Issue 75 - Tidbits of Sheridan and Johnson Counties

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A LOCALLY OWNED AND OPERATED PAPER - THANKS FOR YOUR SUPPORT - KEEP SHOPPING LOCAL!

FREE CLASSIFIEDS!!

June 7 - June 13, 2015

Issue 75

Kysar Publishing

For Ad Rates call: (307) 655-5095

CANNON CONSULTING LLC CLAYTON ROSENLUND - LICENSED SURVEYOR -7 307

52-0

Laugh with

Q: Why are you selling your vacuum? A: It was just collecting dust!

TIDBITS® VACUUMS UP DUST

SURVEYING & MAPPING • BOUNDARY • OIL & GAS • FLOOD PLAIN • DESIGN & ASBUILT • CONSTRUCTION STAKING

your Hometown Lumber yard Since 1928

DOES YOUR ROAD, LANE OR DRIVEWAY NEED IMPROVEMENT, YOUR YARD NEED LANDSCAPING ROCK, YOUR KIDS NEED A SANDBOX, OR YOU ARE A CONTRACTOR? WE CAN HELP!

a bit

109

WWW.1CANNON.COM

bkysar@sjtidbits.com

by Janet Spencer On June 8, 1869, Ives W. McGaffey patented a suction-type vacuum cleaner in Chicago, IL. Called the Whirlwind, it was difficult to use because the operator had to manually turn a crank while pushing it across the floor. Come along with Tidbits as we vacuum up the dust! UNAVOIDABLE DUST • It’s been estimated that there are over 1,500 motes of dust in a typical cubic inch (2.5 cm) of air, even air that’s considered to be ‘clean.’ Human lungs take in about 14,000 quarts (13,250 l) of air daily, and contained in those 14,000 quarts of air are about a billion and a half particles of dust. One of the major components of house dust is microscopic flakes of human skin. You inhale about 700,000 of your own skin flakes daily. • What is dust? It’s salt from the sea, singlecelled diatoms from the oceans, forest fire smoke, volcano ash, bacteria, viruses, fungus spores, mold, pollen, and insect parts. About half of the dust that floats around in the air is a result of human activities such as agriculture, industry, and transportation. SNIGLET DEFINITION • ‘Frust’ is the small line of debris that refuses to be swept onto the dust pan and keeps backing a person across the room until they finally decide to give up and sweep it under the rug. …turn the page for more!

We have a big variety of products such as: o 1 ½” Minus Structural Fill o Boulders o 1 ½” Drain Rock o 2” x ¾” Screened Rock(Landscaping) o 2”x 6” Rip Rap o Washed Sand o Base Gravel - Grading “W” o Crushed Rock in 1”, 7/8”, 5/8”, and 3/8” sizes o Pit Run We also deliver by appointment. The TA Ranch Pit of Buffalo is open Mon - Fri 7am - 4pm and by appointment. We are located 13 miles South of Buffalo on Old Highway 87. For appointment: Bart Serres (307) 620 - 9329

PLUMBING • HEATING AIR CONDITIONING

42 EAST RIDGE RD. SHERIDAN, WY 82801

(P) 307.674.9260

(F) 307.673.0513

Sheridan

1836 S. Sheridan Ave. 307-673-0786

www.wyomingroofing.com

(307) 673-4469

Let Your Company

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Commercial • Industrial • Residential

Mike’s Electric Inc. LOWELL KYSAR NATHAN KYSAR OWNERS FAX • 307-674-4782

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674 - 7373

ELECTRIC CONTRACTORS • Sales • Electric Motors • Electric Heat • Service • Electric Accessories & Supplies

67 Years Service

43 E 5th St. • SHERIDAN, WY


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Tidbits® of Sheridan and Johnson Counties Tidbits Presents the

HEALTH PAGE TO YOUR GOOD HEALTH By Keith Roach, M.D.

