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The Newsgram is delivered to Alva, Capron, Hardtner, Kiowa, Hazelton, Medicine Lodge, Burlington, Byron, Amorita, Cherokee, Helena, Goltry, Carmen, Aline, Dacoma, Hopeton, Waynoka, Freedom, Jet, Nash, Cleo Springs & Manchester “More crime is prevented by fear of exposure in the press, than by all the laws man has ever devised” - Joseph Pulitzer R E V I E W C O U R I E R T H E A L V A N E W S G R A M VOLUME 35, NO. 17 • WEDNESDAY, APRIL 29, 2015 • 50¢ Aline man charged with lewd and indecent acts
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The Newsgram is delivered to Alva, Capron, Hardtner, Kiowa, Hazelton, Medicine Lodge, Burlington, Byron, Amorita,Cherokee, Helena, Goltry, Carmen, Aline, Dacoma, Hopeton, Waynoka, Freedom, Jet, Nash, Cleo Springs & Manchester

“More crime is prevented by fear of exposure in the press, than by all the laws man has ever devised” - Joseph Pulitzer

REVIEWCOURIER

THE ALVA

NEWSGRAMVOLUME 35, NO. 17 • WEDNESDAY, APRIL 29, 2015 • 50¢

Aline man charged with

lewd and indecent acts

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First Friday Sponsored by

Graceful Arts Gallery and Studios523 Barnes Street, Alva • 580-327-ARTS

At Graceful Arts Gallery and Studios—On Exhibit in the Gallery “Fashionable Abstractions” featuring NWOSU Students Angela Westerman, Ellen Etzler, Jessica Latham, Kristen Leonard, and

NWOSU Artist in Residence, Visual Artist Randall Barnes. Refreshments provided. In the Studio—NWOSU Creative Reading Series “School’s Out” featuring Clarence Johnson, Sheldon Russell,

and Alica Hall starting at 6:00 p.m.

At The Runnymede—Featuring Wyatt and Garrett Radford Photography, Pottery and Live Music. Refreshments provided.

At the Cherokee Strip Museum—Featuring a 30 Quilt Display and Mother’s Day Card-Making Crafts in the Fireside Room.

********SPECIAL ATTRACTION********thPublic Art Unveiling Ceremony—6:30 p.m. at the Corner of 4

and Barnes (Brunsteter Corner). The first piece of Public Art to be placed in the Arts and Shopping District acquired as part of The Public Art and Wayfinding Project will be unveiled. This sculpture installation kicks off the Public Art and Wayfinding Signage Project for the community! Join us as we install this

Legacy Bronze titled “Lemon Drops” by Sculptor, Jane DeDecker.

Be sure to support our Retail Partners

Holder Drug and Rialto Theater! Ice cream, popcorn, sodas, and the latest from Hollywood! Alva is THE CULTURAL HUB

of Northwest Oklahoma!

Check us out in Oklahoma Today magazine!

NWOSU Senior Showcase at the Knox BuildingFeaturing the Work of Natalie Malone and the

“Third Space Theory Series” and other pieces of her artwork.

May 1st, 2015 • 6-8 p.m.FIRST FRIDAY ART WALK

Downtown Alva's Arts and Shopping District Cherokee Strip Museum

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April 29, 2015 Page 4Alva Review-Courier/Newsgram

Lynn Says

Checking the budgetBy Lynn L. Martin

The Woods County commission-ers voted last Monday to take a look

at how the Woods County sales tax collection is spent. The commissioners are anticipating that sales tax collections will be falling for a while because of the oil/gas industry slow down.

The county sales tax was passed back in March of 1992 and fortunately was not ear-marked for any one specific use. If there was one thing I will always remember preached by the late Don Benson, it’s “Never ear-mark any tax at election time.” Don’s point was that things are always changing and our leaders need the flexibility to accommodate those changes.

For example, the 911 service did not exist in Woods County when the .5 percent county sales tax was passed, but today a lot of that sales tax reve-nue goes to support the 911 service.

We went through an expensive election a little over a year ago to “un-ear-mark” the money designated for the local hospital. Initially, it was ear-marked for capital improvements. The election changed that so the hospital board could allocate it to areas most in need. They have been able to catch up on a lot of debt and continue to move forward in reducing the age of unpaid accounts. As I recall, before that un-ear-marking occurred, the hospital was at 70 days in payables aging and now it has improved to 41 days.

I asked at the last county commis-sioner meeting if there are county en-tities that need to be worried about the sales tax expenditure review. The an-swer was basically “We need to look at everything and make sure we’re spending wisely.”

Today’s Email JokeRandom thoughts as we age:The biggest lie I tell myself: “I

don’t need to write that down, I’ll re-member it.”

Wouldn’t it be great if we could put ourselves in the dryer for 10 minutes, come out wrinkle-free and three sizes smaller?

Last year I joined a support group for procrastinators. We haven’t met

yet.I don’t trip over things, I do ran-

dom gravity checks.I don’t need anger management. I

need people to stop hacking me off.Old age is coming at a really bad

time.Lord grant me the strength to ac-

cept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can and friends to post my bail when I finally snap!

I don’t have white hair. I have “wisdom highlights.”

My people skills are just fine. It’s my tolerance of idiots that needs work.

If God wanted me to touch my toes, he would’ve put them on my knees.

The kids text me “plz,” which is shorter than “please.” I text back “no” which is shorter than “yes.”

I’m going to retire and live off of my savings. Not sure what I’ll do the second week.

Even duct tape can’t fix stupid ... but it can muffle the sound.

Of course I talk to myself. Some-times I need expert advice.

Oops! Did I roll my eyes out loud?At my age “getting lucky” means

walking into a room and remembering what I came in for.

Chocolate comes from cocoa, which is a tree … that makes it a plant, which means … chocolate is salad!

Have I sent this to you already, or did you send it to me?

Call to orderTitle 1 teachers review the Schoolwide Title 1 readingprogram that is being used in their building.1. Mrs. Schmidt2. Mrs. Levetzow3. Ms. Madrid4. Ms. StroudMr. Shiever (1) Reading Sufciency Report (2) The Summer Reading AcademyReview updates to the Schoolwide Title 1 ProgramQuestionsAdjourn

Title 1 Annual ReviewMay 5, 2015 @ 3:30 p.m.

Agenda

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See Kiowa Page 52\

Medicare swing bed skilled days. This reimbursement is determined by Medicare from data included within KDH’s cost report. The rates will be adjusted again after Medicare reviews and files the 2014 cost report.

Outpatient visits totaled 543. Total clinic visits were 407. None of those figures included the health fair participants.

Goodno noted that gross patient accounts receivable is $808,579. Less allowances of $199,001, net patient accounts receivable are $609,578. Uncollected taxes total $471,468.

The comparative balance sheets for the hospital and manor show $382,193 earnings as of the end of March.

DON Courson said she and Grismer are working hard to meet the requirements of the surveyors.

Manor Financials and StatisticsManor Administrator Balding said the

manor resident total was 20 as of Monday. She spoke of the success of the manor’s revitalization program that is ongoing. The large room at the manor’s entrance has transformed into an attractive, cozy living room setting. The dining room transformation is just beginning. She said they are searching for their next service project for the community.

Balding thanks everyone for their monetary donations and volunteerism to make the revitalization a reality.

Goodno presented the manor’s operating statement for March. It showed $102,445 net patient revenue. Total operating revenue was $109,814.

Total Operating expenses were $168,372. Goodno pointed out there were three pay periods in March. That made a loss of $58,558 for the manor. That loss was reduced to $52,722 with the addition of $5,835 mainly tax revenue.

More KDH Board Business Courson said that 69 people attended

the KDH First Annual Health Fair. Stroh said an estimated 30 of those people made an appointment at the clinic afterwards.

Grismer presented the tuition assistance policy for the board’s review. This is for any employee of the hospital, clinic or manor who wants to improve their position at KDH through continuing education. The

Hospital and Manor Foundation President Judy Schrock.

Hospital’s Financials and StatisticsGoodno was pleased to tell the board,

“We are in a receivable status with Medicare.” The total due from Medicare at the end of March was $308,000.

Presenting the hospital’s operating statement for March, Goodno said total gross patient revenue was $378,047. Total contractual adjustments (including other adjustments and provision for bad debt) were $329,283. These figures resulted in net patient revenue of $707,330.

Total operating expenses were $554,824, so net from operations was $152,908. With the addition of $110,236 total non-operating revenue (mainly tax money) the hospital was in the black $263,144 at the end of March.

Total hospital admissions in March were 20. That made total days of care for acute and swingbed 101, which is the highest of 2015.

Goodno explained the hospital’s profit of $263K was contributed from the contractual adjustment of the additional receivable from Medicare and the inpatient and swing bed volume for March.

The CFO said KDH is currently receiving $2,405 per day for Medicare inpatient stays and $2,170 per day for

By Yvonne MillerThe Monday night meeting of the

Kiowa District Hospital Board was the final one for board President Zack Odell and Vice-President Lori Schrock. Odell announced a few months ago he would not seek his seat when it’s up for reelection at the May 20 annual meeting.

Odell said he accepted a job offer to be chief executive officer (CEO) of Sherman Thomas Telephone (S&T) in northwest Kansas and will move to Colby soon with his family.

As announced previously, Schrock resigned from her unexpired term on the KDH board at the end of the meeting Monday. Following an executive session, the board approved appointing Pat Myers to fill Schrock’s unexpired term. Myers previously served on the hospital board for seven years. Myers’ service began when he filled the unexpired term of Galen Fischer, who passed away in 1995.

Board members present at the meeting were: Odell, Schrock, Brenna May and Jim Parker. Member Chantae Simpson was absent. Also present was CEO Margaret Grismer; Chief Financial Officer (CFO) Janell Goodno; Manor Administrator Kim Balding; Dr. Christie Leal, D.O.; Physician Assistant Melissa Stroh; Director of Nurses (DON) Heidi Courson; and Friends of the

Pat Myers to fill Schrock’s unexpired term on Kiowa hospital boardHospital district in the black ; Medicare cost report and audit to be given at May 20 annual meeting

STOCK MY POND IS BACK!

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The new Woods County Election Board secretary is Sandra Koehn, a long time employee of the office. Koehn was nominated to the position by Sen. Byrce Mar-latt and was confirmed by the State Election Board at their April 6 meeting. Koehn’s term begins May 1 and will be for a two-year period. She is pictured with retiring secretary Wylodean Linder, left, who held the office for 27 years. Photo by Lynn L. Martin

Goltry precinct set to open

Effective June 1, boundaries for two precincts (330-Jet and newly established 320-Goltry) in Alfalfa County have been changed, Kelly Stein, secretary of the Alfalfa County Election Board, announced today.

