1994-06-23 - Lincoln County...

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Business After Hours 5:30-7 porn. Mescalero Activity Day 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Chiricalhnllla IP1aza Afternoon in tlhte IPark ll :30-5 p.m. with the .lfV cheerleaders Oldsmobile Scramble Tee times start at noon The Sierra Blanca Blue Goose :- 6-n 'itle si,de 1 ' ' _._. - L ... _ ';!. Ten picked for manager interviews Interviews are being scheduled with 10 applicants for the job of Lincoln County manager, narrowed down from a list of 36 who sent resumes. The interviews will begin July 12 after a scheduled meeting of the county eommission and will wind up the following day. Names on the list are Tony Gil- bert Chacon of San Jose, California Edward Tony Chance, Dale R. Os- born and Troy Wayne Prichard from Albuquerque; Guy A. Gal- laway and Ted R. Garcia of High Rolls; RusseD Kay Garrison of Ruidoso, Ruth Ann Hooser of Alamogordo, Abdel K. Ibrahim of Roswell and Caroli n A. Cooney of Alto. Govo King dechnre§ state of eme.rgency Governor Bruce King fonnally declared a state of emergency in Lincoln County in an executive or· der issued Tuesday. Responding to a request from the county. King..istmed . on behalf of the irrigation systems around the Rio Ruidoso in Hondo Valley. The order paves the way for disaster relief funds to flow into the county. Crops were damaged by hail; homes, roads, bridges and irriga- tion ditches by flood water that rushed through the valley the afternoon of May 19 as a 10-mile wide storm covered the county. Damage estimates have been placed at nearly $700,000. Sheriff's office gets forfeiture money A check for $8,873.84 was hand delivered Tuesday to Lincoln County Sheriff James McSwane by Richard Rottinger, supervisory spe- , cial agent for the Drug Enforce- ment Administration of the U.S. Justice Department. The money waB generated from a forfeiture program related to a drug enforcement case in which the sheriffs department participated. The money will ba med to porl the efforts of the White Mountain Task Force. Magic 9 magic, magic Magic is taking center stage in Ruidoso this summer with the Magic Magic: theater in Y -Knot park and the Lion's Club's annual magie show on July 2. The Lion's present David Him at 1 p.m. Saturday, July 2, at the First Christian Churc:h on Hull Road. Free tickets are available at var- ious area bumnesse who have made donations to support Lion's Club charities. The Magic Magie theater presents its professional show at 7:30 p.m. in the remodeled lltld retud)ished building next door to y .. Knot; and behind the Ruidoso Stato Bank branch. are encouraged by calling 261 .. 2566. Weather Crane strain A powerful crane moves massive con- crete inlets from the Free Parking Lot to their new home beneath Suddarth for 050 the MainStraet proiect. Motorists were rerouted along El Paso Street for the work that lasted tor about two hours. PE teacher sues Ruidoso schools by DIANNE ST ALUNGS Ruidoso News Staff Writer Physical education teacher Jody Blanton is suing the Ruidoso School Board and superintendent Mike Gladden to stop her removal as head girls volleyball coach. A temporary restraining order against interviewing or hiring a re- placement for Blanton has been issued in the case by District Judge James Waylon Counts. The suit was filed in Llncoln County district court earlier this month by Ruidoso attorney Karen Parsons. It asks the court for a tern porary restraining order to pre- vent hiring a replacement coach, and for a temporary and permanent injunction. Named as defendants in the suit are Gladden and school board mem- bers Mike Morris, Susan Lut- tennan, James Paxton, Ron Hemphill and James Varnadore, in- dividually and in their official capacities. News of Blanton's removal as Please see IPE, page 2A P&Z denies request for Cajun food stand by CHARLES STALLINGS Ruidoso News Staff Writer Pennission for a Cajun food stand next to the Ruidoso Ski Rent- al building was denied Monday by the Ruidoso Planning and Zoning CommisQi'&n. · By· a close five to three margin, the denial was based on inadequate parking. The commission has scheduled a hearing on July 5 for an amend· ment that would prohibit vendors community wide. Larry Blank, owner of the Cajun food trailer that currently operates in Ruidoso Downs, told the commis- - sion that based on his recent food sales in the Downs, he planned to sell his home in Texas and move to Ruidoso to set up a year around . business of selling boudin, etouffee' and crawfish from a stand located next to the ski rental building. Blank told the commission he was willing to work fuJI or part time, whichever the commission ap- proved. The commission asked Blank if rus stand at Frank's Fruit Market would be a full time operation. BHmk said he could market his food at the fruit market in the winter time and the ski rental area in the mumnev. He said he had two food trailers, but only one was pennitted at the present. Richards said there were no ad- verse responses to Blank's food stand proposal from the notifica- tions he sent merchants. Marlene Traster, a retailer in the Four Seasons Mall, told the commission she was concerned about parlcing for the stand. She said the ski rental shop was open Monday. Commission chairman pro-tem Chay Rennick said the ski shop op- eration is a reduced operation in the summer time, but he said it is open for business. Traster reminded the commis· sion she lost on her bid for a hot Please see P&Z, page 2A County Commission puts new computer network on hold by DIANNE STALLINGS Ruidoso News Staff Writer Implementation of a computer system that would allow real estate agents long distance aecess to Lin- coln County property records will be delayed for a month, because the county's computer already is over- taxed. ''We're running at 92.3 percent (of computer storage capacity) now," finance officer Charlene Schlarb told county commissioners during a special meeting Monday. "ffiM requires a five percent margin for their software and that leaves us three percent. That leaves no gap whatsoever. We're running very critical. "I would like to table this (real estate hookup) proposal until we get a new computer system. Lest we almost lost the whole sys- tem, all county records. New users wouldputusinjeopardy. We better wait." Schlarb received approval from to *'t,U'chnse for f4(11QOG ,a new· aomputot $)'Stem AS400, model200. ·jtemoty capacity. cbrilmission had budgeted $51,700 for a com· uttdate of the 1994·95 budget, whicf! begins .. . ri, ·· ' · - :'! how long it will take for all of the records to be transferred to the new computer. Schlarb said ffiM estimated four days at a cost of $4,100, but she found a contract under the General Services Administration for $1,510 and two days. "So we could handle it over a weekend," and departments would experience no down time, she said. The new computer should be delivered during the first week in July and that should put com- missioners in a position to vote on the roo} estate proposal at their meeting July 12. In other business, the county commission: -approved a group insurance contract with Blue Cross-Blue Shield of Roswell through the High Country Insurance Agency in Ruidoso, effective July 1. Commissioners stuck with a list of benefit.s similar to the one they have with current insut'ance car- rier, Cimarron Insurance Service Co!Jioratton in . Albuquerque. An added·fefiliure will be a prescription . With 80 percent paid by the . mqnthly premiums" for tl)edical, will run, $188.lJf for 'etilployees plus one and $373.71 per month for a family. Dental premiums would be an addi- tional $14.07, $26.95 and $39.91, respectively, and vision $2.52, $5.04 and $8.52. Those figures generally are slightly lower than the premiums under Cimarron, but the annual de- ductible of $250 ihat must be satisfied before expenses are repaid is $50 more. Seventy-five employ- ees are eligible for the insurance and 72 currently are enrolled. The other company bidding on the policy was Charles, Garland & Harris of Alamogordo. -awarded all but two elements of the county's general liability and loss insurance coverage to The In- surance Center of Roswell. Steams Agency of Carrizozo will provide ac- cident coverage for fire, emergency medical volunteers and sherlft'e posse members. -approved a resolution calling for law enforcement and code enfor- cement officials in all local municipalities . to JOin with the sheritrs department in a crack down on persons who dump trash and garbage illegally.. . "I think there's a perce. out ther& that the Solid Authority is not doing its job, hut Please see Count»'t;SJaue a• ., 4 .. .. i.,_l;:.._ __ ' i' Ll' I .. , ·I I l t b

Transcript of 1994-06-23 - Lincoln County...

Business After Hours 5:30-7 porn.

Mescalero Activity Day 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Chiricalhnllla IP1aza

Afternoon in tlhte IPark ll :30-5 p.m. with the .lfV cheerleaders

Oldsmobile Scramble Tee times start at noon The Links~at Sierra Blanca Blue Goose

:- 6-n 'itle si,de 1

' ' _._. - L ... _ ';!.

Ten picked for manager interviews

Interviews are being scheduled with 10 applicants for the job of Lincoln County manager, narrowed down from a list of 36 who sent resumes.

The interviews will begin July 12 after a scheduled meeting of the county eommission and will wind up the following day.

Names on the list are Tony Gil­bert Chacon of San Jose, California Edward Tony Chance, Dale R. Os­born and Troy Wayne Prichard from Albuquerque; Guy A. Gal­laway and Ted R. Garcia of High Rolls; RusseD Kay Garrison of Ruidoso, Ruth Ann Hooser of Alamogordo, Abdel K. Ibrahim of Roswell and Caroli n A. Cooney of Alto.

Govo King dechnre§ state of eme.rgency

Governor Bruce King fonnally declared a state of emergency in Lincoln County in an executive or· der issued Tuesday.

Responding to a request from the county. King..istmed tbe..q~., . on behalf of the irrigation systems around the Rio Ruidoso in Hondo Valley. The order paves the way for disaster relief funds to flow into the county.

Crops were damaged by hail; homes, roads, bridges and irriga­tion ditches by flood water that rushed through the valley the afternoon of May 19 as a 10-mile wide storm covered the county.

Damage estimates have been placed at nearly $700,000.

Sheriff's office gets forfeiture money

A check for $8,873.84 was hand delivered Tuesday to Lincoln County Sheriff James McSwane by Richard Rottinger, supervisory spe- , cial agent for the Drug Enforce­ment Administration of the U.S. Justice Department.

The money waB generated from a forfeiture program related to a drug enforcement case in which the sheriffs department participated.

The money will ba med to ~rnp­porl the efforts of the White Mountain Task Force.

Magic9 magic, magic Magic is taking center stage in

Ruidoso this summer with the Magic Magic: theater in Y -Knot park and the Lion's Club's annual magie show on July 2.

The Lion's present David Him at 1 p.m. Saturday, July 2, at the First Christian Churc:h on Hull Road.

Free tickets are available at var­ious area bumnesse who have made donations to support Lion's Club charities.

The Magic Magie theater presents its professional show at 7:30 p.m. in the remodeled lltld retud)ished building next door to y .. Knot; and behind the Ruidoso Stato Bank branch.

~St!lrvations are encouraged by calling 261 .. 2566.

Weather

Crane strain A powerful crane moves massive con­crete inlets from the Free Parking Lot to their new home beneath Suddarth for

050

the MainStraet proiect. Motorists were rerouted along El Paso Street for the work that lasted tor about two hours.

PE teacher sues Ruidoso schools by DIANNE ST ALUNGS Ruidoso News Staff Writer

Physical education teacher Jody Blanton is suing the Ruidoso School Board and superintendent Mike Gladden to stop her removal as head girls volleyball coach.

A temporary restraining order against interviewing or hiring a re­placement for Blanton has been issued in the case by District Judge James Waylon Counts.

The suit was filed in Llncoln County district court earlier this month by Ruidoso attorney Karen

Parsons. It asks the court for a tern porary restraining order to pre­vent hiring a replacement coach, and for a temporary and permanent injunction.

Named as defendants in the suit are Gladden and school board mem­bers Mike Morris, Susan Lut­tennan, James Paxton, Ron Hemphill and James Varnadore, in­dividually and in their official capacities.

News of Blanton's removal as

Please see IPE, page 2A

P&Z denies request for Cajun food stand by CHARLES STALLINGS Ruidoso News Staff Writer

Pennission for a Cajun food stand next to the Ruidoso Ski Rent­al building was denied Monday by the Ruidoso Planning and Zoning CommisQi'&n. · •

By· a close five to three margin, the denial was based on inadequate parking.

The commission has scheduled a hearing on July 5 for an amend· ment that would prohibit vendors community wide.

Larry Blank, owner of the Cajun food trailer that currently operates in Ruidoso Downs, told the commis-

- sion that based on his recent food sales in the Downs, he planned to sell his home in Texas and move to Ruidoso to set up a year around

. business of selling boudin, etouffee' and crawfish from a stand located next to the ski rental building.

Blank told the commission he was willing to work fuJI or part time, whichever the commission ap­proved.

The commission asked Blank if rus stand at Frank's Fruit Market would be a full time operation.

BHmk said he could market his food at the fruit market in the winter time and the ski rental area in the mumnev. He said he had two food trailers, but only one was pennitted at the present.

Richards said there were no ad­verse responses to Blank's food stand proposal from the notifica­tions he sent merchants.

Marlene Traster, a retailer in the Four Seasons Mall, told the commission she was concerned about parlcing for the stand. She said the ski rental shop was open Monday.

Commission chairman pro-tem Chay Rennick said the ski shop op­eration is a reduced operation in the summer time, but he said it is open for business.

Traster reminded the commis· sion she lost on her bid for a hot

Please see P&Z, page 2A

County Commission puts new computer network on hold by DIANNE STALLINGS Ruidoso News Staff Writer

Implementation of a computer system that would allow real estate agents long distance aecess to Lin­coln County property records will be delayed for a month, because the county's computer already is over­taxed.

''We're running at 92.3 percent (of computer storage capacity) now," finance officer Charlene Schlarb told county commissioners during a special meeting Monday. "ffiM requires a five percent margin for their software and that leaves us three percent. That leaves no gap whatsoever. We're running very critical.

"I would like to table this (real estate hookup) proposal until we get a new computer system. Lest wee~ we almost lost the whole sys­tem, all county records. New users wouldputusinjeopardy. We better wait."

Schlarb received approval from eoinmi.ssi~ners to *'t,U'chnse for f4(11QOG ,a new· aomputot $)'Stem ~~ed AS400, model200. with~'IU~te · jtemoty capacity. ~e cbrilmission had budgeted $51,700 for a com·

uttdate of the existin~ SY$te~ 1994·95 budget, whicf! begins

.. . ri, -~.- ·· • ' · - :'!

how long it will take for all of the records to be transferred to the new computer.

Schlarb said ffiM estimated four days at a cost of $4,100, but she found a contract under the General Services Administration for $1,510 and two days.

"So we could handle it over a weekend," and departments would experience no down time, she said.

The new computer should be delivered during the first week in July and that should put com­missioners in a position to vote on the roo} estate proposal at their meeting July 12.

In other business, the county commission:

-approved a group insurance contract with Blue Cross-Blue Shield of Roswell through the High Country Insurance Agency in Ruidoso, effective July 1.

Commissioners stuck with a list of benefit.s similar to the one they have with current insut'ance car­rier, Cimarron Insurance Service Co!Jioratton in . Albuquerque. An added·fefiliure will be a prescription ~d. .

With 80 percent paid by the ~ounty., . mqnthly premiums" for tl)edical, c:ov~rago will run, $188.lJf fo~:iaw\li(itf~S ~biploJl'f.l!S~:$26'1.57 for 'etilployees plus one :d~pendcnt

and $373.71 per month for a family. Dental premiums would be an addi­tional $14.07, $26.95 and $39.91, respectively, and vision $2.52, $5.04 and $8.52.

Those figures generally are slightly lower than the premiums under Cimarron, but the annual de­ductible of $250 ihat must be satisfied before expenses are repaid is $50 more. Seventy-five employ­ees are eligible for the insurance and 72 currently are enrolled. The other company bidding on the policy was Charles, Garland & Harris of Alamogordo.

-awarded all but two elements of the county's general liability and loss insurance coverage to The In­surance Center of Roswell. Steams Agency of Carrizozo will provide ac­cident coverage for fire, emergency medical volunteers and sherlft'e posse members.

-approved a resolution calling for law enforcement and code enfor­cement officials in all local municipalities . to JOin with the sheritrs department in a crack down on persons who dump trash and garbage illegally.. .

"I think there's a perce. ptio~ out ther& that the Solid Wast~ Authority is not doing its job, hut

Please see Count»'t;SJaue a• .,

4

.·.loiJ...----'------~~-~-"i~_ .. _~_~._._~_::. .. j~JL. i.,_l;:.._ __ ~·

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l t b

2A/l1lQ Ruidoso Nswe/Thursday, June 23, 1994

Continued from page 1A

head coach last month caused an uproar at several meetings among her fonner and current students and their parents. The board was urged by some to reconsider Glad­den's action or to offer more defini­tive reasons for her reassignment.

Employed by the Ruidoso dis­trict as an instructor and coach since 1985, Blanton was elevated to head coach in 1989.

In a statement read to The Ruidoso News, Gladden said, "A teacher has brought a suit to enjoin the school board from reassigning her duties as high school girls vol­leyba11 coach.

"The district believes the suit is without merit and it has full discre­tion to reassign coaching duties. She and her attorneys have ob­tained a temporary restraining or· der without advance notice to the school district and the district has moved to dissolve that temporary restraining order."

In the suit, Blanton states thnt when she returned from a coaching clinic in Houston, Texas, paid for by the district, Gladden told her of his decision to remove her as head coach against the recommendation of the high school principal and athletic director.

A month and a half later during the school board meeting May 10, Gladden announced that cerlnin coaches were being reassigned and that Blanton was being "n•mov£>d" from her position, according to in­fonnntion in the suit.

Parsons contends that the school board never voted on Gladden's ae· tion, in spite or the board's po1icy that requires it to approve or reject Gladden's personnel recommenda­tions. She also contends Blanton has never received a written or ver­bal notification by the board of her reassignment and therefore, the ac· tion is void.

She noted t~.l!~; ~~e board's ·~OxtP policy req~-l!IIIS<e of re-employment or termination "must be provided on or before the fourteenth calendar day prior to the last day of the sehool year."

That did not happen in Blanton's case, Parsons alleges. That fact "must be construed to mean that notice of re-employment has been served according to the tenns of her existing employment contract," sub­ject to any percentage raises ap· proved by the board.

To remove Blanton as head coach (a contractual Position) can· not be done without just cause, Par· sons contends in the suit.

Blanton alleges that school offi­cials falled to provide her with due process and failed to provide her w:ith reasons for her removal; and that they refused to provide a hear­ing or to appoint an arbitrator.

She notes that Gladden men­tioned some ren::;on~ in a letter dated March 6 (which Parsons states should have been dated April 6), '"but subsequently indicated ver· bally to others that he had addi­tionn.l reasons.'"

Purson added that Blanton's

evaluations throughout bar career have been "impeccable."

Blanton provided written notice of her acceptance of re-employment under the same terms as the 1993-94 contr110t, but the district has failed to provide her with an employment contract in response and instead, interviewed two ap· plicants for the coach position on June 1.

"Said actions are malicious and made with tha Intent to interfere with the petitioner's righte," the suit states. A subsequent letter from Parsons received no reply from school officials.

"Because of reasons stated, (Blanton) has reason to believe that she will suffer irreparable harm in that her career choice to be Ruidoso High School's head girls volleyball coach, will be destroyed and she will suffer mentally, emotionally and financially, if the defendants are allowed to continue to interview individua1s for the position and to award .a contract to another indi­vidual," according to the suit.

Parsons asked the court to order Gladden to provide an employment contract under the same terms as 1993-94.

Twelfth Judicial District Judge Richard A. Parsons recused himself as judge in the case, because he is attorney Parsons' father. School board members challenged the other judges in the district. The case has been assigned to Judge William J. Schnedar of the Fifth Judicial District in Roswell.

P&Z-------------Continued from page 1A

dog stand two weeks ago because she didn't have adequate parking.

Richards indicated that Susan and Buddy Carter, owners uf thE• Ski Rental building, >~ubmJltN.i a property sketch by which hf' could not accurately assess thP parkmg situation.

He noted that parking mny over· lap and that there may lw nn Pn· croachment problem.

Richards said the sketch sub­milled showed about ~6 or '1.7 park­mg spnces. but with tht· topoJ.,rrnphy .layout of the area, he could find no more than 20 parking ~pncf•s for the property.

He said seven or eil!ht spaces m front could be marked and the back area was basically a gravE' I arPil not improved for parkmg.

Richards srud a propPrly Jm­provem£>nl survey wa~ m••·d~>d.

CommJs.."'iont>r RobPrt StE•rdu srud 1f Ruidoso is gmng to bl.' a tourist based economy, he would lean toward tht> usp of \"f'ndors.

CommJssioner Ardt·n Eckersley was conc£>nwd about mcumustPncy 1n commJssJon actwn

··1 thmk wP an~ bf'g-JnnJng tr1 gf't

mto an area where we're turning one person down and allow:ing an­othE•r, and not have any continuity on this commission. That's the rrluctance I'm feehng," he said.

R£>nnick reviewed the four wndor requests brought before the commission two weeks ago in which om! stand was approved, and three wprc tlrnied.

A Hnow conP stand was approved near an auto body shop loeation with adequate p;uking and re~troom facilities in the body shop.

Rennick !>rud two rpquests were dPnlf'd because of no restrooms on Hw propf•rty, the other denial n•sults•d from inadequate parking.

R£>nnick said a permit for lhe Huidoso Com Roaster's stand was 1!-lSUf'd £>nrli£>r in the yPar with a parkmg vannnce.

H£>nmck said thHt inadequate parking for the Cajun food Rtand nppNtr£>d tu be thP same basis for d~>ninl of th£> hot dog stand during the la.<~t comm1s..<rion meeting.

A commJssJoner asked 1f the is­,;ue should he tabled until the coun­c!l ruled on thP forthcommg- vendor amPndment

H1chard::c dJscouragE'd tabhng as not an appropriate act.Jon

He said an appeal is still timely for Blank.

"Blank's application iB being subnlitted under the current rules and regulations and should be con­sidered under such,H Richards said.

He said the village council also will have lo schedule a public hear­ing regarding any vendor amend­ment. He said that public hearing could not be heard before the first meeting in August.

Sterchi made the motion to ap­prove the vendor stand, seconded by Leroy Nowell. Commissioners Sterchi, Nowell and Van Patton voted aye; commissioners Brenda Buckner, JefT Chapman, Eckersley and Rennick voted nay.

In other business, the commis­Sion:

~approved a replat for John Fuchs to subdivide his commercial acre of property into two lots that would allow him to sell one lot with two buildings.

-denied an application to allow construction within 15 feet of a rear yard requiring 20 feet. The lot is vacant and planner Rlchards said the development could be ac.com· plished in compliance.

Fish-----------------------------Con1inued from page 1 A

State Game and Fish Division and the State Health Department were notified of the situation and two sent representatives to take samples.

From preliminary findings, Mcinnis sald it appears about 1,500 trout, mOfrt.ly brown, but some rain· bow, died.

"Here's what we know," he said. "The kill occurred from the area of the plant down about seven-tenths of a mile, but the area above the plant was not affected.

"Because of that, we started con~ eentrating on the plant as the cause. We talked with the folks there and asked what kind of chemicals they used. There were two used in the process that were washed into the river, at what con-

County--Continued from page 1 A

they are,·· sa.td Commission Chainnan Monroy Montes. "It's the users who are being irresponsible. I drove by Capiten this morning and there were ueven dumpsters mostly empty and garbage piled around them. Tbet'a net the authcrity's fault or rsepansibUity."

Conuniosioner Wilton Howell said with recent heat from the 118W8papera, four mtations hove been iasusd for Uttering and dump­Ing violntlons.

centration we're unsure. They are used in the water treatment pro­cess to take the debris out of the water. They are used to coat the fil­ters.

··1 am having the fish tested for those two chemicals.''

The results probably won't be available for several weeks, he said.

Mcinnis said he agreed with Jackson's description of what may have occurnd with the coating of the fish gills.

"We could find no other reason they would be dying," he said.

Over the next week, he will try to determine the tctal extent of the loss by comparing the fish per mile recorded before the incident com­pared to wbet he found after the spill. His agency criginally stocked the river.

Anglers shouldn't worry, be· cause the affected area already is being recolonized by trout from above and below the kill point, Mcinnis said.

"Any time there is a void in the system, they tend to recolonize when the water becomes fit and that already is occurring," he said.

Jackson said the State Environ­ment Department sent two repre­sentatives Tuesday, one from the water certification division and the other from the surfaee water quali­ty division.

''They met with plant personnel and looked through ths logs to determine how much exeeas may actually have been used.

'What I can eay is we de know for certain an excess amount was used."

,. Two at Two Rivers A family enjoys the view of the Rio Auldoso whlfeco~:rtlll!lti the bridge at Two Rivers Pam.

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Mayor b'fitmes c6unty·~r6r losing a convention bid by DIANNE STALLINGS Ruidoso News Staff Writer

The Lincoln Ccunty Commis· sian's diB811Chantment with the New Mexico Aesociation of Counties may have cost Ruidoso a lucrative conference.

Mayer Jerry Shaw told The Ruidoso News abe was upset with the apperent lack of support from the commission for the village's ef­forts to attract such meetings.