Limiting Sugar Is No-Brainer --DEAR DR. ROACH: Medical advice is to reduce sugar consumption. Does this apply to 100 percent fruit juices, fresh fruit, sweetened cereal products or other fruit-sweetened products? -- R.B. ANSWER: I think it makes sense to limit sugar intake, as most North Americans take in remarkably large quantities of sugar. This week, while giving a lecture at the medical school, I noticed that the carbonated sodas served contained 45 grams of added sugar per can. That’s more than the American Heart Association recommends in a day (no more than 25 grams of added sugar per day for women, 40 grams a day for men)! Be careful of products that claim to be sweetened by fruit juice or fruit sugar; this still counts as added sugar. I do make an exception for fruits, as the body processes natural sugars from fruit differently. You can try this out at home by eating four medium-size oranges or drinking its equivalent in an 8-ounce (250 ml) glass of orange juice. I think you will find a big difference in how full you feel. Although reducing sugar is critical for diabetics and is very important for anyone trying to lose weight, even for people with no sugar or weight problems, the evidence is accumulating that eating too much added sugar increases future risk for heart disease and diabetes. Diabetes has become epidemic in North America. The booklet on it provides insight on its diagnosis and treatment. Readers can order a copy by writing: Dr. Roach -- No. 402, Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475. Enclose a check or money order (no cash) for $4.75 U.S./$6 Can. with the recipient’s printed name and address. Please allow four weeks for delivery. *** DEAR DR. ROACH: I have statin myopathy. I am in pure agony. I am taking muscle relaxants and pain relievers. The muscles all over my body ache. I have had pain for two months. Do you have any advice or remedies? -- B.A. ANSWER: Statin drugs are used to reduce risk for people with an increased chance for heart attack, depending on cholesterol levels, blood pressure, family history and other risk factors for coronary heart disease. As many as 9 percent of people treated with statins have muscle aches, which can be severe. The treatment is stopping the statin. After stopping, the average time for symptoms to get better is two months. Only 7 percent have symptoms after six months. Coenzyme Q-10 has shown promise as a treatment for statin myopathy, in the dose of 200 mg a day, once daily or divided. It doesn’t work for everybody. *** DEAR DR. ROACH: Recently I was told that the “new way” to take blood pressure readings was to hold your arm against your chest and over your heart. I have not seen this on the Web anywhere. Is this true? -- W.S. ANSWER: It’s not so new: We have long known that the arm should be at the same height as the heart. The arm also should be supported. Otherwise, the readings will be slightly (or not so slightly) off. *** Dr. Roach regrets that he is unable to answer individual letters, but will incorporate them in the column whenever possible. Readers may email questions to ToYourGoodHealth@ med.cornell.edu. To view and order health pamphlets, visit www.rbmamall.com, or write to P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475. (c) 2015 North America Synd., Inc. All Rights Reserved

DUST AND HUMANITY • As Hannah Holmes explains in “The Secret Life of Dust” humans can’t do without dust. Cement is a mixture of rock dust and pebbles. Rock dust is used in toothpaste, talcum powder, cosmetics, and medicine tablets such as aspirin. The pencil lead is compressed graphite dust; chalk is limestone dust; bread is wheat dust; mustard is the dust of mustard seeds; cocoa is the dust of cocoa beans. • Dust has a huge amount of surface area available: you wouldn’t drop whole coffee beans into hot water; instead you add coffee dust. You don’t put a whole bar of soap into the laundry; you add soap dust. Surface area increases the amount of interaction that can take place. Sometimes that can be detrimental. GRAIN DUST • When grain is poured into a grain elevator, billions of grain dust particles fly into the air, rising into the enclosed elevator like a cloud. If the dust cloud is mixed with oxygen it becomes explosively flammable if a spark is provided. Sometimes a static electricity spark or the flipping of a light switch is all it takes to blow the roof off the grain elevator. • Between 1900 and 1955 there were around 1,000 grain dust explosions not only at grain elevators but also at malt houses and food processing plants across the U.S., killing a total of about 650 people. Similar dust explosions have happened in woodworking shops, coal dryers, fertilizer plants, cotton factories, and other industries that deal with pulverized matter. In 1998 alone there were 18 dust explosions in the U.S. 14 • One of the biggest happened Sheridan Good Health Emporium Leather in Haysville, Kansas on June 8, Outfitters 1998, when seven workers at the • DeBruce Grain elevator died when something triggered an explosion Werco Ave. of grain dust so big that houses rattled in Wichita ten miles away. It was one of the largest grain eleva• Firestone tors in the world. The grain burned Complete for weeks. Auto Care

Natural & Organic Groceries & Supplements

Coffeen Ave.

