK
73648.
Looking for motivated men
and women for Oilfield
Company Sales Representative. Salary plus commission. Benefits after 90 day
trial period. 8-5, Monday
through Friday plus on
call 24/7 at least one week
out of every month. 3
years sales experience
required. Oilfield contacts
a plus! Apply in person at
The SydCo System, 10879
Highway 44, Foss, OK
(across from Pendleton’s
Truck Stop). No phone calls
please. SydCo is an EOE.
AMBASSADOR HOTEL:
Now hiring front desk position. Apply in person, 2606
E. Hwy 66, Elk City.
Drive-N-Go is now accepting
applications for management positions. Excellent
starting pay, full benefits
after 90 days, great opportunity. Experience helpful,
not required. Send resume
or application to 1422
W. 3rd. Serious applicants
only please.
LUGREG TRUCKING
is looking for full-time
SHOP HELP. No experience necessary. Apply in
person, 3421 S. Hwy 6; call
580/243-7492.
HealthCare Innovations
Private Services is now
accepting applications for
a Personal Care Attendant
in the Elk City, Cheyenne,
and Sayre area. Please call
Jennifer Cox at 1-866-5432834. “HCIPS is an Equal
Opportunity Employer.”
WANTED: TIRE MAN w/
field and road service
experience. Must pass
drug screening. Apply in
person, L&R TIRE, 1204
South Main, Elk City.
Wanted: Experienced
mechanic. Must have own
tools. Monday-Friday,
8-5:30. Salary negotiable.
Apply in person at D&D
parts and service center,
south of Clinton on Highway 183.
LICENSED HVAC
JOURNEYMAN
for heat and air
conditioning company.
Benefits and competitive
pay. Call (580) 482-2182
for more information.
Help Wanted
Lost & Found
REALTY
Mobile Homes
Drilling Fluids Technology, Inc. is looking to hire
a class B CDL driver with
a hazmat endorsement to
work out of the Elk City
area. Please contact Rick
St. Cyr at 405-375-6282.
Found black female lab with
white on chest. Collar with
Circle M tags. She had a
white cone around her head
and an injury to her leg. 4
3/4 miles w of Hutch’s off
of Hwy 6. 580-225-6029.
WANTED: $You don’t have
to be rich$ To get our
homes. A DEED is all you
need! NO LAND :(? DON’T
CRY! We’ll get you some!
Low down payments. WAC
405-631-3200
Bell Ave Nursing Center is
now hiring housekeepers.
FT & PT. Apply in person
at Bell Ave. 2301 Bell. No
phone calls please!
FOUND: Female chocolate
lab. 1 p.m. Wednesday, Feb.
6, near library in Elk City.
Has had puppies. Call 580472-3472.
Double your tax refund up
to $5,000!! Use refund and
receive a Visa gift card
with new home purchase.
No refund? Use your land/
family land ZERO down.
Don’t prejudge credit, E-Z
qualify by phone. WAC 405631-7600 or 405-834-8814.
Machinist CNC or manual.
Insurance and benefits. Apply in person at M-1 Machine, 3833 W. 3rd, Elk
City. 225-6826.
Part-time job with flex hours.
Neat handwriting a requirement. Send resume with
handwriting sample to
BCAC Box 80 Sayre, OK
73662.
LUGREG TRUCKING, LLC
seeking experienced and
dependable CLASS A CDL
DRIVERS to work out of
Elk City yard. Excellent
pay; benefit package available, Apply in person, 3421
S. Hwy 6, Elk City.
Apartments
APts & Condos
FOR RENT
Small
Corporate Units
Available!
Pets
Welcome!
Park Place Apts
Clubhouse Condos
BRIGHTON MANAGEMENT • 243-0624
PUBLISHER’S NOTICE
All real estate advertised herein
is subject to the Federal Fair
Housing Act, which makes it illegal
to advertise “any preference,
limitation,
or
discrimination
because of race, color, religion,
sex, handicap, familial status or
national origin, or intention to make
any such preference, limitation or
discrimination.”
