Garden City Telegram June 7, 2013

Page 1

family night kicks off the 2013 prca rodeo. see page b1 for full coverage.

FRIDAY, June 7, 2013

75 cents

Volume 84, No. 132

3 sections

16 pages

Go to GCTelegram.com for photo galleries from Thursday’s PRCA Rodeo and AJGA golf events.

Monumental phone records monitoring laid bare WASHINGTON (AP) — A leaked document lays bare the monumental scope of the government’s surveillance of Americans’ phone records — hundreds of millions of calls — in the first hard evidence of a massive data collection program aimed at combating terrorism under powers granted by Congress after the 9/11 attacks. Civil liberties advocates and some critics in Congress declared that the sweeping nature of the National Security Agency program, disclosed Thursday,

represented an unwarranted intrusion into Americans’ private lives. But some Democrats, as well as Republicans who normally jump at the chance to criticize the Obama administration, lauded the program’s effectiveness. Leaders of the House Intelligence Committee said the program had helped thwart at least one attempted terrorist attack in the United States, “possibly saving American lives.” One outraged senator was Ron Wyden, D-Ore. He said, “When law-abiding Americans make phone calls, who they

call, when they call and where they call is private information. As a result of the discussion that came to light today, now we’re going to have a real debate.” But Republican Lindsay Graham of South Carolina said Americans have no cause for concern. “If you’re not getting a call from a terrorist organization, you’ve got nothing to worry about,” he said. At issue is a court order, first disclosed by The Guardian newspaper in Britain, that requires Verizon to turn over, on an “ongoing, daily basis,” records of all land-

line and mobile telephone calls of its customers, both within the U.S. and between the U.S. and other countries. Intelligence experts said there was every reason to believe that similar orders were in place for other phone companies. Senate Intelligence Committee Chairwoman Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., said the order was a three-month renewal of an ongoing practice that is supervised by federal judges who balance efforts to See Monitoring, Page A5

Kansas regents bemoan cuts to higher ed funds TOPEKA (AP) — Kansas higher education officials said Thursday that the Legislature’s proposed funding cuts to public colleges and universities will hamper their ability to meet the business community’s needs for highly-skilled workers and will hurt the state’s economy as a result. “It is not a pro-growth budget,” said Regent Vice Chair Fred Logan of Leawood. Legislators finished their work early Sunday on the $14.5 billion state budget for each of fiscal years 2014 and 2015, imposing a 1.5 percent cut to higher education in each year. The plan also calls for a salary and wage cap, which education officials said compounds the cuts and will have an impact on programs and students. Logan and others, including regent Robba Moran, wife of U.S. Sen. Jerry Moran, urged Republican Gov. Sam Brownback to veto the salary cap and lessen the financial impact of the spending cuts. The combined reduction of state general fund resources for higher education is estimated to total nearly $33 million over the two years. “He needs to send a message to the Legislature that that kind of bad public policy isn’t going to be tolerated,” Logan said. In recent years, Kansas has sought to increase the number of engineers and doctors it graduates in order to improve the state’s business climate and overall quality of life. The state has also focused on increasing the number of people earning vocational and technical certificates to meet the demands of industries, including wind energy and manufacturing. The regents said those initiatives were at risk before they had a chance to fully develop. “If you want outstanding universities, you have to pay for them,” Moran said. Brownback was seeking to keep higher education spending stable in 2014 and 2015.

Quality contest Becky Malewitz/Telegram

Jesus Ramirez, left, and his team compete during the 2013 Beef Empire Days cattle working contest at the Finney County Feedlot Thursday afternoon.

Competition a chance for industry workers to shine By SCOTT AUST

saust@gctelegram.com

More than 60 area feedlot and cattle processing workers competed Thursday during the Beef Empire Days cattle working contest at Finney County Feedyard. “People who process cattle work hard every day and they don’t get a lot of praise,” Marvin Hammond, chairman for the event, said. “This helps people who work cattle shine a little at what they do, lets them experience some products they don’t use on an everyday basis, and lets them compare themselves to their peers.” Twenty-one teams consisting of three members each applied skills they use every day in vaccinating and tagging cattle to ensure healthy animals enter the food supply.

Teams were judged on animal handling, chute use, injection technique, ear tagging and equipment use. The contest promotes correct usage of animal health products and equipment, correct handling of livestock, quality assurance, and gives participants the chance to learn from other processing crews and suppliers. “We want to work the cattle efficiently, but correctly,” Hammond said. “Time is important, but it’s not the ultimate thing. Proficiency and correctness is the ultimate thing.” The top three teams included Gray County Feed Yard, with 43.5 points; Ulysses Feedyard, with 41.8 points; and Fairleigh Feed Yard, with 41.4 points. See Cattle working, Page A5

Becky Malewitz/Telegram

Antonio Broa, Sublette, competes during the 2013 Beef Empire Days cattle working contest at the Finney Couty feedlot Thursday afternoon.

Garden City home sales up in April, housing still in short supply By RUTH CAMPBELL

rcampbell@gctelegram.com

Brad Nading/Telegram

A house for sale sign is shown at a residence for sale at Pine and Center streets Thursday.

What’s Inside

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Annie’s Advice . . Classified . . . . . . . Comics . . . . . . . . . Police Blotter . . .

A8 C2 B4 A2

Obituaries . . . . . . Opinion . . . . . . . . State . . . . . . . . . . . TV Listings . . . . . . Weather . . . . . . . .

A2 A4 A3 B3 A8

As expected, home sales in Garden City were strong in April and surpassed figures from the same time last year. A total of 36 homes were sold in April, with an average price of $138,127. Average days on the market was 137. Conventional and Federal Housing Administration financing were the two most used methods of financing, followed by cash, Veterans Administration and Rural Development loans, according to information from the Garden City Board of Realtors. In April 2012, 30 homes were sold for an average price of $107,177 and

Market Prices Grain prices at the Garden City Co-op Wheat...........7.14 Corn..............7.23

Milo..............6.63 Soybeans....14.60

Schwieterman Inc. reported Chicago Live Cattle Futures: June Aug. Oct. High........... 120.82......120.22.....123.15 Low............ 120.10......119.05.....122.37 Stand......... 120.37......119.95.....122.92

homes spent an average of 157 days on the market. Of those, nine homes were financed conventionally, 12 through FHS, eight with cash and one through Rural Development. Vicki Bulkley, owner/broker of Heritage Realty, said she expects the market to continue strong. Bulkley, who also is Zone 8 vice president of the Kansas Association of Realtors, said valuations are going up and housing is still in relatively short supply. “We have a lot of commercial stuff starting to roll through. Rental is still as tight as can be. I don’t see any reason why it will not continue to be a good market,” Bulkley said. See Real estate, Page A5

Weather Forecast Partly cloudy, p.m. T-storm, high 84, low 60. Saturday, some storms, high 90, low 64. Details on page A8.


For The Record

Obituaries (USPS213-600) Published daily mornings except New Year’s Day, Martin Luther King Jr. Birthday, President’s Day, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Columbus Day, Veterans Day, Thanksgiving and Christmas, by The Telegram Publishing Co. Inc. at 310 N.7th Street, Garden City, KS 67846.

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Philip M. Haug Sr. Philip M. Haug Sr., 52, of Garden City, died Wednesday, June 5, 2013, at St. Catherine Hospital in Garden City. He was born Oct. 14, 1960, in Ransom, to Howard a n d Rosanna Herr man Haug. He graduated from Garden City High School. On July 30, 1982, he married Sheila Jane Brown in Garden City. She died Sept. 8, 2010. Mr. Haug worked for 30 years as a truck driver. He enjoyed camping and fishing. Survivors include three children, Traci Smith, Philip Haug Jr. and Leah Haug, all of Garden City; his parents, of Ransom; a brother, Sonny Haug of Garden City; a sister, Diane Keim of Garden City; and five grandchildren. Funeral will begin at 10 a.m. Saturday at Garnand Funeral Home in Garden City. Burial will follow at Valley View Cemetery in Garden City. Visitation hours are noon to 8 p.m. today at the funeral home. Condolences may be emailed to garnandfh@sbcglobal.net. Memorials to the Philip Haug Sr. Memorial Fund may be sent in care of the funeral home, 412 N. Seventh St., Garden City, KS 67846.

Alma Johnson DIGHTON — Alma D. Johnson, 97, a longtime resident of Lane County, died Sunday, April 21, 2013, in Peoria, Ariz. She was born June 16, 1915, in Deerfield, to John L. and Caroline D. Smith. Mrs. Johnson taught school in Lane County for 30 years. She had resided at Freedom Inn Assisted Living in Peoria since 2008. Survivors include several nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by her parents; her husband, Elmer Johnson; three brothers; and two sisters. Graveside service will begin at 10 a.m. Monday at White Rock Cemetery in Pendennis. Condolences may be emailed to garnandfh@sbcglobal.net. Memorials are suggested to the Employee Appreciation Fund at Freedom Plaza or Casa Grande Christian Church, both in care of Boomhower Funeral Home, Box 891, Dighton, KS 67839.

➤ Garden City

Telesforo Dorado

➤ Outside of Garden City

Telesforo Dorado, age 60, died Thursday, June 6, 2013, at his home in Garden City. Price & Sons Funeral Home will announce arrangements.

(620) 275-8500 1-800-475-8600

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THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM

Roundup Briefs

Obituary policy Obituaries must be submitted by 9 p.m. Sunday through Friday for inclusion in the next day’s editions.

Kansas Lottery These Kansas lotteries were drawn Thursday: Daily Pick 3: 6-2-2 2 By 2: Red Balls:10-23, White Balls: 15-23

‘Maverick’ to be shown at Stevens Park The Garden City Recreation Commission will present the movie, “Maverick,� at dusk on Saturday night in Stevens Park as part of the fourth annual Silver Screen Saturday Nights. Movies are shown every Saturday during the summer. Popcorn and drinks will be available for $1 each. Proceeds will go toward helping send the GCRC summer musical youth to the Junior Theatre Festival in Atlanta. For movie titles and future showings visit www.gcrec.com. In the event of high winds or severe weather, movies will be rescheduled. Call 276-1202 for cancellation details.

Live on Stage to hold annual meeting Southwest Kansas Live on Stage will have its annual meeting at 6 p.m. Sunday at the Garden City Co-op Center, 106 N. Sixth St. Meat, drinks and service will be provided; each attendee is to bring a side dish.

The Last Rezort in concert at Stevens Park The Stevens Park Concert Series continues at 7:30 p.m. Sunday featuring The Last Rezort. This “Little Big Band� includes Roger Winter on bass, Allen Hess on trumpet, Mark McCandless on sax, Everett Green on drums, Clint Raynes on sax, David VanPelt on piano, and Jeanette Raynes on flute and vocals. Winter Hess and McCandless have been playing together since the group was founded by former Scott City Band Director Vern Dietz when they were his students. The band has played for weddings, dances, anniversaries, civic occasions, and dedications. Its music ranges from the Big Band era of the ‘40s and ‘50s to more contemporary Big Band favorites of today. The Stevens Park Concert Series is sponsored by the Garden City Recreation Commission and The City of Garden City. All concerts in this series are free to the public. For a complete list of summer performers, visit the GCRC website at www.gcrec. com.

New extension agent hired for local office Lehisa de Fornoza will join the staff of the K-State Research and Extension Finney County office as a family and consumer sciences agent, effective June 23. She worked previously as a program assistant in the K-State Family Nutrition Program in Manhattan and as a nutrition assistant in the Expanded Food and Nutrition Program based at K-State. De Fornoza earned a bachelor’s degree in elementary education at the University Institute of Professional Improvement in Teaching in Venezuela. Family and consumer sciences extension agents provide leadership in their communities by developing and delivering educational programming relative to family-related issues including nutrition, food safety, parenting, financial management, health and safety.

Seniors can apply for farmers’ market coupons

Longhorn Stampede scheduled Saturday The “Run with the Champs� Longhorn Stampede, which includes a 5K, a 10K and a Kids “Buddy� Race, is set for Saturday. The Holcomb Recreation Commission’s fund-raising event supports the Holcomb High School CrossCountry Team and promotes the benefits of a healthy and active lifestyle. The race begins and ends at the HRC building, 106 Wiley St., Holcomb. Race times are 7:15 a.m. (10K), 7:45 a.m. (5K) and 8:30 a.m. (Kids “Buddy� Race; paired with area cross-country runners).

The Kansas Senior Farmers’ Market Nutrition Program will provide low-income seniors with $21 worth of vouchers for use during the 2013 harvest season to purchase fresh, nutritious, unprepared, locally grown fruits, vegetables, herbs and honey at local farmers markets between now and Oct. 26. To be eligible to receive SFMNP coupons, applicants must be 60 or older on the day of issuance; have an individual annual gross income at or below $1,723 a month and must reside in Finney County. Applications will be available

beginning Monday at the Senior Center of Finney County, 907 N. 10th St. Seniors may apply from 9 a.m. to noon and 1 to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Currently, there are funds to serve the first 50 people who apply and are eligible. For more information, call Barbara Jensen at 272-3620.

Girl Scouts awarded grant from foundation The Finnup Foundation of Finney County has provided a $20,000 leadership gift to the Girl Scouts of Kansas Heartland Youth Leadership Development Program and Community Outreach in southwestern Kansas. The gift helped make it possible for Girl Scouts in the Garden City area to continue as the premier leadership organization for girls. Girls are now given the Girl Scout leadership experience through a program delivered by trained GSKH volunteers and staff in outreach programs in the community to deliver the Girl Scout experience. Summer Camp samplers also are available to girls who may not get to experience camp otherwise. Area partners in Finney County include the YMCA and the Garden City Recreation Center for upcoming summer programming. For more information about the Girl Scouts of Kansas Heartland Council, visit www.kansasgirlscouts. org or contact the Girl Scout Office in Garden City at 276-7061, (888) 900-7061 or email shopgardencity@kansasgirlscouts.org.

Registration under way for Challenge Course Registration is now taking place for the Challenge Course Adventure coming up this summer at Garden City Community College. Certified facilitators will lead structured activities that are on the Challenge Course low to the ground. After successful completion, participants will be ready for the high ropes challenge. Activities include: Nitro Crossing, Spider Web, Mohawk Walk, Rope Geometry, Zip Line, Cat Walk, Pamper Pole and Heebie Jeebie. The course is available to youth ages 9 to 14 at a cost of $169 per person. Sessions will be offered June 17 to 20 and July 15 to 18. Register at least one week prior to the class start date. Registration and information are available on the top floor of the GCCC Student and Community Services Center, by calling 276-9647, by emailing biz@gcccks. edu or at gcccks.edu/businessandcommunity.

Police Beat The following reports were taken from local law enforcement logs:

Garden City Police Department Arrests/ Citations Saturday Jason Wood, 35, 812 JC St., was arrested at 11:17 a.m. in the 800 block of JC Street and lodged in the Finney County Jail on a city warrant. Ashley Tabor, 27, 1417 W. Campbell, was cited at 9:50 a.m. in the 900 block of Campbell and released on an allegation of no proof of insurance. Ronnie Martinez, 37, 1217 W. Campbell, was arrested at 11:25 a.m. in the 500 block of Center Street on an allegation of assault and disorderly conduct. Aaron Brimm, 18, 146 Cloverleaf, was arrested at 1:18 p.m. in the 100 block of Cloverleaf on a Finney County bench warrant. Steven Turley II, 37, Scott City, was arrested at 5:17 p.m. in the 1800 block of E. Laurel on an allegation of domestic violence battery. Rian Colbert, 23, 902 1/2 N. First, was arrested at 8:04 a.m. in the 900 block of North First on

allegations of domestic violence battery and disorderly conduct. Kierra Marts, 21, 901 1/2 N. First, was cited and released at 8:20 a.m. in the 900 block of North First on allegations of domestic violence battery and disorderly conduct. Jose Herrera-Macias, 27, 1122 N. Fifth St., was cited and released at 9:07 p.m. in the 900 block of North Jennie Barker Road on an allegation of no proof of insurance. Michael Erives, 20, 303 Evans, was cited and released at 9:08 p.m. in the 1600 block of North Sixth Street on an allegation of driving while suspended. Molly Schweikhard, 20, 1525 N. 13th St., No. 1, was cited and released at 9:45 p.m. in the 1400 block of West Jenny on an allegation of no proof of insurance. June 3 Dalton Pister, 20, 306

driver’s license. May 26 Raymundo Osorio, 23, 508 W. Thompson St., was arrested at 3:13 a.m. in the 200 block of Nelson Street on allegations of driving under the influence and no valid driver’s license. Jessica Borrego, 27, 340 S. Farmland Road, No. 50, was arrested at 2:16 a.m. in the 1900 block of East Business U.S. 50 on an allegation of driving under the influence. Tom Cao, 16, 2012 Cherokee Road, was cited and released at 3:04 p.m. in the 1300 block of East Kansas Avenue on an allegation of failing to stop at an accident involving damage. Sophia Eichorn, 41, 207 S. Fourth St., was arrested at 10:45 p.m. in the 200 block of South Fourth Street on an allegation of disorderly conduct.

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God sends the storm to show that he is the only shelter

W. Bellevue, No. C, was arrested at 5 p.m. in the 2300 block of Taylor on a city warrant and allegations of interference with a local law enforcement officer and criminal use of a weapon. Ivan Diaz, 17, 1100 Ridge, was cited and released at 11:33 p.m. in the 2300 block of East Kansas Avenue on allegations of reckless driving and exhibition of speed. Jesse Wilson, 19, 516 Steockley, was arrested at 9:15 p.m. in the 500 block of Steockley on allegations of aggravated battery, two counts of aggravated assault and criminal threats. Marcos Lopez, 19, transient, was arrested at 7:21 p.m. in the 200 block of West Holmes on allegations of aggravated burglary theft and no valid

Under New Ownership Locally Owned

Get ink on your fingers.

Early registration is encouraged, but same-day sign-ups will be accepted beginning at 6:15 a.m. T-shirts and goodie bags will not be guaranteed without pre-registration. To receive an automated timing chip, you must be registered 15 minutes prior to race time. For more information and registration details, call Dan Knight at 277-2152, or (620) 521-2643, or email hrcwellnessdir@wbsnet.org.

220674

FRIDAY, June 7, 2013

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620-275-5411 www.fccgcks.org

224108

Saturday June 8th, 9am - 2pm Sandsage Bison Range Office, located on Business Hwy 83 @ 0.4mi. South of the Arkansas River Bridge Wildflower Tours

Friends of the Sandsage Bison Range and Wildlife Area guides will be available to give tours of the herd and wildlife area. The first tour will leave at 9:15am and the last tour will go out at 1:00pm. Space is limited so reservations are required for this event. Reservations can be made by calling Tom Norman at 620-474-3645 Sponsored by The Friends of Sandsage Bison Range & Wildlife Area. For more information, call (620) 276-8886 or (620) 474-3645. 224181


Region & State

Roundup Briefs High Plains fiddlers, pickers to gather

THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM

The High Plains Country Music Fiddlers, Pickers and Singers will have its monthly program Sunday at the Memorial Building on Main Street in Lakin. Sign-up will begin at 1 p.m., with the program scheduled to start at 2 p.m. All area musicians are welcome to come and join in and help provide the program for the afternoon. There will be a short break for snacks. Feel free to bring a snack to share. For more information, call Curtis Young at (620) 355-6410, Fred Hendrickson in Syracuse at (620) 640-0482, or Katie Day in Garden City at 276-7316.

FRIDAY, June 7, 2013

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Concealed-carry permit applications drop By Rick Plumlee The Wichita Eagle

(MCT) — A little more than 2,000 Kansas applied for concealed-carry gun permits in May, marking the first time this year that the monthly total has dipped under 3,000, the state’s attorney general’s office said Thursday. But the May total of 2,032 applications was still higher than any other month in the program’s history prior to this year. Before

January, the one-month record was 1,651 applications received in March 2012. The first four months of this year averaged 3,568 applications, with the record number of 4,071 coming in March. Various factors have driven the increase, including the theater shooting in Aurora, Colo., last summer and the school shooting in Connecticut in December. Concern about increased federal restrictions on gun ownership also has been a factor.