Store Hours: Mon. - Fri. 10 - 6 Sat. 10 - 4 307 - 674 - 5715 933 Werco Ave. Sheridan, WY


CLASSIFIEDS AUTOS & MORE

HELP WANTED

2001 Ford Winstar. 135,000 Miles. Clean Body. Brand New Battery. $600 obo. 3 0 7 - 2 1 7 - 2 3 7 6

NEED EXTRA CASH? DO you have an extra 5-10 hours per week? You would be setting up a company’s membership acounts. NOT MLM. NO SELLING. Call for an online interview/company presentation. RG International. Paulette 800-709-2910

Honda Goldwing 100,700 Miles. Clean Bike, Runs Well. New Battery. $2,500 651-303-8919 1992 Chevy Silverado 3/4 Ton with Krogman Bale Bed $10,900 307-736-2245 Haystacker $375 540 Small Round Bailer $3,800 Call George 6745122 or 752-9938 2015 Circle D 20 Ft Livestock/Horse Trailer $8,500 3 0 7 - 4 2 1 - 6 4 9 9 2002 BMW X5 AWD 6 Cyl. 3.0 Auto, Heated Leather Seats, Clean and Well Kept - Clean Title, Comes With Yakima Ski Rack $7,500 307-672-5493 2009 RMK

Polaris Dragon 155 307-660-9250

05 Dodge 3500 Sprinter and 05 Dodge 2500 Sprinter. $10,000 each or best offer. Call Mike at 307-655-7507 2014 Kia Rio - Brand NEW - Only 56 miles! $15,500 330-606-0559

DAYS INN NOW HIRING - HOUSEKEEPERS Apply at 1104 Brundage Ln. Sheridan, WY (307) 672-2888 HOMES FOR SALE BY OWNER

Cute, Cozy home for sale. 1028 sq.ft. on main floor, 966 sq. ft. basement. 2 large bedrooms, 1 large bathroom upstairs. Hardwood floors except kitchen, bathroom and side entry are tiled. Basement is 30% finished, with easy access for a 3rd bedroom and bath. Attached one car garage. 3,550 sq. ft. corner lot. Easy up keep, Great, quiet neighborhood. Asking $159,900. call Rob at 307-752-2700 for more info or for a showing. 4 Bedroom, 2.5 Bath 1896 sq. ft. house built in 2012 on 5.28 acres. Custom cabinetry throughout, knotty alder woodwork, built in closets, walk in pantry, log siding, fireplace, and beautiful mountain views! Email: susan_wieser@yahoo.com

HOUSEHOLD ITEMS

Heavy Duty Camper Shell $100 obo 307-673-0260

Wurlitzer Piano Console model. Walnut Finish. $750. Call 307-6726586 or 307-751-4042

Two 2014 Ski Doo Summit SP’s for sale. $19,000 for both obo. Both Sleds are 800’s - the all black one is a 154 and the orange/black one is a 163. Call Mike at 307-751-7118

3 Office Spaces Available (10’x13’) with views of the Bighorns - $400 per month including utilities. 307-763-8440

2012 Myer V 8’ Snow Plow with EZ-Mount Plus All wiring & Mounting brackets. Fits 2006-2010 Chevy or GMC 2500/3500. Asking $7,500 obo. Call Al at 307-756-2105 8x12 Flatbed Trailer $800 10’ Slide-in Pickup Camper with Bathroom $800 500 Gallon Fuel Tank with Pump $400 Home 750-2714 Leave Msg. Cell 751-0413 No text or email. 2004 Terry Quantum AX6 Ft. Fifth Wheel. 4 Slides. Near new condition w/ several extras. Trailer Saver 2000 hitch included. $17,000 Firm. Must see to appreciate. Call 307-752-9675 2013 Can Am 500 XT $6,500 obo 2014 Can Am 800 Max XT $11,500 obo. Call or text 763-458-6564

FOR RENT

WANTING TO TRADE

Willing to Trade my good running 1997 Pace Arrow 32G Motorhome with Chevy 454 Vortec Engine & Two Speed under drive gear splitter for a comparable value Fifth Wheel. Motorhome is worth $17,000 307-673-0260