This newspaper will not knowingly
accept any advertising for real
estate which is in violation of
the law. All persons are hereby
informed that all dwellings
advertised are available on an equal
opportunity basis.
Garage Sales
LARGE MOVING SALE!
Household, office and
woodworking shop. Friday and Saturday, Feb.
15-16 and 22-23. 8 a.m. to
5 p.m. Sturdy Oak Wood
Crafts, 213 S. Jefferson St.,
Elk City (behind Ray’s Boot
& Saddle).
MOVING SALE! 212 Cypress, Elk City. Friday 4-7
p.m., Saturday 8-noon. Everything priced to sell!
For Lease
For lease in the Elk City
area. Single Bay Truck
Shop with multiple office space and large lot
for parking of trucks and
equipment. Good location. Lease amount dependent on length of lease. Call
580-243-8069.
Livestock
Serviceable age Black Angus
Bulls, Reg. or Comm. 6 different bloodlines to fit your
cowherd needs. For more
info contact Thomas Angus, Reydon, 580/655-4318.
Houses For Rent
Golf Course Condo for rent
now. Call 580-243-0624 for
more information.
Hotel in Wheeler, TX; executive stay, newly remodeled,
great prices! 806-826-3790.
Tips to
draw attention
to your ad.
1.) Keep it simple &
Looking for a GREAT
place to call home?
Wingate
Management
QUEEN CITY MH PARK:
We Now Move Mobile Homes. Mobile
Homes Rent/Sale! We Buy
MH For CASH! 580/2250156, 821-2310
(If an ad is too busy it can
be over looked.)
2.) Be mindful of how
many pictures.
(Depending on the size
more than one photo
can look busy.)
225-4495 374-1352
Studio, 1 &Available
2 BR Units
Corporate Units Available
OPEN• SATURDAY
220 Ridgecrest Drive 225-4495
374-1352
10-2
www.elkcityokapartments.com
Elk City, OK
Circulation Manager
Full-time with Vacation & Benefits!
The ECDN is seeking an organized, motivated,
detail-oriented person who is comfortable in a fast-paced
environment and with customer service.
Walk through or
info:
580-799-0288 or
580-225-5322
521 West Third
580-225-3699
Wayne Wilson - Broker/Owner
580-243-8378
www.elkcity-ok-realestate.com
ALSO VISIT US ON REALTOR.COM
CALL US FOR YOUR HUD HOME PURCHASES
WILSON REALTY
NEW LISTINGS!
104 Grandmark-Beautiful updated home on 1.43 acres, 3bd/2ba, living room + den......................$219,900
304 N. Madison-brick, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, large kitchen/dining room, utility room, ¼ acre.......$140,000
400 E 6th, Leedey-2 bedrooms, 1 ½ baths, remodeled kitchen, CH/A, new roof, garage, cellar.....$50,000
Merritt area-new home/2.5 acres, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, utility room/sink, covered patio...............$240,000
515 Schely, Leedey-Mobile home, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, corner lot, metal roof, cellar.......................$25,000
10 acres off HWY 34, south of Carter - raw land, owner will carry with down.......................................$25,000
905 N. Howard -beautiful, remodeled, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, granite counter tops, cellar...............$155,000
401 E. Madison, Carter-2bd/1ba, metal roof, 8 lots, electric kitchen stove...............................................$35,000
19094 HWY 6-Solitaire DWMH, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2.89 acres, 2 shop buildings, pool..............$189,000
Magnificent home on 10 acres, 4bd, 3 full ba, beautiful kitchen cabinets, new shop, cellar..........$380,000
3,600 sq ft shop/3 lg overhead doors, office, kitchen, 1 ½ baths, lighted fenced yard, 7 acres.....$250,000
3 Country Court-4bd/4 ½ ba, pool, ponds, 1.77 ac...CALL
1205 Bluestem-3bd/4 ½ ba, office, swim spa.....CALL
1201 N Falcon Rd-custom 5 bd/3ba, shop, corner..$449,900
1704 W Ave D - very nice, 3bd/2ba, 30x40 shop, $199,900
902 N Howard - 3bd/2ba, fireplace, privacy fenced.......$190,000
106 Timberridge-3bd/2ba, sprinkler, fenced..........$149,000
OTHER TOWNS!