"We've alwaye been very euppor­tive of the county's attempt to ereate a rural events center in Glencoe;· Shaw said. "All we needed woe a letter of support from the commission by June 2, no mat­ter what ill feeling exists between the county and the association."

What the village received was a letter from Commission Chairman Monroy Montes critical of the asso­ciation's performance. The eommis· sion withdrew from the association a few years ago and is the only county in the state not currently a member.

Montes said Monday he doesn't think the letter hurt the village'e chances, because they probably weren't in the running anyway.

Commissioner Wilton Howell went a step further in his opinion.

"I know we weren't in the run· ning," he said. "! talked to friends of mine in that organization and they made it clear there was no way the group would come to Ruidoso unless we became mem-bers again. .

""We won~ be held hostage like that. I think we were being set up. I also understand that one of the rea­sons they are pushing us so hard to rejoin, like sending a membership dues invoice this year, is that they can't become members of the na· tional association without 100 per­cent membership of the counties in NewMeDco."

Association executive director Donna Smith, in a telephone inter­view from the 1994 conference un­der way this week in Clovis, told The News the- aaaociation doesn't need 100 percent participation by counties in the state to join the na­tional organizatien .

"When Lincoln County was a member, I had a president who wanted 100 percent, but it's not a requirement." she said. "It would give us one more member on the board, but it's a 140-member board and it doesn't make that much dif­ference."

Smith said letters requesting proposals for the 1996 convention were sent to convention centers across the state and the letter that arrived at the Ruidoso Civic Events Center was not meant to be used to ooerce Lincoln County back into the fold.

"More is being read into it than intended," Smith said. "Perhaps the chairman thought this was an at-­tempt to coerce them, but this was a generic letter, a1though I could

see his perspeetivo. Tbete· wse no "In its elfort to secure a IIII!Ot.ing double meaning. pl110e in Ruidoso for a futurs ""nfer·

"The real problem about coming enco, tho association requoated a to Ruidoso Is the lack of slesp!ng letter of BliPPOl't from the ccunty space. We do email alliliate meet- ccmmisaion. Tho contact for dirsct ings there, but we have 603 persons communicat.ion with the Lincoln pre-registered. Beeidas county and County Commission is the ccunty state officials, we hove members of manager's olllce (be liated tele-16 alliliates 6'om tiro chiefs to date phone nnmher and eddress). proeeesing, We need 18 breekout "The weetem lends iesues which rooms in a convention center." . involve property and individual

Shaw said Ruidoso can handle a righte and proposed changes to the convention of that size. grazing formula were never a focal

'We're going to . handle the point of discuaslon at the aeeocia· Municipal League convent.ion in t.ion. The Pll)'ment in Lieu of Taxes 1996, and that group hes 99 mom· iseue aiTecte 32 New Mexico bars and additional alliliates," she countise, it D8VI!!' was a focal point. pointed ont. "In any caes, all we At a time when the taxpayer Is fad needed was a letter shewing some up with self lmpqed raises by ccn· support for our efforts." gr888$BD, the, usoclation dutse to

However, Montes agreed with focua on legislation that would al· Howell's BBS88BDlent of' Ruidoso's low this to happen at the local

~ffin~ we left the association 88 lev~ew Mexico's counties are faced member a few ¥8ar& ago, they've with various ~;~erious problems. only scheduled one meeting in They abould be addroeeed and ac· Ruidoso that I'm awars of and they tually abould recaive a top priority never notified the county," he said. from association legislative com· ~nit was for one of the affiliates, mittee." county manngere 1 believe, and Smith said the association would they didn' allow (former ccunty like to add Lincoln's viewpoint to manager) Andy Wynham to at- its organization. tend." "We'd like them back as a mem·

And Montes doesn' like the idea ber to brosden our public lends per· that the association went through speetive," she said. the village to ask for the letter, in· Shaw echoed Smith's statement. ate d of ·"'·- "SSl"oners "If you want change, you JNork

a a-.,. comw from within," abe said. "Yoqi can't dire~n 1 deal with Ruidoso, I be as effective from the outside." don't call Capitan," he said. In a memorandum to village

"!spoke to (Ruidoso Civic Evente manager Gary Jackeon, Miehelena Center director) Kathleen wrote that while reviewing the Michelena about it and said from specifications for staging the June my standpoint I would be willing to 1996 conference of the aeeociat.ion,, send a letter, but it would be one she saw that a Jetter of support more yanking their chain than of from the commiBBion must ac--support.," Montes said. company the proposal.

"It was never my intention for "I felt that without the letter of our adversarial position to stop support, there wflB no need in going them from coming to Ruidoso." any further since the county is basi-

The county withdraw from the cully asked to be the host <oonty association after continuing dif· and is instrumental in setting the farencee over the diroetion of the theme, planning and stalling of the leadership. Montes estimated that conference," she noted. it cost the county $12,500 in .dues ., .. Afteupeaking to Howall,.lallllll· annaally, plus a matching amount ing ahont.tho a6tmty'slahlrohela­in per diem expenses, travel and tiOnship· with· the association, and time awsy from jobe for county offi. ccneulting deputy village manager cials to attend the meetings. Alan Briley, Micbelena concluded,

'"When Commiasioner Stirling ''there was no sense in proceeding Spencer and I were involved, we with the proposal to the depth of were very active members," Montes which was requested if we didn't said. ''We thought we had made a have the support of the main big effort as part of a movement to player, which would be the Lincoln make the director more aecoun~ County Commissioners, table, but it never resulted in .. 1 have, however, sent an in~ change and we bailed out, b'""'nee formal propoaal along with the we didn't think we could be eiTec· entire fact sheer, lodging establiab· tive staying on as members and ment listing and catering infonna­there were better uses for the tion for the county to the assoeia-money... tion."

lnetead of tackling significant is- Shew said she'll ask Michelena BUeB, the BBSOciation seemed to to go 8 £aw Steps further with mire itself down in the trivial, he follo'I·UP letters to Smith. She said. wants them to be aware of plans Cor

In his letter to the association, the new convention hotel and that Montee wrote that aller a abort evan without the bote~ the village conversation with Michelena, "it could accommodate the conference remains apparent to me that the as well as any city in the state, but association continues to flounder. Albuquerque.

Litterbugs beware! County judges are cracking down

- . by DIANNE STALLINGS Ruidoso News Staff Writer

IDegal dumping of trash and garbage could beccme an expanaive pastime in Lincoln Colinty.

Loeal judges ars cracking down. Ccnvict.ion on a criminal littering eharge in Magistrate Judge Wil· Ham Butls' court,will C8l'l'J' a $600 line and up to Six months jail time, or the line and a hAli1;y number of eommuni~¥ sarvlee hours cleaning up 11111soes around dumpeters.

Two rsaidmts wars lined ill Ruidoso Jlllllliehul1 court Mondq after ccdo enforeemmt ollloers traced piles of trashed .dumped In the Camelot araa, .

Mike

material Ulagally Jell in a dumpeter probably will be heard next month.

Meanwblle an the 0011111it side, Steve Morgan was found ll1!lll;v by Butte and was required to-lllell!l up heasehold garbage dumpell 8long Paradise Canyon Road. · .

"I understand he hauled awa.y thrse p)ekup loads of heUSehoid gaehage, • Bntts said ~. "He wae lined $100 plug i!outt ~ of $31.• . '

On were

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boosted by a Micliig~tflawsuit .. Ell'orla by the Mescalero Apaoho /oa~ recen11ly agreed to kicl< In bllllon, aeeordlng to a recent Auool·

Tribal Couneil to eton radloaetiw '$15 ooo toward design lllld JJ.mi ated Press artide. waste on Its reservation in Otero r...:. Although other tribes aToo Tribal oftloials. have stated that Coun1;v were given a big booet Mon· hll\'8 mqJreB~ed lnterast, lbe Mea- ths Mescaleros will haw a chance

• clo.v- caleros fuwe tfllcen the lead ill pur- to vote on the .proposal to: !>UI'd an Upaet over the ~poet of the suing 1111 iii'AR; : · MRS on their reservation m Otero ~ waste piling up in- : · Sltbig -;;;;rq an a reaervatioli Councyo aaar ths and of ths l(etond delinitely at nuclear plants """""' ' appeals to tlie utilities, because as pbaes, sornet;IIIIO late this )'liar. the llOIDltrjr, ths State of Michigan tn'bal ..._mgn nations, they are l'roponeal;s oontend ths meet asked a ~ judge to order ths uot subject to approval from state would bring jobs and mlllfon8 of U.S. Dep-.nt of EIUII'IlY to agencies eliminating one layer of dollare af other economic benelltil to hsner its COJIID!itmeat to ..._ red tope: · the Tribe. (lppoaen~ say ths Moe· spent lbel rods_ &om power plants While the opening date for a caleros risk, uot only damage to the by JaniUIIy 81, 1998. temporary m<mitored retrievable tourist Industry that helps support

storage facilicyo (MRS) at Mosealero ths group. but also.&::: health In a prepared statement quoted would be at least seven years away, and enoiroamantal ·

~.,._,'!::., ~-~ = the national repository probably Utilitias '!'PfDI. on for ~ esc-..,_ ~-~ won't open for another 15 years. . one! ~ mcludail Consolid_ated

Kalloy said, "II' ths federal govern· Michigan was joined in tjle suit Edison •n Naw York and Southern ment daos uot act .quickly to pro- by officials from Minnesota, Flor- California Edison. The tribal ooun· vide one central repository for ida, California Conusctlcut, oil tui-ned to private1 eompanies spent nuclear lbel, we wiD have Arkanses, Dela...;.., Iowa, Kansas, after aonrees of atudy JIIOney dried ~~r':'c~C:::.=. ~ 73:. "!,~ Maryland, , Maseachusetts, , • Mia- ~P undar the federal nuelear nego·

souri, South Dakota, Vermont, Wis- tiator's voluntaJy siting program. try. This makes no sense, and eonain, New York, Pennsylvania, citizens will not tolerate such an Alabama, Kentucky and Rhode ls· outngeous situation." land.

The r- are located at 73 sites, Kallay aaid. With more..Afiim 30 of the ·na·

The suit was &I~ In Washlagton tlon's lergoet nuclear power com· D.C. ~ court m reepeuse to a panios each agreeing to ·kiek in M!JJJJJent last year by EIUII'IlY See- f16,C)OO, the Mescalero Apscbe retory Hasal O'Leary that the de· · Tn'bal Council is ready to take an· p-.nt is not legally obllgated to other step in its private vanture to begin 8llCBptiag nuclear power build a temporary "torage facility plant wastes by ths 1998 daadline. for radioaetlw waote. ast by Congress. Aceording to tribal coasultant

Miller Hudson, all 88 of the com· Twelve yean age Congress told panies that previflusly paid $5,000

ateteo with nuclear pswer plants are eonsldering or have agreed to uot to build their own storago for join the escond phase of the project fuel nde. lnstaad, states tesed alec- and to fllot the bill for legal and de· trlcicyo generated by nuclear power sign work. plants and sent tho money to tho Utility representatives W.i-e at Energy Dep-.nt to be spsat on the Apache reHR, Tbe Inn of the eonstruetlng a national repository Mountain Gods, !eat week working for high-leval nuc!oar woates. out detaile of the agreements.

Nearly $10-b!IUon bad been coa- Evan if federal approval for a trlbuted te the fund by ths and of unit Is obtelned from the Nuclear loot year, but eonstruetlon hsen't Regulatory Commission without began on ths slta planned for Yucca major delays, the opening of tbe Mountain, Newda. astlmated $100-million monitored

Moanwhile, tho federal nuclear rotrl!Mihle storage (MRS) facility is negotiator's attempts under a not anticipated until the year 2002, voluntary siting process to find a according to tribal conoultllllt temporary storage location haw Daane Schmoker.

Natiw Aniericans and ~ reservations present a unique 1 op­portunity to bypass· many of the usual public stmnbliilg bloclal to such projects, because of their claimed sovereip nation status. They contend projocts on their reservations are not subject to ap­proval &om governors, state legis­latures or neighboring communities such as Ruidaso.

Tha Moacalero have bean critical of opposition &om New Mexico Gov­ernor Bruca King, wha has ap­pesled to Prssideat Bill Clintsn to stop the MRS in his state. Mes­calero spokeiiiii8Jl have poi!ltsd to other nuclear-related industries in the state and haw questioned wby King is drawing a line in the sand at the border of their reservation.

In speaking at ths High Level Waste Conference in Las Vegas, Nevada, tribal vice presideat Fred Peso, said, "We are a business­minded people. We boliaw spent fuel starege is a business op­portuniey, a sorviee provided to a WJ11ing customer by a wDling seller in osehange for a reasonable prof-it" '

. Wieghorst exhi~it Randy Jones (left) has art lovers tapping their toes during· the opening of the Olaf Wleghorsf exhibit In the new fine arts room at the Mu11eum of the-Horse CatchiAg up on old friends while perusing the art ~re (at right) Mr. and Mrs. Steve Talley and Judy Hathcock: -

. ~ stalled. But ths Mosealeroo haw -Pillaned to provide atorage for movod.aholsd on their~- eourtiiJg · 40 ·y'eare, the· ·estlllultsd"Wetime · "He warned tbat·upponents JDBY more than 30 private utilities, that eost of the prqject Is placed at $2- try to camouflage their apposition.

The son of contemporary lllieStllrn · aitrst · ·guests at the 'Opening. Ttre· Wleghorst ·ex-Olaf Wleghorst (center) was among the . hlblt continues at the Museum. :

BLUE PLATE SPECIALS ThUrSc:laj/5

HOmemade 011cken-N-DUI'l'PIIngs $5.95

Friday's Baked Ham $5.75

AD Er1tr'eeS lrd..lde O'lolc8 of 2 vegetableS. ..a-. ll!!lr 6de. rolls and c:orrbreed.

AT THE CIRO..EILPPER CANW\1 11 - 9 SUN- THURS. ••

Los J Romanttcos will be performing

Frida~ .June 24, 1994 5:011 - B:JII

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257-4791 • 2205 Sudderth open daily except Sunday

11 a.m. to 8:30p.m.

VALLEY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

would like to thank the following · people for their help In '

~ifiES)jq ~:~:: ~-f 1r?, : -en~-. ee -·. .. -· . -_·. \Do~q, __ ~ n....;... ~ •• ~'?~.? . -~ ,.,;:::> Joo & Mary Gomez Karen Morris Cheryl Wcnnoy Joe & Rosalie Oarcia Alberto & Ullie Robles Marsio Morales ScottMuhn Jim Bassett Paul Crown Fred Oer1h Family Danny Sisson Family Dave Mcintosh Kathy Busby Deb,oJeter Cuesta Wolfe RuJdoso Greeters

Launo Reynolds L.J. Jameson Tracey Newton Jeff PetolliOI> OTBIBddie N'acbola Teri Sodd CilldyLyocb Ronale Hemphill

. Frank&. Donna Potier Sue & Bob Dolpnor Shirley Hondenon Rachel Blddoe Soblotsky'sDeli RuidoeoDoWIIB a-Track Viii- of Ruidoso Downs SlotTa Solllhwest Outlet

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Ruidoso 'cy ........ ..., Cley Mosaley, a 1990 graduate

of Ruidoso High Behool, will leaw the United Btatea in August for Sicily te compete in the World ey. ctiug Championshipe.

Moseley won the national championship time trials in eyctiug on June 12 at Seattle, Washington, with a finishing time of 52 minute&, three seconds.

Moseley is the son of Rsenelle and Dennis Grimes of Ruidoso.

He etorted his eycling c:areer

here in Ruidoso Wider the ·leacler­aliip and teachiug of Coach Ge.vlon Farrington, who was als'o his Euglish teacher at Ruidoso . High School. .

Moseley and Farrington are hoth National Champion cyctisto.

Farrington is the coach of tho Zi~ Velo cyeliug team thot is sponsored by Bikes Plua of Las eru...s.

"This is a good example of how a

eaellliUt­teaeher eets a good · for their alude!lts at · Sehoel," said Grimes.

a memhor of Tsam Sho1dee, eonaidered tho ,nation's best amateur cyelists. He traiJied for the June 12·19 NationaJ Cycling Ch11111pionships with Shokleo team­mate l[ent Bostick, a 10-timo na­tional 'champion and cycling's "ago­less wonder" at 40.

----... . ' . --""'-"'""'"·--- . Ulll ~afiUI!I Mulco. Hllleldl!,lla!Jiinl_, Ill Niw ~co· -lni"""'*"~6MIN!If. . ._. .. ..,.... . -'Siri;aloslrl-·~ bi.(J•~bllme'J." ............ !his Joltl3erl. RD.. Slmlllet ................................. -·

Ruidoso High School graduate Clay Moseley iS the new national cycling champion and is headed o~rseas to com­pete in t: • W011d Cycling Championship.

Golfers tee off to raise funds for state rep

Golfers are invited to take part in an "Everyone for Underwood"" fundraiser on Sunday, July 24, at The Links at Sierra Blanca in Ruidoso.

The four-person scramble takes ofT with a shotgun start at 8 a.m., with an entry fee of $100 per per~ son which includes green fees~ cart and meal.

Prizes will be awarded for closest to hole, longest drive and on designated holes; and in addition, drawings will be conducted for door prizes.

To register or to make reserva­tions, call258-9090.

SUBSCRIPTIONS

Tfie"R1l'id"a""t8"1'&ws """ 1-Vear ........................................... $34 6 rnonlhs ....................................... $30 Home Oellwl:r r:::.:~ ............................... $20 8 months ....................................... $88 1 year ............................................ $68

The RUkiOBO News {USPS 472-800) Ia published e~h Monday and Thursday , 104 Park Ave. Auldo&o N.M. 8e6ond CfS8s ~ IS paid at the P.O. at Rutdoso, N.M. Poatmaster. Send address Changes 10 The Ruidoso Newa, P .0. Bc»i 128, Ruidoso, NM Sa:M&.

Women take over golf cour~e for ~r.~~ .P.P.rJsing. ,., ... ,!n'.iw.~.19 .m... Cindy C&rroli and 'earc{singie~ rBckod . SeC~>nd li'l.liiht.. . . .. .' . '' ! .. , '... . Ti:;~ •.•' ...... •.c~ <'!".""'~ene Hoover. ::!t~::w~~j,~::~!

up the low gross when women golfers took First:- BetsySikes Bernice Humphries snarmgthebostcatehesofthedey. over the golf eeurae at Cree Meadows Golf Robtn Land Flflh Flight · At Alto Lake, ang1ere are hl:.vlng Course for tho Croo Uprising June 16 and 17. Second- Nancy Rosselli First- BannetDacy fair to good luak uaing salmon eggs

Low net over the field went to ·Maureen Pat Shue Santjy D and gpen power bait. · Tooley and Barbaro Lumley. Third- ·Nina Van Ausdal Sc:eond- Joan tiBdcli'l!Z Fitibing is fair at Bonito Lake

First low championship winners were SUsie Audrey King Dorothy Smith and is a little bl)tter in tho d":' Bergeron and Jeannie Latham, with the rest Third ~h~ , Thiid- Inez Ferguson water on the south side of the I • of tho field divided as follows: Fi t- '-' Linda Russell Ginger Hllhard Anglers are uaing salmon eggs and Seeond low championship- rs ' ; · Lmigest Drive green power 1/:jl~;t!J reslln tho bast

Joette Maskew, Jan McAlpin · • Joan Gosaett Champio hi Cindy Corroll catches of !he~-'. Thirdlowchampionilhip- Second- D~=~= 1stF!fgh~ p- JoJmn;eCarliale At ~>Reservoir, tho

Carol Wall, Becky Auetin Third- ' Liad Emerson 2nd Flight- Deides Hol!:omb llsbing is llih; bllb\g at its best in ~~ ~ ~~~~ -~the~uaing~-Fir- Johnnie Carlisle, Fourth Flight . • . Flshiug pressure is veey light on

Millie Ola Stewart Closest to Pin tho Ruidooo Riwr. Second- Mabel Desterhouse Fir- Becky Seale Thursde.v- Gerry Herrall ·

Ann Halbeol Louise DeBusk Friday- Bennatt Dacy Third- Suaan Spenee Seeond- Jerry Betty Debbie Brown from Hobbs won the Hole in

won pley off-Carol Bayless Sandra Carr One trophy, donated by Lloyd Momon.

All Deadlines for the

Thursday, June 30, 1994

paper, have been moved to Monday,

June 27, 1994 at5 p.m.

Take it to your dealer

for Quality Care. Thursday morning : ... I>Qn. leQ.Jts

his '89 Ford pie.k;up'~s::fte talks ro "Sell it? No way. 'ift:~ haV'~'a ··

miles but it's _stiiJ,mmblfJ!,*~ ~W­see, rve alway's taken it in for .

.. Care Preven~~~~tenance." ·· .. •,.

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· Orillon !lid tbt states with eol· lacliol!i . &lim national lbteate witbirl ita · boundaries, receiving $11!8~0,787. .

Oalllbrnill, wae aeeond with $411,9113,007 BDd WBBhingten \J8B in tbb.'d plaee with $11!,840.429.

Those thl:ee statea reeelve more money, baeed on special legislation Cliiiiii8Cted to lbteets impact by deel· . Biona em thsllCil'theni'Bpotted owl.

In fourth and fifth piiiOt! were Idaho. which eollectad $1.8,530.639 and Montana, with $12,478,688.

65 Month Battery By,._-. ..

~ 37!!

Economy Mufflers ..., 1799

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Revival begins_ this Sunday · , Jr,itat As~ of <Ia!' will ba ~revival Sundey, June 26, through . Wednaeda.Y, June 29, Wlth evengeliate F.ll. end Francine MeAdems. -

'l'lie Mc:Adenlsbeve baen in the ministry for more then 30 yeara having paetorod ehurohes In West Virginia, Oklahoma. Texas and Kaneos.

Slneo bagoming ovangeliata, tb8)' b..., eonductad crusades in South Amerlea, South Atriea, Mexioo, Chile, New Gu,yana end Cana· da"" wall aa aD aeroae Ameriea.

'l'lie Ruidoso 'lOJDIIIunlty is invited te attand these VOJY epeWd rll\'lval meetings dnring both worship services on Sundey and at 7 p.m..MCIIUV through Wodaoodey. ·

.lluidoaeAssJmbl,y of God is loeated at 139 El Paso Road. For more infi>rmalion, call the ehurch offiee at 268-2324.

·Events benefit Wood famij.y Two different beaellta to help defioay modieal expenseo fot Mro.

Shirley Wood, wife of Leo Wood, will he cionducted iin Juno 27 and 28. Woed BUfl'ered a baart a¥ck and was flown te Lubbock for a

· qundrupla bi-paao. ._ -A trail rida, going Into 1M mountains and'back, will begin at 11

a.m. at the reoe track at 'the 'maine Swanderville barn on Monday) June 27. Coat of the trell ride will be $5 per persOn. Participan~ libauld bring a luntb and water. , ' '

A banotit dance will - place Tuesd..,, JUD.o 23, starting at8:30 p.m. at the W'm, Plaoo and Show, \rijh a cover ehargs of $5 p"" per-

•' . son. . ....... ' . "o .. !

ENMU announces scholars_hips __ Eaatarn N.W Mexi.O 'Univeraity·Ruidooo recently announeed that

eeholarabip appllcotlona are 6elng accepted immediately for five (i) lieholarabipa to be awarded by June 30 for the 1994-&5 academic year at the Ruidoso Conter.

The aehelarabipa are being awarded locally by the Ruidoso Woman's Club and thelluidoso Hon8o Valley Rotary Club.

Applieante must be planning to be or become a half-time or full· time ~udont at ENMU·Ruidoso in 1994--96. Other eliglbiliey criteria and lieholarsbip applicotlona are available immediately at tpe ENMU offioa, 1400 Sudderth Drive. . _ -

can 257·211!0 or toll free 1·800-934-8668 for more information ebout tbe gsneral ENMU seholarobip program.·

' Feds OK funds for 5 tribes Senator Pete Domenici. recently announced that the National

Park Service baa awarded five Naw .Mmrlco Indian groups a total ,of nearly $250,000 for biateric proaarvation eft'ortL' ·

Five Now Mmrlco Indian groupo were awarded grants - Jicarilla Apache Tribe will recaive $49,900; -J15eacalero Apaehe 'l'ribe will receive $50,000; Pueblo of Pqjoaque will receive $48,000; Pueblo of Zia will recaive $50,000 and Pueblo of Zuni WJ11 f!N'Bive $49,400. ~ were 43 Ameriean Indian and Alaska Native Greum

~acted from W3 applicant.. for a toto! of $1,826.000 In grant funW. -Ullder this program. ·

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Your CARQUEST Store has access to over 125,000 pan

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Leger Cat tops y fielc;l • ' '·. "' - "

Ruidoso Bud Bre~eders' Cup· Saturday One of the classiest

tht>roughbred fielde in Ruidoso Downs history will assemble Satur· day when graded etakes winner Leger Cat faces Ca1ifornia invader Saratoga Gambler and tep stakes competitor Capitalimprovement in the $75,000-ndded Ruidoso Bud­weiser Breeders' Cup Handicap.