The changes were adopted to better serve the county voters. The new boundary will re-establish the Goltry polling place. Some voters will have a new polling place as a result of the change.

Stein said that a new voter identification card will soon be mailed to any voter whose precinct polling place changed as a result of the new precinct line. If you have a change in address (911 addresses), now would be a good time to update this information to make certain you receive your new card. The polling place is indicated on the new Voter Identification Cards. For more information please contact the Alfalfa County Election Board at 580-596-2718.

Aline Star Cemetery Association meeting and naming of officers

Aline Star Cemetery Association held their annual meeting on Tuesday, April 21. The proposed burial space rate increase was tabled until 2016.

Current positions of officers are: president, Gary Booze; treasurer, Kaye Reihm; secretary, Brenda Dixon; and board members, Cary and Nancy Anthony, Doris Booze, Melvin and Nina Ricke and Monty Shelite.

Annual Aline Alumni Banquet set for Saturday

The class of 1965 will host this year’s Aline Alumni Banquet to be held May 9 at 7 p.m. at the Aline Senior Center. The center will be open at 5 p.m. for visitation and registration. All former students, board members, teachers and the 2015 Aline-Cleo seniors and their parents are encouraged to attend. Please bring a covered dish, table amenities, tea and coffee will be provided.

Special recognition will be given to the classes of 1945, 1955, 1965 and 2015. Alumni scholarships will awarded during the business meeting.

JUNE

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Alva 4-H, FFA & Boosters would liketo thank the following contributors,your support is greatly appreciated

THANKS TO YOUR SUPPORT, OUR STUDENTSHAD AN OUTSTANDING SHOW SEASON.

AEC

Alva 4-H & FFA Boosters

Alva Farmers CoopAlva MonumentAlva State BankAlva Vet Supply

Baker Livestock

Bar S Outfitters

Brown's Shoe FitBurlap Bungalow

Cherokee Sales Company

Community BankConnie WattsCRI FeedersCroft Country Chevrolet

Daisy Village

Darren & Tiffany Slater

David Manning Family

Don & Teri ParsonsDoris MarcusDouble R TransportDr. Gary Lott

Farm Credit of Western OK

G&G Home Furnishings

Glass Farms

Holder DrugHoliday Motel

Alfred & Ruthie Spurgeon Family

AmprideArt & Marcile Lancaster

Banc Central National Association

Becky PingeltonBill HadwigerBrian & Stacey Davey

Carl & Jane Hartwig

Ciera Stewart

Dacoma Farmers Coop

David & Anita NolandDavid Hamil Family

Dean Goll Real Estate & AuctionDevery ImplementDietz Farms

Dr. Trina Piper-Hughbanks

Ed & Teresa SutterElisa Pribble

Foote's Farm Supply

Gaisford FamilyGarnett Oil

Hawley Hot Oil

Hughes Cattle Company

James Le Inc

Janice Litton

Jeff & Kelly Lancaster

Jeff & Terri Owen FamilyJennifer MurrowJesse & Michelle Chapman FamilyJesse Kline

K & S Tire

Kate NickelKenneth Byrd

Lancaster FarmsLarry Bays

Long Gas CompanyLott FarmsMac ToolsMark Ream Motors

Marshall Funeral Home

Merle NormanMidwest FeedersMurrow Cattle CompanyMurrow Real Estate & AuctionNWOSU Aggie ClubOwen Farms

Poe LivestockPRIMERICARandy & Lisa NationRegal Oilfield Supply

Hopeton State Bank

Jack and Loni Stands

Janet Wanger

Jay & Terri Leeper

Jeff & Michelle Mapes

Jim Pfeiffer, CPA

K. Forell & Associates

Kevin & Brooke PingeltonKingson & Lilly ChristianKoleta BurtonKoppitz PensKT's AuctionLaDeeDa

Laura Radford PhotographyLeeper FarmsLohmann Farms

McCracken Cattle CompanyMcMurphy FarmsMelvin Bickford

Pettit Carpet

Renetta & Gerald Benson

Richard BurtonRick Cunningham

Rugged Services

Schuessler Agency

Shelley Reed

Shirley FarmsShort Grass Sheep Company

Snap-On Tools/Nathan Brown

Starr Lumber

Steve & Joni SterlingSteve Knox, CPASusie's Floral & Gifts

Tally Watkins

Tom & Nancy WoodsTwisted KnotWarren & Beverly Little

Western EquipmentWharton Funeral Chapel

Wheeler Brothers Woods County Abstract

Woodward Livestock AuctionYellow House Zoom Properties

Rialto

Ron & Peggy MapesRon Bittle

Ryan & Misty Beiswanger

Schumacher's Copper PennySN Well ServicesShafer Auto

Shirley Dozer

Shirley Shine Car WashSidwell Crop Insurance Agency

Sneary Family

Steggs Arial

Syd Sterling

Tim & Kaylee OhmTom & Connie FooteTom & Connie Foote

We Apologize To AnyoneWho We May HaveInadvertently Missed.

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ObituariesJUDY HAIGHT

Funeral services for former Alva resident Judy Haight, 71, of Perry will be at 2 p.m. Saturday, May 2, at the Perry First Church of the Nazarene, 829 Jackson. Rev. Bill Kalfas will officiate. Marshall Funeral Home of Alva is in charge of arrangements.

BARBARA LOU JETTFuneral service for Barbara Lou Jett, age

77, were held Saturday, April 25, 2015 at 10 a.m. at First Christian Church of Nash with Rev. Richard Cravens officiating. Burial followed at Pleasant View Cemetery north of Jet with arrangements by Lanman Funeral Home, Inc. of

Cherokee. Online condolences may be made at www.lanmanmemorials.com.

Barbara was born on September 5, 1937 in Cherokee to Winfred Huff and Mary Evelyn Metcalf Huff and passed from this life on April 22, 2015 at her home in Jet. Barbara graduated from a tech school in Omaha, Nebraska. In 1956 she married James “Jim” Newton Jett and to this union three daughters were born: Brenda, Belinda and Jenny. Barbara had lived in the Jet community for over thirty-one years, moving from DeWitt, Iowa. She and Jim loved their community and stayed very involved in community affairs. Barbara served as the Jet City Clerk for a number of years. She also was secretary for the Jet Senior Citizens, treasurer of Timberlake Cemetery Association, a substitute teacher in Alfalfa County and a member of United Methodist Women. Barbara also was a member of Oklahoma Home and Community Education and their local

branch, Jet Industrious, where she served as an officer. Barbara was a member of the Nash Christian Church.

Her husband, Jim preceded her in death, along with her two brothers, Mike and Dennis Huff and her parents.

Those left to cherish Barbara’s memory include her three daughters, Brenda Kienast and husband, Dwight of Pleasantville, Iowa, Belinda Hopp and husband, Keith of Silverthorn, Colorado and Jenny Orr and husband, Chris of Cherokee; five grandchildren, Stacy Launsdale, Steven Kienast, Leslie Hopp, Kevin Hopp and Logan Orr; three great grandchildren, Morrison Launsdale, Lilac Launsdale and Henley Hopp.

Memorials may be given to Jet Swimming Pool or Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation-Pulmonary Division through the funeral home.

ROSA LINDA PEREZMemorial services for Rosa “Linda”

Perez were held Tuesday, April 28, 2015 at 10 a.m. at Driftwood Christian Church. Arrangements were by Lanman Funeral Home, Inc. of Cherokee. Online condolences may be made at www.lanmanmemorials.com.

Rosa “Linda” Perez was born in Sterling City, Texas on November 17, 1950, the daughter of Antonio Munoz and Bernabe Gonzalez Munoz, and passed from this life in Alva, Oklahoma on April 22, 2015.

Linda, “Mom”, as many people put it, was a very selfless person. She always put everyone’s well being ahead of herself. She drove a school bus for Burlington Public Schools so she watched many children grow up. Each one was so attached to her bright, loving spirit that she was still in contact with many of them. Linda also worked for the Co-op, cleaned houses and was a caregiver to many. Mom loved spending her time with all of her grandkids and her three boys.

Those who preceded her in death are her parents, Antonio and Bernabe Munoz.

Those left to cherish her memory are her children, Charlie Perez and wife, Nicole of Alva, Raymond Perez of Alva and Rudy Perez and wife, Nicole of Kiowa, Kansas; eleven grandchildren, Dezirae, Dylon, Devon Perez, Gavin, Brooke, Carson Perez, Anna and Emilio Perez, Ethan, Logan, Bailey Nusser; one brother, Toni Munoz and wife, Mary Lou of San Angelo, Texas;

three sisters, Juanita Castro and husband, Ruben of Fort Worth, Texas, Bitona Chapoy of San Angelo, Texas and Dora Perez of San Angelo, Texas.

BERTA ROCA de MARTINEZA Vigil for Berta Roca de Martinez will

be 6:30 p.m. Thursday, April 30, 2015, with a Rosary to follow at the Sacred Heart Church with Fr. Cory Stanley serving as the celebrant. A Funeral Mass for Berta Roca de Martinez will be at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Alva on Friday, May 1, 2015,

at 7 p.m. A memorial service will be Sunday, May 3, 2015 at the Alva Wesleyan Church at 5 p.m. Arrangements are under the direction of Marshall Funeral Home of Alva.

Berta Roca, daughter of the late Berta Roca and Victor Martinez, was born May 30, 1948, in Maturin, Monagas, Venezuela, and passed away April 26, 2015, at Enid, Oklahoma, at the age of 66 years, 10 months, and 27 days. Berta graduated from Central University in Caracas, Venezuela, with a degree in Social Work. She worked for External Relations Ministry in Venezuela for 20 years. She also worked for the military hospital and other government agencies.

On November 11, 1988, she was united in marriage to Dr. Francisco Martinez at Caracas, Venezuela. They moved to Stillwater, Oklahoma, in 1999, then moved to Alva in 2004, where he serves as a Professor of Spanish at NWOSU. She was an active member of the Sacred Heart Church. She enjoyed reading, watching television, traveling, dancing, and meeting people.

Berta is survived by her husband, Francisco, of Alva; two children, Francis Martinez of Alva, and Gidbert Batista of St. Petersburg, Florida; three brothers, Hector Roca, Victor Roca, Jackson Roca; four sisters, Dora Roca de Lara, Eda Roca de Marquez, Margery Roca, and Ana Roca, all of Maturin, Venezuela; other relatives and friends. Memorial contributions may be made to the funeral home to help with expenses.

