Call 785-1100 - Morning News
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Call 785-1100 - Morning News
MorningNews am-news.com ISU qb counted on for season Tuesday, April 26, 2016 » 75¢ Summer Fun Pre-Owned Deals! 2010 RZR 800 LE Pearl White, 3780 miles $5,995 + prep We Take Your Fun Seriously! Partly cloudy See more new and used side by sides at www.actionmotor.com 355 E. Lincoln Rd. 208-522-3050 Idaho Falls 60 / 33 ...page 2A ...page 7A First-graders learn to save By LESLIE SIEGER lsieger@am-news.com BLACKFOOT — All first grade students, in the Blackfoot school district, and their parents are invited to the Blackfoot Saves First open house from 6-7 p.m. Wednesday at the Blackfoot Performing Arts Center (BPAC). “Financial institutions will have tables set up in the foyer of the BPAC,” said Curriculum director Joy Mickelsen. “No money will exchange hands Wednesday. Some banks will match the “seed” money and some will pay for grades.” Mayor Loomis will speak to the parents and students about the city’s participation in the program. Other speakers will speak about the importance of going to college and saving for college. “We want to encourage students to think about college beginning in the first grade,” said Blackfoot Mayor Paul Loomis. First grade students in the Blackfoot school district have been learning the value of saving money to secure their future. First grade teachers, in the Blackfoot school district, have been teaching the students lessons such as “we have wants” and “choices, costs and benefits.” The lesson we have wants teaches the students how to identify a “want” and how to prioritize their wants. The lesson plans include a question of the day that sets the focus for the lesson. Word wall cards are also used to teach economic vocabulary that is used in the lessons. See SAVE, A2 ‘Unique boutique’ sells dreams Groveland students take up firefighters’ reading challenge By LESLIE MIELKE lmielke@am-news.com GROVELAND — Blackfoot firefighters read to families who attended the Book Fair at Groveland Elementary on Monday evening. There was an interesting assortment of graded books families could peruse. Asked what was their favorite, readers gave a variety of answers. Aiden Hendricks, age 9, in the third grade said his favorite books were “Star Wars.” See GROVELAND, A2 Morning News — Greg Eichelberger Armena Fred shows off some of her wares at Spiffyz, a ‘unique antique boutique,’ that will host a Grand Opening on Thursday at 11:45 a.m. The store features handicraft, home decor, jewelry and other items. By GREG EICHELBERGER geichelberger@am-news.com BLACKFOOT — Armena Fred has always wanted her own retail establishment. It was even the dream of her mother, it wasn’t until two months ago that she was finally able to find the right venue for such a hope, a store called Spiffy’z. Her husband told her she had so much stuff that she should find a place to display it, but the search was frustrating. The business, which opened five weeks ago, is located at 97 Pacific St., the corner of Pacific was searching, there was a phone number.” She said she called and met the owner of the building (which had served as the Heart Of Idaho store, an art gallery and other outlets), things just clicked. “It felt right for both of us from the very beginning,” she said. “”It was a ‘God connection and I felt like I was home.” The deity reference was appropriate considering some of Fred’s work deals with native American handicraft work, much of which incorporates the and Broadway. “I had only an email address culture spiritual influencpassed this building many on the door,” Fred said. See UNIQUE, A2 times, but there was “Finally, on the last day I Morning News — Leslie Mielke Blackfoot Fire Department Capt. Branden Wall encourages students to read during the Book Fair at Groveland Elementary on Monday evening. Looming deadline for nuclear waste plant, future in limbo IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (AP) — A darkened central control room with more than 25 computer screens watches over nearly everything occurring inside this radioactive waste treatment plant west of Idaho Falls. The room is where employees at the Advanced Mixed Waste Treatment Project, or AMWTP, monitor and manipulate the facility’s dangerous waste treatment process from afar. Decades-old metal boxes and drums filled with radioactive waste travel through a series of conveyor belts and elevators. At various stages the waste is remotely sorted, repackaged, smashed up, and then packaged again. A final product of multiple 55-gallon drums is shipped on trucks to waste repositories located in New Mexico, Nevada and Utah. The facility — which employs about 700 and has operated for more than a dozen years — is undergoing an approximately $10 million overhaul. Officials hope the new infrastructure will help finish the job of treating some 65,000 cubic meters of Idaho’s transuranic nuclear waste before a looming 2018 deadline. Meanwhile, U.S. Department of Energy officials are pondering what to do with the specialized plant once its cur- rent mission is complete. One tentative post-2018 plan would mean shipping nuclear waste to the Idaho facility from DOE sites spread around the country. The waste would be treated and packaged here, then sent onward to a final resting place outside the state. “There is no other capability like Advanced Mixed Waste in the DOE complex,” said Dave Richardson, the project’s manager for contractor Idaho Treatment Group. He said its infrastructure is worth about $1 billion. “The question is, what do you want to do with this facility?” The AMWTP was built to treat 65,000 cubic meters of transuranic waste that was buried nearby in the Arco desert in the 1970s and ‘80s. It came from the now-closed Rocky Flats Plant near Denver, where nuclear weapon compo- nents were made. Held in slowly deteriorating metal, wooden and fiberglass boxes and metal drums, the waste includes tools, rags, clothing, sludge and dirt — anything contaminated with a transuranic element, such as plutonium, during the weapon-making process. Workers at the facility have been chipping away at the massive pile of waste for years. It’s a painfully See NUCLEAR, A2 (208) 881-9809 182 N. 760 W. | Blackfoot ID 83221 <<Bring In This Ad For Bonus Pricing>> www.millcreekmetals.com Good morning David Daniels of Blackfoot. Call 785-1100 today to claim two free Paramount Theater movie tickets! Vol. 112, No. 93 Copyright 2016. All Rights Reserved. For Home Delivery Call 785-1100 2A LOCAL Tuesday, April 26, 2016 am-news.com MorningNews ICCU named best place to work in Idaho CHUBBUCK — On Thursday, April 14, Idaho Central Credit Union (ICCU) was named as the Best Place to Work in Idaho in the large corporation category for the fourth year in a row. Winners were selected from an employee satisfaction survey conducted by a marketing and research firm. This is the ninth year for the program and they reported a record number of entries. Participating organization’s employees take a confidential survey that covers the following topics: compensation and benefits, work environment, company management, employee growth and development, and work-life balance. The businesses that score in the top ten in each category are named the Best Places to Work in Idaho. “We love and care about our team members. This is what enables them to provide world class service to our members. This award is such an honor because it shows that we’re doing something right,” said Kent Oram, ICCU President. Last month, S&P Global Market Intelligence also ranked Idaho Central Credit Union the number one best-performing credit union in the nation for the fourth year in a row. Morning News — Leslie Mielke Blackfoot Fire Capt. Branden Wall reads to Kalyse Baker, age 8, in the second grade at the Groveland Elementary Book Fair on Monday evening. Who gets to read the book first? Twin brothers Kyle (on left) and Brandon Christensen, age 10, who are in fifth grade at Stuart Elementary in Shelley have a bit of a tug of war at the Book Fair at Groveland Elementary on Monday evening. UNIQUE, continued from 1A es. There are also antiques, handmade jewelry, clothing and cosignment items. “I did not want a thrift store, I wanted a higher quality than that. A group of people once came in looking for antiques, but I did not have any at the time. A few days later, a lovely woman brought in a vintage Singer sewing machine and then another showed up and asked if she could cosign some other antique items.” The store is Fred’s first retail endeavor after years of making crafts while liv- ing in Fort Hall. “I was apprehensive and scared at first,” she said. “So I held a kind of soft opening to see how things would go. Finally, I was confident enough and decided to have a Grand Opening (Thursday at 11:45 a.m.). I wanted to bring a source of peace and happiness. For me it’s all about home.” The store’s hours are Tuesday-Friday, 11:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Saturday, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. For more information on Spiffy’z, call Fred at (208) 2002954. GROVELAND, continued from 1A Twin brothers Brandon and Kyle Christensen, age 10, in the fifth grade, like “Warriors” about cats. Both attend Stuart Elementary in Shelley. Kindergartner Austin Adams, age 6, likes the book, “Around Town.” “Monster High” and “Magic Bunny” are the favorite books of Bella Yancey, age 6, who is a kindergartner. The Blackfoot firefighters issued a reading challenge for elementary grade students in both the Blackfoot and Snake River School Districts. The challenge ends at the end of April. Elementary students are invited to a “read in” at 7 p.m. on Thursday, April 28, in the Blackfoot Fire Station, 225 N. Ash, Blackfoot. are about 12,000 cubic meters still to get through. All the waste is supposed to be treated and shipped out of Idaho by the end of 2018 under a state deadline laid out in the 1995 Idaho Settlement Agreement with the DOE. But the DOE and Idaho Treatment Group have run into recent problems. A New Mexico waste repository where much of the waste needs to be sent remains closed after an accident last year. That means about 20,000 ready-to-ship containers of waste have stacked up, with nowhere to go. In addition, officials said the plant is starting to get worn down, with more frequent repairs costing time that should’ve been spent treating waste. Richardson said he brought the problem up with DOE officials last year. “My point to DOE was, you’ve got to invest some money here, because you’ve got a sprint to the finish line to get to the milestone agreement in December 2018,” Richardson said. The biggest upgrade for the facility — costing about $4 million — is the replacement of two big remote-controlled robotic arms. The arms are operated in adjacent rooms by workers using joysticks. They sort through waste, sometimes chopping it into more manageable pieces, before repackaging it into new containers. The robotic devices were recently shipped to Idaho from the Swedish company Brokk. The current robotic arms were needing to be fixed more and more, said Mike Auble, a senior project manager overseeing the upgrades. It’s no easy or cheap task when repairs are needed in a highly radioactive area, he said. Every time one of the robotic arms or another component broke down, a worker would dress up in an astronaut-like protective suit connected to an oxygen line and go into the contaminated area to try and fix the problem. Considering all the safety logistics, Auble said, each entry cost about $7,000. Last year there were about 1,000 such entries — $7 million worth — to fix problems with the robotic arms and other equipment. A number of other pieces of infrastructure will soon be replaced inside the facility, too, from conveyor belts, to elevators and new hardware and software. Auble said despite nearing completion of waste treatment, the millions of dollars in upgrades were necessary. The last batch of waste to be treated will be particularly demanding, he said. Much of the waste still to go is the radioactive remnants of a 1969 fire at Rocky Flats. It includes big chunks of contaminated metals, wood, plastic and other radioactive material. “While the end is in sight, it is by no means easy,” he said. “This is the hardest waste to process.” Whenever the current pile of radioactive waste is gone, the DOE must decide what to do next with the facility. Considering it is the only plant of its kind in the U.S. — there is a similar version in the United Kingdom — there may be reason to keep it around. Sinking millions of federal dollars into AMWTP now won’t hurt its longterm prospects, either, something contractor officials are well aware of. If the facility were to continue treating waste, where would it come from? Mostly the Hanford Site in Washington and Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico, along with lesser