The 7 112 furlong contest an· nually attracts a solid group of handicap performers, but the quali­ty of this year's 12-horae field ex· ceeds that of any of the six prior runnings of the race.

The total career earnings of the horses entered in t,he handicap is 4VI!r $2 million and nearly all of them have at least one stakes win dJ their credit.

Hubbard and Allred's Leger Cat, who set a stakes record in winning last year's Grade II John Henry

Handicap at Hollywood Park, trouooed his foea by aeveo lengthe in the Governor's Handicap here May 28 and is strictly the one te beat Saturday.

The 8-year·old Argentine-brad gelding by Logical also beat an al­lowance field hare by 4 112-leogths on May 1fi and has adopted well te the Joeal racing surface.

Trainer John Bassett doesn't mind the pressure of training the favorite. ,

R"He's had two races on this racetrack and he has a distinct ad· vantage over anything being hauled in. We just need a little racing luck now," said Bassett. "We put three workouts in him since the Gaver· nor's Handicap and he's set up just right for it."

Last year, Leger Oat competed against the world's best turf horses

in the Grade I Arlington 'Millloll · Ths lllJl Spi!Wl-trainse h!ls biien and in numeroua stekes·in ·c.uror- a $alid al1owani>o and u' o.r 10~ Ilia. His beat etl'ort woe a di>Be aeli' · ckdming competitor in ,outheril and behind 1993 Horae of'l'ho Y4ar CBiifiJrnia for the last th~ years Kotasbaao in the Grade I Eddie . lllld hea -ed earaer earnings of Read Handicap at Del Mar- . OV8I' $300,000. .

The gelding is the richest horae . The Bill · Leach-eharge Capi· in the race with earnings of taliniprovement rarely mieaes his $880,000. Jockey David Lidbarg braak and abould be the on the· eai-.will ride. · ly lead in the Saturday feature.

Saratoga Gamblsr moat recently Capitalimprovement set the ran a respectable aeeond to Darrell paee in- the Houston Sprint Darrall in the $100,000 Arapahoe Championship and Governor's Day Park Sprint in Donver last Haodieap at Bam ·Houston Race weekend and must also 'be given .. Park in Houston, only to tire lata consideration Saturday. Earlier and finish third in both e"erits. The this year, the &.,..or-old Saratoga . 5-ye..-..old Kentucky·brud hor&ll by Six gelding placed In the Grade m Dbdelaild Band won two solid al· Phoanis Gold Cup at Turf Peradise Jowaoee contests at Oaklawn Park and was third in the Grade m this epring going two turns aild is Churchill Downs Handicap in delinitely a threat to steal a victory Louisville qn Kentucky Derby Day. if allowed an uocooteated !sad.

JQckey Gilbert Villescas is back on track with his ,winning ways

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by JAMES MCKfiiGHT Ruidoso Downs Publicity-

Jockey Gilbert Villescas, one of the top thoroughbred riders at Ruidoso Downs two decades ago, is back in th.& saddle here full-time for the first time since the late 1980s and, once again, is making his presence felt as one of the lPading riders here.

The 38-year-;.old El Paso native debuted on the Southern New Mex­ico racing circuit in 1971 and quick­ly established himself as one of the better thoroughbred riders at Ruidoso. But by 1979. problems with alcohol hurt Villaecas' riding abilities and he hed trouble keep­ing up with the rigorous routine of a jockey and keeping his weight down.

After a decade and a half of working as an exercise ridei' and assistant trainer, Villescas is sober, and best of all he's winning races for trainer Doyal Roberts, the man who helped him get started nearly 25 years ago.

. . came W Ruidoso with his family but he was the easiest horse to ride and I loved it." because he juat ran hard enough to

At 14, he got his first racetrack win." job ae Roberto' helper, who was a After 1977, things began to go blacksmith at the lime. Formsr dowohill for Villescas and in 1979 jockey Cliff Lambert gave him his he quit · riding for his mentor first leg up on a horse two years · Roberts. ·, la~r ~uring the 1971 RU;idoso meet. . He resurfaced brieflJ in the ·ear-

Cliff taught me te nde at Sun· ly 1980s te ride for trainar Bill land when I was 15, then '!hen I Leach and owner Mack Yates. He t~m~d ~6. I. was. an apprentice for eVen won the 1981 Norgor Futurity hi!"• siUd V>llescas who. added that on Fill Maekie Cup in 1981. After things were a lot mor! ~llicult for a that year, he left the spotlight and young JOCkey then. Cldf had .m:y spent most of his time behind the ~tra~t and I had to do e--~e,rythin~, scenes galloping horses in the mcluding clean sta).ls. Youre bBSl· mornings ~y .. a groom. Now apprentices just "The ~ason 1 qtdi was 1 couldn't nde. ; . do the weiJ!ht- I ~ drinking too

His first win came July, 17, 1971 much. and 1t was_ hard, to do 122 on his second mount. "I should've (lbs.). Vlllescas smd. won my first race, but I got a little It wasn't until 19H9 that Vii­excited o.nd blew both turns and Jescas seriously considered con· ran 61\h. I came back the next fronting his alcohol abuse. "I took a week and won on Wise County look at myself in the minor and Miss. She went wire-to-wire and said 'I've got to quit drinking or paid $115 te win." quit horses', so I quit drinking."

He won 14 races his first year at He got a job as assistant trainer Ruidoso and business was good. He for Leach that kept him employed also became reunited with Roberts year.round. ViJieseas would tend who had traded in his blacksmith the raeing stable at Ruidoso all license to become a trainer. summer then move to Leach's

"The best year I ever had was ranch in Brady, Texas to break the 1977. We (Roberts and Villescas) babies (yearlings) all winter. "BID is won all the stakes races with a good guy and always had work to Countess Blade. She was probably do-. Going to Brady was good for me the fastest hor&e I ever rode," he because all I did was work, I didn't said. Countess Blade, a Kentucky. have time to do anything else.,.

GILBERT VILLESCAS •

me aehot.'' Villascas' gamble paid off and

Roberto welcomed him back. On May 14, he rode his first bores for Roberts' in 15 years and finished third, ill a $6~5Q elaimi11g rOO@. 011 the mare Automatic Choke.

"'It metint a lot to me to work for him (Doyal) again. He's like a fa· ther to me."

Villescas admitted that at first it woe fruatrating to not eiiJoy the sueeess he had when he was younger. "I waa disgusted when I first started because I bed only won two races, but I think I axpected too much from myself. I balieve we11 start winning mora."

Last weekend he woo three racea which nearly doubled hie prior win total.

Through five weeks of r8Clng he has ridden six winners in 47 moonte and ranks tenth in the thoroughbred jockey ataodioge_ He also has finished second eight times and third eix times for an in the

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----win$ by5•.-• ma:r=ll ~t~~j. spe~~d at the-. 'QI'the $4~ whOJl-l Norgor FUturity the llllllsti!i'l' hlmle under a hand·=- byjqllk-

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ay Jerry Rodripes to win the -prestigioua raee by 6 &'4-leogths, Suodliy at Ruidclao Downs. · stake."

The Now Mmrleo-brad geldiog said he by ,Sky Command woe sent off knew Bandit Oommaoder wail a theiJ'.5 favon"'te in the field of tan good horae !:bill =ng in El 2-,ve~de after winning IUs l'llao, but the P! got sick Norgor Trial by an amazing teo IUW had to miss "the firat month lsogths on June 9- · of lhe 1\!li!toeo meet. "We iblow

Bandit Commander buret hs o!Oillcf nm qwte alcit; -but he A-om the #1 post position and got a little bit of a lung infeellcm bed a head lead over fallow trial and Wl1 s!dpped the ~fil!;tlrii;JI winner Five R Allbimes at the · · (the Rio Grande Kindergarten),'' first call. The gelding stretohed _ Clovis resident Lewter por· his advantai!e to tbrea·lengthe chased. Bandit eommaodar for at the top of the stretqb, than · · $6,500 at Jaet year's Ruidoso

- drew olear to win imprseslvely. Thoroughbred Bale and reci!ived Five R AJJbizoes fil!ishlid ,..;. $22,866 ~the victory. I

and, thral>qll8l'tare of a length Georgo Raoclch'a !'B'ive R in front of 46·1 loogabot Proud Allhii!IIBS. a New Mexico·hrtd Moment whe rallied in "lata galding by Bold Ego, aaroed stretch to got third. '$10,060 as runner-up. Nicky

Madrid red8 for trainer Jqiu): "My idea was to not really kill Jamiaoo. ' ·

him early on; so when we got out The Jon Amett-traloae Proud away from there (the gate) I in· Moment will gat $5,487 for ;his chad him heck a little,'' said -etrorte. The Kentuclijr·bradfcolt Rodriguez who is h•tter known by Moment or Hope is owned by for his suecaea on the quarter Builtrite Inc., Dale O'Donnell et. horae track. "Once that horaa I !"-Manuel Ortiz Jr. was In the (Five R Allbizoes) modo a run at II'Ons. ·

Jarett's Princess looks to reign over foes in the .$7,500 feature Thursday

The 3-year-old filly JareWs.Prio·, ~.. . ·CI!s• ~dho l!!!!et,,..,"l'A'tlY Jim ~ ~ · -•' _ ltltiW lol:'ll\ico·brP.4, dqp«\\l!lr. secon versus ~uo;ovo Cl&f'nililg ~ .i 1"0"''The :er. won a company June 3, ataode out in a $5,000 claiming contest at Sunland oompaet group of seven 3-year-old Park in Apn1 and sheuld reliah the fillies in Thuradey's feature race at drop in elaae Thursdlly. Ruidoso Downs. Don't Jive Me and starling Blurr

The eix furlong sprint for $7,500 abould aleo be_ given considemtion claiming- horses, offers a purse of in the showcase event. The Fred $3,600. Danley-trainee Don't Jive Me won a . Thureday's1~-race program also $7,500 elaiming event here May 28 mcludes the rune-race card A-om and hea &nisbed in the monay in Hollywood Park. three of bar last four outinga. Star-

Jarett's Princess who resides in ling Blurr, a Lynda_Tanner pupil, the Joel Marr-baro, elosed from last lioiebed third in her Ruidoso debut place to get up for the place posi· after spending the winter at Turf · lion behiud Classieal Reseon in her Paradise in Phoenix.

Second Ford Ranger pickup to be given away Sunday;, June 26

In fact, the jockey·trainer combo teamed to win two stakes races at two different tracks last weekend. On June 11, they scored a wire·to· wire victory with Power Stretch in the $11,950 Meecalero Apache Handicap at Ruidoso. The next day, they traveled to Albuquerque where Lt. Roberts came from off the pace to pul1 off a minor upset in the $25,000 Kit Carson Breeders' Cup

. Handicap. They were the first stakes victories for Villescas since the early 1980s.

bred filly by Blade won four stakes It wasn't until earlier this year that summer, including the that Villescas considered returning Ruidoso Thoroughbred Derby and te the saddle full-time. ''My wife the Jockey Club Stokes. (Adriaooa) and I talked a lot about

Villescas also had the pleasure it because I wanted to ride again of riding the speedy and versatile before I got too old."

money rate of 47 percent. His 13 A brand new 1994 Ford Raogar percent win clip ranks him sixth in Sport Pickup will be given away the standings. Sunday, June 26, at Ruidoso Downs

Now that everything is going along with four other luxury items. better for Villescae his only regret The Ruidoso Downa Horaepo;ver le braaking ties with Roberto' 16 Gi"'l''W&J' will take place after the yeara ago. "I would've been with Jaet live raee Sunday.

-Faoa can register for the giveaway by getting entry blanks at more than 80 locations throughout Ruidoso and retUrning them to · eJitry. boxes located - at the raoetraek.

Villescas was initially axpoeed to racing in elementary school when his classmates were the cllildren of trainer's Cliff Lambert and Roberto. "I didn't even know there was a racetrack in E1 Paso, but I was real good friende with Jody Roberto (Doyal's son) and one summer I

runner Master Salls who won the 870-yard Brigand Handicap in Au­goat of 1975, then cams back two days later to win the Ruidoso Mile Handicap.

"I think she (Countess Blade) was faster than him (Master Salle),

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"This poet year I came to the jock's room and I thought of all the fun I uaed to have in there and I thought about riding again. I only weighed 115 (lba,) and I waotad to ga beck te work for Doyal. I thought that if I straightened up, 'hll'd "give

Doyal all theae yeara, but I'm ' Otherprlus to be given away in· hsppy to be here where it's nioe and elude a. two-week stay in a Ruidoso cool and it's close to EJ Paso where condominilllll, aud · Vlllgering Illy Mom lives.'' · vou<llere valuing from $200 to $60,

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Com Roasters say they're taking · the heat for other people' s· trash

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blrCHARLES STALUNGS RuidoSo News Staff Writer

. A downtown wndor·ill perplexocl over the heat Uliknqwil ,..,.cbants are lishtlns' under his IO&IIted ~ bwllneu.. .

K.vin O'NeiU, owner of the RuidOso _.Com Rollllblr8 with his wife Sheri, told the plaJmlng and zcmiJJg • eommiasien that a downtown trash jll'Oblem attributsd to his illaild byuillmown merchants """' 1111111ufactured, In part, 1>7 Wlldaliem. , 'l'ba .'~~tend 18 located cni the 1'1= Store's paddag !at near Su h Drive mid Eagle Drive. · eiU said l!lllduet w8Jis AAd

not bilen a pfoiilem 1111fil ~~~liN when, in BP acl>of Vllllda1iam, trash """' pulled from his container and spread throughout the area. Mud """' IIIDOared on his stand during the same Incident, he said.

"We've been working on our stand sines January. It cost us $15,000, and now someone is trying

to shut·. us down. I wish someone W.uld tell us whO these people are who are tr,yiDg to shut US down," O"N.ill seid. "We want to correct any pro!Jiems; If there is anytillng we can do,,we certainly will."

Part of the trash pnblem In the downtowll aree can be traced to benches and trash centalners pur­cbaoed throuah the MalnStruet pro. gram that have ;yet to arrive.

. Mrs. O'Naill said that she and .her husband are Ruldaso home owners who have bean·livi~~g In the vlllqe forthrae years. .

"We're Dol: seasonal, nor temporary. We pi!}' our taxes and 1mY -.our produce locally 1111d ~ kltp a..much of our money in toWn as we cOn," Mre. O'Neill said.

She oaid there wao an lmpres· sion that their busineos was ereat­ing a Utter problem.

"In f'act, we walk up and down the ,streets specilicully looking for our' corncobs. What we have found Is that we are picking up beer

bottles and Coke cans anci · ootree cups and other take out food and drink cups, and 811 kinds of trusli, but not much of ours," O'Neill said.

' ••No one baa ever told_ us thBy've found a corncob on the ground," she said. ·

Aecordlng to Mre. O'Neill, the corn is praared by tirat roeatiDg the ear, 'ng the husks down to form J1 andle, then the husk is wr&JIII'Id with a napkin and the com dipped in butter. -She said the conlllllller has a choice of 15 opices toilnish otrthe.c<n:JI treat.

1.'h!t lltand also · serves baked 110tu!9.'~s with b11tter. sour lll'OIIUI, ml11i8U . and bacon bite, roasted peanuts, aoft drinlis, Carrizozo or­chard eider and bottled water.

O'Neill oaid they have a yearly permit from the vlllnge and lntcud to keop their stand (Jpen, market permitting. '

Kevin O'Naill has a full time job as pilot with Southwest Airlines.

Caravan fakes visitors to Lake Lucero A ranger guided trip to White

Sands National Monument's Leks Lucero, the source of the white sands, is scheduled for Sunday, June 28, 1994. Reservations lli'B ...,. quired and can be obtained by c811· iDg monument headquarterS lri 605 4711-6124. •

'l'ba ~p Will begin at 6 _p.'DI. at the SmaD Missile Range Gate· in· tsroectien With US Higliwey 70182,

25 mOos west of White Sands Na· tiona! Monument hosdquarters, bo· tween mileposts 174 and 175. The trip will return to tho Small Mieailo Range Gate at 9 p.m.

Participants will drive their own tlebldes 17 miles over p.Ved roads aoroos tho White SJU1ds Mlseile Range to the Lake Lucere trail head, than hike threo..fourths of a mile to the leke.

All vehicles ohould have a spare tire and oullieient gasoline for the 34-mile rmmd ,::r to the Loke Lucero trail h Eeoh person should hove oullieient drinking wetsr, a snack If desired, sunglasses, IJU11SCJ'BBil, stout walk· ing shoes and saituble dress for the waather. Cameras ma,v not be used while passing through the missile range. but are encouraged for usa while at the monument loke area.

Highway 48 advisocy committee to meet Tuesday · . . 'l'ba Highwll}' 48 Achdsor.Y Com·

mittse Jwi scheduled a meeting for 2 ~· en 'l'uesday, June 28, at Rmdooo ViDnge Hall.

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Stete highway _..,entetive Allan Whi!e4el said the pmpose of the msetlns lafQr a prqject update to the public from the state 111gb•

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way and transportation depart. ment. •

Whitesel said bicyele pathe in the prqject will be dlsoussod.

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J:teaHng touch prBctltloners are welHiersed healthcare techniques to relfeve the .palll' and trainee;! In how to use their altematjva of their patients.

Hands hold (;Ulcient healing power . - '

by PAMELA CROMWELL from patients, is only now begin· touch thersptos are tooh\y's version Ruidoso flklws Stan Writer Ding to examine evidsnce of the hu· of laying·on·of·hands, the

Anyone who's token a biology man energy field, , the Americen miraculous heeling method that · class knows about the human cir- Holistic NUrB8$' Aasoeietion 'worked ao wall in Biblical times. culstory syetem, the skelol:al sys- (AliNA) and the American Holistic Research is proving that ' touch tom, the digestive system, the nor- Modical Association have embraced therapie.lf are not oo miracalouo, vous system; but the · biology energy-based healing therapies. but are rooted in nol:ural teacher rarely mentions the humen Alto resident Barbara Mader has phenomena that can be measured eDeiJY syslsm. Even the physi.,- ·been a nurse for 40 ;yeero and has and described by the scientific IIPd chemistry teachers ignore the bsen a .member of AHNA for more method. • growing body of research on the hu· than 10 years. She aloo is a prac· · Dr. Dolores Krieger wes one of mluunergy field. titioner of Heeling Touch. th~ tlrst to ocientifically prove her

· She recently hdllted a Level I method called Therapeutic Touch ~ '!' the ~ field, · training oeminar in Heeling Touch more then 40 ;years age. Today'o

or. bioplasma •• !8 nothing new to therapy. Nurees from ·around the leading experts in the field also in· SClence or relilllO~· For more than state and ae far awl!}' as Arizona elude Pr. Brugh Joy, tho Re\<erend 5,0~0 ~ mystics hove referred ol:teilded, as did people who are not Rosalyo Bruyere, Barbara Brennan to. Pnma. the Indian ~ .. for a In the heeling profesoion. Mader and Dr. Janet Quinn. ~voraal. eno~, and Ch~ • tho has been hosting Levels I and II 'Another energy·based thorapy is Chine~o .~tal Ufo tm;,ce· The H~Jn:ew training seminars for some time, polarity therapy, practiced In wo.rd 18 karnaeem, and Christian· and AHNA has seloctsd Ruidoso as Ruidoso by Judith Palmer. The an-pamtlnge ~weye show 8 helo sur- the site of a Level m oeminar next field P'·'-·- ks 'th rounding opjrltual people. orgy s .......,.. wor WI are

In her book "Harlds of Light," year. part of a different enorgy system former NASA physicist Barbara "Ruidoso was choeen because of involving meridian points. Brennan descnbes how the energy' its hospitality and natural bsauty,'' Palmer usee the onalogy of a field has boen recorded and Medar said. "Irs the perfect atmo- comguter to dascribe polarit¥· measured by oeientists thr.oughout aphere to practice Heeling Touch." therapy. If you think of tho body as th After I · of • -vel Dl"' a computer that emits an elec-

e eges. comp stion ~ ' tromagnetic field, Palmer streDgth-. Siuco about "600 'B'.C. when P.arti.eipllllls. IDll!l opply for certitica- ...,.the el6ctrlcal·11ignala by eleu­

pYtheg'ereaus &rsr-r.cordo.i obser- ti~ m Heeling Touch from AHN~ • ing circuits. of I . body . ti-- Anyone can leatn to do this, ado d 1 k

vence a IIIIW}QUB • "'"en "':" aid Maaer "Nurses like it beceuso "Barbaro 1M rl an WOl all over the world bave oxpen- ~ . · 'd very well together," said Palmer. mented with the energy field · •t 11Jve.s them 8 way to he!P• ~s•. os "The methods Can be extremely around ua. It has been called ll- ohanf!!ng sheets and distributing complementlll)l ." . liaster, the odie force, orgone, and meds. Carolyn Meyers, an 8CUJin!B" io commonly known as the aura. • Ac...-.ling to Mader, Providence surist, works with energy in ;yet an- . '

'The human aura has been Memorial Hospital in EI Paso, other way. Bimilar to ecupuncture; viewed and photographed tbrOugh TOU$, has a heJI)ing room on every · ecupreosure strengthens and elears varioue means such as electrodes to 11oor where Heeling Touch therapy energy pathways at the organ level. ,....rd hqusneies and photo-- is practiced. Many nurses at Wil- Seiedtists hav! mapped the energy quantum devices. More Important- liem Beaumont Army Hospital also moridlans long used In Chinese ly, scientists such as Dr. Schalica perform Healing Touch therapy. medicine. Karagulla, Dr. Dora Kunz and Dr. Part of nursing cuniculum now Energy .. baaed therapies are non .. John Pi.errakos - just to name :a , includes an introduction to invasive healing alternatives that few -have linked observations of Therapeutic/Heeling Touch. Nurses assist tho body's natural healing the human aura to diagnosie of are commonly encournged to pur- precess. Alternative healing moth· medical prob!OD!ll: sue further training in Heeling ods are generaDy not a substitute

Wbile the Amorican MediJ:al As- Touch therapy on thoir own. for aDopathic medicine, but are a sociation, in response to pressure Healing Touch and its related complementary enhancement.

Teacher protests $3,000 water bill Texan Jerry W'mdhem oaid on

hio teeoher's sallll)l he can't afford the $3,000 villego water hill at­tributed to hio Ponderosa Hoighte home one month last winter.

Accordimr to the village, a pips !Bilk. at W"mdham's home spilled

786,340 gaffons of watsr on tho ground. (Picture 75 tanksr trucks lined up along Sudderth. and they'll hold almost that much water.)

As a reoult, the &rat ever village Utility Dispute Advisory Board hoe been called Into session for Thurs· dO}', Juno 30. to diBCUSS billing

charges with utility customer Windham.

Aeco:rdlng to villnge customor re­lations clerk Paula Glarrantano, aevaral options m11 be discussed.

The meeting Is open to the pub· lie and will begin at 10 a.m. In the counm1 chambers.

Serving . Chaves, ·otero

~· Un(J()/n County

is simulcast on 1 AM and

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8AIThe Ruidoso NewuiThursday Juno 23 1994 --' Capitan ·

,. ' Capitan School Board to· begin meetings with prayer. by DIANNE STALLINGS Payne said consistency is hlgh Ruidoso News Staff Writer on the list of requirements by

Prayer isn't allowed in the class- parents. room, but it looks like it will lead "We need to be real consistent off future meetings of the Capitan with policies so there 'is no confu­School Board. sion and so each teacher and parent

Board member Beverly Payne knows exactly what the policy is," noted during the board meeting ehe said. "That was tha problem we last week that she had learned at a encountered with the discipUna recent New Mexico State School policy. Parents and teachers kept Board Law Conference that prayer asking for consistency." is permissible. That discipline policy still is un-

"The board can haVe an invoca- der review by a committee, parent tion at the beginning of a meeting,"' Floyd Goodloe said. And it still she said. "It"s different from prayer needs more teeth. in a classroom where a student Bpt when some parents pushed could be · considered a captive ,... for tougher measures regarding audience.~ ..& cheating, Tiffany Menix said she

Board members agreed to ached~ once had been falsely accused of ule the item for action on the cheating. Avenues must be in~ agenda of a special meeting Friday, eluded for someone to be able to giving superintendent Diana Son~ fight false accusations, she said. namaker a chance to double check Board Member Russell Shearer the information. agreed.