Remembrances may be shared with the family at www.marshallfuneralhomes.com.

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During veterinary school, Whipple has been involved in many different clubs and activities. She was a three-year member and served a one-year term as president of the OSU Student Chapter of the American College of Veterinary Pathologists. She also served four years as an ambassador for the CVHS, leading campus tours and meeting with prospective veterinary students.

Whipple presented a research poster at the 2013 American College of Veterinary Pathologists annual meeting held in Montreal, Canada. She won awards for oral case presentations at OSU’s Phi Zeta Research Day in both 2013 and 2014. She was a member of the 2012 Pfizer Animal Health Clinical Case Challenge winning team.

In 2015, Whipple was awarded the College of Veterinary Medicine Alumni Scholarship and the American College of Veterinary Pathologists Student Achievement Award. She was the 2014 recipient of the American Veterinary Medical Association Veterinarians Serving Veterinarians Scholarship.

As an undergraduate, Whipple was a three-year member and past vice-president of the Pre-Vet Club,

Kellie Whipple will be among 88 veterinary students to earn a doctor of veterinary medicine degree on May 8 from Oklahoma State University’s Center for Veterinary Health Sciences.

Whipple earned a B.S. in animal science and graduated magna cum laude from OSU in 2012.

Whipple to earn veterinary degree

Kellie Whipple

[email protected] • 580-884-8612213 S. Grand • Cherokee, OK 73728Store Hrs: Tues-Fri 10-5:30 & Sat 10-2

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as well as a two-year member and past secretary of the Animal Science Leadership Alliance. She served one year on the executive council of the Student Government Association as webmaster, and was a member of the Freshman Representative Council and President’s Leadership Council. She participated in the Animal Science and Freshman University Research Scholar programs. She also participated in two study abroad programs: studying production agriculture in New Zealand and ecology and conservation in Costa Rica.

Whipple received a National FFA Proficiency Award in wildlife production and management in 2008. She was named one of OSU’s Top 20 Freshman Women in 2009 and in 2010 she was awarded the Mahindra Women in Agriculture award.

Prior to attending OSU, Whipple earned an associate of applied science degree in web and graphic design from Northern Oklahoma College and graduated summa cum laude two weeks before her high school graduation from Alva High School in 2008.

After graduation, Whipple will complete a one year internship at VCA Veterinary Specialists of Northern Colorado in Loveland, Colorado. Upon completion of her internship, Whipple plans to complete a three-year residency program and become board certified in Veterinary Clinical Pathology.

Whipple is the daughter of Alan and Mandy Whipple.

BREAKFAST &LUNCH COOK

NEEDEDApply in Person At

CHEROKEESTATION

1710 S. Grand580-596-2882

Cherokee, OK 73728

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7TH & FLYNN ST. ALVA, OK 73717 • 580-327-2992

ALVA’S MARKET

DELI NOON SPECIALS

PRICES GOODApril 29-May 5, 2015

Tendercrust sandwich white bread....89¢Kraft 16oz salad dressings.............$2.19Kool-Aid Jammers 10ct pkg.......2/$4.00Duncan Hines cake mix.................5/$5.00Gatorade 6pk 12oz bottles...........$3.99Shurfine 16.6 lb charcoal................$4.99Shurfine charcoal lighterfluid 32oz.............................................$2.50

Shurfine gallon white milk................$2.50Wisconsin shredded cheese, 8oz....$2.00Shurfine 24oz sour cream................$2.39Gold Peak tea 59oz.....................2/$4.00Imperial margarine quarters...............79¢

Blue Bunny ice cream 128oz..........$4.99Green Giant 12oz Steamers...........$1.79

Chicken Fried SteakWEDNESDAY:Pulled PorkTHURSDAY: CatfishFRIDAY:MeatloafMONDAY: BurritosTUESDAY:

MEAT MARKETFryer leg quarters, 10lb bag.................................$6.99Boneless Beef chuck roast..............................$4.99/lbBoneless Beef ChuckFamily Pack - $5.19/lb..............Small Pack - $5.49/lbBar-S jumbo meat chicken or bun lengthfranks, 1lb pkg.........................................................99¢Flanders Beef Patties, 2lb box..............................$3.99Country Style ribsFamily Pack - $1.97/lb..............Small Pack - $2.19/lbBoneless Beef Top Sirloin Steak......................$6.19/lbEckrich smoked sausage, allvarieties, 13-14oz pkg......................................2/$5.00Mama Rosa single serve pizzaPepperoni/sausage, 5.25oz...................................$1.19

Roma Tomatoes.....................89¢/lbSmall Avocados....................29¢/eaSeedless Watermelons...........$3.99Romaine, Green orRed Leaf Lettuce...................99¢/eaBroccoli.............................$1.19/lbCelery............................69¢/sleevePR

OD

UCE

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Cinco de Mayo SpecialsJalapeno peppers.........................65¢/lbCilantro.................................35¢/bunchJumex canned drink 11.3oz...........2/88¢Jose Ole taquito 22.5oz.................$4.99On the Border tortilla chips.......2/$5.00Clamato 32oz juice cocktail............$2.79Old El Paso 10oz enchilada sauce...$1.29La Moderna pasta 7oz........3 pkg/$1.00

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121 E. Main • Cherokee, Okla(580) 596-3333

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2015 BURLINGTON SENIORSMay 14th, 2015 ~ 7:00 p.m.

Burlington AuditoriumSpeaker Miss Oklahoma Alex Eppler

Valedictorian ~ Kyle EllerbeckSalutatorian ~ Daniel Ross

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Congratulations Ladies

A retirement reception for Election Board Secretary Wylodean Linder was held Monday at the Woods County Courthouse. She is stepping down after 27 years in that position. Her family gathered at the event: from left, Brooke Johnson, Tyler Crawford, Nolan Dean Vinyard, Kelli Vinyard, Dean Linder, Wylodean Linder, Jon Linder, Jana Pitt, and Julia Schrock. Photo by Lynn L. Martin

Pat Nida is retiring from Share Medical Center after nearly 36 years of service. She said she is the new “hired hand” to help her husband, Rob, on the family farm and is having fun driving a new “Gator” around the acreage. At Share Medical Center. Pat was the Case Manager/discharge planner and quality coordinator.

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By Leslie NationCHEROKEE – The Alfalfa County

commissioners met Monday for their regular weekly meeting.

Before approval of minutes, the com-missioners reviewed an open bid from D & B Oilfield for concrete for bleach-ers for the Alfalfa County fairgrounds. They reviewed another open bid for an Internet and phone system for the OSU Extension and election office in the new fairgrounds. KanOkla made a bid of $19,959.48 that was approved by the commissioners.

The commissioners then reviewed and approved the minutes from last week’s meeting, payroll warrants, M & O warrants for payment, blanket pur-chase orders and road crossing permits.

Other items on the agenda that were reviewed and approved were:

• County clerk to go out on bids for six month bids,

• Private property access easement NW/4 of 3-24-11 and SE/4 of 16-24-11 to remove trees from right of way and place on farmer’s land,

• FY 2015-16 Detention Transpor-tation Agreement between Office of Juvenile Affairs and the Alfalfa County

Commissioners,• Transfer from H-173 Visual Inspec-

tion Capital Outlay to H-17 2A Visual Inspection M & O for $2,000 for sup-plies,

• Transfer from T-2A M & O fro Dis-trict No. 2 to T-3 Capital Outlay District No. 2 for $200,000 for hydraulic exca-vator.

The commissioners tabled the pay-ment for additional services for $1,112 from Guernsey for engineer Zachary Korenak.

Before adjourning the meeting, Commissioner Chad Roach made an an-nouncement about receiving complaints from the community about the main-

Alfalfa County commissioners meetingtenance for Alfalfa County Museum. Roach stated that Alfalfa County does not own the museum; therefore, they have no way of funding upkeep. The museum is actually owned by the histor-ical society, but all board members are now deceased or have resigned.

With no unforeseen business, the commissioners then adjourned the meet-ing.

Road crossing permit revenue is as follows:Dist. # How Many $ Amount1 3 $5,0002 1 $5003 1 $1,750Total All Dist. 5 $7,250

The ORWA (Oklahoma Rural Water Association) 45th Anniversary Conference and Exposition was recently held at Tulsa. Opening general session speakers speaking on the topics “Everyone Else is Selling Water: Why Shouldn’t I?” “Agency Updates” and “Water Taste Test Finals” were (left to right) Scott Thompson, executive director, DEQ; J.D. Strong, exec-utive director, OWRB; Bayli Hyde from the Town of Burlington; Col. Michael Teague, secretary of energy and environ-ment; and Ryan McMullen, USDA Rural Development. Hyde enjoyed being asked to speak at the conference about the conservation of water, a topic she is passionate about. Conservation of natural resources is Bayli’s main 4-H project.

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Moffatt – Wells announceengagement

Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Moffat would like to announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Priscilla Moffatt, to Donald Wells, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Wells of Vilonia, Arkansas.

Priscilla is a 2012 graduate of Alva High School and is employed at Beadles Nursing Home.

Donald is a 2005 graduate of Vilonia High School and is employed by Kenney Oilfield Services out of Vilonia, Arkansas.

The couple will exchange vows on May 16, 2015, at 3 p.m. at the Friends Church in Alva. They will reside in Alva.

Make plans now to attend Harper County’s biggest and most colorful event, the Sunflower Balloon Fest.

The three-day event kicks off at 6:30 p.m. on Friday, May 8, at the Anthony Airport. Parking and admission are free. Friday evening the balloons will be inflated as the weather permits. Flights are possible; if not, balloons may stand and glow. Festival-goers will be able to walk among the balloons and visit with pilots and crew. A fireworks display at dusk will finish off a lovely evening.

Sunrise on Saturday is a perfect time for a hot air balloon flight. Balloons from all over, including Kansas, Oklahoma, Minnesota and California, will participate.

After the flights, visit downtown Anthony for a wide variety of activities, including a flight simulator; car show, carnival; a fun run, tours of the Anthony Historical Museum; food and craft vendors, Dutch oven cooking, walk-

around magician, and new this year, a solar-powered bubble tower; and a live carving demo by a chain saw artist. Local merchants and restaurants will welcome shoppers with specials all day. At 2 p.m. a parade will proceed down Main Street.

Saturday evening the pilots will try for another balloon flight at the airport from 6-7 p.m. After the flight, the whole family can dance, or just enjoy listening or dancing, to music in the Wayne Dennis parking lot at Main and Anthony, from 8:30-10:30 p.m.

