Happy Birthday, Bill - The Poteau Daily News
Transcription
Happy Birthday, Bill - The Poteau Daily News
SERVING LEFLORE COUNTY Thursday, June 16, 2016 PoteauDailyNews.com Complete Sports Coverage, 5 • 3 Weather, Obituary • 4 Opinions • 6 Comics • 7 Classifieds Wister’s Stevee McMillin, left, Heavener’s Rilegh Pate, center, and Wister’s Trisha Walden go for a loose ball during Tuesday night’s LeFlore County Girls Summer Basketball League game at the Heavener Gym. Page 5. Readers’ Choice Ballot, Page 8 Check us out on Facebook 75¢ Daily Edition Volume 126 No. 253 8 Pages District 3 House race Candidates field questions, state views By Kim McConnell PDN Publisher State Representative District 3 candidates left no doubt what issues they support and oppose Tuesday night as all four took the stage during a political forum held at the Donald W. Reynolds Community Center. Republican candidates Rick West of Heavener and Traci Barnes of Poteau, as well as Democrat Heavener opponent Troy Dyer and Independent Dewey Harrison, also of Poteau, made their opinions known regarding charter schools, early and higher education, agricultural tax exemptions, tax credits and the Choctaw Nation. Submit- ‘Right to Farm’ SQ 777 opponents meet here ted questions were relayed by KPRV radio station’s David Billy, emcee of the night. The budget downfall and common agreement that Oklahoma’s dependency on the oil market for financial success were viewed differently by each opponent. But all four agreed the largest issue concerning the budget is the current legislature’s spending problem. “We don’t have a money problem in Oklahoma,” said Harrison. “We have a money management problem.” Economical growth in the state is something each candidate agreed could come from change. “You need infrastructure, healthcare and education,” said Dyer. “Sadly we are lacking in our district and our state on all three of those things.” Barnes suggested eliminating the wind tax credit as well as addressing the underfunding of core functions of the state while overspending in other areas. Cor(See CANDIDATES, page 2) Happy Birthday, Bill A group of area residents gathered in Poteau last week to voice their opposition to a state question they say will alter Oklahoma’s constitution and take away the ability of local governments to regulate corporate agriculture in the state. The proposal, State Question 777, also known as the Right to Farm amendment, gives the highest level of legal protections to a broad range of agricultural activities. The (See SQ 777, page 2) Ag tour brings teachers to area The Oklahoma Ag in the Classroom three-day tour for kindergarten to 12th grade teachers from across the state made several stops in LeFlore County this week on their travels through the state to get a “taste” of Oklahoma agriculture. The group of 51 Oklahoma educators went to Green Country Cowboy Church (See TEACHERS, page 2) Panama car show set this weekend By Averie Warren PDN Intern Panama Businesses and Associates will sponsor the 16th annual Gateway to the Mountains Car Show on Saturday. Registration for the car show will be from 8-11 a.m., participant judging will be (See CAR SHOW, page 2) Bill Mooneyham celebrates his 90th birthday Wednesday by doing what he loves — cutting hair at his shop. PDN photo by Amanda Corbin Mooneyham still a cutup at 90 By Amanda Corbin PDN Reporter A n unwavering heat had settled over Poteau on June 15. The air was sticky. Dewey Avenue was empty of cars, a barren site as crews work to repair the roads. But the heat couldn’t keep down local barber Bill Mooneyham, 90 years old on Wednesday. He celebrated his birthday the best way he knew how — cutting hair. Mooneyham has been a barber for more than 60 years. Born in 1926 as William Arthur Mooneyham to Charles and Francis Mooneyham in Cameron, he served in World War II and married Lucille Didway in 1946. The couple lived on a farm and bought a home in Poteau in the early 1950s, where they remain today. “Everyone says the same thing. He’s the best guy they know,” said Historic Downtown Poteau Director Eric Standridge. Standridge and HDP board members Suanna Rust and Mary Parham visited Mooneyham Wednesday to gift him a birthday card with 40-50 signatures on it and two large bowls of one (See BARBER, page 2) Mooneyham at the Air Force base in Amarillo, Texas. PAGE 2 . . . THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 2016 BARBER of Mooneyham’s favorite desserts, banana pudding. They stuck around to listen to Mooneyham’s famous stories, talking about his work as a barber through the past decades and his times as a child in LeFlore County. Mooneyham received his apprentice license at a barber college in Tulsa in 1948 and his master barber license in 1949. “I said I was gonna work until I was 90 years old, and then I was gonna decide whether I was gonna quit or not,” Mooneyham said. “Well, some [people] have already jumped me, ‘It’s time to decide whether you’re gonna quit or not.’ I said, ‘Well, that’s an option, quit or not.’ But so far I haven’t decided which way it is. But I know I’m on my last legs.” For more than 40 years, Mooneyham has worked at his barbershop on McKenna Street, right off Dewey Avenue. His barber career began at a shop in Cameron. In the mornings, he’d work at the shop then travel to Camp Chaffee near Fort Smith, Ark., and work into the evenings hours. He also worked in Colorado and spent a couple of years as a barber at an Air Force base in Amarillo, Texas. “I’ve seen barbers on military bases,” Mooneyham said. “A lot of those barbers didn’t stay in one place for too long.” Including him, who returned to Camp Chaffee in 1952 where thousands of U.S. soldiers received their haircuts. Mooneyham said he worked in a shop beside the man who famously cut musician and actor Elvis Presley’s hair when Presley reported for duty in 1958. By then, the camp had become Fort Area Chaffee. In the late 1950s, Mooneyham worked with Roy Green at his shop on Main Street in Poteau near the old Poteau Theatre and Wright’s Drug Store. In the 1960s he worked at the Chitwood Barber Shop with Avril Chitwood and Benny Parker. The shop was renamed Parker-Mooneyham Barber Shop after Chitwood retired. The outside of Mooneyham’s present-day shop was decorated in balloons and happy birthday signage Wednesday. The outdoor awning is red, white and blue, traditional colors of barber poles. An American flag hangs in the window and several climbing plants tickle the window pane from inside. Inside, Mooneyham set to work cutting two local men’s hair POTEAU DAILY NEWS — Ricky Dory and Jim Davis. Mooneyham stood, dressed in a plaid blue, white and black button down, his glasses hanging around his neck as he patiently ran the clippers along Davis’ hair. His pockets, or “filing cabinet,” as he calls them, were stocked full with at least seven pens and several scripts of paper with directions for his medicines to take morning, noon and night. The aged barber chair sits before a wall of mirrors decorated in several pictures, newspaper clippings, certificates and artifacts, all mementos of the past and present Mooneyham has collected over the years. The rest of the shop maintains the same. Every single piece has a history to it, but Mooneyham isn’t above crafting one for his visitors. “Look at any of that stuff you want to,” Mooneyham said. “If I don’t have a good story to go with it, I’ll make one up.” Mooneyham and his wife had four children, Jeannie, Joyce, Ronnie and Cheryl. He has cut the hair of several of his grandchildren, great-grandchildren and cuts his own hair. He has been the only barber for many of his customers, charging only $9 a haircut. Despite his age, Mooneyham continues to work five days a week, often into the late afternoon. “You never know what tomorrow holds,” Mooneyham said. For him, it’s another long day of work at the Mooneyham Barber Shop. And he wouldn’t have it any other way. PDN Intern Averie Warren contributed to this report. SQ 777 problem, opponents say, is the proposal’s language is so expansive and the protections so complete that it virtually prohibits local, county and state officials from enacting necessary and reasonable regulation, including protecting surface and groundwater from pollution. Hosted by the Oklahoma Stewardship Council, the meeting was attended by a contingent of LeFlore County residents. “We are very concerned about the negative impact State Question 777 could have on Oklahoma waters,” said Tyler Keen, outreach coordinator for the Vote No on 777 campaign. “Foreignowned agricultural operations should not have constitutional shield to operate as they see fit. We must protect our streams, rivers and lakes from pollution.” Numerous organizations and individuals, including many farmers, are organizing to defeat State Question 777. Those opposing the proposal include Save the Illinois River, Inter-Tribal Council of the Five Civilized Tribes, Oklahoma Municipal League, League of Women Voters, Conservation Coalition of Oklahoma, Humane Society of the United States, Humane Society Legislative Fund, Bella Foundation, Oklahomans for Food, Farm and Family, Oklahoma Food Cooperative, Sierra Club, Oklahoma Welfare League, Oklahoma Alliance for Animals and Oklahoma Coalition of Animal Rescuers. “Don’t be fooled into thinking State Question 777 is intended to protect family farms,” Keen said. “The purpose of State Question 777 is to protect large-scale agriculture companies from reasonable regulation.” The Oklahoma Stewardship Council is a coalition of family farmers, community leaders and concerned citizens opposing State Question 777. For more information about the OSC, visit www.votenoon777.com. Teachers take a wagon ride at the Cowboy Church on Wednesday, top photo, and wear earphones to hear a presentation by Hall Gullick of Hal’s Beef Jerky in Shady Point Thursday. PDN photos by Averie Warren; top photo submitted TEACHERS for a barbecue dinner hosted by the church and Pastor Victor Sweet and his family. The group learned about the GC3 facility consisting of a rustic church building with developing classrooms at the Seedling learning Center preschool, a rodeo arena with events throughout the week for all to join, the Recovery Ranch project and thriving church garden. “We are six years old. God has blessed us,” said Sweet. Kenny Matlock, associate pastor, did a rundown on harnessing equipment, introduced his mule and loaded up groups on the church wagon for a ride across the GC3 property. He then stopped off at the church garden project where agriculture educator and church member Laura Moore gave out some garden/crop knowledge on issues, pests and diseases with a focus on tomatoes. Educators also picked blueberries at Maple Creek Berry Farm in Poteau. Eating fresh and yummy “crub” is a bonus of the tour, organizers said. The teachers touring agriculture facilities are getting ideas on how to implement agriculture into their classrooms. “The youth need to know where everything comes from,” said one educator. CANDIDATES recting this problem could create economical