221 NW Boundary Rd, Erick-3bd/2ba, cellar...$150,000
201 Magnolia/312 W 3rd, Erick-2 houses...$142,000
1631 Crestview Dr., Cordell-3bd/2ba, lr/fp..$138,900
420 S 9th-Clinton-Historic 3bd/2ba, dining...CONTRACT
304/306 Bryan-BF-3/1 ½, lr+den, own/bkr.$120,000
145 Watan, Colony-DWMH, 3bd/2ba.....$115,000
320 Acres, Sweetwater-Heart of Oilfield!........ CONTRACT
160 ac, prime hunting land, river bottom..............$800,000
2 Parcels of 160 acres – Sweetwater-.............$560,000 each
Canute-new home/40 acres-1 ½ story, 3bd/2ba...CALL
240 Acres off I-40, will divide @ $5,000/ac...$360,000
160 acres of fenced pasture in Greer Co...$240,000
more than once.
(Most people do not
respond to ads the first
time they are seen.)
Duties:
Maintain carriers (payroll, bookkeeping),
communicate with retailers, help with production
(special runs & promotions), mail room duties,
downtown newspaper delivery route,
maintain equipment at stores (collect money,
maintenance on TK80 vending machines).
Apply in person at 206 West Broadway
604 N. Sheb Wooley, Erick-3bd/2 ½ ba......$110,000
312B Pawnee, BF-4 bd/2bd, lr + den, 2 shops...$95,000
802 S Washington-Hobart-DWMH, 3bd/2ba...$90,000
304 Potomac-BF-3-4bd/2ba,patio.................................$65,000
101A Potomac, BF-3bd/1.5ba, garage, fence...$45,000
206 Denise- BF-4bd/1ba, fenced yard..$38,000
DWMH/5 ac, 3bd/3ba, lr+den, shop...$225,000
Merritt-3bd/2ba, lr + den, 1.38 acres...$196,500
2bd/2 ba, 80 acres, shop/wood stove...$150,000
10 acres on HWY 34, lots of trees...CONTRACT
1206 W. 1st St, nice building lot.........CONTRACT
314 N 1st, Sayre- 2 corner lots, trees...$7,000
COMMERCIAL
ElkRun RV Park, managers house, 10ac...CALL Store/house, 5 acres, Erick, near I-40...$179,000
Elk City restaurant, seats 80, great location....$475,000 27 acres, highway frontage, Burns Flat...OFFERS
Retail building on 3rd St/Rt 66, lease/sale..$359,000 Shop/2bay/lifts/office/warehouse......OFFERS
Convenience store/grill/fuel, busy HWY..$350,000 509 S. Maple, Erick-6,000 sf, building.....$93,000
160 acres of minerals in Greer County...$288,000 60 Watan/Colony, “Standing Bear Cafe”..$75,000
4.) Purchase color.
(People are more
likely to notice your ad
if it is in color.)
• Nancy Henrichsen 225-5331 • Sherri Carlson 243-9439
• Stacey Carnes 821-4804 • James Kindsfather 821-2225
• Kristie Perkey 243-8738 • Jennifer Cherry 817-907-8340
EXTRA! EXTRA!
HOT OFF THE PRESS!
E
“We Specialize in Service”
lk City
Realty
1412 West Third
Elk City, OK 73644
580-225-2378
www.elkcityrealtyok.com
NEW LISTING
New Listing! 1821 Cattlemens Dr - 3bd/2ba, 2 acres, 30x30 shop, 2 living areas, security system...$245,900
nly gift
they’ll
Find what The New Listing!
116 Mitchell! 2 living areas, 3bd/2ba, 20x20 shop w/ saferoom, appx 2053 sf.................$180,000
you’re lookingget toNew
open
times!
