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herrick`s herrick`s
MorningNews
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4-H Demo contest
Kindergarten
added at Stalker
By LESLIE SIEGER
lsieger@am-news.com
Morning News — Leslie Mielke
BLACKFOOT
—
Administrators of the
Blackfoot School District
have announced that a
kindergarten program will
be offered at Donald D.
Stalker Elementary School
for the upcoming 201516 school year. In conjunction with this change,
classes for Vaughn Hugie
Preschool will be held at
Irving Kindergarten Center.
“We have received
positive feedback from the
Groveland and Wapello
kindergarten programs,”
said Interim Superintendent
Brian Kress. “This allows
us to utilize classrooms at
Irving Kindergarten Center
for pre-school and outreach.”
Kindergarten classes for
students living in the Ridge
Crest and Stoddard school
zones will be held in the
west wing of the Irving
Kindergarten Center. The
east wing has been used
for Child Nutrition services, Transportation, and
Custodial offices.
Administrators
will
present to the school board
the option of selling the
Vaughn Hugie Preschool
property for added revenue to the school district.
Registration for all kindergarten students will
take place Aug. 13 during
the hours of 8 a.m. to 4
p.m. at the school building where classes are to
be held:
Donald D. Stalker,
See STALKER, 2A
Discounted EISF
Six youth earn blue ribbons tickets available
All contestants in the 4-H demonstration contest earned a blue ribbon. Addison Stoddard won the top rosette. From
left are Peyton Stoddard, Gracie Carpenter, Mia Wanstrom, Alessandrah Cernyar, Morgan Reynolds, Marnie Spencer,
Bingham County Extension Educator; and Addison Stoddard.
By LESLIE MIELKE
lmielke@am-news.com
BLACKFOOT — Six
4-H members participated in the demonstration contest on Thursday
at the Bingham County
Extension office. Each 4-H
member earned a blue ribbon.
Addison Stoddard won
the top rosette.
For her demonstration,
“I made non-fat powdered milk,” Addison said.
“With it I made yogurt,
sour cream, cream cheese
and sweet and condensed
milk that I used to make a
raspberry-lemonade pie.”
Alessandrah Cernyar
demonstrated how to
make bottle top bracelets.
Gracie Carpenter demonstrated respecting your
horse.
“How you respect your
horse is keep your distance from your horse,”
Gracie said. “Remember
he is bigger than you.
“Show your horse
affection by the way your
approach him and handle
him,” she said. “Horses
have habits that are just as
difficult for him to break
as our own habits are difficult to break.”
Morgan Reynolds demonstrated how to prepare
your horse for the Horse
Show.
Mia Wanstrom demonstrated the interesting
breeds of rabbits. Her
favorite breed of rabbit is
the mini-lop.
Peyton Stoddard demonstrated how to make an
egg-in-a-hole.
“My mom knew how to
do it and taught us in our
4-H club,” she said.
“So what did you learn
from this activity?” asked
Bingham County Extension
Educator Marnie Spencer.
“I learned how to speak
in public,” one participant
said.
“Some people would
rather die rather than
speak in public, so it is an
important skill to learn,”
Spencer said. “It gives you
confidence.”
For the MORNING NEWS
BLACKFOOT — The
Eastern Idaho State Fair is
less than 40 days away,
and right now gate and
carnival tickets are being
offered at discount pricing when you purchase
them on or before Sept.
4. To make your ticket
buying experience more
enjoyable, you can easily purchase carnival and
gate tickets at a discounted price from the comfort
of your home or work at
www.funatthefair.com.
Purchasing
tickets
before opening day will
save you .50 cents on each
Adult &
Senior ticket and keep
you from waiting in line
for entry. Advance adult
(12 & up) tickets are
$5.50, Advance Senior (65
& up) tickets are $3.50,
Children’s (6-11) tickets
are only $2 and children 5
and under are always free.
Ultimate Happy Passes
are also being offered for
only $40 (a $64 value),
and include daily fair gate
See TICKETS, 2A
Crash sends man to hospital, closes freeway
By LESLIE SIEGER
lsieger@am-news.com
BLACKFOOT — Idaho State Police
reported Thursday that approximately 4
a.m. Edward A. Neal, 34, of Elko, Nev.,
was driving southbound on Interstate
15, near milepost 99, in a 1997 Pontiac
Grand Am.
Neal drove off the right shoulder of
the road, came back onto the roadway,
and then drove off the left shoulder of
the roadway, and into the median. The
vehicle rolled from the median into the
northbound lanes of travel, ejecting Neal.
The vehicle came to rest in the northbound travel lane. Donald F. Gavin, 54, of Idaho Falls
was driving northbound on Interstate
15 in a 2007 Freightliner pulling triple
trailers. Gavin’s truck struck Neal’s unoccupied vehicle.
Neal was not wearing a seatbelt. He
was transported by ground ambulance to
Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center
in Idaho Falls. Gavin was wearing a seatbelt. He was not injured. Northbound traffic was diverted at
the north Blackfoot Exit onto US 91. The
northbound lanes of Interstate 15 were
blocked for approximately five hours.
Photo courtesy of Doug Bowers
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Vol. 111, No. 182. Copyright 2014. All Rights Reserved.
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2A
LOCAL
Friday, July 31, 2015
am-news.com
MorningNews
Morning News — Leslie Mielke
Rachel Durschi (on left) and Talea Murdoch modeled their
Morning News — Leslie Mielke creations during the 2015 Bingham County 4-H Style
Helping unpack buckles for the upcoming Little Buckaroo Rodeo in Firth are (from left) Revue on Thursday.
Caleb Edwards, Lane Carter and Oakley Carter.
Buckaroo registration open 4-H members
By LESLIE MIELKE
lmielke@am-news.com
FIRTH — Registration
for the Little Buckaroo in
Firth is from 6-9 o’clock
tonight, and from 10 a.m.
to 2 p.m. Saturday at the
Firth High Vo Ag Building.
The entry fee for each
496 W
Hwy 39
child is $5, to be paid at
the time of registration.
Each child can enter one
event. Fee includes admission to the rodeo. The Little
Buckaroo Rodeo begins at
7 p.m. on Friday, Aug. 7,
and Saturday, Aug. 8, at the
Firth Riverview Arena.
Tickets can be purchased
at the gate. Adult tickets
cost $5 each; children 12
and under are $2.
In honor of the 50th
anniversary of the Little
Buckaroo Rodeo, t-shirts
and buckles can be purchased for $10 apiece. An
embroidered ball cap is
available for $15.
Now offeriNg
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Auto Rental Service 785-2340
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Mobile: (208)681-4000 Office: (208)785-4000
220 N. Meridian, Blackfoot | More Info @ www.jedtaylor.com
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showcase style
By LESLIE MIELKE
lmielke@am-news.com
BLACKFOOT — Ten
4-H members took the
stage to model their sewing creations at the 2015
Bingham County 4-H Style
Revue Thursday evening.
Asked
what
they
about sewing, soon-to-be
10-year-old Brad Fielding
said, “I kind of like it.”
Allie Hoge, age 10,
said, “I know I can make
my own stuff without having to buy it at the store.”
Amaya Williams said,
“My mom sews and helped
me start. I learned how to
sew straight stitches and
how to sew clothes.”
Brynlie Davis, age 9,
said, “My grandma taught
me how to make a skirt.”
Natalie Bolander, age
11, said “I started when I
was little. I made a skirt.”
Rachel Durtschi, age
17, has been sewing for 10
years. She will attend BYU
this fall.
“Sewing was very popular where I grew up in
Wyoming,” said Rachel.
“We do [our sewing projects] in a group.”
Talea Murdoch won
the top rosette. “I’m from
Shelley,” she said. “[The
4-H group] I sew in is
headed by Rachel’s mom.”
TICKETS, continued from 1A
admission and admission
to the horse races on Sept.
6, 7, 11, and 12.
Carnival
wristbands
and coupon books are also
being sold in advance at a
discount this year. Carnival
wristbands, which are
good for unlimited carnival rides any single day of
the fair, are only $25 if you
purchase them in advance
but return to their original
price of $30 once the Fair
opens. The EISF also offers
a 20 percent advance discount on ride coupons,
allowing you to purchase
a book of 30 coupons for
only $20.
You can also take advantage of mid-week savings
by purchasing Pepsi
wristbands
that
INCLUDE gate admission
along with unlimited carnival rides for just $25.
This year’s Pepsi Wristband
Days are Tuesday, Sept. 8;
Wednesday, Sept. 9; and
Thursday, Sept. 10. Pepsi
wristbands can be purchased in advance, or outside each main gate of the
Fair on Sept. 8, 9, and 10.
Along with the ease of
purchasing carnival, gate,
and grandstand event tickets online at www.funatthefair.com, you may also
purchase your tickets at
Vickers Western Stores in
Idaho Falls and Pocatello,
at the Ticket Office in
Blackfoot, or over the
phone by calling (208)
785-2480, Ext. 7.
STALKER, from 1A
Groveland Elementary,
Wapello, and Fort Hall.
I.T.
Stoddard
and
Ridge Crest registration
will take place at Irving
Kindergarten Center.
According to Idaho
Code, parents are required
to provide a certified birth
certificate and current
immunization
records.
Additionally,
students
enrolling in kindergarten,
for the 2015-16 school
year must be 5 years old
on or before Sept. 1, 2015
(Idaho Statute 33-201).
MorningNews
LOCAL
am-news.com
Death Notice
Theron Edwards, 78
Monday, Aug 3
• Bingham County 4-H Fair will be in full swing at
the EISF. Some of the activities include:
° Market Lamb, Meat Goat and Rabbit Weigh-In
begins at 8 a.m. Judging of the animals and presentation by the 4H members proceeds throughout
Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday.
° The Table Setting Contest begins at 9 a.m. on
Tuesday, at the Needlecraft Building.
° The Sandwich Art Activity begins at 11:30 a.m.
• Free lunch for ages 1-18 at Jason Lee Methodist
Church, 11:30-12:45 and Stalker Elementary, 11:1512:30. Sack lunches will be served Mon-Fri, through
Aug 21st, in conjunction with the Blackfoot School
District 55 Child Nutrition Program. For information,
please call 785-3611.
• Bingham Academy Registration from 9 a.m. - 4
p.m. at the Bingham County Riverside Plaza.
• Blackfoot Art Center four-week session of summer art classes begins today. Classes include a preschool open-ended art class on Monday mornings.
Mondays through Thursdays offer a variety classes for
children ages 6-12. Tuesday and Friday afternoons
will offer teen art classes. Daily art camps are also
available for kids ages 6-12, which include two classes, open studio time, and a snack. The art center also
offers two adult art studio classes including an open
studio class Tuesdays from 6:30-8:30 p.m. and a new
drawing and sketching class on Wednesdays from
10 a.m. to 12 p.m. For more information, visit the
Blackfoot Art Center at 73 N. Broadway between 10
a.m. and 5:30 p.m. Monday-Friday or call 252-7126
or visit blackfootartcenter.org.
Submitted photo
Twelve-year-old Jacob Cox (pictured with his sister Kelsey)
recently received a heart transplant and there will be a 5K
race at Journey’s End Golf Course in Shelley on Saturday to
celebrate and raise money for his medical bills.
surgery at five months and
again when he was three.
His parents always
knew Jacob would need a
transplant eventually and
it became clear the time
was coming in January
when Jacob began wearing down. Getting influenza B in April accelerated the need and Jacob
was only on the transplant
list for a couple weeks.
“Our lives will forever
be changed,” said Jacob’s
mom, Nicole Cox. “Jacob
gets to live a long time
hopefully. He will be able
to learn how to drive a
car, go on his first date,
get married and have a
family. That was almost
taken from him.”
For more information
on the race or to sign
up visit https://raceroster.
com/events/2015/6040/
all-aboard-jacobsexpress or search for
“All Aboard
Jacob’s
Express” on Facebook
or on gofundme.com if
you would like to make a
donation.
Anniversary
Spooners 66th
Melvin
and
Jerri
Spooner will celebrate
their 66th year anniversary
on Friday, July 31.
785-1320
ServiceS
Ma Petra Rico
Funeral Service:
10:00 a.m. Friday,
July 31, 2015 at St.
Bernard’s Catholic
Church
Don C. Elison
Funeral Service:
11:00 a.m. Saturday,
August 1, 2015 at the
Wapello 2nd Ward LDS
Chapel
Viewing:
6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.
Friday, July 31, 2015 at
Hawker Funeral Home
and one hour prior to
services at the church
for more info visit
hawkerfuneralhome.com
Now’s The Time!
Parts • Sales
Service
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Us On
Facebook! MerrickRV.com
Still Open for
Service &
Repairs!
Merrick
RV Store 785-7990
474 W. Hwy. 26 (Arco Hwy)
HARRIS DENTURE STUDIO
Frank C. Harris LD (Denturist)
OBITUARIES: The Morning News welcomes obituaries.
Photos should be of good quality and provided in .jpg format. For information about obituaries, please contact your
local funeral home or the Morning News at 785-1100.
Birthday wishes may be expressed for anyone over 90
years old by sending a photo to mnews@am-news.com.
ANNOUNCEMENTS such as engagements, marriages and
anniversaries run regularly in the Morning News. Send
news to mnews@am-news.com or call 785-1100.
Blackfoot Charter Community
Learning Center
Student Registration will be held on:
Wednesday, August 5th from 10 AM to 3 PM
Thursday, August 6th from 4 PM to 7 PM
BCCLC East Campus Commons
This registration is for all students
Kindergarten through 8th grades.
Both the Elementary school and the Middle
school will register students in the same place.
Please bring updated immunization records,
birth certificate, and payments for school
supplies and snacks.
Podiatrist
Board Certified
American
Board of Podiatric
Surgery
Gentle,
Personalized Care
• Diabetic Foot Care
Injuries & Sprains
• Warts • Flat Foot
• Minimal Incision
Surgery
Hammertoes
• Bunions • Heel Pain
• Ingrown Toenails
• Ankle Arthroscopy
Tuesday, Aug 4
• Bingham County 4-H Fair
° Swine Show at 8 a.m.
° Dairy Goat Show at 8:30 a.m.
° Needlecraft Building Open at 9 a.m., Int./Sr. Table
Setting Contest, Super Shopper Contest from 9-11
a.m.
3A
5K race to celebrate new heart
By JOE WILLIAMS
Theron Edwards, 78, passed away Thursday, July 30, jwilliams@am-news.com
2015 at Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center. Funeral
arrangements are pending and will be announced by
SHELLEY — A 12-yearHawker Funeral Home in Blackfoot.
old boy in Shelley recently received a new heart
and a celebration is set for
Saturday.
“All Aboard Jacob’s
Express” is a 5K race created to “celebrate a boy’s
new heart” and help raise
funds for his family.
Jacob Cox was placed
Friday, July 31
on a heart transplant list
in May and in less than
three weeks, he received
• Tough Enough to Wear Pink Night at The War
a new heart at Primary
Bonnet Round-Up Rodeo at Sandy Downs in Idaho
Children’s Hospital in Salt
Falls. Rodeo gates open at 5:30 p.m.; Pre-rodeo
Lake City, Utah.
events at 7 p.m.; Main rodeo to follow at 8 p.m. There
His neighbor Klarissa
will be giveaways for rodeo attendees. Get there early
Anderson,
a senior to be
for a free fun and other educational opportunities.
and four-year member of
Wear your brightest pink with pride to join the Pinkthe Shelley cross counOut to support breast cancer awareness.
try team has organized
• Bingham Health Care Foundation Golf
this race at Journey’s End
Tournament at Blackfoot Golf Course 8 a.m. This is a
Golf Course for her senior
4-person scramble and entry fee is $400 per team. For
project.
more information, contact Mark Baker at 782-2886 or
“I’m excited to do
mbaker@binghammemorial.org.
something
so impact• ISU scholarship deadline today for a new scholful for my senior project.
arship for female students from Blackfoot who are
I’m happy for his new
attending, living and working there during the fall of
heart. We’re going to have
2015. The Mary Pat Smith Humphrey Grant-in-Aid
music and balloons and,
Scholarship is available to a female from Blackfoot
of course, train whistles!”
who is pursuing any undergraduate major. The miniAndersen said. “I just met
mum GPA required is 2.5. Applications are available
Jacob and learned about
on ISU’s Bengal Online Scholarship System (BOSS).
his health problems when
To log into BOSS, visit: www.isu.edu/scholar and
we recently moved up the
click on the BOSS link. For further information, conroad from him.”
tact the ISU Scholarship Office at (208) 282-3315.
The race will be themed
• Little Buckaroo Rodeo registration from 6-9 p.m.
around
Jacob’s love for
at the Firth High Vo Ag Building. Registration is also
trains and all proceeds
on Saturday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Each child must
will go to him.
have parent or legal guardian’s signature at time of
Jacob was born with
registration. Entry fee of $5 per child to be paid at
Hypoplastic
Left Heart
time of registration. One event per child. Fee includes
Syndrome (HLHS), which
admission to rodeo. All registrations need to be turned
means the left side of his
in by Sunday, Aug. 2. For more information, email:
heart did not develop. He
littlebuckaroorodeo@hotmail.com or call Dixie Finck
had his first surgery at just
at 346-6051 or Kristine Edwards at 339-4831.
four days old. At three
• Bingham County 4-H Fair Horse Show begins at
months, his heart stopped
9 a.m. in the EISF arena.
and it took six minutes of
chest compressions to get
Saturday, Aug 1
it started. He had another
• Twin Buttes Lions Fundraiser from 5-8 p.m. at
Rockford Park. For tickets or information call Al at
680-0400.
• All Aboard Jacob’s Express 5K fundraiser at 7
a.m. at Journey’s End Golf Course in Shelley. Cost is
$20 for adults and $8 for youth under 12. This race is
to celebrate 12-year-old Jacob Cox’s heart transplant
and help raise money for his medical bills. For more
information, search for “All Aboard Jacob’s Express”
on Facebook or gofundme.com.
• Little Buckaroo Rodeo registration at the Firth
High Vo Ag Building from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Each
child must have parent or legal guardian’s signature
at time of registration. Entry fee of $5 per child to be
paid at time of registration. One event per child. Fee
includes admission to rodeo. All registrations need
to be turned in by Sunday, Aug. 2. For more information, email: littlebuckaroorodeo@hotmail.com or
call Dixie Finck at 346-6051 or Kristine Edwards at
339-4831.
• Bingham Crisis Center 5K walk-run at Jensen
Grove at 9 a.m. The cost is $10. People can pre-register at the Bingham Crisis Center at 288 N. Shilling
Ave. in Blackfoot or call (208) 785-1047. You can
also register from 8:30-9 a.m. at Jensen Grove. Five
raffle baskets will be given away. Tickets are $1 per
ticket or 10 tickets for $6. All the proceeds will go
to the Bingham Crisis Center. For more information,
call Bingham Crisis Center Executive Director Dixie
Chapman at 785-1047.
Friday, July 31, 2015
Dr. Darin G. Gambles
1495 Parkway,
Blackfoot
208.785.2555
• New Dentures • Relines • Repairs
• Free Exams • All Work Done on Premises
• Dentist Not Required For Fittings
• Most Insurances Accepted
785-1307 390 N. Broadway • Blackfoot
4A
Friday, July 31, 2015
OPINION
www.am-news.com
MorningNews
Medicare 50th
anniversary a call to
action for reforms
July 30 was the 50th
Anniversary of the cre- Mike
ation of Medicare, which Crapo
has been of considerable importance to many
Americans. Medicare’s
anniversary should serve as
a call to action for achieving the reforms needed to
prevent Medicare from becoming insolvent.
To protect current and future Medicare enrollees,
comprehensive reforms of the Medicare program must
be enacted. The Medicare Trustees report the program
faces an unfunded liability of nearly $25 trillion, and
the program is currently on track to be insolvent in
2030, if action is not taken to reform the program.
Additionally, the federal government is expected to
dramatically increase Medicare spending over the next
decade, increasing the program’s already enormous
contribution to the national deficit. Social Security and
Medicare together accounted for 42 percent of federal
program expenditures in Fiscal Year 2014, according to
the recent Medicare and Social Security Trustees report.
We must address its cost burden now to ensure that it
is sustainable.
Earlier this year, Congress passed and the President
signed into law H.R. 2, which made substantive reforms
to Medicare. This law repealed the flawed Sustainable
Growth Rate formula and contained needed adjustments and reforms to our Medicare system. For the
first time, the law included structural reforms to the
program intended to help reduce deficit spending and
improve Medicare’s solvency. These include Medigap
reform and modest means testing. However, more work
is needed to ensure the program’s long-term solvency.
On July 30, 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson
signed the Social Security Amendments of 1965 into
law, creating Medicare. Medicare was initiated to
address the deficiency of health insurance coverage
of America’s senior citizens, and was later expanded
to assist the permanently disabled. The non-partisan
Congressional Research Service reports that in Fiscal
Year 2015, the program will cover approximately 55
million persons (46 million aged and 9 million disabled) at a cost of about $632 billion.
While I have focused this column on Medicare, as
this program recently reached a significant milestone,
the Social Security program, which turns 80 years old in
August, is also in need of reform to ensure that it does
not become insolvent. In less than 10 years, spending
on Social Security benefits will exceed interest earnings,
and trust fund reserves are projected to be exhausted by
2035. The disability insurance portion of Social Security
is expected to be depleted in late 2016. At that point,
beneficiaries will see a 19 percent reduction in benefits.
Reforming these programs requires tough decisions,
but decisions that need to be made now. The need
for reforms have been discussed for decades, and it is
time to act. If we wait to address the problem, the only
solutions will be substantial tax increases and massive
new borrowing or large cuts in benefits or other government programs. As I continue to work for reforms,
the foremost objective will continue to be maintaining
the promises made to protect current recipients, while
strengthening the system to guarantee benefits for future
retirees.
We must use this significant milestone as a call to
action to bring about the reforms necessary to shore up
Medicare.
Mike Crapo is the senior member of Idaho’s congressional delegation. He served six years in the U.S. House
of Representatives and has served as a U.S. Senator
since 1999.
Letter to the Editor policy
1 — 250-word maximum for regular letters and
1,500 for guest editorials
authorized by the Morning
News.
2 — Preference given
to letters received from
authors within Bingham
County.
3 — Preference given to
letters that are timely.
4 — No set limit to the
number of letters, but we
would prefer no more than
two per month.
5 — We will not run letters if they are prejudiced
against a minority, religion
or ethnic group.
6 — We will not run
letters if they are purely
theological or of a religious
theme.
7 — We will not run letters about civil disputes not
of a general public interest.
8 — We will not run letters advocating violence of
any kind.
9 — We will not run
form letters, letters generated as a part of an organized group or thank you
letters directed to a long
list of recipients.
10 — We encourage
a civil tone and ask letter
writers to avoid personal
attacks or inflammatory
language.
MorningNews
www.am-news.com
(ISSN 08933812)
Leonard C. Martin, Publisher, publisher@am-news.com
Robert Hudson, Managing Editor, mnews@am-news.com
Wayne Ingram, Advertising Director, wingram@am-news.comJ
oe Kimbro, Circulation Manager, circulation@am-news.comKelly R. Koontz, Production Manager
•••
The Morning News is published daily except
Sundays and Christmas Day by Horizon
Blackfoot Publications. Periodicals postage paid
at Blackfoot, ID 83221. Postmaster send address
changes to the Morning News, PO Box 70,
Blackfoot, ID 83221. Legal notices required
by law or court order are carried in Friday editions. Publisher reserves the right to reject,
edit or cancel any advertising at any time
without liability. Publisher’s liability for error
is limited to the amount paid for advertising.