There are 60,037 residents who have an active concealed-carry license in Kansas, which established its permit law in 2006. The high demand for permits had created a back-log in processing the applications, which is done by the attorney general’s office. By law, they must be processed in 90 days. Attorney General Derek Schmidt’s office said applications are currently being processed in 80 days or less, except for those that are pending the receipt of additional information.

Sunflower tours to be offered this weekend Friends of the Sandsage Bison Range and Wildlife Area guides will be available to give wildflower tours from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday. The first tour will leave the range office, located on Business U.S. Highway 83, 0.4 miles south of the Arkansas River Bridge, at 9:15 a.m. and a second tour will go out at 11:30 a.m. Space is limited, so reservations are required for the event. Reservations can be made by calling Tom Norman at (620) 474-3645.

Community breakfast set for Saturday The American Legion Riders Community Breakfast is scheduled for 8 to 11 a.m. Sunday at 405 S. Main St. The menu will feature biscuits, gravy, bacon, sausage, scrambled eggs, potatoes, French toast, coffee and orange juice. Cost for the all-you-can-eat meal is $8. Family members of deployed service men and women eat for free.

Windsor art exhibit slated for Saturday

Becky Malewitz/Telegram

Valarie Smith will have a Windsor Hotel photo art exhibit at the Finney County Preservation Association’s guided historical tours of the Windsor Hotel on Saturday after the Beef Empire Days Parade. Her documentary on the Windsor also will be available. Tours will be from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. for a $5 donation (age 12 and younger admitted free). Also, oral histories are being sought, orders for Windsor benches will be taken and tickets for the Sept. 21 “Asleep at the Wheel” benefit concert will be on sale. For more information, call 275-4340.

Hang on!

Vanessa Main, 9, clings to her sheep on her way to a win during Thursday’s mutton busting contest at the Beef Empire Days Rodeo. Mutton busting will also take place during tonight’s and Saturday’s rodeos. There are still open spots. Those interested may meet at the northeast end of the arena a half-hour before showtime.

Western Kansas legislator announces resignation TOPEKA (AP) — A state legislator from western Kansas announced Thursday that he’s resigning later this month because he wants to spend more time with his family and can’t juggle legislative duties with a growing family business. Rep. Brian Weber said Thursday that he’ll step down immediately after the Legislature’s formal adjournment ceremony June 20. The Dodge City Republican is chairman of a House Appropriations subcommittee on social services and vice chairman

of the House Health and Human Services Committee. The 30-year-old Weber is the co-owner of a family heating and air conditioning business. He and his wife, Alicia, have a daughter, Alise, who will be a year old June 16. “I’ve got too much on my plate,” Weber said in a telephone interview. “I’ve been trying to juggle everything, and I just can’t.” Weber said his business is growing and that he plans to move to Garden City, where it has its main offices. He said he hopes to return to public service.

Cemetery staff to begin removing decorations Monday

3.99 3.74

By The Telegram Garden City cemetery staff will begin removing decorations at Valley View Cemetery and Sunset Memorial Gardens beginning Monday. Decorations will be removed due to maintenance concerns. Items that were planted in incorrect locations will also be removed. The city limits flower plantings on the north and south sides of monuments, space permitting at Valley View Cemetery. No permanent plantings are currently allowed at Sunset Memorial Gardens. The City Commission adopted a grave decorations ordinance in May 2010 stating: Artificial or cut flowers in approved permanent monument vases are permitted year-round.

3.83 Prices based on the most recent sampling of Garden City gas stations. Source: AAA Fuel Price Finder

1805 E. Mary St. 620-275-7440

Stephanie Bogner Assoc. Broker/Owner For Real Estate Help Call Me:

272-3209

Graves with no monument, flowers are to be placed at the head of the grave in the space provided for a monument until the monument is set. At no time shall flowers not in permanent monument vases, solar lights, or other decorations be placed on a grave or in the grass area around the monument from March 1 to Oct. 31. Winter decoration from Nov. 1 to Feb. 28 shall be placed around monuments so it does not interfere with equipment in the process of digging graves. All winter decorations and artificial flowers placed in the ground will be removed and disposed of by cemetery personnel on or after March 1 of each year. Memorial Day decorations are permitted one week before and two weeks after Memorial Day.

If not removed by owner, cemetery personnel shall be authorized to remove and dispose of all decorations. Persons wanting to have temporary decoration on a grave for a period not to exceed one week must get prior permission by calling the cemetery sexton’s office. Dates to be approved for temporary decorations are the deceased person’s: Birth date, death date anniversary, anniversary, Mother’s Day, Father’s Day, and national or religious holidays. Nothing will be placed on any grave or lot except monuments and markers without the special written permit of the cemetery sexton, except for flowers in permanent monument vases. Wreaths, flags, and other temporary decorations shall be removed at the cemetery sexton’s

discretion. All decorations shall be placed within the boundaries of a lot or space. Any decorations placed outside of the boundaries of lot or space shall be removed by the cemetery sexton without notice to the owner or the person placing the decoration at the location. The cemetery sexton is authorized to his or her discretion to remove and dispose of non-complying decorations. Unless an agreement has been made beforehand with the cemetery sexton, no articles will be returned to the owner or person placing them on the lot or space. Cemetery staff asks that you only pick up those decorations that belong to you. Those with questions should contact Kelly Stevenson, cemetery director, at 276-1220. 223936

American Legion Riders Present

COMMUNITY

BREAKFAST Sun., June 9, 2013 Serving from 8-11am

Finney County Humane Society

Biscuits, Gravy, Bacon, Sausage, Scrambled Eggs, Potatoes, French Toast, Coffee, Orange Juice

FREE Parvo/Distemper Vaccination Clinic

The entire community is welcome!

from 2:00 PM to 4:00 PM.

Family members of deployed service men and women EAT FOR FREE!!

Republicans in his 119th House District will pick someone to fill Weber’s seat for the balance of his two-year term, which expires in January 2015. Weber previously served as a city commissioner in Dodge City and was appointed to the House in December 2010 after thenRep. Pat George resigned to become the state’s commerce secretary. Weber retained the seat by winning 69 percent of the vote in the November 2012 general election.

$

for adults 8 ALL YOU CAN EAT

Is offering a

Saturday June 8, 2013 Puppies need a series of three shots to be fully vaccinated. Adult dogs just need one booster shot.

The 2nd Series June 22

Help us help veterans and their families!

The 3rd Series July 6

AMERICAN LEGION 405 S. Main St., Garden City, KS 620-275-6875

224284

Free will donations accepted. Location: Garden City Animal Shelter 124 Fleming Street in the garage bay

224082


A4

Opinion

FRIDAY, June 7, 2013

THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM

Remember why we chase storms Dena Sattler, Editor/publisher

By DAVE CALL

denas@gctelegram.com

Other Views

T

What they’re saying Arizona Republic on Eric Holder needing to go: During his May 23 speech on national security, President Barack Obama promised to chat with Attorney General Eric Holder about reviewing his policies for investigating the news media. “I am troubled by the possibility that leak investigations may chill the investigative journalism that holds government accountable,” the president said. It is hard to imagine an assessment more divorced from reality. The still-developing story of the Obama administration’s willingness to steamroll First Amendment rights of a free press has blown well past the stage at which even the most thorough, chin-pulling “review” of policies is likely to change anything. This debacle requires a change of Justice Department personnel. At the top. This administration has demonstrated, emphatically, that it has no problem whatsoever with putting a chill on investigative journalism. ... Justice guidelines require subpoenas of media records to be as narrowly drawn as possible, according to Arizona State University journalism professor Leonard Downie Jr., writing in the Washington Post, which he formerly edited. The AP warrants captured thousands of calls. The media company being investigated should be given reasonable notice of the intrusion. The AP had none. And the investigation — again, according to policy — must strike a balance between the public’s right to know and national security. The Justice investigations of AP and Rosen struck no such balance. ... The disturbing Internal Revenue Service scandal is also part and parcel to the administration’s control-freak behavior. And every bit as much a threat to free speech. Whether dictated from the top or created by spontaneous combustion, the IRS harassment of conservative groups prior to the 2012 elections stifled speech. The administration may not have issued directives to IRS apparatchiks, but it certainly set the tone for what would occur. In 2008, President-elect Obama promised the most transparent administration in history. That would be a policy worth reviewing. New York Times on smart change in Iran policy: The Obama administration has made a useful modification to its Iran policy by lifting sanctions on companies that want to sell cell phones, laptops, encryption software and other similar technology to ordinary Iranians. This should improve the ability of Iranians to circumvent their government’s unrelenting crackdown on dissenting opinion and communicate with each other and the outside world without reprisal. The decision, announced by the State and Treasury Departments on Thursday, is a departure from the administration’s general approach, which over four years has been to increase sanctions in an effort to persuade Iran to abandon its nuclear program. The Obama administration has definitely not repudiated that approach. ... The technology decision, which comes two weeks before Iran’s presidential election, inserts the United States into Iranian politics on the side of political freedom in a way the Obama administration did not during the last election in 2009. That election was denounced as fraudulent by the Iranian opposition, which, using various social networking services and Web sites, staged months of protests that, in turn, triggered a vicious government crackdown. Just what impact the technology decision might have on the presidential election on June 14 is unclear. ... This should have been done sooner. Tensions between Iran and the United States — over Syria and terrorism, as well as the nuclear program — will almost certainly get worse, barring some unexpected new policies in Tehran. But America will be in a stronger position if it is seen as standing with the Iranian people.

Today’s quotes “ ... I don’t like to smoke; I won’t stay in a smoking room. I want to smoke; I will smoke outside. You will never be able to please everybody, but this request is legitimate.” — Online remark selected by the editorial staff from comments at GCTelegram.com in response to a story on a request from a group of local hoteliers for the city to change its anti-smoking ordinance to allow some rooms for smoking.

market.”

“We have a lot of commercial stuff starting to roll through. Rental is still as tight as can be. I don’t see any reason why it will not continue to be a good

— Vicki Bulkley, owner/broker of Heritage Realty, from a story in today’s edition about the local housing market.

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A better place to do business W

hat you are now hearing across the land is a collective whine. Blue-state Democrats are upset that Texas Gov. Rick Perry dares come and play in their sandboxes, and worse, threatens to “poach” jobs from their states. The website Politico reports that Perry’s attempts to lure jobs to Texas are “infuriating to prominent Democrats around the country.” Gov. Jerry Brown of California — a state that is Perry’s foremost target — has dismissed Perry’s handiwork in scatological terms. Democrats from another target, Illinois, huff and puff about the temerity of it all. “He better not take our businesses away,” Sen. Dick Durbin warned. He better not or what, exactly? What recourse does Illinois have, except improving its own business environment? Which would mean Rick Perry is good for Texas ... and for Illinois. Perry is exploiting the genius of our federalist system for all it’s worth. In his businessrecruitment trips, accompanied by trash-talking ads and Texas-sized braggadocio, he is subjecting other states to the fire of competition. In an ad in Crain’s Chicago Business, Perry offered businesses in the state “an escape route to economic freedom ... a route to Texas.” This is exactly how the Founders imagined the interplay among the states working, although in the era prior to the arrival of Texas in the union, they might have had trouble imagining Rick Perry. The George Mason University scholar Michael Greve refers to the system as “competitive” federalism. “This federalism

relies on exit and mobility — of capital, and of labor — as a means of disciplining government,” he writes. “Competitive federalism is a terrific prescription for a big, diverse country with a highly mobile citizenry and a national government that responds poorly to democratic demands.” Rick Perry may be boastful, but he has a lot to boast about. Texas had a 6.4 percent unemployment rate in April. When President Barack Obama recently made Austin, Texas, his first stop on a trip touting job creation, Perry welcomed him with an ad noting, accurately, “Over the last 10 years, Texas created 33 percent of the net new jobs nationwide.” Perry’s opponents assume that there must be something unfair or wrong about this. Texas, they scoff, is benefiting from an energy boom. Well, states like California and New York also have oil and gas resources, but refuse to exploit them fully for political reasons. Regardless, Texas job growth ranges much more widely than the energy sector. In the past year, according to the Texas Workforce Commission, the category of Mining and Logging, which includes oil and gas, has grown by nearly 17,000 jobs. But Trade, Transportation, and Utilities added 58,000. Professional and Business Services added 62,000. Leisure

and Hospitality, 57,000. Texas also is portrayed as a pit of backwardness. It’s not so, as Chuck DeVore of the Texas Public Policy Foundation — himself a transplant from California — points out. A calculation of poverty rates from the Census Bureau that takes account of cost of living found that California had the highest poverty rate in the country from 2009 through 2011, at 23.5 percent; the adjusted rate for Texas was about 17 percent. He writes that the two states are “remarkably similar in size, diversity and natural resources,” but “they differ in their governance.” Texas benefits from low tax rates, a low cost of living, light regulation, checks on abusive lawsuits and its status as a right-to-work state. California has none of the above. Although its unemployment rate has been declining, it is still 9 percent, the fourth-highest in the nation. “Poaching” jobs sounds pejorative, but it amounts to making it easier for people to do business. The waste hauler Waste Connections Inc. moved from Sacramento, Calif., to a location near Houston. Its CEO told the website The Fiscal Times that it took the company 16 months to design and build a new building in Texas, when the permitting alone would have taken three years in California. If blue-state Democrats want Rick Perry to stop bothering them, they should quit whining and start learning from his example. Email Rich Lowry at comments. lowry@nationalreview.com.

Bachmann’s welcome departure I

t looks as though we jackals of the “lamestream media” won’t have Michele Bachmann to kick around anymore. With just a hint of Nixonian rancor in her voice, she announced — via a lengthy YouTube rant in the middle of the night a short while ago — she would not seek re-election to the U.S. House of Representatives. More’s the pity. Bachmann is a master of the political theater of the absurd and a reliable source of mirth who provides a wealth of grist for the media’s ridicule mill. At every opportunity, she shoots off wild statements in every direction — not caring much about their accuracy or where they land. Who can forget, for example, her assertion on intelligent design? “There are hundreds and hundreds of scientists, many of them Nobel Prize winners, who believe in intelligent design,” she said. (Actually, the number of credentialed scientists who believe in intelligent design would fit in a broom closet, and if any of them have a Nobel Prize, I haven’t heard of them.) She can be mean-spirited, I’ll grant you that. She accused former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s aide, Huma Abedin, of having close ties with the Muslim Brotherhood. (She didn’t). And she used a broad brush when it came to painting opponents un-American. (They weren’t). She saw fascism in Obama’s health care plan and an apocalypse in vaccinating children against disease. OK, so maybe all of that isn’t so funny. But how about seeing the Broadway Show

COMMENTARY Donald Kaul otherwords.org

“The Lion King” as gay propaganda because, she said, it was written by a gay guy? Or finding “commonality” between the war zone in Iraq and the Mall of America? Or suggesting that Glenn Beck could resolve the national debt snafu if we only “gave him the numbers”? She became the first cardcarrying dingbat to launch a major presidential bid. To me, her greatest and most hilarious accomplishment was being named to the House Intelligence Committee. Who says House Speaker John Boehner doesn’t have a sense of humor? To paraphrase a humorous, self-deprecating speech made by South Dakota Democrat George McGovern after he’d lost the 1972 election to Richard Nixon: She wanted to run for president in the worst way, and so she did. Her ill-fated White House campaign should have used the slogan — “Smarter than Rick Perry, prettier than Newt Gingrich.” It would have been as close to the truth as anything in that train wreck — which is now under federal and state investigations. The Republican Party has arrived at a curious moment, when it is possible for someone who doesn’t know anything about anything — science, government, economics (think Sarah Palin) — to be taken seriously as a national leader by the elders of the party. In Virginia, we’ve just witnessed a Republican primary

that nominated a black man, E.W. Jackson, for lieutenant governor. Good for them, you might say. About time, you might say. Except that Jackson believes that homosexuality is a mental disease — akin to, if not the same as, pedophilia. He says that Planned Parenthood has been more lethal to blacks than the KKK and that President Barack Obama sees the world from a Muslim perspective. That kind of black man. All you have to do to win over Republicans these days is to shoot your mouth off in a fashion that impresses the party’s knuckle-dragging ignoramuses. Even worse, to fail to do so can be politically lethal. I don’t mean to come off as a know-it-all. I make mistakes. As a matter of fact, I made one just the other day. I wrote that Jeannette Rankin, the pacifist lawmaker who voted against both World Wars in the House of Representatives, was from Missouri. She was not. She was from Montana. I can explain. I had thought she was from North Dakota, but I looked it up and saw it was Montana. So I went back to my computer and wrote “Missouri.” It could have happened to anyone. Well, maybe not anyone, but it could have happened to Michele Bachmann, who once mixed up the Iowa birthplaces of actor John Wayne and serial killer John Wayne Gacy. I apologize to Jeannette Rankin fans. OtherWords columnist Donald Kaul lives in Ann Arbor, Mich. Distributed by www.otherwords. org.

he tragic death of noted weather researcher and former Discovery Channel storm chaser Tim Samaras has shaken all of us in the meteorological community. He was one of three people killed in the middle of a chase last week in Oklahoma, but he will always be remembered as a scientist first and storm chaser second — someone who helped improve our knowledge of tornadoes and lightning in order to make our lives safer. But the loss of Samaras and his team is a tragic reminder that storm chasing is a dangerous pursuit. With the advent of radar applications for smartphones, precision storm warnings and GPS devices, it may seem as if anyone can simply jump in a car and easily find tornadoes. However, this is akin to thinking one can rewire a house by purchasing electrical supplies and doing an online search for instructions. People interested in storm chasing should, at minimum, take a storm spotting class, read several books about chasing safely and find an experienced partner. They should also respect basic safety rules such as never chasing in cities, at night, or in areas with hills and trees that can obstruct lines of sight. Finally, as the events leading up to Samaras’ death revealed, chasers should maintain a safe distance and have escape routes mapped out in case a storm suddenly changes direction. You might ask: Why not give up chasing entirely? Even with the dangers, there are good reasons to chase and get as close as we safely can to these meteorological monsters. Unfortunately, chasing is still one of the best methods for weather researchers to collect data about tornadoes. While we understand the large-scale factors that cause supercell thunderstorms, meteorologists still are learning why some storms produce tornadoes while others do not. There is simply no good way to measure the near-storm environment without going to the storms themselves and deploying equipment. Not all storm chasers are doing research, of course. There are other reasons — some laudable, some not — to pursue tornadoes. Some chasers serve as severe weather spotters for the Weather Service and feed information to the news media to alert the public — often providing crucial warnings needed to save lives. Others brave the storms to teach classes of future meteorologists. Some, however, lead tours to cater to the curious, and some simply chase to view nature’s power up close and take videos to post online. American meteorologist Chuck Doswell, who helped develop the concept of the supercell, has been worried for some time about the growth of chasing and the risks involved. Since the 1990s, he’s been warning that it would only be a matter of time until one of us would be killed chasing a storm. Last week, his worst fears were realized. Tim Samaras’ death showed that even experienced, conservative professionals can make mistakes and wind up in the wrong place at the wrong time. So, here’s a little advice to the chasers, experienced or otherwise: Please respect the storm. Avoid cities, avoid night chases and remember that it is better to miss a tornado than to risk your life or your property. Some tornadoes and storms simply cannot be chased, and you just have to write them off. When people ask if a chase was successful, the best response is, “No one was killed or injured, so it was a success.” More than getting photos, videos or even scientific data, that should be our top priority: returning everyone safely home.

Dave Call has been at Ball State since 2007 and teaches classes in physical geography, elementary meteorology, severe local storms and broadcast meteorology. Each spring, he leads students on stormchasing trips across the Great Plains.