THE IMPORTANCE OF DUST • Moisture in the atmosphere condenses as it cools. However, the water must condense upon something that it can cling to. Dust serves that purpose. In air that contains absolutely no dust, droplets would simply bounce off each other and would not condense until the atmosphere reached an incredible 300% humidity. Every single drop of rain and snow that falls contains a piece of dust, so precipitation really does “clean” the air. • If there’s too much dust in the atmosphere, water droplets are divided between so many particles that none of the drops ever gets big enough to fall to the earth. A super dusty cloud can hold up to twice as much actual water as a normal cloud, but each droplet is half the normal size and no rain falls. • Huge fires such as those that sometimes burn in the tropics produce gigantic smoke plumes. Studies done by NASA showed that clouds that pass through this smoke will become super-saturated in dust and will subsequently drop far less rain than clouds that skirt the edges of the smoke. A similar study showed that when volcanoes exploded upwind of the island of Taiwan, the rainfall amounts on Taiwan dropped. This is why cloud seeding is such a tricky business. In cloud seeding, either solid particles of carbon dioxide dry ice or a fine mist of silver iodide are spread through clouds. Too much and the cloud dissipates. Just the right amount, and rain falls. NASA’S DUST COLLECTION • NASA actually keeps a Dust Library. There’s a collection of about 100,000 specks of space dust on file at the Johnson Space Center in Houston. Scientists collect space dust from places such as trapped in the Antarctic ice, in the mud at the bottom of the ocean, collected by weather balloons, or gathered by spacecraft in orbit. Space dust generally clings to a magnet whereas earth dust does not, making it easy to separate and identify. PLANT STONES • If you’re a plant and you want to prevent caterpillars and other vegetarian insects from eating you, what do you do to protect yourself? Well, if you’re like most plants, you make sure there’s a hard gritty piece of stone inside each and every cell that might be eaten, making it an unpleasant meal for bugs. These microscopic stones are called phytoliths. Each of the cells in the plant’s leaves, fruit skins, or seed husks contain a tiny mineral rock, making it scratchy. This is what makes bran cereal so rough. When the plants die and deteriorate, their phytoliths are released into the air as dust. IT’S A FACT •The German word “dunst” meaning vapor gives us our word dust. • The word dirt comes the Old Norse “drit” meaning excrement. • “Manure” and “maneuver” have the same origin, the Old French word “manoeuvrer” meaning to till the soil or to work by hand. • “Bonfire” comes from “bonefire,” a fire built to cremate a dead body. • A grain of dust floating in a sunbeam is halfway in size between a sub-atomic particle and the size of the planet Earth. • When astronauts Neil Armstrong, Michael Collins, and Buzz Aldrin returned from the moon, they dutifully declared their lunar rocks and moon dust on customs forms. • Dust storms in Arizona cause about 40 traffic accidents in a typical year. • Just when people in a Texas town met to decide the name of the city, a violent sandstorm whipped up dust in huge clouds. Taking this as a sign from God, the town was named Earth. • During medieval times, mummies found in Persia were ground into dust and sold as medicine.

SERVICES AVAILABLE House painting, cleaning, general labor - Lots of Experience - References Available Call Steve 683-7814

WANTED TO BUY 20 - 22 Ft. Grain Box with a Hoist. 307-7362245 or 307-299-3798 4 Pairs of Ring Neck Doves. 307-672-6179 FOR SALE Over 100 old vintage Playboy magazines in excellent condition. Some dates are back to the sixties. Sell all for only $20.00 (less than 20 cents per issue). Great buy. 307-672-6270

PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIED AD FOR FREE! EMAIL YOUR INFO TO BKYSAR@SJTIDBITS.COM OR CALL 751-1392

Of Sheridan & Johnson Counties

Published weekly by Kysar Publishing. Call (307) 655-5095 bkysar@sjtidbits.com

KP


Tidbits® of Sheridan and Johnson Counties

Page 4

FRESH AUTOS

WEEKLY!

SERVICE DRIVE NOW OPEN!

FINISHING TOUCHES SHOULD BE DONE BEFORE THE END OF THE MONTH

SUMMER TIRE CHANGE OVER!