stimulation, she said. Harrison suggested revamping the tax system to reduce the driving of political parties in the Capitol due to tax exemptions and credits. West doesn’t want to see personal tax increase as it can cripple small business. “... Government creates no jobs, small business creates jobs,” said West. West suggested keeping tax credits but evaluating them for their usefulness. Dyer suggested raising oil tax as Oklahoma is one of the lowest taxing states in the nation. Dyer and Harrison stood in favor of the availability of charter schools if they aren’t harmful to public education. West voiced his stand that what is being done in the education ring isn’t working and seeking information on other avenues to betterment is acceptable to him while Barnes stood firmly against charter schools. The candidates agreed the economic value of the agricultural businesses in the state make a huge impact in the area. Tax exemption for agricultural business seemed to be of no large issue or target of elimination with the candidates, rather only ensur- ing the usage of the tax break was done legally. All four candidates also stood in favor of Pre-K education for Oklahoma students as well as higher education and the legislative support of rural two-year colleges such as Carl Albert State College. “... Pre-K is vital. [Oklahoma] ranks No. 1 in the nation and it is the one thing we do right,” said Barnes. Barnes and West will face off in the Republican Primary Election June 28 and the winner will face Harrison and Dyer in November to see who takes retiring state Rep. James Lockhart’s place. CAR SHOW from 11 a.m. to noon and awards will be presented at 2 p.m. There is a $15 entry fee. There will be top two awards for each of 12 classes and overall awards for Best of Show, Best Paint and Best Interior. The car show also will include music, food, crafts, watermelon eating contest, seed spitting contest and a dog show. Four awards will be given at the dog show: Cutest, Best Dressed, Best Trick and Most Resembles Owner. Dogs must be registered the day of the show by 10:30 a.m., judging will begin at 11 a.m. All pets must be on a leash and well-behaved and have their shots up to date. The Car Show will be held at the Panama Elementary School. Entry forms are available at Central National Bank in Panama, Panama Hardware and Furniture and Mobile Home Supplies or online at panamapba.org. Area POTEAU DAILY NEWS Hooked on Fishin’ Derby Sunday THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 2016 . . . PAGE 3 OBITUARY Tommy Lee “Punk” Brown The 12th annual Hooked on Fishin’ Kids Tournament will take place from 6 a.m. to noon Sunday at Ward’s Landing on Wister Lake. Entry fee is $30. Age categories are 8-12 and 13-16. Above, organizer Mark Goines accepts a donation for the event from Reed Williams Insurance Agency and The Community State Bank. Pictured from left are Josh Wiersig, Jeremy Crites and Jennifer Ryles of Reed Williams, Goines and Jaron Wiggington and Wilson Klutts of TCSB. For more information about the event, call Goines at (918) 7213818. Three area blood drives set Local 5-Day Forecast Thu Compiled by Ken Milam newseditor.pdn@gmail.com TODAY IS BLOOMSDAY • JUNE 17 — Open house and ice cream sundae party, 2-4 p.m., Choctaw Center at Dallas and Railroad streets in Talihina. — Choctaw Seniors spaghetti dinner and pie and cake auction, 5 p.m., Dale Cox Community Center. — “Twistin’ Three Tribal Style” barrel race, exhibits open 8 a.m., races 4 p.m., LeFlore County Fairgrounds. Info: (918) 385-1817. Email toniajohnson@hotmail.com for pre-entry forms or visit https://barrelhorseworld.com/eventdetail. asp?ID=116232. • JUNE 18 — Sixteenth Annual Gateway to the Mountains Car Show, 8 a.m., award presentations at 2 p.m., Panama Elementary School. Entry forms available at Central National Bank in Panama, Panama Hardware and Furniture and Mobile Home Supplies or online at panamapba.org. — “Twistin’ Three Tribal Style” barrel race, exhibits open 8 a.m., races 1 p.m., LeFlore County Fairgrounds. Info: (918) 385-1817. — Fire Safety at Home presentation, kids’ activities, hotdogs, 11 a.m., downtown Poteau Fire Station. Presented in partnership with ReedWilliams Insurance — Moore Family Reunion, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Western Sizzlin, Poteau. Info: Tressa Taylor Moore, (479) 650-5777. • JUNE 19 — Twelfth annual Hooked on Fishin’ Kids Tournament, 6 a.m. to noon, Ward’s Landing on Wister Lake. Info: Mark Goines, (918) 721-3818. — “Twistin’ Three Tribal Style” barrel race, exhibits open 8 a.m., races 1 p.m., LeFlore County Fairgrounds. Info: (918) 385-1817. • JUNE 20 — Kids Crusade, “Fun with the Son,” third through sixth grade, 6-8 p.m., Covenant Church (formerly Poteau First Assembly), 2101 S. Broadway. Info: (918) 647-3040. Fri Sat Sun 6/16 Three blood 6/17 drives are 6/18 coming up6/19 in this area. They 98/72 include: 98/72 97/69 96/68 • June Rubin Health Clinic, A mainly sunny 22, Times of sun White Mix of sun and Mainly sunny. Continued and clouds. clouds. Highs in Highs in the 9sky. a.m. to 4:15 p.m. hot and humid. Highs in the the upper 90s mid 90s and High Winds30, upper 90s and Police and lows inDepartment the lows in the • 98F. June Panama SW at 5 to 10 lows in the low upper 60s. upper 60s. mph. “Guns ‘n’ 70s. Hoses” drive, 12:45-5:45 p.m. • July 2, Walmart, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Oklahoma Glance Donors at at aRubin White and Walmart drives will receive two tickets to the Tulsa Zoo and a “You Otter Give Blood” zoo T-shirts. Donors at Panama will receive a • Enid “Guns ‘n’ Hoses” T-shirt and participate 102/71 in a little healthy competition by designating their donations to the fire depart✪ ment or law enforcement as each rallies Oklahoma City 98/76 • to top the other with the most donors. Lawton 97/74 can donate Most people 16 and older Mon Sunrise: 6:04 AM Sunrise: 6:04 AM Sunrise: 6:04 AM Sunrise: 6:04 AM Sunset: 8:34 PM Sunset: 8:35 PM Sunset: 8:35 PM Sunset: 8:35 PM blood.6/20 Because there is no substitute for blood, the supply must constantly be 95/70 renewed for patients in local hospitals. A few clouds. Highs in the Although all blood types are needed, mid 90s and lows in the low O-negative type blood are those with 70s. especially encouraged to donate. According to the AABB, those with O-negative blood type make up only 9 percent of the national population. However, O-negative blood can be used by anyone in an emergency situation when a patient’s blood type has not yet been identified. •Through a special initiative to support Tulsa the Global Blood Fund, donors can forgo 98/75 the T-shirt and a donation will made to GBF for supplies and equipment for blood centers in the world’s poorest countries. Sunrise: 6:04 AM Sunset: 8:36 PM Local 5-Day Forecast AreaThu Cities City 6/16 Antlers Ardmore Bartlesville Broken Bow 98/72 Claremore A mainly sunny Cordell sky. Continued Duncan hot and humid. El Reno High 98F. Winds Elk City SW at 5 to 10 Enid mph. Guymon Lawton Sunrise: 6:04 AM McAlester Sunset: 8:34 PM Miami Muskogee Fri 6/17 Hi Lo Cond. 96 74 M Cloudy 93 73 Sunny 98 72 P Cloudy 93 71 M Cloudy 98/72 95 74 P Cloudy Times ofSunny sun 100 74 and 97 clouds. 73 Sunny Highs in Sunny the 100 72 upper 90s and 98 71 Sunny lows low 102 in 71the Sunny 70s. 101 68 Sunny 97 74 Sunny Sunrise: 6:04 AM 95 74 P Cloudy Sunset: PM 98 738:35 P Cloudy 96 72 P Cloudy Oklahoma at a Glance National Cities City Atlanta Boston Chicago Dallas Denver Houston Los Angeles Hi 84 81 91 95 94 97 73 Sat Sun 6/18 City 6/19 Mon Hi Oklahoma City 98 Okmulgee 96 Pauls Valley 95 Perry 97/69 96/68 100 Sallisaw 99 Mix of sun and Mainly sunny.97 Sapulpa clouds. Highs in Highs in the 96 Shawnee the upper 90s mid 90s and 100 Snyder and lowsStillwater in the lows in the 99 upper 60s. Tahlequahupper 60s. 95 Tulsa 98 Watonga 99 Sunrise: 6:04 AM Sunrise: 6:04 AM Weatherford 99 Sunset: 8:35 PM Sunset: 8:35 PM96 Wewoka Woodward 100 Lo Cond. 71 Cloudy 60 Sunny 70 P Cloudy 75 P Cloudy 58 Sunny 76 P Cloudy 57 Cloudy City Miami Minneapolis New York Phoenix San Francisco • Seattle Enid Saint Louis 102/71 Hi 90 76 84 103 59 66 97 Moon Phases 6/20 Lo Cond. 76 Sunny 73 Sunny 73 Sunny 72 Sunny 95/70 72 P Cloudy A few clouds. 75 M Sunny Highs in the 73 Sunny mid 90s and 73 Sunny lows in the low 73 Sunny 70s. 70 P Cloudy 75 P Cloudy 72 Sunny Sunrise: 6:04 AM 75 Sunny Sunset: 8:36 PM 73 M Sunny 70 Sunny Lo Cond. 77 Sct T-Storms 59 Cloudy 67 Sunny 73 Sunny 53 P Cloudy 49 M Cloudy • 73 P Cloudy Tulsa 98/75 ✪ First Jun 12 Full Jun 20 • Oklahoma City 98/76 Lawton 97/74 Last Jun 27 New Jul 4 UV Index Thu 6/16 Fri 6/17 Sat 6/18 Sun 6/19 Area 10 Cities 10 10 10 Sudoku Puzzle #3964-D Mon 6/20 10 Very High Very High Very High Very High City Hi Lo Cond. City Hi Antlers 96 74 M Oklahoma Citya 98 The UV Index is measured onCloudy a 0 - 11 number scale, with 0 Ardmore 93 73the Sunny Okmulgee 96 higher UV Index showing need for greater skin protection. Bartlesville 98 72 P Cloudy Pauls Valley 95 11 Broken Bow 93 71 M Cloudy Perry 100 Claremore 95 74 P Cloudy Sallisaw 99 ©2016 AMG | Parade Cordell 100 74 Sunny Sapulpa 97 Duncan 97 73 Sunny Shawnee 96 El Reno 100 72 Sunny Snyder 100 Elk City 98 71 Sunny Stillwater 99 Enid 102 71 Sunny Tahlequah 95 Guymon 101 68 Sunny Tulsa 98 Lawton 97 74 Sunny Watonga 99 McAlester 95 74 P Cloudy Weatherford 99 Miami 98 73 P Cloudy Wewoka 96 Muskogee 96 72 P Cloudy Woodward 100 2 3 3 5 6 1 1 Very High Lo Cond. 76 Sunny 73 Sunny 73 Sunny 72 Sunny 72 P Cloudy 75 M Sunny 73 Sunny 73 Sunny 73 Sunny 70 P Cloudy 75 P Cloudy 72 Sunny 75 Sunny 73 M Sunny 70 Sunny 4 2 7 6 5 8 National Cities 2 City Atlanta Boston Chicago Dallas Denver Houston Los Angeles Hi 84 81 91 95 94 97 73 Lo Cond. 71 Cloudy 60 Sunny 70 P Cloudy 75 P Cloudy 58 Sunny 76 P Cloudy 57 Cloudy 9 5 6 Moon Phases 7 First Jun 12 Full Jun 20 1 UV Index © 2009 Hometown Content City Miami Minneapolis New York Phoenix San Francisco Seattle Saint Louis Hi 90 76 84 103 59 66 97 8 Lo Cond. 77 Sct T-Storms 59 Cloudy 67 Sunny 73 Sunny 53 P Cloudy 49 M Cloudy 73 P Cloudy 1 4 2 5 8 6 3 9 Last Jun 27 Thu 6/16 Fri 6/17 Sat 6/18 Sun 6/19 10 10 10 10 New Jul 4 Difficult Mon 6/20 10 High Very High High Each puzzle Very is divided into SolutionVerytoHigh June 15Very puzzle The UV Index is measured on a 0 - 11 number scale, with a nine sections and each section 0 higher UV Index showing the need for greater skin protection. has nine blank squares. Fill in Sudoku Solution #3963-M 11 8 9 1 6 7 2 5 4 3 all 81 squares on the puzzle ©2016 AMG | Parade 3 2 7 4 5 8 6 9 1 with numbers 1 to 9. You may not repeat any numbers in any 4 5 6 9 1 3 7 2 8 one of the nine sections that 2 4 9 8 3 7 1 6 5 you've already used elsewhere 7 8 5 2 6 1 4 3 9 in that section. Also, you can 6 1 3 5 9 4 2 8 7 use each number 1-9 only 9 7 2 3 4 5 8 1 6 once in each horizontal line of 5 3 8 1 2 6 9 7 4 nine squares and in each verti1 6 4 7 8 9 3 5 2 cal column of nine squares. Very High © 2009 Hometown Content Tommy Lee “Punk” Brown of Shady Point passed away June 14, 2016. Born Jan. 