34 N. Ash/P.O. Box 70, Blackfoot, ID 83221
Telephone: 208-785-1100 • Fax: 208/785-4239
Business Hours: Monday-Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
The proper way to deal with Donald Trump
A businessman once
told me that in business,
when things are not working, sometimes you have
to “throw a brick through
the window.”
Sometimes shock is
the only thing that will
shake up an entrenched
status quo. A brick smashing through glass might be
the only thing that will get
attention.
Donald Trump is a businessman who understands
this. This is what he is
doing and it’s working.
There’s a lot of frustration in America today, and
there should be.
America is a nation
with enormous problems.
And practically all of them
trace back to politicians
kicking the can down the
road.
Republicans
could
have dealt with escalating health-care costs, and
large numbers of uninsured Americans, before
Barack Obama was elected. They didn’t.
Republicans
could
have dealt with government policies that led to
the huge financial and real
estate collapse in 2008.
They could have dealt
with Fannie Mae, Freddie
Mac, the Department
of Housing and Urban
Development -- government programs that use
taxpayers’ money to subsidize the purchase of hous-
ing. They didn’t.
Republicans could have
dealt with the enormous
problems with our broken entitlements programs
-- Social Security and
Medicare. President Bush
added another trillion dollars in commitments to
Medicare with the prescription drug program.
To his credit, President
Bush tried to reform Social
Security, but, despite
Republican control of
both the Senate and the
House, failed. However,
that doesn’t mean one
should stop trying, which
is what happened.
The changing demographics of the nation
were obvious years ago.
Republicans could have
been aggressive in reaching out to poor minority
communities to help them
understand that freedom
and markets would solve
the problems that the
welfare state was making
worse. They didn’t.
And, of course, we
didn’t get more than 10
million illegals in America
overnight. This is the result
of years of Washington
ignoring this problem, as
it got worse and worse.
In response to neglect,
in response to lack of
real vision for the nation,
Americans opted for
change in 2008. But
change in the wrong
direction.
So now, for the past
seven years, we have
had the hard left running
America, taking some of
our major problems and
enacting left-wing, biggovernment “solutions,”
making these problems
worse.
We now have government-run health care that
is already making health
care even more expensive, less innovative and
more of a drain on taxpayers. We have major new
government control of
our banking and financial
services industry, creating
more protection for big
banks and less innovation.
We sit with government
more bloated than ever,
growth rates below historic averages, employment
below historic averages,
no solutions in sight for
the, by some estimates,
$100 trillion of unfunded
liabilities of our entitlement programs.
And now the USA is
about to conclude a nuclear deal with a nation that
chants “death to America.”
No wonder we have
frustration.
But Trump’s campaign
bluster, a cross between
a Veg-O-Matic infomercial and Ringling Brothers,
is just another attention
diverter. His campaign
website is devoid of any
policy. Trump offers no
new vision for America,
no more clarity about
what our health-care,
education, retirement and
housing policies should
look like. And despite the
hype about immigration,
I have heard no practical
solution on how to deal
with 10 million illegals.
Trump has done us a
favor by throwing a brick
through the window. But
no good can come out
of destructive slander
of fellow Republicans.
Americans need a country
and a future, not the World
Wrestling Federation.
Anyone in the current
large field of Republican
candidates would be far
better for America than
another term of left-wing
control.
For these candidates
dealing with Trump, the
best strategy is to offer
powerful visions of their
own, explicitly tackling
our big challenges -- that
will excite Americans
and restore their faith in
America as a free nation.
Star Parker is an author
and president of CURE,
Center for Urban Renewal
and Education. Contact
her at www.urbancure.org
International Airport, killing all 89 people on board.
In 1989, a pro-Iranian
group in Lebanon released
a grisly videotape showing
the body of American hostage William R. Higgins, a
Marine lieutenant-colonel,
dangling from a rope.
In 1991, President
George H.W. Bush and
Soviet President Mikhail
S. Gorbachev signed the
Strategic Arms Reduction
Treaty in Moscow.
Ten years ago: Police
arrested seven people during a raid on an apartment
in southern England, bringing to 21 the number in
custody in the relentless
hunt for accomplices in the
failed July 21 transit bombings in London. Jeong Jang
shot a 3-under 69 to win
the Women’s British Open
by four strokes.
Five years ago: Chelsea
Clinton married investment
banker Marc Mezvinsky
in the upstate New York
village of Rhinebeck.
Orchestra leader Mitch
Miller died in New York at
age 99.
One year ago: The CIA’s
insistence that it did not
spy on its Senate overseers
collapsed with the release
of a stark report by the
agency’s internal watchdog
documenting improper
computer surveillance and
obstructionist behavior by
CIA officers. The death toll
from the worst recorded
Ebola outbreak in history surpassed 700 in West
Africa.
Today’s
Birthdays:
Composer Kenny Burrell
is 84. Actress France
Nuyen is 76. Actress Susan
Flannery is 76. Actress
Geraldine Chaplin is 71.
Singer Gary Lewis is 70.
Actor Lane Davies is 65.
International Tennis Hall of
Famer Evonne Goolagong
Cawley is 64. Actor Barry
Van Dyke is 64. Actor
James Read is 62. Actor
Michael Biehn is 59. Actor
Dirk Blocker (“Brooklyn
Nine-Nine”)
is
58.
Entrepreneur Mark Cuban
is 57. Actor Wally Kurth is
57. Actor Wesley Snipes is
53. Country singer Chad
Brock is 52. Musician
Fatboy Slim is 52. Rock
musician Jim Corr is 51.
Author J.K. Rowling is 50.
Actor Jim True-Frost is 49.
Actor Ben Chaplin is 46.
Actor Loren Dean is 46.
Actress Eve Best is 44.
Retired NFL quarterback
Gus Frerotte is 44. Actress
Annie Parisse is 40. Actor
Robert Telfer is 38. Actorproducer-writer B.J. Novak
is 36. Actor Eric Lively
is 34. Singer Shannon
Curfman is 30. Actor Reese
Hartwig is 17. Actor Rico
Rodriguez is 17.
Thought for Today: “The
trouble with the public is
that there is too much of it.”
— Don Marquis, American
journalist, poet and dramatist (1878-1937).
Star
Parker
Today in history
Today is Friday, July 31,
the 212th day of 2015.
There are 153 days left in
the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On July 31, 1715, a
fleet of Spanish ships carrying gold, silver and jewelry sank during a hurricane off the east Florida
coast, scattering most of
their treasure along the
ocean floor. Of some
2,500 crew members,
more than 1,000 died.
On this date:
In 1777, the Marquis
de Lafayette, a 19-yearold French nobleman, was
made a major-general in
the American Continental
Army.
In 1875, the 17th president of the United States,
Andrew Johnson, died in
Carter County, Tennessee,
at age 66.
In 1919, Germany’s
Weimar Constitution was
adopted by the republic’s
National Assembly.
In
1942,
Oxfam
International
had
its
beginnings as the Oxford
Committee for Famine
Relief was founded in
England.
In 1954, Pakistan’s K2
was conquered as two
members of an Italian
expedition,
Achille
Compagnoni and Lino
Lacedelli, reached the
summit.
In 1964, the American
space probe Ranger 7
reached the moon, transmitting pictures back to
Earth before impacting the
lunar surface.
In 1973, Delta Air
Lines Flight 723, a DC-9,
crashed while trying to
land at Boston’s Logan
MorningNews
WEST
am-news.com
Friday, July 31, 2015
5A
Salmon habitat protected in conservation easement
By KEITH RIDLER
Associated Press
BOISE (AP) — A conservation easement has been
attained on an east-central
Idaho ranch that’s been a
top priority for state and
federal authorities for years
because it contains important spawning streams for
threatened salmon and
steelhead.
The agreement between
the Bonneville Power
Administration, Idaho and
ranch owner Karl Tyler
signed last week protects
about 8 square miles of
ranchland. That includes
about 10 miles of the
meandering Lemhi River
and half a dozen tributar-
ies.
“I feel pretty strongly
that ranching is of benefit to the environment and
to the fish,” said Tyler, 66,
who owns several car dealerships in Montana. “I just
wanted to set up a plan that
would ensure that for future
generations.”
The community-based
Lemhi Regional Land Trust
played a key role in facilitating the deal.
“I feel like a lot of people in our community were
very much rooting for the
success of this conservation easement,” said Kristin
Troy, the group’s executive
director.
Mike Edmondson of the
Idaho Governor’s Office of
Species Conservation said
the $11 million deal is costing the state about $3.5 million and that the Bonneville
Power Administration is
paying the rest.
The state and federal
agencies have obligations
to try to boost the spring
chinook and steelhead that
both receive federal protections under the Endangered
Species Act. The conservation easement is part of
that plan.
“This (easement) is
definitely the largest one
this year, and one of the
largest ones we’ve ever
done,” said Lorraine Bodi
of the Bonneville Power
Administration.
Edmondson said the
Lemhi is the only tributary in the Salmon River
basin that can produce the
numbers of fish needed for
the state to meet its federal
recovery plan. The goal is
2,000 adult salmon returning each year.
“The Lemhi is what
I would call one of the
must-have populations for
recovery,” he said. “This
was one of the most visible
moves on the chessboard
to make.”
Tyler said his parents
fulfilled a dream in 1962
by buying a ranch near
the town of Salmon that
had no irrigation “but lots
of rattlesnakes.” He left to
attend the University of
Idaho in Moscow and study
animal science with a goal
of returning to buy his own
ranch.
He got a job washing
cars at a dealership while
going to school, moved
up to mechanic and salesman before starting his
own dealership in eastern Washington state. He
opened several more car
dealerships in Montana.
By 1994 he fulfilled his
goal of buying a ranch near
Leadore, and over the years
accumulated eight ranches
in the area totaling, he said,
about 20,000 acres.
“I’ve been fortunate
enough to add those as
they became available,” he
said.
Negotiations for a con-
servation easement have
been in the works for about
a decade. Complications,
besides the reduced resale
value of the land with the
conservation easement,
were requirements involving fencing and removing
environmental
hazards
from previous owners.
“I certainly didn’t do this
for the money,” Tyler said.
“I did it for the fact that I
want this ranch to coexist
for another generation of
ranchers and fish.”
Jeff Diluccia of the Idaho
Department of Fish and
Game said the property on
the valley bottom is also
a key area for elk, moose,
deer and other wildlife,
especially in the winter.
His work has been
displayed in some of the
world’s top art museums.
Officials say restoration
work will proceed with
caution in case Castle left
some of his art in the
buildings.
no guilt but acknowledging that prosecutors had
enough evidence to convict him. He was initially
charged with was initially
charged with 12 counts of
assault with the intent to
commit a serious felony.
Prosecutors say Rael
refused to stop when
Coeur d’Alene police
officers tried to pull him
over on June 22, 2014
for drunk driving. After a
short pursuit they say Rael
began shooting a semiautomatic AK-47 rifle and
another rifle at officers.
No
officers
were
injured in the shootout.
Rael was shot and injured.
sel pass.
Protesters on the bridge
and kayakers on the river
have been blocking the
icebreaker from heading
to the Arctic for a drill
operation.
The Fennica arrived in
Portland for repairs last
week. The vessel was dam-
aged earlier this month in
the Aleutian Islands when
it struck an underwater
obstruction, tearing a gash
in its hull.
Around the West
Post Register
up for sale
IDAHO FALLS (AP)
— Post. Co. President
Jerry Brady says the family-owned business that
includes the Post Register
and three other Idaho
newspapers is for sale and
there’s an interested buyer.
The
Post
Register
reports
that Brady
informed employees of the
potential sale in an email
Wednesday afternoon.
Brady says the company needs additional
resources that a larger
company could provide.
Brady declined to name
the potential buyer but
says he expects a final
deal within weeks.
Brady and his brother, Jack, own about twothirds of the company,
with employees owning
the rest through an ownership plan.
The Post Co. has been
a family business since
1925.
Jerry Brady says there’s
no indication the sale will
lead to significant changes
at the company.
Boise officials
detail plans
for restoring
artist’s home
BOISE (AP) — Officials
in Boise say plans for a
home where artist James
Castle
lived
include
restoring an old bunkhouse where he worked
and creating an artist-inresidence program at the
site.
The Idaho Statesman
reports that city staffers
told area residents during
a meeting on Wednesday
that the former home will
also include space for
permanent and temporary
exhibitions.
Castle was born in
1899. He was deaf and
never learned to read,
write or use sign language, but expressed
himself through art made
mostly of found objects,
some containing images
produced with a mix of
soot and saliva.
Washington
County woman
infected with
West Nile virus
WEISER (AP) — A
Washington
County
woman has been infected with the mosquitoborne illness West Nile
virus, marking the first
confirmed human case in
Idaho this year.
KTVB-TV reports the
woman, who is in her 60s,
first noticed symptoms at
the end of June. She did
not require hospitalization
and is still recovering from
the illness.
Mosquitoes have tested positive for the virus
in nine counties: Adams,
Washington, Valley, Gem,
Payette, Canyon, Ada,
Owyhee, and Bingham.
A horse in Washington
County has also tested
positive for West Nile.
West Nile is usually
contracted from the bite
of an infected mosquito. It
is not spread from personto-person through casual
contact.
Symptoms of infection
often include fever, headache, body aches, nausea,
vomiting, and sometimes
swollen lymph glands or a
skin rash.
Gunman in I-90
police shootout
accepts deal
COEUR
D’ALENE
(AP) — An Arizona man
accused of shooting at
northern Idaho police officers on Interstate 90 last
year has accepted a pretrial settlement.
The Coeur d’Alene
Press reports that 25-yearold Marcus Rael entered
an Alford plea Friday to
four counts of aggravated
assault of a law enforcement officer, admitting
Judge orders
fines for
protestors
PORTLAND,
Ore.
(AP) — A federal judge
in Alaska on Thursday
ordered Greenpeace USA
to pay a fine of $2,500 for
every hour that protesters
dangle from a bridge in
Oregon and block a Royal
Dutch Shell icebreaker
from leaving for oil drilling in the Arctic.
There was no sign that
the protesters were going
to abandon the blockade in Portland after the
ruling in Anchorage by
U.S. District Court Judge
Sharon Gleason that
Greenpeace is in civil
contempt.
Greenpeace
USA
Executive Director Annie
Leonard said the activists
will stay in place for now.
“We are confronted
with a huge decision, one
we cannot make alone,”
she said in a statement.
“Right now we’re asking
the activists what they
think we should do next.”
Gleason in May granted Shell’s request that
activists protesting Shell’s
Arctic drilling plans be
ordered to stay away from
company vessels and
beyond buffer zones.
Earlier in the day,
the Shell oil icebreaker
Fennica retreated when
activists dangling from the
St. Johns Bridge over the
Willamette River refused
to leave and to let the ves-
6A
NATION
Friday, July 31, 2015
am-news.com
MorningNews
Defense, DA argue reasons to spare gunman’s life
CENTENNIAL, Colo.
(AP) — Defense attorneys
for James Holmes made
one more appeal for mercy
Thursday for the Colorado
movie theater shooter,
urging jurors to consider
his mental illness in his
sentencing even though
they rejected his claim of
insanity when they found
him guilty of murdering 12
people and trying to kill 70
others.
“Nothing we do here
in this case is going to
turn back the hands of
time. And nothing we do
will bring back those who
died or heal the wounds of
those who were injured,”
said his lawyer, Tamara
Brady.
“It was not about notoriety, it was not about
hatred. It was about the
delusion,” she said.
“The stressors triggered
his psychosis, the psychosis caused him to be delusional, and come up with
this plan to shoot people
in this theater,” she said.
“No one has said that Mr.
Holmes is malingering or
faking or exaggerating psychiatric symptoms. He is
indisputably mentally ill.”
Brady acknowledged
that prosecutors have tried
to explain the “random
and senseless crime” by
describing a theory that
Holmes methodically pur-
sued a mission to kill.
“But the mere senselessness of it shows that it was
psychotic. There was no
political statement or religious statement or statement of any kind about
what happened in that theater,” she said. “He didn’t
send anything to the New
York Times or The Denver
Post. He sent his notebook
to his psychiatrist. It had
nothing to do with notoriety.”
District
Attorney
George Brauchler countered that Holmes wanted
to increase his value by
killing others, and it was
because of that belief that
he qualifies as schizo-
CALL TODAY!
208-785-1900
1090 Fordway,
Blackfoot
www.20ThCenTurYfOrD.COm
phrenic.
“Is mental illness going
to be a shield here to protect someone who had the
Taxidermist
recreates
football rivalry
Jet wheel ignites
on Dallas landing
STEP 2
STEP 3
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JUNE 12 – AUGUST 15
and purchase any
eligible SINGLE DAY
PASSPORT.
BEFORE YOU LEAVE
LAGOON have your
Passport Receipt
VALIDATED FOR FREE.
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LAGOON
any single day within
10 days of your
validation date for
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with your validation
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living Pioneer Museum.
MUSICAL ENTERTAINMENT – Enjoy Lagoon’s talented performers in
our Carousel Theatre, offering family entertainment all season.
FRIGHTMARES – September 18 through October 30.
Celebrating 20 years of Terror!
*Single Day Passport receipt must be validated on initial visit to Lagoon and guests may “BOUNCEBACK” to Lagoon
any single day within 10 OPERATIONAL DAYS of your validation date. Offer valid 2015 Season only. Non-transferable.
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801- 451- 8000 • lagoonpark.com
MSU is better — even the
chipmunks,” Saade said.
Four referees will be
added to the display when
another one of Saade’s
relatives, a doll-maker, is
finished creating their uniforms.
After the display is complete, Saade plans to sell
his creation for $1,500.
“I don’t even care if it
sells or not. It’s just a cute
thing,” he said.
Saade said he doesn’t
kill animals specifically for
his projects, and instead
he uses road kill, nuisance
animals and leftover parts
from the hunting and fishing trophies he makes.
The chipmunks in the
football display were
trapped by several friends
who wanted to rid their
cabins of the rodents.
When a friend donated a
chipmunk, he put it in the
freezer, then waited until
he collected enough of
them for his project.
Other creations Saade
has dreamed up are two
fencing squirrels, an
upright white-tailed doe
holding a cocktail tray and
a lounging muskrat.
LANSING, Mich. (AP)
— A Lansing-based taxidermist used the longtime
rivalry between Michigan
State University and the
University of Michigan as
inspiration for his latest
creation.
Nick Saade, a full-time
taxidermist for 18 years,
recently made a football
display with 22 stuffed
chipmunks wearing little
Spartan and Wolverine
helmets. The chipmunks
are mounted to a smallscale football field in passing, throwing, catching
and tackling positions.
Saade enlisted the help
of his son, who’s a football coach at Sexton High
School, to help him plan
the layout and plays in his
display.
Saade, who owns
Taxidermy by Nick Saade,
told the Lansing State
Journal that display shows
the Spartans as they’re
about to score the winning touchdown, with the
chipmunk quarterback
winding up to throw the
football to his teammate in
the end zone.
The Wolverine playGRAPEVINE,
Texas
ers from the University of
(AP) — No injuries were
Michigan look “kind of
reported after a landing
cool, but everybody knows
gear on a Spirit Airlines
jet caught fire while landing at Dallas-Fort Worth
International Airport.
Airline spokeswoman
Iraida Mendez says Spirit
Flight 407 was arriving shortly before 1 p.m.
Thursday from a threehour flight from Orlando,
Florida, when the wheel
ignited. Airport fire units
extinguished the fire
quickly and passengers
deplaned at the gate.
Mendez says the Airbus
A-320 had 178 passengers
on board.
The fire was the second
incident to involve a flight
arriving at the Dallas-Fort
Worth airport on Thursday.
An American Airlines
flight was evacuated after
smoke was detected in the
cabin as the plane prepared to leave the airport.
Three passengers were
injured slightly when the
plane was evacuated using
emergency slides.
STEP 1
HAVE A GREAT DAY
AT LAGOON!
massacre of a theater full of
human beings. We should
take comfort in that. But
not having the right mind
Around the nation
It’s BoUnceback
Time!
See Validation Booth
for additional
information.
capacity to make decisions?” the prosecutor
asked. “Nobody in their
right mind could plan the
NEW FOR 2015!
Chief: More
training planned
after dispatcher
hung up
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M.
(AP) — All Albuquerque
Fire Department employees in emergency situations will undergo additional training after a dispatcher told a 911 caller
trying to help a teenage
shooting victim to “deal
with it yourself.”
The department will
start giving crisis intervention training to all firefighters and dispatchers next
week, Fire Chief David
Downey told reporters
Wednesday. A department spokeswoman said
she was not sure if some
employees had previously
received the training.
The
dispatcher,
Matthew Sanchez, should
not have hung up on the
17-year-old caller in such
a traumatic situation,
Downey said.
“It was outlandish.
Unforgivable,” he said.
“You cannot call 911 and
be treated like that. You
can’t do it.”
In the recording made
public this week, caller
Esperanza Quintero snaps
at Sanchez for repeatedly
asking whether her friend
Jaydon Chavez-Silver, 17,
is breathing.
“It was upsetting at the
time, but I didn’t have a
choice,” Quintero said.
“What more could I have
done?”
Chavez-Silver, 17, later
died, police said. Sanchez
had sent an ambulance
before hanging up, and
it arrived within minutes,
officials said.
He resigned Tuesday,
and efforts to reach him
have been unsuccessful.
A message left with Local
224 of the International
Association
of
Fire
Fighters, the union representing Albuquerque firefighters, was not immediately returned.
Barge accident
dents wind farm
foundation off
Rhode Island
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP)
— A barge accident off the
coast of Rhode Island has
dented the foundation of
what will be the nation’s
first offshore wind farm.
Deepwater Wind officials told The Providence
Journal on Thursday that
such accidents are not
uncommon in offshore
construction projects.
A barge being used in
the construction hit and
dented the foundation
in the water this week.
Deepwater Wind officials
say repairing the foundation won’t throw the project off track.
The company began
attaching the first of the
steel foundations to the
ocean floor on Sunday.
The foundation is set to be
secured to the ocean floor
this week.
Installing the foundation is supposed to take
eight weeks.
The company expects
the five-turbine wind farm
off Block Island to power
17,000 homes as early as
next year.
Great white
shark thwarts
marathon swim
in SF Bay
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
— A great white shark
thwarted a Northern
California man’s quest to
become the first person
to swim from the Golden
Gate Bridge to the Farallon
Islands.
Corte Madera marathon swimmer Simon
Dominguez was trying to
swim about 28 miles when
his teen daughter, in a support boat, spotted the great
white just 3 ½ miles from
his goal, KPIX-TV reported
Thursday.
After 18 hours in the
frigid ocean, he reluctantly
climbed into his support
boat as the 12-to-15-foot
shark circled it.
Out of the water, the
49-year-old, blood streaming down his chest from
chafed skin around his
neck, said he was disappointed that he didn’t finish the swim.
“It was hard. But a shark
is a shark,” Dominguez
said.
Four swimmers have
swum from the Farallon
Islands to San Francisco,
but Dominguez would
have been the first to make
the trip in the other direction.
The islands are a breeding ground for great
whites. But Dominguez
said he decided to make
the attempt in the summer
before breeding season
normally begins in the fall.
The 240-pound swimmer jumped into the cold
ocean and began the
swim under the Golden
Gate Bridge Tuesday night,
wearing only a cap, goggles, swimsuit and a thick
coat of grease to guard
against jelly fish stings and
keep him a little warmer in
the 50-degree water.