THE Garden City Telegram

FRIDAY, June 7, 2013

A5

Cattle working: Contest a chance for workers to shine Continued from Page A1

Hammond said only 11.5 points separated first place from last place on Thursday, which is a testament to the quality of area cattle workers. “As you can see from the turnout, these guys want to show what they know,� he said. “Super turnout. Super cattle workers. It was a great day.� The top three teams will receive prizes and the top team will also get gold belt buckles, Hammond said. Thursday’s contest was a first for Tracy Housholder, Lisa Holthaus and Jerrod Beard, a team from Syracuse sponsored by Dan Prowse, manager of Premier

Cattle Company. Housholder said she wasn’t completely sure what to expect during the competition, but applying de-wormer, vaccinations and ear tags is something they do frequently. In general, she thought most of the competition would be based on a team’s technique — where shots are placed, where ear tags and implants are supposed to go. “Everything we do is very important ‌ for the safety of the cattle and the people that are going to be eating the beef later,â€? she said. Referring to an educational presentation held before the event that highlighted the big picture aspect of the beef indus-

try, Housholder said she found it interesting to listen. “I mean you don’t think about the whole picture, you think about what you’re doing, why you’re giving your shots. It boils down to safety. It really does,� she said. Before the contest began, the three judges told the teams a few things to expect. Zach Conine, of vaccine-supplier Zoetis, judged vaccinations. “It’s pretty simple. It’s stuff you do every day. As far as the judging criteria goes, change your needles. Proper needle selection is one of the categories, along with proper hydration and preparation of vaccines,� he said. Wade Patterson, Lallemand Animal Nutrition, said he would

be watching overall how teams ran cattle through the chute, looking for things like how calm they keep animals entering the chute before the head gate shut on them, not slamming the head gate too much, and pretty much keeping the cattle flowing smoothly through the processing. Carlie Rooney, of Gold Standard Labs, said she would be looking for proper use of the tagging device in the ear, and proper placement of the ear tag. “We’re also going to do BVD testing. We’re not judging that; we’re testing for persistently infected animals,� she said. Bovine Viral Diarrhea is a viral disease, she said, and a persistently infected animal is born with the

disease. Infected animals spread viral particles constantly, up to 10 million particles per unit of secretions like urine, feces and mucous. That’s a problem for feedyards because an infected animal can quickly pass the virus to others. BVD lowers the immune defenses of cattle making them more susceptible to other diseases. Rooney said BVD is found in about four per 1,000 head, and costs the beef industry about $3 billion a year. “If there’s even one of them in a pen it can wreak havoc,� she said. Sponsors of the contest included Elanco, Finney County Feedyard, Gold Standard Labs, Lallemand Animal Nutrition and Temple Tag Inc.

Real estate: Home sales up in April, but housing crunch persists Continued from Page A1

Bulkley said it would be nice to have an incentive for first-time buyers again, such as the tax credit offered through the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008. “That would be a huge help,� she said. However, the market seems to be, “steady and strong, and I don’t really see any changes,� she added. Jon Fort, owner/broker of ARC Real Estate in Garden City, said 88 homes currently are on the market in Finney County, Garden City and Holcomb. “I would say sales are

brisk,� Fort said. “We still don’t have the inventory that would be nice.� But if homes are priced right, they sell rapidly. “The better market would be in that $125,000 to $175,000 range. Most of those would have four bedrooms and a two-car garage,� Fort said. Higher-end homes can be found in Buffalo Heights or Antler Ridge, and homes in the $70,000 to $80,000 range can be found in Holcomb. And many in that price range are made into rentals. Fort said there is “definitely� a shortage of rental property, and there is dis-

cussion of new construction, the bulk of which is available in Holcomb because there are more lots available. Garden City, he said, has a good board of Realtors that cooperates well and shares information with items such as the multiple listing system. Financing, he said, isn’t as bad here as in a lot of other areas. Fort added that being an agricultural community, Garden City is more conservative than larger municipalities. People may have money, but they choose to invest it into their businesses rather than fancier homes.

According to Garden City Board of Realtors figures, four one-to-two-bedroom homes were sold in April; 10 three-bedroom homes; and 22 homes with four bedrooms or more. One one to two bedroom home sold for $40,000 to $50,000; one that was $60,000 to $70,000; one that was $120,000 to $140,000 and one $200,000 to $250,000. Among three-bedroom homes, two sold for $70,000 to $80,000; one for $100,000 to $120,000; two for $140,000 to $160,000; one for $200,000 to $250,000 and one in the $300,000 to $400,000 range. In the four-bedroom selection, one sold for $40,000 to

$50,000; one for $80,000 to $90,000; two for $80,000 to $90,000; five for $100,000 to $120,000; two for $120,000 to $140,000; six in the $160,000 to $180,000 range; one in the $180,000 to $200,000 range; and two from $200,000 to $250,000. For April 2012, one one-bedroom home sold for less than $30,000; one home in the $30,000 to $40,000 range; one in the $40,000 to $50,000; one in the $50,000 to $60,000 range; one in the $70,000 to $80,000 range; two in the $160,000 to $180,000 range; and one in the $200,000 to $250,000 range. Also, a three bedroom

home sold for less than $30,000; one three-bedroom home for $60,000 to $70,000; three three-bedroom houses for $70,000 to $80,000; three three-bedroom homes for $80,000 to $90,000; two three-bedroom homes for $90,000 to $100,000; one three-bedroom home for $120,000 to $140,000; and two three-bedroom homes for $160,000 to $180,000. In the four-bedroom and up segment, one home sold for $80,000 to $90,000; one for $100,000 to $120,000; one for $120,000 to $140,000; one for $140,000 to $160,000; two for $160,000 to $180,000; and one for $180,000 to $200,000.

Monitoring: NSA surveillance of Verizon phone records revealed Continued from Page A1

protect the country from terror attacks against the need to safeguard Americans’ privacy. The surveillance powers are granted under the post9/11 Patriot Act, which was renewed in 2006 and again in 2011. While the scale of the program might not have been

news to some congressional leaders, the disclosure offered a public glimpse into a program whose breadth is not widely understood. Sen. Mark Udall, a Colorado Democrat who serves on the Intelligence Committee, said it was the type of surveillance that “I have long said would shock the public if they knew about it.� The government has hard-

ly been forthcoming. Wyden released a video of himself pressing Director of National Intelligence James Clapper on the matter during a Senate hearing in March. “Does the NSA collect any type of data at all on millions or hundreds of millions of Americans?� Wyden asked. “No, sir,� Clapper answered.

“It does not?� Wyden pressed. Clapper quickly softened his answer. “Not wittingly,� he said. “There are cases where they could, inadvertently perhaps, collect — but not wittingly.� There was no immediate comment from Clapper’s office Thursday on his testimony in March.

The public is now on notice that the government has been collecting data — even if not listening to the conversations — on every phone call every American makes, a program that has operated in the shadows for years, under President George W. Bush, and continued by President Barack Obama. “It is very likely that

of managing a park and all the animals and plants within the park boundaries. A good example that is a bit closer to home is the Sandsage Bison Range. Managed by the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism, the bison range is located just south of Garden City and is home to a herd of about 22 bison, our Kansas state mammal. It also boasts an impressive variety of other animals and plants that are native to the sandsage prairie ecosystems, such as ornate box turtles, Mississippi kites, multiple snake species, pheasants, sand sagebrush and giant sandreed. Managing such a diverse community requires dedication, flexibility and the ability to work in extreme weather conditions (just like our staff at the zoo!). It is an incredibly rewarding career, knowing that you are researching and protecting animals in their natural habitat, but it is also very hard work. When I was surveying for the Niangua darter, it was normal to trek for miles carrying backpacks full of gear to get to an appropriate fish habitat. Once we reached our stream, we faced the physically demanding task of snorkeling against the current of the water for hours on end, avoiding snakes and leeches in the process. But for me, the opportunity to see these rare fish in their native homes was worth the slight discomfort. This summer, students going into the seventh and eighth grades have the opportunity to experience first-hand the challenges and rewards of being a wildlife biologist. In our Summer Edventure “Junior Wildlife Biologist� camp that takes place July 22 to 26, students will spend time at the zoo and also at Sandsage Bison Range learning sampling and management techniques that real professionals use in the field on a daily basis. We will look at questions such as why fire can be a good thing for an ecosystem and learn how to sample a population of animals to gain understanding about the number

of a particular species in an area. But hurry and sign up, since space in this (and our other) camps are limited! You won’t want to miss this fun opportunity

to explore our zoo and the unique prairie that surrounds us in a way that you have never done before. Make sure to contact the zoo at 276-1250, or visit our

website at www.leerichardsonzoo.org for more information about our summer activities and available camp spaces. We hope to see you soon!

business records orders like this exist for every major American telecommunication company, meaning that if you make calls in the United States the NSA has those records,� wrote Cindy Cohn, general counsel of the nonprofit digital rights group Electronic Frontier Foundation, and staff attorney Mark Rumold, in a blog post.

Study and practice of wildlife biology among paths to zoo work question I get asked a lot when I give programs is: “what classes did you have to take in school in order to work at a zoo?� I make sure to tell the students that science and math are extremely important if you want a job working with animals and that in order to work at a zoo you need at least a bachelor’s degree in a science field. My particular degree is a bachelor’s of science in wildlife ecology and conservation. I love working at the zoo and interacting with animals and nature on a daily basis. However, as cool as working at the zoo is, there are many other careers out there that have an environmental focus, including wildlife biologists. A wildlife biologist is someone who studies and/ or manages wild animals and their habitats. This is a huge undertaking and therefore a very broad field. For instance, before I started work at Lee Richardson Zoo, I worked for the Missouri Department of Conservation performing field studies on endangered fish. I spent an entire summer snorkeling in the Ozarks of Missouri surveying spring-fed streams for the threatened Niangua darter. We would count the darters when we found them and map their location using GPS data in order to determine fluctuations in their populations. We would then identify other fish in the area to see if there was a relationship between, say, the Greenside darter and the location of the Niangua and estimate the size of the Niangua in order to try and gauge the age of the fish. We also focused on other endangered and threatened Missouri fish species including the Neosho madtom, Topeka shiner and the Ozark cavefish. This took the entire summer, and this was just for a few fish species in one state! Yet this is typical work for a wildlife biologist. Sometimes the work is very focused, as in my case with the endangered fish. Other times the work can be broader, such as a biologist who is in charge

Garden City Area Entertainment

*Members and Guests Only at Private clubs

June 6 - June 12

Join us for

Monday Night Bingo: Bingo 7pm

*Members and Guests Only at Private clubs

Eagles Lodge

N. Highway 83 and Mary

620-276-7361

June 6 - Open 4pm; Aerie Trustee meeting 7:00 p.m. Aerie Meeting 7:30 p.m. A Fraternal June 7 - Open 4pm; Commemorative Air Force Dinner 6:00 p.m. Organization June 8 - Open 4pm June 22: Fulton Street Band Open Mon.-Sat. June 9 - CLOSED 8:30 pm - 12:30 pm 4:30-10 p.m. Now booking Weddings & Other Events. We have the June 10 - CLOSED best dance floor in town. For details contact Judy Smith at 620-276-3732. June 11- Open 4pm; Gun Club Meeting 7:00 p.m. Rodeo Club Meeting 7:00 p.m. June 12 - Open 4pm; Bingo/Pull Tabs Mini- 6:30 Reg. - 7:00pm Mini games start at 6:30pm • Regular Bingo starts at 7pm Doors open at 6pm. Open to the Public.

Garden City Elks Lodge #1404 • 905 Kansas Plaza • Garden City • 276-3732

Thursday

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BRAIN BUSTER TRIVIA 6:30-8:30pm

Pulled Pork Sandwiches $5.00

Million Dollar Band 9 pm

Bingo Pull Tabs!

$1 Off Drafts & Pitchers Of Beer Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, & Friday

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GARDEN CITY’S COUNTRY MUSIC BAR

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AMERICAN LEGION CLUB

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A6

Religion

FRIDAY, June 7, 2013

Church Briefs Effectiveness of prayer explored The effectiveness of prayer will be explored at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at Lifetree Café, 1110 Campus Drive, Suite C. The program, “Prayer: Could a Conversation With God Change Your Life?,” features an exclusive filmed interview with former PGA golf pro Wally Armstrong found an unusual way to make his prayers more meaningful. “There’s a new level,” he said, “ I was a believer in prayer but I found there’s a big difference between believing something is true, and experiencing something is real.” Armstrong is the author of “The Mulligan: A Parable of Second Chances.” Admission to the 60-minute event is free. Snacks and beverages will be available. Lifetree Café is a place where people gather for conversation about life and faith in a casual coffeehouse-type setting. Questions about Lifetree may be directed to Craig Cable at (970) 292-4697 or ccable@group.com.

Bible Christian Church 1404 E. Mary St. Saturday: Young at Heart group will meet at 10:30 a.m. for the Beef Empire Days parade and then have lunch in the park. Sunday: Worship Team practice, 8 a.m.; early prayer time, 8:30 a.m.; worship celebration, nursery, Praise & Play, Sunday school and adult discipleship classes, 9 and 10:30 a.m.; worship celebration, 10:10 a.m.; kid’s church, 10:30 a.m.; seventh- to ninth-grade campers leave for camp at 12:15 p.m. Tuesday: 2-3-4 Motorcycle Ministry, 7 p.m. Thursday: Ladies Bible Study, 9:30 a.m.; ministry reporting meeting, 7 p.m., followed by the elders’ meeting. For more information, call 276-8356.

Calvary Reformed Baptist Church of Garden City 1505 E. Spruce St. Sunday: Morning service, 10:30 a.m. at various homes (call for meeting location); evening service, 6:30 p.m. in the chapel at Garden Valley Retirement Village. For more information, call (719) 336-4780, 275-8320 or 805-1768 or visit www. cause-of-god.com.

Church of the Brethren 505 N. Eighth St. Sunday: Sunday school,

9:30 a.m.; worship service, 10:45 a.m., with Pastor John Elder giving the message “So That I Might Proclaim”; children’s church is provided during the morning worship service; carry-in dinner, noon (bring a nonperishable food item to be donated to Emmaus House); youth meeting, 4:30 p.m. Tuesday: Quilting, 10 a.m.; Commission, 6:30 p.m.; General Board, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday: Adult Bible Study, 7 p.m. For more information, call 276-7391, email gccob@ att.net or visit www.gardencitycob.org.

HOPE Puppets, 12:30 p.m.; 2 p.m. departure for kids attending Creative Arts Camp; TNC Junior High Youth Group and Unbinding the Gospel Bible Study, 7 p.m. Monday: Chi Rho Camp I, 10 a.m. Wednesday: LED, 6:45 p.m.; Gospel Choir and youth game time, 7 p.m. Thursday: Trustee meeting, 7 p.m.; kids leave for Primary I Camp. June 14: Office closed. For more information, visit www.fccgcks.org.

Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

2708 N. Third St. Sunday: Small groups, Higher Ground, GroZone and Little Seedlings Preschool, 9:30 a.m.; Jam/ Junior Jam and worship service, 10:45 a.m. Wednesday: Hazelet and Nusser LifeTraks, 6:30 p.m. (use north door). For more information, visit www.fsbcgc.com or call 276-7859.

619 Mary St. Sunday: Sacrament meeting, 10 a.m.; Primary class and Sunday school, 11:20 a.m.; Relief Society, Young Women, Melchizedek Priesthood and Aaronic Priesthood classes, 12:10 p.m.; Stake meetings, 3:30 p.m. Monday: Family home evening. Wednesday: Play group, 10 a.m. to noon at Deane Wiley Park; youth activities and Primary girls achievement day activities, 7 p.m. Thursday: Ward missionary correlation meeting, 7 p.m. For more information about the Gospel, call the full-time English- and Spanish-speaking missionaries serving in Garden City at (620) 875-3715 or 2763363 or visit www.mormon. org, www.LDS.org or www. Liahona.LDS.org.

Cornerstone Church 2901 N. Eighth St. Sunday: Worship services and children’s church, 9 and 11 a.m. For more information, call the church office at 275-5965 or visit www.cornerstonepeople.org.

Fellowship Baptist Church 506 N. First St. Sunday: Sunday school and Adult Bible Study, 10 a.m.; worship service, 11 a.m.; Bible study and prayer, 6 p.m.; youth group, 7 p.m.; Spanish services include Escuela Domincal at 10 a.m. and Servicio de Adoracion at 11 a.m.; Myanmar Christian Fellowship, 1 to 3 p.m. For more information, call 275-5304.

First Christian Church 306 N. Seventh St. Sunday: Sunday school, 9 a.m.; worship service, 10 a.m., with Pastor Scott Schurle giving the message “Believers Fellowship”;

First Southern Baptist Church

First United Methodist Church 1106 N. Main St. Saturday: Saturday Night Light, 5:45 p.m., with the Rev. David Bell giving the message. Sunday: Worship, 8:30 a.m. at Lee Richardson Zoo and 10:45 a.m. in the sanctuary, with the Rev. Bell giving the message “More Than All”; Sunday school, 9:30 a.m. Monday: Middle School Camp at Horizon Camp through June 14. Tuesday: Staff meeting and Women’s Bible Study, 8:30 a.m.; Emmaus reunion groups, noon; Kitchen Table Bible Study and Staff Parish Relations, 7 p.m. Wednesday: Beth Moore Women’s Bible Study and Hands On Children’s Mission Opportunity, 9:30 a.m.; Women’s Bible Study, 1 p.m.; Women’s Bible Study and Men’s Bible Study, 7 p.m.; Praise Band practice, 8:15 p.m. Thursday: Emmaus Reunion Group, noon; Circles of Hope, 5:30 p.m.; YANC, 8 p.m. June 14: Mother’s Day Out, 9 a.m. June 15: Emmaus monthly gathering, 7 p.m. For more information on events, visit www.fumcgc.com or call 275-9171.

Garden City Church of the Nazarene 2720 Campus Drive Sunday: “God’s Big Backyard” Vacation Bible School, with activities taking place from 6 to 8:30 p.m. Sunday through Thursday for ages 3 through sixth grade. Dinner will be provided for each registered camper. Call the office to pre-register. For more information,

call 275-4278, email office@ gcnaz.com or visit www. gcnaz.com.

Garden Valley Church 1701 N. Third St. Sunday: Prayer Partners, 8:30 a.m.; Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship service, 10:45 a.m., with Pastor Steve Ensz giving the message “All Creations Groans”; Vacation Bible School workers, noon. Monday: “Kingdom Rock: Where Kids Stand Strong for God” Vacation Bible School for ages 3 to fifth grade, featuring Biblelearning activities, songs, teamwork-building games, yummy treats and more, with sessions from 9 a.m. to noon through June 14. Each day concludes with Fanfare Finale, with family members and friends encouraged to join in daily at 11:30 a.m. Thursday: Women’s Sewing Group, 9 a.m. June 14: Friday Night Small Group, 6:30 p.m. For more information, visit www.gardenvalleychurch.com or call 276-7410.

Garden Valley Retirement Village (nondenominational) 1505 E. Spruce St. Sunday: Worship service, 9 a.m., with the message given by Pastor Bob Trosper, associate pastor of Church of Christ. Special music will be presented by Church of Christ. Wednesday: “Celebrate Your Faith” devotional service, 7 p.m., featuring “The Copeland, Ks. Generation Gap Men’s Quartet.” For more information, call 275-5036.

Grace Bible Church 2595 Jennie Barker Road Sunday: Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship service, 10:45 a.m., and including a Children’s Day message and a recognition of all children present. Wednesday: Midweek Bible study and prayer service, 7 p.m. For more information, call 275-6701.

Journey To The Cross

the Garden City Telegram

information, call (620) 521-1949, (620) 290-0672 or 275-0760. The Christian Fellowship gatherings each month include a free supper at 7 p.m., with Bible study and devotional fellowship time at 7:30 p.m. During the warm weather months, come and participate in the arena steer ropings at 5 p.m. All who attend the Cowboy Church services on the last Tuesday of each month will receive free cowboy pocket Bibles.

p.m.; men’s service, 7 p.m. For more information or ride to church, visit Templo Emmanuel on Facebook or call 275-7667.

The Apostolic Church

New Life Community Church 1110 Campus Drive Sunday: Worship, 10 a.m.; Teen Ministries, 7 p.m. Tuesday: Connect with Lifetree Café, 7:30 p.m. For more information, visit www.newlifechurchgc. org or call 272-6198.

Pierceville Federated Church 203 E. Avenue A Sunday: Sunday school, 9:45 a.m.; worship service, 10:45 a.m., with the Rev. Terry Major returning to the series in the book of Acts with “Paul’s Ephesian Ministry, Part One.” Monday: Board, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday: Men’s fellowship/study, 6:30 a.m. at Teen House. Thursday: Pierceville Ladies’ Bible Study, 10 a.m. at Martha Major’s home. For more information, call the church at (620) 3355228.