21, 1947, to Thomas J. and Mildred Ollie Humphries Brown, Punk was a coal miner and a member of the Masonic Lodge. He owned a rock quarry for many years. Punk served in the National Guard and was an organ donor. He was preceded in death by his dad and mom; brothers, Ronnie and Lynn Brown; and granddaughter, Faith Enkoff. Survivors include his wife of 50 years, Betty Bradley Brown of the home; two daughters, Tammy Covey and son in law Jimmy Covey of Shady Point, Teresa Catlett of Sallisaw; three sons, Thomas Brown and wife Kelly, Fred Brown and wife Brook, Matt Enkoff and wife Angie, all of Shady Point; one brother, Wayne Brown and wife Betty; sister-in-law, Pat and Glen Kitchens of Wister; 15 grandchildren; 10 great-grandchildren; many nieces and nephews and loved ones who will miss him dearly. Punk, as we called him, loved to fish, hunt, and enjoyed spending time with family and friends so much. Services will be held at 10 a.m. Saturday, June 18, at Evans and Miller Funeral Home Chapel of memories with the Rev. Jim Cook officiating. Graveside services will follow in Shady Point Cemetery. Family and friends are invited to visitation from 6-8 pm Friday at the funeral home. Pallbearers will be Michael Brown, TJ Brown, Daniel Taylor, CJ Covey, Jacob Enkoff, Luke Brown, Chris Covey, Wayne Brown Sr. and Danny Totten Opinions PAGE 4 . . . THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 2016 POTEAU DAILY NEWS Hillary Clinton’s Issues in DHS church problem Editorial Round-up Editorial excerpt from The Oklahoman June 13, 2016 Editor’s note: A version of this article first appeared It’s well known that Oklahoma has often fallen short in in Crisis magazine. protecting vulnerable children. In some high-profile cases, children who clearly should have been removed The 2016 presidential from a residence were not, and the end result was the race, like all presidential child’s tragic death. races, has raised questions Yet despite those cases, another statistic suggests and controversies regardOklahoma officials may be too quick to remove children from their homes. The ratio of Oklahoma children placed ing the religious faiths of in foster care is 11 out of every 1,000. Only West Virginia the candidates. Donald Trump’s beliefs have been has a higher rate. The national average is less than half Oklahoma’s rate questioned, as were Ted — five out of every 1,000. That’s also the rate of foster Cruz’s. And trying to pin placement in neighboring Arkansas, which suffers from down Bernie Sanders’ many of the socio-economic challenges that plague views on God is very difOklahoma. And in Texas, the rate is even lower — just ficult. But that said, recent developments just occurred four out of every 1,000 children are in foster care. In a recent meeting with The Oklahoman’s editorial with the United Methodist board, Department of Human Services Director Ed Lake Church that should focus said there is a “prevailing practice or culture in Oklahoma the spotlight on Hillary that foster care is better” than leaving a child in a home Clinton’s religious thinking. They constitute two with its parents. While DHS officials want to ensure children’s safety, crucial moves that stand in opposition to they’re also concerned about being overzealous as well. direct Lake noted the decision to remove a child from a parental Clinton’s longtime militanhome, even if only for a short time, can have long-term cy for “abortion rights” and her growing radicalism for consequences. “There’s a cliche now in child welfare that you can’t the LGBTQ political agenundo the harm of that first placement,” Lake said. “And da, including her recent that’s because, I think, the general public doesn’t under- full-fledged support of stand the trauma, the impact of that trauma on children same-sex marriage after years of insisting that marand their development all the rest of their days.” He notes there is no real tie between foster placement riage is between one man rates and socio-economic challenges. “It’s not just that and woman in accordance Oklahoma’s a poorer state,” Lake said. “There are poorer with tradition and scripstates that are doing a lot better at this than we are.” ture. Lake said part of the effort to transform DHS involves Every four years the emphasizing alternatives “that will not produce the kind United Methodist Church of harm, or trauma, of being separated from your family,” general assembly meets, while still keeping children safe. where ongoing doctrine is Lake said there are instances where the agency may be determined by democratic able to provide services to a family instead of removing vote among those assemchildren from a home. He said many states that rank bled. A battleground at below Oklahoma in foster placement rates have taken that these conferences erupts approach. between the American lib“We’re not saying we’re just going to leave the chil- erals who for decades have dren at home, because that’s better. That’s not accurate tugged the church leftward either,” Lake said. “It’s always a safety decision.” and the more orthodox/ The safety issue is one that looms constantly over conservative African deleDHS, one that has grown in recent years. gation looking to keep the From 2011 to 2015, the number of referrals at DHS church committed to its increased by 15 percent, from around 66,500 per year to historic beliefs. Two conroughly 76,500. The number of referrals involving chil- ferences ago, the liberals dren increased 25 percent. And, most worrisome, the deliberately held critical number of cases where DHS substantiated abuse and votes on the hot-button neglect rose 90 percent. moral-social matters before Thus, the agency must still focus on recruiting more the Africans got there. foster families even as officials seek to reduce the share Traditional Methodists of children placed in foster homes. That the agency since have worked with the couldn’t increase the pay for foster parents this year, Africans to ensure they are despite prior commitments, is cause for concern. never again circumvented. The need for continued improvement at DHS is Thus, the 2016 conferundoubted. That children have fallen through the cracks ence has been much anticieven in a system that appears overly reliant on removing pated, with everyone waitchildren from their homes is just one more reminder. N ER EWSPAPER CO N 2014 AWARD WINNER S TE LA MA ★★★ ★ PRESS ASSO TI OK ★ HO ON T “LeFlore County’s Newspaper Since 1895” BE TT SERVING LEFLORE COUNTY A CI The Poteau Daily News (USPS 440-200) is published daily by Horizon Oklahoma Publishing Company Inc., Poteau, OK 74953. Periodical privileges paid at Poteau, OK. POSTMASTER: Send change of addresses to Poteau Daily News, P.O. Box 1237, Poteau, OK 74953. The Poteau Daily News publishes Tuesday through Saturday. Kim McConnell, Publisher ..................................................... Ext. 25 publisher@poteaudailynews.com Ken Milam, News Editor ......................................................... Ext. 14 newseditor.pdn@gmail.com Cheryl Thornburg, Business Manager .................................. Ext. 29 business.mgr.pdn@gmail.com Gregory Zigoy, Circulation Director ....................................... Ext. 27 circulation@poteaudailynews.com April Morton, Classifieds/Legals ............................................ Ext. 11 classifieds@poteaudailynews.com To Contact Us: Mail: P.O. Box 1237, Poteau, OK 74953 Location: 804 N. Broadway, Poteau Office Hours: 8:00 a.m. until 5 p.m., Monday – Friday Telephone: 918-647-3188 • Fax: 918-647-8198 Website: www.poteaudailynews.com You can expect delivery of your paper by 6 a.m. Please call by 10 a.m. for prompt replacement delivery. If your paper is damaged or missing ......... 918-647-3188, Ext. 27 ing to see if the United Methodist Church would change the church’s longheld beliefs on naturalBiblical marriage and what it would do on abortion. As to the latter, the United Methodist Church lurched left some time ago, joining the scandalous Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice, a group of leftwing religious believers convinced that Jesus Christ would honor their affirmation of a sacred “right to choose.” This group is a great embarrassment to Christianity by Christians — though not to a Christian named Hillary Clinton. As someone who wrote an entire book on the faith of Hillary Clinton, I can attest that one of the reasons she is “so comfortable” (her words) in the United Methodist Church has been the church’s abortion liberalism. But alas, that has suddenly changed. There was major news at the United Methodist Church’s gathering at the conference this year in Portland. The liberals did not succeed in shutting out the huge contingent of Africans from their rightful representation. The denomination’s growth has occurred in Africa, where it is exploding, contrary to America. One source told me that “overseas delegates” made up 41 percent of the delegates this year, and that the crucial victories would have been “impossible without them.” One such victory came when the assembly voted overwhelmingly (and surprisingly) to withdraw from the Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice. The conference also rejected a resolution titled “Responsible Parenthood,” which would have once again further advanced “abortion rights” in the name of John Wesley. Guest Column Paul Kengor This was a big deal. The headline in the pro-life flagship publication, LifeNews.com, reported it this way, “United Methodist Church Quits Pro-Abortion Coalition After Years of Promoting Abortion.” But that wasn’t all the United Methodist Church did. By a much narrower margin, but a majority nonetheless, the church did not repudiate its historic position on marriage, despite angry protests by LGBTQ Methodist activists. The slim majority thereby affirmed the United Methodist Church’s official Book of Discipline, which states explicitly: “We affirm the sanctity of the marriage covenant that is expressed in love, mutual support, personal commitment and shared fidelity between a man and a woman.” The Book of Discipline also states: “The practice of homosexuality is incompatible with Christian teaching. Therefore self-avowed practicing homosexuals are not to be certified as candidates, ordained as ministers or appointed to serve in The United Methodist Church.” To be sure, what the assembly actually did was far from a perfect solution or a triumph of orthodoxy, as it agreed to defer the sexual-marriage matters until after a committee studies the subject. Nonetheless, as noted by Mark Tooley, a veteran observer of these Methodist battles, “what had initially seemed potentially bad” instead turned out to be “mostly on the whole, good.” For traditionalists, the action taken in Portland might allow the church to hang on until the next blow-up in four years in Minneapolis. By then, the American church will likely have shed still more members and the international element will be even stronger, increasing the chances of natural-Biblical marriage being affirmed rather than undermined by