MorningNews
BUSINESS
am-news.com
Friday, July 31, 2015
7A
Facebook ready to test giant drone for Internet service
MENLO PARK, Calif.
(AP) — Facebook says it
will begin test flights later
this year for a solar-powered drone with a wingspan
as big as a Boeing 737, in
the next stage of its campaign to deliver Internet
connectivity to remote parts
of the world.
Engineers at the giant
social network say they’ve
built a drone with a 140foot wingspan that weighs
less than 1,000 pounds.
Designed to fly at high
altitudes for up to three
months, it will use lasers to
send Internet signals to stations on the ground.
Though Facebook is better known for online software that lets people share
news with friends, watch
viral videos — and view
commercial advertising —
engineers in a unit called
the Connectivity Lab are
working on a different set of
problems.
For one thing, they are
designing a laser communications system they hope
will be accurate enough to
hit a target the size of a
dime at a distance of 11
miles, said Yael Maguire,
director of the unit, which is
responsible for drones, satellites and other high-tech
communications projects.
“There’s a lot of moving
parts here that have to work
in concert,” said Maguire,
during a press briefing at
the company’s headquarters.
The project is part of
a broader Facebook effort
that also contemplates
using satellites and other
high-tech gear to deliver
Internet service to hundreds
of millions of people living
in regions too remote for
conventional broadband
networks.
Other tech companies
have launched similar initiatives. Google is experimenting with high-altitude
balloons as well as drones
and satellites. Microsoft has
funded a project that will
transmit Internet signals
over unused television airwaves.
Facebook also has a sep-
Financial roundup
NEW YORK (AP) - Thursday’s closing
New York Stock Exchange selected
prices:
Stock ............................... Last........ Chg
AT&TInc........................ 34.80........ +.11
AerojetR........................ 22.64....... —.56
Alcoa............................... 9.98....... —.18
Altria............................. 54.20....... —.20
AEP............................... 56.32........ +.38
AmIntlGrp..................... 64.53....... —.01
ApldIndlT...................... 38.41........ +.19
Avon................................ 5.51........ +.13
BPPLC........................... 37.68........ +.29
BakrHu.......................... 58.69....... —.98
BkofAm......................... 18.13....... —.03
Boeing......................... 143.01..... —1.13
BrMySq......................... 64.46....... —.43
Brunswick...................... 51.92..... —1.16
Caterpillar..................... 78.35.......+1.02
Chevron........................ 93.03....... —.22
Citigroup....................... 58.88........ +.01
CocaCola...................... 40.56....... —.03
ColgPalm....................... 68.02....... —.91
ConocoPhil................... 52.07....... —.83
ConEd........................... 63.15........ +.81
CurtisWrt....................... 67.97........ +.73
Deere............................ 93.51....... —.12
Disney......................... 120.03........ +.19
DowChm....................... 47.42....... —.01
DuPont.......................... 55.59........ +.13
Eaton............................. 61.08....... —.17
EdisonInt....................... 59.53........ +.45
ExxonMbl...................... 83.01....... —.13
FMCCorp....................... 48.37........ +.30
FootLockr...................... 70.29........ +.88
FordM............................ 15.10....... —.11
GenDynam.................. 150.28........ +.32
GenElec......................... 26.12....... —.14
GenMills....................... 58.26........ +.77
Hallibrtn........................ 42.29..... —1.00
HeclaM........................... 2.06....... —.06
Hess.............................. 60.33........ +.29
HewlettP....................... 30.62........ +.32
HonwllIntl................... 105.38....... —.16
Idacorp.......................... 61.32........ +.86
IBM............................. 160.96....... —.13
IntPap............................ 47.47........ +.48
JohnJn............................ 99.84........ +.11
LockhdM..................... 206.47..... —1.68
Loews............................ 38.31........ +.01
LaPac............................. 14.62........ +.18
MDURes....................... 19.05........ +.17
MarathnO...................... 21.86........ +.10
McDnlds....................... 99.17........ +.96
McKesson.................... 217.36..... —9.49
Merck............................ 58.52....... —.02
NCRCorp....................... 27.61..... —2.77
NorflkSo........................ 85.80....... —.17
NorthropG................... 175.41.......+1.97
OcciPet......................... 71.40........ +.54
Olin............................... 23.02....... —.18
PG&ECp........................ 52.18....... —.16
Penney............................ 8.26....... —.03
PepsiCo......................... 96.63........ +.10
Pfizer............................. 35.73....... —.03
Praxair......................... 114.27..... —1.66
ProctGam...................... 77.39..... —3.23
Questar......................... 21.84........ +.02
RockwlAut................... 117.10........ +.74
SempraEn.................... 100.86........ +.27
SouthnCo...................... 44.38........ +.81
Tegna............................. 28.95....... —.26
Textron.......................... 44.18........ +.18
3MCo.......................... 151.57........ +.12
TimeWarn...................... 88.44........ +.33
Timken.......................... 33.49........ +.44
TriContl......................... 21.29........ +.04
UnionPac....................... 97.70....... —.83
Unisys........................... 15.94........ +.02
USSteel.......................... 20.09........ +.05
VarianMed..................... 86.00..... —4.39
VerizonCm.................... 46.67........ +.11
ViadCorp....................... 25.30....... —.09
WalMart........................ 72.16....... —.07
WellsFargo..................... 58.15........ +.19
Weyerhsr....................... 30.46........ +.16
Xerox............................. 10.77........ +.01
YumBrnds...................... 88.02........ +.25
Onions & potatoes
IDAHO FALLS Shipping Point Prices as of
30-JUL-2015
Provided by: F. ruit and Vegetable Market
News, Federal - State Market News
Service, USDA.
Phone: ........... (208) 525-0166
Fax: ............... (208) 525-5546
Prices represent open (spot) market sales
by first handlers on product of generally good quality and condition unless
otherwise stated and may include promotional allowances or other incentives.
No consideration is given to after-sale
adjustments unless otherwise stated.
Brokerage fees paid by the shipper are
included in the price reported. Delivered
Sales, Shipping Point Basis excludes all
charges for freight.
IF—FV130
The Following Terms when used by
Market News will be interpreted as
meaning: Occasional 1 to 5%, Few 6 to
10%, Some 11 to 25%, Many 26 to 50%,
Mostly 51 to 90%, Generally 91 to 100%
Twin Falls, ID Clear 59/95
Idaho Falls, ID Clear 42/84
UPPER VALLEY, TWIN FALLS-BURLEY
DISTRICT IDAHO
Sales F.O.B. Shipping Point and/or Delivered Sales, Shipping Point Basis
2014 Season
---POTATOES: DEMAND FAIRLY GOOD.
MARKET STEADY.
Russet Burbank U.S. One 2” or 4-oz Min
baled 5 10-lb mesh sacks non sz A 40%
5-oz min 2.50-3.50 occas higher
baled 5 10-lb film bags non sz A 40%
5-oz min 2.00-2.50 occas higher
baled 10 5-lb mesh sacks non sz A 40%
5-oz min 3.50-4.50 occas higher
baled 10 5-lb film bags non sz A 40%
5-oz min 3.00-3.50 occas higher
50 lb cartons
40s 11.00-12.00 mostly 12.00 occas
higher & lower
50s 11.00-12.00 mostly 12.00 occas
higher & lower
60s 10.50-12.00 mostly 11.00 occas
higher & lower
70s 10.50-12.00 mostly 11.00 occas
higher & lower
80s 7.00-8.50 mostly 8.00 occas higher
90s 5.50-6.00 occas higher
100s 4.50-5.00 occas higher
U.S. Two 50 lb sacks
6 oz min 2.00-3.50 mostly 2.50 occas
higher
10 oz min 7.00-7.50 mostly 7.00 occas
higher
Nonferrous metals
NEW YORK (AP) — Spot nonferrous
metal prices T.
Aluminum -$0.7335 per lb., London
Metal Exch.
Copper -$2.4048 Cathode full plate,
LME.
Copper -$2.3815 N.Y. Merc spot Thu.
Lead - $1712.50 metric ton, London
Metal Exch.
Zinc - $0.9003 per lb., London Metal
Exch.
Gold - $1087.50 Handy & Harman (only
daily quote).
Gold - $1088.40 troy oz., NY Merc spot
Thu.
Silver - $14.780 Handy & Harman (only
daily quote).
Silver - $14.785 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot
Thu.
Platinum -$984.00 troy oz., Handy &
Harman.
Platinum -$989.90 troy oz., N.Y. Merc
spot Thu.
n.q.-not quoted n.a.-not available
r-revised
Financial Markets Glance
Dow Jones Industrials
High: 17,761.25
Low: 17,640.85
Close: 17,745.98
Change: —5.41
Other Indexes
Standard&Poors 500 Index: 2108.63
+0.06
NYSE Index: 10,881.75 —2.16
Nasdaq Composite Index: 5128.79
+17.06
NYSE MKT Composite: 2399.14 +36.48
Russell 2000 Index: 1232.07 +2.47
Wilshire 5000 TotalMkt: 22,205.86
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Volume
NYSE consolidated volume:
3,516,678,589
Total number of issues traded: 3,235
Issues higher in price: 1,583
Issues lower in price: 1,541
Issues unchanged: 111
Financial Markets--Board of Trade
CHICAGO (AP) — Grain futures were
higher Thurssday on the Chicago Board
of Trade.
Wheat for September delivery was up
.25 cent to $4.9650 a bushel; December
corn rose 5.50 cents at 3.8375 a bushel;
December oats were 6.50 cents higher at
2.4650 a bushel; while November were
gained 6.75 cents to $9.50 a bushel.
Beef was lower and pork was unchanged
on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.
October live cattle was off .02 cent to
$1.4645 a pound; August feeder cattle
fell .25 cent to $2.1122 a pound; while
October lean hogs were unchanged at
$.6607 a pound.
Intermountain Grain & Livestock
POCATELLO, Idaho (AP) — Idaho Farm
Bureau Intermountain Grain and Livestock Report Thursday, July 30. Bids are
subject to change.
BLACKFOOT __ white wheat 4.87, down
9; 11.5 percent hard red winter 4.50,
down 12; 14 percent spring 5.30, down
7; hard white 4.60, down 32;
BURLEY __ white wheat 5.15, unchanged; hard red winter 4.06, down
4; 14 percent spring 5.07, down 2; feed
barley 6.00, up 25; hard white 4.66,
down 4;
OGDEN — white wheat 5.46, up 1; hard
red winter 4.61, down 4; DNS 5.86, up
1; barley 6.00, unchanged; corn 8.00,
up 25;
PORTLAND__ no bids for soft white or
white club; hard red winter 5.42-5.62,
down 4; DNS 6.11, down 3; corn 4.574.60, up 6; oats 265.00/ton or 3.8475
bushel, unchanged;
NAMPA— Soft white new crop 8.85,
unchanged cwt; 5.31, unchanged bushel.
LIVESTOCK AUCTION__ Idaho Livestock
in Idaho Falls on July 29. Breaker and
boner cows 96.00-106.00; cutter and
canner 75.00-102.00; heiferettes none;
feeding cows 95.00-110.00; slaughter
bulls 122.00-136.00; feeding and cutting
bulls none; steers: heavy 170.00-190.0,
no light or stocker; heifers: heavy 170.00200.00, no light or stocker; Remarks:
Cows and bulls steady to 2 lower. Not
enough feeders for a test.
arate but related initiative
that works with wireless
carriers to provide limited
mobile Internet service at
no cost, in countries where
residents are too poor to
afford traditional wireless
plans.
But the company invited
reporters Thursday to hear
an update on its effort to
provide service to about 10
percent of the world’s population who live in regions
where it’s not practical
or too expensive to build
the usual infrastructure for
Internet service.
Facebook’s drone was
developed in part with
engineering expertise that
joined the company when
it acquired a British aerospace startup, Ascenta,
last year. Facebook engineering vice president Jay
Parikh said the team created a design that uses rigid
but light-weight layers of
carbon fiber, capable of
flying in the frosty cold
temperatures found at high
altitudes, for an extended
period of time.
LinkedIn bucks week’s
downward trend
among social media
NEW YORK (AP) — It
hasn’t been a good week
for social media companies,
not even for the usually reliable professional networking service LinkedIn Corp.
LinkedIn’s adjusted earnings of 55 cents per share
were well above the 30
cents that analysts polled by
FactSet had expected for the
April-June quarter. Revenue
grew 33 percent to $712
million, also above analysts’
expectations of $680 million.
After a brief surge, its
stock price fell after the
results came out.
Net loss was $67.7 million, or 53 cents per share,
which is wider than last
year’s loss of $1 million, or 1
cent per share. The company had warned in April that
earnings would be dampened by costs related to its
purchase of Lynda.com, an
online learning company.
LinkedIn closed that deal
in the second quarter. On
Thursday, CEO Jeff Weiner
said the deal “could be one
of LinkedIn’s most transformational initiatives as it has
the potential to improve the
member experience across
the platform.”
LinkedIn had 380 million members at the end
of the quarter, up 21 percent from a year earlier. The
company said traffic from
mobile devices represents
more than half of all traffic
to LinkedIn.
On Tuesday, Twitter disappointed investors when
it reported a 15 percent
increase in monthly active
users, to 316 million.
Facebook, meanwhile, has
nearly 1.5 billion monthly
users, but its high-flying
stock also took a hit as investors sought to take profits
and might have had some
concerns about the company’s soaring spending.
Shares of Mountain View,
California-based LinkedIn
fell $4.15, or 1.8 percent, to
$223 in after-hours trading.
The stock fluctuated widely
after the results came out as
investors digested the earnings report.
Colin Gillis, an analyst
at BGC Financial, noted
that while LinkedIn’s stock
is roughly unchanged since
the start of the year, this
masks the “the wild gyrations” that have taken place
in its price. He said “investing in LinkedIn requires a
tolerance to volatility, with
the stock moving over 10
(percent) on each of the last
four earnings.”
8A
Friday, July 31, 2015
NATION
am-news.com
MorningNews
California says water use fell by 27 percent in June
SACRAMENTO, Calif.
(AP) — California’s unprecedented system of mandatory conservation imposed
on cities got off to a strong
start with water use plunging 27 percent in June,
regulators said Thursday.
Data released by the
State Water Resources
Control Board showed
265 of 411 local agencies
in California hit or nearly
reached savings targets.
The governor ordered
cities to reduce water use
by 25 percent to prepare in
case California’s four-year
drought persists.
The savings came during the hottest June on
record, which would normally lead to an uptick
in water use. Prior savings have occurred during
unusually wet months
“The June numbers tell a
story of conscious conservation, and that’s what we
need and are applauding
today,” said Felicia Marcus,
chairwoman of the water
board. “We need to save
as much as possible. That
is water essentially in the
bank for a future dry year
or more.”
The report confirmed
figures previously released
by California’s largest cities, including Los Angeles,
San Diego, San Jose and
San Francisco, showing
strong water conservation.
The agencies that met
or came within 1 percent
of their mandatory water
conservation target serve
27 million Californians.
Under water board
regulations for mandatory
water savings, communi-
ties have nine months to hit
assigned conservation targets as high as 36 percent.
Water savings are compared to 2013, the year
before Brown declared a
drought emergency.
Some agencies opposed
the targets, saying they
were unfair and unrealistic and didn’t give enough
credit for prior conservation efforts.
Many that objected
managed to reach their
targets anyway, including
San Diego which saved 24
percent in June.
Rescuers hope
for ‘best-case
scenario’ for
boys lost at sea
WEST PALM BEACH,
Fla. (AP) — Mustering hope
for a “best-case scenario”
in the face of countless
unknowns, search crews
braced for a seventh day
and night at sea Thursday
in the hunt for two teenagers missing from their
capsized boat.
Five things to know
about air-and-sea search
for 14-year-old friends
Perry Cohen and Austin
Stephanos, who went missing last Friday off Florida’s
Atlantic coast:
THEY COULD BE
ALIVE:
The Coast Guard, which
is leading the rescue mission, says it wouldn’t
continue searching if it
didn’t believe the boys
could still be alive. Much
remains unknown, including whether the teens are
wearing life jackets, might
have a cooler or some
other object to cling to,
or have drinking water or
food. Chief Petty Officer
Ryan Doss said its decision errs on the side of
the “best-case scenario”
while balancing the limits
on human survival.
THE SEARCH
CONTINUES:
The Coast Guard says
it has plans in place for
its crews to remain out
throughout Thursday overnight into Friday. Officials
have not yet said whether
it will continue beyond
that. The decision will be
based on whether clues
surface,
marine
and
weather conditions and,
most importantly, whether they believe the boys
could still be alive. The
Coast Guard doesn’t mobilize to retrieve bodies, so
if their hope is totally lost,
a search is suspended. “At
the end of the day, it’s all
based on the possibility of
survival,” Doss said.
INITIAL REPORT:
The Jupiter Police
Department released the
911 call placed by Perry’s
stepfather Nick Korniloff,
who reported the boys
missing at 4:23 p.m.
Friday, triggering the Coast
Guard’s search. In a calm
voice, Korniloff said the
14-year-old boys hadn’t
been heard from since
about 11:30 a.m. and said
calls to a cellphone went
unanswered. “Usually he
checks in and he’s told
to check in on a regular
basis,” the stepfather said.
The dispatcher replied,
“And you know we had
a storm before, too?”
Korniloff said the boys
went offshore, outside the
bounds of their expected
trip, though it’s not clear
how he knows this. “We
had no idea they were
going offshore,” he said.
PRIVATE EFFORTS:
Even as the Coast
Guard’s intense hunt has
covered more than 40,000
square nautical miles,
and other agencies have
helped, the families of
the boys have organized
their own search and are
prepared to keep it going
if the teens aren’t found
before formal efforts end.
The family said about 20
private pilots were flying
out of Savannah, Georgia,
and Charleston, South
Carolina, on Thursday,
in addition to numerous
boaters, all attempting to
cover areas not already in
the Coast Guard’s search
zone. Matt Kuntz, an uncle
of Austin, said those private efforts would continue
even if the Coast Guard’s
search ends. “We will continue looking every day,”
he said.
MorningNews
am-news.com
FAITH
Friday, July 31, 2015
He set the course;
we are to do rowing
Glenn
Rawson
Ole and
Marn
By PASTOR BOB STONE
Emanuel Lutheran of
Blackfoot
BLACKFOOT — As we
continue to enjoy summer and “all” the great
Idaho outdoors has to
offer, a memory came to
mind. A few years back,
we bought an Old Town
Canoe. It was one of those
short fat 12 footers in the
color red and it was a
blast for fishing. Being a
bright red, short and fat,
we naturally had to give it
a name. The perfect word
that came to mind was the
Shoshone word for “belly
fat” which is Yuhutze.
It was perfect , so this
“vehicle” for summer fun
was aptly named Yuhutze
and it was perfect for a
few “Rez Transplants” in
Southwest Idaho.
As we, Sandy and I,
worked at proficiency
with rowing and balance,
it soon became apparent,
canoe’s are much better
handled and directed by
two people. One rower
at the stern and one at
the bow, rowing in time
and unison together to
guide the vessel smoothly
through the water.
The Sunday service begins at 11:30 a.m. at Emanuel Lutheran, 1110 Parkway Dr. in
Blackfoot.
Pastor Bob Stone
Now don’t get me
wrong, canoe’s can easily
be handled by one person
and I did my fair share of
“water time” solo fly fishing. And it was Terrific!
BUT .... it’s smoother, easier and much more fulfilling if you have someone
with whom you can share
your time and memories.
It’s “What” God made
us for ... to live in communion with each other. To
share the highs and lows,
the success and failure,
the good moments and the
bad or as Solomon aptly
reminds, “There is a time
for every season.”
God made us to live
with and for each other.
His Son Jesus is the perfect example of Someone
who was “made” to live
with us and for us! In a
very real sense, He set the
course and we are
“gifted” to be in the
“vessel” rowing along with
a “Captain” who continually gives His all.
It was an illustration
this week that brought all
my pleasant memories to
the forefront. Not only
of “yuhutze” but of the
“communion” God made
me for, the responsibility
of that community and
the Savior who gently
parts the water. And so ...
a short story ...
Writing about another
time and place, Leo Tolstoy
said, “I beheld the misery,
cold, hunger, humiliation
of thousands of my fellow
human beings ... I feel,
and can never cease to
feel, myself a partaker in a
crime which is constantly
being committed, so long
as I have extra food while
others have none, so long
as I have two coats while
there exists one person
without any … I must
seek in my heart at every
moment, with meekness
and humility, some opportunity for doing the job
Christ wants done.”
The job Christ wants
done. He set the course;
we are to do the rowing.”
As you continue “row-
ing along” this summer,
take a moment to enjoy
the ride, yet, consider just
“What” it is ... You were
made for. We were made
for a purpose. And that
purpose is to live in communion with each other.
Sometimes it becomes
apparent as we realize ...
Two are better than one ...
in short fat canoes!
May the God or all
Peace, Direction and
Provision lead you along
the path of considering the
needs of others through
this life’s water course.
And always remember,
“HE Set the Course; We
Are To Do .... the Rowing.
In His peace,
Pastor Bob
LDS Indianapolis temple open for tours ahead of dedication
75,000 visitors to tour the
temple through Aug. 8. The
34,000-square-foot structure standing on 18 acres
of grounds in Carmel, a
couple of miles north of
Indianapolis, will be the
148th LDS temple worldwide and one of fewer than
20 in the U.S. east of the
Mississippi River. Temples
are used for sacred ceremo-
nies, with attendance limited
to Mormons in good standing.
The Indianapolis temple
will serve 30,000 Mormons
in Indiana and eastern
Illinois who now drive longer distances to temples in
Chicago, St. Louis, Louisville,
Kentucky, and Columbus,
Ohio, said Elder Paul Sinclair
of Zionsville.
“It’s different for members
of the church here to feel
connected to their own temple that’s here in Indiana,”
Sinclair said Tuesday after a
media tour of the temple.
Having a temple in
central Indiana will shave
about 90 minutes off of the
round-trip travel time for
Brad Miller of Champaign,
Illinois, a 29-year-old
University of Illinois student
who now travels with his
wife about once a month to
the Chicago temple.
“We like to come back to
reflect on that, to recommit
ourselves, as it were, but also
just to recommit ourselves to
the Lord,” Miller said.
After the temple is dedicated Aug. 23, it will be open
only to faithful Mormons.
of example, has our attention
from the first words, “God tells
Moses, ‘You will be my frontman.’ He says to 75 year old
340 W Sexton
Abraham, who has only one
Blackfoot, ID 83221
child, ‘I will make you the father
(208) 557-8232
of nations.’ Think of Mary and
Meet with us on Saturday at
Joseph, or King David—think of
10:30 a.m.
A Seventh Day Adventist fellow- the potential in these. Think of
Saint Paul in prison, writing to
ship.
Philippians, encouraging words,
The following is a reprint from
‘because Jesus lives in you, be
Signs of The Times Magazine,
April 2013. Please contact us if bold, stand firm.’ From prison we
you are interested in a subscrip- have much of the New Testament. Folks, people need to hear
tion to the Signs of the Times
magazine. www.signstimes.com the truth. ‘You’re okay, I’m okay’
isn’t enough—without Jesus they
have no hope. Why be totally
The Broken Violin
sold out to Jesus Christ? As
Ashley Emmer’s story helps
believers, we owe everything to
us to understand that God can
refashion our sinful lives so that Him—especially our salvation.”
“I received a note from a young
we produce beautiful music.