The special meeting is ~et .£9t' 7 Goodloe was there to represent a a.m. ~day, June 24,_ m s~~ room packed with parents con~ namaker s office. Other ttems wdl cerned about the infiltration ol out­include personnel action and a come based education (OBE) in the report on the const;ruction wa1k- local school system. through of~ ne": rruddle sch~ol. The parents are convinced that

The arehitect "?II note any Jte~s OBE is a system being pushed by that need correction. or completton the federal government and big before the board wdl accept the business on school districts to teach b_uild.ing from contractor T.E. Ar~ good worker values and discourage nngton. individualism, to track the students

In other issues concerning the and their families, and to supplant new middle school, Payne urged local control. school officials to review handbooks .· They have joined in the efforts of for the individual schools to ensure similar groups across the country to they are consistent with board ap- block the progress of the approach, proved policies. which they contend fosters

She noted that from her own ex· mediocrity instead of excellence, perience, a teacher required her followers instead ofleadsra. daughter to make up work the day Under OBE, a student must after she was absent, when the demonstrate that they have leamed policy book says a student has a quality. such as adaptability. They three days. are re~mediated as many times as

Although she appealed to the ad~ necessary until they attain that ministration, the zero remained on outcome. her daughter's record. State education offlcials, On the

Sonnamaker assured her that other hand, contend that New Mex­teachers must abide by the board's ico is pursuing outcome based ac~ policies and they take precedence creditation, not OBE.

At tha same time, he raaftirmed the group's backing of teachers and !Ill-' ministrators.

Mitch Menix said parents, not schools, should have control over the moral values baing taught and they ehould take core of it at home.

Board membera said thay're more than ready to give that ...,_ sponsil»1ity back to the parents, but the ones who need to accept that re,Ponaibility are not the parent& at tha meeting that night.

The board agreed that more parental involvement is a positive and set a meeting for 7 p.m. July 5· at the mid-school to review the cur-riculum. .

Teacher Mecea Aldridge said many unfounded rumors are being circulated through the town. The session should clear many of the misconceptions. she said.

Interested parents can pick up a copy of tha school handbook at the administration office to review be~ fore the meeting.

Board members thanked tha group for kaeping them updated and restated their commitment to retain local control.

Concerning the poasibility of a concert being etaged on· the high school footbaU field June 29, boatd members were told that the eon~ cert, which was euppoae to be part of the filming of a motion picture, had bean canceled for that date. However, it was possible, it could be rescheduled for Anguat during the county fair. ..

Board members pointed out that liming would not ellow the district to refurbish the field before fo6tbaU season, if it was damaged by con~ cert goera.

ln other bus:i.ness•, the school board:

-hired Gereld .Montes 88 high school counselor and Spaniah teacher, Louis B~ster as band in .. structor -and for seeoodfu:y mathe~ matics.

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Captivating Capitans '

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over any individual preference by That would result in a shift from teachers. The middle school will emphasis on measuring the in~ have a program called ZAP, which greclients of schools to measuring means that zeros wiiJ not be the results of student performance, pennitt.ed on makeup work for ex- they say. It would shift. more te· cused absences. The aim is to teach sponsibility for education to the lo~ the student follow~through and how cal district for better balance be­to live up to their responsibilities. tween state and local accountability

-heard that the budgats for Chapter I (remedial) and Chagter II (library) programs have been cut again and more cuts are expected· next year.

An outcropping along the Capitan Mountain Range Is framed by summer foil· age, ·creating one of the picture perfect views that draws visitors to Lincoln County

eaCh year. Unlike most mountain ranges In the United States, the Capltans present a unique feature by running easUo west, In· stead of a north to south orientation.

In reference to absences, she for student success, and it would said teachers at the middle school encourage mora community in· will call in the afternoon to check volvement. on thei-r students who are· absent. Goodloe told school board mem· In the past, the calling system has hers more parent input should have not been applied consistently at the been solicited on putting together high school and elementary school, the curriculum and philosophica1 but it will in 1994-95, she said. approach for the new middle school.

The cuts ere based on the census, which shows the percentage of low income families is decreas-­ing.

AB a result of the cuts, the Chap­ter l computer lab position will be aboliehed and Stephanie Aldas will be moved from that post to take the job of high sehool sseretsry. Agatha Long will become the secretary at the middle school.

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Band boosters stage carnival A food fair and silent auction is

espected to draw visitors to Capiten High School's carnival as part of the July Fourth community colebration of Smokey Bear's Fiftietb Birthday.

include a collection of Smokey Bear poaters. Ths bids will be opened at 3:30 p.m. and biddsra muat be -· ent.

Delicate dish helps White Mountain Intermediate

Ths cernival, aponaored by the high school hand boosters, will opan at noon and nm until 4 p.m. July 4 in the gymnasium of the school's multi-purpose room.

The food tllir will feature Ger­man sausages, hot dogs, chili and Frito pie, .. wen 88 soft drinks for sale. Boosters will have a dessert table and a multituds of calories is asaured.

The First Annual Cow Pie Plop to benefit White Mountain interme­cliate School is set for Ju]y Fourth at the Cl11essen Arena in Capitan.

Capi

A $2 donation reserves a little chunk of land in the donors name and gives him/her an opportunity to win a $200 gift; certificate from

WAI:MART Phat~macy 2 So you11 always save money, no matter when you shop, no matter what you buy.

SID ... HOUI'8: H MlinAIIIL Plio ... 1118-54110

WaJ.Mart. Spaces can be reserved at One

Stop Flowers, Wei-Mart and Fun Trackers.

A photo booth, fieh pond and other lim stops will give children something to do while their parents submit aealed bids for items that

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&Se CATTLE COUNTRY

HAas, Johnny·~.Ma~ Lt!ll8fQ~

1st

The carnival will be a great way to get out of tha summer aun after the big Happy Birthday Smokey Bear parade that starts at 10 a.m.

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Finish those fair projects lt'e t.lme to start plannloi

projects for tha annual Lineoln County tllir sst for August 9·18 with tha theme ot"Rafnhows."

Aet:oidlng to general SUper• intendent Janice Herd, the tllir building will undergo some remodeUng to provide batter viewing of tha axhibit&. Twu new eatsgories have been added, a bake-oft" and sewiDg, and reeycled art for saniors (66 and older).

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" . "'l1ill lllriest COJIC<!Iltration or famllles witlllncome levels below ~ t.~ }ibMty level li"l(8 in rutal pima of Unooln County in· clwlfDi Hondo, Corona and Car­!ii<OJtO (80o90 .JDilts . fi:oJn Ruidoso ailll the t.!itailJl County Medical Center)."

1JriVin, coiiditiollsln winter ag. -~ that di!liC!llo/ in ace ... , COIIIP!!Wlded by the Jack ot a public

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tho IIB\VOl'ldng district on tho to begin this prOgram works and

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'I htiiWbe" ~ isnol. lifter tbii tllbl." Commis;donor Sclnvolt!l!IIDD eaid. ·

tho program parts or~

"We have to. ~gni .. tho fact to 8!1· that atatewlde tboN has bean- a

I sbarp inerus~ In tom pregnancy," or pro- Miller said. 'Do we eay it's the

and very prerogative .of pareqts or some u•.w- rural com· other - or do we step in and

provido? . . . """""tlvo llliDuDary oon· · ~ll'& on the rise again this ;vear

leins ssven reCOliiJIIondot!QDB and in Lincoln COUilty. If we don't do iupportlng data," Miller .tol4, com· IIOJII8!hiag, tho loag term cost is mieaioners. "Tbose Will b8 tho lnisis sigoitlcantly more In terms or weJ. .of grllllt writlni in the futUre to fare." · bDng serrioes to t.!ncoln County." New . MOllico'a . adolescent birth

. 'Jhe grant projlr&Dl would oon· rate was third hfghest in the ..,trato en doliverinr eerviceS to Umted States in 1980. 'Jhe rate has isolatad rural women and to sea· eontlnnsd to ineruse since 1986, sonal famiUes at Ruidoso Downs study dat, shows. 'Jhe adolescent Race Track, be said. prognancy rata p,.. 1.000 popula-

The comndssiOD, whicb officially tlon ages lli-19 in Lincoln County crested and appointsd tbe MeR for 11190-92 avorage was 80.4 com-beard, previously appropriatad pared to 100.4 for tho elato. . more than $2.000 start-up money Montes said tho commission ap­and aUooatsd. oflice space for pro- procOales an tho volUillesr work gram atal[ council members have put into the

·. Ths cbuncil was an 8liJHIIlBion of "1Git,.. eaid an evan broador rep· an ~ grOUp of professionals ....entation will. be sought, with interested m m~al care is)w!B, me6tlngs in planned in Corona and a coaUUOil otbealih Professionals, outl)ljng iltaas. . . eduoators, soeial seM,. pri>fes- · H8 point<od out' that the &tullY~ sionals, I!OJl8UID8r8 and.<Ommunity oontainsd sevan recommasdatiODB leaders. Membars .1'8pr!Ssnt com· to stnngthsn tho county's perinatal munitlos in Lincoln Couiity and ths health delivery S)'Otsm. Msscrdoro ROs....vet!on in norlbem "Several recommandat!ODB Otero County. targut special populatioas of woman

'Jhe group received toclmical as· asd infants wbe are more at risk siatance fi:oJn the l'r1matal Care for adverse porinntal health out­Nstwork at tho Ulllversity or new oomes, and who do not aeceas Msxjco and mot contlnuoasly fi:oJn psrinatal services." accordlng to ths April 1993 until October 1993, study. whan tho council was formsd.

"You're not looking ut any future "The recommandatlens include dollars fi:oJn the COWltY/" Commis· new programs asd personnel lbet slon Chairman Monroy Mantes wiD require outaids funds, act!ODB

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c:.ti&M 'illolitlllW·.IV'~ ~ ·~ vereua liS JIOil8 Ol'llllknown levels ofpronatal "' )>esrs for non·~~d ~!~others. oare •

. lillll~·Ws. i\ritll. sdolelllltllliil, . . In doscribing tho "'""'ty, the ·thj! Mast. Oli~t\lce to ~vlllll, tiPOI't writers pointsd ollt t~!at Lin· propOI' ~ ·eate. wereliatsd llll: ooln bordore on ssvan counties and feQi' and cislUal elf propancy, gen· · is ranked as tho twenty·second (out emtlooal or cu!Jilral attitudes of 83) most. populous eounty in tl!e 1oward tom preSJiiuliW (no problem state with a ~ of 2. 7 wsons with 'tasn pteg;w,cy), a lack or p,.. """"" mile. ft rapresooto .8 lransportotloti, C0J100rn rdlout oon· p......,t ofNew Ml!llico's population. 'lidslitiality, lack of money, lack of Tho per ~to income was lislsd in

-ebolces JI(Jout tho. £ut\lre, shortage 191l1 at $16,074 compared to the . parina· 'or school-based bealtl! educetlon, state t1gure of $14,844 .and tho na· for at !'iok pregnant bealth informati<!n. and direct ssr- lionel of $19,082.

theb'l!lfanto. · · vices (particularly in rural sahool), The councy's popUlation in' ....to proylda s~ !Apr!! lac!!: of poripatal serviees in rural crelll!sd 11.1 percsnt jl-oJp 1980 to

tl!f~ SBPtsmbllr')' pomnatrd lll'llBB lll!'1 lack of child care for 1990, compared to 16;8 ..,......t for elinics ut tile Ruidose Downs parentlbg tosns. the stale. Tha ·1991 population WIIB l:'iltetraek. Other Btlltistlcs concerning tom astlmatsd at 12,826. · · ·

-to continue planning for the pregnancy inoluded lbet sa percent Baced on those statistics, 913 GRADS program in the Ruidoso l>f. F.eeoant tosns were not in etilldren UJllltlr the age of five con­municipalschools, including on sido schOol compared to 17 percent of st11ute 7.2 Percent of tho countY* day carl. · .-. non·prognant toano; 88 )l<li'All!nt of pcpulstlen and 2,648 womsn are.Of

-to sspand scbool·b!IBsd health pregnant teens wsrs single parents, childbeBring age (betwesn lli-44 education in all county scbool dis- compared to 33 percont or pregnant :VO'f!'l· .• triets. adult women; 66 percent or-· - 'l\cc:ording to 1990 Csnsus data, ·'

-to sspand the couoty MCH .. nant tsans said thay nssded finan· poverty income •statistlce rsveal' Pl!umlng Council's sn1nach and cia! assistance; and 74 percent 'of that in 1989, 20.1 percent of w· membership. pregnant teens pregnancies wers sons asd 16.2 p,....nt of families in

The rsporl pointod out thot the unplanned compared to 811 percent tlui county were Jiving below tho -ty has - ~0 primary care or pregnant adult ~n. fsd....al poVerty lsvol similar to pb,ysiolOJ!S, including one ob- Tbe impact of the MsBCalero replirtsd stitte peres-- of 20.5 stetri<:iailfgy'necologist. 'Jhe Reervatlon on Lincoln County percont and 16.5 pe£cent. · pbysicianlpopulatlon r~tio is ons ~tal services is signitlcant, tho "In 1990, New Mssico ranksd pbyaiclan for every 1,222 pBr$0118. study contonds. third highest among the state in

"Despi~ . the rural nature of Tha hospital on tho reserva!;ion. the perconlage offamllies below the much of LinColn County, as of 1994, whicb bas five pbysiolans and a :14- poverty level. NatlonaU~ tho 1990 it has not recsived tb• fedora! bour emerg'ency toom. refors 90 Csnsus tlgufe was 13.1 j..n:.nt or designstlon of Health Prof~onal p,....nt of its patients to tbe, Lin· persons, and 10.0 (llll'Cent of Sbortage Area (HPSA) for prunery ooln Co~nty Medieal Canter 20-30 families Jiving at or below the

· .~dmtrd <W psychiatric care,~ ae- minutes awq fi:oJn Mescalero for poverty lsvol," llllCOl'ding to tho , • to tho study. dollvery serrices. . data. .

qwever, three sub·county Prenatal, postpertum end wan. . "A significant 47.3 pi>rcent or the BrBIIII, including Carrizozo, Capitan baby cere is providod by the Mes· councy's population were below tho and Corona, are ........,.tly desig- calero Hospital, whicb also handles 200 ·percont poverty lsvel in 1990. naiad for medical (physicians) asd transpOI'tatlon to the Lincoln Female hasded families with no Level 3 Mental beafth; whicb oft'ers County mediealcentsr. · husband pro-t · living below a broadsr specbum or socird ssr· "The impact or women utilizing poverty incraassd frOm 37.8 percent vlcas, not limited to psychiatry." perinatal care in Lincoln County is in 1979 to 46.6 psrcent in 1999.

'Jhe councy's Jive birth rate.of14 most notably the additional That's a grant... increase when ~ 1,000 populstlon (184 in 19921 dollvery services provided by tho compared to· the stale's tlgurss of is lower than both atate and nation· three pb,ysiciODB who practice ob· 87.2 porcent and 46.9 porcent. The ";;ligures of 17.6 and 16.2, rsspsc- stetrics in Ruidoso," the study 1992 unsmployment rato for tho tively. . -· county was 6.4 jlercont.

Tbe councy's neonatal death rate . "Other impacts inoludo the adcfi. "The ;1980 statistics indicate per 100.000 pop.ulatlon was 2.2, · tiooal etrort required to coordinats tbat 26.7 percont of youth less than postnolal morlslity "!to was .4.6 a two-county s:vetsm of porinatrd · 18: years -of age '!lllr& Jiving in· and total infant mortality rate was care for prognant Mssealero Apache poverty, while the undor fivs popu· 6.7 compared to the nation's 1992 women facilitotlng Medicaid ap- lation oonstltuted 20.8 percent in Infant mortality rate of~.~. plication&; and tracking women household& besdsd by l'emelos

·'Jhe. CCJlll1¥ also forsd batter who 'fall through tho cracks' and Jiving In pavertr, 60.7 ~cent in· than tbe &£ate in Jow birth weight, cease obtaining prODstal caro. eluded children bslow the age of 18 with 6.8 percent in 1991).1992 com· "The most significant impact, ycare, and 50.8 percent included pared to 7.3 percent in New Ml!llico howsver, is tho additional matemrd childrsn below the age of five as a whole and 7 parcsnt fo'r the asd infant health risk possd by the years." United States. high preportion or Msscalsro And in case anyone belisves that

Not ....pr!Bingly, the study women who don't obtain adoquate Lincoln County is immune to th'\; showed that the pfoportlon of prenatal care. According to recant HIV (Acquired Immune Deficisncy, -·· Msdiceid mothers ages 15-20 in the data praclded by Indian Health. AID8l" virus, tho study natad lbet county is double lbet of non- SorviCBB: of tho 132 blrtbe to Mes- six now cases wars reported in the Msdicaid; that Medicaid mothers. calero women tram October 1991 Southsast rsgion of New Ml!llioo in started prenatal care eorvices lator- through September 1992, only 34.5 1998. One primary care provider in than non·Msdieaid mothers and psrcent (47 women) received the county has handlad 13 HIV pos· they were 40 percent more likely to prenatal cere in tho first bimester itivs patients frOm Jaouary 1993 have low birth weight infants; ""d asd 38.1 percent (46 women) throngh Morcb 1994, throe or 28 that the !'VBrage age for Msdiceid• recsived little (third trimsster), p,....nt of whom era women.

Dr.B_lrgi~·.LaMothe to receive Governor's Award Fiieworks banned in Ruidoso . ·:nt •. Bitalt-taMothe of Capitan 'nUrty winners were solectod by

:$i;[ve tlie Govemcn:'s Award a panof of seven judges for this · ~ , N".W llfezilio ;velir's awAtdi. 'Jhe judges

illllfll.Y:®l!U~uerque; · tepresent tl)& IHIV8Il planning dJB. ' ''l'be 'Diiitb alllluiJ ceteliiOIIY fa trlcta oftheatali!. ~bythbNIII'~Com· · . ·· · . lillhliln 01t thll Statu& -ot Woml!il · Monica AtDienta, KOB-TV4 tal&· llll!lla ·tliG tllitd's'. liltgasl awards vil!ien ~eonality, will be tho . helulriag "'I'I'OllifD ot tbe ~ . ot t:eteaiODies. Commis-~ · sion chairperson Lol-etta Armenta

will ollar the intl'oductlons, l'ol· Nominat!ODS come fi:oJn fiunily, lowed by .......Uw dirsctor Susan

friends and colleagaes. '1'. Loubot. Oovemor Bruce King

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asd First Lady AHce King wiD band out the awardS.

LaMothe was nominatod by Dr. Linde Coble of Albuquerque, with wbem she sberce an ollics in Capitan •.

A licened certltlsd climcal men· tal health ..,uaselor, LaMothe mcvsd to New M8llico in 11182 fi:oJn tho New York/NewJ~ 81'8&. •

eluding seven years heading a monthly public service support group caUed the Domestic Violence Victim Support Group, and tbe hours sbe hiiB spent with children in scbools and her privato practice.

Tho public in invited to attend tho coremonies in the east wing of tho Albuquerque Convention Con· tor. 'Jhe cost is $80 and reerve·

She was nominated based en her tioll8 are rsqulrsd, cell 605-841· work with women and ebildren, in· 4662 or 1-1100-482-9168.

$30.00 $34.06'.

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Fit'hlorks are banned in Ruidoso, according to a news release provided by tho Firs Department. The tire danger from lireworke bes alread,y been demonstratad onoo this month, oontinuBB the release.

Anyone oangbt shooting tlreworke will be subject to severe panaltios including a line or up to $500 and 90 days in jail. Throwing out a ligbtsd cigarette will result in a tine of $500. Code snforcere wiD be out snforolngthe ban.

"It is everyone's responsibility to belp ksop Ruidoso from bum· ing," rssds the release. Anyone having any information on tlrsworks possession or use, please can Crimestoppers at 267-4546.

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Sadie the lady Sadie, a rare short haired St. Bernard, Sadie auditioned for the lead In a recent romps In the cold ancf comforting Rio Beethoven movie and didn't seern'to mind Ruidoso with a newfound El Paso friend. wh&i!l she lost to a look !lllke contender.

Sen. Jeff Bingaman proposes a compromise on healthcare

A Senate panel has moved to lighten the load of health-care refonn on small businesses, adopt. ing a compromise engineered by United States Senator Jeff Bingaman's (0-NM), according to a story published in the Albuquerque Journal.

While large businesses would pay 80 percant of worker benefits, employers with five or fewer em­ployees and average salaries of no more than $24,000, would pay a one pereent payroU tax, according to Bingaman's amendment ap­proved Tuesday by the Senate

Senator Pete Domenici urged the Senate Appropriations Sub· committee on Transportation to earmark funds ror equipment at the Sierra Blanca Regional Airport in Lincoln county that would allow it to resume full operations.

Domenici, (JI.NM) sought $328,000 for a navigational aid, a '1ocalizer," in a letter to Sub­committae Chairmlir> Frank Lautauberg (D-NJ). The localizer boa been pending FAA approval for at 1esat threo years.

"I strongly urge the Sub­committee to give ite favorable con· sideratlon to the inelusion of a

Attention high school teaehora. Are you looking for aomothiq to

de this summer'/ Are yon looking for somothlllll that yon 01111 take back to yeur ............ &lid that deals with the Important subject of New Mexico's neinral ~

Then yon might 'lfllllt to spomta week in the forest nnd atteiulthe week long worlcsbel!.. "Healtbr · &osystomt," ~by the Nil*' Mes!co Project Le~ 'l'i'ee , Steering Committee. · · ·

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Lehor Committoa. Companies with up to 10 em­

ployees would pay two, percent. "l~s not inappropriate to require

everybody who boa to ability to con· tribute something," Bingaman was quoted as saying.

The National Federation of Inde­pendent Business (NFWJ lauded Bingaman for his vote Wednesday against en employer-paid system proposed by Senator Edward Ken­nedy (D-Mess.), but also opposed his amendment.

"The health care reform amend­ment is nothing more than a new

payroll tax that will horm small buain88B88," read a news release pro.;ded by NFm, tho nation's lorgest small business udvocacy or· ganization, which represents more than 600,000 email nnd indspen­dent firms across the nation, in­cluding 3,600 in New Mexi!o.

NFIB has urged Congress to pass health care reform this year, but without an employer mandate. The business organization believes a mandate would result in job loss, wage reduction, more paperwork and costa that small firms would be unable to control.

Th!l 181U All Alnerlcan li'ettlval PhOI\i BvW s. pioud to IU\IlPUI1C8 its ~ ofjUl'<)l'S fm; thli $'lllll"s everit. . . .

Aeeordiq w a news :rele ... , they bavs obosllll tlh'ee dltl'eront &e!ds of expertise to help iuiiQ ~s year. AU arsas erslmportsllt fo the photopapby. "

The tlrst &eld of expertise iii the art of pbotGgrapby . with D.D. ClevalaadofRoawell obosen for this flelcL A native Texan now Uving in New Mexico, be is iwbis 51st year in photography awl pbotojourna· llam. For the past 20 years all his activity bas been in fine art photog-

Volunteers of th~--Lincoln· County Food Sue Hooper, treas'urer; and Christopher Bank break for a few minutes at their new Carusone, publicity chairman .. Standing, location at St. Eleanor Church. Seated, from left, are: B~b Nys, Grand Knight; Fa· from left, are: Jozach Byrd, vice president; ther Richard Catanach; Dr. James Rucker; Betsy Seller, secretary; Ruben Sandoval; llllld Gary Dean, president.

Food Bank ... , ·is open u1· new home

The Lincoln County Food Bank has moved from the First Pres· byterian Chureh, where it was lo-­cated for seven yosre, to Saint ElelliiOl' Cathonc Church on JWU>­tlonRoed.

The food bank provides food to ssvorallOO nsedy people por month awl is open from· noon to 4 p.m. each Monday, Wednesday end Frl· day. Most reciplenls are residents of Lincoln County. '

The food bank receives no government funding awl relies aole­lyon cnntn'butlons from the genoral pubHc.

Gary Dean, president, said the food bank is in nesd of aesistenes aod aayone waotlq to help in this community efl'ort with contribu· lions of time, food or money, should cnntact him at 26'1·2281 or call the food bank oftlce at 257·5823.

Deao said cnntrlbutlons mey be mailed to the Uncoln Caunly Food Bank, PO Box 1372, Ruidoso NM 88346.

Father Richard Catanach inspects several cases of Deep Se" CrunCh In one of the food storage rooms at St. Eleanor Catholic Church, the new home of the Uncoln County Food Bank. ·

State tags onto new dads' happy. hour . . . ' ' .