Sunday morning at sunrise will be the last flight time for the hot air balloons from 6:30-7:30 a.m. After watching the balloons take off, there’s still time to attend worship at one of our local churches before lunch and the trip home.

We recommend that you arrive one hour before flight time. For more information on events and event pricing call 620-842-5456 or visit the website, www.sunflowerballoonfest.com.

Annual Sunflower Balloon Fest

Caps and gowns, tassels and school rings commemorate the spring season: graduation is upon us. Some of the most famous graduation quotes come from a popular children’s author.

“You’re off to great places, today is your day. Your mountain is waiting so get on your way,” Dr. Seuss said.

Aptitude tests, sleepless nights, hard work and determination have paid off for one student.

Hayden Bonine of Nash, son of Chad Bonine, has been awarded the NOC/OSU Gateway Ambassadors Scholarship at Northern Oklahoma College. This

high honor is given to students who have demonstrated academic leadership in their high school. The scholarship includes a tuition waiver for up to 18 credit hours, fees and books. Applicants must have a 25 or higher ACT score and a 3.60 GPA. As an added benefit to the NOC/OSU Gateway/Ambassadors Scholarship award, students will be a part of the President’s Leadership Council.

Bonine will graduate from Kremlin-Hillsdale High School in the spring and attend Northern Oklahoma College in Stillwater in the fall. His accolades

include academic bowl, football team and team leadership committee. He plans to study social science.

Nash student given NOC Gateway/Ambassadors Scholarship

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It’s time toplant

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Writer seeks Alfalfa County relatives

Dear Editor,I am looking for relatives and

descendants of Isaac and Emaline Neff. They worked a farm and raised a family in Alfalfa County, Oklahoma.

Isaac Neff married Emaline Holmes when they lived in Scioto, Ohio. Isaac died on the farm in Alfalfa County in 1896 and was buried in Barber County, Kansas, in the Hazelton Cemetery. Emaline moved to live with her son Charles and family in Stella, Alfalfa County, Oklahoma. She died in 1924 and was buried next to Isaac.

I am planning a trip to Alfalfa County and would like to meet living relatives of my ancestors. Their daughter, Mary Elizabeth Neff, married William Flatt Sr. They moved to Stiglar where William grew up.

Deana Van Wart3909 Coachman Dr.Independence, MO [email protected]

By Nicholas ClaytonTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The cost of civ-

illy committing sexual predators for treat-ment in Kansas could double during the next 10 years if steps are not taken to improve the program, the state's auditor said in a report released Tuesday.

The report estimates that the program's cost will increase from $13.9 million in 2014 to between $26 million and $34 mil-lion in 2025 and its population will eventu-ally double to more than 500 confined pa-tients if policies do not change.

Offenders deemed to be sexual preda-tors are committed to Larned State Hospital after they serve their criminal penalties and are released only after completing a sev-en-phase treatment plan. Since its inception in 1994, the number of patients in the pro-gram has grown to 258 and just three have been released, while 27 have died during their confinement, according to the state agency that runs the program.

Scott Frank, the lead legislative auditor, said that the program's population is increas-ing by 10 to 15 patients per year and its fa-cilities will reach maximum capacity in the next five years, because "the primary way that someone leaves the program is that they get old enough and then they pass away."

"To put it really bluntly, if you're going to put 10 to 15 people in, and that's the only way that they're going to get out, then the population has to grow to the point that 10 to 15 die a year," Frank said.

The news comes as state lawmak-ers return from their annual spring recess Wednesday looking for ways to close roughly $422 million in budget shortfalls through cuts and tax increases, and legis-lators are increasingly concerned about the programs costs, said Sen. Jeff Longbine, an Emporia Republican.

"At some point over the next couple years the Legislature is going to have to make some really hard decisions about how we are going to continue this program," he said.

The report also found deficiencies in the way patients are treated in comparison to similar programs in Iowa, Washington and Wisconsin, saying officials did not take suf-ficient records of patients' progress and did not offer as much treatment to patients as the other states' programs.

Seton Hall law professor Barbara Mo-ses, who settled a lawsuit with the state of New Jersey over a lack of treatment its pro-gram 2012, said Kansas' program is known as "one of the worst in the country" in terms of treatment quality and patient outcomes. The New Jersey settlement guaranteed of-fenders 20 hours of professional therapy and increased independent oversight.

The amount of clinical therapy Kansas patients received ranged from zero to three hours per week, according to the report, but Larned superintendent Tom Kinlen claimed most received four to six hours of group therapy and varying amounts of individual therapy depending on the patient.

Angela de Rocha, spokeswoman for the Department of Aging and Disability Ser-vices, which runs the program, said the de-partment has already implemented many of the report's recommendations, and stressed that few leave it because they are deemed to be a high risk to offend.

"We have a very narrow front door, and a very narrow back door," de Rocha said.

State Auditor Lynn Retz said Wiscon-sin, which has released 118 patients from its program since 1994, estimates that between 3 percent and 5 percent of those discharged end up returning to prison or treatment for additional offenses.

Sex predator program costs to double by 2025, report says

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By Tim TalleyOKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Exactly

one year after a botched lethal injection, attorneys for other Oklahoma death row inmates were set to ask the U.S. Supreme Court Wednesday to outlaw a sedative used in the procedure — a ruling that could force several states to either find new ex-ecution drugs or change the way they put prisoners to death.

The lawyer for one of the inmates said midazolam has been a "spectacular failure" as the first of a three-drug combination for lethal injections, even beyond the 43-min-ute execution of Clayton Lockett that sparked the lawsuit. Lockett writhed on the gurney, moaned and clenched his teeth for several minutes on April 29, 2014, before Oklahoma prison officials belatedly tried to halt the process.

"There have been cases throughout the United States that have been reported in which midazolam has not sedated the condemned," said Mark Henricksen, who is representing Richard Eugene Glossip in the case.

Three months before Lockett's execu-tion, Ohio inmate Dennis McGuire snorted and gasped as he was strapped to the gur-ney and didn't die until 26 minutes into the procedure. It was the only time Ohio had used a two-drug combination that included midazolam, and prison officials have since abandoned it. Officials in Arizona have said they are also abandoning the drug and will try to obtain others for executions.

Assistant Federal Public Defender Dale Baich, who represents some death row inmates, said a ruling in favor of the inmates would apply to a handful of states that use midazolam as part of their lethal injection protocol.

"Lethal injection as a method of execu-tion would not come to an end, but states would not be able to use midazolam," Baich said.

Four states have used midazolam in executions: Arizona, Florida, Ohio and Oklahoma. Another three states, Alabama, Louisiana and Virginia have execution procedures that allow for midazolam but have not used the drug in executions, said Megan McCracken, a death penalty expert at the University of California at Berkeley law school.

The Oklahoma lawsuit was filed by 21 inmates, but only attorneys for the three whose executions have been scheduled for this year will make arguments Wednesday — the one-year anniversary of Lockett's death. They're urging justices to rule the drug unconstitutional because it's possible an inmate would remain aware even after the drug was administered, resulting in severe pain when the next two drugs are injected.

But Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt has asked the high court to dismiss the lawsuit, arguing in legal papers that lower courts have ruled the dosage of midazolam called for by the state's execu-tion protocol is likely to render death row inmates unconscious during their execu-tions.

"So far, seven courts have reviewed the same facts that will be considered by the U.S. Supreme Court, and all seven have ruled that Oklahoma's lethal injection protocol is constitutional," Aaron Cooper, a spokesman for Pruitt, said in an email. "The facts determined by the lower courts are well supported by the record and med-ical literature."

Lockett's execution was the first time

Oklahoma had used midazolam. On Jan. 15, another Oklahoma death row inmate, Charles Warner, was put to death using the same three-drug combination that was used in Lockett's execution and showed no obvious signs of distress. Executions are on hold in the state while the high court considers the challenge.

McCracken said it was hard to know whether a decision in favor of the Oklaho-ma death row inmates would have broader implications. But Henricksen said he be-lieves a favorable ruling would bar the use of midazolam for lethal injections in other states as well.

States have had increasing difficulty obtaining execution drugs as pharmaceu-tical companies, responding to criticism mainly in Europe, have refused to sell their products for that use. State after state has passed laws shielding key details about the drugs, including their source, from the public.

But there have been nine executions since the court agreed to hear the Oklaho-ma case in late January. Each one used a single drug, pentobarbital.

Meanwhile, the challenge has forced officials in Oklahoma to scramble to find alternative methods for conducting execu-tions. Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin signed legislation into law on April 17 that made the state the first in the nation to approve nitrogen gas as an alternative death penalty method if lethal injections aren't possible, either because of a court ruling or a drug shortage.

There are no reports of nitrogen gas ever being used to execute humans, and critics say that one concern is that the method is untested. Some states even ban its use to put animals to sleep.

US Supreme Court to consider challenge to execution drug

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TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Oil produc-tion increased last year in Kansas while natural gas production declined, newly released numbers show.

The numbers, which the Kansas Geological Survey released Monday, show that Kansas produced about 49.5 million barrels of oil last year, marking a 5.7 percent increase from 2013, The Topeka Capital-Journal (http://bit.ly/1J6QyzS) reports. Despite falling pric-es, last year's oil production was at its highest level in Kansas since 1995.

However, the production and ex-ploratory efforts related to oil and gas tailed off toward the end of 2014 as the prices dropped, according to KGS. The value of the oil produced dropped from $4.11 billion in 2013 to $4.09 billion in 2014.

The state's top oil producer for 2014 was Ellis County, with about 3.4 mil-lion barrels, followed by Harper Coun-ty, with 2.9 million barrels.

Harper and Sumner counties both saw a notable increase in production as drillers explored different areas of the Mississippian limestone play, which lies

under south-central and southwest Kan-sas, KGS geologist Lynn Watney said in a news release.

The news release said most oil pro-duction in the Mississippian came from hydraulic fracturing, known as frack-ing. Rawlins, Logan and Scott counties, which are over the Pennsylvanian-Age Lansing-Kansas City geologic group, also saw a notable increase. Their wells are primarily vertical, unlike the hori-zontal fracking wells.

Meanwhile, natural gas production fell by 2.5 percent to about 287.6 billion cubic feet. With a one-year exception, production in Kansas has dropped every year since 1996.

Stevens County was the largest nat-ural gas producer, and most gas produc-tion was concentrated in southwest and south-central Kansas. Most counties with natural gas wells showed declining production, although the amount pro-duced rose in Stanton County.