Listing! 257
1005 Bowman,
4bd/2ba, open floor plan, double fireplace, new wood scraped floors, updated
interior texture and paint, new appliances, sprinkler system, cellar in garage, move-in-ready................$219,500
for in the
New Listing! 1005 Kathy’s Pl, 3bd/2ba, great kitchen w/ Corian counters, sprinkler system...............$245,000
classifieds. $
*
83 a year!
206 West Broadway • 225-3000 • www.ecdailynews.com
New Listing! 910 Kathy’s Pl, two living areas w/ 3-4bd/2ba, updated kitchen, gazebo and more!.....$239,500
New Listing! 1122 N. Washington, 3bd/1ba, appx 1600sf, new roof and wood deck..........................$109,500
That’s a 36%
savings
over
the newstand
prices.30x50 shop on 1 acre, great neighborhood..................................$222,500
New
Listing!
6 Liberty
Ln, 3bd/2ba,
New Listing! 305 NE Hwy 66, Sayre, 3bd/2ba, 2485 sf, built in 2004, a must see!!!.............................$250,000
Buy
theListing!
Complete
Coverage Package
New
Commercial
Building/Sayre 7 offices, 3 bathrooms, reception area, great location.....$180,000
by December 14 for your chance to
New Listing!
209 NFire!
Jefferson office building w/ 5 offices, reception area, 2 meeting/board rooms..Lease Only
win a Kindle
New Listing! 5000
sq.subscriptions
ft. building
* Mail
extra. on HWY 66, Elk City, Great location, previously retail.......................$325,000
RESIDENTIAL
Business Services
B&J
Mini Storage
• All Sizes
• 4 Locations
• All Fenced & Lighted
• Low Cost Rates
• Discounts for Pre-Pay
• Outside RV Storage
• 7 Day Phone-Long Hours
225-6300
COMMERCIAL
408 N Adams/Reduced..........79,500 2 Tracts, EC Industrial Park...contract
205 Blackburn/Reduced..........79,500 715 W. 3rd .............................130,000
204 Blackburn/New Listing...89,000 307 NE Hwy66/Sayre Office Bldg...180,000
108 Ramsey Pl/New Listing...92,500
1023 W. Ave C/Reduced..........95,000 1020 W Main(lease available)..199,000
1122 N. Washington/New Listing...109,500 822 W. 3rd St. /5000 sq.ft. bldg only...325,000
1017 Ave C/New Listing......115,000 6 acres @ EC Industrial Park.............475,000
415 Hoover Circle/Reduced...........120,000 Well Established Restaurant/New Listing......499,500
115 Mary/New Listing...................122,000
OTHER TOWNS
814 W Ave C........................................Contract
1117 W. Ave B/New Listing........Contract 214 Adams, Canute/Dblwide....69,500
524 N. Calloway/New.............135,000
313 Ridgecrest/New Const...142,500 715 S 6th Canute................................115,500
2007 W 7th Pl.....................Contract 305 NE Hwy66, Sayre/New Listing...250,000
311 Ridgecrest/New Const..145,900
114 Oakridge......................Contract ACREAGES with RESIDENCE
1102 Colorado/Reduced.........169,500 E of EC Golf Course 4/2, 2.2 Ac...Contract
520 Kimberly..........................Contract
301 Sondra Dr/Reduced.....Contract W. of EC, Dbl wide, 4bd/2ba, 5 ac..Contract
110 Mockingbird/Reduced..........208,000 1821 Cattlemens Drive, 3bd/2ba, 2ac...245,900
115 Peggy/New Listing.............Contract W.Hwy6 4/2, 5ac/reduced.....Contract
138 Calhoon..................................Contract
1005 Bowman/New Listing............219,500 1301 W 7th 10ac, 1426sf, 2bd..........350,000
6 Liberty Ln/New Listing..............222,500
LOTS & ACREAGES
910 Kathy’s Pl/New Listing.........239,500
1005 Kathy’s Pl/New Listing......245,000 1955 S Randall, 1.09ac......................44,000
305 NE Hwy66, Sayre/New List..250,000 45 ac (MOL) S of EC/New....270,000
Judy Burson 580-821-2168 • Robbie Allen 580-821-1908
Ella Fagan 580-225-5526 • Charmaine Smith 580-821-0075
Deedra Watson 580-243-9540 • Vickie Parker 580-303-0615
The Elk City Daily News
publishes lost and found pet ads
for FREE!