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neee8aary factonl. iJf pte' a violation, accordl~~g to

"COII8icleratlon" and that IQ:~~~be 11

c0ntract'' based. ,;. J :ai.embers agreed tlult an iiitluz or peeple iatCI Ruidoso to at- . tllnd an IIV8Iltwhioh·would lnereaee ,Qt.., ta¥ for tlul ~loge wiluld be t0Jisldor$tion. . vm..,. elerk Tammie Maddox, who attends eaeh LTAB moeting, IQl!l the board proof or adequate COQsiderstion is needed.

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Blast-off buddies S.S9pnd grade astronauts at White Mountain El9mentary prepare for take-off

· on the Starshlp Enchantment. For the sep­ond year, the claSil&s of teachers SusB~~ Rhodell, and Allee Payne have recreated the. launch .and: scientific missions of the

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shuttle crew. Above, state and local dig­nitaries give their blessing to the crew be­fore ·the launch. At 1!111, the shuttle on wheels mimics the reallbing. The Ruidoso program Is being used as a model for other schools.

. In view or the ruling by Udall, the ccimmlttoe passed out new forlns for IIV8Ilts to eomplets and rtturn wbile villsge attorney John Upderwood drafts a eontract thet Wlll. be suitehle for future ap-p'JjoiiD\8. . •

:li?i=t~;,.~~:·Awareness eff~rts conthtue on child support enforcement tho 1994 ~ula1ee; Muoo- New Moxico Child Support support for the child, tlio dolln· support. Tbe broadoaoters' .....,qia- ps,ying tho association $10,000 for The Human Sorviooo Depart-11m or the Horso for year around Awareness Days endod Failier's quent parent azul the taxp..,.,... tion will distribute the radio end Its seholarohlp 1\md. As an addod mont also has produced two print . ""'"keti!Jg ell'orts; Lincoln County Day, but awareneas ell'orls will eon· Tbe Human Sorviooo Deport- television ads to member stations benefit ts the dQPertment, many · ads that era being dialributsd to Cowboy ~poainm for the fifth an- tinue with a state-wido advertising ment hae Worked with the New throughout the stats and will eon· stations will oontinue to air the ads newspapers throughout the state. nual cel~n; azul Friends or campaign. Moxico Broadcaetsrs Aasoclution to tmot with tho stations for ~o.ooo ae public sorviee announeemsnts Tbe deportment ie aeking tho newa-Smokoyfor'theSmokoyeelebration The ads emphasize tho eon· predoee ...-a! radio and wlevi- worthordonetodairtime, evenafterthoyhavefulfilledtheiJ papers to print tho ads floee or Jal,v 14. · sequeneas or failing to pay ehild Ilion ad~amente about ehild In .,..bange, tho department le aesoclation eontract. · chnrge ae a pob6o aervice. , . . .

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BlJle Goose owners host Business after ~purs to celebrate anniversary by MoLLY WEBER Luneh Is served both lnsldO and Spacial tn The News outside on the celorful patio eur-

When tho new ownere or the rounded by berrols or pansies, mne Goose mataurant. looatsd near pstunial and mied·fiowers. A bilge Up(ler Cannon on Suddarth, mural creatod by artist Ray Halaoy celehrstetbell' gt!Uid 9Peabl& June aclol'lls the well separating the two 23, · by h~ Buainoss ·After eaflng &rh& QoUQfroln 6:30 ~ 7:80 l'.iil.-it will · _ _,_ h ~•-

,l!e',J~,,)rtUl)lp)l fotfJllllJ3110tiU!nd .:·'!!!!~_-·_·.' ~~._.-"_!"'_~~: ~-.:.,.·~ •. 4;..;._......-.'; ..,.. .awu. .f!WH ~ ~ <;::'!'l'ltit~-.-wneis, Kathy and our patio ·open we· can seat up·to J"JiiiiDy Ji~r, ~ apora· 46ln a private party, We creato our tod tha bullinete In the summer antrees around clientele's special 1\ibntbs so we tiel it Is quite a feat needs wbethor it 'be thalr allergies t!Utt \'Po hn\fe ·:= opeil aU lb.lJ.'air need for hnort healtby wiJ!te;, Sanehea • Tbair chicken salad azul Banta

"TTuif• :whlr W6· . "" 1!08t)Hu!ad Fe ""•ese soup, developed 6y tha ou:r.OIIflllnglltllil now ... lt needod c.~. d addad ~ •• s tobeiit1hli$ttlms."Nid&Soatt. H ......... ers,aa to"' aa-

Bolll pari$1'11 lui.ve 'UteDBive ehez, 111maln tha public's favorites. bilcWtblllldaill thdood Jnduqb:y. Tbore ... , .. __ lsd ~- an ontree that has . Sooit ~ lili-CIIl1Df1!1 career ......, .....

Iiy, ~~ in btl tainilf• drive-In ''We like to work on a one-on-one ..sta~ In ~astoiL Latsr he baele and we want people to feel at !),came.lii!Sistmit county Dl•nager. hems, • Boatt notss. Since tlien he has worked locelly at Even thoUIIh this is not a fast Jt,.:Sob'& establi h .·sancnez says ha 1e solf-taught foodBDiont, no one waits sinCe. his first job at 15 ~ BJ!a]dn- and tho prlees am competitive. And Ko'bhlillln Albuquerque. If you aren't counflng oalorles, you -~ diba 18 If 1 could won't wallt to mise one or thalr ~ Cakes 80 1 told them 'yes,' made freah d!llly desserts. Tbe sour . fQIIjld'. ll bOtk and taught myself. cream IemOII ple and broad podding JW. ""en decoratb!J Cakes ever ...., hard Wbeat li[pce.~· . . . Business bllitte'are !'tom 11 a.m. ; ,tlo ~le.-.aed,foral ~ir to 4 p.m. MOJillaT tlirough Slltufo. ~Qeini ... ,Owel'llmltoswell. ~

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DAMQN SANCHEZ

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BILL SCOTT

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BE & BREAKFAST AND CABINS. 605-2117-7395

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111111 . . ' . QUAUTY. CONDITION, AUTHENTICI'h', OR VALUE BY ROY HENSON AUCTIONEER, jNC, OR OWNERS OF PAoPEf.l]Y.

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:sate than .sotry .·· : ::'Iii~. tl!8 fire r:JiiM!Intlan :blri!ilr, Is ~lebreth'lil hi$ :soll'llllllhi:lay 11t a tlrrte lillian hlgfl :-.rnpsratures, high

.. ~~~ ~~ IG\ll ·h.umldlty have ~1. his holll8 staia at .l!lik Of Wildfire~ Tl:lesa. conditlqns placa the state of 11iew· Mexico at a ha%ardous pOint.

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. "~ly you can p"""ent fo~st. flree, • says Smokey • .. lltf th!iit qQfs ~t ~ar brush and Ulllga_ flree, too. lfs Important that '11:1{1\inal· visitors and k!c::als join forces , to protaol,thls stfllt ~m fires. · ·~ . 11~.y.,,.~t~ "

Thlll 'M\If!l state Is under La\l$l 1 tf!lm'l~pns. The Enei'gy.'llllf!illn!llll and Natural Resources DEif)artment Forestry alld Resources .Consatvlitlon Division, has J)laQad tile following_ restrictions on all state JMld pri· vate non...nl!niCIPallands: ·

· -smoking Is prohibited except In vehicles sql!lpj:iiid With ashtiay's . on paved roads, surfaced tOads or daSignated areas. ' ' 'i< •' I

. ~'fi flll!s 11r £11l!llpllres are prohibited except In dSvelc!Pllcl ~rounds or In .atf!es designated In . wrHJng by lbe landowner; no acoess limits are lm· poal!d. A campfire· does not lnc;:lude any cooking or heating device consumi"Jlg kerosene, gasoline or gas, provided such device maele the fire undei'Wrlter'll speclllcatiOne for safety; Charmal broilers and wood and coal stovae, used outside of dwelling are classed a £11lmpllres and are prohlblt8d. •

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Ontt good way Jo wllilbnifil Sritokay's birthday this Fou~of July weekend Is to hea(f on over to Capitan for thEI big parede, rodeo and Qlher ll!lllvitles. Mes­calero wfll .Preeant a Pl!l,n!lde, ·ceremonials and a rodeo, as well ~o to the races, chllok out one of the area's m!HII¢81, magical or musical showe. Whatever y.ou do,,faav&,he rnatchell at horne.

You've heart! It befQre, but it bears repeating: "Only you can ·prellent forest fires. •

Thought for tlie day: "Jf there,s aQ opiDion, facts wDI be found to support It}' -.Judy Sproln

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1979

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. P&Z decisions should be made through survey

of.,: erationa were to be eompletely blllllll!d In the Village of Ruidoso:

1 know that· opinion surveys are is why 1 would like. to probablY not required acoording to propose a ebange in policy that

IJ"u&t Wllllled to voloe an oplnlon our code, but theu abould be so that would require publie oplllion sur· _--... • veys to ensure that a IIUI!ority of that Ileelllke Is beiDg 1.,..,_ by the people of Ruidoso can be fairly the people are being represented es the Village of Ruidoso. I oan't be- re~tl!d and not be subje~ to a required In a Democratic society. 1 lieve that 10 or 15 people can voice few ';"cliVJduols' personal opuJ!ons· "!mow that extensive surveys can be their opinion ogaiDst an issue and the!' just happen_ to be In the right expensive to the taxpayers but that is all it takes to promJit a pOSitions to unpi~D)ent th"!" what I am proposing is for a couple of Individual& at village hall changes. I ~ thl!ll' rebuttal II! volunteer eommittee of no more to take It upon themselves that o~ ~ all polimes ~ ~ea. than three people be set up to con­oily code needs to be rewriltell eon·· .Ill our c:ads are publ!abed m the duct the random surveys. If only earning this issue. baek of the paJ'Ol' m the, lf!!ol 100 people were surveyed, the Vd·

It looks like to mo that public nlitl~ and are open for public dis- loge eould•probably get a fairly ae-beiiJiup or opiDion IIUJ'VII)'B w0111d CUSSIOD. ~ npresentative sample of be conductecl prior, ta see it re- As e businese persoo and voter, I public opinion at no cost to ihe viJ. addressiDg the code Is even know that apathy Is at an all dmo loge. If this is not aceeptable. then justilied: Our govemment, wbethOl' high expocially wbeb it has do with there are many companies that it be loeal; c8tate or federal, is sup- an issue such es this that doesn't profs~onally. conduct theso sur­peead to reflect the ""'lorll¥ of the directly inlluenoe their 6nances, I veys lllezli0D81ve\y.

. People, of which is very rarely of also know that negative opiDiODS It is pitiful when our local non· liD¥ concern to most ofliciols or em· viewpoints get voiced and are beard profit Boy Scouts eannot even set ployees within govemment. much more than positive view "·-• -~~ · ~ land

A DIIW po"-• banning 888BOIJIII. · pointe. For ow•-le, a pereon or up a , ......... .,..ng conce ... on s

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Pets

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of Fun's supermarkets with011t being run oft' because of our. wondetlbl code that bas to be c:an·

.elslently enforced. Temporary ' stnaf>llidelemenade stands are not

even allowed by our ehildron In our O"WIIjlards.

I can't believe thai our sign 01'­doas not llllow a businesa

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OD sh0111d be to to eneourage, not discourage, free en­terprise end to keep such practic:es tiom being disenchanting to our valuable tourist baaed economy, I feel sofe in saying that the IIUI!ority of Ruidoso residsnts would allow such practices if random public opiniop were surveyed.

I am not presently living insids the city limits, but presently have my bemo under contract and hope· fully will be moving back insids the city limite and would be veey will· ing to voluntarilY serve In some type of capaelty to help implement policy that fully represents the people of Ruidoso.

Thank you. TeiT)' Whitaker

Alto P.S. My children's existing shaved ice stand Is loeated at Gavilen Can· yon and Highway 48 (outaids the elty limits) and not in Ruidoso Downs as The Ruidoso News in· correctly assumed. We are not in any shape, form or . fashion of. OHaled with the snow cone V<laders in the Downs.

We invite everyone to come out and see for themselves bow we are trying to change the stereotyped image that most of these eyp011 of stands represent and to sign our petition. A pieture is being anoloaed with this letter for the publit's

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8:30 1'-111~ SALE at Wal-Mart sponaored by 1ha Ruidoso High School Juaior.Varail,y eheOl'­loadora. Profits go toward det'taying souie of 1halr expenses.

1 am.-2:30 p.m,FAMJLY AFTERNOON MOVIE! "Living Free" at Ruidoso Public Library. Children under five years of ago have to he ac­eompaniad by an adult and all children have to be picked up inside the library ,.u soon as the movie is .over.

8 a.m.-3 p.m.-MESCALERO ACTIVITY DAY, at Chiricahua Plaza by the Mescalero Tribal f!tpre. Mescalero Againot Drugs will feature a 5K and one mile run for children, music by '"11le Foree," milita­ry static dieplaye and spoeial appearances by McGrufl', Buckle Bear, Smokey Bear, Vme and Larry. Free Pepsi and hot dogs. For more jnfonna· tio.n, call505-671-4494, ext. 264.

9:30-11:30 a.m.-DESERT SKY FOODS, 2810 Sudderth, presents a worksho:f' on acupressure, "How to Relieve Back Pain an Sciatica." For in .. formation, contact Maria Monke at 336-4896.

11:30 a.m.-5 p.m.-SATURDAY AFTERNOON IN THE PAliK FOR KIDS !!pi>DIIOI'Od by the Ruidoso High School JV eheerleaders to roise funde to help defray costs of some of their eapensze. '11be cost will he $10 per ebild. Your support or dona- · tions will be gladly acc::epted,

6:30 p.m.-LINCOLN COUNTY RISTORI­CAL SOCIETY on the pavilion at La Finca, San Patricio. Speaker and slides on "The Harvey Girls." Pot luck with theme of "Good Homo Cooking." Also bring folding ehair. For information, cal! 653-4545.

7-9 p.m.-THE BOOK STORE wi!! present li free lecture-discussion on "Angels," led by Linda Dressen of Abilene, Texas. If you've ever had an angel experience, or ever wanted to, you'll eqjoy this event. ·

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6 a.m.---BMOKBY BEAR BOT AIR BAL· LOON ASCENSION In Capitan.

' 10 a.m.-6 p.m.-RGA'a FIRST ANNUAL

SPOR'!1S CABD and Comic show sponsored by the Ruidoso Gymnastica AooociatiOn at 1he Rdidaoo Elk'a Lodge on Highway 70 Wast. Call 378-4661 for more information. · ·

6:30 a.m.~PANCAKE BREAIIJiAST at 1ha Capitan Senior Citiz..,. Center.

7:30 a.m.-14TH ANNuAL SMOKEY BEAR lOK AND ll MILE FUN RUN ataith>g at Smokey Boar Bouleverd anJi State Road 247 in Capitan.

10 a.m.-WILDFIIIE CHILl COOKOFF at Smokey Bear State Park in Capitan, with taotins from 1 to 3 p.m.

N '11 . Ti - ~~.,......BILES~•~• ·~",•J....,.....oLDWRSTRANCHRODEOat1he oon ee me~......,-~ v~~~ n....: "-'- Gr ---~- •· C •tan at 1ha Links at Sierra Blanca. $15 green fee and ...,.tiiD •.our Owmo m a)ll • cart, $40 Oldsmobile entry fee, one dozen golf balls included. $55 total entry foe. Cal! 1he Linke to en­ter, 1-800-8 LINKS 1. Linke staiTwill pair taams or you can make your own. Oldsmobile requires each team to have two players with handicaps at '!1ho Linke.

9:30-11:30 a.m.-8UIIIMER BIDLE SCHOOL at Sacred Heart Catholic Community in Capitan. Children in gradeo kindergerton through sixth are invited to attend.

9:30-11:30 a.m.-8UIIIMER BIBLE SCHOOL at Santa Rita Catholic Community in Carrizozo. Children in grades kindergarten through sixth are invited to attend.

9 a.m.-FANTASTIC FOSSU..S PRESENTA· TION by Carolyn Price at Ruidoso Public Library. Open to all!

FEDERATED REPUBLICAN WOMEN monthly meeting at the Smokey Bear Restaurant in Capitan.

7 p.m.-CHRISTIAN COALITION regular monthly meeting to be at Trinity Mountoin Fellow-­ship on Gavilan Canyon Road. Call Kerry or Toni Hellmna at267-2015 for further information.

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FIRST ANNUAL COW PIE PLOP, sponoored by White Mountoin Intermediate Sehool, in Capitan at 1ha Cil!eason arena. A $5 donation will reaorve a little piece of land In your name and enter you for the opportunity of winning a $100 gift o;er­tifieate from Wai-Mart. Reoorve your square at One Stop Flowers or Wai-Mart. ·

6:30 a.m.-PANCAKE BREAKFAST at 1ha Capitan Senior Citizens Center. .

10 am.-BMOKEY BEAR STAMPEDE PA­RADE in Capitan with 1ha 1hema "Happy Birthday Smokey!"

Noon-BARIIECVE AND OLD WEST RANCH RODEO at tho Capitan Foir Grounde In Capitan.

Noon to 4 p.m.-CARNIVAL, FOOD FAIR AND SILENT AUCI'ION sponsored by 1he Capitan lfjgh SehoolMuaie Boostsrs will he held at 1ha Capitan School multipurpose building.

2:80-6:30 CEBT on

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. . June fJ July

SpecJal

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KATHRYN LOUISE WOODY DRISKILL

RLT.presents "Play It Again, Sam" •-Play It Again, Sam," dlreetad by wookonde, July 111-!!8, and 28-30. ~ III~~Yed by Eliz8be1h Burgin,

Mary Danielaon 1he upcoming pro- ' 'l1ha p!Qy, whleh is In rehearoal tor coiullllent6 and Introductions to duet:ion of Ruidoso Little '11haatro, IIOW, waa wrillan by WqjK)y ~n. 8 b~ c(hqll!lfilid ~na will opan at !.E; TlnlrsiJlit,IJul,y Set In ig&O; ·~ lt '$n; sam· . Wlfti le~!blrii tll· ''ald tiie "

,-.14, in--fPe-th"'OIke. .. ext -do= bas iJdlnito appeal; -..... -- to Bat 8~ayed l)y .•

. ~::."' post 11961

Su 0":!":'.;t Includes Steve Norbury =·=~ uial':!11

nan1e1.!'t Performances will continue at 8 playing Allan FaliK, 1he n......,., Reservations ill' perlbrmancea

p.m. Priday and Saturday~July 15 byperaetiye day dreamer, who calls ebould b.o made by calling the and 10, and agoin day upon bla host liiand, Diok, playad Ruidoso Valley Chamber of Com· through Friday 1ho two' by Ron Qergsron and Dick's wife, merce atllll7•7ll96.

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DAR honors local patriots Dan S_torm and Nell Trout . 'l1ha Daughtare of the American Shop sponsored by 1ho Ilncoln . DAR, Dor. Bllilay. ·

Revolution held a eookout on Sun· County Medical Canter Ladies Aux- · 'l1losa pUsent in llddltion to 1ho day, Juno 12, at ths homo of mem- lltary. · two spacial guests were memhera bot, Marie Line. Dan Storm, a voteian of World and hushabds, DoroiiiY Bailey, Flo , Honored at the meeting wanl War n, was commended !'or faith- and Eugene Durand, GJaris F,gor-­

Dan Storm and Nell Trout fOr eom• . IUI!y fly1ng 1ho llag or tha Unitad son, Maria Line, Leato and I!D!d mUD!~ service aad acta of Statos every day !'or more than.20 Pllngaten, Juno anil W'.n&r Patriotism. years. Both were preaanted, W.U Jlawlay, Marclla Stawut, Sally

Mrs. 'J:!aut. was honored for bar plaques In show or appreciation by tatlll, Kat:~~¥.,. and,. :Qm!i, ~via. many dedieatad hours at tha Tbrlft ragent of1he Sierra Blanca~ Matti Yoder W!cl~·

Itemo to be lncludsd Coming Up section of''lba' numtbe

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Minnesota ~an

namsd of tha Year and

of peace,"""'"' me as people ab.,.. measages, peace may no lonor seem un­attainable - it willbeconie paJt of ~Ufe."

Winter is delighted that "Old Turtle" will be at The BoP~< Store from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. July 9, to promilte the book's message.

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won the lnternalional Reading As. socidon Children's Book Award. u.s. Reprasaatative Jim Over­star was so impressed with Old ¥•'• WJiveraal message that he gave compUmsntary copies of the hoP~< to ever,y DlOOiher of Congress, Houas and Senate, and the Preai· dent's Cabinet.

''We'll be having all kinde of ac· ; . ti~ties," she 1aid. "Roswell · · 1 •

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Happy graduates Kind$~ gradll~ at ·Ruldcie9 ChriS.: Mbeun\ey and Jace Erlo. LeBianc;§fro • tl8n 'SchoOl are:afl $111lles during. their pro• · from . .lli(t) Siera ·Eloise G!!lmer, gram raoently !!It the ii!CI\oOL The Class of Renee 'ffapp, MaoKenzle Chase Moble • 1994 Includes (b!!lck, . from left) Jimmie Nicole M$ria Ooth and Ha$thar Lenles a Wade Thomas 11, Jarad Rena Garner, Eric· McDougal. Ruidoso Christian School Is ln fan Davatos,-Sandov&l, Samuel Ryan the RuidoSo Oowns First Baptist Church.

J?owns sponsors social to help senior citizens meals program

•' . The Ruideeo Downs AllldliBr)' win ~a "Cake and Ice Cream Slllia!" and auellon to ralstl t\mde ueeclod to I'8DIJ\'IltB tha kitchen area at the Senior Citizens Canter in the

.. l)ovms. 'lbls-llmcllon win take place at

8:80 p.m. Tuesday, July lll, at the oenter.

o(!lller to be served there and at the village hall. delivorad to those who are unable The awdliary is esldng fur dona· to laave their homee. t;ons of aueUOD iteme which can be

'lbls program was ohteinad dropped oft'cat the Ruiiloso Dewne tbntugh the ellbrta of State Repro- City Hall.ltayhuret Said dondODB sentallve H. John Underwood and of monay from individuala er the State Agency program, ex· grOUJIB also would be greatly ap­p41insd Ruidoso DowJm Mayor Joe premated and ean he mailed to the Hayhurst. Ruidoso Downs Auxiliary, PO Box All~ $16,000 is 348, Ruidoso DOwns NM 88346, er

needed to renovate the kitchen eall 378-442.1! and someone will be whiCh requires all ateinlesa steel glad to come by and plek Up dona· equipment. · ·111mB of items er money.

Llnceln County Commissioner L. Tiekats fur tbe. eocial win be . RoY ever,yone to par-

avaltahle at tbe door, $2 fur adulte ticfpate got this BODior l!'l4,$1,f~phjl· ~ ~~ ..

Turtle, are . from God to the eartb, a prayer from tho earth baek to Qod." 'nul people lose sight of this unt;) Old TDrde spseka again, and they learn "to see God in ene another and in the beauty of all the Earth."

''I think the book is wonderful because it deeen't attaek aayone's

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A PO<Uiin of all hook .Balee go towarli prqjecto that promote BD• 'vironmental healing and intema· t;onal underateuding.

Pfeifer..Hiimilton have· brought Old Turtle to Iiiii fur the peace tour, convert;ng a Volkswagen Bsetle into a largar-than-lilil turtle ntad­ater. Children and adults all over the country will write meseagoa of . their own visions for peace among peoole and with the p41not.

the publisher& :hope to deliver

musician Shawn Loudermilk hae writtoo some special eoogs and win perform. Kids and adults ean wriie ,....., lettero here or bring tbem, 1md we want kido to make turtles OU\. of recyelad things Uke bettles, or whatever they want."

WiDtor win p41ce 'box tlirtles" in neighboring eommWJiUas to eollect letters from people who may not be , able to attood the event. · ·

"This is ·a·wonderful way to talk about spirituality, peace and harmoay, said Winter. "It reaches klde before they fonn prejudiC88 or biases, and children are tbe ones who can learn. That's wby the book has power."

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~d Turt~e

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Text by Douglas Wood Watercolors by Cheng-Khee .Chee

to "Old Turtle," the book, prompted such an publisher Is sending Old Turtle as a mas­outpouring of peaceful massages that the sanger of peace throughout the nmlon.

LIVE ON RAGE! · JACJK BAIJilR"S.

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Call 257-4001 or

FAX 257-7053 ---6:00

p.m. fOr the Monday p.m. tqr the Thursday lsaue.