A famous violinist once ordered woman who attended Rodeo
Bible Camp expressing gratitude
a violin manufacturer to make
for him the very best instrument for ‘taking the time to tell me how
his skilled hands could produce. to be saved.’ Joe Sutherland
The manufacturer went to work, was preaching from horse back.
and in due time he delivered the His horse responded at the
slightest touch of the bridle—he
new instrument to the violinist.
trusted Joe’s directions. Then
However, after playing it, the
sensitive artist was not pleased amazingly, he took the bridle off.
Joe had invested so much of
with the tone. In indignation
himself into the horse, the horse
he smashed it on the floor and
knows that Joe has his best
broke it to pieces.
interest at heart and responds
However, the disheartened
to his touch—gentle pressure
dealer didn’t give up. Carefully
gathering the broken pieces, he or movement. This is what
God wants of us—lean into the
made a new violin and sent it
purpose for which He came and
back to the fastidious musidied. Fighting the bit won’t work,
cian. This time the master was
charmed with the tone. When he because one way or another
‘one day every knee will bow
asked the manufacturer where
he had obtained the materials for and every tongue will confess
the new violin, he was surprised that Jesus Christ is Lord.’
to learn that the violin maker had Prayer Chain contact Debbie
made the new instrument out of Chappell. Pray without ceasing.
Pray for those on our prayer list.
the pieces of the very one the
Please pray always for our pasviolinist had broken to bits.
tors—we are so blessed.
Likewise, God can take the
fragments of our lives, which
Blackfoot Christian
we’ve shattered by our sinful
Fellowship
indulgences, and, putting the
pieces together, He can produce
sweet melodies in our regener2550 Rose Road
ated souls.
Phone: 785-3247
Isaiah 53:5 NKJV But He was
wounded for our transgressions, Email: office@blackfootfellowship.org
He was bruised for our iniquiFacebook: facebook.com/
ties; the chastisement for our
peace was upon Him. And by his groups/blackfootfellowship/
stripes we are healed. (Thank
It’s amazing to us that Pastor
You, Jesus!)
Kevin Olivarez and his family
have been with us a whole year
Christ’s Cowboy
now. We will be having a Potluck
Country Church
Celebration this week, following the Service, and everyone
will be able to share what they
Non Traditional Bible Based
love and appreciate about the
Mill Iron Ranch Meeting Hall
Olivarez family.
129E 200N Weeding Lane
Our Sundays begin with a time
782-0459
of fellowship, at 9 a.m., with
coffee, juice, and donuts and
Pastor David’s message, full
Sunday Schools around 9:10
a.m. Our Worship Service is
at 10 a.m. and is a come as
you are, mild contemporary
service where we give all glory
to God. Children’s Church is
provided during the Service, for
children 10 years of age and
under, except on the first Sunday
of each month, which is Family
Sunday and the kids stay in the
Service. We offer nursery care,
for the littlest ones, every week.
For by grace you have been
saved through faith, and this is
not your own doing; it is the gift
of God. — Ephesians 2:8
Church phone: 785-0809
E-mail: ccblackfoot@gmail.com
Website: ccblackfoot.com We are a congregation of believers in Jesus Christ as God’s only
begotten Son, conceived by the
Holy Spirit, and in the scriptures
of the Old and New Testaments
of the Holy Bible as the inspired
word of God, without error in the
original manuscripts, and the infallible rule of faith and practice.
Pastor Mike Eld Weekly Schedule: Sunday ‘Worship & the Word’ 10 a.m.
This Sunday: The Gospel According to Mark. Monday - ‘Praise & Prayer’, 7
p.m. in our new church building
at 689 S. Fisher.
Wednesday - ‘Going Deeper’
Bible Study, 7 p.m. in the church
office building. Currently: Isaiah.
Contact the church office for
details.
At Bethel we serve one another
and our community just as Jesus
served us. Some are apostles,
others prophets, evangelists,
pastors or teachers. Our main
characteristic is that we are all
centered on Him and the cross.
Come to this holy place to find
your true identity--a child of
God. Together we share in this
celebration of being who we
are--brothers and sisters of the
savior. Let us celebrate with you!
We welcome all to our service at
9 a.m. every Sunday. A weekly
text study is held on Wednesdays at noon. Bring a lunch and
enjoy the conversation discussing each week’s scripture.
Please come and enjoy the fellowship and discipleship offered
at Bethel Lutheran in Firth.
CARMEL, Ind. (AP) — The
first temple of The Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints in Indiana, standing
106 feet tall and crowned
with a gilded statue of the
angel Moroni, is open for
three weeks of public tours
before its dedication next
month makes it off-limits to
non-Mormons.
Church leaders expect
Church bulletin
Bible Discovery Center
9A
Calvary Bible Church
1248 Camas St.
Blackfoot, ID 83221.
cbcblackfoot.com
208-847-0227 or 208-705-1330
We would love to have you
visit on Sundays at 10 a.m. for
Sunday School and 11 a.m. for
Church. As pastor of Calvary
Bible Church, I hope you are
having a good day. We would
love to have you join us as we
continue in the Gospel of John.
We had a great week of Vacation
Bible School with the children
this July. We hope that all of you
who came out also enjoyed it
and learned much from God’s
Word, the Bible, on creation. We
hope you are enjoying your
summer. In the Gospel of John
19, Jesus is moving on to the
cross as our sacrifice for sin. It is
wonderful to note that in His trial,
there is nothing to find about
Jesus that is wrong. As a matter
of fact, the ruler of the Romans
in that area, Pilate, declared He
was innocent. Yet He died on a
cross. He died a cruel death on
what would be a state of being
declared innocent. He died
because of our sin; yours and
mine. By trusting in him, we can
have our sins forgiven – our debt
cleared. Come out, and hear
more.
Place your faith and trust in
Jesus Christ and God’s grace
today. He truly is the only One
through whom we can receive
eternal life. Once again, I’m
Pastor Dave. May God keep His
eyes on you and His loving arms
around you. Bethel Lutheran Church
413 North Main Street
P.O. Box 427
Firth, Idaho 83236
(208) 346-6271 or (208) 5891557
Ephesians 4:11-12 (NRSV)
reads; ‘11 The gifts he gave
were that some would be
apostles, some prophets, some
evangelists, some pastors and
teachers, 12 to equip the saints
for the work of ministry, for
building up the body of Christ’.
Every church is equipped with
members who are strong in all
the areas. The best description
of these five-fold ministries is:
Apostles – one who is sent out
– a visionary; Prophets – one
who hears and listens to God;
Evangelist – one who brings
good news and shares the
message readily; Pastors – one
who shepherd God’s people and
cares for others with a tender
heart; Teachers – one who holds
forth the truth and is excited
about it.
To build up people in the faith,
it is best to be able to identify
and utilize each person for the
talents that they bring. We all
have some of all five of the
ministries within us. Identifying
those talents in each person
can be challenging and often
people change due to situations
within the church or their lives.
Calvary Chapel Blackfoot Flexibility during these changes
and our own strengths at any
particular time or situation must
Meeting at the Blackfoot Senior be accommodated for every
member to thrive and the comCitizen’s Center
munity to grow.
20 East Pacific Street
Jason Lee Memorial
United Methodist Church
168 S University, Blackfoot
785-3611
E-mail: office@jlmumc.org
www.jlmumc.org
Sunday, Aug. 2
Theme: “What Are You Suited
For?”
Scriptures: 2 Samuel 11:2612:13a, Psalm 51:1-12, Ephesians 4:1-16, John 6:24-35
Tenth Sunday after Pentecost.
Assisting in this week’s 10:30
a.m. worship service: Liturgist –
Cindy Bewley; Acolyte – Benjy
Jones; Greeter – Tom Drysdale;
Sound – Chris Nowacki; Power
Point – David Buss. Sanctuary
flowers are given to the glory
of God by Debbie Reid-Oleson.
Everyone is welcome to attend
services – Come as you are!!
Saturday, 6 p.m. AA
Sunday, 9 a.m. AA
Sunday, 10:30 a.m. Worship
Sunday, 11:30 a.m. Fellowship
Hour and Prayer Circle after
Worship
Wednesday, 7 p.m. AA
We will be hosting the sack
lunch program each weekday
from August 3 through August
21. The sack lunch program
helps fill the hunger gap for
children between the end of the
school summer lunch program
and the beginning of school.
Free sack lunch for children
aged 1-18. Adults $2. Lunch is
served from 11:30 a.m. to 12:45
p.m. at Jason Lee Methodist
Church – 168 South University
and at Stalker Elementary on
West Center Street. No lunch will
be served at Jensen’s Grove.
Ole and Marn Peterson
had left Denmark in April of
1857 bound for Utah. Once
in America they had been
assigned to the Park handcart
company.
However, at the Missouri
River, Marn, who had an
infection in her leg, was told
she would never make it.
They stayed near Council
Bluffs, Iowa, and farmed, preparing for that day when they
could continue on to Zion.
Then in the spring of 1861
a large wagon train was organized and Ole and Marn and
their four children, Peder
14, Annie 6 and the babies,
Mary and Joseph, joined with
them.
Somewhere along the trail
sickness spread through the
camp and Annie became
ill. Notwithstanding she was
administered to and fervent
prayers were said on her
behalf, Annie grew weaker
until at last she was declared
dead.
There was danger on the
trail from Indians. Hence, it
was decreed that the company had to move on and
there was not time to dig a
proper grave. According to
family records, the child was
wrapped in a blanket and
covered in heavy brush.
Death was no stranger to
Ole and Marn as they had
already buried three children
in their native Denmark.
Nevertheless, it was hard
to leave Annie behind.
Obediently they went on.
They had not gone far when
it was deemed expedient to
make camp as Indians threatened.
That night around the fire,
as was customary, the company sang, “Come, Come
Ye Saints,” the anthem of the
trail. As they raised their voices “all is well, all is well!” the
feeling gnawed at Marn that
all was not well. It was like
the Spirit was trying to tell her
something. “Ole,” she said,
“I can’t feel our baby was
dead. “I know, dear,” said
Ole gently. “We had so many
plans, but she was, and there
is nothing we can do now
but pray that we will be able
to raise the family we have,
and more when we settle in
Zion. Come to the wagon
so you will be refreshed for
tomorrow’s travel.”
Wearily Marn started for
the wagon.
“Ole, listen to the wolves,
and our baby is lying back
there alone, not even protected by a grave. How can
we stand to go on?” “We must make up our
minds to go on and trust
in the Lord for the rest,” he
replied.
“I can’t, Ole! I just can’t!”
Gently but firmly Ole took
her by the arm and led her
back to their wagon.”
The next morning at
dawn, Ole discovered that
Marn was not in her bed and
nowhere to be found in the
camp. A search was mounted until suddenly someone
spotted her in the distance
coming toward camp from
the east. She was carrying a
burden and stumbling with
weariness.
Ole ran to his wife and
lifted the burden from her
arms. As he spoke to Marn
it struck him that the burden
was Annie—and the child
was warm—she was alive.
Annie Christina Peterson
would recover and live to
marry Samuel Wilcox, bear
9 children, and as a midwife bring many children
safely into mortality. God be
thanked for all those mothers
who in love and tenderness
never give up.
Source: Donald Long
History at https://familysearch.org/photos/stories/2875272
Glenn Rawson is a former
resident of Blackfoot. He has
written and produced books
and television programs on
the history of the Latter-day
Saints.
10A
Friday, July 31, 2015
SPORTS
am-news.com
MorningNews
Brady lawsuit transferred from August holds important dates
Minnesota to New York court for hunters and anglers
NEW YORK (AP) — Tom
Brady’s lawsuit against the
NFL in which he wants
his four-game suspension
overturned will be heard
in New York instead of
Minnesota.
Brady and the players’ union filed their
suit
Wednesday
in
Minnesota. But the NFL
already had filed papers
Tuesday in New York,
moments after announcing that Commissioner
Roger Goodell upheld
the suspension for Brady’s
involvement in the use of
underinflated footballs in
the AFC championship
game.
U.S. District Judge
Richard Kyle, based in
Minnesota, ordered the
transfer.
The judge wrote that he
“sees little reason for this
action to have been commenced in Minnesota at
all.”
He noted that Brady
plays in Massachusetts, the
union is headquartered in
Washington and the NFL
in New York, Kyle added
that “the arbitration proceedings took place in
New York and the award
was issued in New York.”
Jeffrey Kessler, the lead
attorney for Brady and the
union, wasn’t concerned
about this game of musical
witness chairs.
“The court decided the
case should be heard in
New York because the NFL
filed first there,” he told
The Associated Press in
an email Thursday. “We
are happy in any federal
court, which unlike the
arbitration before Goodell
provides a neutral forum,
and will now seek our
injunction in the New York
court.”
In a footnote, Kyle said
the court “strongly suspects the union filed in
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As a Blackfoot native,
Dr. Rodgers has been seeing
patients locally for over 10 years.
Now serving patients at
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Minnesota because it has
obtained favorable rulings
from this court in the past
on behalf of its members.”
Kessler had said the
lawsuit should be heard in
Minnesota because it was
related to a case involving Adrian Peterson’s suspension last season. Kyle
countered that the union
made “only a fleeting
attempt” to link the Brady
case to Peterson’s.
Kyle reasoned that the
union’s argument would
mean, for example, any
court that had heard a
racial discrimination case
against a large corporation would then hear every
other racial discrimination
case against that company.
“Venue simply cannot
be predicated on such a
thin reed,” he said.
The union asked the
court to throw out the
suspension before Sept.
4. That would keep Brady
from missing any practices before the Patriots’
Sept. 10 season opener
against the Pittsburgh
Steelers. Brady is allowed
to participate in all training camp and preseason
activities.
The lawsuit argues
that the NFL made up
its rules as it went along
and misapplied the ones
that were already on the
books. Kessler called
it “offensive” that the
league accused Brady of
destroying his cellphone
to obstruct the inquiry by
investigator Ted Wells, a
claim Goodell made in
upholding the suspension
Tuesday.
Judge Richard M.
Berman, who has been
assigned to the case, told
all sides to “tone down
their rhetoric.”
“The earth is already
sufficiently scorched, in
the Court’s view,” Berman
wrote.
For the MORNING NEWS
Hunters: Pick Up Your
Controlled Hunt Tags by
Saturday
Big game hunters who
were successful in drawing controlled hunt tags
for deer, elk, pronghorn,
and black bear have
until midnight Mountain
Daylight Time, Saturday,
Aug. 1 to buy their tags.
Applicants can find out
if they drew a tag by
checking the controlled
hunt drawing results on
the Idaho Fish and Game
web site at http://fishandgame.idaho.gov/ch. Postcards were mailed to
successful applicants by
July 10. It is the responsibility of hunters to determine whether they were
drawn.
Unsuccessful
applicants will not be
notified.
Controlled hunt tags
not purchased by Aug.
1, except unlimited tags,
will be forfeited and made
available in a second
drawing. The application
period for the second
drawing runs from Aug.
5 to 15, with the drawing to be held around
Aug. 20. Any remaining tags leftover from the
second drawing will be
available first-come, firstserved Aug. 25 at 10 am
Mountain Time.
Hunters can buy their
tags at any Fish and Game
office, license vendor, by
telephone at 800-5548685, or online from Fish
and Game’s website. For
information on rules and
dates for specific hunts,
consult the current seasons
and rules brochure or the
Fish and Game website.
Take Me Fishing Trailer
Makes Its Last Summer
Stop
Idaho Fish and Game’s
Take Me Fishing Trailer is
headed to Soda Springs
be available at Fish and
Game regional offices.
Comments can be submitted at the open house,
online, via mail, or by
completing a comment
form which will be available at the regional office. for its final summer stop The comment period runs
to help kids 13 and under through Friday, Aug. 7.
get hooked on fishing!
For more informaJoin Fish and Game at tion, please contact the
Upper Kelly Park Pond Fish and Game office in
this Saturday from 9 a.m. Pocatello at 208-232until 1 p.m.
4703.
The Take Me Fishing
Take
A
Hunter
Trailer is loaded with Education Class Now
fishing poles, tackle, bait,
Hunter
education
and all kinds of equip- classes have been offered
ment to help kids go fish- throughout the region all
ing. Reservations are not year long, but there is still
needed, and equipment time to get into a hunter
is checked out on a first- education class or field
come, first-served basis. day before hunting seaThose new to the sport son is here.
can even receive assisA Hunter Education
tance with basic fishing Class is being offered
skills, from tying knots in Inkom at the Inkom
to casting, to reeling in a Community Bible Church
feisty fish.
on Grant Avenue starting
Everyone is welcome, this Monday. The class
but remember, only those will continue on Aug. 4,
13 and under can fish at 6, 10, 11, 13 and 15. Upper Kelly Park Pond. Meeting times for each
For more informa- night is 6 p.m. to 8:30
tion, contact the Fish and p.m.
Game office in Pocatello
To register for this
at 208-232-4703 for more class or to see what other
information about this Hunter Education classes
event.
or field days are availWaterfowl
Open able, check Fish and
House Scheduled
Game’s Hunter Education
The public is encour- webpage at http://fishandaged to bring questions, game.idaho.gov/public/
concerns, ideas, and education/?getPage=30.
general input regardKeep in mind classes
ing waterfowl seasons to will be added throughout
another open house this the rest of the summer
Monday at the Fish and into the fall, but that does
Game office, 1345 Barton not mean you should
Road in Pocatello. The wait! Classes will be very
open house will run from limited—especially once
9 a.m until 5 p.m.
hunting season is here-Can’t make it to the and those classes that are
open house? No prob- offered will fill quickly!
lem. Waterfowl season
Jennifer Jackson is the
proposals will be posted Regional Conservation
on Fish and Game’s web- Educator for the Idaho
site at http://fishandgame. Department of Fish
idaho.gov and will also and Game, Southeast
Jennifer
Jackson
Jazz PG Trey Burke:
“I’m as hungry as
I’ve ever been”
SALT LAKE CITY (AP)
­ Trey Burke has enjoyed
—
adding stamps to his passport
this summer, but that doesn’t
mean he’s been relaxing.
The Utah Jazz point
guard is currently in
Johannesburg
working
with the NBA’s Basketball
without Borders and made
his first-ever trip out of the
country to the Philippines
earlier this summer. In
the meanwhile, the team
added two more point
guards to the roster.
“It’s all motivation,”
Burke said by phone
Thursday. “I’m as hungry
as I’ve ever been. At the
point I’m at right now, I’m
not worried about certain
signings or whatever’s
going on. I’m always a
team guy. ... Never questioned anything with team
or anything like that.
And I’ve always felt like
I worked for where I’ve
gotten myself to. Nothing’s
ever been handed to me.
“It’s just another test.
Another stepping stone
where you can use it as
motivation going into training camp. Right now, just
really dedicating myself
and come training camp
I know I’ll be prepared.
That’s all that matters.”
Burke is coming off
a 2014-15 season that
had plenty of ups and
downs. Team-wise, the
Jazz improved and had
the sixth-best winning
percentage in the league
after the All-Star break.
Individually, Burke’s role
changed in his second year
as first-round pick Dante
Exum took over as the
starter midway through the
year. Burke became the
sixth man and top offensive weapon with the second unit. He faced heavy
criticism for shooting 36.8
percent from the field, 31.8
percent from 3-point range
and having questionable
shot selection. At the same
time, Burke was asked to
be the primary shot-taker
with a second unit that
lacked offensively.
He said he has been
dedicated to the gym
despite the travel schedule
and has focused on getting
in the paint and finishing
and his overall shooting.
Some fans have questioned Burke’s future with
the team and took to social
media to debate his invitation USA Basketball’s Las
Vegas camp. Burke, who
has two years left on his
rookie deal, said he tries to
ignore the Twitter talk.
“Pretty much my whole
basketball career I’ve had
people saying things like
that,” Burke said. “It really
doesn’t bother me. ... At the
same time, at times, I still
defend myself if I feel like
someone’s disrespecting me.
“I use it as motivation.
It’s something I try not to
pay attention to, but It’s
always in the back of my
mind. Once I come into
the player that I know I can
be, it’ll all work out.”
MorningNews
SPORTS
am-news.com
Photo courtesy of the Chicago Bears
Former Idaho State defensive end Jared Allen is moving to outside linebacker this season
for the Bears after playing his entire carrer at defensive end.
Bears’ Allen out to prove
he’s still elite pass rusher
BOURBONNAIS,
Ill. (AP) — No matter
how disappointing his
first season with the
Chicago Bears was,
Jared Allen believes he
can wreak havoc like
no other pass rusher.
“I’m ready to go out
and bust someone’s head
open, honestly,” he said.
“That’s the kind of year
that I want to have. I
want to have fun.”
Last season was anything but fun for him
or the Bears.
N ow a t a g e 3 3 ,
with a new position
and playing for a new
coach, Allen insists he
is ready to re-establish himself as an elite
player after struggling
through his worst season as a pro. Tops
among active players
with 134 sacks, he finished with a careerlow 5 1/2 a year ago.
That explains why
expectations are not
exactly
soaring
as
Allen enters his 12th
season. He was even
asked if he still considers himself a starter.
“In my mind I still
think I’m the best at
what I do,” Allen said.
“Last year (stunk), I’m
not going to sugarcoat
it.”
Th e B e a r s s i g n e d
Allen
a w ay
from
Minnesota before last
season to a four-year
deal that guaranteed
$15.5 million, hoping
he would invigorate a
struggling defense. The
results didn’t unfold
that way.
After reaching double digits in sacks the
previous seven seasons, Allen was slowed
early by pneumonia and
never showed the form
that made him a fivetime Pro Bowl defens ive e n d . C h i c a g o ’s
defense ranked among
A SUBSIDIARY OF TITLE FINANCIAL CORPORATION
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the worst in franchise
history, and the Bears
made sweeping changes after finishing last
in the NFC North at
5-11.
They fired general
manager Phil Emery
and
coach
Marc
Trestman and replaced
them with Ryan Pace
a n d Jo h n Fo x . Th e
Bears also ditched the
4-3 defensive scheme
in favor of a 3-4, moving Allen from end to
outside linebacker.
“It’s just hard to be
on all the time, whether it’s a season, whether it’s a week, whether
it’s a day,” Fox said.
“I think he has a lot
of skill set still left in
him. Things didn’t go
well. He got ill last
year and lost a bunch
of weight.”
Allen is ready for a
new beginning. He’s
embracing the position switch and the
coverage responsibilities that come with
it, something he might
not have done a few
years ago.
“Three years ago, if
you had tried to make
me switch my position, I would’ve quit,”
Allen said. “Honestly,
because I was a knucklehead and I would’ve
been like ‘No, I’m
a right end and I’m
going to go up against
the left tackle. This is
where I’m going to be,
that’s where he’s going
to be, I’m the best,
you’re the best, let’s
see what happens and
play ball.’
“But coming off a
year where I dealt with
injuries and being sick
a n d my p r o d u c t i o n
numbers were down,
it kind of clears your
mind. This game will
humble you. However
it does it, it will humble you. I got a nice
little slice of humble
pie last year.”
He
said
he
is
healthy, and clearly
the drive still appears
Friday, July 31, 2015
to be there.
He bristles at the idea
that his reputation took a
hit last season, no matter
how brutal it was.
“I’m still the active
leader in sacks,” Allen
said. “I still did things
in my first 11 years
that took guys 15 years
to do. So I don’t know
if it took a hit. I’m
still proud of what I’ve
accomplished — being
top 10 all-time — but
do I have goals? Do I
want to put up double digits? Do I want
to lead the league
11A
in sacks again? Do I
want to be the only
person that has three
sack titles? It’s funny,
every fourth year in
my career I’ve led the
league in sacks. I’m
hoping that continues.”