3102 Schulman Ave. Saturday: Outreach prayer, 9:30 a.m.; outreach meeting, 10 a.m.; church prayer, 6 p.m. Sunday: Prayer, 9:30 a.m.; worship service, 10 a.m.; Sunday school classes, 10:30 a.m.; prayer, 6 p.m.; evangelistic service with the Rev. James Charles, 6:30 p.m.; the Rev. Steve Carrier from Salina will be the guest preacher for the morning and evening services. Wednesday: Prayer, 7 p.m.; Church Bible Study, 7:30 p.m. Note: Other available services provided include home Bible study, hospital visitations, prayer for the homebound and bilingual services. Live radio broadcast 24/7 is available at www.holyghostradio.com. For more information, call 275-8535.

The Presbyterian Church 1719 Texas St. Sunday: Worship service, 10:45 a.m., followed by fellowship. Monday: 88 Hrs. practice; Vacation Bible School at Trinity Lutheran Church through June 14. Wednesday: Adult Bible Study, 6 p.m.; choir practice, 7:30 p.m.; Worship and Prayer Team, 8:30 p.m. Thursday: Deacons, 7 p.m. June 14: Women’s dinner, 5:30 p.m. at Ward’s Cafe. For more information, call 275-9141 or visit www. pcgardencity.org.

St. Thomas’ Episcopal Church 710 N. Main St. Sunday: Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; morning prayer, 10:15 a.m., followed by coffee hour. For more information, call 276-3173.

Three Hierarchs Orthodox Christian Church

Second Missionary Baptist Church

2009 N. Main St. Today: Akathist, 5 p.m. Saturday: 9th Hour and Great Vespers, 5 p.m., followed by confessions. Sunday: Orthros and confessions, 8:45 a.m.; Divine Liturgy, 10 a.m., followed by a luncheon; Catechumen class, 1 p.m. For more information, call the church at 271-0811 or visit www.orthodoxkansas.org.

1107 N. Main St. Sunday; Sunday school, 10 a.m.; worship service, 11 a.m.; Bible study, 6 p.m. For more information, call (620) 757-1566.

1205 W. Maple St. Registration forms are being accepted for Rodeo Bible Camp, which is set for June 20 through 23. The Rodeo Bible Camp will take the place of the regular meeting this month. Cowboy Church services are normally held on the last Tuesday of each month at the F-Diamond Roping Arena, 1205 W. Maple St. Journey To The Cross is the Garden City chapter of Fellowship of Christian Cowboys and is a nondenominational Christian organization. For more

Templo Emmanuel Asamblea de Dios

1311 New York Ave. Sunday: Prayer time, 9:15 a.m.; Sunday school, 9:45 a.m.; worship service and sermon, 11 a.m., with Fidel Martinez, pastor, as the speaker; evening praise and worship service, 6 p.m. Monday: Music practice, 7 p.m. Tuesday: Prayer, 7 p.m. Wednesday: Prayer, 6:30

3004 N. Third St. Sunday: Prayer for the service, 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.; worship service, 10:15 a.m. and 6 p.m., led by Pastor Marty Younger; Refinery Youth, 6 p.m. Wednesday: Refinery Youth, 7 p.m. For more information, call 276-3825 or visit www. wordoflifegcks.com.

The veterans’ monument would be placed in front of the city’s Diamond Stadium. City Councilman Brian Tisdale says the design shows a World War II soldier mourning a comrade and isn’t meant to be religious. However, William Burgess of the humanist group says it still comes down to a government putting a religious symbol on public property.

Pilgrims to converge on shrine

and soldiers were deployed in Baghdad to secure the processions. Pilgrims have to undergo several searches before reaching the gates of Imam Moussa al-Kadhim shrine. Many of the main streets in the capital have been closed in recent days to prevent attacks on the walking pilgrims. No significant attacks have been reported, Ibrahim said.

Spanish Assembly of God Church

Word of Life Church

Religion Briefs CINCINNATI (AP) — A jury found an Ohio archdiocese discriminated against a teacher fired after becoming pregnant via artificial insemination, leaving legal experts expecting an appeal they say could have a much wider legal impact. Christa Dias, who was fired from two schools in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cincinnati in October 2010, was awarded more than $170,000 Monday after winning her federal anti-discrimination lawsuit against the archdiocese. Steven Goodin, the attorney for the archdiocese and the schools, contended Dias was fired for violating her contract, which required her to comply with the teachings of the Catholic church. The case, viewed as a barometer on the degree to which religious organizations can regulate employees’ lives, is the second lawsuit filed in the last two years against the archdiocese over the firing of an unmarried pregnant

teacher. Legal experts believe it will definitely end up in an appeals court. Jessie Hill, a professor of civil rights and constitutional law at Case Western Reserve University School of Law in Cleveland, believes the “ministerial exception” could be raised. The archdiocese argued before trial that Dias, who was a computer technology teacher, was a “ministerial employee,” a position that has not been clearly defined by the courts.

Amish sects differ LANCASTER, Pa. (AP) — Conservative Amish groups have larger families than other Amish and their children are far less likely to leave the church, a trend that is expected to bring dramatic changes for them in the coming years, according to a book on the distinctive religious group being published this week. “The Amish,” a 500-page overview of the Christian followers known for traditional dress and the use of horse-and-buggy transportation, identified 40 distinct groups and a variety of

permitted practices. “They may all look alike on the outside from an external perspective, but the fact of the matter is there are over 2,000 different ways of expressing Amishness in terms of daily practice,” said coauthor Don Kraybill, senior fellow at Elizabethtown College’s Young Center for Anabaptist and Pietist Studies.

Humanist groups sues Lake Elsinore LAKE ELSINORE, Calif. (AP) — A humanist group is suing a California city for funding a monument depicting a soldier kneeling at a cross. The Riverside PressEnterprise reports that the American Humanist Association served Lake Elsinore with the suit on Monday. The suit claims the Riverside County community violated the separation of church and state by agreeing to pay $50,000 to create a monument with a soldier kneeling before a cross-topped grave.

BAGHDAD (AP) — Tens of thousands of Shiite pilgrims were converging on a golden-domed Shiite shrine in northern Baghdad to commemorate the death of a revered Shiite Muslim saint. Security is tight after a wave of deadly attacks. Interior Ministry spokesman Lt. Col. Saad Maan Ibrahim said Tuesday that several thousand policemen

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THE Garden City Telegram

FRIDAY, June 7, 2013

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Religion: Continued from Page A6

children, while comparatively progressive families are just over half that size, suggesting some are using birth control.

Czech court upholds plan PRAGUE (AP) — The Czech Republic’s highest court on Monday upheld a government plan to pay billions of dollars to religious groups in compensation for property the country’s former Communist regime seized from them. The ruling is a big victory for the country’s churches, which have been fighting since the 1989 fall of communism to get back assets such as farms, woodlands and buildings that have remained in the state’s hands. Under the plan, 16 religious groups — including Catholics, Protestants and Jews — will get 59 billion koruna ($3 billion) in compensation over the next 30 years. They will also get 56 percent of their former property now held by the state — estimated to be worth 75 billion koruna ($3.8 billion). The state, meanwhile, will gradually stop covering church expenses over the next 17 years. The Constitutional Court rejected an appeal by the republic’s left-wing opposition. The plan is highly controversial in a country with one of Europe’s highest concentrations of atheists.

Come Celebrate Christ with your brothers and sisters Weekly Words of Wisdom RESPONSIBILITY

ANCIENT WISDOM FOR MODERN LIFE

The thought of great wealth appeals to many. Who wouldn’t want to be able to buy whatever they wanted? With great wealth, however, comes great responsibility—to be humble believers generous to others. Even if you don’t have a lot, you still have a responsibility as a follower of God to be generous and share what you have with those in need.

Jewish inmates seek kosher diet MIAMI (AP) — The U.S. Department of Justice is asking a Miami federal judge to guarantee that Jewish inmates in Florida prisons can have access to a kosher diet. Government lawyers will ask U.S. District Judge Patricia Seitz at a hearing Tuesday to issue an order ensuring the state maintains kosher diet offerings. Muslim inmates are seeking to join the case so they can get halal or kosher meals as well. In response to lawsuits, Florida officials said kosher meals would be served in prisons statewide beginning in September. But Justice Department and inmate attorneys say a court order is necessary to make sure the state doesn’t rescind its policy. Kosher and halal meals adhere to strict religious dietary rules. The inmates contend they are prevented from properly exercising their faiths.

North Florida county to allow atheist monument STARKE, Fla. (AP) — A North Florida county will soon be home to an atheist monument. Bradford County has reached a deal to allow American Atheists to install a 1,500-pound granite bench near the county courthouse. The bench will feature quotes from Thomas Jefferson and Madalyn Murray O’Hair. It will also include a list of punishments for violating the Ten Commandments, including stoning. The placement of the monument in late June ends a lawsuit between American Atheists and the county. The national organization filed its lawsuit after Bradford County allowed a local group to install a monument that lists the Ten Commandments. Dave Muscato, public relations director for American Atheists, told The Gainesville Sun that if religious groups are allowed to have monuments “it’s only appropriate that we have matching monuments.”

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FRIDAY, June 7, 2013

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Depression could have physiological origins Dear Annie: I am a 16-year-old girl in high school. I have so much to be thankful for, but recently, I have been feeling like something is wrong with me. Quite frankly, I am depressed. I am always tired, anxious and nervous, and I have outrageous mood swings. I have lost all focus, ambition and motivation, and sometimes it just hurts to breathe. I hate to use this as an excuse for my grades, but I had been a straight-A student, and now I have two C’s and a B. This is unacceptable. I hate disappointing my parents. Along with the grades and the other symptoms I mentioned, I am constantly having trouble eating and recently resorted to selfharm. Suicidal thoughts also accompany this, as much as I hate to admit it. I worry that if I tell my parents, they will hate me. I don’t have a teacher or counselor I feel comfortable confiding in. None of my friends know, and I am scared that I will do more damage to myself than I intend. Please help me. I hide behind a smile every day, and I am so lost. —

ANNIE’S MAILBOX KATHY MITCHELL MARCY SUGAR

Depressed in Hiding Dear Depressed: Please tell your parents you aren’t feeling well and ask them to make an appointment for you to see your doctor. A lot of what you are describing may have physiological origins that can be treated (such as a hormonal imbalance). You can speak to the doctor privately and tell him what you told us. But please don’t be afraid to discuss this with your parents. They love and care about you. They may be worried, but they will want to help, and you will feel better confiding in them. Dear Annie: My cousin is getting married in another state. I have four other relatives in my city, and we are planning to go together, even though we’ve seen this cousin only a few times in our lives. The wedding is on a Sunday evening, and we’d

arrive on Saturday afternoon. If there is a rehearsal dinner on Saturday night, should we be included as out-of-town relatives? We’re already spending a great deal of money on airfare and hotel rooms. What do you say? — Dinner Guest or No? Dear Dinner Guest: The rehearsal dinner is specifically for the bridal party, immediate family and the officiant. If the hosts can afford to include out-of-state guests (related or not), it is both gracious and appreciated. However, if there are many such guests, it can be beyond the means of the hosts to include them in the rehearsal dinner. It is appropriate, however, for them to provide some welcoming snack or hospitality for all out-of-towners upon their arrival, since such guests are unfamiliar with nearby restaurants and might be arriving too late to eat at the hotel coffee shop. Dear Annie: I was moved to write after reading the letter from “California,� the man who felt so guilty about a brief

extramarital affair he had 40 years ago that he wanted to confess it to his children. My parents divorced in 1968, when I was 13. I would respect my father more if he would acknowledge that his affairs were a significant reason for the divorce. Our mother told us, but didn’t use it as part of the divorce proceedings. I think she thought it was too embarrassing. Dad married his girlfriend six months later. Last summer, my 87year-old father had the nerve to tell me that my mother was the one who wanted the divorce and he didn’t know why. While you may think it would do more harm than good, I’d rather my father tell us than keep lying. —S. Dear S.: Your father had a long-term affair that resulted in a divorce. It is not the same as a brief indiscretion that was deeply regretted. And while Dad should not lie or blame your mother, it’s possible that, at the age of 87, he no longer clearly remembers the reason behind the divorce.

Fighting toe fungus Magazine management

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DEAR DR. ROACH: My (a few drops two or three husband has bad times daily); soaktoenail fungus. ing in Listerine He is not dia- TO YOUR 10 minutes twice betic. He cannot GOOD HEALTH daily; Nizoral shamtake prescrippoo (one drop twice tion medicine by a day); and Vick’s mouth (like terbiVapoRub (apply nafine) because daily for a year). he is on too many Mostly, the inforother prescripmation showing tion medications. these worked was What about laser Keith Roach, M.D. anecdotal (not from treatment? Does North America Syndicate clinical studies), it work? Is it but none is likely to expensive? Is it be harmful. contagious? — E.K. Toenail fungus is Dr. Roach regrets that he caused predominately by is unable to answer individuTrichophyton rubrum. It is al letters, but will incorporate present in the environment, them in the column whenever so most of us are exposed possible. Email questions to to it, but it’s not really clear ToYourGoodHealth@med. why some people get it and cornell.edu or request an others don’t. The oral medi- order form of health newscations itraconazole and ter- letters at P.O. Box 536475, binafine are the most effec- Orlando, FL 32853-6475. tive treatments, but because they can have serious side effects, I recommend them as treatment only if the fungus is causing symptoms. Since the last time I discussed this topic, I have received many suggestions from readers. One reader told me that laser treatment was very effective for her and recommended it to others despite being expensive. However, the published data do not yet support its effectiveness. Other suggestions I received included tea tree oil

Dear Readers: How many magazine subscriptions do you have? If you have a few (I have more than 10), I bet you get renewal notices what seems like all the time! Here are some helpful hints to manage magazine subscriptions: • Companies may start sending renewal notices up to 18 months in advance! Look at the address label on your subscription — there may be a small date or code. This will tell you when your subscription actually expires. • Call the company if you want to renew. You

might be able to get a better price. • Keep a list or spreadsheet if you have several subscriptions. Write down the dates you renewed, what price and when they expire. • Always look at your notices. Some companies will automatically renew the subscription if they don’t hear from you. So always check. — Heloise Send a great hint to: Heloise; P.O. Box 795000; San Antonio, TX 782795000; Fax: 1-210-HELOISE; Email: Heloise@Heloise. com

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SCHEDULE OF EVENTS Thursday, 8:30 a.m. Slack Run - FREE Admission June 6: 7:05 p.m. Family Night Family of 4 get in for $10. Crazy House giving away bandanas and candy to the first 350 kids! Muttin’ Bustin’ and Boot Scramble for the kids during the rodeo! Friday, 7:05 p.m. Breast Cancer Awareness Night June 7: Are You Tough Enough To Wear Pink? Come enjoy the night’s festivities and support your local Relay for Life. Presented by Cox Communications. Muttin’ Bustin’ and Boot Scramble for the kids during the rodeo!

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Saturday, 7:05 p.m. Military Appreciation Night June 8: Show your Military ID and get in for FREE. Presented by Boot Hill Casino. Muttin’ Bustin’ and Boot Scramble for the kids during the rodeo! Specialty Act: Funnyman Mark Swingler here to entertain you!

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Sports

French: Serena back in final, to face Sharapova. PAGE B3

Coaching change: Stephenson out at WSU. PAGE B3

THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM

FRIDAY, June 7, 2013

GCTelegram.com/Sports

SWKPrepZone.com

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Comeback kids claim AJGA titles Darquea, Guanlao rally to claim girls’, boys’ titles at Dunes. By KEVIN THOMPSON sports@gctelegram.com

Brad Nading/Telegram

Aaron Guanlao, Haslet, Texas, drives a fairway shot onto the No. 3 green Thursday at Buffalo Dunes Golf Course during the final round of the AJGA Junior Golf tournament. Guanlao won the boys’ title.

The pair of winners at the American Junior Golf Association’s Kansas Junior event that concluded Thursday had something in common. They both came from behind to claim their titles. Daniela Darquea of Quito, Ecuador, came from the penultimate group, firing a 69 to win the girls event by a stroke after starting the day six strokes behind. Aaron Guanlao of Haslet, Texas, playing in the lead group, came from one stroke back to take a two-stroke victory on the boys side. And both were equally ecstatic with their wins. Playing under perfect conditions all day, a day removed from Wednesday’s chilly and blustery round, Darquea knew she had a great round in her and she made it happen. The 17-year-old, who has signed to play golf for the University of Miami this fall,

got birdies on holes two and seven on the front nine and a bogey on three left her 1-under for the day at the turn. Then she birdied 12, 13 and 16 before taking a bogey on 18. That bogey almost turned out to be costly, but Courtney Dow of Frisco, Texas, playing in the final group and whom Darquea led by a stroke, also took bogey, thus eliminating a sudden-death playoff. “I like the course, and I felt very comfortable here,” Darquea said. “It’s very much like at home, so I was expecting very much to do something today.” Wednesday’s winds were a challenge, she said, which led to a 79, but the weather factored greatly into her final round 69, a target score when she started the round. Case in point, she said, on hole No. 9 Wednesday, she hit driver-three wood and still didn’t reach the green. Thursday she hit driver-pitching wedge, which was much more to her liking. “This weather is very much Quito, so right now I’m very at home,” she said. Her demeanor Thursday matched the calm conditions, she said. Not playing in the final group also helped keep off some See Golf, Page B3

Brad Nading/Telegram

Daniela Darquea, Quito, Ecuador, hits a fairway shot on Buffalo Dunes Golf Course’s No. 11 Wednesday during the second round of an AJGA Junior Golf tournament. Darquea won the girls’ title in Thursday’s final round.

Dakota domination Breuers tops in bareback riding; Maier shares lead in bull riding at rodeo. By BRETT MARSHALL

bmarshall@gctelegram.com

One would not be surprised that the leaders at the end of the opening day of the Beef Empire Days PRCA Rodeo in bareback riding, saddle bronc riding and bull riding are either from South Dakota or North Dakota. After all, the horses and the bulls that were ridden at the Finney County Fairgrounds Arena all come from Korkow Rodeos of Pierre, S.D. Ty Breuer and Casey Breuer of Mandan, N.D., grabbed the lead in the bareback riding with 83 points, earning their current top spot on Flashcard Champ and Mean Jean. Joe Gunderson, from Agar, S.D., was third with 82 points. Rorey Maier of Timber Lake, S.D., scored 83 points on Black Velvet to share the lead in bull riding with the only nonDakotan, Sage Steele Kimzey of Strong City, Okla. Louie Brunson, of Interior, S.D., rode Cherry Velvet to an 85-point performance, taking a two-point lead over Cole Elshere of Faith, S.D., and Wade Sundell of Boxholm, Iowa. For Maier, the performance was a good one, having seen Black Velvet at some other rodeos, but never having a chance to ride the bull. “It’s always good to get a first ride in,” said Maier, who travels with his two older brothers, Ardie and Corie. “You can’t worry about what the other riders do. All you can do is ride your own bull. I’ve seen him before, and I knew how he’d buck. But, heck, he was a lot bigger than I thought.” Maier, 25, has been riding bulls at the pro level since he was 18 and said he had been riding some of the Korkow bulls since he was a kid in 4-H. “They’ve always got good bulls, and I’ve been around them a lot,” Maier said. Brunson got his leading ride of 85 points on another Velvet, this one Cherry, and it provided him that two-point advantage over Elshere and Sundell. “He’s a nice horse, and the ride felt good,” Brunson said. “I’d seen him at the NFR (National Finals Rodeo), and you know you’re always gonna have a chance for a good ride.”