I Annot.~neementa z Thank vou 3 PefHnaiS 4 Lolli end Fow.t 5 Unci lor Sele e Hou .. s tor Sate> 7 Cabtnll tot &ale 8 Real Estate T'edH 9 Real Est81e

-19 PtoplirtY"''-naaemeiu , 20.$to,.$f)JOe tor'ReAI tt.W•nttCll4lf'a.n• ~ P•t9Jre. IPr .. enl 23_. AuiOJ! -to, S.~e . 24 P!Gk••· ~ T1WM 2fii ·VSM iof $are H·MofutcycfesiOr.s..,. 27 Auto Parts

DEADLINES FOR ALL DISPLAY ADS: Thuraday, 5 p.m. forth•Mon· c:t.y lasu•; Tueaday, 5 p.m. tor th• Thurw.day Ia~ to Mobile Hd~,•• tor Sale

t t Buslne•• Opportunities 12 HOUitefli lor Renl

28 R.V.'a ami Travet Trail••• 29 UvealoCk 4HMI HorHa 30 Farm Equlpmenl

... •• 47 .. c ....

DEADUNES FOR ALL LEGAL Nonces : wednesday. 5 p.m. tor the Monday lasue; Monday, 5 p.m. for th1

13 Ap8rtment• IDI Rent ' J4 Mobiles lot Rent 15 fttoblle Spaces for Rene 16 Rll!flllo Share

31 -Feed and orlllli 32 Prodlfce and Pfanta 3:3 Pets and SI.IPP"-• 34 Y11rd &11fea

· 49 Chlhf em W.nted so Entercatnm•ft1 · ·

· Thursday IBBUe. , J

. ' ' 17 Buetneea Rftntele 18 Resort Rentals

3G Household Goods ·ae uu•c.t l...,tu•menla

\ 11 Firewood For sate !O.T~StovJoes.

All real estate in this news-P•I"'r the Federal Fa1r Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or dis­criminjltion baaed on race, JJ:Plor religion, sex, handicap, familliii status, or national ongin, or an intention to make any such pref­erence, limitation Qr discrimina­tion." This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertis­ing for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunit~ basis. To com­plain of diBcnmination, call HUD toll-free at 1-800-424-8590. For the Washington, DC area please call HUD at 426-3500. The toll-free telephone number is 1-800-543-8294. R-62-tli:

FOR ANY PERSONAL CRISIS -call the Mental Health Hotline at 1-437·8680 (collect). M-56-tfnc

YOU CAN GIVE the gift ofsight by bejng an eye donor. Contact any Lion or can 257-2776 for details and A donor card. Do it now; there is A tremendous need for eye tissue. L-87-tfnc

TRYING TO REACH MORE -people than our local market? How about 213,000 readers in 29 Hometown newspapen all over New Mexico. For $96.13 your 25 word ad will reach 29 papers outside of Albuquerque. Call The Ruidoao News at 257-4001 for more information. R-92-tfnc

FAMILY CRISIS CENTER - 24 hour crisis line. Answered by Ruidoso Police. 257-7365.

M-.T-99-tfnc KNOW A CRIPPLED or burned

child? Call Bbriners for free help. 257.7333 days, 258-5860 evenings or 257-4871, 257-2079.

18-S-13-tfnc HIV SUPPORT GROUP - maets

the 2nd Monday of each month. For information call 1-800-573-AIDS. M-7·H-tli:c

LOVING OTHERS SUPPORT -8!D:U p for friends or relatives of HIV + meeta the 3rd Tuesday of each month. For information call 623-AIDS or 1-800-673-AIDS M-H-7-tfnc

MOOD DISORDERS SUPPORT -Grou.P will be meeting Monday evemngs at 7:00. This grou~ open to an_y one with A • nosed mood disorder. 267-88 . 25-M-66-tli:

FEMALE - Intelligent, educated, fun, christian, seeking malo. Age 40-60, with like intereeta es­pocially christian. Ruth, Box 4026, Ala.mogunl}'1 NM 88810. uo•R-l1-2tp

roUND _ Men'• ·err· elaases with cbaluleable · . t reno-ea. GtindstAJns-Canl"'n Ofle !lo Touch ofTexas. 268-321!8. 17-M-12-2tf

il. I.nnd f<11· ::->nle .,

HORSE FARM - 18 acres Nagel eree. V meob and pipo fenc:e. 10 stall barn with living qharters. Irrigated paddocks, hay otorege, many improvements. Asking $140,000. 267·4486. 26-F-99-tfc

WANTED LANP - fur 12x60 mobile home1 preferably with hook-ups ana ohade treeo. In Lincoln, Tinnie Hondo or Picacho aree. c;dt Nevada 702-623-0798 after 6 pto !4onday -Friday, or anytime Saturday dt' Sunday. 31-K-10-4tp

13 PLUS - acres with improve­ments between Bonita and Nogal. Phone 1-50/S-354-3095.

)lf..9-12-2tp THIS RANCH WiU ceab Oow 33

sections 80% New Mexico State. 330 head carrying capacity. $400,000. $100,000 down owner financing. 3"'1-4369. 20-D-12-3tp

TIMBER. Game, live water, 934 acreo. excellent access, $700,000. M-D-12-3tp

COOL PINES • VIEW 5 + Acree • S*C,900

Perfect building sttq among the Pinon & Ponderosa pines wlfull view of sierra Blanca. t.evei, paved access. Electricity, telephone. Won't last. Tenns. Properties of the ~.CALL NOWI25N1045 1·800-AUIDOSO, Ext. 770.

MUST BELLI 16.9Acrea

Lola of tall Ponderosa pines surround this beautiful knoll, just walling for your dream or vacation hOme. Beautiful vfews of Afo BonHo Valley & Sacramento Mountains. A steal at $59.900. Terms. Properties of the SW. Call257~ 9045 1-BOD-AUIDOSO, Ext. 78.

RIVERFRONT BARGAIN

Five acres w/Jots of frontage on Rio Bonito. Cottonwood, oak, ponderosa & pinon wlhelp keep you cool. VIews of entire valley & Sierra Blanca peak. Restricted area. Only $49,900. Terms. Properties of the SW. CALL NOWI 257-9045 or 1-800. RUIDOSO, ext. 774.

fi. llon'•i'!-1 I(Jl' Hl.lle

HOME ON 2 213 ACRES- proper­ty backs up to river, 2200 sq.ft. g.2 with gameroam, two eer.Jl&· rege. $125,000. For an aJ>POlnt­ment leave measage lor BOn 257-6381. 26-L-8-4te

FOR SALE BY OWNER - due to health........,.,., App. 2200 sq. ft. Sierra Blanca view zoned Jieat, refrigerated air, C8il;ng fans, hot tab, bar, - living arees, 2 WB fireplacee, · IUmishod. $249,500. 258'5689. 36-M-12-1tf

CREE MEADOWS - filii\V'!Y homo. Four bedroom - blrtb, newly ......,vated, llJ!.ht and airy. UnfUrnished $129,900. 257-4695 or.267-6640. 18-T·l0-6tp

FOUR BEDJIOOM - 3 bedroom filler upper .on -Iota. *Jloeeible OWDer financing. $67,0()0. 378-4800 14-k_lO-Stp

FOR SALE - bY El Paso owners. Three bedroom, - bath, large den, rock fireplaee, double ga­rege, treed tot. $92,000.'915-581-1670 or 505-268-2186. · 24-K-ll-4tp.

Three bedroom, 2 bath home. Carport, decks, s1oral!e. great neighborhood. OWner finance with large down payment.

Dynamite duplex, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, furnished each side. Great cash flow. Owner finance.

1\vo bedroom, 1 bath home on nlee lot. $47,500. Owner financing. CaB BDL

Commercial Adobe with ltvlng quarters Upper Canyon $96,000 with owner financing. CaB Leon.

Four bedroom, two bath, J10o4 lm:allon. ~ $74,500. CaBBDL

Aspen Run - Two bW<IC>DI, two bath, fully fumlsbed. Big view. $89,000. CaB Bill

Block 206 La coiiSirUcllon 3 bath.

lJ. H(',d E..;Ut(('

LARGE AESTHETIC- PanoraiDic FoR SALE BY OWNER - Two ESTli.TJl: DIS!'IiiBSAL. -G...;.;.,;.. of ' Four bedroom three hath. bedraom two hath lbmished N-

VJOWH · ~ • -do ?~ . I---'-•'· vw..,· 1111111 totalJ.b!l107 -.a a.ijacent 01110 ...- ~-"'·· ot ~tee - - ~ .. ,... to""'·-"""~--· ~~-t. Ll .~ ·-~·- ~16. ~ ....._ ·--'• ....... """'" ...... M"""' ve alt:endetl "' nature. Owner 267- •• .....,.. ........... water imcl abllllllant wildlll8. 7886. 19-8-12-ltp ered. 258-6 . M-Q..102-tfc Poaaible finAncing. Call IlsaJty

WANTED _ Audienc:e to ODJoy !lAVE LEGITiMATE BUYER ,..c Services, 258-4674. 26-R-4-Itc hilarious live comedy thealn at fur 600·1000 A.U. rao.oh. Johft ALTO ALPS CONDOMINWM -Carrizo Lodge. WedJiesday. Bat- Kircbhofl; · Real Eslaf;e Bmker. 1i>ut ~ three bath. fUr..

~~i~-2:m 267-2012. ~7:.. rrll06-s:e.ar~· =w= ::~·~oa: FOR SALE BY OWNER - Due to 16·K·76-tic 4377. . · · lfi..Q..8.4t2_

health .reasons WHITE BY OWNER- Rulcloso, NM Cedar GREAT INVESTMENT!~"--:\7. MOUNTAIN home "PP"""- 3200 Creek sree. Large one bedroom, Park 114 hook-ups, sq. ft. Sierra Blanca VJOW, zoned .one+ bath boine. Den. willi laundry, reo 1llODI, on river. beat, refrigerated air, ceiling fireplace. Professionally Boautli\it 1900 ~.ft. home all fano, hot tab, bar, ~ li!inil ~~·I:' of :J:'~ ,rme .......... Call now Stlrman areas, 2 woocl bum_ing llri! 91= 79. ~;C. as-a.: B.ealllatafii, 3'18-4391. 26-S-8-~d86.Furniohed. $2411.000. 98-4? m7nto ..... .......,nm.---::::-'i!=-:=::-

. 36-M-12-1tf FOR W BY OWNER - FUliY VA= ~Call~ riJ:j furnished condo on Cree ~~91 .. , M-S8-7to

· . MODULAR HOME ~Meadows J!:~c:o:"""~~ MOiiiLE" '-lbiiY t\Jrnishect,.,~-wtth ·a lovely sunroom and 800 View of Sierra large Iota. Call now! >mrman

enclosed porch. In Hideway 77,6oo.llrm. 267-3737. Real Estate, 878-4391.. M-S!l-Hllls just west of Capiran ~-W-7-4tp 7to •

on 2.6 acnos with outstadd· RARE OPPOitTlJNITY- to own 2 ALTO LOT -:- InCiuil08 lidl ~ ing view of Sierra Blaiica. UJ>fl"'' Can.von building Iota. m!!'!:i~· $22 J~O

QUiet aud accesailile. Catfllsalty 0 .. --o:e-t Jean Gossett· us Price is just $72,500. Service for more lnformallol!, ComJI8!!!!81 Inc. Call 1158-4379

Call Gerda at ColdweU 258-4574. 19-R-4-tib or 336-779'~. 18-G-10-rtc

~=~_,J ALTO ALPif ti6NboMINIUM' - . FOB. SA&i,iJi o'WNEB -·.m<e "" · · two bedroom - hath. Great wooded ·lol in Ptlnderoaa

Weetern Wty Inc. 336-4377. Helghfa. Build or Dlaee mobile. M.Q..8..4tp $4000. 268-4386. 16'1>-10-&tp

• : 1 , - • • • ' •• ' , .• _, •

-.---------... -•. ·.: .~.-.. > .... · •... · .... , •. · .•.•• · .... ·-... · .... '·· ·.....,_......,_..;_;_ ....... ...___.,:tr...• __ __........____ ---'-~-·-,, ~ . -~~··''it.· ' .... ··-.,; rT_ •• ~I U6ti -·~<·f>\.;;Yennr-,;n-sr····,nm'·'pz"''pnr··!:rt'll ''?"··;;;;- ......... ,-,. - - ~-

f:~ lliahed. Century 257-9067

19114 PATRIO'r - 28lr48 Dou· blewi4e, Masonite sidiJJg, sbilll!le roof. Monthly -!8 ONLY $284. We dBiive1' and set-

. up In New· Mexico. 806·894-·1212. . 23-B-90-tfc

101 SRYLANE - in. R-. Thnoe bedroom, 1 l/2 bath,

· 12x80 fully furnished OD V4 acre in a nioe ~barbaod. 258-4487 or 33CI-4278, 20-H-110-tlb

LARGE FIVE BEDROOM- three bath. J?o.uble wi"!,, over 2,200 sq.ft. living · area,nreJJiace, all kitehen appliances. High 40's. Free Delivery and set up. Clall C.J. 1-800-667-9356 26-M-'8-Btc

QUALl'.l'Y - at allimlable prices. 2Jdl walls, tiiJIO and textures and. textured and much more. 4 bdr undar $2011/m, 3 bdr undar $189/m. Free credit cheek. 1-800-959-7275 DL58S. M·N-J2.2tfl

Mlif1'0Wiif- Tlll'e8 bedroom, two bath, extra nice, upgraded, V8

acre deck, -· eovered ~. IUmisbed. $67,200. 257· 4453. J.S.IJ..12-8tp

\1, Bllc,ilH'"~ Oppot tunit\(•S

EXCELLENT BUSINESS J4. Di in lluljlos, eou ·• jmm'· . S.Yearw~··.

· 'es.and lnlbrmatlon. write to rn' Box 12&;.B, Ruid- NM 88l!45. Please lncluds your phone 11. 31-B-2-tlb

RUIDOSO SBLl!CJ'IONS THB C1WC1C11R HOME ·in Wid"' MI. Estates. B!egant, Spodous, Qwlllty l'luoughout-$250.000 INCLI.JDING ALTO C01JNTRY CLUB MEMBl!liSHIP 108)ad< Little Drive •. A SWI!I!T ANOSECLIJDEDCO'ITAGE IN THB WOODS..

· Tuel<edawaym'laguletcukfe.sacbutln Wlllkinl<dls""""'to = Tluee bedrooms, two batlis, wo.lder£ul wooj~s ..• $89,50if567Seccmd

· Sierra Blanca Realty satlyBudallaller Sales Coasullant

700 MocbcmDrive .Jbal'laoa

RuidosO, NM 88345 (105):1M4576

. .

RESULTS -are in sight whan .YOU uss the claasilled sectiOll. The Ruidoso Newa, 257-4001.

COl I LE COUNTY,·TEXAS 111& •GMinfptMI fann with ..

puture,. saeo.oo per.... . OT&R~M.

48ftir.ferm

LAS /INIMAS CO. COI.ORADo 25,750 •ere J'8JIGb, t8J peraCM. CATRON COIIIJIV, NIW MBXICO

1280 acr. ranch

~OHN KIRCHHOFP RNI_B_,

l'lafnvltW, TOila (!108Jft3.784ll

Auldoao, Naw Maxloo (1081217 .......

We have buyers lntereated In amaU ~d large nmohes.

• •

130 · J.PioN . FARRAR - ~e • FOR SALI!l.- 1~ Volks""'J!eD, be<1Nom 1 814 bath unfUmisbed amall window Gn8Jnal> Cell878-homll. h.cstt front ;mel atorage 5492. · · · M·M-94-tlb

· shOd. AvalJ. July 1, $850 mmth FOR SALE· - ·1980 camani 850 plus biDs. CaD Cindy, Gary $1,200. cali37&;.48U eveninge or

• Lynch &alty, . ,2'6'7-4011. leavemsssageforJoe. M-M-2· . . M.G-J.2..1tp. t1b ·

ti LOCKE - Thnos bedroom tWo BUJL\RU STATION WAGON -bath furnishsd home. $800 4WD Turbo, mreellent ClOlldltiOll. mDllth plus bills. Cell Cindy, $6il96. 33S;.7047. M..s:B-tll> Gary ~ Reolty, 257-4011. 1996 PONTI'AC - C:.and Prix ex·

M.G-12·1tf caliOllt eonditio11. 46.000 miles, *'il"'ES011PEftA:ii1D"'TE"""'LYv-=-_-:_;;::;;~i::· :;'T.ho:;;uses;:: · V&,_AC, Front WD, Auto. 257·

for property. Call C Gary so..,_ · J.ll.1·10-4tp . • LynCh. Realty. -4011. 1991CHEW-s.10Exlimdedclib,

M-0..12-ltf 85 000 miles V6 all power ... PRIV.;;· '""A:"'r"'Er:'"1o>.~;;;e-;;b;;;e&r.::;::;m;:-eafi;::i;inr;'. 5s),.ed, $9'.250. 25114764. 19-B-

Weel!!Y or monthly. Beforences. -.i1~1J..~2tfllp:.Villll. mPrn=-r;;;;;;;;;;:;:: . . N:o Pets. Good r.o.atton. 378- f972 voLK8WAGON - Convert-

4161. M-M-J.2..2tp ible. restoration in ~os. THREE BEDROOM U!!· New parts engine overbaDied.

furnished. oountry loeotion at Csll267-6736. aftsr five. M.S. THE FARM. One· milo wset of 12-2tp · Wal-mart, HW1 70 west. 1983 LESABRE - Buick. li2 000 Reforences reqmred. 257-9549 miles. $2800 OBO. 257-il849 18-D·l2-l!tc M-B-12-Stp

HOOSE FOR kENT - By cwnsr. 1937 TWO 'bOOR Subaru 4 Two level, l{,ur bedroom, two spaed Runs great. $900. OBO. bath, _Iorge Uviua area, office. 8'18-4427 M-P·12-2!c NO PETS. For information call

· 606-887.0932. 20-V-J2.3tp

VARIOUS TYPES OF - llsntals available. lleforsncea ~uired, uc pats. Give us a call. Owen

· 336-4444. . M-H· 79-tfc RENTlLS olliciencies, npart.

mDllts, . houssa. COlltuzy 21 . As!!."':! Real Eatote, 251-9057.

M-C-118-tfi: SUPER NICE - FUllY i\ii1ii8hlid,

one bedroom, $600 a mOllth. 25&;., 4334. 10-M-ll..tfc

SOWDER APARTMENTS - on river. Two bedroom, 1 112 bsth, carpeted, un!Umished, with DlBJor ' appliances, dis· hwaaber,Pflti012!!tsid• storage. VERY LOW u'l'ILITIES, water

Past Credit Pl'obteme Keeping you from ftnaadng a Carl w..,.,. ......

CaB Lyadt of'Mc:Ma9ters .

•• S78-4400

1934 DOUBLE CAB DUALLY­eonditiop. 354-2144 even-743· 7815 Weekends. M-C·

P.aid._F'i'tst month"• utilities paid. 21J..P.l1·2!c • VERY CLEAN. No pets.,..vail- · . · able July 15 or sooner. $460 per . 1970 FlOO - Ford Jilek up. 300 hp month 2117-8990. 39-S-U·tfc • motor'" fu~ .speed, ~sse trac-

TBEPEE OABINll _ And Tl'liiiOi tion. uooa tire!. . BhiiU -~-Park. Niglitl,y Cabin rental. · $960:00. 378;.42·tt: 1S;.P.'J2-Monthly KV ilnd trailer space 1tp rental. 100 Mecheui, Ruidoso. 257-4413. 1&;.0-12-ltp .

NICE J.i'URNiSHEb - Ons bedroom apartmsut. Bills. ~aid. No r,ts $300 per month. 258-575 . · M-H-12-<Itp

FOR RENT - HUD approved or $310 per mOllth. TWtl bedroom

· mobiiO home. Water paid. Nci pets. 257-7739 or 623-8404.

' 18-P-J.2..2tf THREE BEDROOM - two blith,

with fireplace. By tho! river: 88fl. 4325 M·B·l2-tfe

NICE AND LARGE - Watar ~d, natural gas and cablevision awilable. Near Y, Easy access. Moving allowance. 37S:6496 or 278-4498 17..().11-tfc

TEEPEE CABINS - And Ti'ilill!T Park. Nllrbtly cabin rental. Monthly lfV 8nd traile,! space rental. 100 Mecham. Ruidoso. 257-4413. 20.-C-12-8tf.

, ' A

"'· -

-.•-·

'

' .

. . . . .. • •

. ~- .. - --- ·····--·'·~-- -~- ~ :..-::.· :~~~~~fr~:;;;l:;;o,.,...,."!¥Wo;~_;;..;..:.<;·~.'~*~~-:;;r';·~~~-z~r~~·-~~·.,.::-;_._,~--~'~ ~:~(·-~7?~-~----~::'~~~:~·-r;:4·:-·1t-~·:.;,~~r~~~1,:.:;~-~:·-~~-/-- ......... ..,~·;.---··~--_·:-·~ _..-.•. _:;, .• , .':,:::.:.,·-_:],;> ~- ,:._) :-'·' _ _. __ '·

AUSTRALIAN SHEPARD -registered

and

9-

FREE PUPPIES - only two left. Blue Healer and Rottweilsr ......,, 257-5827. M-B-12-1tp

FREE KITI'ENS - multi-<olors. Please call. 336-8411.

M-0-12-4tp

GARAGE SALE - 222 Rio Arriba. Upper end. Saturday only of gooilstum Sam. M-W-12-1tp

GARAGE SALE- Saturday only. 124 Horton Circle1 clo!"' to Sonic. Washer, dryer, rurnitur..e, chil­dren's clothing and computer.

17-H-12-ltp BIG YARD SALE - Saturday,

June 25, 1994. 9:00 am till 5:00. 418 West Drive. Ruidoso Downs. Follow signs. !8-C-12-1tp

YARD SALE- Saturday, June 25. Refrigerator, nice carpet remenents, baby furniture and c1othea, misc. Cherokee Village Sp #70. 9am-5. 18-P-12-ltp

RETIREMENT/MOVING - Sale. Lazy boy cheiz, bridge table/chairs, dillhealpasoware, Kirby sweeper, buildmg equip­ment. 105 Quail Run, Desr Park Woods, Alto. 26-8-12-ltp

THREE FAMILY - Garage sale. Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. Swing set. 211 Hart Avenue off Paradiss Canyon. M-P-12-ltp

GARAGE BALE - 302 Barcus. Multi-family garage sale. Sat 25th. 8:30. Luts of mille.

M-H-12-ltp MOVING SALE - Thursday, Fri­

day and Saturday. Antiques, plumbing, tools, furniture. Fawn Ridge, 123 Buck Trail.

M-G-12-1tp INSIDE SALE- Mom's moving in.

Stuffs gotto go! Saturday 25tb. Sam-1pm. 200 Spring Drive, Ruidoso Downs. 18-G-12-ltp

GARAGE SALE - 800 Hull. Satur­day 9am. No early sales. Found a bunch more stuff to get rid of. Luts oft.eaebing stuft'. 21-C-12-ltp

GARAGE AND MOVED SALE­

SATURDAYONLY JUNE25,8-? 118SKYVUE

M-R-12-ltc

CARPORT SALE - Rain or sbine clothes, furniture, appliances, etc. White bouse on bill across from Handy Haoks. 505 Mechem. Saturday and Sunday. Sam. 21-T-12-1tp

THREE FAMILY - Garage sale. Saturday, June 25, 94. Entrance to Mountain Salvage follow signs to house on hill. 17-B-12-ltc.

YARD SALE - 309 Ksys. 9 till ?. Sears electric weedeater, stucco, gas, BBQ grill, dillbss, crochet, bedspread, kitchen items, clothes, tree bouse, toys and lots more good things. 257-6848.

28-P-12-ltp MOVING SALE - Friday and Sat­

urday. 8 till noon. ONLY. Gas grill, 250 dirt hike. full set stonewarefutencils, household items, etc. We have it all. 102 Skylane. Absolutely no /early hirda. 29-S-12-ltp

YARD SALE · - antiques, collec­tables book cases, Swamp cooiBr, vacuum glass storm door, tons of SiiUiilttems. 201 Junction up from catholic cbureh. 6-3 Satur­day June 25. 28-M-12-1tp

MOVING SALE - June 25 and June 26. 9-4. 601 Parkway. Al!ua Frill. M-G-1-t.c

ORIENTAL RUG - 9x12, earthtons colors, paidJ8,000, saorifice $1,500. <llimp le set blue leather barral chairs, $750. !tams like new. 336-9110 fbr in-l'ormation. 23-B-10-Stp

FOR SALE - Dining tabll! with two leaves, finlr chairs $100. Large colfee table $50. Portable butane gpll $15. Wedding drass, size 12, $40. Self correcting elec­tric typewriter, $100. Phone 257-7241. 30..M-12-ltp

CONSOLIDATING - TWo hOmes. Must sell excess furniturs, area rugs, misc. All quality itams. New or like. Excellent prices. 336-9679. 20-M-12-2tp

RED DOOR ANTIQUES -is now open at Fenton's Gallery, HWY 70 Eas~ Ruidoso Dowas. 378-4481. M-R-4-tfc

"WINTER MOON" - First addi­tion. By Bruce McEiya. Un· framsd $400. OBO. 682-3429 leave message. 13-M-Il-2tc.