Notes: TE Martellus
Bennett said he is “not
even worried about”
his contract after pushing unsuccessfully for
an extension in the offseason. With two years
left on his deal, he
skipped voluntary offseason workouts.
Athlete of the Week
Greg Long
Drew Damron
Greg Long and Drew
Damron claimed top
honors in the Rupe’s
two-man best ball tournament at Blackfoot
Golf Course on Sunday.
The duo finished
with a 128.5 score as
contestants used full
handicap one day and
one-half handicap on
the other.
302 North East Main
785-5710
Specials of
the Month
Orange Cream Shake
BBQ Beef Sandwich
w/ Fries or Tots
MorningNews
am-news.com
PAWS & CLAWS
Friday, July 31, 2015
12A
Find A Friend…
… Save A life
Please join these Sponsors, the
Morning News and the Bingham
County Humane Society in
helping friends unite.
Call 680-3881
or go online at...
www.bingchs.org
Please remember to
spay or neuter your pet
Willow
Willow is a 4 month old puppy that we rescued
along with 3 pit pups. Willow weighed 16
pounds at the vet when she was fixed so she
will probably be a medium sized dog. We’d like
to see her go to a home where she can be both
indoor and outdoor not just stuck in the yard.
Silver
766 So. Broadway
(just north of the Arctic Circle)
Hours:
Wednesday
2:00-6:00 p.m.
Or by appointment only.
To Adopt, Call The
Bingham County
Humane Society at
680-3881
Smokey
Smokey is a 7 year old female Coton. She will
need a dental within the year. We took her in
when her person died. After a month she is just
starting to warm up to her foster mom. If you
have the time and patience to let her adjust
slowly then Smokey may be the one for you.
Christine’s
Herbs n’ Things
Itty Bitty was rescued from the Blackfoot
Animal Shelter. She is a small girl and has a
short face so looks like she might be a Persian
mix. Itty Bitty is very loving and would like to
share the love with her new family. Is Itty Bitty
the girl for you?
Itty Bitty
Smush is just a big love and full of character.
He has been an indoor kitten all his life and is
looking for that new forever indoor only home.
Smush gets along with other cats but has been
fostered in a home without dogs so is not a real
fan of them.
Axel & Suri
smush
Tabitha was 1 of 6 cats that we took in from the
family of a lady in our area who died. She had
many cats but the six we got were her
housecats. Tabitha is 1-2 years old and tall and
lean. She is a little shy but is great with other
cats and will warm up to you given a little time.
Pepe Le Pu
Tabitha
Robyn is a 6 year old Bichon whose person
died. She is a little standoffish but with time
and trust will fit right into a home. She is such
a cutie and is used to other dogs and cats. This
photo was taken at the pet store so she is
adjusting to different environments.
Bobby
Axel & Suri were born to a stray mom and all
are looking for new indoor homes. We have a
lot of cats and kittens this year. We are offering
discounted spay/neuter certificates. So far
we’ve exceeded the number helped last year.
Please help with the stray cats in your
neighborhood.
Robyn
dick & jane
Pepe Le Pu is 4-6 years old and out of the same
home as Tabitha. She has adjusted the best to
the rehoming. She is very loving and is great
with all of the cats at our building. Pepe is
missing that one on one interaction that she’d
get with her person. Can you offer that to her?
Garnet
Garnet is our 11 year old cat with disabilities.
She was born with back legs where her knee
caps are backwards thus her legs really
straight. She is a loving beautiful cat but is
paper trained as a litter box is not for her. She
can’t squat but can walk on her hands so she
can move fast.
Sweetheart & Tish
Bobby and 2 brothers are 4 month old
Polydactyls. All have the extra toes on their
front feet. They are loving and playful. They’ve
been in a multi cat environment so are great
with other cats. Bobby and his brothers are
looking for indoor only homes. Will that be
yours?
Tasha
Sweetheart & Tish came from the Blackfoot
Animal Shelter (BAS). They are 3 months and
would like loving indoor homes so they don’t
end up there again. BAS continues to fill up
with our feline friends. Can’t adopt? Save lives
by donating towards spay/neuter P.O. Box 385
83221.
Sincerely, The Pets
To The Wonderful Businesses
Who Sponsored This Page
Tasha has been with us for a while and
apparently thinks she is staying with us. She
likes to follow you around and help with
whatever you’re doing. She isn’t much of a lap
cat but likes to be petted and loved on. Tasha
needs to be an indoor only cat and would
brighten any home.
Dick and Jane came to us in October as semi
wild kittens. They are not mean but just don’t
want to be held. Both love their daily soft treats
and some scratching. They would make great
shop or house cats for those looking for
something other than a lap cat.
Willow
231 Rich Ln., Blackfoot
785-5580
Animal Health
Clinic
P.O. Box 129, Moreland
684-5101
Hale’s Repair
62 N. 400 W., Blackfoot
785-6794
Pratt Truck Service
Willow was a stray in a Blackfoot neighborhood.
She went into their garage and had 4 kittens.
The kittens have all found homes but Willow is
still looking for hers. She is a great cat, very
friendly with people as well as other cats. Can
you offer this beauty a new forever home?
Homestead Family
Restaurant
1355 Parkway, Blackfoot
785-0700
Wal-Mart Super Center
Conquest Insurance
65 S. Broadway, Blackfoot
785-2139
565 Jensen Grove Dr., Blackfoot
785-6937
144 W. Bridge St., Blackfoot
785-0760
473 First St., Idaho Falls
522-2588
First Street Welding
180 Doud St., Blackfoot
sandgelectric.com
785-5121
S&G
Electric Motor Repair
Silver was rescued from the Blackfoot Animal
Shelter. She is very sweet and gets along with
other cats in our building. She is not a real
needy cat but likes her soft treats and some
pets now and then. Silver is 1 of 8 loose female
cats in our building that all get along.
Paws & Claws
Kitties
Kitties of all ages need new homes. We need to
be able to adopt out the ones we have so that
we can help more. Those pictured are all girls
except the black and white one. They are very
friendly and were rescued from the Shelter. If
you can help save lives call us (208)680-3881.
Alliance Title
246 W. Pacific St., Suite A.,
Blackfoot
785-4573
City of Blackfoot
Chief of Police
501 North Maple, Blackfoot
785-1235
Pocatello Pet Lodge
70 S.E. Main, Blackfoot
785-7022
White Eagle
4000 Yellowstone, Pocatello
237-7387
Wendy’s
1195 Parkway Dr., Blackfoot
785-4111
Steel West
5690 Industry Way, Pocatello
237-1580
MorningNews
CLASSIFIEDS
www.am-news.com
Southeastern Idaho
DevelopmentalCenter
Therapy Aide/Tech
FT/PT positions available in Blkt/Poc area teaching
life skills to children, youth, and adults with developmental disabilities. No experience required. Flexible
PT hours. May be able to work around school, work
schedules, etc. Must be at least 18 with GED. Background check upon hire, valid driver’s license, and
good driving record. Position DOE. Apply at 765 W.
Judicial, Blackfoot, Idaho 782-1301.
Bingham County’s Marketplace to Buy, Sell or Trade!
Debit
CarD
Place an ad.
It’s so easy!
...here and online!
To Place An Ad Call Jackie Graham
Index.
Online: www.am-news.com
Email: Class@cableone.net
Call: 785-1100
Walk In:
34 North Ash,
Blackfoot
Mail: P.O.Box 70
Fax: 785-4239
All of our classifieds
have everything you
need, all sorted by category
& sub-category
1B
Classifieds
TODAY’S FEATURED AD
Find An item.
Friday, July 31, 2015
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Call Before
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Please Call for
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ITEMS UNDER
$200 ARE
Limit two free ads per household,
per month. Free must be listed in
ad, one item per ad and no copy
changes. No animals or pets,
ongoing crafts, collections, services or similar type items.
Private party advertisers only.
Prepayment required, no refunds
and extra lines, $5.80 per line.
FREE
Up to 5 Lines! Ad runs 6 days!
000 Homes For Sale
#
1
9
7
4
7
7
Priced right at
only $89,900
Great starter or
investment
3 bdrms,
1 1/2 baths,
Family room,
Living room,
large fenced back
yard. Big open
deck
LD!
#
1
9
9
8
2
0
W!
NE
Kathy
Broker, GRI
208-681-2474
• 684-3919 •
#
1
9
8
3
3
2
6.
Price must be included in ad. Ad
must be pre-paid. Only one item
per ad. No copy changes allowed.
Animals, pets, homemade crafts,
collectibles or similar items are
not allowed. No bulk items, services, real estate or rentals
accepted. Private party advertisers only. Prepayment required,
no refunds and extra lines are
$5.80 per line.
99
$
Up to 5 Lines! Ad runs 6 days!
ITEMS UNDER
$2,000 ARE
9.
$
99
Up to 5 Lines! Ad runs 6 days!
Price must be included in ad. Ad
must be pre-paid. Only one item
per ad. No copy changes allowed.
Animals, pets, homemade crafts,
collectibles or similar items are
not allowed. No bulk items, services, real estate or rentals
accepted. Private party advertisers only. Prepayment required,
no refunds and extra lines are
$5.80 per line.
000 Homes For Sale
000 Homes For Sale
SO
ITEMS UNDER
$1,000 ARE
W!
NE
$160,000
Beautiful Victorian
6 bdrms 2.75 baths
One of a kind
2 car oversized
finished garage
Priced to sell
$380,000
MLS # 199820 Country Escape in
Groveland Area
7.8 + acres, private pond and custom
landscaping
2 story home with 2 shops / shed
5 bdrms, 3 bths, covered patio
#
1
8
8
9
5
6
rice!
ted P
Upda
$375,000
Custom built
on river front
acreage.
6 bdrm beautiful home with a
priceless view.
Town & Country Real Estate
785-2474 - 710 W. Bridge
Call or email Kathy or Linnea today for a list of all of the homes in
your price range today! kathychid@cableone.net Linnea.C@me.com
Linnea
Real Estate
Agent
• 680-1996 •
Check Out All These
Great Listings!!!
785-7555
199 W. Bridge St.
Blackfoot
PREFERRED PROPERTIES
Information & Pictures for every home listed in Southeast Idaho @ www.JustIdaho.com
TED
PDA
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Carrie Hasselbring
681-7555
Susan Caldwell
680-3325
Jean Nilsson
317-2360
!
NEW
Andy Hasselbring
681-7444
Renette Loosli
604-3058
!
NEW
CE!
PRI
#195468 Cute! $48,900
Great starter or investment home.
Updated wiring, ideal location, 3 bdrm, 1 bath
ready to move in. Call Carrie 681-7555
Featured Home of The Week
!
NEW
#199977 East Side Gem $90,000
2 bedrooms on main floor and 3 in
basement plus a 2nd bath. Fenced,
one car garage.
For details call Susan 680-3325
#196680 All Brick Home! $91,000
Hardwood floors, large fenced yard,
attached carport w/storage.
Call Jean 317-2360
!
NEW
!
NEW
#199539 Home near
Jensen Grove! $115,000
3 bdrm 1 bath large fenced
backyard in a good neighborhood.
Call Jean 317-2360
!
NEW
#200011 Great Buy! $135,000
5 bdrm/2 bath home near schools.
Bonus living room, multiple possibilities.
Updated tile, carpet and a new furnace.
Call Andy 681-7444
!
NEW
#200160 HISTORIC BEAUTY! $150,000
Gorgeous 2 story on Shilling w/5 bdrms 2
baths! New carpet, spacious living room w/gas
fireplace, formal dining room, updated wiring
& vinyl windows on a nice treed lot. Single
garage & single carport. Over 3000 Sq. Ft.
Call Carrie 681-7555
#198412 Priced to sell $230,000
Brick home over 4,000 sq.ft.! Has a new
addition w/amazing maple kitchen, master bdrm w/private bath, office, formal
dining & huge living room! Basement is
perfect for mother-in-law suite
Call Carrie 681-7555
#200006 Great country home on a double
lot $130,000 4 bdrm, 2 bath with wonderful
updates. Vinyl siding, architectural shingled
roof, new paint. Large lot allows flexibility to
add a shop. Call Andy 681-7444
#200444 Charming Home! $118,000
1,836 sq ft home w/refinished hardwood floor & gas fireplace. Amazing
backyard Call Andy: 681-7444
!
NEW
#200023 Amazing home in country
location $135,000 3 bdrms w/ living
and family rooms on main level. Kitchen
has been updated. Out back you find a
fully fenced lot with concrete patio and
shed. Call Andy 681-7444
W!
NE
#200381 Great Investment
Opportunity! $163,000
This 4 plex is priced to sell! Each
Unit has 3 bdrm 1 full bath
Call Carrie: 681-7555
New Listing
Coming Soon!
#198886 Nice Town Home! $135,000
quiet area – 3 bdrm 2 bath dbl car
Garage, auto sprinklers
Call Jean 317-2360
G!
DIN
PEN
#200327 Country home close to town! $145,000
Brick home w/wood accents, has sunken living room,
wood stove & vaulted ceilings. 2 bdrms 1.5 baths.
Double garage & 16x20 shop + chain link fenced yard.
Call Carrie 681-7555
#198904 Only $142,000 MUST SEE
Manuf. Home w/4 bdrms & 2 baths,
HUGE kitchen w/stainless appliances.
2-car garage w/storage, 2 decks, 30x40
shop! Call Carrie 681-7555
New Listing New Listing New Listing
Coming Soon! Coming Soon! Coming Soon!
!
NEW
#200238 Expect to be Impressed 289,900
6 bdrm, 3 bath Ranch with 3600+ sq. ft.
4.11 acres w/ water rights. 40 X 30 SHOP
with concrete & lean-to. Lots to like here!
Call Susan for tour! 680-3325
Syringa Terrace Commercial Lots
varying sizes,
some contiguous,
all utilities on site.
Near golf course & ball fields
Call Susan for details! 680-3325
#196910 Great Location! $149,000
Great location for your business. 3
offices, shop, storage, overhead door,
3-phase power. Endless possibilities!
Call Jean 317-2360
!
NEW
#199654 $190,000 Peace &
Tranquility Here - 8 irrigated acres
3 Bedroom/2 Bath whole log home.
Great condition with room to grow.
Call Susan 680-3325
2B
CLASSIFIEDS
Friday, July 31, 2015
000 Homes For Sale
000 Homes For Sale
Ann Ogden
Assoc. Broker
• 604-6100 •
000 Homes For Sale
000 Homes For Sale
Kim Wolfley
Broker, GRI
• 680-2678 •
785-3494
Blackfoot, Idaho
idahowestern
realty.com
!
NEW
!
NEW
2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths
1,113 sq. ft. Owner/Broker
$124,900 • MLS#199460
!
!
NEW
NEW
!
rice
dP
$89,900 • 199188
3 bdrm 1 bath, in Basalt
Won’t last long!
!
ED
UC
D
RE
A great value!
2 bedrooms, 2 baths,
1 car garage.
Lot is the largest on the block.
Fully landscaped w/auto sprinkler
system & fence. Large kitchen and
dining room. Granite throughout,
central vac, security system,
appliances included - even the
washer & dryer. Builder’s model
and has many great features.
!
NEW
!
MLS#185849 • $111,000
Call Megan 241-8712
Secluded 3+ bed, 1.5 bath on 2 ac.
$137,900 • MLS 200332
Custom Twin Home 4 Bedroom 3 bath.
MLS 198308 • $219,000 Granite &
Remodeled! 5 bdrm 2 bath home.
2 car garage, 1 bed apt. & bonus rm. Granite, Tile, Hardwood. Near Golf Course tile
in kitchen. Formal living, great room New tiled baths & kitchen w/ appliMLS#193824 • $339,000.
GFA/AC, sprinkler system, no HOA.
too. 3 bdrms 2.5 baths & laundry on main. ances. New carpet, paint, cabinets,
Call Ann 208-680-6063.
GFA heat, deck, fenced, sprinkler sys.
$224,500.
lighting. egress. Call Ann 680-6063
Call Ann 208-680-6063
!
e
e!
c
c
i
i
!
r
r
P
P
ced
New
New
Redu
MLS#197575 • $134,00
Martha
Bermudez
589-0056
Quality Twin Home For Sale
Place your ad and
picture with
The Morning News
at 785-1100
NEW
MLS 197381
$224,900
Nice, brick 6 bedroom 3 full bath home on
2.5 irrigated acres. 2 car garage plus barn/shop.
Great 3 bed 2 bath home on quiet st. New carpet, paint,
windows & updated bath. Fenced, sprinklers, GFA/AC
$174,000 • 199482
Perfect Location!! 4 bdrm 3
bath, 2580 sq ft
Lots of Extras Don’t miss this one!
Cindy
Schroeder
681-5552
!
2,350 sq. ft. finished area
4 bdrms, 3 baths, Fenced and
landscaped. 2300 Windsor Court
MLS#197892 • $184,900
000 Homes For Sale
$75,000 • 199510
2 bdrm 1 bath, 760 sq ft
One car garage.
NEW
Comfortable 3 Bdrm 2 Bath Home
$69,000 • MLS#189940
With potential of having
4.4 acres Great horse property
2 additional Bedrooms and Bath
Great 4 acre bldg lot in country!
MLS200235 • $199,900
Spacious!
3 bedroom, 2 bath
on 1 acre in the country
#200446 • $135,000
ate
Upd
!
NEW
Beautiful 5 Bdrm 3 Bath Home
Over 3,300 sq. ft. finished
Two Car Garage
$219,900 • MLS#198471
000 Homes For Sale
$75,000 • 199514
2 bdrm 1 bath, 760 sq ft
One car garage.
See more information on these and additional listings at:
www.IdahoWesternRealty.com
MorningNews
www.am-news.com
MLS 199662 $279,900.
4000 sq ft. 6 bedrooms, 3.5 baths, on
6 irrigated acres Spacious, great yard.
RiveRside Real estate
220 N. Meridian
Blackfoot
reALTOr®
Jared@
Jared Taylor.net
Owner/BrOker
Jed@
JedTaylor.com
Candra Risa
681-6102
reALTOr®
email@
Candrarisa.com
Updated Today!
[
785-4000
Jared Taylor
557-9595
Jed Taylor
681-4000
4 City Lots!
2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, 880 sq ft Home with
New Roof & New Shop/Garage. Updated electrical,
steel siding & large fenced yard. A Must See!
Call: 317-2651 or 317-2652
Ann Blaser
• 680-6063 •
Broker
611 N. Broadway Blackfoot
,000
$65
Angela Palmer
757-9538
3 bed 1 3/4 bath home,
3.89 acres. Privacy & Space!
Ready to move in to!
MLS# 195087 • $120,000
reALTOr®
Angela@
AngelaMPalmer.com
Building Lot in Swan
Valley!!
#200122 • $36,000
1.64 Acres
Call
Karen Batten
681-3494
65 E 100 N, Blackfoot
Perfect Home, Ready for New Owner Country Living, Everything on One Level
MLS 199230
$128,900
MLS 196745 $144,900
1,200 sq ft, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths
1,790 sq ft, 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms
1 Ac w Sprinkler Irrigation, rV Parking
new Appliances, wH & Gas Furnace
Call Angela at 757-9538
Call Angela at 757-9538
Affordable Country Home on 3 Acres
$150,000
MLS 198720
2,025 sq ft, 2 bedrooms, 1 bathroom
40 X 50 Insulated Shop, Flood Irrigation
Call Jed at 681-4000
Beautiful, High Quality Construction
$175,000
MLS 197146
1,582 sq ft, 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms
no Maint.Yard! Full wheelchair Access
Call Jed at 681-4000
Beautiful Country Home w/Shop
Beautiful Brick Home
$300,000
MLS 199687
$195,000
MLS 199406
3,020 sq ft, 4 bedroom, 3 bathrooms 1.55 Ac, 3373 sqft, 3 bedrms, 2 baths
extensively remodeled, newer roof Basement is ready for Finish work
Call Jed at 681-4000
Call Jed at 681-4000
d!
ce
du
Re
Home on 3 Acres
One Level Country Home on 8.75 Ac. Amazing Home &4000 sq ft Shop
$330,000
MLS 196052
$425,000
MLS 199396
$300,000
MLS 197112
3,200 sq ft, 4 bedrooms, 3.5 bathrooms 4,000 sq ft, 6 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms
3,696 sq ft, 4 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms
Includes dwelling used as Beauty Salon Open Floor Plan, Formal Lvng& Dn rm water rights for 2+ Acres of Beauty
Call Angela at 757-9538
Call Jed at 681-4000
Call Jed at 681-4000
NeW Hud
4 bdrm, 2 bath Home. 1800 sq ft
Remodeled from top to bottom!!
MLS#200424 • $129,000
W!
NE
d!
OL
S
Now Is The Time To Buy!
2 bed, 1 bath, 1440 sq ft
HUD Home
.MLS# 200225 • $87,000
4 bdrm 2 baths Near Greenbelt.
Handicap accesibility! 2460 sq ft.
MLS#194809 • $129,900
d!
1 bdrm 1 bath 560 sq ft 1 car garage 1.3 ac Atomic City
MLS 193700 • $45,000
!
W
NE
Unique Desert Oasis in Atomic City
Liquor License/inventory/living qtrs.
MLS#188394 • $59,000
Mark Call
604-4602
Owner/Broker
Cathy
Haggard
317-6919
Amanda
Scott
403-6547
Heather
Callister
244-2706
Roxie Jensen
680-4018
w
Ne
Residential lots in Atomic City!
Perfect location, city water.
MLS 186826 • $45,900
R
Two lot(s) near Mackay for single family homes. RV’s
Okay with city approval. MLS 175369 • $12,500 each
Gary Ternus
680-1901
www.garyternus.com
Justin Bair
690-9094
www.jmackbair@gmail.com
Elias Trejo
716-7007
Manuel Garcia
680-2664
Judy
Campbell
589-8247
Featured Home!!
ce!
Pri
29.5 Commercial Acres-Salvage Yard
Zoned M2 Heavy Industrial
MLS 188440 • $185,000
d!
All Brick! 4 bdrm, 2 bath home has 2200 sq ft
Great views. MLS#197767 • $139,500
!Featured Home!!
G
dIN
PeN
Fenced Corner Lot! 5 bdrm, 2 bath, 2028 sq ft
Finished basement. MLS#197540 • $115,000
!
80 Acre Farm near Driggs with
3 bed, 1 bath, 1320 sq ft home
.MLS# 196787 • $599,000
Low
ce
u
ed
NEW
Featured Home!!
!
W
NE
W!
NE I.F.
In
e
uc
d
5 bed, 2 bath, 2184 sq ft
Perfect, affordable, &
charming updated home!!
.MLS# 199771 • $123,000
NeW Hud
4 bed, 2 bath, 2972 sq ft
HUD Home
.MLS# 199999 • $148,000
Re
Falling!
If You Want More, You Want Us!!
Featured Home!!
W!
are
Luxury Home on 4 Acres
$850,000
MLS 197162
6,095 sq ft, 6 bedrooms, 4.5 baths
Great room with 2 Story window
Call Jed at 681-4000
Check Out All These Great Listings!!!
NE
www.idahohighplainsrealty.com
Interest
Rates
!
ed
c
du
Re
DUPLEX, Great Rental History!
$160,000
MLS 198557
Unit 1 - 1,273 sqft, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths
Unit 2 - 1,492 sqft, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths
Call Jed at 681-4000
Fenced Yard, Low Maintenance Siding
$146,900
MLS 199071
2,298 sq ft, 4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms
Convenient-keyless entry + Security Sys
Call Angela at 757-9538
Idaho High Plains Realty
!