nature-Bible redefiners. And so, here is this big issue as related to the 2016 presidential race: All of this relates intimately to Clinton, the presumptive Democratic nominee who proudly calls herself a committed “old-fashioned Methodist.” Will Clinton now follow the lead of her church and soften her fanatical position on abortion? Will she back off her push to redefine marriage? How does a self-described “old-fashioned Methodist” (as she calls herself) merrily take the liberty of redefining marriage and advocating unlimited “abortion rights?” She will not change one bit. Not a chance. Nonetheless, what happened at the United Methodist Church conference is very important and cannot be ignored. It now places Clinton’s cultural radicalism in direct and rising defiance of her own church and its teachings. Just like that, there is suddenly controversy between. Clinton and her church. Dr. Paul Kengor is professor of political science and executive director of The Center for Vision & Values at Grove City College. Letter to the Editor Dear Editor, To the citizens of Heavener: I have lived in Heavener most of my life. I am a retired unit manager from Jim Hamilton Correctional Center with 31 years of service. I am retired from the U.S. Army with 21 years and a Vietnam veteran serving in the Infantry from June 19671968. I worked as a parttime police officer for Heavener more than 25 years and the LeFlore County Sheriff’s Office before that. I am a CLEET certified firearms instructor and taught at the DOC Academy and police academy. Doing away with the dispatchers in Heavener was a mistake. A town the size of Heavener needs dispatchers. This system Heavener has gone to will not work in the long run. There needs to be someone in the police department 24 hours, seven days a week. If someone needs help and cannot call they come to the police department. But no one will be there to help them. The officer will be out on patrol from 3 p.m. till 7 a.m. and the office is locked. My daughter, Becky Judge, worked for the Heavener Police Department as dispatcher for 19 years. She is 47-years-old and has never been out of work since being out of high school. On May 19, the [Heavener] City Council decided to hire Cheryl Boggs in her spot who had been there under two years. [Police] Chief TyArmstrong called her on the phone and told her that she did not get the job. That job meant a lot to her. You would think that after 19 years, the chief would have enough courtesy to tell her in person. This is wrong for the City Council and Chief Ty Armstrong to put Becky out on the street with no job, no insurance, after dedicating 19 years for the Heavener Police Department. The City Council did not even thank her for 19 years of service nor did Chief Ty Armstrong. If this was your daughter, you would feel the same way I do. Ty, you said the police department was yours. Well, how about the people of Heavener? You said any credit or blame was yours. Ty, you told me that all you did was read the resume and Becky had 19 years. Ty, if you can’t look someone in the face and tell them the truth, you need to step down. You just have a title and the City Council tells you how to run things. P.S., for the good of Heavener, all City Council members that voted against Becky getting the job should resign, including the chief, and hold your head in silence. John Wilson Heavener To Subscribe: Phone 918-647-3188 1 month ................................... $9.50 3 months................................ $25.00 6 months................................ $42.00 1 year ................................... $75.00 — Out-of-County, Out-of-State — 1 month ................................. $12.00 3 months................................ $35.00 6 months................................ $66.00 1 year ................................. $129.00 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Email letters to Publisher Kim McConnell at editor@poteaudailynews.com, mail or drop off at 804 N. Broadway, Poteau, Ok.74953. All letters must include name, town of residence and phone number for verification. The phone number will not be published. Sports POTEAU DAILY NEWS THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 2016 . . . PAGE 5 After five games of NBA Finals, Love still seeking his rhythm CLEVELAND (AP) — Numbers may not necessarily lie, though they can deceive. On one hand, Cleveland’s “Big Three” of LeBron James, Kyrie Irving and Kevin Love combined for 84 points in Game 5 of the National Basketball Association Finals — the triumvirate’s highest such total this postseason. Of course, Love scored two of them. Irving and James, they each had 41. If Cleveland is to complete an NBA Finals comeback unlike any other — the Cavaliers pushed the series to Game 6 with a win at Golden State on Monday night — then getting something out of Love might be a huge help. For as great as James and Irving usually are, to expect more Game 5-type performances from them again is asking a ton. So, if Love lightens their load, as he often has in their two seasons together, Cleveland’s lessthan-great odds in this series fig- Game 6 tonight in Cleveland; Warriors look to close out series ure to markedly improve. “We still have life,” Love said. Game 6 tonight is the last game in Cleveland this season. It wouldn’t surprise many if it was Love’s last home game with the Cavaliers as well, with his name sure to come up during this rapidly approaching summer in trade rumors even if Cleveland pulls off this comeback and gets its long-elusive championship. The Cavaliers sent Andrew Wiggins, now a star-in-waiting, to Minnesota in the deal that landed Love two summers ago that seemed one-sided toward Cleveland when it was first executed and now appears like it could be a huge boost to the Timberwolves going forward. And Love’s two postseasons with the Cavaliers could be best described as snakebitten, too. Last year his shoulder was pulled from its socket in the first round, ending his playoffs right there. This year, he avoided serious playoff trouble until the finals. The Cavs lost the first three games in which he appeared, won by 30 in the game he missed with a concussion — sparking questions about whether they were better without Love — and staved off elimination by pulling away from Golden State in the second half of Game 5 on Monday night in a game where Love was a total non-factor offensively. Out of the nearly 400 NBA games in which he’s logged 30 minutes or more, Love has scored no more than two points now twice. As if that could get made to look worse, it seemed Tuesday that the most-replayed “highlight” involving Love from Game 5 was when he appeared to try to give James a high-five and got no reciprocation. “He’s an important player for them,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said earlier in the series, which his team still leads 3-2. “He’s a guy who you have to account for in a lot of ways. So when he’s on the floor, we’ll be well aware of his presence.” For lack of a better term, Love is the third wheel in this Big Three set-up. It’s a role that Chris Bosh struggled with at times in Miami when James was there with Dwyane Wade and the Heat went to four consecutive NBA Finals. To outsiders, it could have seemed like a demotion. Bosh was the star in Toronto like Love was in Minnesota, then had to accept what looked like an ego hit in order to fit alongside fellow elite players. However, throughout those four years in Miami, it was James who often referred to Bosh as the “most important player” on the Heat. And when Bosh went scoreless in Miami’s Game 7 win over San Antonio in the 2013 NBA Finals, hardly anyone noticed. “I ain’t scored no points,” Bosh said as he walked into the locker room champagne-spraying party that night, “but I’m still happy, though.” There’s still a chance for Love to get one of those same moments. He’s had 55 games of 20 or more points in his two Cleveland seasons, and the Cavs are 40-15 in those games. They’d surely take a couple more of those efforts right about now. “We get to go back home, and we’ve played well there all year,” Love said. “We love playing there in front of the home fans, so this is a good opportunity for us.” A good opportunity for him, too. JUST SAFE! — Panama baserunner Dakota Eaves, left, just barely gets back to second base before Leflore shortstop Mason Warren can get the tag applied on an attempted pick-off attempt during Wednesday afternoon’s LeFlore County Summer Baseball League game in Panama. Today’s schedule is listed below. PDN photo by David Seeley Today’s LeFlore County Summer Baseball League Schedule At Spiro Roland vs. Spiro, 10 a.m.; Pocola vs. Sallisaw-Central, 11:45 a.m.; Poteau JV vs. Leflore, 1:30 p.m.; Poteau JV vs. Howe, 3:15 p.m. Masters champ Willett takes on second leg of Grand Slam as U.S. Open begins today OAKMONT, Pa. (AP) — More than five decades of history is enough to remind Masters champion Danny Willett that winning the calendar Grand Slam is unlikely. He only needs to look back one year to at least think about the possibilities. Jordan Spieth followed up his Masters victory a year ago by winning the U.S. Open at Chambers Bay, making him only the fourth player since 1960 to get halfway to the slam, which is winning all four majors in one year. His hopes ended when he missed the playoff at the British Open by one shot. Your turn, Danny. “I mean, what Jordan did last year was awesome,” Willett said Tuesday. “You look at the strength of the field and it would be fantastic to even be somewhere thereabouts come Sunday. We’re just going to have to play golf and see what happens. Hopefully, we can be somewhere there and get a little bit of a feeling for it.” Spieth had a slight advantage last year being at Chambers Bay, where he tried to qualify for the U.S. Amateur and where his caddie, Michael Greller, used to work in the summers when he wasn’t teaching math. Oakmont is entirely different, a course that is demanding from tee-to-green with the thickest rough of the year, deep bunkers and the reputation for the fastest greens in golf. Willett referred to it as “great fun,” mainly because of the different options to play various holes. “The only thing I say around this place is you’re probably not going to see a ton of birdies,” Willett said. “It’s going to be a lot of pars and trying to limit your mistakes to when you do get out of position. So hopefully, we can keep it in the fairways and keep it on the greens and make life as stress-free as possible.” Whatever stress there is off the golf course is starting to subside. Willett, who played on the Walker Cup team with Rory McIlroy in 2007, had been slowly rising to become one of golf’s elite players when he closed with a 5-under 67 and overcame a faltering Spieth on the back nine at Augusta National to win his first major. His first child was born 11 days earlier. He went home as a Masters champion and more attention than he has ever received. He took a month off to adjust to his new life on and off the golf course and didn’t take long to get back on form. He finished third in the BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth in his most recent start. The euphoria of having a green jacket — it’s home in England this week — hasn’t worn off. “I don’t think it will for a while. It’s still a great achievement,” he said. “It doesn’t mean you don’t get home and you don’t work hard, you don’t practice, you don’t train. We had a few weeks celebrating and stuff. ... But there is now another job at hand, and that’s trying to get as well prepared as we can for this week.” As for that calendar Grand Slam? Willett said he was surprised no one has ever won the Masters, the U.S. Open, the British Open and the PGA Championship in the same calendar year. The modern slam dates to 1960 when Arnold Palmer raised the idea after winning the Masters and U.S. Open. He finished one shot behind at the British Open. Jack Nicklaus got halfway home in 1972 until he finished one shot behind at the British Open. Tiger Woods dominated the Masters and U.S. Open in 2002, only to get caught in bad weather at Muirfield on his way to an 81 in the third round to lose his bid. “You can’t look at it as a whole,” Willett said. “It is quite funny because running up to this week, you are the only guy that can do it in the same year. But, again, that’s not to say you’re not going to win the Masters again and have another chance to do it a few more times in your career. It’s just nice that we have got that chance. What comes of that? You don’t really know.” WHO WANTS ME?