DELUXE GOLF CART - for sale, new batteries, radio, etc. 257w 4781 day time. 12-G-10·2tp

M-Il WITH BARREL- extension, giock model 23, S&W sigma .40, SKS rilles 7 .62x39 .223 available 257-7415. ' 15-W-11-ltp

17 112 FT 10 - 185 fish and ski all new interior. trolling motor, live well~, $5000 17ft camper $1000. 803 null258-9296. !9-A-11-4tp

FOR SALE 81 Bass Tracker with HP Mercury. Bilge E' live well, fish finder, tro · motor and dual batteries. $26 . 257-5203 efter 5:00 pm

24-E-12-2tp

THRIFT SHOP - LCMC AUXIL­IARY. Open Monday throul!h Saturday, lOam to 4pm. !40 NOh Hill Drive. Telephone 257-7051. Your donations of usable household and clothing items are apprecillted. Let us sell your 11treasures". We are non-oivfit: the money is used to better equip our hospital. M-T -89-t:tnc

MOUNTAIN SALVAGE biiYiDi wrecked cars, custom exhaust ~tems, mechanic on duty. Three miles east of track. 378-8110. 17-B-7&-tfc

HUMANE SOCIETY Tbrifl. Shpl'f 629 Sudderth (next to Aroya white stucco building iD rear) 257-5463. Open Wednes­day, Thursday, Friday, Saturday 12pm-4pm. Cmne and browse. Also. don't forget us if you have any serviceable househOld items fur donation.. M-H-64-tfuc

SUNQUEST WOLFF TANNING­BEDS. New commercial bome units from $199.00. Lamps, lo­tions., accessories. Monthly menta low as $18.00 Call free new color 9197.

I

ty ;;&\J now M-A-9-Btp

STEEL BUILDING SALE - · . Heavily discounted fbr limited

timsl Wicltha 30' to lliO' various length. Most sizes avialable. Call now lbr special .Jiricing. 1-IIOQ.. 766-4790. - !lf-N-10-211'

ALASKA JOBS - Earn · .!'!! . to $30,000 in tluee months ll8bing Salmon. Also const..uction, ean­neriea, oil IWids plus morel For iDlltJ,ediate response~ eall l..fi04-

. 646-4513 Ext K7896 24 hours. M-N-10-2tf

SPORTS CARDS and comics, can ba seen ajl;etnoons 3pm to 6pm at Curiosity Cottage, 271 lfwy 70, e&st in Ruidoso bOwns. Call378-8305. 21-R-11-

WANTED - audience to l!lliay hilarioUs live comedy tbeatno. The Enchantod Tbaatno at Car­rizo Lodge. Wednesday - Satur­day. 18-W-11-2tp

FOR SALE - motor ~· ba1met $59, Dresser $25, Crib $30, side by aida reliigerater $200. 258-3311. 18-A-11-2tp

RUSSIAN IDGH SCHOOL -student- U.S. Congress grant, arriving in August. Become a host family with AISE. Call 1-800-SIBLING M-M-1.2-2tf

STEAM CLEANER - For sals. In­cludes trailer, other accessories, and customers. $4600. 257-4336. M-H-12-4tp

FOR SALE - 20" boys bike, play houss, swing set. Baa at 311 Mechem. M-A-1.2-2tp

BOCK POLISIUNG - Silversmi­thing . equipment. Chipper­shredder, bunk bads, recliners, eiz buckey table, gas grill, tent, aquarium with fish. 378-4628

20..B-12-2tp MUST SELJ, - , Kirby vacuum

~joansr,lt co~s wi~ tho lbllow­mg accessoties: _ .itbumpooer, spray painter and compressor. Brand new, used only 2 months. Call354-2541. 25-G-12-tfi:

40' ALUMINUM storm door $75. Black Mesh sun shade, two strips 10x20 $60, Power baad fbr any vacuum $75, Tappan Micro­wave $50. 437.0288.

23-N-12-ltpp CANON ELECTRIC - 'IYI>ewriter

$80.00. 378-4427 ext. 12'14 M-P: 12-2tp

Compubtla for Sale AMIGA 3000: 10 mag AAM, Int. 960012400 Fax modem, ext disk drive. AMIGA 600: 4 meg RAM, FUdce,..Ffxer, ext. GVP 60 meg HO, ext 2400 bp$ mod_ern.Bo~h In mint condlUon. 338-7084 rda-l or aaa..7082(Mnlna-.i'

GOOD USED CLOTHING - toys, disbas, lamps, kitchen Items, small furniturs items, line tbur other housshald items. J!\piag Hands Tbrifl. Shop fbr Christian Book Stero of Capitan. Call 854-2025. After 6/JJI/94, Donations AcceJ>ted. A Mlnist.y of Spirit of Life Apostolic Church. 411-W.P. 4tp -

. -·. ,. :d . . . 0. •

,""

1: ;

GREAT OPPORTUli11TY'- ftit ma­ture reBJl"n'!fble individual With nof;ail upertenee in sales man­agement, buyiJ,g, msrchandi&qlg no"'MD£ & operations fbr ladies speeial!-f shop. Send resume to The Attic. 1031 Mechem Ruidoso NM 88846. · 31-A-0-tfi:

INN OF THE MOUNTAIN -GODS in Masoalero Dl!eda honaskeeper ASAP. Please apply at the personnel oftice M-F l!-4. 111-1-0-261!:

HAIRDBESSERS AND NAIL Technicians. booth space avail­able elean, lsge, air­OO'Dilltionsd salon. see or call Sharon at Sbarou's Heizstylea, 413 Mecham, 257-9278. 21-R-6-I!W

INN OF THE MOUNTAIN GODS - in Masoalero needs a nisbt auditor ASAP. llPM - 7AM shift. Cmnputer experience 111'8ferrell Contact tho Peraonuel l>lllea Monday thru Friday 9-4 28-l-7-41e

RECEIVING CLERK - Part lima. person. The Attic. M-. .

·• . •.

~ --~;-:.•

~ Gleddsti, Su . . . RUidOsiiM~~~ 200'~~'"""""" lliddoiaiJ. NM 88846 · ~601i'2G'T-4051 .....,._. applicants wiU ba inter-

viewed !6ll<!wibtr initial . of · a!>lliicat.lon materi:J""~

· • .a~;;.... . ...-r........-.. •ON .. DEADLINE- -~~ '~uns30,1994. 69-R-12-lltc

IIEceP'nONIST · PART•11ME

People-oriented Individual tpr new lOCal Qfllce of national NYSE- nGeded lmmedfately. Gocid offiCe

·.skiJis & computer data army --nacaasary. Soma -nd& required. COinpetltlva salary. EiOE. Call Anita Bn>Wn, PR>pertles of .the ·

t :..g . ·._ .... ..:.

Gab' At:hr.r'-IJ* Foxworth __ aauf~:h

Building Materiats Center, needs a Part-Time Attendant with the following qualifica­tions. • Knowl¢ge of Buildi!Jg

Materials; Mach Skills a plus

. • Ability to the monitor flow of ysud facility

• Ability to greet """ direct customer _traffic •

The ideal applicant must be solf-mplivl!fed, a team player and •af.~ll' pon•9Jouo .wJtb

· · e:tcelle'dt1 ts'll~roriiEftls8tWce skills.

We offer a competitive wage nd comprehensive benefits. If interested, apply in persou to the Genem1 Manager at

Foxworch- Galllraltll BuildbJ& Materials Center · 2Z63Bwy.'70We.t

Ruldo$o, NM 111134$ We am an Equal Oppom&ally Bulp!O)'ft ........... ...,..._. __ "• --·

AIIIDDIII:t Foxworth - Galbraith

Building Materials Coute.r, needs a Part-Tilile Yard/Warehouse Associate with tha following qua!lf'lca­tions. • Knowledge of8ulld'ilfg -~.

• Knowtedp of-1\'lilg anc1 iiMntOI)'proi<;tices; math skill&aplllii ·

·• Ablll&ytolldlat~ • On prodUct setectiOit . ..

. ' -l\). s('l'\ lC! -.

Rich pBJidng

'

and

..

ALL

·W. Child t ar{'

OAYCARE - 1DI 11Dme. 1iceDse ptllding. 2511-41611. M-P-7-4tp

WILL Bil1iYSI.T - in my home. M· ,F .. Some niJ!hts, :'.£. U.,. wei·

.· • 'COJIW, Nutritious , 811acks, . aJtd lots il£ filii. Dave ;referenoea.

Call 267421i3. 12pil>4r>m or 6pm-7pm. . 26-U:ll-2ql

BABY Sl'l'l'ING - 24 hours end weolrends. Call 267-8768.

M·P-l2-3tp

~.268-5546 WITNU$ D!Y hood snd

oea1 of the Oial>ict ~art of LhH:oln Co~D!tj>, New M~xico, on Ju"e 13, 1994.

MARGQI,INDSAY

-•~· CLBRK..OF1HB DIS'IlUCT COURr ·

BlC I!LIZABBI'H LUBRAS, DI!PllTY

11!1326 4T(6)16,Z3,30(7)7

LEG,M. NOTICE TWIILFrB

J.UJ)JCI"l­DJI;I'tRICT

COUNTY OF LINCOLN

S'I:A.TE OF NEW MEXICO Np, CV-!14-107 FEDEUL

NATIONAL MORTGAGB

ASIIOCIATJON, · Plalntltt,

""· .JAMES C. LODEN aad SALLY E.

LODEN, Ills wUe, and ANY TENANTS

PRESENTLY RRSIDING IN. OR UPON THE RE"l­

PROPERTY CONCERNED WITH

HEREIN and. ANY AND "1-L OTHER

PERSONS · CLAIMING· AN

INTEREST IN AND TO THE SUBJECT

.·~lf~ Defeadau.ts.

1'40TICB op SUIT STATE OP NBW

MEXICO TO THB A.BOVS . NAMED DBF BNDANTS, ORBBTJNGS: You -hereby notified that the ahove-11811Jed Plaintiff bas filed a civil ~on against you in the above--entitled Court and cause. the

-~~~----~~~~~~----~~~--~~~~~~~~--~--~--~--~~----~--~ genu~ .object memof ~ · being to foreclose a

Legals .JUJ)ICIAL

DISTRICT COURT S'l"A'l'E OF NEW

MEXICO COtiHTY OF LINCOLN

DliLlJERT G. SIIORETTE,

Plalatlft,

YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFI£0 that tho abOve l'lalllllff bas rued • Complaint tor Qplot ndo in lbo Dlstr;ct Court of Liucol.D.. Cw:aty,. New McxloO, <:lvll Docket No. CV-94-t34:Thlo object of

"'" - lJ to qtllot tide aaaJnatlbo llefoadants in older i<lt tbi> Plalllllfl' to obtain <I"'* iillclltJ aod to Ot" foUowiDJ dellcribed nild (il01IiOttY lil<lated io Llli<!Oid '<llb\lnty, Now

mortgas:e dated October 27, 1983, by .... - ... JAMBs c. LODEN sod SALLY B. LODEN, his wife. Mortgagors. and PIRST CITY M 0 R T 0 ·A 0 B COMPANY. Mongagee. · being Lot 24 of A TOUCH OP TBXAS. a townhouse project. LincolD County, New Melcieo, lbo .a.n.sa bolng 200 GriadsiQae Csnyon Rod, Urllt 24, 8uicloso, NcwMcxleo.

BB ADVISBD that unless . ,xou eotet Jqu.r appoarailclio ill """'~ 011 or bef,.. J\agast ~- 1!194.

. bY dtifailli wlll'

,, -

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Cli!RKOPTHB . :tll'STliiCTCOlJRr · BrtRthnltadtt•**: -· · wun

4T(t)lt,zJ,31(7)7

· urc..u. MOTtca 'l'WIU"nn

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____ ,

COURI' By: lsiBii2llbelh Lueras

Deputy Clerk 11!1329

1 T(6)23,;J0('7)7 ,14

' . ',,-, . . .,~ ... on · 3T(6)Z3,27 ,l!O

P.M. et L2it ·Nom.· ~·. JNVI'il\TloM POll

Thlo Board .......,.. the .. n 0 .... 11- ·~ .. Jlshl.lo toject- .,w ·all .... w .... "'" ~ ....... bl4s . and wolve all ' l'ROl'0$4.~ FOllP biclDiicRUties. ARCHI'l'DCTVUL

IBIM!keGiadden . lllllli.VtCEs · Thlo Hoodo Valley BoiUd

Bupea(ntondeot ·' of Bd .. ation hll'o!qlleSting a,.idosoMunlcipqJ pr~posah · from . Schoo1s ilrCbitectural firms

11!1341 2T(6)Z3,27 interested in prOvidiD&

LBG"l- NOTICE . profeasloaiol ......me to ihe MEETING NOTICE school district i:onslstllJ& •

LEG"l- NOTICE The lJncoln County of ARCHITECTURAL CAJ.lo FOR BIDS Board of COitlmlssionors SBRVICBS. .

1. Hondo Valley Public wUI hold a sJleeiaJ Board . Spocificallons for lbo Schools: is rcccriYilig; bids meotfDB on Tuesday •. June service and all contractual to provide, milk for the 28, i9P4, beglnniJig at terms and conditions 1994-95 sQboO) _year. Tho 9;00 A.M. The meedng is . appUcabfe t~-n!~e sealed bid tmiBt be received the · b1:- · • Jll'OCUremeDt ate &vquaulo

open· to pu ...._ and in the office of the bY. 2:00 pm, Jul~ '12, will bo held m the 1994 to be opened at a Conamission Meet~ng Superifttendent, Qondo regular board meedag on Room of the Lincoln · Vall~y PubUc Schools. July 12. 1994. cOunty Courthouse t'n ' Hondo,. NM 88336. 653~

. . A411. U. Hondo Valley PubUc Carri-'OZO. Agenda· Js ~ .. 1 11 •- aled

Schools is receiving bids ·-"-•~ 24 ho · ~ • "•v.t"...,....s mu ~ se a,......._, urs pnor 1o and ......~.ono_._r.., identified to Pft!Vide propane for the the meeting. __,..........._., on 1994-95 school year. The MARrHA OUBVARA the face of the envelope.. sealed bid must be: received J;.SSISTANT COUNTY They must_ be received in by 2:00 pm, July 12. . MANAGER . the Supcrintendcnt's oftice 1994 to be opened at :f#9l42. IT(fi)23 by 2~00 pm, June 29, regular meeting on JulY · _____ ..;..;.....;.....;;;.;;.;;;,:.:;;;. 1994. PropQsals. wUI be 12, 1994. . LEGAL NOTICE epened and n>a<!Adoud at a

Specifications for tbei Region IX Education s,pcdal BoardofBducalion· services arc available in Cooperative Coordinating meetins on June 29. 1994, tbf\, office of the Council m.eetin& at 7:00 PDl in accordance Superintendent. PO BoJr. Monday. June'2.7, 1994 _ witb the New Mexico SS, Hondo, NM 88336 or 1 1':00 a.m. _ · RBC IX Piocuremeut Code: The telephone 6534411. The .• Conference Room • 1400 board shall award a Board .reserves tbe riaht to Suddertb • (f.uidoso, NM. contract based ch. the accept or iejcct an;~ all 1bc meeting is open to the specifi)d criteria. whk:b is bids 11ubm.itted, waivins public. Tentative agenda not li..U.ted- to price. The minor tecluticalities. irems include: Approval of right 10 reject any and 81.1

fsfCiare TinBuely Coordi.Jiator oflnformatioa proposals, and to waive . Business Manager Services, RBC;IX State technicalities is reserved

#19-~37 Agency status update, by the~~ u..-n.: ...... -6T(6)20.23.27,30 approval of' staff ---.-.

(7)4,7 salary/benefits. In SchooiBoard.Ptaident _____________ .....;...;.._ accordance with the Hondo Valley PUblic

LEGAJ., NOftCE American With Schools CALL FOR BIDS Disabilities Act. #9l41i-

Tbe Ruidoso Boanl of comm.uni~y'members arc 3T(Ii)23.27,30 ··EducatiOn desires to request to contact Sandy

'=~~fico ::;:.do~.,;:;;::;. a:! ·r~n':,W'!:ltt Speci;fic-aitfons 4re . meded ,, REQUI!:STS POR

available in 1bo office of IB/Saody Gladden, BIDS FOR SCHOOL the Superintendent of Director BUS Scbools, Mike Gladden, 11!1343 2T(6)Z3 27 The Hondo Valley &old 200 Horton Circle, . ' of Education is requestins Ruidoso, N.M. 88345 or LJ!:GAL NOTICE bids for parcllase of 21· .....,..,no257-40SI. REQUEST J10R passoOgDtsc)toolbusc •··

Bids must be received in PROPOSALS SpociftcaUods for the lhe Superintendents office Region IX Education service ud aiJ contractual by 4:00 P.M., July 19, Cooperative Related terms and conditions 1~. 'Blda wiU be opened Sed•ice Providers BPP.licable to the ODd read aloud at the (Occupational Therapists. procun:mcnts are available regular board meeting on Pb.ysical Therapists, ln the office of the July 19, 1994 at 7:00 Speech/Language Superintendent, Hondo P.M~ •at the Ruidoso P at b o I o g i s t s • Valley Public Schools, Scbool Administration Psychologists, Motor Hondo. NM 88336, 653-0fllce, BoiUd Room. Sonoic:es AssislanlS) 441 I.

The Board reserves the Minimum. requirements: Proposals must be scaled right to reject any and all I. State Department of andadequatelyldentificdon bids and waive all Bdncationl.icensure tbe face of the envelope.

. tecbnical.itics. 2. Membership in They must be received in Mike Gladden natioua11icensing agency - the Superintendent's office

Superintendent State of New Mexico by 2:00 pm, June 29, Ruidoso Municipal licensure Complete 1994. Proposals will be

Schools Request for Proposal opened and read llloud at a 6340 1T(Ii)23,27 iafonDation available at speciaiBoardofBdncation

LEG"l- NOTICE CALL FOR BIDS

The Ruidoso Board of Bclucatioa wishes to receive .bids for milk for tile 1994·9'. Specifications may be pjckcd ap at lbo office of <Ito Suporin~odsril, 200

..

ltuidoso, -or telephona

RBC IX Office, Only meeting on June 29, 1994.,. fUlly-qualified candldetos at 7:00 pm in accmdanco need inquire. (505) 2S7- with the New Mexico 2368 • Ssody Olsddon. Procurement Code. The

REQVI!ST FOR board shall award a l'llOl'OSALS contract basod 011 tho

Reaion IX Bducadoo specifted criteria,. whlcb i8 · Cooperative Educational not limited to price. The Disgoostlc;an Services right to reject any snd all

Minimum. Rqu:inmtents: proposals aacl ·to waive . D-of ""'bnicallll08 hi .....,..,....

by tile boanl.

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.

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Apache Indian Assembly of God

Mescalero Donald Pettey. pa8tor Telephone; 671-4747

Sunday School-9:4!1 Mn. Swaday worobip-10:4S a.m. 1 p.m. Wedneaday servicell-7 p.m.

First Assembly of God 139 E1 Paso Road. RuidO!Io

Rev.H.T.SmnWWnd,pastor $unday School-9:45 am. Sunday worahip-10:30 a.m .• 6 p.m. Wedncaday uerviceo-7 p.m. Royal RMgera Miniatry-7 p.m. Wednesday

BAPTIST First Baptist Church

Carrizozo Hayden Smith, Pastor

Sundoy School-9:45 a.m. Sunday worship· II a.m., 7: 15 p.m. Olun;h trnining-6:30 p.m. Sunday

First Baptist Church Ruidoso

420 Mechem Drive D. Allen Ceadey, PBBtor

Sunday School-9:30a.m. Sunday wonhip-10:45 a.m., 6 p.m. Wednesday uervices-7 p.m.

First Baptist Church Ruidoso Downa

Randy Smith, Pastor Sunday School-9:30a.m. Sunday wonhip-11 a.m. Sunday Evening-7 p.m. Wednesday pmyermeeting-7 p.m.

First Baptist Church Tmnie

Bill Jonea, Pastor Sunday School-9:4S a.m. Sunday wonhip-11 am.

lg lesla Bautista VIda Eterna 420 Mechem Drive

L.uio F. Gomez. Pastor Domingos: Eacuem DominicallOa.m.

Culto de Predicacion 11 n.m., Cullo de Predicacion 6 p.m.

Miercolea: E!&tudio Biblico 7 p.m. Mescalero Baptist Mission

Mescalero Rev. lim GillilAnd, Pastor .' ·

Sunday School-! 0 a.m. Sunday wofllhip·lla.m .. 7:15p.m. Training Unio11·6:JO p.m. Sunday Wednesday aervioes-6:30 p.m.

Ruidoso Baptist Church 126 Church Drive Pnlmer Gateway

W nyne Joyce, Po.stor RAndel Widener, Anociate Pastor

S~mdny School-9:45 a.m. Sunday woruhip·l 0:4S a.m., 6 p.m. Wedneaday Bible atudy-7 p.m.

Trinity Southern Baptist Church

Cnpi14n (aouth on Highway 48) Aoyd Goodloe, Pastor

Sunday School-9:45 n.m. Sunday worahip-8:30 n.m., II a.m .• 6 p.m. Por infonnnlion, call 3S4-3119

ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS

Ruidoso Arid Group Meet. at the Stroud Building. Lower Level. rear cntriiJlce. Sunday!0---3 p.m. open ladieo and men• alag meeting.. Mondaya---Noon AA meelin8JI and 8 p.m, Step Study. Tueaday!0---3 p.m. closed AA nod Alan on. Wedneaday.._Noon AA meetinga nod 8 p.m. clo!led AA and Beginner'• night and A!Anon Step Study. Thundaya--Noon open women's meet­ing and 8 p.m. Social open and Alnnon. Priday.-Noon AA meeting• and 8 p.m. Book Study. Saiurdays---8 p.m. AA open. Birthdaya, lllllt Saturday. Phone number 258-3643

Ruidoso Area Group Meets in lhe Commanity United Meth­odi•l Cbun:h, 220 Jun~on Road. AA and Alaoon, 7 p.m. Tueadaya.

NewAAGroup Meeu from 8 to 9 p.m. at Ontcway Church of Cbriat. 41S Sudderth Drive in Ruidoso. Tite formal is open-diacu .. ion, meaning thBt concerned non-alcohollco may attend. For more infonnarion, or refennls, coli 336-8351.

Co-Dependents Anonymous

Meets at Texas-New Mexico Power Company. Step atudy meeting, 7 p.m. Tuesdays.

Narcotics Anonymous Making Oaanges OrCJUp meeu Pridaya 7 to 8 p.m. at Gateway Church ol Christ, 42j Suddetth Dr.

Overeaters Anonymous Meets at Texa1-New Mexico Power Company at 6 p.m. ThetdAys. Por mom infonnalion call257-9033.

Meeting in mcmbem' homes. For informl)tion. c:alJ 251-3987 or 336-7739.

CATHOLIC St. Eleanor

Catholic Church Ruidoso

Reverend Ricbnrd Catanach Sacrumenl of Pencm~Bturday 6 p.m. or by nppoinlmeot. Saturday Maaa-7:30 p.m. Sunday Mass- J 0 a.m. (BnsJisb)

II :30 a.m. (Bilingual) Sunday Mass-St. Jude Thaddeus,

San Patricio-8 a.m. Women's Ouild-7 p.m. the third Monday Knighlll of Colgmbus-

7 p.m. 2nd cmd 4th Tuesday.

Sacred Heart Catholic Church

Capitan 354-9102 Saturday Maas-S p.m. SWlday Mass-9 a.m. Adult Bible Study Monday--6 p.m.

Santa Rita CathoJic Church

Carrizozo 648-2853 Father Pave Bergs, Piutor. Saturday Masa-6:30 p.m. S~mday Mass-11 a.m. Adult Bible Study Tuesday--6 p.m.

St. Theresa Catholic Church

Corona SWl_dny Mnaa--6 p.m.

St. Joseph Apache Mission Mescalero

Pother Tom Herbal, Pastor Sunday Maall-!0:30 n.m.

Our Lady of Guadalupe Bent

Father Tom Herbst, Pas'tlr Saturday Maas-6 p.m. Sunday Maas-8 a.m.