amounts from handful of other DOE sites, according to a DOE PowerPoint presentation on the subject. Those two sites have more than 25,000 cubic meters of waste that could be treated at AMWTP, the presentation said, which could keep the facility running for years. The Idaho Settlement Agreement requires the current transuranic waste to leave the state by the end of 2018. But waste from elsewhere is allowed to enter the state — and long as it is treated and shipped out within one year. Treating waste from DOE sites outside the state has already been done several times at the facility. There could end up being significant opposition to a life extension for the facility, said Beatrice Brailsford, nuclear program director for the watchdog group Snake River Alliance. Many Idahoans don’t have much trust in the DOE when it comes to nuclear waste, she said. As an example, she said, spent nuclear fuel shipped here over the years hasn’t left. “Fundamentally, I think most people in Idaho are nervous about waste coming in,” Brailsford said. On a recent lobbying trip to Washington, D.C., local mayors and economic development officials encouraged DOE to keep the facility up and running, considering it provides hundreds of local jobs. The Idaho National Laboratory Site Citizens Advisory Board also issued a letter to the department in late 2014, saying it was in favor of keeping the plant running. “AMWTP has already proven it can be a national asset by receiving and processing transuranic waste from 13 different DOE site offices across the country,” the letter said. NUCLEAR, continued from 1A slow process that since 2011 has been handled by Idaho Treatment Group. This summer a new government contractor, Fluor, will take over management of the job, along with other waste cleanup duties on the desert site. Richardson said there Weather WEATHER SPONSORED BY 496 W Hwy 39 Powell’s Body Shop WHERE PERFECTION IS STANDARD COMPLETE DETAIL ONLY Powell’s Body Shop & Towing 208-785-4040 $125 Full Wax, Wa ax, Wash & Interior Shampoo Riverbend Rentals Auto A uto Rental Service SAVE, continued from 1A Also included in the lesson plans are songs to help reinforce the lesson. Lesson one includes a song “I’ve Got Money” that is sung to the tune of “Are You Sleeping, Brother John.” The first verse starts out with the chorus “I’ve got money, I’ve got money, what should I do? What should I do? I must make a choice, I must make a choice, spend or save, spend or save.” The scarcity lesson teaches children why they can’t have everything they want through a variety of activities. MorningNews LOCAL am-news.com Death Notices Richard Joseph Hembreiker, 56 Richard “Curly” Joseph Hembreiker, 56, of Blackfoot, Idaho passed away Monday, April 25, 2016 at Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center in Idaho Falls. Funeral arrangements are pending and will be announced by Hawker Funeral Home in Blackfoot. Ted Fullmer, 69 Ted Fullmer, 69, of Mesa AZ passed away on April 23, 2016 in Salt Lake City, Utah. He is the son of Darcel H. and Rosemarie Parsons Fullmer. Both preceded him in death. He retired from the INEL in 2001 after 35 years of service. He enjoyed the friendship of all his coworkers and classmates. 3A Obituaries Dorothy Gneiting, 90 Milo Kayne Arevalos, infant Milo Kayne Arevalos, infant son of Louisa Gallardo and Jose Arevalos, was born and shortly afterwards died Saturday, April 23, 2016, from complications of being premature. Funeral services will be conducted at 11 a.m. Wednesday, April 27, 2016, at the Hawker Funeral Home with Father Jose Gonzalez of St. Bernard’s Catholic Church officiating. Interment will follow at the Gibson Cemetery. Condolences may be sent to the family online at www.hawkerfuneralhome.com. Tuesday, April 26, 2016 Dorothy Gneiting, 90, of Blackfoot, Idaho passed away Sunday, April 24, 2016 at Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center. Dorothy was born Nov. 3, 1925 in Idaho Falls, Idaho to Arnold Alma Jolley and Rosa Vidella Whitmill. She was raised in the Firth/Kimball area, attending Firth grade schools and graduating from Firth High School. On Nov. 15, 1944 Dorothy married Derrell Arthur Gneiting in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. Derrell passed away on March 19, 1993. She married Joe Layman in June 1999. She delivered telegrams during World War II for Western Union, helped on the farm, worked in the potato warehouse, was an Avon Lady and a wonderful homemaker. Dorothy was a member of The Red Hat Society and was involved in 4-H. In her free time she enjoyed softball, bowling, piano, singing, dancing and family history. Dorothy is a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. She served in many callings, including her service as an early morning Seminary Teacher. She served three full-time LDS missions: Jacksonville, Florida; Kansas City, Missouri and an employment service mission in Great Falls, Montana. Dorothy is survived by her husband, Joe Layman of Blackfoot; children, Dorothy Jean (Rodger) Wray of Moreland, John Arnold (Georgia) Gneiting of Riverton, Wyoming, Derrell Joe (Carol) Gneiting of Newdale, Idaho, Michael Craig Gneiting of Sun River, Montana and Tamara Sue (Michael) Love of Sunset, Utah; sister, Rosa Marie Tidwell of Pasco, Washington; 19 grandchildren; 28 great grandchildren; and three great great grandchildren. She is preceded in death by her parents; first husband, Derrell Gneiting; and brother, Barney Alma Jolley. A funeral service will be held at 1 p.m. on Thursday, April 28, 2016 at Hawker Funeral Home, 132 South Shilling Avenue in Blackfoot. The family will meet with friends and relatives for one hour prior to services at the funeral home. There will also be a graveside funeral service held at noon at the Sun River Montana Cemetery on Saturday, April 30, 2016. The family will meet with friends in Montana at the Sun River, Montana., LDS Church, 845 US-89 from 11 a.m. to noon before going to the cemetery. Condolences may be sent to the family online at www.hawkerfuneralhome.com. A special thank you to her hospice nurses and her granddaughter Rhianna Gneiting for her loving care. Ben Willis Flint, 73 Wednesday, April 27 • Story Time at 10 a.m. at Blackfoot Public Library, 129 N. Broadway. The theme is “Jack and Jill.” Story Time is best suited for children up to age 6. Thursday, April 28 • Time of My Life Tour featuring the music of Unspoken, Among the Thirsty, The Afters, and Chris August at the BPAC. Tickets are $30 for the first 6 rows and $20 for the rest of the auditorium. They can be purchased at revelationradio.fm. For more information call Revelation Radio at 208-569-0732. • A fertilizing your garden class, offered by the Bingham County Extension, begins at 3 p.m. in the conference room of the extension service, 583 W. Sexton in Blackfoot. Please RSVP by calling (208) 785-8060. Friday, April 29 • Registration deadline today for Stillwaters Counseling “Parenting the Love and Logic Way” class. Cost of the class is $15 for the manual. Manuals are required for each person in the class. Classes will be offered on Friday’s from 6–8 p.m. beginning on May 6 and ending on June 10. Space is limited. Manuals must be paid for by today in order to participate in the class. Call 782-0675 to reserve your spot. • “The Drowsy Chaperone,” at 7:30 p.m. at the Nuart Theater. Tickets are $7. For tickets visit blackfootcommunityplayers.com. • Prime Rib Dinner Fundraiser at the Bingham County Senior Center from 6-8 p.m. Cost is $20 in advance or $25 at the door. Proceeds will go to The Bingham County Senior Center and the programs they offer to seniors. For more information, call (208) 785-4714. Saturday, April 30 • “The Drowsy Chaperone,” at 7:30 p.m. at the Nuart Theater. Tickets are $7. For tickets visit blackfootcommunityplayers.com. Monday, May 2 • Blackfoot Public Library board meeting at 7 p.m. at 129 N. Broadway. • “The Drowsy Chaperone,” at 7:30 p.m. at the Nuart Theater. Tickets are $7. For tickets visit blackfootcommunityplayers.com. Tuesday, May 3 • Health care plan program at 6:30 p.m. at the Blackfoot Public Library. Bobbette Brown will discuss the options to start a health care plan. Refreshments will be served. Wednesday, May 4 • Story Time at 10 a.m. at Blackfoot Public Library, 129 N. Broadway. The theme is “Get Up and Go.” Story Time is best suited for children up to age 6. • Craft program at 6:30 p.m. at the Blackfoot Public Library. Linda Beauvais will instruct on how to make a floral topiary for Mother’s Day. The cost is $5 and you need to register for the class. Call the library at (208) 785-8628 to get your name on the list. Ben Willis Flint, 73, of Blackfoot passed away Thursday, April 21, 2016 at Bingham Memorial Hospital. Ben was born Dec. 25, 1942 in Blackfoot to John W. Flint and Edna T. Anderson. He graduated in 1961 from Blackfoot High School and from Idaho State University in 1967. On Aug. 30, 1980 Ben married Sharon Jean Reid in Virginia City, Nevada. He was an electronic technician, working in Sunnyvale, California for Ampex Corp, He returned to Blackfoot in 1993, working for Radio Shack and Nonpareil. In his free time, he enjoyed bowling, golfing, horse races and fishing in his younger years. Ben is survived by his wife, Sharon of Blackfoot; sisters, Betty (Fred) of Roseburg, Oregon, Donna Arnold of Pocatello, Joan Raymond of Port Orchard, Washington and Dorothy Parrish of Elk Creek, Nebraska. He is preceded in death by his parents; brothers, Don Gough, Bob Gough and Johnny Davidson; and sisters, Marjorie Flint and Irene Flint. A graveside service will be held at 2 p.m. on Wednesday, April 27, 2016 at the Grove City Cemetery. Family will meet with friends and relatives for one hour prior to services at Hawker Funeral Home, 132 South Shilling Avenue in Blackfoot. Condolences may be sent to the family online at www.hawkerfuneralhome.com. Roger Arthur Clark, 65 Roger Arthur Clark, 65, of Blackfoot, Idaho passed away April 9, 2016 while on vacation in Mexico. Roger was born Oct. 7, 1950 in Blackfoot, Idaho to Donald R. Clark and Lillan Butler. He spent his lifetime in Blackfoot, graduating from Blackfoot High School in 1969. On May 2, 1970, Roger married Cheryl Stoddert in Blackfoot. They have two daughters, Brandie and Sheri. Roger joined the National Guard in 1969, went to active duty in the United States Army in 1971 and was honorably discharged in 1975. He worked in the family radio communications business most of his life, he became a police officer in 2002, where he worked for the Blackfoot City Police Dept., he also volunteered 12 years with the Bingham County Sheriffs Office Search and Rescue on the dive team. Roger also spent 39 years as a member of the Elks Lodge, where he was the Exalted Ruler from 2000-01, he was also a longtime member of the American Legion, chairman of the Elks Hoop Shoot and a big part of the Elks and Veterans programs. In his free time, he enjoyed fishing, hunting, camping and being with family. The friendships he made were for a lifetime. He will be missed by all who knew him. He was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Roger is survived by his wife, Cheryl Clark of Blackfoot; daughters, Brandie Clark of Blackfoot and Sheri (Gary) Thomas of Chico, California; stepmother, Karen Clark (serving a mission in Ireland/Scotland); brothers, Dray (Sandra) Clark, Send in your news The Morning News welcomes news from the community. Send your items to mnews@am-news.com. SPRING TREE SERVICE It's Time to Schedule for Fruit Tree Trimming! Prune & Shape Your Trees 785-1320 ServiceS Milo Kayne Arevalos Funeral Services: 11:00 a.m. Wednesday, April 27, 2016, at the Hawker Funeral Home Ben Willis Flint Graveside Services: 2:00 p.m. Wednesday, April 27, 2016 at the Grove City Cemetery Viewing: One hour prior to services at Hawker Funeral Home Dorothy Gneiting David (Roene) Clark, Paul Clark and Aaron (Rebecca) Clark all of Blackfoot; sisters, Debra (Jed) Taylor and Linnea (Scott) Chidester of Blackfoot; three grandchildren, Quinn, Echo and Cloee; and several nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by his parents and a brother, Mark Clark. The family suggest memorials be made to the Pocatello Veterans home through the Blackfoot Elks Lodge’s Veterans program. A memorial service will be held at 11 a.m. on Saturday, April 30, 2016 at the Blackfoot Elks Lodge, 123 N. Ash in Blackfoot. Arrangements are under the direction of Hawker Funeral Home in Blackfoot. Condolences may be sent to the family online at www.hawkerfuneralhome.com. Funeral Services: 1:00 p.m. Thursday, April 28, 2016 at Hawker Funeral Home Viewing: One hour prior to services at the funeral home Graveside Services: 12:00 noon Saturday, April 30, 2016 at the Sun River Montana Cemetery in Sun River, Montana Viewing: 11:00 a.m. to 12 Noon before going to the cemetery at the Sun River, Montana, LDS Church Roger Arthur Clark Memorial Services: 11:00 