Kansas oil production rose in 2014, gas dropped

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Stu-dents at an Oklahoma City high school are poised to pick a new mascot to replace one deemed offensive by the American Indian community.

Oklahoma City Public Schools spokes-woman Tierney Tinnin revealed two mas-cot finalists for Capitol Hill High School on Monday night. Students will decide Wednesday if they want to cheer for the Red Wolves, a nearly extinct species, or the Guardians, which would be represent-ed by a mythical created known as a grif-fin, next year.

The school board voted 8-0 in Decem-ber to remove the 88-year-old Redskins mascot after hearing from students, teach-ers and a district official who said it is of-fensive and harmful.

Since then, the district has been trying to rally support from community members

interested in assisting with the transition."We wanted to create opportunities to

engage the current student body with the Capitol student alumni association," said Tinnin.

The group included students, faculty, alumni, community members and Native Americans.

"All the kids had these big long list from unicorns, to honey badgers, to what-ever we could think of, and we talked it all the way through," said Capitol Hill's sec-retary, Wanda Thompson.

She said she's confident that the school and the district have made the right deci-sion because now everyone can be repre-sented.

The change is expected to cost the dis-trict about $200,000. The school plans to auction off memorabilia to help pay for the transition.

Replacement mascots revealed for Oklahoma City high school

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a

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Margaret Davis Jenkinson was born to Ora and Elsie Davis on a farm in Southeast Kingman County, Kansas on May 13, 1925. She graduated from high school in Norwich, Kansas and earned a teaching certicate at Wichita State University. Margaret married Manford Jenkinson in 1944, and they farmed near Burlington, OK for over 65 years. Margaret moved to Enid in 2011 after her husband passed away in 2009. Children are Carol Mote, Sharon, OK; Faye Garrison, Muskogee; and Sue Diel, Enid. Margaret has seven grandchildren, thirteen great-grandchildren, and one great-great-grandchild. No gifts please. Cards may be sent to 702 West Mulberry, Enid, OK 73701

Margaret Jenkinson

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By Katy Daigle,PASLANG, Nepal (AP) — There

is almost nothing left of this village but enormous piles of broken red bricks and heaps of mud and dust.

One of those piles was once Bhoj Kumar Thapa's home, where his preg-nant wife pushed their 5-year-old daughter to safety in a last, desperate act before it collapsed and killed her during Saturday's earthquake.

On Tuesday, Thapa and others in Paslang were still waiting for the gov-ernment to deliver food, tents — any kind of aid — to this poor mountain village near the epicenter of the quake that killed more than 4,700 people, in-jured over 8,000 and left tens of thou-sands homeless.

"When I got home, there was noth-ing," said Thapa, an army soldier. "Everything was broken. My wife — she was dead."

He was put on leave from his army unit to mourn, one of the few Nepal-ese soldiers not deployed in the coun-try's massive rescue and recovery op-eration. But instead of sadness, there

is anger."Only the other villagers who have

also lost their homes are helping me. But we get nothing from the govern-ment," Thapa said.

An official came, took some pic-tures and left — without delivering anything to the village of about 300 people north of the capital of Kath-mandu, he said.

"I get angry, but what can I do? I am also working for the government," Thapa said. "I went to ask the police if they could at least send some men to help us salvage our things, but they said they have no one to send."

Paslang is only 3 kilometers (1.8 miles) up the mountain from the town of Gorkha, the district headquarters and staging area for rescue and aid operations. But the villagers, who have no idea when they might get help, are still sleeping together in the mud and sharing whatever scraps of food they can pull from beneath their ruined buildings. Three people in the hamlet have died.

Officials and foreign aid workers who have rushed to Nepal following the magnitude 7.8 earthquake are struggling against stormy weather, poor roads and a shortage of manpow-er and funds to get assistance to the needy. On Tuesday, the district man-aged to coordinate 26 helicopter trips

to remote villages to evacuate 30 in-jured people before a major downpour halted the effort.

"We need 15,000 plastic tarps alone. We cannot buy that number," said Mohan Pokhran, a district disas-ter management committee member. Only 50 volunteer army and police officers are distributing food and aid for thousands in the immediate vicin-ity, he said.

"We don't have nearly enough of anything," Pokhran said.

On Tuesday came more tragedy: A mudslide and avalanche struck near the village of Ghodatabela and 250 people were feared missing, district official Gautam Rimal said. Heavy snow had been falling, and the ground may have been loosened by the quake.

But there also was also some heart-ening news: French rescuers freed a man from the ruins of a three-story Kathmandu hotel, near the main bus station. The man, identified as Rishi Khanal, was conscious and taken to a hospital; no other information about him was released.

Across central Nepal, including the capital of Kathmandu, hundreds of thousands of people remained liv-ing in the open without clean water or sanitation more than three days after the quake. It rained heavily in the city Tuesday, forcing people to find shel-ter wherever they could.

While many across Nepal are opt-ing to sleep outdoors for fear of the

Near Nepal quake epicenter, desperate villagers await help

See Nepal Page 46

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constant aftershocks, those in Paslang have no choice because almost no buildings are left standing. At night, survivors huddle together against the cold, rain and mosquitoes, and wait until dawn.

Tilak Bahadur Rana, a farmer, still has a tin roof over his head but the cold rain leaks through.

"In any case, I can't sleep. I am too stressed. I worry about how I will feed my family," he said.

Some in Paslang have seen sacks of food being flown by helicopter to remote regions reachable only by air, without stopping. The arrival in the village of a diesel generator Tues-day, brought by "a nice charity man" from a foreign aid group that no one could identify, brought moments of much-needed elation as dozens crowded around to charge their cell-phones on four attached power sock-ets.

Sitting in the mud and sharing tea made over an open fire with his wife and children, Rana confessed he was losing heart.

"Because of this earthquake, the

whole village is destroyed. We need food. We need a place to sleep, or compensation for all we have lost," he said.

Instead, the villagers are pooling anything they can rescue from the ru-ins, which isn't much: a pile of garlic bulbs, wax honeycombs and some bed rolls, doorknobs, metal pans, and por-traits of Nepal's last king and queen.

To help feed his family of 10, Loba Thapa dug into the brick dust that was once an A-frame building where he stored his livestock and food.

Thapa — no relation to the soldier — sifted out some millet and cornmeal, although it still contained powdered bricks, pebbles and livestock dung. Still, it was all the family had to eat.

"I have lost everything. Everything is below the rubble, including my clothes," the 50-year-old said, throw-ing his hands up in exasperation.

The U.N. said the quake affected 8.1 million people — more than a fourth of Nepal's population of 27.8 million — and that 1.4 million needed food assistance.

The challenge is to reach them in rugged isolated villages. Trucks car-

rying food were on their way to af-fected districts outside the hard-hit and densely populated Kathmandu Valley.

Geoff Pinnock of the U.N.'s World Food Program was leading a convoy of trucks north toward the worst-af-fected areas when the rain began, causing a landslide.

" I can maybe get one truck through and take a risk driving on the dirt, but I think we'll have to hold the materials back to try to get them out tomorrow by helicopter," he said.

The World Food Program said dis-tribution of rice would begin Wednes-day in Gorkha district and that the agency plans to provide $116 mil-lion worth of food in the next three months.

In the town of Gorkha, rescue he-licopters delivered several injured women who grimaced and cried out in pain, unable to walk or speak.

Sita Karki winced when soldiers lifted her. Her broken and swollen legs had been tied together with wisps of hay twisted into a makeshift splint. "When the earthquake hit, a wall fell on me and knocked me down," she said.

Nepal's death toll rose to 4,768, said police officer Hari Bhakt in Kathmandu. Another 61 were killed in neighboring India, and China's of-ficial Xinhua News Agency reported 25 dead in Tibet.

Thomas Meier, an engineer with the International Nepal Fellowship, called the disaster "a long-term emer-gency."

"This will need major attention for the next five years," he said. "People have nothing left."

From Page 42 Nepal

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Just a note to let you knowhow happy we are with our“Help Wanted Ad”.Each week the ad has beenpublished in the paper wehave had applications.We have hired and retained3 non-student employeesand multiple studentemployees.With the end of the schoolyear, we are having toonce again advertise forhelp at the Alva Sonic.

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MDS which is directly linked to Medicare. Courson said the PointClickCare company has 75 percent of nursing home business across the U.S. Facilities using this program have seen 60 percent more revenue per patient based on better documentation, Courson said.

The cost of the PointClickCare system is around $600/month for the software and a one-time charge for hardware of $10,000 to $15,000. Grismer said it is economical to replace the old hardware with the new.

Regarding health networks, Grismer said KDH is currently a member of the Southern Plains Network at Pratt. Grismer said Via Christi at Wichita has the Wheat Plains Network, for which she’s been working on an application the last month. She said this agreement would better suit KDH since their practitioners go toward Via Christi

for referrals and services. Ultimately the patient has a choice to go either direction.

Since pharmacist John Hagood resigned as in-house pharmacist, the board is reportedly negotiating an agreement with Kiowa Prescriptions Plus, which is owned by Lance Freeman.

In other action, the board discussed options to hire mowing of the hospital lawn or purchase a lawnmower. The board received two sealed bids from people wanting to contract the mowing. The board reportedly opened those bids in executive session and took no action upon return to open session. The board also approved the risk management/quality assurance monthly reports.

The KDH annual meeting is Wednesday, May 20, at 7 p.m. in the Kiowa Community Building.

board capped the amount at $2,500 per semester.

Regarding the manor, Grismer, Balding and Courson recommended utilizing the PointClickCare program. This is for reporting electronic health records of residents in an immediate and more efficient manner. Courson explained the plan is to have kiosks in the hallways with touchscreen computers. Immediately after providing treatment for a resident, nurses and other health care personnel simply go to the computer and enter the information.

The computers are set up directly to the

By Marione MartinAn Aline man has been charged

with two counts of lewd or indecent acts against a child under 16. The felony charges were filed April 21 in Alfalfa County against Anthony Edward Phillips, 31, of Aline.

The charges follow an investigation by District Attorney’s Investigator Steve Tanio who was told by Alfalfa County Deputy Sheriff Loren Nusser he had responded to a child sexual assault allegation in Aline. A woman said her 11 year old daughter was being molested by

her step-father.Tanio interviewed the girl on April

20 at a residence in Aline. The girl said the sexual touching had occurred over at least the last year with the last time being two weeks prior to the interview. The child said her step-father came into her bedroom in the evening hours and would put his hand under her clothing.

Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation Special Agent Chris Ray said he conducted a post-Miranda interview with Phillips on April 20. Ray said Phillips admitted touching the girl’s genitals one

time but said it was an accident. He also admitted grabbing her breast.

On April 20, Tanio conducted a post-Miranda videotaped interview with Anthony Phillips who admitted touching the girl a couple of months ago but said he stopped when he realized it was the 11-year-old and not his wife.

In a handwritten statement, Phillips said he apologized for “dealing with stress and being financially unstable and accidentally touching …” He also stated, “I can’t stand child molesters and I am not one.”

Aline man charged with lewd and indecent acts

From Page 6 Kiowa

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According to the affidavits and petitions on file, the following individuals have been charged. An individual is innocent of any charges listed below until proven guilty in a court of law. All information is a matter of public record and may be obtained by anyone during regular hours at the Alfalfa County Courthouse. The Alva Review-Courier will not intentionally alter or delete any of this information. If it appears in the courthouse public records, it will appear in this newspaper.

Felony FilingsAnthony Edward Phillips, 31, Aline:

Two counts of Lewd or indecent acts against a child under 16 ($531).

Civil FilingsJanetta Renee Orr vs. State of

Oklahoma: Petition for expungement and sealing of records ($135.70).

American Farmers & Ranchers MU vs. Mario Mason Ray Shillito: Auto negligence ($218.50).

Marriage FilingsWesley Tyler Lambert, age 23, of

Jones, Oklahoma, and Addie Lea Allen,

age 21, of Cherokee, Oklahoma: Marriage license ($50).

Cale Weston Leeper, age 29, of Dacoma, Oklahoma, and Cinthia Ivette Tavares, age 34, of Dacoma, Oklahoma: Marriage license ($50).

Protective Order FilingsKelli Arnold vs. Kaitlynn Renee

Harper: EPO ($218).Michelle Harper vs. Kolby Kern

Arnold and Kelli Arnold: EPO ($218).Traffic Filings

Michael Loren Seachris II, 20, Wichita, Kansas: Failure to comply with compulsory insurance law (state dismissed without fine or costs).

Philip Gale Wallace, 62, Aline: Operating vehicle on which all taxes due state have not been paid ($211.50).

Philip Gale Wallace, 62, Aline: Failure to comply with compulsory insurance law ($231.50).

Philip Gale Wallace, 62, Aline: Operate M/C without “M” endorsement ($211.50).

Nicholas Coy Hough, 28, Ringwood: Failure to use child passenger restraint

system ($234.50).Nicholas Coy Hough, 28, Ringwood:

Failure to carry motor vehicle registration ($211.50).

Timothy Oneal Morris, 61, Carmen: Operating motor vehicle at a speed not reasonable or proper ($256.50).

Ryan Scott Cobble, 28, Drumwright: Inattentive driving resulting in collision ($211.50).

Jerrod Ryan Rogers, 38, Hennessey: Improper backing ($211.50).

The following individuals received a citation for speeding:

Lisa Janene Lopshire, 55, Waynoka: 21-25 mph over ($281.50); Tiffany Elaine Fairless, 25, Fort Smith, Arkansas: 16-20 mph over ($241.50).

The following individuals received a citation for failure to wear seatbelt ($20 fine):

Ty Jeremy Barnard, 25, Pond Creek; Luther Aaron McTrye, 37, Dallas, Georgia; Andrew Lawrence Stifter, 19, Cherokee; Nicholas Coy Hough, 28, Ringwood.

Alfalfa County Court Filings

Real Estate TransfersBook 769, Page 912: That Diel

Properties Oklahoma, LLC; convey unto Darcy L. Kisling Trust No. 1: Same as Quitclaim Deeds Book 769, Page 910. Warranty deed.

Book 769, Page 916: Darcy L. Kisling and Kent. J. Kisling, Trustees of the Darcy L. Kisling Trust No.1; convey unto Diel Properties Oklahoma, LLC: Lots 4 and 5 and the E/2 SW/4 of 19-29-11, Alfalfa County, Oklahoma. Warranty deed.

Book 769, Page 979: That Kayla Puffinbarger; convey unto Justin Goss: Lots 13-15, in Block 30, in Cherokee, Alfalfa County, Oklahoma. Warranty deed.

Book 769, Page 980: That Leonard Scott and Sheryle Scott, husband and wife, and Luke Scott, single; convey unto Cynthia Kozee: Lots 6 and 7 and W 18’ of Lot 8, Block 11, West Side Addition to Cherokee, Alfalfa County, Oklahoma. Warranty deed.

Book 770, Page 138: That Burlington Christian Church (Disciples of Christ); convey unto Driftwood Christian Church: Lots 13-16 inclusive, Block 16,

Burlington, Alfalfa County, Oklahoma. Warranty deed.

Book 770, Page 141: That KGBT, LLC; convey unto Mike L. Cook and Rhonda B. Cook: Lot 4 and the SE/4 SW/4 of 7-28-11; AND Lot 1 and 2 and the S/2 NE/4 of 3-27-12, Alfalfa County, Oklahoma. Warranty deed.

Book 769, Page 910: That Linda Pentz, Shannon Bland and Lee Bland as Co-Trustees of the Linda Pentz Revocable Trust; convey unto Diel Properties Oklahoma, LLC: SE/4 of 13-28-12, Alfalfa County, Oklahoma. Quitclaim deed.

Book 769, Page 986: Between Margaret J. Glasby; and Margaret J. Glasby, Trustee of the Margaret J. Glasby Revocable Trust: SE/4 12-25-9. Quitclaim deed.

Book 770, Page 117: That Paul L. Doman and Carol K. Doman; covey unto Paul L. Doman and Carol K. Doman, Trustees of the Paul L. Doman and Carol K. Doman Revocable Trust: A tract of land approximately 54’ by 122.2’ located in 3-26-9; Lot 8, in Block 1, Hodgens First Subdivision; Lot 1, 24 and 25,

Block 1, Hodgens Second Subdivision; Lots 1-5, and 6 and N. 45’ of Lot 7, all in Block 1 of McSparrin Subdivision; Lots 1-4 of Block 2 of McSparrin Subdivision; Lots 1-3 of Block 3 of McSparrin Subdivision; Lot 4 for Block 3 of McSparrin Subdivision; Lots 1-4, of Block 5 of McSparrin Subdivision; Lots 2-4 of Block 6 of McSparrin Subdivision; AND 10-26-9 all in Alfalfa County, Oklahoma. Quitclaim deed.

Book 770, Page 125: That Cheryl Lynn Ellis and Steven Earl Ellis, wife and husband, and Paul L. Doman and Carol K. Doman, husband and wife; convey unto Paul L. Doman and Carol K. Doman, Trustees of the Paul L. Doman and Carol K. Doman Revocable Trust: Lot 26, Block 1, Hodgens Second Subdivision; the S. 75.5’ of Lots 2 and 3, in Block 1, Hodgens Subdivision; Lot 21-23, Block 1, Hodgens Second Subdivision, all in Alfalfa County, Oklahoma. Quitclaim deed.

Book 770, Page 140: That KGB Trust, LLC; convey unto the KGBT, LLC: Lot 4 and the Se/4 SW/4 of 7-28-11, Alfalfa County, Oklahoma. Quitclaim deed.

Alfalfa County real estate transactions

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Sunday, April 19, 20152:45 a.m. Accident, seriousness

unknown, CPD advised of a single vehicle accident between Ingersoll and the four-way stop on Highway 64, individual has hit a cow, vehicle is blocking the road, CPD advised that there is antifreeze and debris on the road, advised OHP and on-call deputy, vehicle is a silver Nissan.

1:16 p.m. Livestock in roadway, respondent advised of 22 head of cattle out on Harmon Rd west of the sale barn, contacted possible owner.

Monday, April 20, 20159:43 a.m. Welfare check, respondent

advised a employee at the Aline-Cleo High School saw two little girls walking around town early this morning, one is in kindergarten and the other is in third grade, a teacher went up to the door and could not get anyone to answer, there are no cars in the driveway but could hear cartoons in the background, respondent thinks the kids might be home alone, wants a welfare check, advised deputy, deputy advised the door is open to the house and he is going to make entry, deputy advised he secured the house, there is no one inside, advised respondent.

12:47 p.m. Break/enter, respondent advised of a possible break and enter east of intersection of highways 38 and 11 on the south side of the road, advised he never sees the doors open unless the couple is there, the door looks busted open, wants us to check it out, owner may not show up for another week or so.

4:04 p.m. Abandoned vehicle, respondent advised of a newer SUV sitting 1 ½ miles east of Cozy Curve along the road, he was afraid someone would hit it or it may cause an accident, thought we needed to check it out, advised OHP, no response so called OHP, they said their trooper had checked it out and it was OK.

9:19 p.m. Livestock at large, respondent called saying that there is cattle out on 64 and 720, called two possible owners, they will call back, individual drove to Grant County line and couldn’t find any cattle out.

Tuesday, April 21, 20151:15 a.m. Livestock in roadway,

respondent advised of black cattle in the road on Highway 64 on Alfalfa/Grant County line, tried to notify possible owners, notified Grant County.

5:32 a.m. Livestock in roadway, respondent advised of a baby calf out on Aline blacktop between 520 and 530 on

north side, called three possible owners.7:42 a.m. Information, respondent

advised of a vehicle that is abandoned 2 ½ miles east of Cozy Curve, it is halfway in the road and is a traffic hazard, advised respondent we have had reports of this vehicle, advised OHP.

9:15 a.m. Information, respondent advised he has locked his keys in his truck, he lives 2 miles east of Cozy Curve, advised respondent that we cannot unlock vehicles anymore, respondent requested us to come get out an unlock kit and he will do it himself, deputy advised that would be fine but he is liable for any damage on our equipment, deputy went with respondent to unlock vehicle.

3:35 p.m. Accident seriousness unknown, respondent called in that a person has straddled the bridge bannister 7 miles east of Carmen, advised deputy of accident, CPD advised of same accident, advised OHP, deputy advised the car is sitting on the cement sides of bridge, called for salvage number and Alva wreckers numbers, deputy advised trooper has taken over the scene, deputy heading to Aline.

4:44 p.m. Gas drive off, Carmen Jiffy Trip had a white pickup drive off with gas, weather on side, a lady followed it and turned towards Helena, advised Helena officer, driver is a white male, Carmen Jiffy Trip called back and said that the man went to 412, think they may have tried something on side, pickup was travelling at high rate of speed, advised OHP.