CHRISTIAN

First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)

Hull and Govilan Canyon Road Bill Kennedy. Poator

Sunday Schooi·K-12/Adult-9:30 a.m. Regular Sunday Wonhip-10:45 a.m. Chancel Choir-Wednesday- 7 p.m.­youth Group-Sunday-6 p.m. •

CHURCH OF CHRIST Capitan Highway48

Lea Earwood, Miniatcr Sun<lny Bible atudy-1 0 a.m. Sunday wonhip-11 a.m .• 6 p.m. Wedneadoy Bible orudy-7 p.m.

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF RETIRED PERSONS

AARP meeta at the Senior Citizens Cen­ter behind the Ruidoso Public Ubnuy al 10 n.m. the fourth Wednesday. Preaident J. Wesley Kurtz.

AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY OF L.C.

Memorial Cbai rmruJ S.andy Thomu, P.O. Box 2328, Ruidoso NM 8834~­

Telephone: 2S7-4041

AMERICAN LEGION Robert J. Hagee, Post 79

Meets ai 7 p.m. the third Wednesday in the American Legion Building at U.S. Highway 70 and Spring Road in Ruidosa Downs. For more information, call 2j7 • 5796.

B.P.O.E. No. 2086 Blk'e mceu In the Elk's Lodge Building on U.S. Highway 70. 7:30p.m. tint and third Thundnys.

B.P.O.DOES Does meet in the Blk'• Lodge Building on \J.S. Highway 70. 7:30p.m. second and fourth Thundnya.

BET A SIGMA PHI Pour chaplen meel In memben' home•. 7:30 p.m. aecond and fourth Mondaya. Por infonnation, 2j7-S368, 257-4651.

BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA

Troop S9: 7-8,30 p.m. Monday. at the Epl•copal Church lJf the Holy M011nt. Scoutmaster Steve Norbury, 2!18-3417. Cub Scouta: Ruidoso pack meetina at 2 p.m. the third Sunday. ·

RUIDOSO CHESS CLUB 8-10.:30p.m. Wednesday at Pizza Hut on Mechem. No due• or feet. Por lnfonna-iion. c:a1l lWrl•~ 251·1023. ·

,.,,

'; '~!(qfQ . Jimmy S~p~:.Y,,, ~~~~~r . .

Sunday Bit# study;.l)_:~o, •• m.-. · Swaday monilng worshi"·10:30 a,m, Sunday evening womhlp-6 p.m.· · We4nesd4Y·Ciu'lalian se111Jce1 2.4p.m. · WecJnesdny Bible ptudy-7 P,JJJ•,

CHURCH OF JeSUS CHRIST L4TTER DAY

SAINTS -Church of Jesus ChrfstLDS

Ruidoso Bnmc:h 12 miles north of Rtrldcno

on Highway 48 on casl•ldo between mile posts 14 and 15.

336-4359 or 258-9138 Sunday: SWlday Scbool-1 0 a.ro. . Priesthood ReUef Society-1 t a.m.-

. P,rimnry & Young Women-ll am. Sacrnment' meeting-noon ..

Church of Jesus ChrlstLDS 'Mescalero Branch

Marvin H~~~Jsen, Prcsideni '-. 434-0098 .

Swaday: · Priesthood & Relief ~ociety ~I :30 a.m.

Sunday School & primary·noon Sncnunent meeting-10:30 a.m.

EPISCOPAL Episcopal Cl1urch of the

Holy Mount 121 Mescalero Tmil, Ruidoso

. Father John W. PeiUI, Rcaor Sunday Bucharist-8 & 10:30 a.m. Wednesday: Daughlera of King-noon Eucharist & healing-5:30p.m. Choir pmctice•7 p.m.

Episcopal Chapel of SanJuan

Lincoln ·Sunday: Holy Euchariat-10:30 a.m.

St. Anne•s Episcopal Chapel

Glencoe Sunday: Holy l!ucbariat-9 a.m.

St. MaHhlas Episcopal Chapel 6th & B Strce~, Carrizozo

Sunday: Holy Eumarist-9:30 LID.

FOURSQUARE Capitan Foursguare

Church Highway 48, Capitm

Harold W. Perry, Putor SWJday Scbool-10 a.m. S11r1day wonhip-11 a.m .• 7 p.m. Wedneaday Dible study-7 p.m.

FULL GOSPEL MissiOn Fountain of LIVIng

· water Futl Gospel Sao Patricio

Sunday Scbooi-IOa.m. Bvening tervic.ea-7:30 p.m. Sunday, Tueadlly and Friday

JEHOVAH'S . WITNESSES Ruldoeao-Kingdoftl Hall

106 Alpine VillMC Rqad, JliJ)lway 4B 258·36$9, 251-7715 .

Sunday publio talk•IO a.m. Sunday Warchrower·l0:50 a.m. Tue•day Blblc •tudy·.-1:30 p.m. Thunday minbtry ac:hool· 7:30p.m. Thuraday •ervicc mcet-8:20 p.m.

Congregaclon Hlspana de los Testtgos de Jehova

~ 106 Alpine ViJla&o Road. Hlshway 48 258·3659. 336-7f176

Reunion publica Dom.-1:30 p.m. Bltudio do Ia Atalaya Dom.-2:20 p.m.

• Bltudlo de libr'o L.un.-7 p.m. Escuela del mmJaterio tecc:ratic:o MiCJ'.-7 p.m. . Reu~on de aervlcio Mier.-7:50 p.m.

LUTHERAN

Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church

1210 Hull Road 258-4191, 25'7-5196

/Kevin L. JCrohn. PAsror Sunday ·wonhip-8:30 a.m .• 10:30 a.m. . . Sunday School and Adult Bible Cla11 •

• 9:30a.m. Wonhlp-10:30 a.m. Wedne~day~ Nooo-1 p.m. Bible Snnty A member of the Mi11ouri Synod

METHODIST Community United Methodist Church

220 Junction Ra..d Behind Daylight Donuts Crllig CodueU, Putor

Sunday Scboo1-9::JO a.m. · Sundny WDI'Ihip-8:30 a.m.,10:30 a.m.

United MethOdist Church Parish

Trinity Carrizow/Capltan 648-28!)3, 648--2846

Tommy c. Jared. Puror, Capitan/Carrizow

Cani;r.ozo St~r~d~ ~c:f!9ol ~00 ll·~" Suoday wonblp 9:1~-.,m. Wednesday choir-6 p.in.

Capitan Sunday wonhip-9: 15 a.m. Adult Sunday School--8:30 a.m. 2nd Stmday School II a.m.

· Club Calendar-FAMIL V CRISIS CENTER

Z4-hoW' crllia line otur;wered by the Ruidoso Pollee DepartmcnL Call 257-1365 and ask for the Family Criaia Cen­ter volunteer. Board meetl at 6 p.m. the fint Thursday ac Dr. Arlene Brown • • af· fice. Free women't aupport group at 11oon Mooday'a at Dr. Birgit LaMothe'• office in Compound 1401 at 1401 Sud­derth Drive.

FEDERATED REPUBLICAN WOMEN OF L.C.

Meets the fourth Tuesday ol each month at II a.m. for a busine11 meeting and program. f'or infonnation. call Coleta Elliott. 258-44.5.5.

FRATERNAL ORDER OF 'POLICE LODGE N26

Meets at K·Dob'a Steak Howe ReJtllurant at noon every Thunday.

FRIENDS OF THE LIBRARY Meets at the Ruidoto Public Library. 4 p.m. lint Mondny.

ZIA GIRL SCOUT COUNCIL Ruidoso .ervice unit meeu at the Bpi•· copal Chun:h of lhe Holy Mount tile sec­ond Monday ac 6 p.m.

GOLDEN AGE CLUB Mecta at the Ruidoso S~lor Citizen• Center behind lhe Ruidoso )Jbl'ii)l at nCIOD firal and third Wedne1daya for cov­ered diah lunch and Jamc•.

HIV+ SUPPORT GROUP

meell the the ~ Monday, . Lovin~-Oibers Suppon OtOUp fotfriend• and f~lly of HIV+ meet• lhi! dill)! . Tueaday, Por lnt91mati~, c#l 257·.2236. or(I·800)573·AID9 ·

HUMANE SOCili". OF LINCOLN COUNTY

BASS MASTERS Mceu al 6:30 p.m. ~ second Wedae ... day In the brief'm& room at the Ruldoao Police DeputmenL Prealdent B.J. Bamea. 25'8-5641; Jecrctary-ue.uurer Bill Stroud. 25!-4480 or 258-5098.

FOOD BANK In !he Fam Pmbyteriao Clurcb oo Nob HilL Board meeu • 7 p.m. the third Thumfl)'. Food barlt bOIUI ~m aoon..., p.m. 'Monday. Wedn.esday and Friday. For lnformatioo, call 257·5823.

LINCOLN COUNTY HOMEBUILDERS

Meets a& Ccee Me.dowa Reauurant a& 6:15 p.m. tho fint Tuaday. President Bill ComeU111,

LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS

Meets at 11 :30 a.m; lbe dtlnl Monday at the Episcopal OJorch of the Holy Mount. Board meeu at 10 a.m. before the rquw meettna. Prea£clent Su~~n SkiMer. Por lnfcnnatiOiiJ. wrire ro Box 1705, Ruidoto NM 8~45.

i!A . .. _______________________ ......____......._. ........ ......_,~...L;..dl~ . .¥ EJ .. _J" .. ~~-~' .:..>_, ..... ;, 1"'"""·•-u~~""""'"''·~~~: . .;•·>~s.:~r~~;.· "'.._:~---ric~-·~~_.~ a.:~ ·,,--,~ ,_, ~' ·•

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NA%At=.EttE Angus Cht.m::b ·. of the Nazaren,•

At Bcinlto Parte Nazarene Conference Center. Aopa, 12. n'lileJ north of

~uldo•o on .Hiahwa)' 48 CbarJeJ Hail, PM.tor

336-8032 $un#.y'School-9:45 MD· Slind&- worahip,I0:45 a.m. &. 6:3() p.m. Wc:dn"day feDowlbip.-6:3[) p.m.

PRESBYTERIAN

First .Presbyterian Churcb

RuidOIQ, Nob HiJ1 ' 25-7-2220

Dr. Jamet Rucker. Pu101 Church •c~ool-9:45 a.m. SWlday womhip-11 a.m. Pcduclt feRow•hip lundJ after wonhip !he thinl S~J~~day: womcm •, Bible 1tudy and btoWD bag lunc:h at noon.lhe aecond TueJday.

Mountain Ministry Parish Community United Prc•bytcrian ·aaurch

cl Anc:ho Sunday worahlp-9 a.m. SWlday Schoot-JO a.m.

Corona Prc1byleriao Cbnn:h Worahlp-11 a.m.

Nopl Prcabyt.erlan Qurch Adult Sunday Scbool-10 a.m. Wonhip-11 a.m.

REFORMED CHURCH Mescalero Reformed

Meacalero Bob Schut. Putor

Qurch ac:hool-9:30 a.m. Sunday wonhlp-10:30 a.m. Mon. junior bijh yowh.-6:30 p.m. Wed. biah school meetlna•7 p.m. Thur. Kida Club (&radc:a 1·5)-3:30

.SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST

seventh Day Adventist rw.tciO.O DOWn., Ai.ua ~rfa Hennan OUad!of•ki, Puto'r

624-2684, 378-4~96 378-4161

Slbbalh Scbool-9:30 a.m. Qaurch aervicc·ll a.m.

OADEROFTHE EASTERN STAR

Ruidoso Chapter #65 Meets In tho &item Star Bulldln& fn the Palmer O"taeway ~ a1 7:30p.m. tee­end Thursday. Vl1ltina membera wel­oome.

_REPUBLICAN PARTY OF LINCOLN COUN'fV

Mceu tho flnt Mooday ot. acb moatb • 6 p.m. ~ tmemsed If wekoase­For iofomatim call Dallfd stem at 336-4442 or Bob Ny• at 258-4372.

ROTARY IN'tERNATIONAL Ru&doso Hondo Valley Club Mcetl at lhe Swil• OWtt 1M U liOOD

'l"detd&Y•· RUIDOSO CARE CENTE!R

AUXILIARY

caJv;.Y chailft 1108 Ga'llilall-~~·kd.,ldto

Pa.•torB~:n ~~ 378-9196.~46.19

10:30 11.n\. Suniiay Wotship · 7 p.m. Wedne.a•:v!Bible Stud)'

Cbrlst comtnUPJty , F$IIOW$hJJ ·.

cJ~iiM.JtiJil,WftY 380 Wett l'!~'V.W•C1ti; P•t.tor . . 354-2458

Sunday&h®l·~:45 a.m'. ~qndq WOP.MP..l0;30 jldl),

~meratone Church Cor.Qeratclno Squaro. 613 St.I!WCttb J)Jivo

. ~57-9265 B.D. Hllllfer, P.uror

Ray WeJb, AIJoclatc P .. tor SIUlday HJVice• 10:30 a.m. uut 6 p.ID.

' Wednuday-7 p.QJ. ,,

· Uv1na Word Churc;h • P~; jqay and ~Ocla Ayqa

1035-B Mecbem, ~7814 s..,t&y toi30im. ·

Md6p..m, . Wc:daeaday 1 ~:.,.,,

Peace Chapel Universal Life Church ~-l"OAcbcl_..l'a~JHC·

O.v.llan ~yop ~ ·19-miJc!: ~. ~ " jundkio ai Hl&hway .. a llOI1b iDd

OavllM CanyQP a.4 . , . Va~Je Sunday KhetiiiJe Ia ~r plcuo c:a1l OD SIIIW'tlay lor e:ucJ ~··

336-7oos · I Jcamalc Price, Put.or •

336-7075 . · Momin. dlape.l-6:30 a.m. Moaclay lhi'OU&b Friday. Sunday aorvJco-10;00 IJ.ID, tNCf1 week alP~ aapoJ.~ the fim Sunday of the 01011tli 1Vben tilt! ~ervko II at 10:15 &m • .a Ruldc¥o ~ Ccnlcr. Vapcra-7:15 ~m.-3nJ 'l't\lwtky,

Ruidoso Word Mlnlltrles RaldOIO Down•

Aland Marty LMe, P~fl 371-1464

Oillchm'• MlAimia-9:30 a.m; Sunday worablp-1(}.45 aA), Wedoelday tervloea-7 p.m.

Trinity Mountain Fellowahlp ~

1101 oavu.. Cla)'OD Rblld Ju.42J) .

Suaday Sei'\11~ ·~J()-..3() a.m. SUQday Sc:boolifl»l()-.30 a.m. Woclaaclay HocMGRIDp; 7..1Jp.-a. BJIIJe smdy, PdlowJblp. MiNJII)I 1hut'lday: 7-9 p.m. owi'CoiDOI'IIa Quia 12-teep r'ocovery &roup

RUiDOSO SHRINE CLUB Meets II Cree Meadow• ~Ural~~ ... 6:30 p.m. Cocrtb Wednacby. Por in­forma.tloo, call 253-334&, 336-4175 or 336-4125. •

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SPECIAL ORDER

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Green Patio Turf 1 ~or indoor or outdoor use 1 Won't rot, mildew or discolor IJ8976

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. W~sp & Hornet Spray 1 Kills on contact '1314/81774

Acrylic Fl11 _ Wall Paint· • 1 Velvet flat fimsh I Hlgh·hiding 1 Easy water cleanup • Wh1te & stock colors 201·10·001/649 1

Combo Cooler Set 1 25 quart ice chest, 1n. gallon thermal lug I SoU·side litterless lunch box l'l/3 piot Servin Saver square & bottle I 14 ot Servin Saver c~inder · .J104·Dl•26/192389

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lft.1ll31n'x2J'.13~17Sq.ft (1142 . . ..... I U,UiJ

(R·19)6'x1~'.48005Q fl 1 (1143 .•.. 0.99 (R·19) 6" X 'l!. 7~01 Sq fl 17 6 (1144 . .. . . . • 9

PREMIER

• . . ... . .

BamMnter® Roofing & Siding

Full·hard 90;000 PSI corrugated steel

Particle Board Shelvina I 3/4'x111/2'xB' 1 W11h limshed edge /111743 10' 1111744 .. ..5.99 17 1111145... . ........ 7.99

• • ••

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52" X 11' I 4 G1uge Canle Panel 1 Ungraduated 1 Galvanized /139410

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Chainlinlt Fabric 1 13 gauge x 48' x 50' 1 Class Ill galvanized /154676

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SPECIAL ORDER

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2'6' /alll.oos3 ........................ 37 .38 2'6' /al13·12. ...................... 38.08

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SPECIAL ORDER

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~texfaint 1 ~~r1n!~11~1 u~~ 1 fl~!lim~~ 1 ~oa~ ~ ml~r tl~~~u~ 1 W~1m ~ tu~mm oolor! !00mm11mm

~atin Woo~ fini~~ 1 ~rfmlum ~ual1~ · 1 ~l~ar ~·m~~~~~

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'rimer/lealer 1 ~~~~~! ~~~me~~~ !~ell~~ !e~leij 1 ~!~onn~or~r~ioull~wmi!~~~~u~~~~ n1111 , .. L ••

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AI~J.~ ~namel 1 f~r i~lfnm ~~ en~ri~r ~~~ 1 ~~~ o~ wo~~~ me~l m ro~~~~~~ I UiO~M~~!~I m~1~1mm

~Year latex tault •mi~ Uitl/lml

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1~ lear Ac~lic taul~ 11~1~rmr or a!~nor uoo 1 f~inm~lf I W~il~ /1MI

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~rn~mental 'ate late~ 1 ~~~~am u~ w ~·~it~ 1 ~an Of ~~~oc~~~ 1 ~oo~ 1 /lo' ~~el ~oo~ool! 1 ~l~t~ !Jni~~ ~1·11~1~1~

YOUR

CHOICE!

Al1in11D •ric ~~~rtlostr ~~~·1~11M11XQ

IUR CHOICE!

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Bathtoom Fan 1 50 CFM a1r movement 1 Mounts on wall or cethng AC76!Jilf6(ll51

Bath Vent/light 1 50 CFM au movement

EACH

1 100 watt light fixture mcluded 1 f1ts 3' 10und duct for wall or roof exhaust 1 Patented shap-m tnsulatron AC75!il/49119

Heata1~~ mfrBla100

BJU "• 67.98

Combo Commode 1 16 gallon I While /197.Wl

~0048 69.98

Elongated Combo Commode 1 1 6 gallon I White /SEATS SOLO SEPARATELY /197339 ON THE ABOVE MODElS J

White Wooden Toilet Seat 1 Rustproof poly hrnges nm WhiUI 8ooga111d T odlll Seat 15TZrl

Oekvlow® 16" x 19" Vanity 1 1 door 1 Doweled construct ron 1 f1mshed mtenor

8.98

1 Htnh-gloss golden oak ltnrsh OI!M76004 19' a24'~Varnty BS 88 P74G/115137 ... . . . .. . . . . •

98 EACH

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A mraNaLI Galaxy® Medicine Cabinet 114'x18' 1 Stamless steel B727HDJ6lJ829

:~~~ .. ~.~~ ...... 34.88

KINKEAD. St Tub Enclosure 1 Tempered safety glass 1 Hammered texture I

PLASKOLITE ,•poMalt' IWhill texturtd finlahl lw70-4401134156

88 EACH

•AJrurt (White hi-giOII finiahl IW85-440f134158

31 G11fon N1tu11l G11 GIEJOJJTJNTAil

40 Gallon Eltelric Dou•l• Elernent e1E4000045SHORT

Energy Saver® Water Heaters 1 foam insulation 1 5 year tank warranty 1 11 (2 year parts warranty 1147117-147124

Sink 1 x 33' x 61/2' deep

4holes r Self·rimming

/49533

~::.~.~.~~.~ ........ 59.98

shuauaster Disposal

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Cord w/3 conductors

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Rafter Anale Sq~are · 7' x 7' handY pocket Slze

included

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Measurin! Tape . Rigid steel b ade Fm{Jer·ttp lock American Made

11505/~194 '

YOUR CNOICEI ..

98

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Callfa-nia Red ow .· . ., :. ...

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..awbar .. ies

pint

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Baz. cans ....

SPECIAL PURCHASE SPECIAL PURCHASE

Fui'I''S

Chips

18 141D 18 DZ.

. SPECIAL PURCHASE

gal.

SPECIAL PURCHASE

·'!!!!'-

ao&z. SPECIAL PURCHASE

•• 84DZ.

SPECIAL PURCHASE

· . .-. . ' -~--

BadBal_

..... II oz •.

SPECiAL PURCHASE

-·· 42 .. .... SPECIAL PURCHASE

........ L.A. Looks Oil of Ola!

Drlglnal ar SeneU e _Bag.pn ...art_.w.,..u• . 88

· SPECIAL PURCIIASE

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SPECIAL PURCHASE

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Apples

Sweat CaiHorala Apl'icats

lb.

1111

Bib. bag

Ripe Blackburlas and CaiUornla

Baspllal'l'ias

each .... pkg.

..... .... · .. ·.. . ·p'tJ·R'R'S FLORAL SHOPS

DaUcala 4•• Mini Rase

Rasa Bouquet 8 811hDa. Buy'• Brealb,

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i4LIFORNIA SEEDLESS

Grapes PER POUND

FEED YOUR lLY •

FOR •

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Fryer Breasts PER POUND

lAY'S ASSORIED BLUE BUNNY ASSORTm

DELMONTE

Ruffles® Potato Chips

$2.99 SIZE BAG

79

Ice Cream

112 GALLON SQ. CTN.

FOR

oRfll./ Mr./ UIE FIIIIIJ COCIIWL•UIE I NAT. CHIIHIIY MIXED FliiiiJ •UIE OIRfll. PDCIIIIAWES I SUCIS•CHIIHIIY Flllllr•

•UIE PUR IIAMS I SUCESoiiiG •• Mr. PrAIIWJES•

r1ato ketchup Del Monte Fruits 32 OZ.1JUG 16-17 OZ. CAN

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BLUE BUNNY JI/ICI; BOMB JR. OR

Bomb Pop Jr's. 12Cf. BOX

STAHKIST LIGHT IN WATER OR OIL

Chunk Tuna 6.5 OZ. CAN

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REGUlAR I FREE ULTRA

Liquid Cheer 50 OZ. JUG

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Dove Liquid 42 oz. BTl.

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Bath Tissue SIX-4 ROLL PKGS.

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White Rain ~11-15 OZ. BTL

REGULAR/FREE OR WITH BLEACH

Ultra Cheer 98-106 OZ. BOX

99

Mr. P's · ' '

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GRIFFIN'S

Grape Jelly 2 LB. JAR

f* £4 ±• 2! 3¥!£211 9¥ £_§0 .£3_]_4 .. fUU.£ I 00£££.!0(00 __;_g _ _s_s §.d_L¥.L!AJj?.f_9?£¥f§i!S¥03430!JO..!@S$&33 C??4.S.ff_4jl6S_C¥4 .... _2£&§_.J7_ 2 .. 0_000£££2,2_f§§l__£II§.Z:::? ££ J. $,

ASSORTED FLAVORS

Spam® / . Luqcheon Meat

12 OZ. CAN

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Wesson Oil 48oz. an.

GRimN'S BONUS

Yellow Mustard 200Z. an.

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Bake-Rite Shortening

..

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Herbal Tea

NESTEA REGULAR/ . DECAF. OR WITH NUJRASWEET

Instant Nestea 3-3.3 OZ. JAR

69

42 OZ. CAN

. Lipton Tea Bags 48CT. BOX

49 •

•• PACE MILDJMEDIUM/HOT SHURFINE NATURAUBUnER FLAVORED .

Picante Sauce Microwave Popcorn 24 OZ. JAR

99

WISHBONE ASSORTED

Salad Dressing

'• ' 8 oz. 811..

10.5 OZ. SIZE

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HILLSHIRE FARMS

Smoked Sausage r ',

PER POUND

•POLSKA • LITE • TURKEY • REGULAR

FAMILY PACK FRESH

Ground Beef PER I:'OUND

RED RIPE -

Water~nelon

EACH

$ 4

CELLO

Head Lettuce EAcH

ASSORTED

Coke 6 PACK, 12 OZ. CANS

ALL TYPES

Coke

59

~sAY Hello TO GOOD BUYS~

PILGRIM'S PRIDE ' '

Fryer Breasts

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SHANK PORTION

Cook's Hams PER POUND

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GARDEN FRESH GREEN

Onions BUNCHES

$ FOR

PRICES EFFECTIVE JUNE 19-25, 1994

THRIFTWAV WHEELER, TEXAS

PRICES EFFECTIVE · JUNE 20-25, 1994

MOORE'S THRIFTWAY PADUCAH, TEXAS

CALIFORNIA SEEDLESS

Red. Grapes PER POUND

PRICES EFFECTIVE JUNE 22-28, 1994

RUIDOSO THRIFTWAV RUIDOSO, NEW MEXICO

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES IN TEXAS

diiJ14FFIUATED MEMBER FOODS INC. STORE

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