a.m. Saturday, April 30, 2016 at the Blackfoot Elks Lodge for more info visit hawkerfuneralhome.com FREE Movie Tickets Receive two Paramount or Center Theater movie tickets when you subscribe to The Morning News for a year. New subscribers, renewals or gift subscriptions, you all qualify. Removal • Topping • Storm Damage • Shaping FREE Estimates • Affordable Rates • Prompt Service 20 Years Experience • Satisfaction Guaranteed 50', 65' & 80' Bucket Trucks Roberts & Son’s Tree Service Call 529-5970 Wednesday, May 10 • Story Time at 10 a.m. at Blackfoot Public Library, 129 N. Broadway. The theme is “Ready...Set...Read.” Story Time is best suited for children up to age 6. Saturday, May 13 • Endangered Species Day celebration from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Zoo Idaho in Pocatello. The day will feature games and activities, all designed to educate zoo-goers. This is a limited time offer, so don’t delay. To subscribe call Joe or Melissa at 785-1100 4A Tuesday, April 26, 2016 OPINION www.am-news.com MorningNews The pursuit of talent Everywhere I go, I hear about the talent shortage facing American Jeff workplaces. The existing Hough workforce is aging and the new group coming in has a different approach to working than previous generations. Yet, teaching college students during the past semester, I can’t help but be impressed with the talent I saw. In class I saw the usual stratification of talent. There were the hard-working over-achievers and there were those doing just enough to get by. Yet as I pushed the class and challenged their abilities, they constantly rose to the challenge and completed assignments with creativity and flair. After reviewing an amazing presentation by some marketing students, I reflected on the efforts of businesses and communities to attract the type of talent I witnessed. The student’s presentation demonstrated a work ethic that supposedly is non-existent and a commitment to excellence that would serve any company well. The need to recruit and retain good talent isn’t new. Employers say it is more difficult than ever because the millennial generation is so different and the rules of the game seem to change daily. Communities seeking to attract talent for existing businesses are often at a loss because they aren’t sure what it is that attracts the younger generation. Everyone likes to tout quality of life, but that means something different to everyone. For businesses and communities to survive and grow, a concerted joint effort is needed. Since the rules seem to change constantly, it is time to think differently. The challenging part is trying to balance the needs of the older generation which likes things the way they are— or the way there were 20 years ago—and the needs of the new generation. A survey completed by Australian Human Resource Consulting firm Drake International reveals some key elements for recruiting today’s talent. Of the 400 candidates interviewed in the study, 89 percent said that training and development opportunities were their number one consideration when looking at a company. Number two on the list was pay and benefits, while a close third was having an enjoyable environment. Rounding out the top priorities of potential candidates was the opportunity for flexible hours. Having an enjoyable environment and flexible hours are “squishy” topics. Trying to understand what enjoyable environment and flexible hours means to each individual can drive HR managers crazy. Does an enjoyable environment mean a company kitchen that is open all the time, a recreation center where employees can go to relax or an environment where stress doesn’t exist? Flexible hours is another discussion point that has no solid definition. While not every company can create a fun environment like the high-tech offices, there are things that can be done to make any workplace enjoyable. One of the first things is offering leadership training to existing managers and supervisors. During a recent training session of seasoned leaders in a manufacturing company, those with over 20 years of experience had less than 30 hours of formal leadership training. It is tough to create the right environment when leadership doesn’t understand the fundamentals of effective communication nor have the tools to deal effectively with people. The next thing that can be done is to create the right culture. If the right culture is established (for example, one in which the employee has a voice and the opportunity for self-expression and creativity) the word will get out and your employees will be your greatest recruiters. For communities to compete they need to become well-rounded, offering a variety of activities which appeal to a diverse group of individuals. Even with tight budgets, getting creative in the approach to solving work-life balance is key to attracting the kind of talent that makes a community better. The battle to recruit talented individuals and families is fierce. Companies and communities everywhere are looking for ways to solve their talent shortages. Those who think differently and seek innovative ways to set themselves apart will be successful in solving this challenging problem. Jeff Hough is director of Workforce Services at Idaho State University. Contact him at hougjeff@isu.edu. WRITE TO US: The Morning News welcomes letters to the editor. Letters must contain your home address and a telephone number where you can be reached during the day. Letters must be shorter than 500 words as a courtesy to other writers. We reserve the right to edit for length and clarity. E-MAIL: mnews@cableone.net. MAIL: 34 N. Ash St. • P.O. Box 70, Blackfoot, ID 83221. The views and opinions expressed here are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the Morning News. MorningNews www.am-news.com (ISSN 08933812) Leonard C. Martin, Publisher, publisher@am-news.com Joe Williams, Managing Editor, mnews@am-news.com Wayne Ingram, Advertising Director, wingram@am-news.com Joe 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. Groupthink People generally take comfort in consensus. Typically, no one wants to be the only person in the room to express a contrary opinion. After all it is a common saying, “There is safety in numbers.” But there can be times when consensus can be lethal. Several decades ago leaders in business and social science began to notice that coworkers sometimes ignored certain courses of action to maintain a sense of harmony in their organization — a phenomenon known as groupthink. Groupthink can mean: • Poor group decision making. • Excessive optimism about the group or organization. • Censorship of members with differing views. • Ignoring information which conflicts with the group’s conclusions. • The inability to evaluate hazards and weaknesses of the chosen course of action. • Bias in researching options. • Failure to fully evaluate plan objectives. • Belief that the group’s intellect and ability is superior to everyone else. Groupthink can be caused several factors — loyalty among them. While loyalty is almost always a virtue, excessive loyalty is not when it comes to making decisions. Many times employees feel obligated, out of sense of loyalty, to support certain plans and policies even if they have their own doubts. Even past success can cause groupthink by creating an atmosphere and the assumption that an organization or its leadership is always right because they have been right in the past. Isolation from facts or other opinions can lead to groupthink. That is what occurred a century ago on the Titanic. Capt. Edward Smith and White Star Line Managing Director Bruce Ismay falsely believed the company’s press releases that the Titanic was unsinkable. Ismay and Smith’s confidence in the invincible nature of the ship were shared by the officers, crew and even the passengers. The night the Titanic sank other nearby ships had ether stopped or greatly slowed their speed because of the numerous icebergs, But the Titanic rushed forward at breakneck speed in an attempt to get to New York City ahead of schedule. On the bridge of the Titanic, numerous ice warnings were ignored by the captain and the other officers. There was not even a pair of binoculars in the ship’s crow’s nest, which could have been used to spot the iceberg well before the Titanic struck it. Groupthink also likely prevented the Titanic from having sufficient lifeboats aboard. The ship’s owners felt the boats were not needed, and the additional boats would hamper the view of passengers. This groupthink spread to the passengers, and many failed to board lifeboats simply because they believed the ship was unsinkable. This misplaced optimism cost many lives. But groupthink can be prevented by: • Making an organizational commitment to consider all possible options. • Appointing a committee member to act as a “referee” or a “devil’s advocate” to ensure all possibilities are fully considered before a decision is reached. • Using multiple committees to consider solutions to the same problem. • Using a third party consultant to suggest a course of action. • Assigning each member of a committee the task to comment critically on all proposed plans of action. The consequences of groupthink can be tragic. Groupthink robs an organization of its most valuable asset — ideas and intellectual ability. The good news is that this problem can be eliminated. Dan Cravens is the Director of Bengal Solutions, a consulting program at Idaho State University’s College of Business. He lives in Blackfoot with his wife Jill and family. Cravens holds a Juris Doctorate from Gonzaga University, a Master of Arts in Government from Regent University, and a doctorate in business administration from Argosy University – Salt Lake City. In 1945, Marshal Henri Philippe Petain, the head of France’s Vichy government during World War II, was arrested. In 1952, the destroyerminesweeper USS Hobson sank in the central Atlantic after colliding with the aircraft carrier USS Wasp with the loss of 176 crew members. In 1972, the first Lockheed L-1011 TriStar went into commercial service with Eastern Airlines. In 1994, voting began in South Africa’s first allrace elections, resulting in victory for the African National Congress and the inauguration of Nelson Mandela as president. China Airlines Flight 140, a Taiwanese Airbus A-300, crashed while landing in Nagoya, Japan, killing 264 people (there were seven survivors). Ten years ago: Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld paid a surprise visit to Iraq, where they embraced the country’s fledgling leaders as independent and focused on the future. Five years ago: An 84-year-old naturalized American from Burundi accused of participating in the 1994 Rwandan genocide went on trial in Wichita, Kansas. (While Lazare Kobagaya was convicted of making false statements on immigration forms, the jury deadlocked on whether he’d played a role in the genocide. Federal prosecutors later moved to dismiss all the charges because they’d failed to disclose information about a witness who could have benefited the defense.) One year ago: Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe arrived in Boston for a stop at the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and a dinner hosted by Secretary of State John Kerry as he began a weeklong U.S. visit. “General Hospital” and “The Young and the Restless” were the top winners of the Daytime Emmys with three trophies each, while the latter shared the best drama series award with “Days of Our Lives.” Actress and TV personality Jayne Meadows, who’d often teamed with her husband Steve Allen, died in Los Angeles at age 95. Today’s Birthdays: Actress-comedian Carol Burnett is 83. Actor Giancarlo Esposito is 58. Actress Joan Chen is 55. Actor Jet Li is 53. Actorcomedian Kevin James is 51. Rapper T-Boz (TLC) is 46. Melania Trump is 46. Country musician Jay DeMarcus (Rascal Flatts) is 45. Actor Leonard Earl Howze is 39. Actor Tom Welling is 39. Actor Pablo Schreiber is 38. Actor Nyambi Nyambi is 37. Actress Jordana Brewster is 36. Actress Stana Katic is 36. Actress Marnette Patterson is 36. Actor Channing Tatum is 36. Actress Emily Wickersham (TV: “NCIS”) is 32. Actor Aaron Weeks is 30. Thought for Today: “A good scapegoat is nearly as welcome as a solution to the problem.” — Author unknown. Dan Cravens Today in history Today is Tuesday, April 26, the 117th day of 2016. There are 249 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On April 26, 1986, a major accident occurred at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant in Ukraine (then part of the Soviet Union) as an explosion and fire caused radioactive fallout to begin spewing into the atmosphere over much of Europe, forcing hundreds of thousands from their homes in the most heavily hit areas. On this date: In 1777, 16-year-old Sybil Ludington, sometimes referred to as “the female Paul Revere,” rode her horse into the night