8:05 p.m. Structure fire, respondent called and advised there is a barn fire and flames were coming through the roof, her grandson stopped and two girls came to the door, they thought they may have been alone, grandmother was home but didn’t come to the door, Woods County called wanting Carmen Fire paged out, Carmen called wanting to get Waynoka, Woods County had to page out Waynoka, Carmen said that the barn was on the ground, Carmen Fire headed back to station.

Wednesday, April 22, 20154:46 a.m. Accident, seriousness

unknown, respondent called in to report that an oilfield truck is upside down in a ditch on the north side of the road about 3 ½ miles west of Cherokee on Greer Rd, respondent said no one was in the truck, advised OHP, respondent called back and was worried that he didn’t look for

the driver enough and wanted to know if we could send an officer to investigate further, OHP will be sending an officer, advised deputy, deputy advised he is with the safety administrative for oilfield company, safety administrative advised that accident happened around 1:30 a.m. and the driver was taken to the hospital with minor injuries and was released and is at his home in Alva, OHP advised their officer is coming from Fairview and they wanted the person driving on the scene, deputy made call to him, advised OHP, deputy called and informed about the bridge railing being out, deputy is worried with some more rainy weather coming in today since there aren’t any markers out at bridge, tried to call county commissioner, no answer, left message.

5:14 a.m. Accident seriousness unknown, CPD advised there is a car on its side on Greer Rd, advised deputy that after he checked the first accident to check further for another one, CPD advised Cherokee FD, CFD stopped at accident, deputy left there to check on other accident, 8 miles out and couldn’t find anything.

12:14 p.m. Civil matter, respondent advised her neighbor, her husband’s brother has her truck and other items, advised deputy, he spoke with respondent, this is a civil matter.

Thursday, April 23, 20156:14 p.m. Unknown fire, fire

department checking on a controlled burn south of field, controlled burn may be out of control, advised Nescatunga Fire Department, en route to fire, all units take no further action, fire is put out.

7:09 p.m. Reckless driver, respondent called and advised that an old four-door truck occupied by two males was going about 55-60 mph by her house, respondent has two guys working painting her house and they yelled for the truck to slow down, truck came back and sat for a minute then left towards Helena, respondent worried because spouse is not home.

911 call, hang up, 911 call came in and was a hang up, operator advised that she was having a call from State Highway 58 and she couldn’t get a hold of anyone, advised officer, Life EMS got ahold of caller, they are fine.

9:06 p.m. Reckless driver, respondent

Alfalfa County Sheriff’s Office log

See Sheriff Page 62

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Animals and Pets Angus Bulls

14-18 months old. AI Sired. Proven, predictable, genetics. BSE Tested. Ready to work. 1 simi/Angus baldy bull. 1-30 month Angus proven bull. Armbruster Cattle Co. 580-748-2828 (Alan)

Consignment Sale Special Horse & Roping Cattle Sale. Beaver, OK. May 3, 2015. 200 fresh roping steers & 100 horses already consigned. Open horses of any kind taken through sale day. For info about sale or to consign your horse or cattle call 405-401-4759

Business Services Double B Carpentry

For all your flooring and carpentry needs from remodeling, painting, drywall, texturing, siding, farm & ranch, etc. 580-748-1489

Rick’s Repair Rick’s Repair & Welding, Mechanic. Shop & On-Site. Mention this ad for discount. Get Your Spring Repairs Done Now. 25 Years Experience, References Available. 620-825-6122

Vendors Wanted 1st Annual Flea Martket. June 6 in Medicine Lodge, KS. Fundraiser for Pastime, Inc. Indoor theatre restoration project! Call 620-886-2002 or 620-213-0189

Movies Here First! The Rialto Video has movies for rent before Red Box and NetFlix, 2 for 1 every Monday. Best drink deal in Alva. ICEE drinks avail. Best Hot Dogs & Nachos

Annual Cemetery Meeting Fairview Cemetery. May 3. 2pm at the Cemetery (SW of Hardtner, KS)

Need New Sidewalks or Driveway perhaps. Give us a call. 580-732-1028

Attention! Scribner Salvage will be closed from Wed, Apr 29 to Wed May 13 at all locations. Trespass at your own risk. The police won’t know if you are supposed to be in salvage and I won’t be there to tell them not to arrest you!

Alva Moose Lodge Sunday Buffet 11am-1pm. This Sunday May 3-BBQ Spare Ribs, Chicken Santa Fe, sides, salad bar & desserts. 580-327-1359

SheaDeeLea’s Painting Residential, Farm & Ranch, Commercial, Interior & Exterior. Free Estimates. Serving NW Okla & Kan. 620-825-6275 or 580-829-3097

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•1120 Acres-Southern Woods So Ranch Excellent hunting & Fishing. Excellent Grazing 4.5 ac spring fed pond - Price 1.7 Million

•1421 Acre OK-KS Ranch. 272 Cropland -1149 Ac Grassland. New 6 wire fences, corrals, Etc. All contiguous - Price 2.9 Million

DEAN GOLLReal Estate & Auction, LLC

UNDERCONTRACT

UNDERCONTRACT

800 ACRES –NORTHWEST OF AVARDAll grassland, good fences, some new.SOLD

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Glen’s Gun Shop Aline, OK. 580-430-5400. Nice supply of Guns, 22LR & other Ammo

Vintage Market Days at Kansas Coliseum. 1229 E 85th St. N. Wichita, KS. May 8-10. 100+ vendors from 8 states selling Vintage, Architectural, Furniture, Handmade Treasures & more. Music, Food, Family Fun. www.wichita.vintagemarketdays.com for info

Large In-Home Daycare 2 Star facility. DHS approved. Opening for ages 0-4. 580-327-8092 or 580-327-7680

Depot Bar & Grill Wed Lunch Special-Pot Roast, Carrots, Potaotes, Roll, Brownies. Thur-Pan Burritos, Shrimp Stuffed Poblaro Pepper, Strawberry Cake. Fri-Chicken Fried Steak, Mashed Potatoes, Gravy, Corn, Roll, Pumpkin Sheet Cake. Open at 11am. Full menu every day. 580-327-2212

Employment Help Wanted

Dishwasher/General Help. Apply after 4pm Wed-Sat or 580-327-1359 or 580-748-1561

Help Wanted Mon-Fri Day Shift, nights & weekends off. 580-327-7011

Office Cleaner Once a week in Alva, also possible private residences. 719-371-1836

Immediate Opening for 2 Full-Time Auto Mechanics. Bogner, Inc. 800-462-0731

Part-Time Work Attention retirees, farmers or farm wifes, NASDA, needs survey interviewers in Woods and Dewey Counties. Applicants must have valid driver’s license & access to a vehicle. Starting pay is $10.77, inclds training time + .56 cents/mile for travel. Farm background is desirable but not essential. If interested call Patty Long at 580-689-2390. Fax 580-689-2215. [email protected]

Help Wanted New Store-Cherokee ACE Hardware/NAPA Auto Parts accepting applications for Full-Time Cashier, Department Manager Trainee for Lawn & Garden, Electrical, Plumbing, Paint, Housewares, Automotive Parts & Supplies, Hardware & Tools. Apply in person at 1512 S Okla Ave, Cherokee, OK. 580-596-2438. Store Hours 8am-6pm Mon-Sat. Full or Part-Time Hours

Help Wanted Bill Johnson Correctional Center-Food Service Specialist IV (FT or PT) starting at $2170.08/mo ($12.52/hr). Correctional Case Manager starting at $2521.77/mo ($14.54/hr. Correctional Security Officer I, II, III starting at $12.78/hr with increase to $13.41 in 6 mo & $14.31 after 18 mo + overtime. Benefits include Health, Life, Dental, Vision, Vacation & Sick Leave. Contact Lisa Ackerman at 580-327-8000

Help Wanted Taco Mayo looking for Dependable Staff. Day & Night Shifts. Full-Time & Part-Time avail. Apply in person at 139 E Okla Blvd

In BusinessFor YourHealth

Since 1952

580-327-3332 • 1-800-458-5349513 Barnes • Alva, Okla.

HOLDERDRUG

Come See Our New

201 S. Okla.Cherokee, Oklahoma

580-596-2705Doyce & Rachel Hager

We Do Party Traysof All Kinds!

Graduation, Weddings,Any Occasion,Give us a Call!

ALVA STATEBANK &

TRUST COMPANY

Specialists inAgriculture Lending

We’ve Served You100 Years!

580-327-5353

AUTO • HOME • LIFE • BUSINESS •

WORKERS’ COMPENSATION

[email protected]

580-747-7825

Todd HamiltonInsurance Agent

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Mineral Management Knowledgeable and experienced professionals working on your behalf. Landrun Mineral Management www.landrunminerals.com 405-285-5200

Farm Supplies For Sale

2014 JD W110 Swather with 16ft Sickel Head. Draper Ready. 620-886-1006

Garage Sales Yard Sale

118 Center. Sat 8am-2pm

Garage Sale 714 S Sunset Dr. Sat, May 2. 8am-1pm. Bow & tools

Garage Sale Sat, May 2, 8am-1pm. 418 Seiling. Cook Books, Picture Frames, Ladies Clothes 14-16, Jeans, Shoes 10, Kitchen Items, Knick-Knacks, Material, Lamps. If rain canceled

Estate Sale 1007 S Grand. Cherokee, OK. Fri & Sat, May 1 & 2. 8am-5pm. Furniture, Appliances, Exercise Equip, Dishes, Glassware & lots of misc. Sale by Jan’s Collectibles. 580-829-3062

Waynoka Garage Sale Something for everyone. 2884 Cecil. Fri 10am-5pm. Sat 8am-?

Garage Sale 1118 Meno. Fri 4-6:30pm. Sat 8am-noon. Lots of misc & fishing equip

Garage Sale 710 & 718 3rd St. Lots of furniture, household items, tools & misc items. Fri 9am-?

Estate Sale (Round 1) 208 Flynn. Sat 9am. Nice furniture, sofa, chairs, Duncan Phyfe table, coffe table, end tables, entertainment center, nice wood desk with chair, lamps, dishes, pots & pans, lots of kitchen items, home decor, Antiques, linens, clocks, material & so much more. By Rita 580-430-5210

Garage Sale Sat, 703 4th. 8am-noon. Household items, clothes, tools, mini-fridge, etc

Garage Sale Sat 8am-? Girls & adult clothing, misc. 1741 Maple

Garage Sale Sat, 8:30am-? Furniture, name brand clothing & much much more. 1324 Santa Fe

Lawn Care Tired of Mowing?