Requirements:
High School diploma, moderate Microsoft Office,
Dos programs and internet skills, business
environment work history, Customer service
202ShellBlvd-remodeled4bd/2ba.,cornerlot.........$125,000
321 W 1st -2bd/1ba, 2 story, corner lot, garage...$119,900
105 Thornton, 3bd, 1.5ba, updated.................$87,500
611 W. 6th-3bd, 2ba, large yard..................$63,900
127 Carpenter, 2-3bd/1ba, fenced yard, cellar..CONTRACT
1321 S. Franklin - 3bd/1ba, kitchen appliances.....$25,000
HOME ON ACREAGES / ACREAGES / LOTS!
3.) Run your ad
220 Ridgecrest Road
• home?
Looking
for a GREAT
to call
A GREAT
Place place
to Call
Home!
• CimarronStudio,
Ridge
& 2 BR Units
• 1Raintree
III
Corporate
Units
• Timber
Creek
Between Elk City
& Canute. Almost
completed!
MORE ELK CITY LISTINGS!
to the point.
Mobile Home Parks
POTTER’S MH PARK: RV
Spaces for rent. 30amp for
$235 and 50amp for $270.
Water, Sewer and electricity furnished. Storm Shelter.225-2186, 243-8040.
New Country Home!
Hotels
Office Space
FOR RENT; All utilities
paid, lease negotiable, $500
for 1, $900 for 2, 400 sf
each. 580-453-9502
Thursday, February 14, 2013
Contact Classifieds for more information.
580-225-3000
classifieds@ecdailynews.com
Get away from the daily
The you.
nly gift they’ll
routine & take us with
get to open 257 times!
83* a year!
$
Add the e-paper only $1/mo.
Keep up with the news wherever
you go via tablet or phone.That’s a 36% savings over the newstand prices.
Buy the Complete Coverage Package
by December 14 for your chance to
win a Kindle Fire!
206 West Broadway • 225-3000 • www.ecdailynews.com
* Mail subscriptions extra.
Activities
Thursday, February 14, 2013
The Elk City Daily News • Elk City, Oklahoma
Page 7
Woman pays grandkids to not smoke
Dear Abby
DEAR ABBY: It bothers me greatly
to know that so many children continue to start smoking at an early age.
My husband and I did that, and now
we're paying an awful price.
We have had emphysema for years.
Four of our children also took up the
habit. I finally started paying them to
quit ($100 every two weeks they didn't
smoke -- up to five payments).
I decided to head off the temptation
our grandchildren would face.
We told them if they didn't start
smoking by the age of 18, we'd pay
them $2,000. So far, seven of the 10
have collected a nice check on their
18th birthday, and we expect the
remaining three to collect in turn.
They have grown up understanding
that cigarettes are "gross" and, if they
start smoking, it will cost them a lot of
money!
Abby, you're the best way to spread
ideas. I hope you will think it worthwhile to pass this one along.
DO AS I SAY, GAINESVILLE, FLA.
DEAR DO AS I SAY: I'm passing it
along, but frankly, I'm not crazy about
bribery. One would think that, having
witnessed firsthand the serious health
issues you and your husband are experiencing, your grandchildren would
have understood what awaited them if
they took up the habit.
The tobacco industry has done a
huge disservice to young people by
marketing their products to them
-- and not just in the form of cigarettes, but also with flavored chewing
tobacco, which is equally addictive.
According to the U.S. Surgeon
General, nearly 90 percent of smokers
start by age 18.
In 2006, U.S. District Judge Gladys
E. Kessler of Washington, D.C., ruled
the major cigarette manufacturers
were guilty of fraud and racketeering
under the federal RICO Act. (When
the tobacco companies appealed, the
Supreme Court rejected it without
comment.)
She wrote that for more than 50
years the tobacco industry "lied, misrepresented and deceived the American public, including smokers and
the young people they avidly sought
as 'replacement smokers,' about the
devastating effects of smoking....