through Putnam and Dutchess counties in New York to alert militiamen that British troops were sacking Danbury, Connecticut. In 1865, John Wilkes Booth, the assassin of President Abraham Lincoln, was surrounded by federal troops near Port Royal, Virginia, and killed. In 1913, Mary Phagan, a 13-year-old worker at a Georgia pencil factory, was strangled; Leo Frank, the factory superintendent, was convicted of her murder and sentenced to death. (Frank’s death sentence was commuted, but he was lynched by an antiSemitic mob in 1915.) In 1937, German and Italian warplanes raided the Basque town of Guernica during the Spanish Civil War; estimates of the number of people killed vary from the hundreds to the thousands. MorningNews am-news.com IDAHO Tuesday, April 26, 2016 5A Wildfire rehab effort going well so far in Idaho, Oregon BOISE, Idaho (AP) — Scientists say a $67 million rehabilitation effort following a wildfire in southwest Idaho and southeast Oregon is starting off well thanks to good precipitation over the winter. About $14 million has been spent since October as part of a five-year restoration plan to develop new strategies to combat increasingly destructive rangeland wildfires in the West. “This fire occurred in an area that has a lot different terrain, different ecotypes,” said Cindy Fritz, a natural resource specialist with the Boise District of the U.S. Bureau of Land Management. “There’s a ton of variety out there and we’ll be able to see how our treatments work.” She said about half of the $14 million has been spent on seed and the other half on labor and operating costs. The new wildfire approach ordered by Interior Secretary Sally Jewell last year is credited with preventing many small rangeland wildfires from getting big. But the Soda Fire scorched 436 square miles of sagebrush steppe that supports cattle grazing and some 350 species of wildlife, including sage grouse. Jewell’s order calls for a “science-based” approach to safeguard greater sage grouse while contending with fires that have been especially destructive in the Great Basin. The bird did not receive federal protections under the Endangered Species Act last fall, but various efforts to protect sage grouse habitat have been put in place. Part of that effort is making sagebrush steppe resistant to wildfire and more resilient should a wildfire occur. On-the-ground specifics of how to actually achieve those goals are being tested in the areas scorched by the Soda Fire. Among the notable dif- ference with the current wildfire rehabilitation compared to previous efforts, scientists say, is that the plan is five years rather than three. Another change is that the plan is adaptive, meaning that if restoration efforts appear to be failing in some portion of the burned area managers can go back in with another effort, such as planting native vegetation. The BLM has also partnered with the U.S. Geological Survey to see what works. Some 2,000 sample monitoring plots are being tracked to measure results of techniques that could become templates for future wildfire rehabilitation efforts. “We’ve devised a new approach to monitoring that has more sampling rigor in terms of design and the intensity of sampling,” said USGS research ecologist Matt Germino, who specializes in sage- brush ecosystems and is working on the Soda Fire rehabilitation. The process includes retreatment triggers if rehabilitation efforts are failing, continued monitoring of areas doing well to make sure progress continues, and monitoring to determine when cattle grazing can return. Experts say returning cattle too soon could hinder rehabilitation efforts. Another significant change for Idaho is that a herbicide is being used that targets cheatgrass, a fire prone invasive annual that displaces native perennials with wildfire and part of the reason for the gigantic size of the Soda Fire. Around the state Mountain snow in SE Idaho The National Weather Service has issued a special weather alert regarding the several inches of mountain snow that will likely fall on parts of Southeast Idaho Monday night and Tuesday morning. Up to eight inches of snow could fall on the higher elevations in four counties — Bear Lake, Franklin, Oneida and Cassia. Temperatures Monday night through Tuesday morning are expected to dramatically drop and this could result in motorists encountering slush-covered roads in these counties during the Tuesday morning commute. The following mountain passes are expected to be especially hazardous for motorists: Malad pass, Emigration pass, Georgetown summit, Geneva summit and Sweetzer summit. Snow is also expected to fall on the Island Park, Victor, Driggs, Palisades and Arco areas but accumulations are expected to be light and no weather warnings have been issued for these communities. Most of East Idaho’s towns and cities will receive rain instead of snow Monday night through Tuesday morning. Thunderstorms are also a possibility. The weather system that’s impacting our region has triggered winter weather advisories in southwest and south central Idaho and winter storm warnings in Nevada. Parts of Utah and Wyoming will also see some stormy weather. Bingham courthouse evacuated due to chemical spill BLACKFOOT,Idaho (AP) — The Bingham County Courthouse was temporarily evacuated on Friday after a chemical spilled from a boiler pipe, according to local sheriff Craig T. Rowland. The non-toxic, but strong-smelling chemical, which is used to prevent pipes from rusting, leaked while some repairs were being made, the sheriff said, adding that the shutoff valve failed. People were evacuated from the building for about an hour while the chemical was cleaned up. Send in your news The Morning News welcomes news from the community. Send your items to mnews@am-news.com. Or call Joe Williams at (208) 785-1100. “Teacher of the Year” AWARDS VOTE FOR YOUR FAVORITE TEACHER! On Tuesday, May 31, 2016, the Morning News will be awarding prizes to the three teachers in Bingham County. One teacher in K-6, one teacher 7-8 and one teacher in 9-12. Each winning teacher will receive a plaque, dinner for two at Tommy Vaughn’s and a bouquet of flowers. plenty of opportunities to vote for your favorite teacher. The teachers with the most votes will be declared the winners. Last year’s winners are not eligible this year. Final deadline Thursday, May 12 at 5pm. Each day starting Monday, April 25 and ending Thursday, May 12, there will be official entry forms published in the Morning News. Vote for your favorite teacher by filling out an entry form and dropping it off at the Morning News located at 34 North Ash, Blackfoot or mail to Morning News at P.O. Box 70, Blackfoot, Idaho 83221. Enter as many times as you want, but only original official entry forms will qualify. Copies or reproductions of entry forms will not be accepted and will be discarded. There will be over 20 entry forms published, so you have LAST YEAR’S WINNERS - Michael Moll, Kelli Martinez and Melissa Hunt! Presented by... 6A Tuesday, April 26, 2016 FACES/PLACES am-news.com MorningNews Morning News — Greg Eichelberger Local children, above, take part in the annual Wapello Elementary School Kolor Kraze run at Jensen’s Grove on Monday, April 18. Right, here come the kids from the same event (photo by Leslie Mielke). Morning News — Greg Eichelberger Third-graders Porter Hershey and Spencer Anderson relax while reading at the Royalty Read event at Groveland Elementary School on Friday. Meanwhile, Kaden Capson (from Stoddard Elementary) and Damien Bustamante (Groveland), right, have written pen pal letters to each other since the beginning of the school year. They met for the first time last Thursday at the event (photo by Susan Gough). Morning News — Greg Eichelberger Third-graders Skye Mitchell and Davanie Figaroa, above, share time at the Royalty Reading Night. Right, four-year-old Addy Penrod found just the book for her at the book sale at the Blackfoot Public Library on Saturday, April 9 (photo by Leslie Mielke). Morning News — Greg Eichelberger Members of the Diva Dance troupe perform ‘Minion Crazie’ at the annual Bingham’s Got Talent show at the Blackfoot Performing Arts Center on Saturday evening. MorningNews SPORTS am-news.com Tuesday, April 26, 2016 7A National Basketball Association Curry out at least 2 weeks with sprained right knee Morning News — Greg Eichelberger ISU sophomore quarterback Tanner Gueller gets set to hand the ball to a running back on Saturday at Dave Kragthorpe Classic, the team’s final practice of the spring (which was later rained out). ISU quarterback on target POCATELLO, IdahoAs a three-sport star in football, basketball and baseball at WF West High School in Rochester, Wash., Tanner Gueller was raking in the accolades. He lettered four years in baseball and three in football and basketball. When it came time to decide which sport he wanted to pursue in college the decision was an easy one. It was going to be football. “There is something just different about football,” Gueller said. “There are only 12 games you get to play. There is something special about a Friday night or a Saturday and being able to take the field once a week. There is a brotherhood in football that there is not anywhere else. The best part is the moments with the team.” Gueller’s decision to focus on football was right on as he passed for 4,000 yards and 57 touchdowns while also running for 1,332 yards and 12 touchdowns. With the success at WF West, opportunities to play collegiately presented itself and when Idaho State jumped in the picture, the decision on where to go was easy. “As I talked to coach Kramer you could tell he is a program builder and that he has a clear direc- tion of where he wants to go,” Gueller said. “When I came on my visit I really liked how close everyone was and the unity that was on the team. We do everything with each other. I could see that on my visit and I really liked it.” Gueller redshirted during the 2014 season and in 2015 he started games vs. Sacramento State, Montana and Weber State. He appeared in 10 games during the season. The Bengal quarterback threw five touchdown passes for 855 yards as a redshirt freshman. While the season had its ups and downs, Gueller remained positive and relied on people who are close to him, his family, especially his older brother Mitch who was a drafted 54th by the Philadelphia Phillies. “Once he (Mitch) graduated the biggest thing is he has helped me with is handling things mentally,” Gueller said. “That is what separates people. You have to be mentally strong. His first couple of years he went through some ups and downs. He ended up being able to help me with that a lot, especially this past season.” Gueller said his brother has been his role model his entire life. “He has been my best friend since I was born,” Gueller said. “I hated him at times when he was kicking my butt on the court. He used to beat me in everything. It was always really competitive.” Gueller enters his sophomore season as the starting quarterback. Its an opportunity that he relishes and with that he knows he has to continue to work hard to make himself and the team better. “It is a dream come true,” the Bengal signal caller said. “It has been something I have wanted to do. You always picture these days but for it to actually happen is better than I could ever imagine.” Gueller has put in the time with the receivers to perfect timing and he admits that he has become more confident and “comfortable in my own skin.” He said that while he struggled in 2015 he is grateful for the film he has now to study of him in live action. “I just have gotten more comfortable with the guys and a thing is different this year is our timing and understanding of how everyone runs the routes.” Gueller and the Bengals closed out spring practices on Saturday with the Dave Kragthorpe Classic, which was rained out at the half, but it did not prevent the QB from completing 10 passes off 15 attempts. National Football League Brady must serve ‘Deflategate’ penalty NEW YORK (AP) — New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady must serve a four-game “Deflategate” suspension imposed by the NFL, a federal appeals court ruled Monday, overturning a lower judge and siding with the league in a battle with the players union. A three-judge panel of the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan ruled 2-to-1 that Commissioner Roger Goodell did not deprive Brady of “fundamental fairness” with his procedural rulings. The split decision may end the legal debate over the scandal that led to months of football fans arguing over air pressure and the reputation of one of the league’s top teams. It also fuels a fresh round of debate over what role, if any, the quarterback and top NFL star played in using underinflated footballs at the AFC championship game in January 2015. The Patriots won the contest over the Indianapolis Colts, 45-7, and then won the