$39.95

Includes dismounting 4 winter tires and re-mounting & balancing 4 summer tires. Good for passenger cars, light trucks & SUV’s. Offer good through 17 “ rim diameter slightly more for 18” on up.

Offer good until June 15, 2015

SAME HOURS M-F 7:30-4:30 SAT 8-3


For Advertising Call (307) 655-5095

Page 5

PET OF THE WEEK

Maui is our cat of the week at Second Chance Sheridan Cat Rescue! Maui is a 2 year old, sweet domestic short hair that loves to cuddle! For more information about Maui or any other adoptable cat, please call 307-461-9555 or visit http://sheridancatrescue.org.

Summer Flea Control

AIR POLLUTION: SMOG • Long ago people in Britain used wood as fuel. When the supply of wood ran short, they began burning coal. Some coal burns fairly cleanly, but the cheapest coal does not. It smokes a lot and loads the air with sulfur. The word “smog” was invented in 1905 by a person describing the combination of fog and coal smoke over London. London smog led to one of the deadliest dust episodes in history. • On December 5, 1952, a temperature inversion moved over London. A layer of cold air was trapped by a layer of warm air which acted like a lid. Sulfurous coal soot was trapped in the air around the city. The moisture in the air condensed around the smoke particles, forming a thick fog. Visibility dropped to a few feet. The smog stung the eyes and caused skin irritation. Cattle began dropping dead of asphyxiation. People with respiratory illnesses or cardiovascular problems became seriously sick. Those suffering from bronchitis or pneumonia who might have recovered under normal conditions died instead. By the time the inversion lifted on December 9, about 4,000 people had died from breathing the highly acidic polluted fog. • As a result of the “Black Fog,” Parliament enacted the Clean Air Act in 1956, reducing the coal-burning allowed in the city. LOS ANGELES LANDSLIDE • In L.A. in 1994 earthquakes caused landslides in the area. The landslides created clouds of dust that engulfed entire towns. A few days later, people began showing up at hospitals complaining of fever, coughing, and fatigue. Over 200 people got sick. The Centers for Disease Control investigated. Mapping the location of the victims showed that they had all been in the path of the dust clouds. They had inhaled fungus spores in immense numbers, causing them to become ill.

E l Ta p a t i o D o s Authentic Mexican Food

Hours: Monday - Friday 11am - 3pm & 5pm - 8pm S a t u rd a y 11am - 8pm 1125 N Main St. Sheridan, WY 307-673-0056