Let us take the work out of it for you. Big or small yards. Give us a call 580-748-4308

Lawn Care Connor Martin & Crew. Mowing, Trimming, Edging. Call 580-829-3107

Miscellaneous For Sale

5th Wheel Trailer. 2005 Sandpiper. 33 1/ft. 3 Slides. $16,500 firm. 580-748-0195 or 580-884-9033

97 Easy Go Golf Cart Electric. $750. 580-829-2601

JLG Scissor Life battery powered will extend to 16’ and pass through a 36” door platform extends from 6’ to 9’. $4950. 580-829-2601

BROOKS BROOKS

Insurance Tailored to Fit Your Specific Circumstances

421 7th - Alva327-5353 Bryan, Troy & Dawn Gay Brooks

AGENCY AGENCYAuto

Homeowner - Farmowner - CommercialHealth

Call (580) 596-6594 to schedule events.

AlfalfaCounty Arena Events

All Events Are Listedon our Facebook page

May 3rd & 24thSpring Barrel Racing Series-Starts @ Noon

May 30th - 5pm - CRC Play Days

EXHIBIT BUILDINGApril 30th - 5pm -Alfalfa Co. Purchasing Class

May 3rd & 10th - 9am - Cowboy ChurchMay 5th & 6th - OHCE Flower Show

May 14th - Poultry Tester Certification - 8amMay 17th - Ministerial Alliance Benefit Dinner

“Kids Against Hunger” - Noon

Hitchin’ Post Trailers

Car Haulers-Livestock-UtilityFull Bumper Replacements & Truck Beds

Custom Orders & TradesFairview, Oklahoma

Call or Text 580-744-0053

J&I Bale Beds

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alvahouses.comSchuessler Real EstateOffice: 580-327-0707 • Brenda 430-5591Virgil 829-2830 • Traci 748-0044 • Harvey 829-1195

Mary 829-2080 • Darren 405-401-2350

www.murrowrealestateandauction.comwww.murrowlandandhome.com

REAL ESTATE& AUCTIONMURROW

580-327-1998

Community CalendarWednesday

9 a.m. The Woods County Senior Citizens Center, 625 Barnes, Alva, is open for games and other activities. Ex-ercise is scheduled each day at 11 a.m. Transportation provided upon request.

Noon Alva Kiwanis Club meets at Champs Restaurant.

2-5 p.m. The Cherokee Strip Mu-seum in Alva is open every day except Monday. For information or arranged tours, call 580-327-2030.

Thursday9 a.m. The Woods County Senior

Citizens Center, 625 Barnes, Alva, is open for games and other activities. Exercise is scheduled each day at 11 a.m. Transportation provided upon re-quest.

Noon Alva Rotary Club meets at Champs Restaurant.

2-5 p.m. The Cherokee Strip Mu-seum in Alva is open every day except

Monday. For information or arranged tours, call 580-327-2030.

3-6 p.m. Food distribution every Thursday, Alva Wesleyan Food Bank, 818 Lane St.

7 p.m. Alva Moose Lodge men’s meeting is held every Thursday.

7 p.m. Alcoholics Anonymous will meet at 1027 8th (Wesley House) in Alva every Monday and Thursday.

Friday9 a.m. The Woods County Senior

Citizens Center, 625 Barnes, Alva, is open for games and other activities. Exercise is scheduled each day at 11 a.m. Transportation provided upon re-quest.

2-5 p.m. The Cherokee Strip Mu-seum in Alva is open every day except Monday. For information or arranged tours, call 580-327-2030.

6-8 p.m. First Friday Art Walk will be held in downtown Alva.

Annual Plant Sale Petunia Garden Club. Sat, May 9, 8am. Courthouse Parking Lot. Large selection of perennials, hanging plants & potted plants.

For Sale 60’ Baker Cult, 57’ WAKO Big Country (chisel, cultivator & anhydrous app), 50’ Case IH Chisel, 55’ McFarland Harrow, 40’ Crustbuster Drill-All Plant-Liquid Fertilizer. 580-327-1419

For Sale Honda 750 Motorcycle. Low Mileage. Extras. 714 S Sunset Dr

Capron Cemetery Assn Annual Meeting at Homestead. Tuesday, May 5, 2015 at 7pm

Looking For Wheat acres and workers at $3000 per month. Call Scott 620-562-8453

Alva Moose Lodge Karaoke this Friday May 1 9pm-?

Looking For Canoe or Boat. 620-825-6122

Real Estate For Sale

921 Barnes. Remodeled 4bdrm, 2bth, 2 living roon, 2 car garage with AC. Sits on 2 lots with big fenced in backyard. 405-659-5273

For Sale To be moved. Solitaire 28x48. 3bdrm, 2bth. Metal Roof. 620-886-1006

Home for Sale Hardtner, KS. Large corner lot. CH/A. Finished attic. Basement with storm cellar. 2 car detached garage. 303-885-3976

House For Sale in Kiowa, KS. 3bdrm, 2bth. Appliances. 580-829-4527 lv message

Move-In Ready 1051 8th St. Alva. 3bdrm, 2bth. Energy efficient, carport, storage shed & appliances included. 2400+sqft. 580-732-0195

For Rent Well Maintained. Recently upgraded. 2 BR 1 bath home in Aline. $775/Month. $500/Deposit. No Pets. No Smoking. 580-541-7098

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April 20, 2015Kiowa Ambulance transported pa-

tient from Hardtner to Kiowa Hospital.April 22, 2015

Medicine Lodge Ambulance trans-ported patient from Sharon to Medi-cine Lodge Hospital.

Medicine Lodge Ambulance trans-ferred patient from Medicine Lodge Hospital to Wichita.

April 24, 2015Medicine Lodge Ambulance trans-

ferred patient from Medicine Lodge Hospital to Wichita.

April 25, 2015Medicine Lodge Ambulance trans-

ported patient from west of Medicine Lodge to Medicine Lodge Hospital.

Hazelton and Sharon Volunteer Fire Departments aided Harper County at a grass fire.

During the week officers received

15 reports of cattle out, one report of horses out, two reports of goats out, performed 15 Public Assists and as-sisted one other agency.

ArrestsApril 20, 2015

James P Sowter, Hazelton, W/M, 25. Arrest by BASO. Charges: DUI 2. Tamper with Ignition Interlock. Re-leased April 20, 2015, on $750 OR Bond.

Christina R Bohannon, Medicine Lodge, W/F, 28. Arrest by BASO. Charge: Fail to Appear on Reno Coun-ty Warrant. Released April 20, 2015, on $108 Cash Bond.

April 21, 2015Venito Ruiz, Kiowa, W/M, 54. Ar-

rest by BASO. Charge: DUI. Released April 21, 2015, on $750 Surety Bond.

April 22, 2015Jonathon M Million, Medicine

Lodge, W/M, 23. Arrest by MLPD. Charge: Drive while DL Suspend-ed. Released April 22, 2015, on $750 Surety Bond.

April 23, 2015Joshua N Smart, Medicine Lodge,

W/M, 33. Arrest by MLPD. Charge: Fail to Appear. Released April 23, 2015, on $750 Surety Bond.

Len E Bell, Kiowa, W/M, 56. Ar-rest by BASO. Charges: DUI 2. No Headlight. Released April 24, 2015, on $750 Surety Bond.

April 25, 2015Kayla E R Womack, Alva, Okla-

homa, W/F, 19. Arrest by BASO. Charges: Possess Controlled Sub-stance 2. Possess Drug Paraphernalia.

Ann M Gibson, Medicine Lodge, W/F, 20. Arrest by MLPD. Charge: Disorderly Conduct. Released April 26, 2015.

Barber County Sheriff’s Office log

called to report that individual is hot rodding around Jet in a silver two-door Dodge pickup, advised deputy.

Friday, April 24, 20153:01 p.m. Miscellaneous, respondent

called and reported a vehicle that was suspicious on the side of the road, respondent wasn’t sure if maybe someone was hurt or something else, vehicle is light brown SUV 2 ½ miles

east of Cozy Curve, advised deputy, deputy advised vehicle is off the road and has been already tagged by trooper.

7:42 p.m. Road information, respondent called and reported a stop sign missing from 2 miles east of the football field on Greer Rd, advised county commissioner.

Saturday, April 25, 20152:00 a.m. Minor accident, respondent

advised that he hit a deer on Highway 8 south of Highway 45, respondent advised that there was damage to the driver side headlight, damage to driver side from headlight to the rear bumper, respondent came in to fill out report.

6:03 p.m. Accident, seriousness unknown, CPD advised of accident by water tower at park entrance, a tire went flat and they wrecked, advised officer of accident, trooper called wanting info about accident, told him it was on Highway 38, trooper en route, OHP advised trooper is also responding to, he was in Waynoka area.

Sunday, April 26, 201512:50 a.m. Intoxicated person,

respondent advised of an individual that was caught three times trying to sleep in respondent’s van, intoxicated individual threatened to kill respondent,

advised individual is armed with two knives, deputy advised and en route, deputy had negative contact with individual.

1:55 a.m. Suspicious person, deputy in pursuit of a 1984 Toyota westbound on Highway 45 and into Woods County, vehicle pulled over 3 miles west on Garvin and 281, Woods County deputy on scene to assist.

2:43 p.m. Drunk driver, Garfield County advised of intoxicated driver headed west on Highway 45, advised trooper is trying to catch up to them as well, advised deputy, respondent advised vehicle turned onto Slaton St, deputy advised he could go to the church and wait, deputy en route.

5:35 p.m. Controlled burn, respondent called to say he was having a controlled burn south of McWillie and 1 mile west, at 7:19 pm, respondent called and said he was done with his controlled burn.

Monday, April 27, 20151:11 a.m. Grass fire, CPD advised

of a fire in the Byron/Amorita area on Leflore and CR 630 west of Byron, respondent advised that it was a lightning strike, CPD paged out Byron/Amorita Fire Department.

From Page 56 Sheriff

Bridal

Registry

Dr. Morga

n Schoeling &

Dr. Brand

on Shupka

Crystal P

errin & Tim

othy Clapp

Tiffany

Smith

& Robert M

ata

Karolyn

Thompso

n & Brice

Cole

Madison Bird & Jerem

iah Cam

pbell

Riley Wiebe

ner & Josh

ua Fau

lkner

Schuhmacher’sCOPPER PENNY

405 College Ave. - Alva, OklahomaMon-Fri 10-5:30 & Sat 10-4 • 580-327-0777

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Alva Review-CourierNewsgram

(580) 327-1510

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