ING
d
PeN
Cozy, 2 bdrm 1bath 1137 sq ft
with 27x14 building next to home
MLS 193459 • $86,499
785-1313
745 W Bridge
Suite B
www.IdahoanRealty.com
Property is being sold “as is”
5 bdrm, 3 bath, 2860 sq ft MLS#198132 • $65,000
d!
ce
du
Re
3 bdrm 1 bath Great starter home. 1400 sq ft. Fenced yard w/fruit trees!
MLS#187631 • $99,500
MorningNews
CLASSIFIEDS
www.am-news.com
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
Friday, July 31, 2015
000 Homes For Sale
000 Homes For Sale
!
ED
C
DU
RE
RE
3 Bdrm, 3 Bath with room to grow
in the framed & wired basement!
2710 sq ft just over 1 acre Lots of
extras! Landscaped,sprinkler system
MLS#198970 • $229,999
000 Homes For Sale
!
ED
C
DU
!
!
ED
C
DU
RE
5 bdrm 3 bath, 2624 sq ft
Newly remodeled ready to move
into on just under 3 acres!
MLS 198405 • $195,000
2 bdrms 1 bath 865 sq ft
Very clean! Nice back yard
MLS 193801 • $80,000
Lot For Sale
NEW
3B
!
NEW
Five Acres in Fort Hall
$37,500
!
NEW
3 Bdrm, 3 Bath Country
Home in Pingree!
Has 2 out buildings and corrals
MLS#199833 • $115,000
Manuel
Garcia
680-2664
000 Homes For Sale
Wonderful 3 bdrm 2 bath Home
Basement can be an apartment
& has kitchen!
MLS#200106 • $115,000
New listing! 2 bdrm, 1 bath
A great buy at only
$69,999
Team 208
Elias
Trejo
716-7007
Heather
Callister
244-2706
"Don’t Just Put a Sign
In Your Yard! Call Us
To Get Results!!"
000 Homes For Sale
000 Homes For Sale
[
Updated Today!
Aberdeen! $286,500
Aberdeen • $103,000
Must see! Aberdeen. • $160,000
!
NEW
mLs#200468 - spacious 2653
sQ.FT. Brick home on 2 1/2
Acres. 5-6 bedroom, 2.5 Baths.
1 car garage, plus shop.
Auto sprinklers.
MLS #194005 - 3 bdrm, 1 bath w/
Incredible 5420 sq ft custom brick
seperate extra walk-in shower. New
home on 5 acres! 5 bdrm, 4 bath,
carpet & paint! Lrg. orchard, 1 acre! office, exercise room, 2 bonus rooms,
Call
Terry Lebrecht
681-1191
terrylebrecht@
gmail.com
Home isWhere
The Heart Is
2 family rooms, 3 fireplaces & indoor
Hot Tub. Chef’s kitchen w/pantry.
Water rights, sprinkler system, &
Much More!! MLS#199346
785-6685
Buying or Selling? Call us today
for a Free Market Analysis!!
!
NEW
Tami Fairchild
681-6646
John Fairchild
Broker
70 S. Spruce
Valerie Duran Lindsay Fairchild Sharlyn Piggott Kathy Rhead
680-1815
681-6643
317-3171
260-0933
G!
!
NEW
Nice Brick Home
2022 Sq Ft home
3 Bedrooms, 1 Bathroom
Unfinished Basement
MLS#200462 - $127,900
!
Country Living Close To Town
2676 sq ft home w/5 bdrm, 1 3/4
bath, 1.379 acres w/water rights
MLS#192727 • $179,000
Brick Home On Quiet Cul-De-Sac
2084 Sq Ft home w/4 Bed, 1 Bath
Lots Of Updates, 1 Car Garage
MLS# 200183 • $119,900
Wonderful Home in Pingree
2838 sq ft home on 2.123 Acres
3 bdrm 3 bath, open floor plan
2 car garage & outbuildings
MLS #195315 • $189,000
!
NEW
NEW
Waterfront Property
5.13 acres in Shelley
Build your dream home here
MLS#200045 • $229,000
!
DING
PEN
Gorgeous 2 Story Home
3084 Sq Ft/3 Bed-2.5 Baths
Built in 2008-Lots of upgrades
MLS#197878 • $264,900
TED
PDA
U
Wonderful Brick Home
2202 Sq Ft w/5 Bed, 2 Bath
Brand New Kitchen
MLS#200454 - $134,900
ed
Pric
Newer Town Home
985 Sq Ft w/2 bed, 1 bath
Single Car Garage
MLS#197916 • $116,500
l!!
Dea
Custom Home in Atomic City
2 bed 2 bath 2500 sq ft on 0.42 ac
2500 sq ft shop
MLS#183047 • $120,000
Home In The Country
2000 sq ft w/4 bdrms, 2 baths
Ready to move in & Priced to sell!
MLS#183597 • $167,500
ell!
To S
Wonderful Brick home
2711 Sq Ft / 4 Bed, 2.5 Baths
Open Floor Plan & Lots Of Storage
MLS# 189137 • $172,500
Home on 5 Acres
5 Bedroom, 2 Bathroom
Newer Custom Kitchen
Barn & outbuildings
MLS#196624 • $160,000
Cute Home
808 Sq Ft w/2 bed, 1 bath
Some new paint, Flooring, etc
Attached 1 car garage
MLS#199361 • $84,900
U
Cute Home Close To Schools
1131 Sq Ft home, 3 Bed, 1 bath
New carpet, tile, paint
MLS#198715 • $118,000
Spacious Building
3034 sq ft w/6+ Offices
20+ off street parking
MLS#189924 • $149,900
ot!
ul L
tif
eau
Gorgeous Building Lot
on the River
MLS#180683 • $129,000
!
OLD
S
Clean & Cozy Home
2104 Sq Ft home
4 Bed, 2 Bath New Kitchen
MLS198442 • $133,500
!
NEW
Beautiful Home On 2 Acres
3875 Sq Ft, 5 Bed, 3 1/2 Bath
Spacious open Kitchen
Main Floor Master
MLS#200324 • $310,000
TED
PDA
U
CE!
PRI
Cute Home
840 sq ft w/2 bdrms, 1 bath
1 car garage attached
MLS#197759 • $71,000
6 bed, 4 bath, 5100 sq ft
3.839 Ac.of private setting
MLS#190734 • $369,000
CE!
Great Location For Business
U
Beautiful Custom Home
PRI
3920 sq ft building. Great for retail,
office or investment. Owner will
carry w/acceptable offer & down pmt.
MLS# 182434 • $169,000
TED
PDA
Great Starter Home
1351 sq ft w/ 2 bdrm 1 bath
Unfinished Basement
MLS# 195679 • $63,000
!
NEW
TED
PDA
CE!
TE
PDA
B
Come Take A Look
3 bed, 2 bath home w/2147 Sq Ft
Lots of updates
3 car attached garage
MLS#197580 • $132,500
CE!
PRI
RI
DP
U
D!
SOL
at
Gre
DIN
PEN
CE!
PRI
Beautiful Home!!
3072 sq ft w/5 bdrms, 3 baths
3 car garage.
This home has all the extras
MLS#178128 • $208,000
LOTS FOR SALE
Great Country Subdivision
1-2.47 ACRE LOTS
Natural Gas, Power,
Phone to lot.
Pressurized Irrigation
FOR MORE INFO
CALL TAMI AT
681-6646
TRy OUR QR Code
TO CONNECT TO
OUR WEBSITE.
LOOk FOR SIGNS
WITh ThE QR
COdE FOR ThAT
hOME!
Nice Brick Home
2004 Sq Ft w/3 Bed 1 & 3/4 Baths
Well Maintained-ready to move in
MLS#196836 • $121,000
!
NEW
Home on 1 acre
2160 Sq ft w/ 4 bed, 2 bath
Lots of updates
MLS#198569 • $139,000
Tons Of Potential!
1000 sq ft 2 bdrms 1 bath
New paint, carpet, roof
MLS#187704 • $49,000
4B
CLASSIFIEDS
Friday, July 31, 2015
030 Lots - Acreage
030 Lots - Acreage
Lots and Acreage
• A Great lot in a well developed Subdivision ready to build on.
Utilities are on the lot. Sale of the lot is contingent on Loosli
Construction Inc being the builder and construction to begin
within 120 days of purchase of the lot. $30,000 Call Renette
604-3058 MLS #178836
• Bare Ground ranging from 1 acre to 23 acres priced
from $10k to $58K located North of Moreland
• #195446 Hard to find R3 Lot in the City $17,500
Call Andy: 681-7444
• Priced to Sell! 6.76 lush irrigated acres on the edge
of town. Great building site for horse or cattle lovers
or for single family subdivision (Zone R1).
Only $75,000 MLS#199663 Call Carrie 681-7555
Commercial
• #196911 $95,000 Large .502 acre commercial lot on
N Broadway near the fair grounds. Ready for your business. Call Jean: 317-2360
• Commercial Building with over 11,000 sq. ft.
There are 3 warehouses (2 of which are leased) and plenty
of office space for only $225,000. Call Carrie 681-7555
•2.64 acres commercial ground with 531’ of frontage.
Great access and visibility from Hwy 26. Possible Owner
carry. MLS #196547 Call Renette #604-3058.
RE/MAX
PREFERRED PROPERTIES
199 W. BRIDGE ST.
BLACKFOOT, ID 83221
785-7555
070 Homes For Rent
070 Homes For Rent
MORELAND
Five-bedroom, three bath with full finished basement
on one acre lot. Clean, quiet neighborhood.
Garden, fenced back yard. New paint, new carpet, new
LG washer and dryer, garage. $1,250 per month
No smoking, pets negotiable.
OR
Four-bedroom, two bath with full basement. Garden,
fenced back yard. New paint, new carpet, new LG
washer and dryer, garage. No smoking, pets negotiable.
$1,000 per month.
Call (702) 812-4770
r o o f t o p
real estate
management
•Two bedroom one bath Home
• Four bedroom 3 bath Home
Call 522-roof to make an appointment or
check it out online at rooftoprentals.net
050 Furn. Apts. For Rent
060 Unfurn.Apts.ForRent
COZY, TWO-BEDROOM
Heat and city utilities paid. Quiet cool
and clean. Bathroom remodeled. $450
month plus $200 deposit. Smoking and
pets optional. Rent Pro-rated till
August 1st. Call 785-5619.
*****************************
Three-bedroom apartment, Groveland.
Water, sewer, garbage paid.
Washer/dryer hookups. Service pets
only, no smoking.
Call 684-4251.
*****************************
060 Unfurn.Apts.ForRent
**********
COTTONWOOD
COMMUNITY APARTMENTS
Beautifully Remodeled
One-bedroom – $420
Two-bedroom – $520
Three-bedroom, $620
In nice quiet cul-de-sac neighborhood.
Ask about our new, pet-friendly policy.
Call 317-7457
**********
141 South Birch
Clean and Roomy!!
Two-bedroom, one bath apartment. All
utilities included. $535/month. No pets,
no smoking. Call 317-1362.
GARAGE
SALE
Clip
&
Carry
Blackfoot
125 Bergeson
488 Alexander
852 Connie St
405 W Colllins
Side (by Non Pareil)
2929 & 2875
Teeples Dr.
260 Bergeson
fort Hall
500 W Ferry Butte Rd.
MorElaND
870 W 100 N
(Pioneer Road)
One & two bedroom apartments
for Senior Citizens in Aberdeen,
Blackfoot & Firth. Appliances
furnished. Deposit required.
Rental assistance available.
Bingham Housing, Inc.,
P.O. Box 781, Blackfoot
785-9639
*Equal Housing Opportunity*
**********
2, TWO-BEDROOM
MOBILE HOMES
For rent at Town & Country Mobile Home Park. New carpet.
$425 plus deposit. No pets. Call
785-1581, leave message.
***********
CUTE AND CLEAN
Two-bedroom, one bath home. $600
plus $350 deposit. No smoking. Call
785-6685 or 681-6646.
FOUR-BEDROOM
$795 plus $500 deposit
Great location
Pets negotiable - w/d hookups
Call 760-3030.
110 Garage Sales
YARD SALE!!
870 W 100 N (Pioneer Road)
Friday & Saturday! July 31st
&August 1st 8am-??
Nice Clothes (baby - adult),
Motorcycle Helmets and
Saddle Bags, shoes,
highchair, & Much More!
Cash only.
GARAGE SALE!
EVERY SATURDAY!
1651 E Airport Road
Saturday,
August 1st from 9a.m. - 3 p.m.
Everything new and in the box!
Something for everyone!
GARAGE SALE!!
449 Neff Circle (go to 100 North turn
right on Mark Lane then left of Neff Circle). Saturday August 1st 8am-??
Table lamps, designer purses, boom
box, compact size elipticle excersizer
and More!!
MULTI-FAMILY YARD SALE!
852 Connie St. Friday-Saturday
July 31st & August 1st from 8 am to ??
Tons of Clothes, toys, beds, bedding,
lamps, desks, home decor, PS3
games, and MUCH, MUCH MORE!!
MULTI-FAMILY YARD SALE!!
525 Gardner Dr. Saturday Only!!
August 1st from 8am to 1pm
Furniture, tools, office supplies, scrapbooking, antiques, holiday items,
clothes & Lots more! Don’t Miss!
YARD SALE
48 N 900 W
Aug.1st 9:00AM
-6:00 PM 15 hp Irrigation pump, Hot
tub filter, exercise equipment, clothing, electronics, furniture and misc.
YARD SALE!
125 Bergeson (Golf Course)
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
July 31st & August 1st!! 8am-1pm
Tools including Saws & Drills, Lawn
Equipment, Golf Equipment, Clothes,
Electronics, Toddler Bed & Much More!
YARD SALE!
1287 Charlynn Way (Off Rich Lane)
Saturday Only!! August 1st 9am -2pm
Lots of Miscellaneous!!
YARD SALE!!
260 Bergeson Dr. (golf course)
Friday & Saturday July 31 & August 1
from 7am to ??
Complete Queen
Size Bed!! Snow blower, weed eater,
small ladies clothes, bedspreads,
household items, and more.
YARD SALE!!
2929 & 2875 Teeples Dr.
Friday-Saturday,July 31st & August 1st
from 8am-??? Trolling motor with foot
control, treadmill , miscellaneous guy
stuff & miscellaneous. DON’T MISS!!
YARD SALE!!
405 W COLLINS SIDE (by Non Pareil)
Friday Only! August 1st - from 8- ??
Lawn mower, Bedroom Set, Washer &
Dryer, Patio Furniture, Grill, Too Much
to List! Don’t Miss!!
For Rent In Groveland
Three-bedroom. New carpet and paint.
Close to schools Large yard - in
YARD SALE!!
Cul-de-Sac. Water, sewer, garbage
488 Alexander Friday Only!
paid. No smoking/No pets. $575/Month
July 31st from 9am to 2pm
plus $250 deposit.
Lots of kids clothes, Womens size 18
Call 690-9778
pants, Lots of Toys and Books and
Lots of miscellaneous! Don’t Miss!!!
IN TOWN
One and two-bedroom apartment. $350
YARD SALE!!
and $425 plus deposit. Call 785-3560.
500 W FERRY BUTTE ROAD
Friday & Saturday July 31st & Aug 1st
IN TOWN
from 8am to 3pm
STUDIO APARTMENT
DON’T MISS OUT!!
With electric heat. $235/month plus deposit. Call 785-3560.
YARD SALE!!
779 W 100 N (Pioneer Road)
NEWLY-REMODELED
Saturday, August 1st! from 8am - 3pm
STOUT STREET APTS.
Generator,camping equipment, backTwo-bedroom, one bath in excellent
packs, blankets, toys, books, movies,
location near schools. No pets.
small appliances & Much More!!
Fridge/stove included. Washer/dryer
hookups. $435 plus $400 deposit.
YARD SALE!!
Call 680-0377.
845 Pearl Dr. (off Wooten Way)
**********
Saturday Only! August 1st 8am to ??
Baby items, Toys, Bikes, Basketball
ONE AND TWO-BEDROOM
hoop, Motorcycle pipes, Pontoon,
Daily, weekly and monthly rates.
Clothes, etc., etc., etc.
All utilities plus cable included. Call
Paul, 406-7744.
YARD SALE!!
870 W 100 N (Pioneer Road)
ROOM FOR RENT
Saturday Only! August 1st 8am-??
$300/month plus $150 deposit.
Nice Clothes (baby - adult), Motorcycle
Utilities included. Call 680-3876 or
Helmets and Saddle Bags, shoes,
text.
highchair, & Much More! Cash only.
Sunset Manor
Apartments
106 N.E. Main
785-6171
Accepting
applications for
one-bedroom
apartments.
Subsidized-housing
for seniors and
those with disabilities.
Must meet eligibility
requirements.
www.am-news.com
MorningNews
rningNews
www.am-news.com
070 Homes For Rent
Equal Housing
Opportunity
YARD SALE!!!
BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND!!
Saturday, August 1
8 a.m. to 12 noon
1351 Clifford Street
Kites, bike, 3 bar stools, loveseat,
florals, household, Christmas items.
Lots of great items!! Don’t miss!!!
MorningNews
www.am-news.com
180 Help Wanted
180 Help Wanted
130 Notices
We accept
MasterCard, VISA,
and Discover.
Place Your
Classified
Ad Today!
MorningNews
Bus Drivers
Needed for
Miles Bus Company
Will train for CDL!!
Call 785-1107
www.am-news.com
785-1100
Notice
For more information and
assistance regarding the
investigation of financing,
business opportunities,
The Morning News
urges its readers to contact the
Better Business Bureau of
Eastern Idaho, Inc.
by writing
425 N. Capital
Idaho Falls, ID 83402
or call 523-9754.
Southeastern Idaho
DevelopmentalCenter
Therapy Aide/Tech
FT/PT positions available in Blkt/Poc area teaching
life skills to children, youth, and adults with developmental disabilities. No experience required. Flexible
PT hours. May be able to work around school, work
schedules, etc. Must be at least 18 with GED. Background check upon hire, valid driver’s license, and
good driving record. Position DOE. Apply at 765 W.
Judicial, Blackfoot, Idaho 782-1301.
NEW TODAY
AA HAPPY HOUR
MEETINGS
Jason Lee
Methodist Church
168 S. University
Wednesdays & Saturdays
6 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Sunday mornings
9 a.m. to 10 a.m.
Will Sign Court Cards.
Come join our team!
Health West Inc. a Community
Health Center is seeking an active
DID YOU KNOW
Newspaper-generated content is so
valuable, it’s taken and repeated, condensed, broadcast, tweeted, discussed, posted, copied, edited, and
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call 916-288-6011 or email
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Sell your structured settlement or annuity payments for CASH NOW. You
don't have to wait for your future payments
any
longer!
Call
1-800-914-0942.
Family Medicine Nurse Practitioner or
Physician Assistant to work at their
clinics located in Pocatello, Idaho and
surrounding area. Student loan
repayment is available thru the National
Health Service Corp. Must have current
Idaho license. EOE/Veteran’s preference.
Send questions, CV or resume to
nhartley@healthwestinc.org.
Closing date:
When position is filled.
HEP Instructor – Blackfoot Please visit
our website for job details and to apply
www.communitycouncilofidaho.org
140 Personals
AL-ANON/ALA-TEEN
POWER COUNTY HOSPITAL
Is looking for an:
Sundays:
7 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Bingham Memorial Cafeteria
Tuesdays and Thursdays:
7 p.m. to 8 p.m.
St. Paul’s Episcopal Church
72 North Shilling
MDS Coordinator in Long Term Care
Please apply online at: www.pchd.net
Or email your resume to:
kendra.sweat@pchd.net
522-4947 or 785-2541
Meet singles right now!
No paid operators, just real people like
you. Browse greetings, exchange
messages and connect live. Try it free.
Call now: 1-877-955-5505.
150 Lost & Found
LOST BLACK/TAN MALE MINATURE PINCHER Lost in Blackfoot
between river and Sage Hill. Went
missing Sat 7-25 9am REWARD
208-598-2308. or 402-319-7931
Jodie or Blake
POWER COUNTY HOSPITAL
Is looking for a:
LEAD RN
In our long-term care department.
Apply online at: www.pchd.net
Or email your questions or resumes to:
kendra.sweat@pchd.net
FREE
Italian Soda
with the purchase of a Morning News classified ad
49 S. Spruce
(503) 409-1860 • Blackfoot, ID
With every purchase of a paid Morning News Classified Ad.
Don’t Delay...
Place your ad today
For a limited time when you purchase a
Morning News Classified Ad, you’ll receive
a coupon good for a Free Italian Soda
compliments of the Morning News and
Mudslingers in Blackfoot. Limited to one
coupon per person per visit. Just place your
pre-paid, one week ad in person and we’ll give
you a free coupon. No limit to the number of
coupons you can earn, one coupon for each
pre-paid week long ad.
120 Money to Loan
Reduce Your Past Tax Bill by as
much as 75 Percent.
Stop Levies, Liens and Wage Garnishments. Call The Tax DR now to see if
you Qualify: 1-800-791-2099.
130 Notices
SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY
BENEFITS. Unable to work? Denied
benefits? !We Can Help! !WIN or Pay
Nothing! Contact Bill Gordon & Associates at 1-800-879-3312 to start your
application today!
34 N. Ash St., Blackfoot
208-785-1100
OFFER EXPIRES Aug 31, 2015
MorningNews
CLASSIFIEDS
www.am-news.com
5B
Friday, July 31, 2015
180 Help Wanted
180 Help Wanted
240 Services Offered
**********
NEW TODAY
THE SQUEEGY SQUAD
WINDOW WASHING
Specializing in “hard water removal!”
Residential and Commercial
Free Estimates
Reasonable Rates
Call 680-6467 or 317-2978
************
************
Instrumentation Technician
HOME TOUCH
HOUSECLEANING
SERVICE, LLC
Depending on qualifications and experience
Bonded and Insured
New clients!
Susan Christiansen
380-9610
************
$28.64 – $30.15 per Hour
J.R. Simplot Co. is seeking an instrument
technician who possesses a certificate of Instrument
Tech. training at an accredited university or a
minimum of six years of experience
Possess knowledge of:
• Electronic and electrical controls
• Process instrumentation
• PLCs, DCS control elements
• Familiarity with the NEC code
An aptitude test shall be used to assess the
candidate’s ability to troubleshoot, repair, install,
and calibrate electrical devices and instrumentation associated with a chemical processing facility
preferred. Schedule may vary depending on the
needs of the position.
Qualified applicants may send a resume no later
than August 14th, 2015 to J. R. Simplot Company,
Don Plant HR Department, P O Box 912,
Pocatello, ID 83204, fax to 208-234-5487,
or email to debarah.crane@simplot.com.
Background check and drug screen are
required as condition of employment.
Equal Opportunity Employer
************
HOME TOUCH
HOUSECLEANING
SERVICE, LLC
Bonded and Insured
New clients!
Susan Christiansen
380-9610
************
************
POGGE’S EXCAVATION
LLC
~Licensed and Bonded~
*Post Hole Digging
*Custom Grading
*Driveways, all sizes
*Water Lines
*Sewer Systems
*Homesites
*Haul topsoil & gravel
(We acept credit card on-site)
Call 684-3403, 681-1550
or 681-0582
************
Grover Service Centre
ESTABLISHED IN 1970
210 Good Things To Eat
150 Lost & Found
Check out the
Animal Shelter for
your lost pets.