Super Bowl. Soon after the ruling, Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump opened a campaign rally in Rhode Island by sticking up for Brady, a longtime friend and golfing buddy. “First of all let’s start by saying leave Tom Brady alone. Leave him alone. Leave him alone he’s a great guy,” Trump said. “It’s enough. It’s enough.” The ruling can be appealed to the full 2nd Circuit or to the U.S. Supreme Court, but it would likely be a steep and time-consuming climb even if the courts took the unusual step to consider it. In a majority opinion written by Judge Barrington D. Parker, the 2nd Circuit said its review of labor arbitration awards “is narrowly circumscribed and highly deferential — indeed, among the most deferential in the law.” “Our role is not to determine for ourselves whether Brady participated in a scheme to deflate footballs or whether the suspension imposed by the Commissioner should have been for three games or five games or none at all. Nor is it our role to second-guess the arbitrator’s procedural rulings,” the opinion said. “Our obligation is limited to determining whether the arbitration proceedings and award met the minimum legal standards established by the Labor Management Relations Act.” The 2nd Circuit said the contract between players and the NFL gave the commissioner authority that was “especially broad.” “Even if an arbitrator makes mistakes of fact or law, we may not disturb an award so long as he acted within the bounds of his bargained-for authority,” the court said. In a dissent, Chief Judge Robert Katzmann said Goodell failed to even consider a “highly rele- vant” alternative penalty. “I am troubled by the Commissioner’s decision to uphold the unprecedented four-game suspension,” Katzmann said. “It is ironic that a process designed to ensure fairness to all players has been used unfairly against one player.” The NFL Players Association said in a statement it was disappointed. “We fought Roger Goodell’s suspension of Tom Brady because we know he did not serve as a fair arbitrator and that players’ rights were violated under our collective bargaining agreement,” the statement said. “Our union will carefully review the decision, consider all of our options and continue to fight for players’ rights and for the integrity of the game.” NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy said the court ruled Goodell acted properly in cases involving the integrity of the game. “That authority has been recognized by many courts and has been expressly incorporated into every collective bargaining agreement. OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — If the Golden State Warriors want to cap a record-setting season with a second straight NBA title, they will need to survive the next two weeks without their best player. Stephen Curry is expected to miss at least two weeks with a Grade 1 sprain of the MCL in his right knee, dealing an unexpected blow to the Warriors’ hopes of repeating as champions. “From our perspective, it’s relatively good news,” general manager Bob Myers said Monday. “Clearly we don’t want to be here getting MRIs at this point of the season, especially someone of Steph’s stature. ... But mechanically the knee is intact, so that’s good.” Myers said the twoweek estimate is an educated guess based on how players typically respond to similar injuries, but cautioned the absence could be three weeks or possibly slightly shorter. The team will have a better handle on how long Curry will be out after about a week but Curry will miss the rest of the first round of the playoffs and almost assuredly the start of the second round if the Warriors advance. Golden State leads Houston 3-1 heading into Game 5 at home on Wednesday night. “If it’s not two weeks, don’t go crazy,” Myers said. “If it’s before that, great. If it’s after, it’s after.” Curry was injured on the final play of the first half of Sunday’s 121-94 win in Houston when he slid awkwardly on a wet spot on the court and fell. He immediately grabbed his knee and jogged with a limp to the locker room. “Nobody is to blame here,” Myers said. “If you play basketball, that stuff happens unfortunately.” Curry came out with the team after halftime, but sat on the bench for most of the warmup time. After talking with coaches, he returned to the locker room with his second injury of the series. Curry had missed the previous two games with a sprained right ankle but said that was not an issue during the first half Sunday. The Warriors thrived without Curry on Sunday, hitting eight 3-pointers in the third quarter alone to turn a tie game into a 21-point lead on the way to the easy win. But doing that without the reigning MVP for a longer period of time figures to be more problematic. The Warriors have gone 3-2 this season without Curry playing, including wins against the Rockets on New Year’s Eve and at home in Game 2. Golden State also lost Game 3 in Houston by one point while Curry sat with the ankle injury. Replacing everything Curry does is almost impossible because no one has ever had the collection of skills he has with the ability to spread the defense with long-range shooting, the ballhandling to create his own shot and the playmaking that leads to easy baskets for his teammates. Curry led the NBA this season by averaging 30.1 points per game, while averaging 6.7 assists, 5.4 rebounds and a leagueleading 2.1 steals as A Family Mexican Restaurant Welcome Amigos!!! Buy 1, Get 1 ½ OFF Lunch or Dinner Expires April 30, 2016. 620 West Bridge 785-1595 Rent a Drinking Water Call For a Special Rate... System Today! and a FREE Kobe ‘saves’ potato truck EAGLE, Idaho (AP) — Kobe Bryant’s recent mention of the Great Big Idaho Potato Truck might have helped save the traveling advertisement from a premature retirement, according to the head of a state agency that promotes Idaho potatoes. The recently retired Los Angeles Lakers guard remarked on the red truck while talking with an ESPN reporter during one of his final games. The truck hauls a 6-ton replica Russet Burbank. It’s on its fifth national tour to help charities and raise awareness of Idaho’s most famous vegetable. Frank Muir, Idaho Potato Commission president and CEO, said ESPN sideline reporter Heather Cox told him that before a recent interview, Bryant referenced the running story line of the commission’s ads: an Idaho potato grower’s search for the “missing” potato truck. Cox is a spokesman for the commission. well. Curry made a record 402 3-pointers, eclipsing his own previous mark by 116. While backup point guard Shaun Livingston and do-everything power forward Draymond Green can shoulder much of the playmaking load and Klay Thompson is the secondbest 3-point shooter in the league, the Warriors go from a historically great team that won a record 73 games in the regular season with Curry in the lineup to a vulnerable one if he misses significant time. With a 3-1 series lead and two potential games at home against the eighthseeded Rockets, Golden State is still primed to advance to the second round without Curry. But a second-round series against either the Los Angeles Clippers or Portland would be much more problematic. The second round of the playoffs won’t start until this weekend at the earliest. No matter when the second round starts, Game 4 would likely be either May 8 or 9, which will be in two weeks. Drinking Water Test! culligan.com 232-3855 608 North 5th, Pocatello REDUCE HUNGER AND CRAVINGS with our NEW Leptin Activator from Essential Source is a homeopathic spray! Leptin supports reducing hunger and cravings and the desire to overeat. Stop in and get yours today!! 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NFL SUNDAY TICKET 2016 season included at no extra cost CHOICETM PACKAGE OR ABOVE. 360 W Judicial St, Blackfoot CITY, ST PERMIT #XXXX www.winklersat.com FREE Genie® upgrade One HD DVR powers your whole home' CALL TODAY 785-4556 The Morning News – Bingham County’s news source Tuesday, April 26, 2016 8A COMICS & ADVICE frank & ernest Zits Hi & Lois Dear Annie: I am 15 years old and I love your column. Here's my problem: Ever since I was a little girl, I had one dream — to become an astronaut. I would gaze at the stars for hours each night, and I learned everything I could from books. However, my parents have always drilled into me that I was to become a doctor or lawyer. They are very strict, and I always have obeyed them. I believe they do this for my benefit. My parents grew up poor. They want me to make heaps of money so I will want for nothing. Whenever I bring up the topic of becoming an astronaut, they quickly shut it down, because they don't believe astronauts earn enough. My parents will never support me in this. I have only one path, already drawn, complete with college courses and job openings. My parents see their friends' children becoming lawyers, surgeons or specialists, and they expect me to do the same. Even my teachers and friends give me doubtful looks when I tell them what I want to do. Budget wisely and don’t let take anyone over your personal affairs. Preparation and a proactive approach will result in success and peace of mind. Let your intelligence and insight lead the way to victory. Direct and precise communication is the best way to execute your intentions. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- Build alliances and develop open relationships with people heading in the same direction as you. A beneficial idea or service you offer will bring in extra cash. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- You shouldn’t let anyone guilt you into something you don’t care to do. You’ll gain respect if you say no. Don’t pay for others’ mistakes or make donations you cannot afford. CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- Speak up, share your suggestions and offer solutions. Don’t worry about the actions of others. If someone is unpredictable, keep your distance. Your intuition will not mislead you. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -Socializing with your peers will put you in a good position. Personal changes will BLondie BaBy BLues B.C. DEAR DOCTOR K: A friend heard about a study that said a person’s immune system changes with the seasons. That seems incredible to me. But if it’s true, it’s fascinating. Do you know what she is talking about? GarfieLd HaGar April 26, 2016 2011 - 7B am-news.com tHe HorriBLe for Better or Worse DEAR READER: I think I know the study she is referring to. Before describing what it found, it’s worth talking a bit about the immune system and also about genes. First of all, that the immune system should change in response to any external circumstance -- like the weather, or the season -should not be surprising. The immune system is constantly changing as it responds to a changing set of foreign threats. Different germs, different non-infectious foreign substances (such as pollen, animal hair, dust) are entering our bodies all the time. A healthy immune system is always refocusing its attack as it encounters new foreign substances. The immune system is like an army; it has many different types of cells that have different functions. Think of each group of cells as a platoon that does a particular job. It also has a hierarchy, with the cells at the MorningNews Kathy Mithchell & Marcie Sugar Annie's Mailbox But let's say that I cut ties with my parents and take college classes in physics and astronomy and don't get into NASA. Medicine is a solid field. You can find jobs anywhere. Shoot for the stars? Very funny. Do I live for myself or my parents? — Trapped in the Grave of a Dream Dear Trapped: Dreams are great, but they do not always translate to reality, as you know. According to NASA, the competition to be an astronaut is, well, astronomical — there are an average of 4,000 applicants for 20 openings every two years. You'd need a degree in engineering, science or mathematics, and then three years of related experience. Astronaut salaries Eugenia Last Astro-Graph build confidence. Someone will be jealous of you. Offering friendship will stump your rivals. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Use your intelligence and experience to overcome any problems you face at home. An elder or someone you feel responsible for will have difficulty combating common sense and practicality. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -Partnerships will play a major role in the decisions and choices you make. Short trips or a meeting with someone can make a difference to the outcome of a personal situation you are facing. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- You’ll have a different vision from someone you are working with. Try to use what both of you bring to the table to come up with something spectacular. Dr. Anthony Komaroff Ask Doctor K “top” directing the actions of all the other cells -- just like the generals and admirals in the armed forces. Those top cells send orders in the form of immune system chemicals. For the cells of the immune system to function properly, the right genes in those cells need to be turned on (and other genes turned off) at the right time. In the past 30 years, research scientists have developed ways of determining which genes in a cell (or a related group of cells) are turned on and off. So much for the biology lesson, and on to the study I think your friend was talking about. It was conducted by a scientific group in Europe that obtained blood samples from thousands of people living in both the Northern and the Southern hemispheres. Some people lived well north (or south) of the equator, where the seasons are most dramatic. Others are solid, but will not make you wealthy. But we don't want you to give up your dream if you are that committed to it. The good news is, you don't have to decide today. In college, a pre-med program will require many of the same science classes that you would need to be an astronaut. This will give you an opportunity to see how well you do in those subjects, and your parents will have no objections. 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. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- You’ll receive plenty of information, but before you act on hearsay, ask questions and go to the source for the truth. A change of heart will lead to a romantic encounter. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- It’s OK to be different. Follow your gut when it comes to someone acting inconsistently. Pour more time, attention and cash into your home, family and plans for the future. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- Follow your heart and use your skills and best attributes to get things done your way. Love is in the stars, and a romantic evening will pay off. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -- Proceed with caution. Don’t give in to someone making demands on your time or money. Consider where you can make the most difference and follow through on your plans. ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- Your quick wit will put you in the spotlight. Strut your stuff and make personal changes that will boost your morale and result in compliments. Romance is encouraged. lived near the equator all year, where the seasons are the least dramatic. In the blood samples, the researchers measured which immune system genes were turned on. They found that some immune system genes were turned on pretty much all year, without any seasonal variation. But in both hemispheres, some immune system genes were turned on quite differently during summer than during winter. The study also found, not surprisingly, that in parts of the world where infectious diseases are most common during certain times of the year, many more immune system genes were turned on during those times. For example, genes that turn on protective inflammation were activated more often during the rainy season in equatorial Africa -- a time when malaria is rampant. There are no practical applications that follow from this study -- at least not that I can see, and not yet. But I’m glad you asked about it, because I agree with you that the study is interesting. It underlines just how dynamic our immune system is -- and has to be -- to do its job. New NOW 4pm OPEN Born Loser Spring into Flavor with our Big Bold Steaks! A Steak for every occasion... We Serve Local Beef! Cheff C Ch Cruz M Moreno 340 W. Judicial St. Stockman’s old Blackfoot location. 208-932-1053 MorningNews www.am-news.com • Mowing • Power Raking • Aerating • Fertilization 208-705-0969 CLASSIFIEDS TODAY’S FEATURED AD Tuesday, April 26, 2016 Classifieds Bingham County’s Marketplace to Buy, Sell or Trade! Call For A Free Estimate Debit CarD Find An item. 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 Deadlines. Real Estate 00-04 Rentals Announcements Help Wanted Pets/Misc Merchandise Farm & Ranch Automotive Ads Appearing Call Before Monday Friday, 9am Tuesday Monday, 9am Wednesday Tuesday, 9am Thursday Wednesday, 9am Friday Thursday, 9am Saturday Friday, 9am 05-10 11-15 16-20 21-28 29-32 33-38 39-42 Get More Exposure Online! Please Call for Display Sizes www.am-news.com ITEMS UNDER $200 ARE FREE Up to 5 Lines! Ad runs 6 days! 000 Homes For Sale 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. ITEMS UNDER $1,000 ARE 6. 99 $ Up to 5 Lines! Ad runs 6 days! 000 Homes For Sale 000 Homes For Sale 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 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 785-7555 199 W. Bridge St. Blackfoot PREFERRED PROPERTIES Information & Pictures for every home listed in Southeast Idaho @ www.JustIdaho.com ! NEW Carrie Hasselbring Broker 681-7555 Susan Caldwell 680-3325 Jean Nilsson 317-2360 Renette Loosli Andy Hasselbring 604-3058 681-7444 Featured Home of The Week D! D! SOL SOL Tara Eppich 680-2772 K! LOO #202619 One-Level Brick Home, east side $90,000 # 197378 Move in Condition! $95,000 3 bdrms, 1 bath w/single car garage This 3 bdrm, 1.5 bath home has gas heat, wood stove & lovely yard w/sprinkler & fenced yard. Won’t last long. system. Call Carrie: 681-7555 Call Carrie 681-7555 ! NEW ! D! SOL U #203508 Prepare to be Impressed $209,000 Attractive 3 Bdrm/2 Bath home has custom cabinetry, hardwood floors and gas fireplace. Definitely one of the most beautiful yards located in a great neighborhood. Call Andy 681-7444 TED PDA U 203009 Wonderful 4 Bdrm/2 Bath home on East side! Only $132,500 #202638 2-Story Brick Home Entire interior is freshly painted, main $159,900 4000 sq ft, 5 bdrms/ has new carpet & hardwood floors. Large bdrms, fireplace, GFA, Cvrd in quiet area. Priced to sell. Patio, Fenced Yard, Garage & more! 3.5 baths Call Carrie 681-7555 Call Carrie 681-7555 TED PDA CE! PRI D! G! DIN PEN TED PDA U D! #203158 Newer home in desired area! $173,000 4 bdrm/3 bath Expanded living on patio & parklike yard, many amenities. Call Susan 680-3325 ! #201496 Extras Galore! $189,000 #197210 Gorgeous $190,000 5 Bdrm/3 Bath, vaulted ceilings, spacious Tons of updates including kitchen & kitchen and large family room. Fully 2 baths!! Park like setting, greenhouse, landscaped w/sprinkler, privacy fence & garden area and workshop. 5 bdrm/3 bath RV parking. Call Andy 681-7444 2 car garage. Call Andy 681-7444 D! SOL MLS#203247 659 E Washington 1860 Sq.ft., 4 BR, 3 bath. Large dine in Kitchen. New master bedroom/bath. Lg. family room. New roof. nice patio, Privacy fenced yard. Shed. MLS#203728 82 W Bingham. 2 BR, possible 3rd, 1 Bath. One level, handicap accessible. Vinyl Siding. 42’x32’ shop. w/ man cave. .64 Acre lot. Beautifully landscaped. Large fire pit w/ benches. 2 sheds. Horseshoe pit. Out house that’s hooked into City Sewer! Yard totally private with 100’s of trees. MLS#194005 2146 S 2800 W 3 BR, 1 Bath. with extra walk in shower in Mud room. Huge 30’ x 70’ shop, with 3 overhead doors. large orchard in the front, with many types of fruit, Shared well. Underground Auto. sprinklers on on 1 Acre. MLS#203972 382 N 7th, MLS#199346 3155 W 1500 S., Aberdeen. 5 BR, 3 Bath. Beautiful Custon Brick Ranch Style. 5420 craftsman style home, completely sq.ft., 5 BR, 4 Bath. Huge Tile updated! Gas heat & central air. Kitchen. 3 fireplaces. Indoor hot Formal Dining with Balcony. No tub. 2 car garage, w/ basement Maintenance siding. Country feel, access. Trex Decks. Fenced Elk with city amenities. .40 Acre. pasture. 3 car detached shop. all 5 Acres! www.gemvalleyrealestate.com terrylebrecht@gmail.com G! ! Red MLS 203075 • $192,000. Nicely MLS 203532 • $315,000 2.3 ac. of quiet. Home. 4 bed. 1.5 bath updated 4 bdrm 2 3/4 bath home. New & irrig. Detached garage with apt., roof, newely finished basement. Granite full bath, bonus rooms. Gas heat, AC., & tile. Extra garage/shop, GFA heat, covered deck. Call Ann 680-6063 Call Ann B 208-680-6063 ! d! uce NEW Red Beautiful custom home near Blackfoot High. Over 6000 sq. ft. Lots of tile and granite. 4+ big bedrooms, 3.5 baths 3 car garage. GFA/AC , sprinkler system, fireplaces. Call Ann Blaser 208-680-6063 d! ! uce DIN PEN NEW Aberdeen! • $72,000 Aberdeen! $275,000 !! DING PEN .40 Acre! • $169,000 MLS 202802 • $109,000. 4 bdrm 2 bath 1856 2 story home. Very spacious! Tiled bathrooms. Call Kandice 540-1059 NEW MLS 198308 • $210,000 Granite & tile in kitchen. Formal living, great room too. 3 bdrms 2.5 baths & laundry on main. GFA heat, deck, fenced, sprinkler sys. MLS 204256 • $112,900. 5 bdrm 3 bath 2865 sq ft Beautiful home w/open floor plan Call Kandice 540-1059 ! NEW MLS 204551 • $219,000 Spacious home in country setting. 4300+ sq. ft. on 1.67 ac. Four bed rm. 3 bath, GFA/AC Call Ann B. 208-680-6063 RiveRside Real estate 611 N. Broadway Blackfoot CE! PRI #200011 Great Buy! $120,000 #200444 Charming Home! $118,000 5 bdrm/2 bath home near schools. 1,836 sq ft home w/refinished hard- Bonus living room, multiple possibilities wood floor & gas fireplace. Amazing Updated tile, carpet and a new backyard Call Andy 681-7444 furnace. Call Andy 681-7444 #204175 This Could Be the One! #202560 Custom Accents! #203926 Newer Country Home on $259,000 4Bdrm/2.5 Bath w/grand $205,000 Lovely 5 bedroom/3 bath 1.15 acres west of Moreland, Only master suite, hardwood floors, gas fire- #192988 Beautiful Home! $349,900 newer home with countless $234,900 Over 3400 sq ft w/3 Bdrms, 2 place, fully fenced and landscaped. 4+ 6 bdrms, 3 baths, custom kitchen & upgrades and attention to detail. Baths & Bsmt family room. Room To Grow car garage with one double bay, Extras entertainment center. Open family Call Andy 681-7444 with Great View! Call Carrie 681-7555 galore! Call Andy 681-7444 room. Call Andy 681-7444 Aberdeen! • $105,000 #200293 Super Clean $115,000 Cute & Updated 4 bdrm home in Pingree. Updated kitchen, vinyl windows, 2 sheds. Fenced Yard & NEW roof! Call Susan 680-3325 SOL NEW G! DIN PEN Aberdeen! $89,000 Call Terry Lebrecht 681-1191 CE! PRI #199826 Location, Location, Location $165,000 2 acre river frontage near Tilden Bridge. 2 Bedroom/2 bath mnfctrd home with a great view. Call Susan 680-3325 SOL #201497 Amazing One Level Home in Moreland $200,000 2 Bdrm/2 Bath with rustic oak cabinets, sun room, hot tub, shop and family room with gas fireplace. Call Carrie 681-7555 SOL ! #203241 Beautifully updated home $116,000 3 bdrms/1 bath has newer vinyl windows & siding, new interior paint, wood look tile flooring. Vinyl fenced yard & huge covered patio! Call Carrie: 681-7555 NEW D! D! LOOK D! #203831 Clayton, ID Only $70,000 Older school house on 1.629 acres is bordered by a creek, & beautiful mountain view. Over 1900 sq ft w/endless possibilities….could easily accommodate 2-3 bdrm/1-2 baths plus huge living area. Call Carrie 681-7555 SOL #201967 Check out the Updates! $110,000 Fully renovated 3 bedroom home with 36x24 shop, on large lot with water rights. Call Andy 681-7444 SOL #203316 Duplex w/Great Rental History $115,000 2 Bdrm/1Bath in each unit. Each has updated kitchens, tile flooring, paint & carpet. A shared double garage and laundry. Call Carrie 681-7555 #195468 Cute! $54,900 Great starter or investment home. Updated wiring, ideal location, 3 bdrm, 1 bath Ready to move in. Call Carrie 681-7555 #201164 Iconic Blackfoot Motors building $375,000 Located on main thoroughfare near downtown. 