Becky Malewitz/Telegram

Frank Morton, of Wright, holds on during the bronc riding competition Thursday at the Beef Empire Days PRCA Rodeo at the Finney County Fairgrounds Arena. Brunson, whose best years were 2008 and 2009 when he was in the Top 20 rankings, said the BED rodeo was the start of a busy summer season. “We drove 10 hours down here just to get a chance to ride some of their (Korkow) horses,”

Brunson said. “You can tell when you’ve got a good ride going. You just have to stay aggressive and finish strong.” Taylor Jacob, who competes for Texas A&M’s college team and who is headed to Cody, Wyo., for the College National Finals

Rodeo, put in a speedy 17.26-second ride to occupy the top spot in the women’s barrel racing event. That gave Jacob, of Carmine, Texas, a .32 of a second lead over Brittany Pozzi of Victoria, Texas, See Rodeo, Page B2

Spurs rally to overcome Heat in Game 1 MIAMI (AP) — The San Antonio Spurs returned to the NBA Finals just the way they left — with a victory over LeBron James. Tim Duncan overcame a slow start to finish with 20 points and 14 rebounds, Tony Parker banked in a desperation jumper with 5.2 seconds left and the Spurs withstood James’ triple-double to beat the Miami Heat 92-88 on Thursday night in a thrilling Game 1. Parker ended up with 21 points after referees reviewed his shot to make sure it just beat the shot clock, giving San Antonio a four-point edge in a game that was close the whole way. James had 18 points, 18 rebounds and 10 assists in his second straight NBA Finals triple-double, but he shot only 7 of 16 against some good defense by Kawhi Leonard, and Miami’s offense stalled in the fourth quarter. Playing for the championship for the first time since sweeping James’ Cleveland Cavaliers in 2007, the Spurs improved to 5-for-5 in Game 1s, hanging around for three quarters and then blowing by the defending champions midway through the fourth. Manu Ginobili, the third member of San Antonio’s Big Three that has combined for 99 postseason victories together, finished with 13 points, and Danny Green had 12. Game 2 is Sunday night. James became a champion on this floor last year in Game 5 against Oklahoma City, but he hasn’t forgotten his first taste of the finals. The Spurs swept his Cavaliers in 2007 and James spoke Wednesday like someone who had payback in mind. He was 22 then, a fourth-year player headed for greatness but with holes in his game that San Antonio exploited in a fourgame sweep. Revenge won’t come easily — if it comes at all. Dwyane Wade scored 17 points for the Heat but was shut out in the fourth quarter. Chris Bosh had only two of his 13 in the final period. It was an entertaining start to a matchup that seemed years in the making between perennial contenders, the Spurs making their fifth appearance and the Heat their fourth. Commissioner David Stern called it “probably the most anticipated finals in who knows, 30 years,” likely more a bit of hyperbole in his final state of the league address than a comment meant to slight fans of the Celtics, Lakers, or Michael Jordan’s Bulls.


B2

Scoreboard

FRIDAY, June 7, 2013

BASEBALL American League By The Associated Press East Division W L Pct GB Boston 37 24 .607 — New York 34 25 .576 2 Baltimore 34 26 .567 2 1/2 Tampa Bay 32 27 .542 4 Toronto 25 34 .424 11 Central Division W L Pct GB Detroit 32 26 .552 — Cleveland 30 29 .508 2 1/2 Minnesota 26 31 .456 5 1/2 Kansas City 25 32 .439 6 1/2 Chicago 25 33 .431 7 West Division W L Pct GB Texas 36 23 .610 — Oakland 37 25 .597 1/2 Los Angeles 26 34 .433 10 1/2 Seattle 26 34 .433 10 1/2 Houston 22 39 .361 15 ——— Thursday’s Games Detroit 5, Tampa Bay 2 Baltimore 3, Houston 1 Boston 6, Texas 3 Kansas City 7, Minnesota 3 Oakland 5, Chicago White Sox 4, 10 innings N.Y. Yankees at Seattle, night Today’s Games Minnesota (Correia 5-4) at Washington (Karns 0-1), 6:05 p.m. Texas (Tepesch 3-4) at Toronto (Rogers 1-2), 6:07 p.m. Cleveland (U.Jimenez 4-3) at Detroit (Verlander 7-4), 6:08 p.m. Baltimore (Hammel 7-3) at Tampa Bay (Archer 0-1), 6:10 p.m. L.A. Angels (Hanson 2-2) at Boston (Doubront 4-2), 6:10 p.m. Houston (Lyles 3-1) at Kansas City (Shields 2-6), 7:10 p.m. Oakland (J.Parker 4-6) at Chicago White Sox (Sale 5-3), 7:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Kuroda 6-4) at Seattle (Bonderman 0-1), 9:10 p.m. ——— Royals 7, Twins 3 Minnesota Kansas City ab r h bi ab r h bi Carroll 3b 4 1 0 0 AGordn lf 4 1 1 0 Mauer dh 4 0 0 0 Hosmer 1b 3 1 2 1 Wlngh lf 3 1 0 0 S.Perez c 4 1 1 1 Mornea 1b 4 0 2 0 BButler dh 4 0 2 1 Doumit c 3 1 1 2 EJhnsn pr-dh 0 1 0 0 Parmel rf 4 0 0 0 Mostks 3b 4 1 1 0 Thoms cf 4 0 0 0 L.Cain cf 4 2 2 2 Dozier 2b 4 0 1 0 Lough rf 4 0 1 0 Flormn ss 4 0 1 0 Getz 2b 3 0 1 2 AEscor ss 3 0 0 0 Totals 34 3 5 2 Totals 33 7 11 7

Minnesota Kansas City

300 000 000 — 3 020 001 04x — 7

E—Pelfrey (1), Moustakas (8). DP—Minnesota 2. LOB—Minnesota 8, Kansas City 3. 2B—Florimon (8), A.Gordon (14), Hosmer (9), B.Butler (11). HR—Doumit (8), L.Cain (2). IP H R ER BB SO Minnesota Pelfrey 6 1/3 7 3 3 1 2 Duensing 1/3 0 0 0 0 0 Fien 1/3 0 0 0 0 0 Burton L,0-3 2/3 4 4 4 0 0 Pressly 1/3 0 0 0 0 1 Kansas City W.Davis 5 4 3 0 3 6 Hochevar 1 0 0 0 0 1 Collins W,2-1 2 0 0 0 0 0 G.Holland 1 1 0 0 0 1 HBP—by W.Davis (Willingham). WP—W.Davis. Umpires—Home, Tom Hallion; First, Chris Guccione; Second, Mike Estabrook; Third, Phil Cuzzi. T—2:56. A—14,942 (37,903).

———

National League By The Associated Press East Division W L Atlanta 37 22 Philadelphia 31 30 Washington 29 30 New York 23 33 Miami 16 44 Central Division

Pct GB .627 — .508 7 .492 8 .411 12.5 .267 21.5

Television

On Tap

Today

College Baseball — Noon., ESPN2, NCAA Super Regional, teams TBA; 3 p.m., ESPN2, NCAA Super Regional, teams TBA; 6 p.m., ESPN/ESPN2, NCAA Super Regional, teams TBA. Pro Baseball — 1:10 p.m., WGN, Pittsburgh Pirates at Chicago Cubs (joined in progress); 7 p.m., FSN, Houston Astros at Kansas City Royals. Pro Boxing — 9 p.m., ESPN2, Friday Night Fights, Andrey Klimov vs. John Molina Jr., from Shelton, Wash. Pro Tennis — 10 a.m., NBC, French Open, Men’s Semifinals, from Paris.

Saturday

Auto Racing — 7 p.m., ESPN, NASCAR Nationwide Series, Dupont Pioneer 250, from Newton, Iowa; 7:30 p.m., ABC, IndyCar Firestone 550, from Fort Worth, Texas.

St. Louis Cincinnati Pittsburgh Chicago Milwaukee West Division Arizona Colorado San Francisco San Diego Los Angeles

W 39 36 35 24 22

L 21 24 25 33 37

Pct GB .650 — .600 3 .583 4 .421 13.5 .373 16.5

W L Pct GB 34 26 .567 — 32 29 .525 2.5 31 28 .525 2.5 27 32 .458 6.5 25 33 .431 8 ——— Colorado 12, Cincinnati 4 Arizona 10, St. Louis 3 San Diego 6, L.A. Dodgers 2 Thursday’s Games N.Y. Mets at Washington, ppd., rain St. Louis 12, Arizona 8 Philadelphia 5, Milwaukee 1 San Diego 6, Colorado 5, 12 inn. Atlanta at L.A. Dodgers, night Today’s Games Pittsburgh (Liriano 3-2) at Chicago Cubs (T.Wood 5-3), 1:20 p.m. Minnesota (Correia 5-4) at Washington (Karns 0-1), 6:05 p.m. Miami (Fernandez 3-3) at N.Y. Mets (Harvey 5-0), 6:10 p.m. St. Louis (Wainwright 8-3) at Cincinnati (Leake 5-2), 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia (Lee 7-2) at Milwaukee (Figaro 0-0), 7:10 p.m. San Diego (Volquez 4-5) at Colorado (J.De La Rosa 7-3), 7:40 p.m. San Francisco (M.Cain 4-3) at Arizona (Corbin 9-0), 8:40 p.m. Atlanta (Maholm 7-4) at L.A. Dodgers (Ryu 6-2), 9:10 p.m. NCAA Division I Super Regionals By The Associated Press Best-of-3 (x-if necessary) At Goss Stadium/Corvallis, Ore. Saturday, June 8 Kansas State (44-17) at Oregon State (48-10), 6 p.m. Sunday, June 9 Kansas State at Oregon State, 9 p.m. Monday, June 10 x-Kansas State at Oregon State, 6 p.m.

BASKETBALL NBA Playoff Glance By The Associated Press CONFERENCE FINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) NBA FINALS San Antonio 1, Miami 0 Thursday, June 6: San Antonio 92, Miami 88. Sunday, June 9: San Antonio at Miami, 7 p.m. Tuesday, June 11: Miami at San Antonio 8 p.m. Thursday, June 13: Miami at San Antonio, 8 p.m.

THE Garden City Telegram

College Baseball — 11 a.m., ESPN, NCAA Super Regional, teams TBA; Noon, ESPN2, NCAA Super Regional, teams TBA; 2 p.m., ESPN, NCAA Super Regional, teams TBA; 3 p.m., ESPN2, NCAA Super Regional, teams TBA; 6 p.m., ESPN2, NCAA Super Regional, teams TBA; 9 p.m., ESPN2, NCAA Super Regional, teams TBA. Horse Racing — 4 p.m., NBC, 145th Belmont Stakes, from Elmont, N.Y. Pro Baseball — 3 p.m., WGN, Oakland Athletics at Chicago White Sox; 6 p.m., FOX, Houston Astros at Kansas City Royals. Pro Golf — 2 p.m., CBS, PGA Tour, FedEx St. Jude Classic, third round, from Memphis, Tenn. Pro Hockey — 7 p.m., NBC, Los Angeles Kings at Chicago Blackhawks (if necessary). Pro Tennis — 8 a.m., NBC, French Open, Women’s Final, from Paris. Women’s Pro Basketball — 2:30 p.m., ABC, Phoenix Mercury at Indiana Fever.

x-Sunday, June 16: Miami at San Antonio, 7 p.m. x-Tuesday, June 18: San Antonio at Miami, 8 p.m. x-Thursday, June 20: San Antonio at Miami, 8 p.m. ——— Spurs-Heat, Box SAN ANTONIO (92) Leonard 3-9 4-4 10, Duncan 8-19 4-4 20, Splitter 3-6 1-2 7, Parker 9-18 3-4 21, Green 4-9 0-0 12, Ginobili 4-11 3-4 13, Diaw 1-1 0-0 2, Joseph 0-1 0-0 0, Neal 3-9 0-0 7, Bonner 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 35-84 15-18 92. MIAMI (88) James 7-16 3-4 18, Haslem 1-1 0-0 2, Bosh 6-16 1-2 13, Chalmers 3-10 0-0 8, Wade 7-15 3-4 17, Allen 3-4 4-5 13, Miller 2-3 0-0 5, Andersen 3-5 1-2 7, Cole 2-4 0-0 5, Battier 0-3 0-0 0, Anthony 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 34-78 12-17 88. San Antonio 23 26 20 23 — 92 Miami 24 28 20 16 — 88 3-Point Goals—San Antonio 7-23 (Green 4-9, Ginobili 2-5, Neal 1-5, Leonard 0-4), Miami 8-25 (Allen 3-4, Chalmers 2-6, Cole 1-1, Miller 1-2, James 1-5, Battier 0-3, Bosh 0-4). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—San Antonio 47 (Duncan 14), Miami 54 (James 18). Assists—San Antonio 16 (Parker 6), Miami 20 (James 10). Total Fouls—San Antonio 12, Miami 12. A—19,775 (19,600).

BEEF EMPIRE DAYS Beef Empire Days Horseshoe Tournament Saturday at Garden City Class A 1. Ken Bentley, Lamar, Colo.; 2. Calvin Wilson, Dighton; 3. Frank Powers, Gove. Class B 1. Norman Wyatt, Garden City; 2. Nancy Simon, Syracuse; 3. Preston Unruh, Sublette. Class C 1. Janie Motile, Holcomb; 2. Diana Biernacki, Garden City; 3. Tyler Wyatt, Garden City. Hoof it to Health Road Race Saturday 2 Mile Amy Wickwar (35-49), 21:11. 5K Under 18 Tea Stoppel, 24:33; Amber Koons, 26:07; Grace Selee, 45:46; Esther Selee, 65:22; Linda Selee, 65:37. 18-34 Jonny Bernasky, 16:06; Penny Johnson, 22:46; Karen Burrows, 24:32; Caoline Robinson, 27:12; Courtney Main, 29:52; Marisa Kleysteuber, 30:09; Jill Wahl, 31:17; Norma Jean Rodriguez, 33:07; Meghan McFee, 33:38; Kendra Howland, 33:41; Anna Robinson, 39:06; Rachel Hager, 56:13.

35-49 Vince Koons, 21:00; Mark Miller, 23:35; Tina Stoppel, 24:35; Courtney Leslie, 26:25; Stacey King, 27:37; Michael Davis, 29:37; Kim Fisher, 31:05; Steve Davis, 31:31; Mike Howland, 33:41; Shawn Myers, 35:29; Afton Davis, 37:58. 50 and Over Jaime Delgado, 22:30; Gina Gigot, 27:15; Rod Stilwell, 27:52; Dan Knight, 28:23; Elaine Lott, 29:38; Mark Verhoff, 31:11; Tammy Rieth, 31:21; Patty Knoll, 33:38; Emery Swaferty, 37:03; Charlie Robinson, 42:15; Scott Selee, 65:51. 10K 18-34 Derek Algrin, 37:59; Jamie Ellis, 54:57; Ashley Baker, 59:10; Lori Deyoe, 59:28. 35-49 Dan Davis, 49:27; Yolanda Rogers, 56:38. 50 and Over Jake Bernasky, 42:16; Roger Unruh, 53:13; Claudia Boyles, 56:27. PRCA Rodeo Thursday at Fairgrounds Arena Day 1 Leaders Beef Empire Days PRCA Thursday Bareback Riding 1. Ty Breuer, Mandan, N.D., 83; 2. Casey Breuer, Mandan, N.D., 83; 3. Joe Gunderson, Agar, S.D., 82; 4. Will Lowe, Canyon, Texas, 79; 5. Tanner Aus, Granite Falls, Minn., 78; 6. Chris Harris, Itasca, Texas, 75; 7. Frank Morton, Wright, 69. Saddle Bronc Riding 1. Louie Brunson, Interior, S.D., 85; 2. Cole Elshere, Faith, S.D., 83; 3. Wade Sundell, Boxholm, Iowa, 83; 4. Chuck Schmidt, Keldron, S.D., 80; 5. Cort Scheer, Elsmere, Neb., 79; 6. Troy Crowser, Whitewood, S.D., 78; 7. Ty Thompson, Wanblee, S.D., 74; 8. Ty Atchison, Jackson, Mo., 73. Bull Riding 1. Rorey Maier, Timber Lake, S.D., 83; 2. Sage Steele Kimzey, Strong City, Okla., 83; 3. Patrick Geipel, Elbert, Colo., 79; 4. Lane Wilhelm, Elk City, Okla., 77. Barrel Racing 1. Taylor Jacob, Carmine, Texas, 17.26; 2. Brittany Pozzi, Victoria, Texas, 17.58; 3. Delores Toole, Manter, 17.60; 4. Annesa Self, Sanger, Texas, 17.62; 5. Sherri Odell, Liberal, 17.66; 6. Angie Meadors, Blanchard, Okla., 17.72; 7. Tana Poppino, Big Cabin, Okla., 17.75; 8. Carley Richardson, Pampa, Texas, 17.76; 9. Kaley Bass, Kissimmee, Fla., 17.80; 10. Katie Jolly, Deer Trail, Colo., 17.81; 11. Jeannie McKee, Lenapah, Okla., 17.87; 12. Chelsie Clement, Glencoe, Okla., 17.90. Steer Wrestling 1. Justin Smith, Castle, Okla., 4.2; 2. Seth Brockman, Wheatland, Wyo., 4.2; 3. Kyle Broce, La Junta, Colo., 5.0; 4. Kyle Irwin, Robertsdale, Ala., 5.2; 5. Ryan Swayze, Freedom, Okla., 5.4; 6. Trevor Haake, Grand Island, Neb., 5.7; 7. Del Ray

Today Baseball — TBD, Finney County Blues, Bandits at Ulysses Tournament. Pro Rodeo — 7 p.m., Second night performance. Amateur Tennis — 8 a.m., Garden City Open, Singles, GCHS Courts.

Kraupie, Bridgeport, Neb., 5.8; 8. Brady Hagerman, McCook, Neb., 5.8. Tie Down Roping 1. Cody McCartney, Ottawa Lake, Mich., 9.8; 2. Reese Riemer, Stinnett, Texas, 10.1; 3. Chase Williams, Stephenville, Texas, 10.2; 4. Trenton Johnson, Mound City, 10.3; 5. Jesse Clark, Portales, N.M., 10.4; 6. Trevor Thiel, Greeley, Colo., 10.5; 7. Trevor Brazile, Decatur, Texas, 10.9; 8. Tyler Garten, Kingman, 11.6. Team Roping 1. Chase Wiley, Charlotte, Texas/Ace Pearce, Washington, Texas, 4.9; 2. Travis Tryan, Billings, Mont./Jake Long, Coffeyville, 5.1; 3. Jake Orman, Huntsville, Texas/Corey Hendrick, Huntsville, Texas, 5.2; 4. Colby Siddoway, Hooper, Utah/ Shay Carroll, La Junta, Colo., 5.2; 5. Trey Harmon, Pocasset, Okla./Jace Crabb, Mangum, Okla., 5.5; 6. Parker Warner, Vinita, Okla./Dustin Searcy, Mooreland, Okla., 5.7; 7. Adam Rose, Willard, Mo./ Billie Saebens, Nowata, Okla., 5.9; 8. Josh Morris, Clay’s Corner, Texas/Austin Rogers, Crescent, Okla., 6.1; 9. Trevor Brazile, Decatur, Texas/Patrick Smith, Lipan, Texas, 6.2; 10. Cole Dorenkamp, Lamar, Colo./Ryon Tittel, Pueblo, Colo., 6.2.

GOLF AJGA Kansas Junior Thursday at Buffalo Dunes Golf Course Boys Division Aaron Guanlao 70-73-70—213 Daniel Wetterich 70-72-73—215 Michael Hodson 70-73-72—215 Sam Meuret 74-74-69—217 Tyler Gammill 77-76-69—222 Phillip Baumberger 72-76-74—222 Wesley Jackson 75-79-69—223 Alexander Moorman 74-78-71—223 Sean Wilcox 78-77-69—224 James Henderson 77-75-72—224 Andrew Welk 78-73-73—224 Kyler Dunkle 76-74-74—224 Jassem Setayesh 76-74-74—224 Caleb Haight 73-75-76—224 Nick Gillihan 78-74-73—225 Griffin Peters 75-75-75—225 Gray Townsend 73-80-73—226 Brody Davis 74-78-74—226 Walker Kirk 74-77-75—226 Matt Digoy 76-75-75—226 Mason Overstreet 76-80-71—227 Turner MacLean 75-81-71—227 Austin Cotton 77-78-72—227 Joshua Montoya 75-77-75—227 Grant Rogers 72-80-76—228 Ricky Barrett 77-80-72—229 Austen Christiansen 76-76-77—229 Wells Padgett 79-78-73—230 Jalen Heald 78-78-74—230 Peter Dierks 73-82-75—230 Matthew Gilbaugh 74-81-75—230 Kelly Brown 78-82-71—231 Zachary Ginn 75-80-76—231 Brock Drogosch 74-79-78—231 Jason Fitzgerald 77-75-79—231 Tyson Reeder 77-81-74—232 Robert Rickard 74-84-74—232 Gage Ihrig 79-76-77—232 Reed Russ 74-79-81—234 Blake Martin 81-69-84—234 Tanner Owen 86-79-70—235 Mason Keller 80-81-74—235 Charlie Hughes 76-80-79—235

Saturday Baseball — TBD, Finney County Blues at Ulysses Tournament; Finney County Bandits at Ulysses Tournament. Pro Rodeo — 7 p.m., Final night performance. Amateur Tennis — 8 a.m., Garden City Open, Doubles, GCHS Courts.