L o st p e ts a re
o n ly h e ld
th re e to five d a ys.
199 Frontage R d.
785-6897
180 Help Wanted
180 Help Wanted
Full Time Position
available for:
Route Relief Driver
Paid holiday and
vacation Medical plan,
401K
Closing Date:
8-6-15 at
at 4:30 p.m.
Apply
at:
Home Guard Siding is looking for a Siding, Roofing,
Window person. Experience
preferred but will train.
Call 208-233-2171.
Alsco is an
EOE/AAE/M/F/H/V Employer
Booth Lease Available. Also nail
tech needed. Call Stephanie at
208-785-0682.
Find it fast...
785-1100
180 Help Wanted
Please apply online at
careers.alsco.com
180 Help Wanted
Now hiring- friendly
and reliable people
for the following
part-time position
Deli Supervisor
Apply online at
chsinc.com/ careers.
Or come in and use
computer in main
!"#$%&'!&())*+,
CHS Bingham Co-op
477 W. Highway 26
Blackfoot.
We are an equal
opportunity employer
Shoemaker’s
YOUR “GREEN GROCER”
Sweet Corn Is Ready!!
Hagerman Watermelon!!
Also Baby Red Potatoes,
Zucchini & Summer Squash
Coming soon: Beets, Basil,
Cucumbers, Peas & More!
OPEN DAILY
9 a.m. to 7 p.m.
201 N. 300 W.
• 785-6346 •
180 Help Wanted
Dependable and Responsible Person to Assist
Individuals with Disabilities.
First aid, CPR and Medication Certification preferred.
Various Shifts. Part-Time Hours.
Please apply in person at:
280 Cedar Street
Place an ad..
785-1100
240 Services Offered
!Repair & Restoration of your
Favorite Clock or Watch
!"#$%&'()*++,&(-+#./(
((0%.1#&2(3415#&*6,'(7,&8*.,
!7$*99(:&#;,99*#<%++2(
((=&%*<,'
!("%<'9(#<(>?@,&*,<.,(#;(
Over 50 Years
!)%/,9("#49,(-%++9
!-%++(=#'%2(1#()%/,
an Appointment
Grover Service Centre
ABC((D,91(:#+,+*<,(E#%'
E,?F4&GH(IJ(ACKKL
208 356-6085
-5,./(M4&(D,F(7*1,
G&#8,&9,&8*.,.,<1&,N.#O
RAILINGS BY
WESTERN FABRICATION
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Powder Coating and
Installation included in all bids
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Call Craig
208-241-6774
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Free Estimates
IDAHORAILING.COM
240 Services Offered
Iron Storm ConStruCtIon
180 Help Wanted
Dawn Enterprises, Inc.
Cedar Center
NOW HIRING
210 Good Things To Eat
DRIVERS WANTED!!!!
Classes Start Weekly
Day or Evening
*5-Week-Day Session Available
*One-On-One Driver Training
*Job Placement Assistance
*$30 to $40,000 per year
*Good Jobs Available
SAGE TECHNICAL
80 Doud Street
Blackfoot, Idaho
www.sageschools.com
782-2282
NOW HIRING
Needed:
Processing Plant
Mechanic
Must be available for
rotating shifts. Forty plus
hours per week.
Welding experience and
tool knowledge helpful but
not necessary. Pay is DOE.
!"#"$%&'()(*+(,+"'(-%".'
waiting period.
Apply in person at
Idaho Supreme,
614 E. 800 N.
Firth, Idaho
“We Install the Best & servIce the rest”
All types of
• Landscaping
• sprinkLer systems
• repair & instaLLation
684-9600 • Matt Reid OwneR
785-5323
“Low Price Leader!”
Residential & Commercial
General Contractors
•RCE 11755
EEO/AAE
190 Child Care
www.steadmanconstruction.net
WE DO:
• Concrete sidewalks
• Concrete foundations
• Concrete Driveways
• Excavation of all kinds
• Hauling
• Demolition
• Water Mains
• Septic Systems
• Top Soil
• Gravel
RCE 16241
**********
UNIVERSITY DAYCARE
ICCP Certified
• Ages infants to 8-years-old
•One-on-one care
with activities
•Big fenced play yard
•Snacks & Lunch
Call now, 785-0566 or 785-3791
**********
220 Pets & Grooming
Blackfoot
Pet Grooming
by DeAnna
llC
Satisfaction Guaranteed
Quality Since 1987
Summer Is Here!!
Schedule Now While There Is Still Time!!
• Sprinklers • Landscaping • Water Features
Mike Fresh • 684-4955 • Member of the
www.mikeslawndesign.com
785-6789 or 680-5459
Most dogs in and out
within an hour.
Open Tuesday-Friday
We Groom Large
& Small Breeds.
Cats Too!!
Walk-Ins Welcome!
JULIE’S PET SALON
42 Years’ Experience
785-4940
240 Services Offered
**********
208 CONCRETE
Specialize in Residential Flatwork
Patios
Driveways
Sidewalks
Garage Floors
Stamped or Colored
Custom Concrete
FREE ESTIMATES
LOWEST PRICE GUARANTEED!!
Call (208) 406-9900 or
339-3486
**********
Local - Reliable – Friendly - Insured
Guaranteed
•Spring / Fall Cleanups
•Complete Lawn Maintenance
•Professional Tree Care
•Lawn Fertilization
•Lawn Aeration / Power Rake
Cell:(208) 680-6446
www.greenbearlawncare.com
6B
ADVERTISEMENT FOR
BIDS
Friday, July 31, 2015
240 Services Offered
240 Services Offered
785-7494
Quality Service Since 1995
Denton Klingler - Owner
Bonded • Public Works Licensed
Commercial • Residential
Asphalt Paving
• Commercial/Residential
• Crushed Gravel
• Screened Topsoil
• Back Hoe
• Arena Sand
• Sanding
• Pit Run
• Landscape Rock & Boulders
• Sewer Systems
• Grading
Delivered or Loaded
Mickelsen Construction • 684-3803 •
Hot Plant, 785-0487
We accept all major Credit Cards!!
Honey for Hire
Appliance Repair
Home Repairs
Trash Removal
Decks & Fencing
General Labor
Framing, Painting
Chimney Cleaning
s
Reference!
Available Call Scott
339-3573
Music Lessons
Call 339-3573
JusT CAll BoB!
“When Bessie
Does,” Give us
DBA
A BuZZ!
Custom Fabrication & Truck Repair
• Specializing in Stretching Truck Frames
• General Fabrication • Aluminum Repairs
bobiothebuilder@yahoo.com
DBACustom
Manure spreading
“We do everything but stand
behind our work”
sirshitmaster@yahoo.com
Been in a World of Shit Since 1999
BoB Caldwell
Ventures, Inc.
244 S 1400 W, Pingree - 221-6447 or 684-4550
240 Services Offered
DID YOU KNOW that not only newspaper media reach a HUGE Audience,
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MorningNews
400 Recreation
Vehicles
ceived
by Harper
Leavitt En- 400 Recreation Vehicles
500
Lot Legals
10 in Block 5 of Wind
gineering at 800 West JudiRiver Estates, Phase II,
cial, Blackfoot, Idaho 83221
Bingham County, Idaho acuntil 10:00 a.m. prevailcording to the plat recorded
ing local time, on MonAugust 25, 2009, as Instruday, August 10, 2015, at
ment No. 610306
which time HLE will deliver all sealed proposals
THE TRUSTEE HAS NO
to Blackfoot City Hall
KNOWLEDGE OF A MORE
(council chambers) to
PARTICULAR DESCRIPTION
Got Knee Pain? Back Pain? Shoul- open at 10:30 a.m. on
OF THE ABOVE-DESCRIBED
der Pain? Get a pain-relieving brace August 10, 2015
REAL PROPERTY, BUT FOR
00
-little or NO cost to you. Medicare PaPURPOSES OF COMPLIANCE
tients, call Health Hotline Now! 1- For:
WITH IDAHO CODE, SEC800-285-4609.
This work shall consist of
TION 60-113, THE TRUSTEE
furnishing and installing apHAS
BEEN INFORMED THAT
VIAGRA 100mg or CIALIS 20mg. !40
proximately 133,288 square
THE STREET ADDRESS OF:
tabs +10 FREE all for $99 including
feet of 2.5 inch thick 1/2”
465 Windriver Drive, ShelFREE, Fast and Discreet SHIPPING.
hot mix asphalt pavement
ley, ID 83274 also shown
1-888-836-0780 or Metro-Meds.net
500 Legals
500 Legals
grade 58-28 and 4” of 3/4”
of record as 465 Wind River
crushed aggregate.
ADVERTISEMENT FOR
340 Hay & Straw
Drive, Shelley, ID 83274,
BIDS
MAY SOMETIMES BE ASSOFEEDER HAY
The Contractor shall furnish Sealed proposals will be re- CIATED WITH SAID REAL
240 TONS 1ST CROP!
4X4 Bales. No Roundup used. $140 all labor, materials, equip- ceived by Harper Leavitt En- PROPERTY.
ment, tools, transportation gineering at 800 West Juditon. Blackfoot Area. Call 785-5936
and supplies required to cial, Blackfoot, Idaho 83221 Said sale will be made with420 Cars
complete the work in accor- until 10:00 a.m. prevailing out covenant or warranty
dance with the Contract local time, on Monday, regarding title, possession
2001 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX
4-door, 3.1, V-6. Power seat, cruise, Documents, the plans, the August 3, 2015, at which or encumbrances to satisfy
automatic. Local trade. Runs great! Idaho Standards for Public time HLE will deliver all the obligation secured by
Works 2015 Edition, and sealed proposals to Black- and pursuant to the power
Good title. Lots of car for only
$2,498 any applicable Federal, foot City Hall (council cham- of sale conferred in the
State and Local require- bers) to open at 10:30 a.m. deed of trust executed by
Call Allen, 589-7105 or
ments.
on August 3, 2015
Jocelyn Hayes a single perLiquidators Unlimited
Proposals will be opened For:
son , as Grantor to Alliance
522-7142, Idaho Falls
and publicly read at the This work shall consist of in- Title & Escrow Corp., as
792 E. Greenway
above hour and date.
stalling Chip Seal a CRS-2R Trustee, for the benefit and
2003 BUICK LESABRE CUSTOM
No Pre-Bid meeting and Emulsified Asphalt for Seal security of United States of
Only 49,000 actual miles, Clean Car- walk thru will be held.
Coat at 0.35 Gal/S.Y. Cover America acting through the
fax, many options. If you want a beau- Plans, specifications, pro- Coat Material Class 2 at 25 Rural Housing Service or
tiful, conditioned, economical, low mile, posal forms and other infor- lbs/S.Y.
successor agency, United
like new car, for a low price, don’t miss mation are on file for ex- Estimated Quantities:
States Department of Agrithis one!
amination at the following • South University 15,211 culture (formerly Farmers
Only $6895.00 locations:
SY
Home Administration or RuCall Von, 589-7142 or
• N Fisher (Alice to School) ral Economic & Community
Liquidators Unlimited
City of Blackfoot
4784 SY
Development) as Benefici522-7142, Idaho Falls
157 N. Broadway
• Alice Street 8,212 SY
ary, recorded August 12,
792 E. Greenway
Blackfoot, Idaho 83221
• Rich Lane 17,017 SY
2011 as Instrument No.
• Walker Street (York To 630629 and re-recorded
2004 BUICK LESABRE LIMITED
Pendlebury) 7,905 SY
January 6, 2012 as InstruAn immaculate, beautiful, economical Associated General
ment No 634436, Mortgage
car with almost all options. Includes Contractors
The Contractor shall furnish records of Bingham County,
leather, heads up display, On-Star, etc. 984 John Adams Parkway
all labor, materials, equip- Idaho. THE ABOVE GRAN85K. These cars usually give thou- Idaho Falls, ID. 83401
ment, tools, transportation TORS ARE NAMED TO COMsands and thousands of miles of beauHarper Leavitt Engineering, and supplies required to P L Y
WITH
SECTION
tiful driving pleasure!!
complete the work in accor- 4 5 - 1 5 0 6 ( 4 ) ( a) ,
I DAH O
Only $8,485 Inc.
800 West Judicial St. dance with the Contract CODE. NO REPRESENTACall Von, 589-7142 or
Blackfoot,
ID.
8 3 2 2 1 Documents, the plans, the TION IS MADE THAT THEY
Liquidators Unlimited
208.785.2977
Idaho Standards for Public ARE, OR ARE NOT, PRES522-7142, Idaho Falls
Works 2015 Edition, and ENTLY RESPONSIBLE FOR
792 E. Greenway
Harper-Leavitt Engineering, any applicable Federal, THIS OBLIGATION.
2005 KIA AMANTI
Inc. 985 N. Capital Av.
State and Local requireOnly 68,000 miles. Has most options, Idaho Falls, ID. 834022
ments.
The default for which this
including sunroof, etc. This car is an
Proposals will be opened sale is to be made is failure
immaculate, economical, long-lasting A bid bond in the amount of and publicly read at the to:
luxury car at a very affordable price.
5 % of the total bid amount above hour and date.
Make principal and interest
A joy to drive!!!
is required.
No Pre-Bid meeting and payments as set forth on
Only $7,985
walk thru will be held.
said Deed of Trust and
Call Von, 589-7142 or
Contract Documents can be Plans, specifications, pro- Promissory Note. The origiLiquidators Unlimited
obtained on CD format upon posal forms and other infor- nal loan amount was
522-7142, Idaho Falls
payment of $10.00 (non-re- mation are on file for ex- $146,000.00 together with
792 E. Greenway
fundable) for each set, in- amination at the following interest thereon at the rate
cluding technical specifica- locations:
of 4.2500% per annum, as
2013 LINCOLN MKS
tions and accompanying City of Blackfoot
evidenced in Promissory
All-wheel drive! 365 HP Eco Boost.
drawings. Or a “Hard Copy” 157 North Broadway
Note dated August 12,
Only 21,000 miles! Every option availof the Contract Documents Blackfoot, Idaho 83221
2011. Payments are in deable. Perfect Car Fax. Smells, looks
may be obtained for a pay- Associated General Contrac- fault for the months of June
and drives like new. This car costs apment of $50.00 (non-re- tors 984 John Adams Park- 2014 through and including
proximately $61,000 new! Trades are
fundable) at Harper-Leavitt way Idaho Falls, ID. 83401
December 2014 in the
welcome!
Engineering’s Blackfoot of- Harper Leavitt Engineering, amount of $855.46 per
Only $35,995!
fice ONLY.
Inc. 800 West Judicial St.
month and continuing each
Allen Beck
Blackfoot, ID. 83221
and every month thereafter
589-7105 or
A Public Works Contractors Harper-Leavitt Engineering, until date of sale or reinLiquidators Unlimited
License for the State of Inc. 985 N. Capital Av. statement.
The balance
522-7142, Idaho Falls
Idaho is required to bid on Idaho Falls, ID. 834022
now due is $140,968.75 in
792 E. Greenway
this work.
208.785.2977
Principal;
Interest
is
A bid bond in the amount of $3,545.48, subsidy granted
2014 CHEVROLET MALIBU ECO
5 % of the total bid amount is $3,727.92 and fees curOnly 18,000 miles - 36 miles per gal- To be published:
is required.
lon. Perfect Car Fax. Trades welcome! July 24, 2015,
rently assessed are $953.95
Contract Documents can be computed through DecemRemainder of GM 100K factory war- July 31, 2015
August 7, 2015
obtained on CD format upon ber 18, 2014 with interest
ranty!
payment of $10.00 (non-re- accruing thereafter at the
Only $18,995! (#644)
fundable) for each set, in- daily rate of $16.4142. In
Call Allen, 589-7105 or
Garrett
H.
Sandow,
Esq.
cluding technical specifica- addition to the above, there
Liquidators Unlimited
220 N. Meridian
tions and accompanying is also due any late
522-7142, Idaho Falls
Blackfoot, ID 83221
drawings. Or a “Hard Copy” charges, advances, escrow
792 E. Greenway
Telephone: (208)785-9300
of the Contract Documents collection fees, attorney
2014 FORD FUSION SE
Facsimile: (208)785-0595
may be obtained for a pay- fees, fees or costs associOnly 15K miles. Satellite radio, power Idaho State Bar No. 5215
ment of $50.00 (non-re- ated with this foreclosure.
seats, microsoft sync, 35 MPG. Attorney for Personal
fundable) at Harper-Leavitt
Hard-to-find tuxedo black paint. Perfect Representative
Engineering’s Blackfoot of- The balance owing as of this
car fax.
IN THE DISTRICT COURT fice ONLY.
date on the obligation seOnly $18,995 OF THE SEVENTH JUDICIAL A Public Works Contractors
cured by said deed of trust
Call Allen, 589-7105 or
DISTRICT OF THE STATE OF License for the State of is $144,696.67, excluding
Liquidators Unlimited
IDAHO, IN AND FOR THE Idaho is required to bid on interest, costs and expenses
522-7142, Idaho Falls
COUNTY OF BINGHAM
this work.
actually incurred in enforc792 E. Greenway
MAGISTRATE DIVISION
To be published:
ing the obligations thereunIN THE MATTER OF THE
July 17, 2015
der or in this sale, as trusDONATE YOUR CAR, TRUCK OR
ESTATE OF
July 24, 2015
tee’s fees and/or reasonable
BOAT TO HERITAGE FOR THE
JOSEPH FREDRICK BAILEY, July 31, 2015
attorney’s fees as authorBLIND. Free 3 Day Vacation, Tax De Deceased.
(635)
ized in the promissory note
ductible, Free Towing, All Paperwork
Case No. CV-2015-1148
secured by the aforemenTaken Care Of.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
File No.: 256122 /
tioned Deed of Trust.
Call 1-800-401-4106.
(I.C. 15-3-801)
Customer Ref No. CSC No. Dated: July 16, 2015
Got an older car, boat or RV? Do the NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 80546253
humane thing. Donate it to the Humane that the undersigned has
Alliance Title & Escrow
been appointed personal
RESCHEDULED NOTICE
Society. Call 1- 800-205-0599.
Corp.
representative of the
OF TRUSTEE’S SALE
By:
500 Legals
above-named decedent. All
Melissa Ambriz,
persons having claims On August 27, 2015 at the Trust Officer
ADVERTISEMENT FOR
against the decedent or the hour of 10:30AM, of said Phone 877-947-1553
BIDS
estate are required to pre- day, in the office of Alliance This communication is on
Sealed proposals will be re- sent their claims within four Title & Escrow Corporation behalf of a debt collector
ceived by Harper Leavitt En- months after the date of the located at 246 W Pacific, and is an attempt to collect
Ste A Blackfoot, ID 83221.
gineering at 800 West Judi- first publication of this
a debt. Any information obcial, Blackfoot, Idaho 83221 Notice or said claims will be
tained will be used for that
Alliance Title & Escrow purpose.
until 10:00 a.m. prevail- forever barred.
ing local time, on Mon- Claims must be presented Corp., as trustee, will sell at Publish: 7/24, 7/31, &
day, August 10, 2015, at to the undersigned at the public auction, to the high- 8/7/15
which time HLE will de- address indicated, and filed est bidder, for cash, cash- (#640)
liver all sealed proposals with the Clerk of the Court. iers check, certified check
to Blackfoot City Hall DATED this 16th day of or tellers check, (from a
bank which has a branch in
(council chambers) to July, 2015.
open at 10:30 a.m. on ______________________ the community at the site of
Kevin Carpenter,
the sale), money order,
August 10, 2015
Personal Representative
State of Idaho check or loBy: Garrett H. Sandow,
cal government check, or
For:
cash equivalent in lawful
This work shall consist of Attorney for Personal
money of the United States,
furnishing and installing ap- Representative
all payable at the same time
proximately 133,288 square 220 N. Meridian
of sale, the following defeet of 2.5 inch thick 1/2” Blackfoot, ID 83221
www.am-news.com
scribed real property, situhot mix asphalt pavement Publish: 7/17, 7/24 &
ated in the County of Binggrade 58-28 and 4” of 3/4” 7/31/2015
(#637)
ham, State of Idaho, and
crushed aggregate.
described as follows, to wit:
The Contractor shall furnish
Lot 10 in Block 5 of Wind
all labor, materials, equipRiver Estates, Phase II,
ment, tools, transportation
Bingham County, Idaho acand supplies required to
cording to the plat recorded
complete the work in accorAugust 25, 2009, as Instrudance with the Contract
ment No. 610306
Documents, the plans, the
Idaho Standards for Public
THE TRUSTEE HAS NO
Works 2015 Edition, and
KNOWLEDGE OF A MORE
any applicable Federal,
PARTICULAR DESCRIPTION
State and Local requireOF THE ABOVE-DESCRIBED
ments.
REAL PROPERTY, BUT FOR
Proposals will be opened
PURPOSES OF COMPLIANCE
and publicly read at the
WITH IDAHO CODE, SECabove hour and date.
TION 60-113, THE TRUSTEE
No Pre-Bid meeting and
HAS BEEN INFORMED THAT
walk thru will be held.
THE STREET ADDRESS OF:
Plans, specifications, pro465 Windriver Drive, Shelposal forms and other inforley, ID 83274 also shown
mation are on file for exof record as 465 Wind River
amination at the following
Drive, Shelley, ID 83274,
locations:
MAY SOMETIMES BE ASSOCIATED WITH SAID REAL
City of Blackfoot
PROPERTY.
157 N. Broadway
Blackfoot, Idaho 83221
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CLASSIFIEDS
Sealed proposals will be re-
money of the United States,
all payable at the same time
of sale, the following described real property, situated in the County of Bingham, State of Idaho, and
described as follows, to wit:
‘94 Hitchhicker II
30’ 5th Wheel Trailer
with one Slide Solar Setup
Good Condition!!
$7,500.
Call: 680-5141
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MorningNews
Call
785-1100
MorningNews
www.am-news.com
500 Legals
500 Legals
NOTICE CALLING FOR
BIDS
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that the Commissioners of
Bingham County will, on or
before the hour of 2:00
p.m. on the 10th day of
August 2015, receive sealed
proposals for bids at the office of the County Clerk in
the Courthouse, 501 N. Maple Street #204, Blackfoot,
Idaho, 83221 to be opened
at a meeting by the County
Commissioners to be held at
2:00 p.m. on the 10tht day
of August 2015 for the following:
Solid Waste/ Material
Handling Crane for the
Moreland Solid Waste
Central Transfer Station
Copies of BID documents
may be obtained from the
Clerk’s Office in the Courthouse at 501 N. Maple
Street, Blackfoot, Idaho.
BINGHAM COUNTY reserves
the right to reject all bids,
non-responsive bids, and
bids of non-responsible bidders. The County retains
the right to have a ten (10)
day award period after the
bid opening in order to
evaluate other public entity
bids.
Individuals who need accessible communication or
other accommodations in
order to participate in this
bid are invited to make their
needs and preferences
known to the ADA/504
Compliance Coordinator,
Pam Eckhardt, Bingham
County Clerk, at least 3 to 5
days in advance of the bid
opening.
Bidders shall submit their
bids on the county form
supplied
by
Bingham
County.