23921 sq. ft., 2 buildings with drive through lube area and shop. High visibility area. Call Carrie 681-7555 WE S LD D L S D L S S LD D L S D L S S LD LD S D L S D L S SSIFIEDS IT IN THE CLA Ann Blaser • 680-6063 • Broker In Print & Online www.am-news.com 000 Homes For Sale # 2 0 0 4 9 7 CLASSIFIEDS Tuesday, April 26, 2016 ! LD SO $132,500.00 WOW !! What A Great Home, Clean and Ready To Move Into. 4 bdrms, 2 bath, gorgeous kitchen with all the extras, large living room, formal dining room w/built in hutch. Beautiful yard with auto sprinkler. # 1 9 9 8 2 0 # 1 9 8 3 3 2 $160,000 Beautiful Victorian 6 bdrms 2.75 baths One of a kind 2 car oversized finished garage Priced to sell! # 2 0 1 9 2 5 000 Homes For Sale How You Can Save Thousands with 20th Century Homes W! NE BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY 4 LEVEL HOME $184,000 5 bdrm, 3 bath 1.39 acres, Approx 2985 SF New flooring, new paint W! ! D OL S # 2 0 3 8 6 5 000 Homes For Sale 000 Homes For Sale 000 Homes For Sale 000 Homes For Sale One thing that makes 20th Century Homes special is our unique financing process. Instead of requiring 2 loans– a construction loan, and later a final mortgage–and therefore forcing you to pay 2 loan origination fees, we are one of only a few dealers who will help you bypass the construction loan. NE GORGEOUS $305,000 $380,000 Country Escape in Approx 1 acre of ground, Approx Groveland Area 4158 Total Sg. Ft. 6 bedrooms 3 Baths 7.8 + acres, private pond & custom Acasia Hand Scraped Wood Flooring landscaping 2 story home with 2 shops / shed 5 bdrms, 3 baths, Stainless Steel Appliances covered patio A MUST SEE!! Kathy Broker, GRI 208-681-2474 • 684-3919 • Town kathychid@cableone.net & Country Real Estate 785-2474 - 710 W. Bridge townandcountryIVhomes.com Linnea Real Estate Agent • 680-1996 • MorningNews www.am-news.com We’ll be glad to explain the details in person, so be sure to ask how we make financing your new home simpler, and save you thousands at the same time. Linnea.C@me.com Call or Email Today to Get Started My name is Bill Agado, General Manager of 20th Century Homes. Please call, text, or email me at your earliest convenience to start your project. Together, we can and do make dreams come true! 208-251-6704 www.20thcenturyhomes.com Great 2 acre building lot with division right in Rockford! MLS# 204208 • $44,000 Call Karen Batten 65 E 100 N, Blackfoot 785-4000 W! Great Starter Home! $95,000 MLS 203978 1,968 sqft, 4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms Both bathrooms are updated! Call Jed at 681-4000 W! 220 N. Meridian Blackfoot Jed Taylor 681-4000 reALTOr® Jared@ Jared Taylor.net Candra Risa 681-6102 reALTOr® email@ Candrarisa.com Angela Palmer 757-9538 reALTOr® Angela@ AngelaMPalmer.com Updated Today! $178,500 A Hidden Treasure!! Call Jean 208 243-1882 3 bedroom, 2 bath home on 1.6 acres. Zoned M-1. Circular driveway, room for lg truck parking. Established yard, 30x40 shop w/office & More!! MLS#203372 W! NE NE Amazing Original Hardwood Floors $99,900 MLS 203110 1,928 sq ft, 3 bedrooms, 1 bathroom All Brick Home, Dbl Carport w/shed Call Angela at 757-9538 ! W! Jared Taylor 557-9595 Owner/BrOker Jed@ JedTaylor.com Fixer Upper Includes a Shop $100,000 MLS 203803 2,395 sqft, 4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms Much of Plumbing and roof are new Call Jed at 681-4000 Perfect Home, Ready for New Owner $124,999 MLS 196745 1,790 sq ft, 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms new Appliances, wH & Gas Furnace Call Angela at 757-9538 red! owe W NE Beautiful Home, Lots of Character $139,900 MLS 203652 2,760 sq ft, 4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms Updated! Lots of storage. Lg Back Yard Call Angela at 757-9538 Place an ad.. 785-1100 See all of our listings at: www.idahohighplainsrealty.com 681-3494 NE 2 bed 2 bath home, 3/4 acres close to town! 4 den/office rooms, updated kitchen & bath! MLS# 204404 • $137,500 [ roveland patio! 7,900 2B eL Pric Updated 6+ Bedrm Home $154,900 mls 203333 2,642 sqft, 6+bedrms, 2.5 baths Fenced Garden, Gas/Central A/C Call Angela at 757-9538 3.9 Irr Ac. & 30X50 Shop $240,000 MLS 203390 2,697 sqft, 4 bedroom, 3 full baths Log Pole Barn, Set-up for Horses Call Jed at 681-4000 Home on 3 Acres $275,000 MLS 197112 3,696 sq ft, 4 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms Includes dwelling used as Beauty Salon Call Jed at 681-4000 W! NE NE Charming Country Home, 1.25 Ac $369,900 MLS 204114 4,250 sqft, 6 bedrooms, 3.5 bathrooms Huge kitchen w Dbl Ovens & Granite Call Angela at 757-9538 Amazing Home & 4000 sq ft Shop Stunning Views, Move In Ready $375,000 MLS 199396 $415,000 MLS 204347 4,000 sq ft, 6 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms 4,068 sqft, 4 bedrooms, 3.5 bathrooms X-Large Master Suite w Jetted Tub water rights for 2+ Acres of Beauty Call Angela at 757-9538 Call Angela at 757-9538 Prominent Luxury Home on 4 Ac $650,000 MLS 203779 6,095 sqft, 6 bedrooms, 4.5 bathrooms All Landscaped, Awesome Greenhouse Call Jed at 681-4000 Check Out All These Great Listings!!! W! NE 5 bdrms 2 bath 3592 sq ft home Country living on over 5 acres MLS 203990 • $199,000 If You Want More, You Want us!! d er, I ! NEW Ham 5 bdrms 3 bath 3504 sq ft home Immaculate Golfer’s Dream MLS 203828 • $349,000 3 bdrms 2 bath 1680 sq ft home Brand New modular Energy Star! MLS 201783 • $249,000 3 bdrm 2 baths, 1332 sq ft New floor coverings, Established yard MLS 193361 • $102,900 6 bdrms 3 bath Immaculate home in Firth . 3816 sq ft on 1.7 acres MLS 203091 • $297,000 5 bdrm 3 baths, 2668 sq ft Super location for this farm w/2 homes! MLS 200607 • $940,000 4 bdrm 2 bath 1360 sq ft Great location & quiet neighborhood MLS# 202622 • $145,900 Acreage!! 3.48 acres. Perfect place to build your new home! MLS 201162 • $55,000 Featured Home!! For Sale or Lease, Office, service business, 3 rest rooms wheel chair access, parking MLS 202415 • $249,000 3 bdrm 1 bath Great starter home. 1400 sq ft. Fenced yard w/fruit trees! MLS#187631 • $99,500 Wapello on Wicks Road W! NE 80 Acre Farm House with 80 shares Grand Teton Canal .MLS# 196787 • $699,000 Residential lots in Atomic City! Perfect location, city water. MLS 186826 • $45,900 4 bdrms 2 bath Home MLS 201580 • $122,900 3.32 Acres Commercial/Residential 50 trees w/drip line near Howe MLS 202253 • $29,000 785-1313 745 W Bridge Ste B www.IdahoanRealty.com 5 - 5 acre lots 3 - 3 acre lots Pressurized irrigation From $65,000 to $85,000 CCR’s 3 bdrms 2 baths 1600 sq ft Beautifully remodeled! MLS 201326 • $135,000 Mark Call Roxie Jensen 604-4602 Owner/Broker 680-4018 Range Ground! 14 secluded acres, may be divided into 2 building lots! MLS 199725 • $45,900 1 bdrm 1 bath 560 sq ft 1 car garage 1.3 ac Atomic City MLS 193700 • $45,000 Gary Ternus Cathy Haggard 317-6919 680-1901 Justin Bair 690-9094 ! D OL S 3 bdrms, 2 1/2 baths 2686 sq ft Completely landscaped! New paint & floor coverings!! MLS 201067 • $220,000 Y! POK Approx 48 Acres in Ashton Beautiful piece of land! MLS 194890 • $199,000 3 bdrm 1 bath 1200 sq ft Hardwood floors, fenced back yard. MLS 203076 • $110,000 Two lot(s) near Mackay for single family homes. RV’s Okay with city approval. MLS 175369 • $12,500 each 4 bdrm 2 baths Near Greenbelt. Handicap accessibility! 2460 sq ft. MLS#194809 • $129,900 Amanda Scott 403-6547 Judy Brandon Parks Campbell 200-2562 589-8247 Jammie Matheson 313-1474 Cassidy Wilcox 681-2124 MorningNews www.am-news.com CROSSWORD PUZZLE CLASSIFIEDS Tuesday, April 26, 2016 030 Lots - Acreage 030 Lots - Acreage 060 Unfurn.Apts.ForRent Lots and Acreage Rose Park Place Apartments 55 + Senior Community Currently Available 1 Bdrm/1 Bath Rent $460 • A Great lot in a well developed Subdivision ready to build on. Sale of the lot is contingent on Loosli Construction Inc being the builder and construction to begin within 120 days of purchase of the lot. $32,000 Call Renette 604-3058 MLS #202919 • Bare Ground ranging from 1 acre to 23 acres priced from $10k to $58K located North of Moreland • Priced to Sell! 6.76 lush irrigated acres on the edge of town. Great building site for horse or cattle lovers or for single family subdivision (Zone R1). Only $75,000 MLS#199663 Call Carrie 681-7555 • 203452 Premium 1 Acre Building Lot in Groveland with Water Rights. Only $29,000 Call Carrie 681-7555 Groveland Area – Six new home acreages 2.3 to 3.5 acre lots, prices vary (start at $47,500), water rights, utilities to lots and covenants. Call Susan 680-3325 1385 Meggan Street Blackfoot, Idaho 1-208-782-0085 Must income qualify. Washer/dryer & Garage with each apartment. Rental Assisted Households welcome. 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 Commercial • Great Downtown Location with high visibility! Over 12,000cesqd!ft on main thoroughfare. Only $95,000 du Bring all offers seller motivated. Re MLS 193511 Call Carrie:#681-7555 •2.64 acres commercial ground with 531’ of frontage. Great access and visibility from Hwy 26. Possible Owner carry. MLS #196547 Call Renette #604-3058. •Commercial Building with over 11,000 sq. ft. There are 3 warehouses (2 of which are leased) and plenty of office space for only $200,000. Call Carrie 681-7555 S LD! Looking to sell your home fast, then contact a local REALTOR®. Their knowledge and expertise will help you find the right buyer at the right price. Call one today! Greater Blackfoot Association of REALTORS® 000 Homes For Sale Home isWhere The Heart Is BEAUTIFULLY, REMODELED Tami Fairchild 681-6646 Valerie Duran 680-1815 A Beautiful Acreage in Mackay 20+ Acres with water Beautiful Views MLS# 201608 • $75,000 ING D PEN in ! y 1 Da Wonderful Home In Pocatello 1620 Sq Ft w 3 bed, 1 1/2 baths Lots of updates Single car attached garage #203963 • $115,000 ! NG NDI PE Country Home on 1 Acre 1800 Sq ft 4 Bed, 2 bath Lots of updates MLS#203513 • $130,700 t Mus ! See Solid Brick Home 2690 Sq Ft Home On 1 Acre 5 Bedrooms, 2 Bathrooms 2 Car detached garage MLS#202626 • $178,000 ed Pric Great Starter Home 2024 sq ft w/4 bed, 1 3/4 baths Newer kitchen, Hardwood floors Priced to sell! MLS#204485 • $80,000 D! UCE RED s! Acre On 4 m o ust u. C e! Bea Hom Country Home on 2.169 Acres 5231 Sq Ft w 7 bed, 3 1/2 baths Spacious Building Great Business or Investment Property! Open floor plan with lots of upgrades walk out basement, 3 car garage 3034 sq ft w/6+ Offices 20+ off street parking MLS#189924 • $149,900 MLS#203758 • $459,000 ! NEW Great Country Lot 2 parcels that is approx 1.1 acres 30 X 50 cinder block shop MLS#204484 • $67,900 ! NG NDI PE Beautiful Custom Home Beautiful Home On 2 Acres 3875 Sq Ft, 5 Bed, 3 1/2 Bath Spacious Open Kitchen Main Floor Master MLS#200324 • $310,000 NEWER 2 bedroom country duplex All Appliances W/D N0 pets, Smoking or drinking. $500 604-2205 000 Homes For Sale Lindsay Fairchild 681-6643 ! ell! 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 SOL ! NEW Adorable Home 1897 Sq Ft w/4 bed, 2 bath Newer paint, carpet and roof Oversized detached 2 car garage MLS#204142 • $121,500 Great Deal! Fully Finished!! 3072 sq ft w/5 bdrms, 3 baths 3 car garage. This home has all the extras MLS#178128 • $196,900 TED PDA U Beautiful Log Home 3504 Sq ft home w/2 Bed, 3 Bath home on 22.88 acres Oversized 2 bay garage MLS#201205 • $379,000 D! NG! DI PEN Affordable Lot In The Country 1.4 Acres Rockford Area MLS#202826 • $29,000 Sharlyn Piggott 260-0933 To S Classic Home 1893 sq ft home 3 bed, 2 bath All brick home MLS# 201051 • $105,000 5 bed, 4 bath, 5100 sq ft 3.839 Ac.of private setting MLS#190734 • $369,000 NEW Home In The Country 2000 sq ft w/4 bdrms, 2 baths 4 acres with water rights. MLS#183597 • $159,900 GREAT LOCATION!!! One-bedroom - $410 per month plus $300 deposit. Laundry facilities, no pets. Call 760-3030 000 Homes For Sale ! Home in The Country 3020 Sq ft home on 1.075 Acre 4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms MLS#200566 • $223,900 Must income qualify. Call 317-7457 John Fairchild Broker 70 S. Spruce 2, two bedroom handicap accessible 1 at $485 & 1 at $530 Chaparral Meadow Apts. 1417 Chuckwagon Place Blackfoot, Idaho 1-208-785-6824 1Bedroom - $420, 2 bedroom - $520, 3 bedroom -$620 In nice, quiet cul-de-sac neighborhood. Ask about our new, pet-friendly policy NEW Beautiful 10 Acre Lot Build Your Dream Home Here Beautiful View Of The Hills MLS#196720 • $59,500 3 BR, 1 Bath, Rent $540 Income qualify DW, W/D hook-ups & garage Security deposit $350 060 Unfurn.Apts.ForRent 000 Homes For Sale 785-6685 Buying or Selling? Call us today for a Free Market Analysis!! Really Nice!! COTTONWOOD COMMUNITY APARTMENTS Place your ad and picture with The Morning News at 785-1100 000 Homes For Sale 000 Homes For Sale 785-9639 *Equal Housing Opportunity* RE/MAX PREFERRED PROPERTIES 199 W. BRIDGE ST. BLACKFOOT, ID 83221 785-7555 060 Unfurn.Apts.ForRent 3B Home on 1 acre 2160 Sq ft w/ 4 bed, 2 bath Lots of updates MLS#198569 • $139,000 CE! PRI Beautiful Home All On 1 Level 1364 sq ft home 3 bed, 2 bath, lots of updates MLS# 202009 • $134,500 Beautiful Custom Home 3550 Sq ft home 3 Bed, 2 Bath Full unfinished basement MLS#201010 • $239,900 TRY OuR QR CODE TO CONNECT TO OuR WEBSITE AND TO VIEW ALL OuR LISTINGS. 39 SPRING HOUSECLEANING CAN REALLY PAY OFF! Sell items byby calling Jackie or Patty at at 785-1100 Sellyour yourunwanted unwanted items calling Jackie or Lisa 785-1100 4B CLASSIFIEDS Tuesday, April 26, 2016 060 Unfurn.Apts.ForRent 140 Personals 180 Help Wanted AL-ANON NICE, three-bedroom, one bath apt. with central a.c. No smoking, no Sundays: 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. pets. $600 plus deposit. One year Bingham Memorial Cafeteria lease. Call 782-0673. Tuesdays and Thursdays: 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. RECENTLY UPDATED St. Paul’s Episcopal Church STOUT STREET APTS. 72 North Shilling Two-bedroom, one bath in excellent location near schools. No pets. 522-4947 or 785-2541 Fridge/stove included. Washer/dryer 150 Lost & Found hookups. $440 plus $400 deposit. Call 680-0377. Check out the ********** TWO DUPLEXES New carpet. Two-bedrooms. Water, sewer, garbage paid. $470-$480 Call 680-0301 or 520-3662. 