"They suppressed research, they
destroyed documents, they manipulated the use of nicotine so as to increase and perpetuate addiction, they
distorted the truth ... so as to discourage smokers from quitting."
It is extremely important that
young people be educated about -and prevented from -- using tobacco.
Smokers who start as teenagers
increase their chances of becoming
addicted.
Think about it: reduced lung function, early heart disease, cancer,
asthma, disfigurement. Yes -- it could
happen to YOU.
DEAR ABBY: I have a wonderful
husband and adorable grandchildren,
but I have developed deep feelings
for a man I met at the gym where I go
with a friend.
I find myself thinking of this man
during the day and night.
I don't want to have an affair nor do
I want him to know what I feel. When
the thoughts of him come, they overwhelm me so I try to pray. I have no
plans to cheat on my husband. What
else can I do?
CONFIDENTIAL IN GREENVILLE, N.C.
DEAR CONFIDENTIAL: Because
you have a wonderful husband and a
life you do not want to be disrupted, I
recommend that when you finish exercising at the gym you take a COLD
shower. And if that doesn't work, go to
an all-female gym.
HAPPY VALENTINE'S DAY TO
MY READERS: Thanks to you, writing this column is a love-in every day
of the year.
www.ecdailynews.com
Pearls Before Swine
Get Fuzzy
Dilbert
Garfield
CROSSWORD
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School Talk
Page 8
The Elk City Daily News • Elk City, Oklahoma
A hands-on lesson
Students in Brenda Morgan’s sixth-grade language arts class create dioramas to depict
scenes from the book the Boy in the Striped Pajamas. Students read the fictional title set
during World War II, a story seen through the innocent eyes of Bruno, the 8-year-old son of
the commandant at a concentration camp, whose forbidden friendship with a Jewish boy
on the other side of the camp fence has startling and unexpected consequences. Photo
provided.
Thursday, February 14, 2013
The perks of
being in gym
Ryann Richardson
Grandview sixth-grader
Gym is what keeps me in
shape.
Mrs. Wilson is our coach
for gym. She is a good coach
for p.e.
She knows a bunch of exercises that we do the days we
have gym.
She pushes us until we
can’t go any farther. She is a
great inspiration to us.
She teaches us different
sports. She picks a sport and
we learn about that sport for
several weeks.
We also do exercises some
weeks.
She has taught me a lot of
things I didn’t know about or
how to do.
She makes us change out of
our school clothes to our gym
clothes that we bring from
home.
After we get done changing we run for three minutes
everyday that we do gym.
After we get done running
we sit in a circle and we do 10
stretches every time we have
gym.
She makes us take fitness
tests. Gym really keeps you
active.
When you learn these new
things it makes you want to
keep doing them at home too.
Ryann is the daughter of
Teena and Brian Richardson.
Pioneer students have fun, recognized for good behavior
Vernetta Felton’s kindergarten class enjoyed dressing backward for letter B week.
Pictured are Hooper Stover, Kelsey Davis, Korbyn Ibrom, Cambrie Filyaw, Asia Maddox,
Hunter Laughlin and Ryan Beck. Photo provided.
Grandview Star Reader
Grandview’s ARP All-Star for the month of February is Kailey Clark. She read and tested
for 56.2 points during the month of January to receive the honor. Photo provided.
Pioneer Elementary recently named its students of the week and star students.
Pre-k p.m. Students of the Week: Aiden Hall, Joshua Sanchez-Carbajal, Dafne
Hernandez, Kiah Simmons and Khali Pedro.
Pre-k a.m. Students of the Week: Caden Walters, Embree McGuire, Camri Bodey,
McKenzie Scoggins and Isaiah Arvizu.
Kindergarten Star Students: Justin Goolsby, Christian Campos, Mason Helton, Charles
Medina, Christopher Rivas, Sarah Gieswein, Gunner Coffey, Lyndsey Davis, Taylor
Musick, Nova Underwood, Fabian Armendariz and Ella Sottile (not pictured). Photos
provided.