--DEAR PAW’S CORNER: Temperatures are really warming up now, and with it, I know, will come the annual onslaught of fleas on my dog, cat and all over my house. Is there any way I can get rid of fleas for good? -- Charlotte in Columbia, Maryland DEAR CHARLOTTE: Flea infestations are incredibly annoying and tough to beat --even when you think fleas have been eradicated, they often come back. Winter temperatures often send these pests into dormancy or at least reduce their activity, but they return with a vengeance in spring and summer. A pre-emptive attack could make a big difference in this summer’s flea wars. While you may not notice adult fleas on your pets just yet, flea eggs or larvae may be present on their fur or throughout the house. Start by talking to the veterinarian about the best treatment for your pets. Many owners swear by one-month topical treatments that are applied to the back of a dog or cat’s neck, but others are leery due to potentially serious side effects. Consider alternatives if you’re not sure. Next, treat your home for fleas -- using a carpet and upholstery treatment designed for both adult fleas and their eggs. You’ll want to tackle not just the carpet and dusty corners of the house, but the furniture and any linens, such as curtains, that aren’t frequently cleaned. Keep pets out of rooms until the treatment you’re using has been vacuumed up or washed away. Through the summer, brush your pets’ coats daily, checking for fleas. Vacuum and dust at least once per week. Send your questions or tips to ask@pawscorner.com. (c) 2015 King Features Synd., Inc. Noteworthy Inventions QUIZ: VACUUM INVENTORS • In 1907 Murray Spangler was trying to make a living as an inventor. To make ends meet, he worked nights as a janitor in a department store in Canton, Ohio. Spangler’s asthma acted up every time he cleaned the store’s rugs with a broom because he was allergic to the dust. He had seen suction sweepers but they were awkward and often ineffective. He knew there had to be a better way. • Using a tin soap box, an electric fan, a rotating brush, a pillow case, and a broom handle, he put together a contraption. He showed it to his cousin, Susan. She used it in her home and raved about it to her husband, who everyone called Boss. • Boss owned a leather goods manufacturing shop but he was so interested in the invention that he bought Spangler’s patent, hired him as a partner, and soon had six employees making suction sweepers in the corner of his shop. • Boss placed an ad in the “Saturday Evening Post” giving ten days free use of a Suction Sweeper to anyone who wrote with a request. Rather than simply mailing them a sweeper, he sent the customers to local stores that had agreed to become dealers. In short order he had a nationwide network of dealers as well as teams of salesmen who went door-to-door demonstrating the product, ensuring that the vacuum cleaners soon became a standard household item. • The vacuum company, named after Boss’s last name, is one of the top vacuum manufacturers in the world today. What company is it? Answer: Hoover. FACT • The average carpet will harbor anywhere between three tablespoons and three cups of dust and dirt per square yard. IT’S A FACT • In the early days of vacuum cleaners, Hoover salesmen were required to make 15 sales calls each week. In 1922, there were 748 salesmen making a total of 549,780 sales calls that year. 31% of people pitched bought the product. CLEANING UP • Melville and Anna Bissell owned a crockery and china shop in Grand Rapids, Michigan in the late 1800s. Melville had allergies and Anna did her best to keep their store dust-free. But there was a lot of sawdust in the shop and it clung to the carpets on the floor. In frustration, Anna asked Melville if he couldn’t come up with an invention to keep their carpets cleaner. • In 1876, Melville Bissell patented the Bissell Carpet Sweeper. Although there were already carpet sweepers on the market, Bissell’s model was light and easy to use, it worked on uneven floors, and it picked up dirt without creating a cloud of dust. Bissell Carpet Sweepers proved to be so popular that by 1883 Melville and Anna had given up their crockery shop and gone into the carpet sweeper business full time. • When Melville died in 1889, Anna took over the business until her death in 1934 at the age of 87. Anna Bissell was one of America’s first female CEOs. The Bissell Company is still run by family members. Their carpet sweepers are most commonly found in places like restaurants where crumbs regularly need to be swept without disturbing diners. IT’S A FACT • One kind of early day vacuum cleaner was powered by bellows that were connected to a rocking chair. The man would read the evening newspaper, smoking his pipe and rocking, while the wife did the vacuuming.


Tidbits® of Sheridan and Johnson Counties

Page 6

Special Purchase

Matching Sofa & Love Seat Sets - Both for $869 (while they last)

DESAVA’S COMFORT PLUS Furniture & Mattress Store

We’re BIGGER than we look!

Over 60 Recliners to choose from & much, much more!

102 E. Hart St. 684-7048 Open: (Tues - Sat) 10-5:30pm

TZIGANE

Bohemian Gypsy Eclectic Funky Junk Vintage Collectibles ~ Home Décor ~ Western Items

58 E Fetterman St. Off Main Street Buffalo, WY 82834

Tel: 307-425-1005 FaceBook: tziganewy

FOX CONST/ROCKY MOUNTAIN Buildings Start At $15/sq. ft

Protect Your Hard-Earned Investments Professionally Built Serving All Your Farm/Ranch Needs Covering Sheridan - Johnson Counties And Northern Wyoming

FOX Const/Rocky Mountain

“Our Reputation is Building”

Buffalo, WY www.foxconst.com (307) 684-1369 Call Today!


Page 7

For Advertising Call (307) 655-5095 WATER PRODUCTS INC Leader in Water Conditioning

307-672-7606

1831 S Sheridan Ave • Sheridan, WY

Fluoride Reduction Cartridges in Stock Fluoride FREE Bottled Water!

TRUST

Culligan Service Provider

Serving Sheridan & Johnson Counties

REDI-MIX SHERIDAN

K K K XK CONSTRUCTION

BUFFALO

48 INDUSTRIAL LANE SHERIDAN, WY 82801

39 CROSS H LANE BUFFALO, WY 82834

307-673-1200

307-620-4008

www.wyomingroofing.com

(307) 673-4469

751-1392

2175 Skyline Drive - Sheridan

RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL CONCRETE!