070 Homes For Rent 190 Child Care 190 Child Care Cedar Center NOW HIRING Dependable & Responsible Person to Assist Individuals with Disabilities. High School Diploma or GED Required. First Aid, CPR, and Medication Certifications Preferred. Various Shifts Part-Time Hours Apply in Person at 280 N. Cedar 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 210 Good Things To Eat Dawn Enterprises, Inc. NOW HIRING Apparel Manufacturing Positions Available Applications are being accepted for individuals with one or more of the following skills: •Sewing •ProductInspection •QualityAssurance •PatternDesign •Product/ProductionLine Management/Supervision •Product/ProductionPlanning Mustbeteamorientedwhileensuringcompany policies, procedures and regulations are upheld. Obtain an application @ www.dawnent.org or at 280CedarStreet,Blackfoot,Idaho PositionscloseonMay1,2016 180 Help Wanted New Local Steakhouse • HIRING FULL TIME • Experienced Cook Apply in person 340 W. Judicial St We accept MasterCard, VISA, and Discover. 180 Help Wanted MorningNews Dawn Enterprises, Inc. SMALL, THREE-BEDROOM HOME In town. Washer/dryer hookups; fridge/stove included. $500 plus $500 deposit. No pets, no smoking. Call 160 Work Wanted 680-0414. FORMER MILITARY LOOKING FOR WORK! 100 CommercialProperty Will mow lawns, clean gutters, rake leaves, clean houses / windows, anything for some cash. Call: 785-3627 ask for Jason 130 Notices www.am-news.com (Old Stockman Location) Owner Cruz Moreno 1 307 203-9094 220 Pets & Grooming ~RASPBERRY STARTS~ 10 for $10 Call 604-2205 220 Pets & Grooming JULIE’S PET SALON 42 Years’ Experience 785-4940 230 Giveaways FREE BARBEQUE WITH NEW PARTS YOU FIX AND PICK UP! CALL: 681-5973 or 816-1647 Blackfoot Pet Grooming by DeAnna OPEN MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. SATURDAYS 9 a.m. to 12 Noon 785-6789 or 680-5459 Most dogs in and out within an hour. We Groom Large & Small Breeds. Cats Too!! Walk-Ins Welcome! 240 Services Offered ********** Residential and Commercial STONE WORK and Brick and Masonry Repair (208) 782-3557 FMandC.com ********** SONKO CERTIFIED FAMILY HOME NOW ACCEPTING LIVE-IN CLIENTS 604-6009 Whether your friends and family are around the corner or around the world, we deliver the news you need to stay in touch. Place Your Classified Ad Today! MorningNews www.am-news.com 785-1100 Now Hiring: Day Cook Must be able to work days, M-F 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. Apply in person at: 814 S. Broadway Blackfoot Full Time Position available for A Seasonal 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. Paper delivery person needed that has ability to walk and read a route list. This commitment would be limited to one or two days per week during daylight hours. The expectation would be porch delivery. Pay would be based upon #of papers thrown. The goals would be to expose nonreaders to our product and increase our paid circulation base. If you have a penchant for selling and want to earn additional money for taking new orders a commission could be negotiated. Please contact Joe at the Morning News (208) 785-1100. www.am-news.com Feeder/Folder Medical plan, 401K Closing Date: 4/28/16 at 4:30 pm Apply on line at careers.alsco.com MorningNews WE DELIVER! Call 785-1100 To Subscribe! find us on facebook Blackfoot Morning-News FREE Whopper American Linen is an EOE/AAE/M/F/H/V Employer with the purchase of a Morning News classified ad 1205 Parkway Dr • 785-8082 • Blackfoot, ID With every purchase of a paid Morning News Classified Ad. Don’t Delay... Place your ad today For a limited time when you purchase a Morning News Classified Ad, you’ll receive a coupon good for a Free Whopper compliments of the Morning News and Burger King. Limited to one coupon per person per visit. Just place your prepaid, one week ad in person and we’ll give you a free coupon. No limit to the number of coupons you can earn, one coupon for each pre-paid week long ad. 34 N. Ash St., Blackfoot 208-785-1100 OFFER EXPIRES May 31, 2016 MorningNews www.am-news.com MorningNews www.am-news.com CLASSIFIEDS 240 Services Offered ************ HOME TOUCH HOUSECLEANING SERVICE, LLC Bonded and Insured New client Discounts! Susan Christiansen 380-9610 ************ ************ LAWNMOWING In Blackfoot Reasonable rates Call Mike (208) 716-2648 ************ Tuesday, April 26, 2016 240 Services Offered 5B 240 Services Offered KLINGLER ASPHALT MAINTENANCE ✩ Seal Coating ✩ Crack Sealing ✩ Asphalt Repairs ✩ Paving ✩ Parking Lot Striping ✩ Parking Lot Sweeping ✩ Backhoe/Dump Truck Service ✩ Gravel 785-7494 Quality Service Since 1995 Denton Klingler - Owner Bonded • Public Works Licensed Commercial • Residential ************************ POGGE’S EXCAVATION LLC ~Licensed and Bonded~ *Post Hole Digging *Custom Grading *Driveways, all sizes *Water Lines *Sewer Systems *Homesites *Haul topsoil & gravel (We acept credit card on-site) Call 684-3403, 681-1550 or 681-0582 ************ ********** M.A.TREE TRIMMING *REMOVAL OF TREES Free estimates Reasonable rates Call 681-6478 or 680-2611 ************ Buy & Sell the easy way with the Morning News Classifieds Arthur R. Hoksbergen, Attorney at Law Office 208-785-7676 Fax 208-785-4757 291 North Broadway • P.O. Box 965 Blackfoot, Idaho 83221 Free 30 Minute Consultation Day, Evening & Weekend Appointments email: hoksbergen.arthur@gmail.com web-page: http://arthurhoksbergen.weebly.com 785-1100 240 Services Offered 240 Services Offered 240 Services Offered 240 Services Offered CAPPIE'S HOME SERVICES All Your Home Repair & Clean Up Needs!!! • Home Remodels • All Your Plumbing Needs • Painting & Restoration • Fireplace Cleaning & Servicing • Roto-Rooting • Roofing CALL TODAY FOR YOUR FREE ESTIMATE • Mowing • Power Raking • Aerating • Fertilization 208-705-0969 Call For A Free Estimate 208-681-9377 CHADWICK’S CUSTOM BUILDING & CABINETRY All your home needs in one stop. From new to remodels and home services. We can help call Chris 208-709-5764 chadwickscustombuilding@gmail.com Honey for Hire Appliance Repair Home Repairs Trash Removal Decks & Fencing General Labor Framing, Painting Chimney Cleaning s Reference! Available Call Scott Mike’s Lawn Service, LLC will now be doing business as: MLS Landscape Services This name will better communicate the variety of services we provide for you. The only change is we will no longer service residential lawn mowing, cleanups, or power raking. Mike will be providing the same great service he has in the past 28 years. MLS Landscape Services will continue performing: Landscape design, installation and maintenance, Sprinkler system installations and repairs, Complete water feature installation and maintenance, Snow removal. As always, if you have any questions, please call the office at 684-4955. Thank you for your business! www.mikeslawndesign.com “When Bessie Does,” Give us A BuZZ! Custom Fabrication & Truck Repair • Specializing in Stretching Truck Frames • General Fabrication • Aluminum Repairs bobiothebuilder@yahoo.com 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 • Commercial/Residential • Crushed Gravel • Screened Topsoil • Back Hoe • Arena Sand Delivered or Loaded Mickelsen Construction • 684-3803 • Hot Plant, 785-0487 We accept all major Credit Cards!! Vacation Rentals? Franchise Opportunities! Auctions? Training Schools? Reach 750,000 Homes With one call to Jane at 208-785-1100 Pacific Northwest Newspapers Display Ad Network 240 Services Offered 240 Services Offered Grover Service Centre ESTABLISHED IN 1970 Repair & Restoration of your Favorite Clock or Watch JusT CAll BoB! DBACustom • Sanding • Pit Run • Landscape Rock & Boulders • Sewer Systems • Grading 339-3573 Music Lessons Call 339-3573 DBA Asphalt Paving • Snow Removal •Spring Cleanups •Complete Lawn Maintenance •Sprinkler Repair/Installation •Lawn Fertilization •Lawn Aeration Local - Reliable – Friendly - Insured Guaranteed A Mowing division of MLS, LLC. Cell:(208) 680-6446 www.greenbearlawncare.com Buy • Sell • or Trade Morning News Classifieds 785-1100 •Driveways • Topsoil • Gravel • Septic Systems • Water Lines • Diking Reasonable Rates Licensed & Bonded Bill Bennett 681-3775 Subscribe Now!! MorningNews !!"#$%&'(!)*%+&',-./!0.'1,$. 203,44!5'&6.44,&7#88(! !!9'#,7./ 2!:#7/4!&7!;<=.',.7$.!&6! Over 50 Years 2>#?.4!:&*4.!@#884 2@#88!9&/#(!%&!>#?. an Appointment Grover Service Centre ABC!!D.4%!5&8.8,7.!E&#/ E.<F*'GH!IJ!ACKKL 208 356-6085 @+.$?!M*'!D.F!0,%. G'&1.'4.'1,$.$.7%'.N$&O 250 Misc. For Sale/Rent 40 GALLON AQUARIUM COMPLETE SET UP! $50 Call: 684-3469 ~RASPBERRY STARTS~ 10 for $10 Call 604-2205 www.am-news.com Call 785-1100 Place an ad.. 785-1100 Never Have a Dull Moment... Visit Our Community Calendar www.am-news.com 6B CLASSIFIEDS Tuesday, April 26, 2016 250 Misc. For Sale/Rent 250 Misc. For Sale/Rent 350 Feed , Seed & Plants Groveland Storage Now Has New Units!! 10 x 35’s Great for smaller boats, ALFALFA SEED CORN & GRASS SEED SAVE MONEY!! WE DELIVER JOSH ODERMOTT 208 315-1165 4 wheelers, Razors & household goods!! Gated facility Call 785-4406 Roll Ends of PaPER foR salE $3.50/uP GREat foR CRaft oR aRt PRojECts, PaCkinG & tablE CovERs. MorningNews 34 N. Ash • Blackfoot www.am-news.com 25 - Words rate $525 extras Words: $50 each ad reaches 3 Million Pacific northWesterners in 30 daily neWsPaPers, runs the 3-highest circulation days in aK, id, Mt, or, ut, & Wa. call Jane at 785-1100 250 Misc. For Sale/Rent Moreland Storage Security Fence & Gate 10 x 10’s 10 x 15’s 10 x 20’s 10 x 30’s 210 N. 700 W. New Units Available!! 1090 Fordway, Blackfoot 2010 FORD EXPEDITION LIMITED, CUSTOM WHEELS, MOON ROOF, DVD, LEATHER BLACK ON BLACK U1810A 208-785-1900 www.MyFordDodge.com 684-9399 TREADMILL FOR SALE!! Hardly used. $100 or best offer. Call: 680-5973 or 816-1647 420 Cars 420 Cars 1090 Fordway, Blackfoot 1090 Fordway, Blackfoot 2014 FORD TAURUS LIMITED, SILVER WITH BLACK LEATHER INTERIOR, LOADED 2008 CADILLAC DTS, SILVER LEATHER INTERIOR ONLY 83000 MILES $18,995 $9995 RC115 208-785-1900 www.MyFordDodge.com U1760A 208-785-1900 www.MyFordDodge.com 1090 Fordway, Blackfoot $11,995 U1758 208-785-1900 www.MyFordDodge.com $23,900 Call: 290 Sports Equipment 420 Cars 2014 CHRYSLER 200, 44,000 MILES WHITE WITH BLACK INTERIOR 420 Cars 1090 Fordway, Blackfoot 2014 FORD FUSION, WHITE WITH BLACK CLOTH INTERIOR 1090 Fordway, Blackfoot 2012 FORD FOCUS SE, 32,000 MILES, PW, PDL, A/C $11995 RC118 208-785-1900 www.MyFordDodge.com $16,900 1090 Fordway, Blackfoot 2015 CHEVROLET MALIBU, ONLY 4000 MILES LOADED $18,990 U1831 208-785-1900 www.MyFordDodge.com RC120 208-785-1900 www.MyFordDodge.com 2015 CHRYSLER 200 LIMITED New body style! 8.4 inch touch screen infotainment - back up camera 100,000 mile factory warranty - 36 MPG. Only 15,000 miles. Perfect car fax. Only $16,995 Call Allen, 589-7105 or Liquidators Unlimited 522-7142, Idaho Falls 792 E. Greenway www.liquidatorsunltd.com 350 Feed , Seed & Plants 1090 Fordway, Blackfoot 2011 DODGE CHARGER RT AWD HEMI, 41,000 MILES SILVER WITH BLACK CLOTH INTERIOR $23998 U1739A 208-785-1900 www.MyFordDodge.com 2003 BUICK LESABRE LIMITED Only 60,000 miles. Beautiful car with almost all options. Economical 3800 V-6. Top-of-the-line transportation for a “low price.” Getting harder to find and will soon cease to be available. Only $8,485 Call Von, 589-7142 or Liquidators Unlimited 522-7142, Idaho Falls 792 E. Greenway 2009 HYUNDAI SONATA 4-cylinder, 66K miles. Interior and exterior are immaculate. A beautiful, economical, long-lasting automobile. Reduced to $7,985 Call Von, 589-7142 or Liquidators Unlimited 522-7142, Idaho Falls 792 E. Greenway www.liquidatorsunltd.com 2011 FORD FOCUS SE 4-door. Excellent, very economical transportation. Many options. Includes traction-control, factory mag wheels, etc. - 60K. Reduced to only $7,748 Call Von, 589-7142 or Liquidators Unlimited 522-7142, Idaho Falls 792 E. Greenway www.liquidatorsunltd.com 2014 CHEVROLET IMPALA LIMITED LTZ Heated leather seats, moon roof, 300HP (V6), On Star/XM-Bose stereo; rear spoiler, remote start - 28,000 miles. Chevrolet 100,000 mile factory warranty. Perfect car fax. Only 28,000 miles. This car costs over $40,000 new!!! Our price, only $17,995 Call Allen, 589-7105 or Liquidators Unlimited 522-7142, Idaho Falls 792 E. Greenway www.liquidatorsunltd.com 2014 CHEVROLET MALIBU ECO 36 MPG!! Only 23,000 miles. Remainder of Chevrolet 100,000 mile factory warranty. Perfect car fax. Only $14,995 Call Allen, 589-7105 or Liquidators Unlimited 522-7142, Idaho Falls 792 E. Greenway www.liquidatorsunltd.com www.am-news.com 420 Cars BEAUTIFUL 2012 CHEVY MALIBU This car has been serviced and maintained on schedule. Includes service records, etc. Very economical, 4-cylinder, 85K. Save thousands off new car price!! On ly $10,485 See and test drive to appreciate. Call Von, 589-7142 or Liquidators Unlimited 522-7142, Idaho Falls 792 E. Greenway 2005 PT Cruiser 4 door, Auto, Loaded, 121K miles, Very nice car, New tires 2002 Pontiac Grand Prix GTP Loaded, Leather, Supercharged 3800, Sunroof, 136K miles. 2000 Mitsubishi Eclipse GT Auto, Runs great! 1999 Jeep Grand Cherokee 4x4 4.0, Auto, Loaded 1992 Honda Civic 4 Door Auto, 131K miles Runs great. 1985 GMC Suburban 4x4 350, Auto, Runs great, New tires 2002 Chevy Cavalier 4 Door, Auto, Runs great. 681-5646 1030 W. Bridge Sell it sooner (instead of later) with the Morning News Classifieds 785-1100 MorningNews
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