— Wister’s Stevee McMillin, left, Heavener’s Rilegh Pate, center, and Wister’s Trisha Walden go for a loose ball during Tuesday night’s LeFlore County Girls Summer Basketball League game at the Heavener Gym. PDN photo by David Seeley Sports Briefs The Father-Son/Daughter Golf Tournament will begin at 10 a.m. Saturday at Choctaw Country Club. The tournament had been scheduled for last Saturday but was postponed. For additional information, call Choctaw Country Club at (918) 647-3488 or Keelie Allphin at (918) 4138203. ••• The Poteau Pirates football team is currently doing a fundraiser to help raise money to help upgrade the lockers inside the Costner Stadium Fieldhouse as well as the seats by each locker and getting a sign to honor past playoff teams and All-Staters on the outside of the field house. Each player is trying to raise $500 with the desired overall goal of reaching a grand total of $6,000. For additional information about the fundraiser or to find out how to make a donation, call Poteau Quarterback Club President Jerry Pitchford at (918) 721-9878 or Poteau football coach Forrest Mazey at (254) 290-3963, or get with any of the Poteau football players. ••• The Scott Vincent Memorial Golf Tournament will begin with a shotgun start at 9 a.m. Friday at Choctaw Country Club. The entry fee for the two-person scramble is $50 per person. Hole sponsorships are available for $100. All proceeds will go toward the Scott Vincent Memorial Scholarship Fund. Lunch will be provided after the tournament. For additional information, call (918) 647-3488. ••• The Touchdown Factory Quarterback/ Wide Receiver Developmental Camp will begin at 9 a.m. Friday at Costner Stadium. The camp is open to players who will be entering grades seven through 12 next fall. The cost is $50, which includes two threehour practice sessions and a camp T-shirt. For additional information, call Poteau coach Forrest Mazey at (254) 290-3963 or e-mail inquiries to fmazey@gmail.com. ••• The Eastern Oklahoma State College Summer Slam basketball tournament will take place beginning at 5 p.m. Saturday at EOSC’s Claud C. Dunlap Fieldhouse. The tournament will be double elimination and is open to all ages. Teams will be split into male and female divisions. Coed teams are allowed and will play in the male division. Teams are limited to four players at a cost of $10 per person for teams who register prior to the day of the event. Teams who register the day of the tournament will be charged $15 per person. For additional information and registration forms, please visit eosc.edu/summerslam or call EOSC women’s basketball coach Amber Taylor at (918) 465-1894. ••• The fourth annual Camp of Champs wrestling camp will be from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday at the Tulsa Edison Preparatory Athletic Center at Tulsa Edison High School, located at 2906 East 41st Street. The cost is $50 per camper and coaches will be free with or without a team. Three-time national champion Alex Dieringer of Oklahoma State University — the 2016 Dan Hodge Trophy winner for being the nation’s Oustanding Wrestler of the Year — and world wrestling champion Jimmi Dawn Hornbuckle will be the camp instructors. For additional information, call Ray Nunneley at (918) 637-5567 or make contact by e-mail at greencountrywrestling@cox.net. ••• The Poteau Pirate Speed and Strength Camp will be Monday through July 21. There will be three camp sessions. The session for those who will be sophomores, juniors and seniors next school year will be from 6:30-8 a.m. Mondays through Thursdays. The camp cost is $25 per camper. The session for those who will be seventh-, eighth- and ninth-graders next school year will be from 8-9 a.m. Mondays through Wednesdays. The camp cost is $50 per camper. The session for those who will enter grades three through six next school year will be from 9:15-10:15 a.m. Mondays and Wednesdays. The camp cost is $75. Entry forms are available at all Poteau Schools’ offices. For additional information, call Poteau football coach Forrest Mazey at (254) 2903963. PAGE 6 . . . THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 2016 ALLEY OOP© by Jack and Carole Bender Entertainment MODERATELY CONFUSED© by Jeff Stahler POTEAU DAILY NEWS HERMAN© by Jim Unger ARLO & JANIS© by Jimmy Johnson THE VILLAGE IDIOT NATURE ABHORS A VACUUM CLEANER I must have accidentally bumped something while vacuuming up a giant warren of dust bunnies behind my media center, because now my television is on the fritz. And by "media center," I mean my TV. The rest of the items there - the wildly expensive and way out-of-date tuner, the obsolete VHS player, the state-of-the-art (at the time) multi-disc CD player that I haven't used since, oh, 1995 -- are BIG NATE© by Lincoln Peirce HOROSCOPE By Eugenia Last Thursday, June 16, 2016 Your performance will be a testament to your discipline as well as your ability to resist temptation. Sticking to your plans and refusing to give in to peer pressure will be required in order to excel, and you are up to the challenge. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- You'll need to be steadfast when faced with temptation. Don't give in to other people's opinions or get involved in something you cannot afford. Be smart and stay safe. CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- Socialize, network and share your unique ideas. You'll entertain others and encounter interesting information along the way. A job offer will lead to an interesting partnership. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Be a participant and make a difference. Taking care of the needs of children, elders or those who cannot fend for themselves will be satisfying and change the way you live your life. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Socializing will prove informative and will help you climb out of your shell. A reunion will reconnect you with someone who will influence your beliefs. Incorporate what works best for you into your lifestyle. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- You can accomplish a lot if you set your mind to it. Don't procrastinate when there is so much to gain by taking action. If you are the instigator, you will control what unfolds. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- Keep your ideas flowing and put them into action. Don't be afraid to follow a dream if it will quell sad or depressing thoughts. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- You don't have to overspend or take on too much in order to impress people. Do something that will make your life better or easier. Alter what isn't working in your personal life. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- If you listen to other people's ideas, you will discover a solution to something you've been working on at a snail's pace. It's time to get in gear and move forward. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- Open your home to friends and family, or host an event that will bring in extra cash. Holding a garage sale or parting with things that are weighing you down is encouraged. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -- Don't lose sight of your goals. Temptation is everywhere, and falling into a position that helps someone else instead of you will not get you where you want to go. ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- Set aside some time to nurture an important partnership. Compromise will be required to keep the peace and approach getting what you want. Money matters can be resolved. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- Step outside your comfort zone and try something new. Don't be afraid to show your emotions. A passionate approach to an important relationship will work wonders. THE BORN LOSER© by Art and Chip Sansom FRANK & ERNEST© by Bob Thaves THE GRIZZWELLS© by Bill Schorr MONTY© by Jim Meddick THATABABY© by Paul Trap Thursday, June 16, 2016 Communications. Today is the 168th day of 2016 and the 89th day of spring. TODAY'S HISTORY: In 1884, the first U.S. roller coaster began operation at Coney Island in Brooklyn, New York. In 1903, the Ford Motor Co. was incorporated. In 1963, cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova became the first woman in space. In 2000, the FCC approved the merger of Bell Atlantic Corp. and GTE Corp. as Verizon TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Stan Laurel (1890-1965), actor/ comedian; Barbara McClintock (1902-1992), geneticist; John Howard Griffin (1920-1980), journalist; Joyce Carol Oates (1938- ), author; Roberto Duran (1951- ), boxer; Laurie Metcalf (1955- ), actress; James Hellwig aka The Ultimate Warrior (19592014), wrestler; Cobi Jones (1970), soccer player; Phil Mickelson (1970- ), golfer; Tupac Shakur (1971-1996), rapper; Abby Elliott (1987- ), actress/comedian. TODAY'S FACT: The Formula Rossa roller coaster at Ferrari World in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, overtook the Kingda Ka roller coaster at Six Flags Great Adventure in Jackson, New Jersey, as the fastest coaster in the world in 2010, reaching a maximum speed of 149.1 mph. TODAY'S SPORTS: In 1998, the Detroit Red Wings defeated the Washington Capitals 4-1, winning the Stanley Cup and sweeping the championship series for the second consecutive year. TODAY'S QUOTE: "Homo sapiens is the species that invents symbols in which to invest passion and authority, then forgets that symbols are inventions." – Joyce Carol Oates TODAY'S NUMBER: 31 - years of the papacy of Pius IX, the longest-reigning elected