John Edwards Daniel Gaspar Garret Giesselmann Marc Kepka Alex Shattuck Taylor Larsen Thomas Allen Dalton Rhoden Adan Eaton Trevor Brown Matthew Stewart Lukas McCalla Michael Duch Philip Lee Hunter Giesselmann Dalton Smith Luke Henke Dathan Terry Brock Falley Andy Fain Dylan Hatley Thomas Winters R J Bondon Curren Mody Henrik Olsson Andrew Knopke Braxton Sides Cole Anderson Nicholas Lavezzorio

74-81-80—235 77-83-76—236 81-77-78—236 77-81-78—236 79-78-79—236 75-81-81—237 80-79-79—238 76-82-81—239 82-84-74—240 79-86-76—241 81-80-80—241 78-82-81—241 77-85-80—242 79-84-79—242 80-82-80—242 76-84-84—244 85-80-81—246 80-84-82—246 83-83-81—247 84-87-79—250 85-88-78—251 86-86-79—251 84-89-79—252 85-88-80—253 85-92-77—254 78-91-85—254 79-89-87—255 84-92-82—258 82-92-85—259

Girls Division Daniela Darquea Emily Campbell Courtney Dow Ana Ruiz Mabel Wong Isabelle Kane Maddy Rayner Chandler Gallagher Kaitleen Shee Addison Mitchell Madeline Davis Nikki Long Abigail Shaddix Taylor Boylan Jordan Wolf Divya Manthena Samantha Barker Macy Holliday Emma Whitaker Pauline Nguyen Kelsey Johnson Regan McQuaid Anna Kroll Lauren Chappell

73-79-69—221 71-75-76—222 74-75-73—222 73-78-74—225 72-80-76—228 75-78-77—230 79-82-74—235 82-83-73—238 77-86-75—238 80-82-78—240 77-83-81—241 80-88-78—246 79-86-81—246 83-81-82—246 80-87-80—247 77-84-86—247 82-84-83—249 79-85-85—249 87-89-76—252 88-85-82—255 81-92-84—257 85-91-87—263 84-97-89—270 89-94-93—276

HOCKEY NHL Playoff Glance By The Associated Press CONFERENCE FINALS (Best 4-of-7) x-if necessary EASTERN CONFERENCE Boston 3, Pittsburgh 0 Saturday, June 1: Boston 3, Pittsburgh 0 Monday, June 3: Boston 6, Pittsburgh 1 Wednesday, June 5: Boston 2, Pittsburgh 1, 2OT WESTERN CONFERENCE Chicago 3, Los Angeles 1 Saturday, June 1: Chicago 2, Los Angeles 1 Sunday, June 2: Chicago 4, Los Angeles 2 Tuesday, June 4: Los Angeles 3, Chicago 1 Thursday, June 6: Chicago 3, Los Angeles 2

Stephenson out after 36 seasons at WSU By DAVE SKRETTA AP Sports Writer

Becky Malewitz/Telegram

A rodeo clown gets out of a bull’s way during Thursday’s Beef Empire Day’s PRCA Rodeo.

Rodeo: Dakota domination Continued from Page B1

currently the No. 13ranked barrel racer in the world. Pozzi had competed on Thursday morning in the slack portion of the first day while Jacob rode Thursday night. “It was good, and it’s all because, first, I’ve got a good horse,” said Jacob, who indicated the arena conditions were probably better than the morning contestants faced in the aftermath of Tuesday night’s rain that left it mucky. “I’ve had her about a year and a half, and she’s fast and smart. It’s a lot about knowing your horse.” Jacob is just at the outset of what will be her first year of competing at the professional level on a regular basis. “I’m just trying to feel my way through,” Jacob said. “Others out here are telling me which events are the best ones to go to, so I’m planning my schedule around that.” One other exciting piece of news for Jacob came on Thursday when she was informed that she had been accepted into the Calgary (Canada) Stampede, one of the top rodeos in North America. “That’s really exciting,”

she said, beaming. “This is the second time I’ve come to Garden, and it’s a nice stopover on the way to the college finals. It really breaks up an otherwise long, long trip.” Other event leaders were Chase Wiley of Charlotte, Texas, and Ace Pearce of Washington, Texas, in the team roping at 4.9 seconds while Travis Tryan of Billings, Mont., and Jake Long of Coffeyville were next at 5.1 seconds. World champion Trevor Brazile of Decatur, Texas, and Patrick Smith of Lipan, Texas, were ninth at 6.2 seconds. Cody McCartney of Ottawa Lake, Mich., was atop the leaderboard in the tie-down roping at 9.8 seconds while Reese Riemer of Stinnett, Texas, followed at 10.1 seconds. In steer wrestling, Justin Smith of Castle, Okla., and Seth Brockman of Wheatland, Wyo., shared the top spot at 4.2 seconds. The rodeo continues at 7 tonight, and it will be Are You Tough Enough to Wear Pink Night, an event that will help raise awareness for breast cancer. The PRCA event concludes at 7 p.m. Saturday, when the nation’s military branches and veterans will be honored.

Gene Stephenson knew the end was near when he got on the phone with Twins pitcher Mike Pelfrey, one of his best players during 36 years as baseball coach at Wichita State. The two of them chatted for a bit Monday night, and Pelfrey came away disgusted that his mentor and friend was being forced out as the leader of a program Stephenson built from the ground up. “He deserves to go out

on his own terms. Forcing him out is not right at all,” Pelfrey said before Tuesday night’s game against the Kansas City Royals. “I don’t like the way they handled it.” Tuesday, Stephenson’s fate was sealed: He was officially fired after leading the Shockers back to the NCAA tournament this season and with a year left on his contract. “I remember watching video of that place when he got there and it was nothing,” Pelfrey said. “I grew up in Wichita and that was

the place to be and the place to go. When you think of Wichita State, you think of Gene Stephenson. To hear that they are turning their back on him is shameful. “This guy is a legend and I don’t agree with it. It’s not right at all.” Stephenson won more games during his tenure than any other Division I program, and his career record of 1,837-675-3 leaves him with the second-most victories among major college coaches. Along with Pelfrey, he produced major leagu-

ers such as Joe Carter and Casey Blake, and helped to deliver the school’s only national championship during the 1989 season. “We have reached a decision to go a different direction with the leadership of our baseball program,” athletic director Eric Sexton said in a statement. “Following an evaluation of the program as a whole and a presentation of the options, the decision became clear that this is the proper time to move into a new phase of Shocker baseball.”

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THE Garden City Telegram

Sharapova awaits Williams in women’s final.

Associated Press

Serena Williams, of the U.S, returns the ball to Italy’s Sara Errani Thursday during their semifinal match of the French Open tennis tournament at Roland Garros in Paris. The final features the top two women in the rankings and seedings, No. 1 Williams and No. 2 Sharapova. They are 1-2 among active players in French Open match wins, Williams with 45, Sharapova with 43. And they are two of three active women with more than two major championships; Sharapova completed a career Grand Slam in Paris last year with No. 4. Plus, Williams has won a career-best 30 consecutive matches, the longest singleseason streak on tour since 2000. Sharapova has won 13 consecutive matches in Paris. Despite all of that, this one doesn’t shape up as much of an even matchup,

because Williams is 13-2 against Sharapova, including winning the last 12. “Well, I’d be lying if it doesn’t bother me, obviously,” said Sharapova, who last defeated Williams all the way back in 2004, at Wimbledon and the WTA Championships. “Whatever I did in the past hasn’t worked, so I’ll have to try to do something different.” Williams never gave Errani a chance to switch things up. Errani, Williams’ coach Patrick Moratouglou explained, “needs to rally, she needs to run, and then she’s really, really dangerous.” But, he continued, Williams “decided to refuse to let her play.”

Simple as that. The 31-year-old American won the first nine games. When Errani finally got on the board, 37 minutes in, she raised both arms overhead as the crowd roared. Williams accumulated a 40-2 discrepancy in winners, showing off a full array of talents. She won 28 of 33 points she served, helped by five aces, including one at 123 mph. She smacked 10 return winners. She mixed in overhead smashes, powerful groundstrokes, even a drop shot. “She was playing,” Williams’ mother, Oracene Price, summed up, “like Serena of old.” Sharapova certainly dealt with plenty of tension against Azarenka, the winner of the past two Australian Opens. Good as she was in the first set, Sharapova was shaky in the second, and it took her a while to straighten things out after a 35-minute rain delay that preceded the third. Up an early break, Sharapova double-faulted four times in a single game to make it 2all. Serving for the match the first time, at 5-2, she let four match points slip away, then double-faulted on the last two points. Finally, at 5-4, she steeled herself, serving out the victory at love, punctuated by her 12th ace. “I did the job,” Sharapova said. “I just hope that I can improve for the next one.”

AJGA: Darquea, Guanlao rally to claim titles of the pressure. “I didn’t have to worry about other girls shooting lower than me,” Darquea said. “Everything was working, putting especially.” She figured she had 26 putts in her final round, which is one of her strengths. Her final tee shot ended up next to a tree, so she had to punch out to the fairway, and her putt from above the hole just didn’t fall, but fortunately Dow could not convert, either. Dow had birdies on 6, 9 and 11, but she started her day with a double-bogey on No. 1 but managed to stay focused the rest of her round. Dow, coming off her freshman year, was about two feet from a par putt and just missed. “I’d been putting well all week, so something was going to happen, and I just let it get to me,” she said. Her double-bogey start was caused by a tree, but she stayed confident and was at minus-2 for the next 16 holes. “After one, I just played pretty solid. I saved a lot of pars by putting well,”

she said. Second-round leader Emily Campbell of Carrolton, Texas, couldn’t make her 3-stroke lead stick as she faltered to two bogeys and a double-bogey on No. 2 to finish tied for second with Dow. On the boys side, Guanlao beat out Michael Hodson of Amarillo, Texas, and second-round leader Daniel Wetterich of Cincinnati. His final round 70 had just two birdies — at 5 and 18 — and 16 pars. His two playing partners both had two bogeys. Wetterich had two birdies, and Hodson had three, but the turning point for Guanlao came late in the round. Hodson took his bogeys at 14 and 16, and Wetterich took a double-bogey at 15. Guanlao took advantage at 15 and 16 by saving par with putts of 8 feet and 6 feet, respectively. He just missed a birdie putt of 6 feet below the hole on 17, but he got it on the final hole. “I hadn’t hit a good tee shot on that hole all tournament, but I finally hit a good one over the tree,” he said. “I was at 98 yards, so I hit a little 58-degree

to about a foot-and-a-half. I knew from there I was looking pretty good.” Guanlao said he stayed patient all day, making pars and waiting for the two leaders to make their mistakes. Guanlao’s father has been working as his swing coach, and tempo has been the key to his game. “Tempo with me is the start of the shot and the whole shot,” he said. “Most of the week I made sure I was calm coming up, and I didn’t rush anything. Good

tempo equaled a lot of good shots this week.” Wednesday, he shot a 73 under the extreme conditions, saying he had to play mentally strong and hit a lot of knock-down shots, which led to a decent round to set him up for Thursday’s final. It was the first win on the AJGA circuit for the soon-to-be senior. And it couldn’t feel any better. “I’m happy. I’m so happy. I worked so hard coming into this tournament,” Guanlao said.

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Solution in next edition Sudoku is a number-placing puzzle based on a 9x9 grid with several given number. The objext is to place the numbers 1to 9 in the empty squates so that each rowm each columb and each 3x3 box contains the same number only once. The difficulty level of the Conceptis Sudoku increase from Monday to Saturday.

SEQUOYAH 8

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The Cryptoquip is a substitution cipher in which one letter stands for another. If you think that X equals O, it will be O throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words and words using any apostrophe give you clues to locating vowels.

Nonslip Mats: Most injuries occur while getting in & out of the shower/bathtub. Having a nonslip mat in the shower/tub and a plush mat on the outside can help decrease slipping while getting in/out.

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Solution is by trial and error. C 2011 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

FRIDAY EVENING 6:00

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6

By Dave Green

Manager, Steve Thomas

Ways to reduce accidents in the bathroom

300 Oak, Holcomb • $134,900

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2013 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

Serena back in French Open final PARIS (AP) — Done with a dominating performance in the French Open semifinals, Serena Williams climbed the stairs leading from the locker room to the players’ lounge, looking to give her mother a hug. Smiling widely all the while, Williams greeted visitors, posed for photos and signed autographs on her way. It’s been more than a decade since she was so happy — and played so well — this deep in the tournament at Roland Garros. Coming as close to perfect as seems possible, Williams absolutely overwhelmed last year’s runnerup, fifth-seeded Sara Errani of Italy, 6-0, 6-1 in a mere 46 minutes Thursday to reach the final for the first time since winning her lone French Open championship in 2002. “It doesn’t seem like that long ago,” Williams said, “even though it was.” To collect her 16th Grand Slam title Saturday, Williams will need to beat defending champion Maria Sharapova, who put aside 11 double-faults and got past third-seeded Victoria Azarenka 6-1, 2-6, 6-4 in a much more competitive semifinal.

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Friday June 7, 2013 HAPPY BIRTHDAY

DAY IN THE STARS

BIZARRO

Jacquelline Bigar King Features

The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHH You might not be aware of the confusion that surrounds you. You feel centered and focused. Use caution with all your energy, as others simply are not on the same page. Make it a point to really listen to a friend or loved one. Confirm all meetings. Tonight: Count on intensity. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHH Whatever a boss or parent says, he or she means. How this person delivers the message might change, but the words will remain the same. Don’t be surprised if you witness a minor display of frustration. The smart Bull will say little. Tonight: Maintain a sense of humor. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH Others could associate your dynamic personality with many different experiences. Should you choose to reveal your fiery side, for example, people might link you to high-energy situations. Do not take any comments personally. Tonight: TGIF! Start your weekend now! CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHH If you can take the day off, do. Take a walk by the water in order to center yourself. Choose this type of experience, and you’ll bypass much of the confusion that marks today. Use caution with others, and be aware that their words speak of the moment. Tonight: Keep your distance. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHHH Focus on friendship. Let your imagination play into the moment. Your fiery side might emerge when dealing with a friend who seems to stomp all over your plans. Consider this behavior a manifestation of this person’s confusion. Tonight: Where your friends are. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHH You might decide to take the lead in a project, as you’ll note a theme of chaos running throughout the day. Investigate what could be the root of this issue. Consider that you might not be hearing others clearly. The haze surrounds you, too! Tonight: Celebrate the weekend.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH Listen to news with a bit of cynicism. Your sixth sense kicks in when you sense that something is off or not adding up. Confirm facts and ask questions, as your sources might not realize that they are giving out distorted information. Tonight: Try reading the tea leaves. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHH You’ll want to rethink a personal matter. This could be difficult, as someone might refuse to leave you alone. Trust that the right moment will appear, perhaps in a few days. By then, you will have new information. Tonight: Grab your favorite person, and go celebrate the weekend. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH You might think that you have solid plans, but so many invitations will appear that you could need to make an adjustment. Whatever you are doing, make sure that all parties are on the same page. Confirm meeting times and place just in case. Tonight: Be reasonable. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHH Recognize your limits, as you start what you think is a very normal day. Apparently, others already seem to have bypassed their work schedule for Friday plans. The reason might not be as important as you recognizing the issue. Tonight: Do whatever makes you feel good. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH While others might act confused -- or in some cases, ornery -- you are caught up in your efforts of pleasing a loved one. You will have to decide what should be done and what should be left for a rainy day. A child could make you laugh. Tonight: Keep spontaneity a high priority. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH Much is likely to wash right over you, which will prevent you from seeing clearly now. You might not want to deal with what is coming up. Use caution around a display of anger. You might be far more vulnerable than you are aware. Tonight: Home is where the heart is.

THE LOCKHORNS

CROSSWORD

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THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM

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Tom & Ray help figure out Towing Needs

Click and Clack Talk Cars By Tom and Ray Magliozzi

We do a lot of city driving, but in the summer months we tow a couple of Jet Skis around behind our older Nissan Murano, and it has seemed to do the job

just fine. The total weight of the Jet Skis and trailer is about 2,100 pounds. We are considering replacing the Murano with a 2013 Ford Escape with the 2.0-liter, EcoBoost engine. The 2013 Escape claims a towing capacity of 3,500 pounds, which is the same as our Murano. We like the idea of a smaller engine (better gas mileage) for when we are not pulling a trailer, but we are concerned about the

strain on a smaller engine when we do. Would you recommend the new Escape for our needs, or should we look at something with a six-cylinder engine or larger towing capacity? We live in Minnesota and appreciate the 4-wheel drive, too. If not the Escape, do you have other suggestions for us? Thank you. -- Dave RAY: Get the Escape. Its towing capacity is 3,500 pounds, and you need to tow

2,100. TOM: Your strategy is correct. You want a vehicle that meets your needs for the vast majority of your driving, not a vehicle that will handle every exception. And if you live in the city, a smaller vehicle with better gas mileage certainly makes sense. RAY: You’re right to be concerned about the towing. Adding 2,100 pounds of weight to any non-behe-

See Click and Clack, Page C2

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moth vehicle makes everything work harder -- the engine, the transmission, the suspension, the brakes. But the same was true of your Murano, and it’s done fine. TOM: You never want to run a vehicle at or near its limit, certainly not on a regular basis. So if you were planning to tow 3,400 pounds on summer weekends, we’d advise you to


CLASSIFIEDS

Click and Clack Talk Cars

Continued from Page C1

get some more wiggle room. But 2,100 pounds is well within the capacity of the 2013 Escape. RAY: You can protect your investment by taking some reasonable precautions. First, drive more slowly when you’re towing. The more gently you accelerate, the less strain you put on the engine and the entire drive train. TOM: Similarly, by driving at 60 or 65 instead of 80, you reduce the wind resistance significantly, and reduce the engine’s workload, allowing it to run cooler. RAY: And by changing the oil before and after your summer towing season, you’ll make sure you’re getting the best possible lubrication while your engine is working the hardest, and then you’ll drain out any oil that may have been subject to more heat and disintegration because of that towing. TOM: Other than that, following the owner’s manual’s maintenance instructions for heavier-duty-type of driving (that includes more-frequent scheduled maintenance for people who drive in extreme hot weather, tow things or deliver pizza), switch to a synthetic oil if your car doesn’t come with synthetic, and enjoy your new car and the better mileage. It’s NEVER cheaper in the long run to buy a new car. Want proof ? Order Tom and Ray’s pamphlet “How to Buy a Great Used Car: Secrets Only Your Mechanic Knows.” Send $4.75 (check or money order) to Used Car, P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475. Get more Click and Clack in their new book, “Ask Click and Clack: Answers from Car Talk.” Got a question about cars? Write to Click and Clack in care of this newspaper, or email them by visiting the Car Talk website at www. cartalk.com. (c) 2013 by Tom and Ray Magliozzi and Doug Berman Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

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Residential Rentals

4 BED, 3 bath home. NE location. Fenced yard. References checked. $1500/month. (620) 272-4542

(Published in The Garden City Telegram June 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, & 11, 2013.) NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: Harold Kenningston #27 Items: Dryer & 25cu ft freezer. Items will be sold or otherwise disposed of at this site on Saturday, June 15, 2013 at 11:00 am at the address listed below, in order to satisfy lien for rent due, in accordance with State statutes. Terms of sale are cash only, no checks. All goods are sold in as is condition. Seller reserves the right to outbid. All items may be available on date of sale. AAA Secured Storage 3105 E Mary Garden City, KS 67846 224231

THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM Public Services Help Wanted

Special Notices (Published in The Garden City Telegram June 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, & 11, 2013.) NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: Kathi Osborn #5. Items: Numerous boxes & bags. Items will be sold or otherwise disposed of at this site on Saturday, June 15, 2013 at 10:30 am at the address listed below, in order to satisfy lien for rent due, in accordance with State statutes. Terms of sale are cash only, no checks. All goods are sold in as is condition. Seller reserves the right to outbid. All items may be available on date of sale. AAA Secured Storage 3810 Schulman Garden City, KS 67846 224230

Lost LARGE GOLD women!s ring. Lost outside JCPenney!s on May 27th. Sentimental value. (620) 275-4874

LOST!! 2 year old red & white female Austrailian Shepherd named Tess. Lost from 6310 Old Post Rd, Garden City on March 14th. Wearing a brown collar, recently shaved. $500 reward offered if found. Call Lonnie or Justin at (620) 260-7042. LOST: SET of keys and round lock between American Legion and Pro-Build. REWARD! (620) 640-9463.