W

yMont Overhead Doors, LLC Sales – Installation – Service Committed to Quality 307-752-6299

6665 Big Horn Ave.

Sheridan, WY 82801

ELECTRIC CO. Serving Northern Wyoming

* New Construction 28 Years Experience * * Residential Owner - Dean Tapani * * Commercial Prompt - Reliable - Service * * Remodel Work Estimates Always Free *

Real Estate

307-752-3263

1230 N Main Suite 3 Sheridan, WY

Sheridan, WY

Realtor

Office 763-7354

Cell 461-4473

www.sheridanhomesearch.com wbrooks3333@gmail.com

461-4473

PLUMBING HEATING AIR CONDITIONING www.foxconst.com

42 EAST RIDGE RD. SHERIDAN, WY 82801

307-684-1369•Buffalo, WY 307-684-1369 Buffalo,WY

Warner Services LLC

(P) 307.674.9260

(F) 307.673.0513

Heating & Air Conditioning

Become an Annual Maintenance Agreement Customer • Save 10% on Repairs • No Overtime/After Hours Fees • Extended Warranties

warnerservicesllc.com

307-429-1329 We Are Local!

763-7354

Unlike most lenders, all of our home loans are handled in house!

Processing / Underwriting Closing / Funding

LANA KITTO

Branch Manager/Mortgage Loan Originator 19 North Main Street | Buffalo, WY 82834

OFFICE 307.684.2400 | CELL 307.217.3312 FAX 866.416.6852 | lkitto@majormortgage.com www.majormortgage.com/lanakitto NMLS#502111

A Division of Amcap Mortgage, Ltd. NMLS#129122 Regulated by the Wyoming Division of Banking

A/C TUNE UP SPECIAL

$59.95 INCLUDES 1” STANDARD FILTER AND ODOR NEUTRALIZER.


www.e-zcash.org

NEED EXTRA CASH? Then Come See Us!

Payday Advance Loans Prepaid Debit Cards Check Cashing • Notary Services Consumer Loans • Title Loans Copies & Faxes • Western Union 307-673-0050 OFFICE 307-673-0070 FAX 2240 Coffeen Ave. Ste D • Sheridan, WY

FREMONT MOTOR FORD SHERIDAN LUBE, OIL & FILTER CHANGE

$

19

95

INCLUDES: Oil (up to 5qts), Lube, Filter, Courtesy Inspection & Top Off Fluids where necessary

10% off

Any recommended maintenance at the time of service. Good only at Fremont Motor Ford Sheridan. Cannot be used with any other special or coupons. Shop supplies and tax extra. Oil change excludes diesel engines. Expires June 30, 2015.

OUR NEW NUMBER 307-675-1958

1658 Coffeen Avenue Sheridan, WY Hours: Monday - Friday: 8AM - 5PM FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE WE ARE ALSO OPEN ON

SATURDAY FROM 8AM - 3PM!!

FAST FACT • Some researchers theorize that people who experience chronic sinusitis are actually suffering from their body’s auto-immune response to fungus spores in the air. ASTHMA • One study showed that kids who live on farms suffered from less asthma than kids who live in the city. A study of Berlin shortly after the Berlin Wall fell found that in wealthy West Germany, asthma was common, but in impoverished East Germany it was rare. • It has long been known that asthma is far more common in wealthy developed nations than in poverty-stricken undeveloped nations. In the U.S., the number of people who suffer from asthma has grown by 50 percent per decade since 1970. Other nations such as New Zealand, Britain, Japan, Australia, and the Netherlands have also experienced asthma epidemics. In fact, military records in Finland show that the number of young men with asthma has multiplied an incredible twenty times since 1960. • Why? Researchers theorize that constant exposure to dust and dirt challenges the immune system and keeps it strong. People who live in a fairly sterile environment have immune systems that get totally freaked out when hit by a load of dust they’re unfamiliar with. The immune system then goes overboard trying to fight the “invader” which it doesn’t recognize as being ordinary dust. • Nowadays kids spend most of their time indoors in front of the TV, the video game, or the computer screen in clean indoor environments where there is limited dust. In earlier days kids spent their time outdoors where they were exposed to a wide variety of dusts. Incredibly, some allergists have had success treating asthmatics with an injection of a solution of dusts reaped from vacuum cleaner bags.


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