pope in the history of the Catholic Church. Pius IX began his reign on this day in 1846. TODAY'S MOON: Between first quarter moon (June 12) and full moon (June 20). by Jim Mullen just decorations now. But they're all still plugged in, with a "spaghetti bowl" of wires and cords attached, many connecting them to giant speakers I never use. These gadgets are zombies: no longer alive, but still sucking up power and interested in eating my brain. I spent an hour down on my knees with a flashlight trying to figure out why the only thing we really use, the TV, no longer works. If you wonder why I'm not calling the TV manufacturer's help line, you missed last week's column. It takes longer to get them on the phone than it does to buy a new TV online and have it shipped from Korea to the house. Actually, if I'm not mistaken, that's the manufacturer's business model. But it's not just the TV set itself I'm having a problem with; it's my TV provider. They've got me set up with three different boxes next to the TV, with all kinds of wires coming in and out of them. Figuring out which box does what is like trying to figure out a wartime Enigma code machine. I have been thinking of getting rid of my TV package anyway. I'm paying a $130 a month for a package they advertise as costing $75 a month. It only gets up to $130 after they add on the monthly "Advanced Receiver Service" fee, the monthly "Protection Plan" charge, the monthly "Whateverwe-feel-like" fee, the "What-doyou-mean-you-watch-TV-in-thekitchen-too" fee and the "You'repaying-for-90-channels-you-don'twatch" fee. They're not nickel-and-diming me to death. They're five-and-10dollaring me to death. If a cable TV company ever buys the Dollar Store, the next day, every item in the store will suddenly cost $10. But they won't change the name. Our TV is practically brand-new. It's just a year old. Or to put it another way, it's an antique - an embarrassment that should be covered with a black shroud when company comes. If our guests ever want to watch television, we'll just say we don't have one, that we've given it up, like alcohol and smoking. But it's not broken; I know there's just a loose wire somewhere. Tightening and untightening every connection seems to do nothing. Is a cable plugged into the wrong socket? What does "antenna in" mean? Who has an antenna anymore? Does the output of this component go into the input of this other one, or is it the other way around? Let's try this. Whoops! Now the TV in the kitchen has stopped working, too. There is sweat rolling off my forehead. If I don't get this fixed before tonight's game starts, Sue will cut off my head, then she will tell my head that now she plans to really hurt me. I feel like James Bond trying to figure out what wire to cut before the ticking bomb goes off. There's only one thing to do. I put everything back the way I think it used to be and pull out the vacuum cleaner once again. I vacuum behind the TV stand without a care, banging into everything back there for a good five minutes, and "accidentally" kicking it a few times for good measure. "What are you doing in here?" Sue says. "Cleaning," I answer. "Well, go do it somewhere else. 'The Young and the Stupid' is on and I'd like to watch it in peace." This is it. My life is over. I get ready to blame the lying, cheating, unreliable, soul-killing, money-grubbing cable company when I suddenly hear the theme music from her favorite soap opera. I am never getting rid of this vacuum. (Contact Jim Mullen at mullen.jim@gmail.com.) The Unknown Successors, Assigns and Heirs of the Estate of THE STATE OF OKLAHOMA TO: Beth Sherman, if living; the heirs, executors, administrators, devisees, trusDONNA WHISENtees and assigns of HUNT, Deceased, D.G. Sherman, deDefendants. ceased, the heirs, executors, adminisPOTEAU DAILY NEWS THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 2016 . . . PAGE 7 Case No. trators, devisees, CJ-2016-119 trustees and asNOTICE BY PUBLIsigns of Bessie L. CATION Sherman, deTHE STATE OF ceased, The heirs, OKLAHOMA TO: executors, adminisKenneth D. Whisentrators, devisees, hunt and the Untrustees and asknown Successors, signs of Thomas D. Assigns and Heirs Sherman, deof Donna Whisenceased, the unhunt, Deceased; known successors You will take notice of D.G. Sherman, that the Plaintiff, Bessie L. Sherman, Central National Thomas D. SherBank of Poteau, Oklahoma, filed its man, deceased; the Petition in the cards. Disunknown succesWe Accept Visa, MasterCard, and Discovery All sales are final (No Refunds) trict Court of sors of Beth SherDeadline of publication is three businessLeFlore days prior to date man, intended for publication before noon. County, if deceased. Oklahoma, against Greetings: Breakfast For Dad flour the above named You are hereby noPETS LEGALS MOBILE HOMES APARTMENTS REAL ESTATE Defendants, and tified that you have By Tresa Erickson 3-1/2 t. baking powder FOR RENT unless you answer Airedale Pups 1, 2 & 3 been sued in Case J.L Ford Investments As a young child, you 1 t. salt said Petition on or For Sale Bedroom No. CV-2016-62, in 918-647-2712 Clean, Quiet looked up to your dad and 1 T. sugar before the 26th day We Buy & Sell Full Blood, 2 Males, Apartments the District Court of 2 Bedroom, of July, 2016, said 3 Females. Good For Rent. 1-1/4 c. milk LeFlore County, enjoyed the time you Shady Point (23249 James Lane) 1 Bathroom. will be 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath homePetition on large fenced lot. For Hunting, HUD & Choctaw Oklahoma, a s spent with him. You loved Stove, Refrigerator, 1 egg Interior recently painted.--------$49,500 taken as true and Protection, or Approved. styled above. You Washer/Dryer fishing with him at the 3 T. butter, melted judgment rendered Companion. Poteau Valley Included. must answer the Shady Point (23426 Maple St.) foreclosing said $300 each. Apartments lake, playing catch with In a bowl, sift together 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, 2 car garage brick home.the CH&A, NO PETS!! Petition on or beinterest barn/shop, carport, parkingDefendants’ for RV/camper, storm 918-617-5701. 918-212-4802 918-647-6392 or fore the 22nd day of him in the backyard and flour, baking powder, salt shelter on 1.7 acres fenced.-------$97,500 in the following de918-647-6996. July, 2016, or the helping him cook on the and sugar. Make a well in **FOR RENT** scribed real propPoteau (611 N. Walter) allegations of the Clean, 2 Bedroom, erty andfenced further quiSERVICES 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath with CH&A, Petition will be nights Mom had to work. the center and pour in 1 Bath. Stove, yard and 1 car garage on corner etinglot.-----$45,000 the title to the taken as true, and a Your dad wasn’t much of milk, egg and melted butTwo or Three Mobile Home Refrigerator, Dish following described Poteau (102 Wedgewood) judgment will be en- a cook, but boy, could he ter. Mix until smooth. Bedroom Mobile Transporting Washer Included. realwith CH&A estate as 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath home Homes For Rent. tered quieting the tiMoving, set-up, Total Electric. against said Defenand fenced yard.-------$99,900 make some mean pan- Heat a lightly oiled gridRV spaces tle in Plaintiffs as tie downs. CH&A. NO PETS!! dants. Such propMonroe (Hwy. 83) available also. Licensed in prayed for in their cakes. Now that you’re dle on medium-high heat. 918-647-6392 or erty being de3 Bedroom, 2 Bath Mobile Home on 33 acres of pasture Trash and sewer Oklahoma and Petition to the fol- older, you’d like to repay Pour 1/4 c. batter onto the 918-647-6996. scribed as follows, land. 2 ponds, shop and older mobile home.----$150,000 paid. No Pets!! Arkansas. lowing real propto wit: the favor by throwing griddle for each pancake. BRAND NEW 918-647-3923 or Great Service, LANDSURFACE erty: AND Duplexes For Rent. your dad a pancake break- Brown on both sides and 918-774-4624. Great Price!! SURFACE AND SURFACE ONLY: Poteau (Fruit Farm Rd.) Stove, washer/dryer 800-940-5581. fast this Father’s Day and serve hot. SURFACE ONLY: Lot 18 50 acres m/l (pasture & wooded) with and cabin. the GreatE/2 hook-ups. Contact Escape!-------$75,000 The NW SE of Sec- serving him and his budof Lot 19, Potts Strawberry Vanilla HOMES FOR RENT Bill Barnhart at tion 10, Township 4 Mountain Cabinsite 918-839-2623. West of Wister dies some of the best pan- Pancakes Uncontested No. 2, (same being North, Range 22 AFFORDABLE 20 acres of good pasture land. Has water meter, septic 1 c. all-purpose flour Divorces for platted from part of East of the Indian cakes ever. Here are some and ready to build or set mobile.-------$52,500 HOUSING LEGALS the E/2 NE/4 SW/4 Couples with or Base and Meridian. recipes you might want to 2 T. brown sugar Rent Based of Section 14, (“The property”) ADVERTISEMENT without children. On Income. try. 2 t. baking powder James Ford Township 5 North, Dated this 6th day FOR BID All the paper work Central Heat/Air, 479-806-8446 Oatmeal Applesauce 1 t. salt Range 24 East of of June, 2016. Sealed bids for conWasher/Dryer you need. Please We Buy & Sell the Indian Base and Melba Hall, Court Pancakes struction of Water 1 egg Hook-ups. call for information Median, LeFlore Clerk Panama, LeFlore, Storage Tank Modi1 c. all-purpose flour 1 c. milk and pricing. County, Oklahoma); LEGALS LEGALS /s/ Loni Chandler Cowlington, Muse fications and Re918-839-6040 1/3 c. quick cooking 2 T. vegetable oil with the building and Whitesboro. By: Deputy Court painting will be reoats 2 T. vanilla Call Kiamichi ceived by the City IN THE DISTRICT and premises and Clerk OURT O F the appurtenances, Prepared by: EMPLOYMENT Housing Authority. of Poteau at 111 CLEFLORE 1 t. baking powder 1 c. fresh strawberries, hindrances and all 918-522-4436. George H. McBee Peters St., Poteau, 1/4 t. baking soda chopped other rights thereto COUNTY MED-CORP PLUS, OBA # 5839 OK 74953 until appertaining to or STATE OF OKLAInc. Now Hiring 1/2 t. cinnamon In a bowl, combine Matthew H. McBee 2:00 p.m. local time, belonging, and all HOMA Full-time RN for OBA # 18004 3 Bedroom, June 29, 2016, and 3/4 c. unsweetened flour, brown sugar, bakfixtures thereon or CENTRAL NAMedicare/Medicaid. 2 Bathroom McBee Law Firm applesauce then p u b l i c l y TIONAL BANK OF ing powder and salt. Add thereafter attached Insurance, Paid Brick Home PLLC opened and read or used in connectime off and Mile1/2 c. sour cream egg, milk, oil and vanilla For Rent P.O. Box 1303 aloud. tion with said premPOTEAU, OKLAage. Contact: Ralph 703 Wilburn 1 egg, lightly beaten and mix well. Fold in Poteau, OK 74953 The information for HOMA, ises, adjudging that Stephan. Poteau, OK Phone: Bidders, Form of 1 t. vanilla strawberries. Heat a large Plaintiff’s mortgage 1-866-466-5538 $700/month, 918.647.2340 Bid, Form of Con- Plaintiff, represents a first 1/3 c. milk oiled griddle over medi$300/deposit. Attorneys for the tract, Specifications, vs. lien in and on the Call Brian at Heat a lightly oiled um heat. Pour 1/4 c. batPlaintiffs, and Form of Bid above described Help Wanted: 479-629-0691. Curtiss L. Boone griddle on medium-low ter onto the griddle for Bond, Performance property and will be Heavy Duty and and Payment Bond, taken as aforesaid, K E N N E T H D . heat. In a bowl, combine each pancake. Flip with a Mechanic Brenda L. Boone and other contract WHISENHUNT, and forever barring Wister Company is flour, oats, baking pow- spatula when bubbles For Rent: 20776 documents may be Published in the Posaid Defendants and seeking Heavy Old Hwy 59 South. examined at the folROBERT O . from all right, title, teau Daily News on der, baking soda and cin- appear in center. Cook Duty Mechanics. 