Bids shall be submitted in a
sealed envelope bearing the
bidders name and plainly
marked:
SEALED BID FOR SOLID
WASTE/MATERIAL
HANDLING CRANE
Dated this 21st day of July,
2015
BINGHAM COUNTY, IDAHO
A. Ladd Carter, Chairman
Bingham County
Commission
Blackfoot, Idaho
STEPHEN J. BLASER
BLASER, OLESON & LLOYD,
Chartered
Attorneys at Law
285 N.W. Main
P.O. Box 1047
Blackfoot, Idaho 83221
(208) 785-4700
Fax No. 785-7080
ISB #1923
Attorneys for Petitioner
IN THE DISTRICT COURT
OF THE SEVENTH JUDICIAL
DISTRICT OF THE STATE OF
IDAHO, IN AND FOR THE
COUNTY OF BINGHAM
MAGISTRATE DIVISION
RAFAEL ARREGUIN,
Petitioner,
vs
MAGDALENA ARREGUIN,
Respondent.
Case No. CV-2015-1123
SUMMONS BY
PUBLICATION
To be published:
07/24/15 & 07/31/15
(#641)
TO: MAGDALENA ARREGUIN
You have been sued by Rafael Arreguin, Plaintiff, in
the Magistrate Court in and
for Bingham County, Idaho,
Case No. CV-2015-1123.
The nature of the claim
against you is for Divorce.
Any time after 20 days following the last publication
of this Summons, the court
may enter a Judgment
against you without further
notice, unless prior to that
time you file a written response in the proper form,
including the Case No.
CV-2015-1123, and pay any
required filing fee to the
Clerk of the Court at 501 N.
Maple, Blackfoot, ID 83221,
and serve a copy of your response on the Petitioner's
attorney, Stephen J. Blaser
at PO Box 1047,
Blackfoot, Idaho 83221,
(208)785-4700
A copy of the Summons and
Complaint can be obtained
by contacting either the
Clerk of the Court or the attorney for the Petitioner. If
you wish legal assistance,
you should immediately retain an attorney to advise
you in this matter.
DATED and signed this 15th
day of July, 2015
PAMELA W. ECKHARDT
CLERK OF THE COURT
(SEAL) By
Wyoma Tendoy
Deputy
Publish: 7/17, 7/24,
7/31 & 8/7/2015
(#636)
herein is listed to comply
with Section 45-1506(4)(a)
of the Idaho Code. No representation
is
made
whether or not the Grantor
is currently responsible for
the obligation listed herein.
Foreclosure is be500 Legals
ing made because of default
consisting of failure to pay
the required monthly installment as follows:
1.
Failure to pay the
required monthly installment in the amount of
$573.88 in a timely fashion,
and for failure to pay the
monthly installment of
$573.88 for the months of
July 2014 to June 2015, and
all subsequent payments
until the date of sale or reinstatement;
2.
Accrued interest at
twelve percent (12%) per
annum in the amount of
$5,070.29 from May 30,
2014 to July 13, 2015, and
continuing to accrue at
$12.397 per day;
3.
Uncollected late
charges in the sum of
$688.68 for the months of
July 2014 to June 2015, and
continuing to accrue at the
rate of $57.39 per month
starting July 2015;
4.
Delinquent and unpaid taxes, if any;
5.
Costs of foreclosure in an amount to be determined; and
6.
Attorney’s fees.
By reason of said default,
the Trustee has exercised
its option in the Deed of
Trust to declare the entire
indebtedness and accrued
interest, late charges, attorney's fees, Trustee's fees
and other costs or expenses
associated with this foreclosure to be due and payable,
and to sell the above-described property. The principal balance due and owing
of $37,706.93, accrued interest of $5,070.29 from
May 30, 2014 to July 13,
2015, which continues to
accrue at $12.397 per day,
uncollected late charges and
accruing late charges, unpaid and accruing taxes, if
any, costs of foreclosure
and attorney's fees as required by the Deed of Trust,
the Promissory Note or
Idaho Law.
DATED this 13th day of
July, 2015.
CLASSIFIEDS
JARED M. HARRIS,
as Trustee
/s/ Jared M. Harris, Trustee
By:
______________________
Jared M. Harris, Trustee
Publish: 7/31, 8/7,
8/14 & 8/21/2015
(#649)
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S
SALE
Notice of Trustee's Sale
Idaho Code 45-1506 Today's date: July 1, 2015 File
No.: 7037.106690 Sale date
and time (local time): October 30, 2015 at 11:00 AM
Sale location: at the main
entrance to the County
Courthouse located at 501
N. Maple, Blackfoot, ID
83221 Property address:
210 Spruce Street Shelley,
ID 83274 Successor Trustee: Northwest Trustee
Services, Inc., an Idaho
Corporation P.O. Box 997
Bellevue, WA 98009 (425)
586-1900 Deed of Trust information Original grantor:
William Ned Day Jr & Michelle Day, Husband & Wife
Original trustee: Amerititle
of Idaho Falls Original beneficiary: Mortgage Electronic
Registration Systems, Inc.,
solely as nominee for First
Horizon Home Loans, a Division of First Tennessee
Bank N.A., its successors
and assigns Recording date:
12/31/2007 Recorder's instrument number: 589375
and
modified
on
12/31/2013 under Recording
Number
655441
County: BINGHAM Sum owing on the obligation: as of
July 1, 2015: $175,110.00
Because of interest, late
charges, and other charges
that may vary from day to
day, the amount due on the
day you pay may be
greater. Hence, if you pay
the amount shown above,
an adjustment may be necessary after we receive your
check. For further information write or call the Successor Trustee at the address or telephone number
provided above. Basis of
default: failure to make
payments when due. Please
take notice that the Successor Trustee will sell at public
auction to the highest bidder for certified funds or
equivalent the property described above. The property
address is identified to comply with IC 60-113 but is
not warranted to be correct.
The property's legal description is: Lot 9 in Block 5
of Kelley Park Addition, Division No. 4, to the City of
Shelley, Bingham County,
Idaho, according to the Plat
recorded as Instrument No.
198671, Records of Said
County. The sale is subject
to conditions, rules and procedures as described at the
sale and which can be reviewed at www.northwesttrustee.com or USA-Foreclosure.com. The sale is
made without representation, warranty or covenant
of any kind.
(TS#7037.106690)
1002.281622-File No.
Publish: 7/17, 7/24,
7/31 & 8/7/2015
(#625)
On the Thursday,
November 12, 2015 at
the hour of 10:00 a.m.,
recognize local time of said
day at the front steps/main
entrance of the Bingham
County Courthouse, 501
North Maple, Blackfoot,
Idaho, JARED M. HARRIS
will sell, to the highest and
best bidder, for cash or
cash equivalent, lawful in
the United States, all payable at the time of sale, the
following described real estate, situated in Bingham
County, Idaho, legal description:
Lot 2, Block 2, DeLoy Yorgensen Addition to the City
of Shelley, Bingham County,
Idaho, as shown on the Plat
recorded April 18, 1957, as
Instrument No. 52969;
Together with all tenements, hereditaments and
appurtenances now or
thereunto belonging or in
anywise appertaining, and
the rents, issues and profits
thereof, SUBJECT, HOWEVER to the right, power
and authority hereinafter
given to and conferred upon
Beneficiary to collect and
apply such rents, issues and
profits
Trustee has no knowledge
of a particular description of
the above-referenced real
property, but for purposes
of compliance with Idaho
Code § 60-113, the Trustee
has been informed the address of 6 2 0
Holley
Street, Shelley, Idaho
83274 is sometimes associated with the real property.
The sale will be
made without covenant or
warranty regarding title,
possession or encumbrances to satisfy the obligation secured by and pursuant to the power of sale
conferred in the Deed of
Trust.
The undersigned,
Trustee of a Promissory
Note and Deed of Trust executed by JUANITA BAUTISTA DELUNA, a single
person, Grantor, dated
August 7, 2013, and recorded on August 7, 2013,
as Instrument No. 651837,
records of Bingham County,
Idaho; which was assigned
to BEAR LAKE, LLC, an
Idaho limited liability company, Beneficiary, which assignment was dated October 7, 2014, and recorded
on October 7, 2014, in the
office of the County Recorder of Bingham County,
Idaho.
The Grantor named
herein is listed to comply
with Section 45-1506(4)(a)
of the Idaho Code. No representation
is
made
whether or not the Grantor
is currently responsible for
the obligation listed herein.
Foreclosure is being made because of default
consisting of failure to pay
the required monthly installment as follows:
1.
Failure to pay the
Notice of Trustee's Sale
Idaho Code 45-1506 Today's date: July 13, 2015
File No.: 9218.20001 Sale
date and time (local time):
Friday, July 31,
November 16, 2015 at
11:00 AM Sale location: at
the
main entrance to the 500 Legals
500 Legals
County Courthouse located
at 501 N. Maple, Blackfoot,
FLOOD
CONTROL
ID 83221
Property
address:DIST #1 OF IDAHO
NOTICE
OF PUBLIC HEARING
2866 Hunter
Loop Building.
BUDGETID
FOR
FISCAL YEAR 2015
No. 4 Blackfoot,
83221
Notice is hereby
given
that the Flood Control District #1
Successor
Trustee:
Northof Idaho
will hold
a public
hearing for the consideration of
west
Trustee
Services,
Inc.,
theIdaho
proposed
fiscal yearP.O.
2015 budget. The hearing will
an
Corporation
be held
at the
law officesWA
of Beard, St. Clair and Gaffney,
Box
997
Bellevue,
2015 (425)
Coronado
St., Idaho Falls, ID. on Wednesday
98009
586-1900
August
12, 2015
at 7:00pm. The public is invited to
Deed
of Trust
information
providegrantor:
testimony
concerning the proposed budget.
Original
Matthew
2015
Bradshaw, a married man
Proposed
Original trustee: Alliance
2014 Corporation
Actual
2014 Budget
Budget
Title & Escrow
Original
beneficiary: MortRevenues:
gage Electronic Registration
Systems,
Property TaxInc. solely
40,754 as
42,494
45,000
nominee
for United
FinanOther
3,320
1,200
2,500
cial
Corp. CashMortgage
Carryover
123,706
125,000
Recording
date: 07/27/2006
Total Revenue
44,074
167,400
172,500
Recorder's
instrument numExpenditures:
ber:
569969 County:
BingAdministrative
9,291
12,650
10,000
ham
owing on32,732
the obliLevy Sum
Maintenance
29,750
37,500
gation:
as of
July 13, 2015:
Emergency
Levy
125,000
125,000
$46,906.06
Because42,023
of
Total Expenditures
167,400
172,500
interest,
late charges,
and
Excess Rev/Exp
2,051
other
that may
Publish charges
Blackfoot Morning
News
500 Legals
vary
from
dayAugust
to day,
the
(#648)
July 31,
2015,
7, 2015
amount due on the day you
pay may be greater. Hence,
if you pay the amount
shown above, an adjustment may be necessary
after we receive your check.
For further information
write or call the Successor
Trustee at the address or
telephone number provided
above. Basis of default: failure to make payments
when due. Please take notice that the Successor
Trustee will sell at public
auction to the highest bidder for certified funds or
equivalent the property described above. The property
address is identified to comply with IC 60-113 but is
not warranted to be correct.
The property's legal
description is: Parcel I: A
portion of Lots 6, Block 1,
Cottonwood Park Subdivision, Bingham County,
Idaho, more particularly described as follows: Beginning at the Southeast corner of said Section, Thence
North 88 degrees 47'29"
West 1329.33 feet along
the South section line and
North 02 degrees 06'28"
East 25.00 feet to a point
on
the
Northerly
Right-of-Way of Mark Lane
also being the Southwest
corner of Cottonwood Park
Subdivision; thence North
02 degrees 06'28" East
312.70 feet; and North 01
degrees 52'29" East 333.10
feet along the Westerly
boundary of said subdivision
to the True Point of Beginning; running thence North
01 degrees 52'29" East
(#650)
112.65 feet along the Westerly boundary of said subdi500 Legals
vision
to the Northwest corner of said subdivision;
thence South 89 degrees
12'41" East 79.38 feet
along the Northerly boundary of said subdivision;
thence South 01 degrees
17'26" West 101.34 feet;
thence South 89 degrees
12'41" East 10.06 feet;
thence South 02 degrees
01'36" West 13.02 feet;
thence North 88 degrees
07'31" West 90.42 feet to
the Point of Beginning. Parcel II: Together with an ingress/egress common area
easement described as: A
portion of Lot 5, 6 and 7,
Block 1, Cottonwood Park
Subdivision,
Bingham
County, Idaho, more particularly described as follows: Beginning at the
Southeast corner of said
section, thence North 88
degrees
47'29"
West
1329.33 feet along the
South section line and North
02 degrees 06'28" East
25.00 feet to a point on the
Northerly Right-of-Way of
Mark Lane also being the
Southwest corner of Cottonwood Park Subdivision;
thence North 02 degrees
06'28" East 312.70 feet;
and North 01 degrees
52'29" East 121.40 feet
along the Westerly boundary of said subdivision
thence South 88 degrees
47'27" East 83.99 feet;
thence North 01 degrees
12'28" East 92.33 feet;
thence South 88 degrees
47'27" East 7.20 feet to the
True Point of Beginning;
running thence North 02
degrees 01'36" East 131.33
feet; thence South 89 degrees 12'41" East 168.69
feet; thence South 00 degrees 47'19" West 92.87
feet to the Northern
right-of-way line of Hunters
Loop which is also a point
on a curve having a radius
of 185.00 feet and a chord
that bears South 51 degrees 29'20" West 62.08
feet; thence to the left
along said curve 62.38 feet
thru a central angle of 19
degrees 19'10" thence
North 88 degrees 47'27"
West 123.49 feet to the
Point of Beginning. The sale
is subject to conditions,
rules and procedures as described at the sale and
which can be reviewed at
www.northwesttrustee.com
or
USA-Foreclosure.com.
The sale is made without
representation, warranty or
covenant of any kind.
(TS#9218.20001)
1002.281821-File No.
Publish: 7/31,8/7,8/14
& 8/21/2015
(#639)
Notice of Trustee's Sale
Idaho Code 45-1506 Today's date: July 13, 2015
File No.: 9218.20001 Sale
date and time (local time):
November 16, 2015 at
11:00 AM Sale location: at
the main entrance to the
County Courthouse located
at 501 N. Maple, Blackfoot,
ID 83221 Property address:
2866 Hunter Loop Building.
No. 4 Blackfoot, ID 83221
Successor Trustee: Northwest Trustee Services, Inc.,
an Idaho Corporation P.O.
Box 997 Bellevue, WA
98009 (425) 586-1900
Deed of Trust information
Original grantor: Matthew
Bradshaw, a married man
Original trustee: Alliance
Title & Escrow Corporation
Original beneficiary: Mortgage Electronic Registration
Systems, Inc. solely as
nominee for United Financial Mortgage Corp.
Recording date: 07/27/2006
Recorder's instrument number: 569969 County: Bingham Sum owing on the obligation: as of July 13, 2015:
$46,906.06 Because of
interest, late charges, and
other charges that may
vary from day to day, the
amount due on the day you
pay may be greater. Hence,
if you pay the amount
shown above, an adjustment may be necessary
after we receive your check.
For further information
write or call the Successor
Trustee at the address or
telephone number provided
above. Basis of default: failure to make payments
when due. Please take notice that the Successor
Trustee will sell at public
auction to the highest bidder for certified funds or
equivalent the property described above. The property
address is identified to comply with IC 60-113 but is
not warranted to be correct.
The property's legal
description is: Parcel I: A
portion of Lots 6, Block 1,
Cottonwood Park Subdivision, Bingham County,
Idaho, more particularly described as follows: Beginning at the Southeast corner of said Section, Thence
North 88 degrees 47'29"
West 1329.33 feet along
the South section line and
North 02 degrees 06'28"
East 25.00 feet to a point
on
the
Northerly
Right-of-Way of Mark Lane
also being the Southwest
corner of Cottonwood Park
Subdivision; thence North
02 degrees 06'28" East
312.70 feet; and North 01
degrees 52'29" East 333.10
feet along the Westerly
boundary of said subdivision
to the True Point of Beginning; running thence North
01 degrees 52'29" East
112.65 feet along the Westerly boundary of said subdivision to the Northwest corner of said subdivision;
thence South 89 degrees
12'41" East 79.38 feet
along the Northerly boundary of said subdivision;
2015
7B
Sell it
sooner
(instead of later)
with the
Morning News
Classifieds
785-1100
Need to
Buy or Sell
Your Home?
Your Local Realtor
Can Help!
The Morning News – Bingham County’s news source
Friday, July 31, 2015
8B
COMICS & ADVICE
MICKEY MOUSE
Dear Annie: Yesterday,
I had an argument with
my 85-year-old mother.
She said I must be a lesbian because of my recent
Facebook posts in support of all my gay friends
and the Supreme Court
decision upholding gay
marriage. Specifically, I
changed my photo so it
was colored in beautiful
rainbow shades.
My
mother
was
appalled that I was supporting "those people"
and demanded that I
change my picture. She
said she was embarrassed
and claimed that all of
her friends were calling
her to ask whether I was
gay. This was a lie and
she admitted it. Then she
said she does not support
gay people and I should
support them in more private ways. I told her I am
50 years old, not 10, and
these are my choices. If
she doesn't like it, she
doesn't have to look at
my Facebook page.
I have never felt comfortable having my mother
as a friend on Facebook.
ZITS
HI & LOIS
You will be drawn into
unfamiliar, exciting territory
this year. This period of creative change will help you
discover a new purpose and
a higher potential. Take a
leadership role and fight for
what you believe in.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -Before you take on someone
else’s responsibilities, make
sure you are reading the situation clearly. Don’t step in
and take over unless you are
prepared to go the distance.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-- Practicality and a straightforward attitude will help you
get ahead. A detailed project
will give you the opportunity
to highlight your skills and
show your dedication and
loyalty.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
-- You have nothing to lose
and plenty to gain if you are
open to new philosophies
and ideas. Search for a novel
approach to a troubling situation.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- An overactive imagination will lead to problems.
Deal with matters as they are,
not as they seem. An unrealistic viewpoint or false assumptions will lead to conflict.
BLONDIE
BABY BLUES
B.C.
DEAR DOCTOR K: I have
esophagitis. Could this have
been caused by my acid
reflux? What can I do about it?
GARFIELD
HAGAR
THE
HORRIBLE
FOR BETTER
OR
WORSE
DEAR READER: Yes, it
could, and there are treatments. First, some explanation. The esophagus is the
muscular tube that carries food from the mouth,
through the chest and into
the stomach. Normally you
don’t feel the presence of the
esophagus, except when you
are swallowing.
Sometimes the lining of
your esophagus becomes
inflamed. That’s called esophagitis. By far the most common cause of esophagitis is
acid reflux, or gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD).
A muscular ring (the
esophageal sphincter) sits at
the bottom of the esophagus,
where it meets the stomach.
Normally, the sphincter opens
when you swallow, allowing
food into your stomach. The
rest of the time, it squeezes tight to prevent food and
stomach acid from backing
up into the esophagus.
In most people with
GERD, however, the esophageal sphincter does not seal
tightly. As a result, acid and
digestive enzymes from the
stomach flow backward into
the esophagus. These caustic stomach juices irritate
July 31, 2015 2011 - 7B
am-news.com
MorningNews
Kathy
Mithchell
&
Marcie
Sugar
Annie's Mailbox
I want to un-friend her,
but I'd feel guilty. She
has always been this way,
and frankly, I'm fed up.
She has other friends and
family on Facebook, so
it's not as though she'll
be out of the loop. What
do you say? — New York
Dear New York: There
are kinder ways to deal
with this rather than unfriending your 85-year-old
mother. You can arrange
your privacy settings on
Facebook to limit what
she sees and what she
can post on your page.
But truly, you are 50 years
old and should know how
to deal with your bigoted
mother by now. Ignore her
comments. Change the
Eugenia
Last
Astro-Graph
SAGITTARIUS
(Nov.
23-Dec. 21) -- Your power of
persuasion will work in your
favor. People will be happy
to help you get what you
want. Others will be inspired
by your words and motivated
by your actions.
CAPRICORN
(Dec.
22-Jan. 19) -- Your colleagues
will be surprised by your
innovative problem-solving
techniques. Change will be
necessary if you aren’t satisfied with your current position. Go after your dreams.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) -- Personal affairs and
romantic opportunities will
confuse you. Work on your
relationships with others.
More give-and-take and a
focus on equality will help
tame any problem you face.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) -- Don’t spend time with
people you can’t trust. Trying
Dr.
Anthony
Komaroff
Ask Doctor K
and inflame the lining of the
esophagus. (I’ve put an illustration of this on my website,
AskDoctorK.com.)
Esophagitis causes several
bothersome symptoms. Pain
-- in the throat or behind the
breastbone -- is a common
symptom. The pain can be
burning, heavy or sharp, and
it may be worse after meals
or when you lie down. (That’s
because stomach acid travels
more easily backward, up into
the esophagus, when you lie
flat.)
Swallowing problems are
also common. For example,
if esophagitis is causing a persistent pain in your mid-chest,
it may get worse when you
swallow. Or you may feel
like you have food sticking in
your chest after you swallow.
Esophagitis can also cause
bleeding; if you sometimes
vomit, you may see blood
in your vomit. The bleeding
in your esophagus may travel downward and make the
color of your stool very dark
(black).
subject when she says
things you find offensive
and refuse to engage her
in these pointless arguments where neither of
you will influence the
other. Don't become
angry. Smile, and then
do what you want.
It's how children have
dealt with difficult parents for centuries.
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime
editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please email your
questions to anniesmailbox@creators.com,
or
write to: Annie's Mailbox,
c/o Creators Syndicate,
737 3rd Street, Hermosa
Beach, CA 90254. You
can also find Annie on
Facebook at Facebook.
com/AskAnnies. To find
out more about Annie's
Mailbox and read features by other Creators
Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators
Syndicate Web page at
www.creators.com.
to sort out what is and isn’t
true will be taxing. Opt to
spend time with people who
love and understand you.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) -- You will gain popularity and status by participating in a cause you believe
in. The people you meet
will help you advance personally and professionally.
Romance is in the stars.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- Consider letting go of
projects and people that are
dragging you down. Take the
direction that suits you best
instead of what others want
you to do.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20) -- Your desire for mental and physical stimulation
will warrant trying something
you’ve never done before.
You should air serious concerns with family and close
friends in order to get some
answers.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) -- Deception is apparent. Listen, learn and observe
before signing a deal that
requires cash up front.
Protect your possessions and
your assets, and don’t lend or
borrow money.
To treat esophagitis caused
by acid reflux, you have to
treat the acid reflux. Start with
lifestyle changes:
-- Lose weight if necessary. Being overweight causes
more acid reflux.
-- Eat small meals throughout the day rather than three
large meals. Large meals
generate more acid -- and
more acid reflux.
-- Don’t lie down right
after eating, since your stomach makes more acid during
meals.
-- Cut out cigarettes and
alcohol, both of which stimulate acid production.
-- Identify and avoid
foods that cause symptoms.
Common culprits include caffeine, chocolate, peppermint
and high-fat foods.
Your doctor will likely prescribe acid-blocking medication as well. Examples include
H2-blockers and protonpump inhibitors.
If reflux and esophagitis
continue, your doctor may
recommend surgery to tighten
the esophageal sphincter.
Your symptoms should
begin to improve within days
of starting the right treatment,
but it can take weeks for
symptoms to go away completely. In the meantime, your
doctor can prescribe pain
relievers.
35 Years Experience
No Hidden
Fees
BORN LOSER
No Delivery Charge
Delivery Schedule to Match Your Convenience
Call 785-0401
Perry Butt | Cell: 339-0987 | Fax: 782-1058
Home: 684-5200 | perry.prboil@gmail.com
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