Public Services 12 STEP Group of Alcaholics Anonymous meets daily at 116 1/2 E. Chestnut. Call 272-5623. EMMANUEL UNION Free clothing & Household Items Available on Wed 10am - 6pm. 509 Chesterfield DR. All donations / non-perishable items gratefully accepted (620) 290-2616

GARDEN CITY 12 x 12 Al-Anon Family Groups (For families and friends of alcoholics/addicts) Thursday @ 7:00 pm. 116 Chestnut (A.A. Hall)

IF YOU USED THE MIRENA IUD between 2001-present and suffered perforation or embedment in the uterus requiring surgical removal, or had a child born with birth defects you may be entitled to compensation. Call Johnson Law and speak with female staff members 1-800-535-5727

Attention Parents: Does your day care provider have a license to watch children?. It!s the law that they do! Licensed daycare providSpecial Notices ers give positive discipline, enjoy working (Published in The Garwith children, and have den City Telegram June 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, & 11, been screened for any 2013.) history of physical or sexual assault against NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: children or substance A & A Drywall #125 abuse. Illegal care is Items: Sheetrock Mud Did you know that post- against the law. Want Mix. Items will be sold or ing signs on utility poles to become licensed? otherwise disposed of at and street signs, in Call Maggie Baker RN, this site on Saturday, street right-of-ways, or child care Surveyor, June 15, 2013 at 11:00 other public property is Finney CO Health Deam at the address listed (620) prohibited in Garden p a r t m e n t below, in order to satisfy City. All such signs will 272-3600. lien for rent due, in accordance with State statbe removed without no- WE ARE all created to utes. Terms of sale are tice! Your cooperation serve.! Come and join cash only, no checks. All is greatly appreciated. the Volunteer Team at goods are sold in as is The City of Garden City St Catherine Hospital condition. Seller reserves Ordinance No. 1858 and enjoy giving back. the right to outbid. All items may be available For more information Spl it out; get btr reslts. call 272-2522. on date of sale. AAA Secured Storage Did you get that? 3105 E Mary What we!re saying is... Garden City, KS 67846 Spell it out! And get 224232 better results with your ad! Ads with fewer abBIG HEADLINES GET THE JOB DONE! breviations are easier Advertise the right way to read. in the classifieds.

Luxury newly remodeled 2 bedroom apartment. No pets. $900 / $900. (620) 510-2477.

Narcotics Anonymous (NA) Meetings. Monday & Saturday 7pm; Satur• Self Motivated day Book Study 6pm. • Friendly Attitude St. Catherine Hospital • Valid Driver’s License Classroom 1. [North en• 18 Yrs. or Older trance west of EmerAPPLY IN PERSON BETWEEN 9AM-11AM gency room — follow hall to 1st elevator go to NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE LL exit elevator turn left then right 1st room on right.] or call 620-899-5420. Children welcome, parents are 705 W. Kansas • Garden City, KS responsible for their DRIVERS: TRAINING, children. Class A-CDL. Train and Education & Training work for us! ProfesAIRLINES CAREERS - sional and focused Become an Aviation training for your Class Maintenance Tech. A-CDL. You choose beFAA approved training. tween Company Driver, Financial aid if qualified Owner Operator, Lease - Housing available. Operator or Lease Job placement assis- Trainer. (877) 369-7885 tance. Call Aviation In- www.centraltruckingstitute of Maintenance drivingjobs.com 888-248-7449. EARLY MORNING ATTEND COLLEGE front counter help ONLINE from Home. needed. You will rotate *Medical, *Business, between 4:30 am to 11 *Criminal Justice, *Hos- am and 6:30 am to pitality. Job placement 12:30 pm. Must have assistance. Computer cash register experiand Financial Aid if ence and must speak qualified. S C H E V English. Great job opauthorized. C a l l portunity for someone who likes to work morn888-220-3977 www.CenturaOnline.co ings and have afternoons free. Looking for m someone who is Help Wanted friendly, energetic, honest, and dependable. We are closed on SunWESTLAKE ACE day!s and all major holiHARDWARE GENERAL MANAGER Reports to: days. Apply at Daylight District Manager The Donut before noon.

DELIVERY

212877

C2

General Manager is responsible for ensuring superior customer service in their store. They must develop associates at all levels, drive sales and profitability, and maintain effective expense and payroll budget management. They ensure compliance with effective inventory management and merchandising practices and all Westlake policies and procedures. Summary of Job Duties and Responsibilities:Customer Service, Store Operations, Leadership, Hire/Train Associates. Education/ Training: High school or GED equivalent. Experience: Previous retail management experience preferred. Hardware experience preferred. If interested, please submit resume and salary requirements to resumes@westlakehardware.com or fax to 866490-0460.

ASSISTANT PLANT Manager.. Local manufacturer located within the city limits specializing in custom PVC fabrication. Must have good verbal and written communication skills, prior supervisory experience a plus but notrequired. Wage DOE, full benefits. Email resume to ckirby@nacopvc.com or call (620) 276-3218.

BARTENDER, EXPERIENCED COOK, & WAIT STAFF needed. Must be 18 years old or older. Apply in person at TIME OUT SPORTS CLUB

is seeking a

Maintenance Manager Special Accounts Representative

Responsibilities include: Controlling delinquent loan accounts, collecting delinquent loan payments and recovering collateral. Qualified candidates will be detail-oriented and have strong communication skills.

6 4 9 7 1 8 2 3 5

224177

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Help Wanted MICRO, A division of MWI Veterinary Supply Co, has an opening for a Field Support Computer Consultant working remotely from the Garden City or Scott City, KS area. Involves computer installations, wiring, maintenance, wireless networking and troubleshooting Intel based computer systems at feedlots. Requires an AS degree in computer related field or equivalent. Needs basic electrical/electronic knowledge. Unix, Linux and Windows exp. desired. Heavy day travel some overnights required. Apply at www.mwivet.com. Career Tab Link. EEO/AA

HELP WANTED at Fitz LLC, Mike!s Locker. 3547 Hwy 40, Oakely, KS 67748. Butcher, wrapper, & processing. (785) 672-9003 HELP WANTED “Partners In Excellence” OTR Drivers APU Equipped Pre-Pass EZ-pass passenger policy. 2012 & N e w er equipment. 100% NO touch. Butler Transport 1-800-528-7825 HELP WANTED Waitresses nights and weekends. Apply atHannah!s Corner Taylor Ave & Mary St. Garden City

Maintenance Technician! The Trails of Garden City has an immediate opening for an experienced Maintenance technician to join our property management team. Candidates must have a working knowledge of electrical, plumbing, carpentry, painting and dry wall repair. Must have reliable EXP. FLATBED Driv- transportation. Bi-liners:! Regional opportu- gual English/Spanish nities now open with helpful. Applicant must plenty of freight & great pass a background pay! 800-277-0212 or check, drug screen and primeinc.com have a valid driver!s liGeneral Pest Control cense and auto insurhas an opening for a ance. Please apply in full time Service Tech- person between the nician no experience hours of 10:00am and necessary, will train the 2:00pm at 3501 N. right person. Sales/ Campus Drive, Garden Service experience City, KS. Equal opporbeneficial EOE pre-em- tunity employer. ployment & random OFFICE HELP needed. drug screening reMust have good comquired. Excellent beneputer, communication fits included. 15609 S and organizational Hwy. 23, Cimarron, Ks skills. Part-time or (620)855-7768 or full-time. Send resume 1-800-362-0124 to P.O. Box 554, GarIs it Junk? Or is it den City, KS. 67846. Retro Cool? Don’t The Classifieds: think about it - Place an ad with us today! Get it here

The optometry office of Drs. Hopkins & Hopkins & Ackerman has an opening for an

Optometric Technician/ Receptionist. The position will require close work with patients gathering health and personal information, performing multiple testing, scheduling appointments and answering phones. Good people skills and work ethics are necessary. Bilingual is helpful, but not required. Pay commensurate to experience. Benefits include health insurance, life insurance, vacation and sick leave pay, 401K, and eye care benefits. Please apply in person at 802 Campus Drive, Garden City, KS 67846.

224213

Please contact the: Human Resources Manager for more information on this position. Hamilton County Hospital, Box 948, Ave. G & Huser, Syracuse, KS 67878, 620-384-7461. Drug screening required. EOE

Spirit of the Plains, CASA is seeking a

Volunteer Coordinator for a Child-Advocacy Program Qualified applicants will have excellent people skills, enjoy public speaking, computer skills, the ability to supervise volunteer advocates, and enjoy working with children. Knowledge of the child-welfare system and court system is helpful. A degree or 3 years experience in the social service field is preferred. This is a full-time position. Benefits include sick and vacation days, retirement plan, and $200 a month towards health insurance. Spirit of the Plains, CASA P.O. Box 656 Garden City, KS 67846 Deadline is June 13, 2013. 224188

224240 202246

224280

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KEARNY COUNTY HOSPITAL LAKIN, KANSAS

This full time position requires flexible hours and offers competitive wages, excellent benefits including group health insurance; vacation, sick and holiday pay; pension plan and an organization that takes pride in providing excellent patient care. Home Health experience is preferred. Applications may be picked up at the KCH business office or downloaded at www.kearnycountyhospital.com Kansas license required. Contact: Donna Winright, 620-355-1520 or Debbie Tuttle, 620-355-1365 Kearny County Hospital 500 Thorpe St., Lakin, KS 67860

Shift Differential Competitive Wages Excellent Benefits Group Health Insurance

EOE. Physical exam and drug testing required.

Help Wanted

PLUMBERS & HVAC technicians and installers for new construction, remodel or repair. Excellent wages and benefits. Hays, Ks Call 785-628-8088.

SANDBLAST POSITIONS

Palmer Manufacturing & Tank, Inc. is looking for Experienced Sandblast positions. Qualifications: 5 years of Sandblast/Paint experience needed, dependable/ hard working person, willing to work night shift, team player, safety focused, high school diploma/ GED and able to pass a Pre-Employment drug screen and background check. The company offers health insurance, life & disability insurance, vacation and holiday time, along with a 401K plan. Come by and fill out an application M-F from 8am-5pm at 2814 W Jones Ave, Garden City, KS 67846.

223420

PSI TRANSPORT is always looking for Good Company Livestock Haulers.! Competitive Pay, Life/Health/Dental Benefits paid in Full for Employees, Discounted for Family, 401K and Bonus Program Available.!Contact (785) 675-3477 for more information.

SHOP LABOR position open. Local manufacturer located within the city limits specializing in custom PVC fabrication. Minimum 40 hours per week, hours 6.30am-2:30pm, overtime on a as needed basis. Our core business is the manufacturing of PVC pipe fittings. PT BOOKKEEPER This position begins as needed for local truck- a 90 day temporary eming company. Call Deb- ployment working into a bie at (620) 271-3593 full time position based on performance. Must between 2-5pm only. team orientated. THE SUPERSTORE is Email resume to now hiring for a FT ckirby@nacopvc.com sales position. Hourly or call (620) 276-3218. wage, plus commission. Benefit package. Please apply in person Drivers at The Superstore, 1213 Fleming, between TRUCK DRIVER. End Dump experience a 9 am and 11 am. plus, loader experience TRUCK DRIVING a must. CDL required. positions available. Local hauls, home eveClass A CDL required. rynight. Call 6202 years experience. 272-4725. Call (620) 275-5499.

WAREHOUSE ASSOCIATE

223842

HD Supply Power Solutions is hiring for the position of warehouse associate/CDL-A driver at our Ulysses, KS warehouse. Must be 21 years of age or older. Must pass drug test and background check. High School diploma or GED required. Forklift experience preferred. Class A CDL license is required. Qualified applicants please apply online at www.hdsupply.com - Job Req#75524. For additional information please call 620-356-3373. HD Supply is an equal opportunity employer.

224192

LPN FULL TIME Summitt ResCare is seeking a qualified individual to fill the full time position of LPN at our Garden City office. This position is responsible to provide nursing care to individuals as prescribed by the physician and in accordance with standards of nursing practices and regulations, and may be directed by Nursing Department Managers. Must have completed post secondary education coursework to facilitate licensure as a Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN). Must have a current license in good standing. Must have a valid drivers license, ability to read, write, and follow oral and written directions at a level necessary to accomplish the job. must be able to relate positively and favorably to individual / consumer and families and work cooperatively with other associates. Must be knowledgeable of individual service plans including understanding of clients rights, health needs and program implementation activities. Must be able to bend, stoop, push, pull, sit and walk for periods of time. Must be able to utilize, proper body mechanics while lifting up to 75 pounds. If interested, apply only at www.rescare.com then select careers. Summitt ResCare is an EOE employer. (Published in The Garden City Telegram on May 24, 31 and June 7, 2013) IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF FINNEY COUNTY, KANSAS In the Matter of the Estate of ARNOLD C. SCHWEER Case No. 11 PR 61

HOME HEALTH RN

2013 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

EOE

Hamilton County Hospital is seeking a motivated and innovative individual to manage the Maintenance Department. If you have knowledge and skills in electrical, plumbing, and carpentry, then this is an exciting opportunity for you to be a part of a progressive management team.

FULL TIME

Send cover letter and resume to — Vice President, HR Services Golden Plains Credit Union PO Box 459, Garden City, KS 67846

Help Wanted HEAVY EQUIPMENT Operator Career! 3 Week Hands On Training School. Bulldozers, Backhoes, Excavators. National Certifications. Lifetime Job Placement Assistance. VA Benefits Eligible! 1-866-362-6497

G & S Transport, INC. is looking for Drivers w/ CDL. Home nightly (620) 290-5532.

Hamilton County Hospital

Golden Plain Credit Union is currently seeking a qualified individual to fill a full time position as a Special Accounts Representative.

FRIDAY, June 7, 2013

Irsik & Doll PEN RIDERS Beefland Feed Yard is now taking applications for Pen Riders. Applicants should be reliable, hard working, and self motivated. Individual must have previous experience and knowledge. Competitive wages are offered with a full benefits package including: 401(k) with company match, profit sharing plan, 100% paid medical and dental insurance for employee, paid short/long term disability insurance, life insurance, paid vacation, sick leave, and career advancement opportunities. To apply for this outstanding opportunity, apply in person at Beefland, 12500 S Beefland Road, Garden City, KS, or call 620-275-2030 to schedule an appointment. Irsik & Doll is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

www.irsikanddoll.com

Shop the Classifieds

NOTICE OF HEARING THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS CONCERNED: You are notified a petition for final settlement has been filed in this court by Clara Faye Schweer, duly appointed, qualified and acting executor of the estate of Arnold C. Schweer, deceased, requesting that petitioner!s acts be approved; account be settled and allowed; the heirs be determined; the will be construed and the estate be assigned to the persons entitled thereto; the court find the allowances requested for attorneys' fees and expenses are reasonable and should be allowed; the administration of the estate be closed; upon the filing of receipts the petitioner be finally discharged as the executor of the estate of Arnold C. Schweer, deceased, and the petitioner be released from further liability. You are required to file your written defenses thereto on or before the 20th day of June, 2013 at 10:00 o!clock a.m. in room 209 in the District Court, in Garden City, Finney County, Kansas, at which time and place the cause will be heard. Should you fail therein, judgment and decree will be entered in due course upon the petition. Clara Faye Schweer, Executor Michael K. Ramsey, SC#10764 HOPE, MILLS, BOLIN, COLLINS & RAMSEY 607 N. Seventh Street, P.O. Box 439 Garden City, Kansas 67846 (620) 276-3203 Attorneys for Executor 223956


THE Garden City Telegram

Get Professional Real Estate Service ... Let A REALTOR Serve Your Needs!

224271

We’re open 24/7 at www.mba-realestate.com

NEW LISTINGS

620-271-9500

www.hometownrealestategc.com

NEW LISTINGS

1605 York Ave.

$125,900 - 5bdrm, 2bath with bonus room on main level. Can be used as a rec room or master bdrm. Large dble garage with extra parking in back. A Must See at a great price.

1710 B Street $154,900

Stephanie Bogner, Broker, 620-272-3209

1118 N. 12th - Multi-Family $68,000

1708 Hattie

$108,000-Cute 4 bdrm house with steel siding, vinyl windows, sprinkler system. Nice corner lot. Oversized Single Detached garage with carport and shop. Newer A/C and water heater 2012.

Viviana Longoria, Realtor 620-290-6263

MBA REAL ESTATE

275-7440 224238

1505 Hattie $65,000

Check out New Hud listings at www.hudhomestore.com We specialize in Good Neighbor Next Door Programs. To view details on this and other listings, go to www.hometownrealestategc.com Sandy Keller................................ 620-272-1969 Judy Garner ................................ 620-521-1515 Beth Bruno-Hamilton ................. 620-271-1128 Missy Baier.................................. 620-287-5000 Susan Carmichael ...................... 620-260-7369 Skip Garner ................................. 620-521-8181 Vicki Downey .............................. 620-521-0160 Terria Judge ................................ 620-271-2129 Joey Kelch................................... 620-640-5732 Carmen Guzman ......................... 620-290-8669 Mario Reyes................................. 620-640-5222

ReganAndCo.com

PRICE REDUCED

Price reduced to $396,000

423 N. Main, Garden City • 276-3525

ReganAndCo.com

NEW LISTING

Jamie Biera...................................... 805-2616 Diane Crockett................................. 260-6001 Peggy Glunt..................................... 272-6494 Lisa Hogan ...................................... 338-7474 Kathie Maestas................................ 271-4777 Mike Regan ..................................... 290-0949 Bob Rodriquez................................. 521-2898 Pat Smith ......................................... 271-2279 224249

Child Care

Miscellaneous for Sale RECONDITIONED USED bicycles of various sizes. Fixed with a webliner in tires and new thorn resistant tubes. See at 1307 Glenn St in Scott City, KS. 620-872-5591 STORAGE CONTAINERS: 8x20 or 8x40. BIG L SALES , 620-276-3189 STURDIBILT STORAGE SHEDS, all sizes. BIG L SALES, 1102 East Fulton, Garden City.

Miscellaneous for Sale BARGAINS PLUS CONSIGNMENT 308 N. 7th Garden City. Tuesday- Saturday 10am-4pm gctbargains.com

Want to Buy

1104 Mockingbird Lane $362,000 ~ EXCEPTIONAL HOME! 4 bedrooms, 3 bath, formal & casual dining, walk out family room on lower level. Plus recroom in basement. Beautiful woodwork. Peaceful, private backyard! There’s just nothing missing. Peggy Glunt (620) 272-6494

Wearing Apparel

Mike Regan (620) 290-0949

1608 B St. Twin beds, clothes, bicycle. Fri 8-4 Sat 8-4 1622 BANCROFT Couches, clothes, & more. Fri 5-? Sat 9-? 1709 PARKWOOD Ln. Multi-Family Garage Sale! Paintball gear, dishes, TV, toys, infant-adult clothes, maternity clothes. Fri 4-7 1713 PEPPERWOOD Fishtank, boys clothes, toys, bunk beds, tools, kitchen items, fridge, pool table, misc. Fri 3-8 Sat 8-12 2006 COMMANCHE Clothes, toys, washer, & lots of misc. Cash only. No early sales. Saturday 7 - 12 2010 N Sunflower St. HUGE Estate/Garage Sale! Furniture, mattresses, tvs, W/D, lawn equipment, patio set, tools, dishes, & numerous household items. Saturday 8 - 1

DEERFIELD FEEDYARD is now accepting contracts for high moisture corn. Please call (620) 426-8611 and ask for Cary from 8 am-4:30 pm.