1 1/2 miles outside lowing: June 9, 16, 23, namon. In a separate until golden brown on the estate, interest, BROOKS, JR., Immediate of Heavener, OK. 1 WDB Engineering property, and equity 2016. (27425) Employment if bowl, combine apple- other side. bedroom furnished PLLC as Special Adminis- of redemption in LXPLP qualified. Individual cabin. Appliances 6330 S.E. 74TH sauce, sour cream, egg No matter what type of trator of the Estate and to said propmust have own included. erty, or any part of Street and vanilla. Stir applepancakes you serve your tools. Pay is $425/month and Oklahoma City, OK thereof. DONNA WHISENdetermined based sauce mixture and milk dad, he is sure to enjoy $200/deposit. Water Dated the 7 day of HUNT, Deceased, 73135 on experience. paid. References into flour mixture until them simply because you June, 2016. Copies may be ob- and Call Larry at required. HALL, moist and thick. Pour 1/4 took the time out to whip tained at the office The Unknown Suc- M E L B A 918-649-4151 or 870-389-6074 or cessors, Assigns COURT CLERK email resume to of WDB Engineerc. batter onto the griddle them up and serve them 918-635-5342 By:s/Janet Rogers rock_it_bob@ ing PLLC located at and The longest for each pancake and to him with a smile. He’ll (DEPUTY) COURT Heirs of the Estate yahoo.com. An 6330 S.E. 74th CLERK recorded flight cook, turning once, until surely remember this EOE Employer. Street, Oklahoma of BARBER & BARFor Rent: 20770 City, Oklahoma golden brown on both Father’s Day breakfast of a chicken BER Old Hwy 59 South. DONNA WHISENupon payment of sides. just as fondly as you RUSSELL V. BAR1 1/2 miles outside HUNT, Deceased, was 13 NOW HIRING $200.00 for each BER of Heavener, OK. 2 Defendants. O l d - F a s h i o n e d remember all of the nights LEGAL SECREset or an electronic seconds. Attorneys At Law room furnished TARY/RECEPPancakes he served pancakes to 107 Beard - P.O. cabin. Appliances set may be obC a s e N o . TIONIST tained upon pay1-1/2 c. all-purpose you. Box 518 included. Private CJ-2016-119 Applications are beand p e a c e f u l . ment of $100.00. NOTICE BY PUBLI- Poteau, Oklahoma ing accepted for 74953 $400/month and Refunds will not be CATION full-time position as $200/deposit. Water made. THE STATE OF Published in the Polegal secretary/reteau Daily News on paid. References The Owner reOKLAHOMA TO: ceptionist with a law serves the right to Kenneth D. Whisen- June 9, 16, 23, required. firm in Poteau, 2016. (27421) 870-389-6074 or waive any informalihunt and the UnOklahoma. Must ties or to reject any known Successors, LXPLP 918-635-5342 have typing, and or all bids. Assigns and Heirs computer skills. Each bid must be of Donna WhisenMust be able to In The District Court MOBILE HOMES submitted in a hunt, Deceased; deal with general Of LeFlore County sealed envelope You will take notice FOR SALE public. Medical InState of Oklahoma bearing on the out- that the Plaintiff, Curtiss L. Boone, surance available. side the name of Central National and Retirement plan DON’S Loans $100 to $1400 the bidder, his ad- Bank of Poteau, Brenda L. Boone, available upon vestMOBILE dress, and the Oklahoma, filed its Plaintiffs, ing. Salary comHOMES name of the project Petition in the Dis- vs. mensurate with exfor which the bid is t r i c t Court of K a y perience. Send reSherman **Spring Sale** submitted. No bid LeFlore County, Braun, aka Kay D. sume to P.O. Box will be accepted Oklahoma, against Sherman, et. al. 518, Poteau, OklaLot Model Close-Out more than 72 hours the above named Defendants. homa 74953. Interprior to the sched- Defendants, and C a s e views scheduled by No: 2016 River Birch, uled bid opening. If unless you answer CV-2016-62 our office upon reModel 3820, 32x64, ceipt of resume. All forwarded by mail, said Petition on or NOTICE BY PUBLIinquiries kept confi3 Bedroom, the sealed envelope before the 26th day CATION dential. containing the bid of July, 2016, said THE STATE OF 2 Bathroom, must be enclosed in Petition will be OKLAHOMA TO: 1800 Sq. Ft., another envelope taken as true and Beth Sherman, if Ranch Dry Wall, Part Time addressed as speci- judgment rendered living; the heirs, exAppliance Package, foreclosing the said ecutors, administraDirector of Youth fied in the bid form. Large Bedrooms Defendants’ interest tors, devisees, trusMinistries Wanted: Each bidder must & Closets. First United deposit with his bid, in the following de- tees and assigns of $72,000 Methodist Church D.G. Sherman, desecurity in the scribed real propAND of Poteau, OK is amount, form and erty and further qui- ceased, the heirs, 2016 Atlantic, searching for a subject to the condi- eting the title to the executors, adminisDirector of Youth Model Extreme tions provided in the following described trators, devisees, real estate as trustees and asMinistries. Part 8500, 3 Bedroom, Information for Bidagainst said DefenTime. Call signs of Bessie L. 2 Bathroom, 1500 ders. Attention of dants. Such prop918-647-2217 or Sherman, deSq. Ft., Island bidders is particuerty being deemail pastor@ larly called to the scribed as follows, ceased, The heirs, Kitchen, Patio Door, poteaufumc.com executors, adminisrequirements as to to wit: Tile Backsplash & for more details. trators, devisees, CLASSIFIED conditions of emWalk-In Closets In SURFACE AND trustees and asployment to be ob- SURFACE ONLY: DEADLINES All Bedrooms. signs of Thomas D. served and miniClassifieds must be $61,500. Lot 18 and the E/2 S h e r m a n , deArbuckle mum wage rates to of Lot 19, Potts ceased, the unsubmitted by 3 pm two days prior to Truck Driving be paid under the Mountain Cabinsite known successors ***FREE*** the date you want to run them. School, Inc. contract. Washer/Dryer or 55” No. 2, (same being of D.G. Sherman, Laid off? Low Legals must also be Flatscreen TV With No bidder may with- platted from part of Bessie L. Sherman, Income? No cost submitted by 3 pm two days prior to Purchase of Either draw his bid within the E/2 NE/4 SW/4 Thomas D. Shergrants. Job ready the date you want to run them. of the Above Homes. 60 days after the of Section 14, man, deceased; the in 4 weeks. VA actual date of the Township 5 North, unknown succesBenefits, Tribal Thank you on behalf of the staff (800) 940-5581 opening thereof. Range 24 East of sors of Beth SherAssistance. Job of the Published in the Po- the Indian Base and man, if deceased. Placement. Poteau Daily News donsmobile teau Daily News on Median, LeFlore Greetings: Weekend Classes (918) 647-3188 homes.com June 9, 16, 2016. County, Oklahoma); You are hereby noAvailable. (27422) LXLP with the building tified that you have 580-223-3360. and premises and been sued in Case GENERAL INFORMATION: YARD SALE INSURANCE: $3.00 ADJUSTMENTS: the appurtenances, No.RAIN CV-2016-62, in and all out, the (must District of The Daily News reserves the right to reject, revise, edit & properly classify all hindrances If your yard sale is rained rain,Court not sprinkle, off and on until noon) Please check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. After which time thereto LeFlore County, advertising submitted for publication. We will not knowingly accept advertis- other we will rights rerun your ad whenever you choose (peraour ad guidelines). Must call a refund or reprint is limited to one insertion only. Canceling ads placed at appertaining to or O k l a h o m a , s ing which discriminates because of race, color, religion, national origin or belonging, next businessand day after rained out sale. Insurance expires 30 days after discounted rates revert to standard prices, therefore a refund may not apply. all styled above. You fixtures thereon sex. date of purchase on or ad. must answer the Omitted ads are eligible for refund of amount paid ONLY or appearing in thereafter attached Petition on or bealternate issue. or used in connecfore the 22nd day of tion with said premJuly, 2016, or the ises, adjudging that allegations of the Plaintiff’s mortgage Petition will be represents a first taken as true, and a lien in and on the judgment will be enabove described tered quieting the tiproperty and will be tle in Plaintiffs as taken as aforesaid, prayed for in their and forever barring Petition to the fol- Classifieds Did You Know? Services Directory Read ers’ Cho ice PAGE 8 . . . THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 2016 14th Annual Readers' Choice Ballot POTEAU DAILY NEWS READERS’ CHOICE AWARDS 2016 Results will be tabulated and published in the Poteau Daily News. ORIGINALS ONLY - COPY BALLOTS WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED! Just For Voting, You Could Win One of These 3 Prizes Drawn From Ballots Submitted: • One-Year Subscription • 6-Months Subscription • 1 Week Classified Word Ad ($30 Value) Mail or drop off your ballots – 804 N. Broadway • P.O. Box 1237, Poteau, OK 74953 – by Tuesday, July 5 at 5 p.m. WEAVER’S MEAT MARKET 34842 U.S. Hwy. 59 S. Poteau, OK 918-647-9832 ❑ Yes ❑ No Are you a Poteau Daily News Subscriber? Email Address __________________________________________________ Phone Number _________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________ Return your ballot page by Tuesday, JULY 5, 5 p.m. Address ________________________________________________________ Name of Voter __________________________________________________ Winners of the three prizes will be drawn from ballots submitted and notified using information below. (You must use newspaper ballot, NO COPIES ACCEPTED!) FOOD: (Restaurant): Appetizer __________________________________________ Soup ______________________________________________ Salad ______________________________________________ Pizza ______________________________________________ Steak ______________________________________________ Catfish ____________________________________________ Chicken Wings _______________________________________ Sandwich ___________________________________________ Hamburger __________________________________________ French Fries _________________________________________ Nachos ____________________________________________ Beef Jerky___________________________________________ BBQ ______________________________________________ Mexican ____________________________________________ Asian ______________________________________________ Italian _____________________________________________ Seafood ____________________________________________ Kids Meal ___________________________________________ Ice Cream __________________________________________ Milkshakes _________________________________________ Coffee/Latte ________________________________________ Happy Hour _________________________________________ Donut _____________________________________________ Cupcake ___________________________________________ Breakfast __________________________________________ Brunch ____________________________________________ Lunch _____________________________________________ Dinner ____________________________________________ Kid Friendly Dining ____________________________________ Best Fast Food _______________________________________ Best Food Truck ______________________________________ Best Buffet _________________________________________ Best Sports Bar ______________________________________ Best Cocktail ________________________________________ Best Date Night Dining _________________________________ Best Atmosphere _____________________________________ Best Service ________________________________________ To Take Out of Town Guests ______________________________ Entry form must be filled out completely for ballot to be valid. Butcher Shop ______________________________________ Catering Service ____________________________________ Clothing Store _______________________________________ Consignment Shop_____________________________________ Dry Cleaners ________________________________________ Jewelry Store ________________________________________ Antiques/Collectibles __________________________________ Pawn Shop _________________________________________ Sporting Goods_______________________________________ Hunting Supplies _____________________________________ Farm Machinery ______________________________________ Farm Supplies _______________________________________ Hardware Store ______________________________________ Lumber Supply ______________________________________ Building Supplies ____________________________________ Building/Contractor ___________________________________ Roofing Service ______________________________________ Locksmith _________________________________________ Interior Designer _____________________________________ Paint Dealer________________________________________ Painter ____________________________________________ Carpet Cleaner ______________________________________ Flooring Store _______________________________________ Furniture __________________________________________ Pest Control ________________________________________ Landscaping/Lawn Care ________________________________ Landscaping________________________________________ Natural Stone Distributor _______________________________ Appliances _________________________________________ Real Estate Agency ___________________________________ Bail Bond Service ____________________________________ Cellular Service ______________________________________ Heating/Cooling Service ________________________________ Rental Service _______________________________________ Shipping Service _____________________________________ Snow Removal Service _________________________________ Auto & Oil Change Services ______________________________ Auto Repair _________________________________________ Auto Body Shop ______________________________________ New Auto Dealership ___________________________________ Used Auto Dealership __________________________________ Motorcycle Dealer _____________________________________ Bike Shop __________________________________________ RV Sales ___________________________________________ Tires ______________________________________________ Car Wash __________________________________________ Wrecker Service ______________________________________ Public Service Transportation ____________________________ Place to Worship _____________________________________ Bridal Registry ______________________________________ Florist _____________________________________________ Gift Shop __________________________________________ Barber Shop _______________________________________ Hair Salon _________________________________________ Nail Salon__________________________________________ Tanning Salon ______________________________________ Gym/Exercise Studio __________________________________ Gymnastics Center ___________________________________ Photo Studio _______________________________________ Day Care __________________________________________ Kids Playspace ______________________________________ Veterinary Clinic _____________________________________ Pet Grooming _______________________________________ Pet Supplies ________________________________________ Law Firm __________________________________________ Bank ______________________________________________ Accounting Firm _____________________________________ Loan Co. __________________________________________ Finance Co. ________________________________________ Investment Co. ______________________________________ Insurance Co. _______________________________________ Tax Prep Service _____________________________________ Check Cashing Service _________________________________ Pharmacy __________________________________________ Weight Loss Center ___________________________________ Physical Therapy Services _______________________________ Counseling Services___________________________________ Hearing Aids ________________________________________ Home Health Agency___________________________________ Retirement/Assisted Living ______________________________ Nursing Facility _____________________________________ Nursing Home ______________________________________ Hospice Service _____________________________________ Funeral Services ____________________________________ Taxidermist ________________________________________ Vape Supplies ______________________________________ Storage Facility _____________________________________ Computer Repair ____________________________________ Internet Provider ____________________________________ ★ VOTER’S ENTRY FORM - READERS' CHOICE AWARDS 2016 ★ PLACES: To Golf ____________________________________________ To Bowl ___________________________________________ For Banquet ________________________________________ For Meetings _______________________________________ Wedding Location ____________________________________ Wedding Reception Venue ______________________________ Museum/Historic Site _________________________________ To Shoot Pool _______________________________________ To Karaoke _________________________________________ For Best Live Music ___________________________________ To Go Camping ______________________________________ To Shop Local _______________________________________ To Honeymoon _______________________________________ To Picnic ___________________________________________ Hotel//Motel_________________________________________ PEOPLE: (Also list where they work, if applicable) PDN Carrier ________________________________________ Volunteer __________________________________________ Civic Group Member __________________________________ Social Service Organizer ________________________________ Teacher ___________________________________________ Counselor (LPC) _____________________________________ Superintendent ______________________________________ Principal __________________________________________ Sales Clerk _________________________________________ Wedding Planner _____________________________________ Disc Jockey _________________________________________ Accountant _________________________________________ Investment Advisor ___________________________________ Mortgage Broker _____________________________________ Banker/Teller _______________________________________ Loan Officer ________________________________________ Tax Preparer ________________________________________ Auctioneer _________________________________________ Real Estate Agent ____________________________________ Barber____________________________________________ Beautician _________________________________________ Mani/Pedi Tech ______________________________________ Massage Therapist ___________________________________ Pet Groomer ________________________________________ Butcher ___________________________________________ Cook _____________________________________________ Waitress/Waiter ______________________________________ Hostess ___________________________________________ Bartender __________________________________________ Bookkeeper _________________________________________ Nurse _____________________________________________ Doctor ____________________________________________ Dentist ___________________________________________ Pediatrician ________________________________________ Chiropractor ________________________________________ Physical Therapist ____________________________________ Optometrist ________________________________________ Pharmacist _________________________________________ EMT ______________________________________________ Home Health Worker ___________________________________ Veterinarian ________________________________________ Attorney ___________________________________________ Law Enforcement Officer _______________________________ Fireman ___________________________________________ Insurance Agent _____________________________________ Receptionist ________________________________________ Mechanic __________________________________________ Contractor _________________________________________ Electrician _________________________________________ Plumber ___________________________________________ Welder ____________________________________________ Carpet Dealer _______________________________________ Heat & Air Tech ______________________________________ Computer Tech ______________________________________ Public Service Driver __________________________________ Sign Artist _________________________________________ T-Shirt Designer _____________________________________ Photographer _______________________________________ New Car Salesman ___________________________________ Used Car Salesman __________________________________ Tourist Attraction ____________________________________ Elected Official (City) _________________________________ Elected Official (County) _______________________________ BUSINESS: (If business has more than one location, please specify which location you are voting for.) Chamber of Commerce ________________________________ Supermarket _______________________________________ Convenience Store ___________________________________ Variety Store _______________________________________ Health Food Store ___________________________________ Liquor Store _______________________________________ Bakery ___________________________________________ The Next READERS' CHOICE Winner Could Be YOUR BUSINESS! 300 Dewey Ave. Poteau, Ok 918-649-3400 Heavener Flowers & Gifts 212 West 1st Street Heavener, OK 74937 918-653-2983 or 800-874-3973 Owners : Luethira Ragan and Donna Roper www.heavenerflowers@windstream.net 918-653-4803 101 W. Ave. D Heavener, OK Most Insurance and Prescription Plans Accepted
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