Service Directory Call the Classified Department to Advertise. 620-276-6862 ext. 501

DAZZLIN’ DOGS PET GROOMING We make dogs look dazzlin’ !

Julia A. Goetz Certified Groomer (620) 277-2130 (620) 640-1370

GARDEN CITY HANDYMAN SERVICES (620) 640-2010

2006 HONDA Accord LX - V6, 4 Door, 76K Great Car in!Great Condition.!White w/Tan Cloth Interior.!Asking $9,995. Please call (620) 277-8070. Don"t miss this deal! FOR SALE: 2004 Freightliner Columbia. 645K miles. $18k. 2010 Tempte grain hopper. $25k. 620-338-7547

Call Tim at (620) 521-2181

NEED ELDERCARE? I am a mature woman with a flexible schedule that is available to work in your home 7 days a week. Garden City area. 720-666-1378.

Licensed & Insured

J&H Upholstery Dining Room Chairs Tractor Seats, Motorcycle Seats & More! 3410 N. 8th, GC (620) 521-7073

Autos 2000 FORD Windstar.. Call after 6pm. (620) 275-4245.

MJT CONSTRUCTION

Roofing, Siding, Remodeling, Windows, doors & concrete. Free estimates.

NEXSTEP LAWN CARE

LAWN MOWING & TRIMMING Good Rates (620) 272-2839

Full Service Mowing & Trimming Yard Clean-Up Vi / MC Accepted (620) 276-6699

LAWN RANGER Landscaping, Stone Edging, Planting, Mulch & Rock Laying, Shrub Trimming, Mowing & Fertilizing. Insured. Free Estimates. Call Alonzo 290-9406.

Specializing

The Classifieds: Get it here

620-260-6600

52877

In Interior Carpentry

Paramount

Carpentry

STAPP’S AUTO SALES

TheSHEET

www.stappsautosales.com

AT HARVEST AUTO L.L.C.

221415

METAL Shop

Check us out at

214157

Jamie Biera...................................... 805-2616 Diane Crockett................................. 260-6001 Peggy Glunt..................................... 272-6494 Lisa Hogan ...................................... 338-7474 Kathie Maestas................................ 271-4777 Mike Regan ..................................... 290-0949 Bob Rodriquez................................. 521-2898 Pat Smith ......................................... 271-2279

2111 Antler Ridge

1304 LABRADOR AKC LAB PUPS Truck bed cover, Ready June 5th. Bumper Defender, 7 males. Blk, choc, comp. routers, Tv!s, wht, golden. jewelry, shoes, clothing, 620-952-2506 patio glass door and more! Fri 4pm-? Sat FREE KITTENS to a good home. Calico, 8-noon black & white, or cham1305 W,MARY pagne colored. Call Estate sale! Glider, an- (620) 276-3386 for tique sidebar, dining more information. set. Sat 8-2. No early REGISTERED sales. ENGLIGH Mastiff pup1506 FAIR. Sat 8-12. pies. Ready June 10th. Mens, womens, boys 1st shots. $750. Call (2T-4T), & girls (up to 9 (620) 277-0889 in the mos) clothes, Maytag afternoon or evening. glass top range, Farmers Services wooden bunkbed.

2118 W. Jones Bookcases, antique glassware, Pyrex/Corningware bowl sets, cake pans, collectables, toys, dressers, Disney VCR movies, lots of misc. Sat 8-12

ct ContraNG! I PEND 423 N. Main, Garden City • 276-3525

Pets

51546

Garage Sales

Wedding Gowns, Prom Dresses & QuinceaĂąera Dresses!

We currently have a wedding dress, 2 purple prom dresses, vintage gold prom dress andcute flower girl dress in the shop! We are now accepting formal gowns & dresses for consignment. Items must be freshly clean and in “ready-to-wear� condition.

Bargains Plus Consignment 308 N. 7th, Garden City Tue-Sat 10am-4pm.

HPR IN Satanta, KS LOOKING TO BUY has over 50 black guns nice mobile home. in stock from entry level (620) 424-2174. to bench guns. We are class 3 for your NFA Household Items items such as suppresKENMORE SIDE-BY sors and short barreled -SIDE refrigerator & rifles. We take care of electric stove. $375 toATF paperwork. Give gether. (620) 640-7326 us a call for all your fireWASHER & Electric arm needs. Shawn Dryer by Whirlpool (620) 629-7080 or Shop 220v $325.00. Please (620) 649-2670. call (620) 521-0302 between 8 am - 4:30 pm. JR. GOLF Clubs (5) w/bag & practice net. $40.00. (620) 275-0613

Motorcycles & ATVs

405 N 4TH. Paintings, 2001 APRILIA FALCO antiques, collectibles, 1000, $4000. (620) furniture, art supplies. 295-0723 Fri, Sat & Sun 9 - dark. 2001 HARLEY Davidson Fatboy. 88 cubic in. 501 N. 9th St. Baby items, furniture, 10,800 actual miles. Inhousehold and clothing. cludes helmet, cover, luggage, and battery Sat 8-noon charger. Dealer serv519 N. 12th iced. (620) 275-5903. “Make an Offer� 5 Party Sale! Apt. size stove, 2005 DYNA Wide Glide fooseball table, sofa, Harley Davidson. Black namebrand clothing, Cherry. 88 cubic in. For lots of misc. Fri 4-8, Sat more info call (620) 8-? 640-2805.

BEAUTIFUL CHERRY ENTERTAINMENT C EN T ER , L AM P S, BAR STOOL, ANTIQUE ROCKING CHAIR AND MORE! Bargains Plus Consignment, 308 N. 7th, Garden City. Tuesday- Saturday 10am-4pm. www.gctbargains.com

1505 E Johnson, Garden City - Multi-family sale. FRIDAY 5:00 PM - 8:00 PM. Bunkbeds, infant swing, carseat, bouncer, toys. Household items. Infant boy's clothing and women's apparel.

FREE! YOU HAUL! WOOD PALLETS Pick up in the alley behind The Telegram 310 N. 7th Street Garden City

SOUTHWIND MOVING SALE!! 106 Cambridge Ct. Lawn equip/supplies, beds, ping-pong table, W/D, bedroom set, various furniture & much more! Fri. & Sat. Open at 8 am!

108 Apache, Satanta. In alley. Saturday 8am-noon. Colectibles, Antiques, & Misc. 1608 TERMINAL Ave. Brand name clothes, household items, lots of misc. Friday 11 - 7

%VDUXPSL 'MBTIJOH r /P +PC 5PP 4NBMM 0S -BSHF

+VMJVT "QQFMIBOT t 155 Harvest St. (Behind Mia Rumba)

28090

• Tree Service • Snow Removal • Firewood Lowest Prices Free Estimates Licensed & Insured Workers Compensation

Troy Hawker, Owner Operator

271-0478 • (cell) 640-1605

Auto Parts & Services

Bargain Blowout

Garage Sales

Custom Sheet Metal Fabrication

02 HARLEY Wide Side, purple. 22k miles. Priced under book $7,500. 01 Harley Sportser, Candy Red. 12k miles. Lowered for lady rider. $4,500 OBO. 620-304-5377

902 LABRADOR Lots 2008 HONDA Goldwing of clothing, furniture GL. Over $2k in and household goods. add-ons. 27,500 miles. Sat 7:30-Noon Excellent condition. $16,900. Call (620) 640-8319 for more inMULTI-FAMILY GAformation. RAGE SALE. 2116 W 224250 Mary. Office furniture, FOR SALE: 2009 motorcycle, golf clubs & Honda Shadow Spirit. Tools & Equipment LOTS MORE. Black, windshield, only DC WELDER on a Fri 12-6 Sat 8:30-1 2200 miles. Call trailer. Oxygen hoses, 620-290-7080 or regulators, & torch in620-335-5515 cluded. (620) 276-7849

www.gctbargains.com

Sporting Equipment

3310 YELLOWSTAR Friday & Saturday 8am-???. Household furniture, kids clothing, pop machine, shelving units, treadmill, home decor, appliances, toys, misc.

SUVs & Vans 2010 CHEVY Tahoe LT. 4X4. Leather, 69k miles $27,800 OBO. 620-353-4223

33622

All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex or national origin, or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination. This Newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law.

EXPERIENCED, LICENSED daycare has 2 infant spaces plus pre-school openings. Call (620) 640-5873

C3

FRIDAY, June 7, 2013

Southwind

ANTIQUE VISIBLE gas pump. Nice condition. $2500. (620) 271-4148. Cargo cover and sliding cargo divider. Fits Nissan Xterra. Great for traveling. Excellent condition. See at Bargains Plus Consignment, 308 N. 7th, Garden City. TuesdaySaturday 10am-4pm. www.gctbargains.com

N IO 52 CARS-PICKUPS - VANS T C APPLIANCES - FURNITURE - HOUSEHOLD

AU GLASSWARE - ANTIQUES – COLLECTABLES ESTATE ITEMS & CONSIGNMENTS GARDEN CITY, KS

Trailers 1999 TIMPTE Super Hopper trailer. Call after 4pm for information. (620) 260-7286 CALL TODAY Sold tomorrow! (620) 275-8500

Need Money? SELL YOUR STUFF No Calls to Make No Visits to Your Home, No Hassles! It’s Fast, Easy & Fun! We’ll sell your items and send you a check. Call 271-7484 for more information on adding your items, valued at $100 or more, to our Bargains Plus Consignments Store, or stop by 308 N. Seventh St. between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. Tuesday - Saturday. t -PDBUFE +VTU 4PVUI PG UIF (BSEFO $JUZ Telegram. t 0QFO BN QN t 5VFTEBZ 4BUVSEBZ t / 4FWFOUI 4U (BSEFO $JUZ ,T

XXX HDUCBSHBJOT DPN

SAT., JUNE 8TH,9:00AM CT.

OPEN HOUSE: Friday, JUNE 7th, 1:00 - 5:00 PM LOCATION - THE AUCTION CENTER BUILDING, 3280 W. JONES AVE., GARDEN CITY, KS (2 mi. West of 5 Points next to Traders Pawn Shop) SEE COMPLETE LIST W/PICTURES AT “www.scottauction.com� VEHICLES: 52 LATE MODEL CARS, PICKUPS & VANS, see web site for complete list – 19 NOS OEM Ford & Dodge pickup bed liners - pickup bed trailer – tires - FURNITURE: couches, loveseats, recliners, rockers - chairs - Entertainment Centers - Microwave Stand – cabinets - dining tables - chest of drawers - bookcases - nightstand - End / coffee tables – misc. chairs - writing desks - lamps – beds - APPLIANCES - ELECTRONICS: freezer - elec. Range top - elec. Organ - Commercial refrigerated service pie case - washers & dryers – microwaves - Stereo’s & TV’s – computer monitors, printers & equip. - ANTIQUES – COLLECTABLES: Collectable glassware - dolls – vintage toys – lots costume jewelry – Razor, pocket knife, buckle & lighter collections - Music instruments - Antique furniture needing restoration – HOUSEHOLD: Lots household, kitchen items, small appliances – elec. Smoker - Dishes, cookware, bakeware, - Linens, towels, fabric, bedding - baskets - books – mirrors – holiday decorations - luggage – patio furniture SHOP EQUIP. - TOOLS: power tools – hand tools – drill press – hyd. Press – micrometers - lots boat/rv parts & repairs -lots yard & garden tools - hand tools - vac’s - EXERCISE EQUIP, ETC.: - weight sets – tread mill Lots Misc. hardware – golf clubs - bicycles - Exercisers - sinks - OFFICE & COMMERCIAL: 2 new hyd. Patient lifts (bed to chair/bath) - desk - file cabinets – binder equip. – dividers – wood & metal storage cabinets & shelves - 100’s of other items too numerous to list TERMS: CASH - Check w/ positive ID – 10% BUYERS PREMIUM. - - No warranties expressed or implied. Announcements day of sale take precedence. - - All merchandises must be removed within one week LUNCH SERVED.

Another

SCOTT AUCTION

A Division of the

There is a reason

224038

3280 W. Jones PO Box 398 Garden City, Kansas 67846 Phone 620-276-8282 www.scottauction.com


C4

FRIDAY, June 7, 2013

the Garden City Telegram

GARAGE SALES

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17

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To 1305 West Mary

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To 2116 West Mary

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14 9

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CT

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1 To

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To 1622 Bancroft

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16 To 2118 W. Jones

3 To 519 North 12th

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1505 E Johnson, Garden City - Multi-family sale. FRIDAY 5:00 PM - 8:00 PM. Bunkbeds, infant swing, carseat, bouncer, toys. Household items. Infant boy's clothing and women's apparel.

2

3 519 N. 12th “Make an Offer� 5 Party Sale! Apt. size stove, fooseball table, sofa, namebrand clothing, lots of misc. Fri 4-8, Sat 8-?

4 2006 COMMANCHE Clothes, toys, washer, & lots of misc. Cash only. No early sales. Saturday 7 - 12

5 1304 LABRADOR Truck bed cover, Bumper Defender, comp. routers, Tv!s, jewelry, shoes, clothing, patio glass door and more! Fri 4pm-? Sat 8-noon

6 SOUTHWIND MOVING SALE!! 106 Cambridge Ct. Lawn equip/supplies, beds, ping-pong table, W/D, bedroom set, various furniture & much more! Fri. & Sat. Open at 8 am!

7 1709 PARKWOOD Ln. Multi-Family Garage Sale! Paintball gear, dishes, TV, toys, infant-adult clothes, maternity clothes. Fri 4-7

8 501 N. 9th St. Baby items, furniture, household and clothing. Sat 8-noon

9 1622 BANCROFT Couches, clothes, & more. Fri 5-? Sat 9-?

10 108 Apache, Satanta. In alley. Saturday 8am-noon. Colectibles, Antiques, & Misc.

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16

3310 YELLOWSTAR Friday & Saturday 8am-???. Household furniture, kids clothing, pop machine, shelving units, treadmill, home decor, appliances, toys, misc.

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2118 W. Jones Bookcases, antique glassware, Pyrex/Corningware bowl sets, cake pans, collectables, toys, dressers, Disney VCR movies, lots of misc. Sat 8-12

17

1713 PEPPERWOOD Fishtank, boys clothes, toys, bunk beds, tools, kitchen items, fridge, pool table, misc. Fri 3-8 Sat 8-12

MULTI-FAMILY GARAGE SALE. 2116 W Mary. Office furniture, motorcycle, golf clubs & LOTS MORE. Fri 12-6 Sat 8:30-1

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13

1608 TERMINAL Ave. Brand name clothes, household items, lots of misc. Friday 11 - 7

1608 B St. Twin beds, clothes, bicycle. Fri 8-4 Sat 8-4

Commercial Real Estate

4 BED, 3 bath home. NE location. Fenced yard. References checked. $1500/month. (620) 272-4542

MOBILE HOME park for sale in Garden City. Serious inquiries only. (620) 277-0131 or (620) 640-0857.

Shop The Classifieds!

Commercial Real Estate

2922 CLIFF PL. 5 LAKIN — NICE 2800 bdrm./3 baths, great NE sq.ft. home in the councul-de-sac. Updated try on 66 acres near throughout. $196,900. river. 4 bedroom, 3 913-302-6041 bath, with D/ A garage. 40x60 shop, underground spring fed pond. Price reduced. Will consider all offers. Call (620) 355-7653 or (620) 271-3685.

Check Us Out

3332 JANTZ Circle 4 bdrm., 3 baths. Recently finished basement. Beautiful family home. Great quiet kid-friendly neighborhood! $189,000 (620) 805-1650

20

15

Residential Rentals

4355 CHAMBER Drive, Garden City. 6 acres, parcels & prices negotiable. (620) 276-3087, (620) 765-0239.

To 1608 Terminal Ave. Real Estate

902 LABRADOR Lots 405 N 4TH. Paintings, of clothing, furniture antiques, collectibles, 660 S. RANDY LANE and household goods. furniture, art supplies. 1729 sq ft, 4 bed, 2 Sat 7:30-Noon Fri, Sat & Sun 9 - dark. bath geodestic home in horse friendly neighbor19 hood. Lots of upgrades 14 throughout the house. 1305 W,MARY All kitchen appliances 1506 FAIR. Sat 8-12. Estate sale! Glider, anincluded! $128,000 Mens, womens, boys tique sidebar, dining Call Clint at (2T-4T), & girls (up to 9 set. Sat 8-2. No early (620) 290-5008 for info. mos) clothes, Maytag sales. glass top range, wooden bunkbed.

Real Estate

203 E. Laurel, Garden City, 275-0284 www.HeritageRealty.biz Yo Si Hablo EspaĂąol

214995

HOUSE FOR SALE! 3 bd, 2.25 bath.Nice, quiet neighborhood. 2 car garage. 271-2225.

Real Estate

Luxury newly remod2303 Lee eled 2 bedroom apart2611 N. Coachman ment. No pets. $900 / 3 bedroom, S/A garage, Well maintained home fenced yard, almost fin- in nice NE neighbor$900. (620) 510-2477. shed b a s e m e n t . hood. 5 bdrm, 3 bath. Commercial Rentals $115,000. 3,057 sq. ft. Large FOR RENT: 40! x 123! (620) 276-6299 kitchen, bedrooms, and x 14! Warehouse/Shop family room. $203,000. Trailers Career Shopping? Building with offices, Call 620-640-0455. See 24 FT Aluminum car bathrooms, and 20! x Don!t Miss a day of The www.forsalebyowner. hauling trailer. Lightly 13! D.S. door. 150 N InTelegram Classifieds! com for more info. hauled. $8k with gen- dustrial Drive. (620) 275-6142 or (620) erator. $7k without gen640-4149 erator. 620-272-3120 NEW UTILITY & cargo trailers . Big & Small! BIG L SALES , 1102 East Fulton, Garden City.

Real Estate

www.gctelegram.com

2010 N Sunflower St. HUGE Estate/Garage Sale! Furniture, mattresses, tvs, W/D, lawn equipment, patio set, tools, dishes, & numerous household items. Saturday 8 - 1

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18

8

LAKIN — NICE 2800 sq.ft. home in the country on 66 acres near river. 4 bedroom, 3 bath, with D/ A garage. 40x60 shop, underground spring fed pond. Call (620) 355-7653 or (620) 271-3685. Classifieds do the work!

Check out the classifieds! 224193

Direct Support Professional Summit ResCare is seeking a qualified individuals to fill the position of direct support staff. This position will provide services for assigned consumers in Garden City. High school diploma or GED and a valid driver’s license are required. If interested, apply only at www.rescare.com then select careers, External Applicants, enter 67846 and then choose Garden City Summit ResCare. Summitt ResCare is an EOE employer.

LAND FOR SALE

223606

Haskell Farm, Providence Grain vicinity. 2300 acres, 1765 acres sprinkler irrigation. 8 years TRIPLE NET LEASE Excellent soils & good water. No minerals. $9,200,000. Development property. Almost 10 acres East of Wilson Addition. Excellent location. Price reduced. $149,500 Morton Co. KS. South of Rolla. 440 acres, 280 acres sprinkler irrigated, rebuilt & renozzeled T&L sprinkler at 700 gpm. 140 acres growing wheat, bal. to corn. No minerals. $1,100,000. Hamilton Co. KS. 1,013 mineral acres. 6 Tracts. $710,000 Meade Co. KS. 640 mineral acres. 3 Tracts. $448,000 Contact:

Johnny Crist, Land Specialist (620) 272-1207 johnnycrist 29@gmail.com www.landcompanyonline.com Cheryl Zortman, Broker Canon City, Colorado

REACH US

224209

By Smart Phone

1508 N. 8th St., $81,000

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