Bargain shoppers will be in for a treat during the seventh annual “Trash to Treasures” garage sale event to be held in Clarendon and nearby communities this Saturday, June 2.
Twenty-one individual sales are scheduled to be held. A complete description of each sale is printed on the official Treasure Map located on the last page of this week’s Enterprise.
From a tractor to a Texaco light, this weekend’s sales will feature hundreds of treasures just waiting to be uncovered at bargain prices.
Other items included in this year’s sales are leather recliners, a hot tub, books, a piano, a Maytag washer, and more.
“Trash to Treasures” is being promoted with advertising dollars in area communities; and many people from neighboring counties attend.
After visiting all the sales, hungry shoppers are urged to stop by sale number 21 where the Assembly of God Youth Group will be having a hamburger lunch from 11 a.m. til the food runs out.
Trash to Treasures is organized by The Clarendon Enterprise as a service to the community.
This Week
Kids’ College begins at CC next Monday
Kids’ College classes at Clarendon College will get underway next Monday.
There will be more than 20 classes offered in the month of June for kids age 5-15.
“We have a wide variety of classes for kids this summer, and we’ve set things up so that even kids who go on vacation can still hopefully attend a portion of the offerings,” CC Marketing Coordinator Ashlee Estlack said. “We love offering Kids’ College as a way for kids to learn in a fun environment right here at home.”
This year’s courses feature popular returners from last year including Let’s Have a Tea Party, Take Home a Pet Tornado, Erupt a Volcano, and Make an Ocean in a Bottle. New to this year’s schedule are Telling Tall Tales, Creative Writing, Fabric Crafts, Hand Sewing, Rooms Crafts and Jewelry Making, Fun with Fossils, and Jelly Making.
“Another class we are excited to offer is Basics in Babysitting,” Estlack said. “This course is taught by the American Red Cross and is graciously underwritten by the City of Clarendon in order to make it affordable for the students. The class is for anyone ages 11 to 15 and features training in first aid and home safety and is perfect for anyone interested in babysitting neighbors or relatives.”
Students can be registered up until 3:00 p.m. the day before any class starts. The first classes start Monday, June 4, and classes will continue until Friday, June 29.
For more information on Kids’ College stop by the Student Services office in the Instructional Center or visit www.clarendoncollege.edu. Anyone with questions can also contact Ashlee at 806-874-4808.
The college is open Monday to Thursday 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. and Friday 7:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.
Man accused of luring children into van
Local parents are being reminded to be alert after three small children were reportedly lured into a van at the Clarendon ballpark Saturday morning.
Sheriff Butch Blackburn said his office received a report that Joe Bryan McCary had been seen in a plumber’s van during the youth ballgames and that he had lured children into the van. The sheriff said parents retrieved the kids, and McCary left the area.
“This should show parents that they should know where their kids are at all times and who they are with,” Blackburn said. “Even in Clarendon, they are not safe.”
A warrant for McCary was obtained, and he was arrested Monday morning and charged with three counts of Enticing a Child, a Class A Misdemeanor which carries a maximum sentence of a year in county jail and a $2,000 fine.
McCary, age 48, was arraigned by County Judge Jack Hall and bond was set at $1,500 for each charge. He posted bond the same day.
Blackburn said the investigation is still underway in this case. McCary has a prior criminal history of drug related charges.
In related news, McCary’s stepmother, 64-year-old Emily McCary, was also arrested Monday on a third-degree felony charge of Tampering with a Witness after she was accused of harassing a victim’s family. Justice of the Peace Connie Haven’s set Mrs. McCary’s bond at $5,000, and she was released on bond the same day.
Following Saturday’s incident, the Clarendon Baseball Association released a memo to its coaches stressing the need to prioritize child safety at its ballgames. The memo urges parents to keep their children with them and keep an eye on them at all times.
“Parents should not bring their children to the field and turn them loose unsupervised,” the memo said. “Children should sit with parents at games. The potential for child safety problems can occur at any game or any time, regardless of the age or gender of the child. Clarendon is not immune from the problems other bigger cities have.”
Babcock trial to begin May 30 in Memphis
The Capital Murder trial of Robert Babcock is scheduled to begin next week in Memphis with jury selection beginning on Wednesday, May 30.
District Attorney Luke Inman’s office said the state is not seeking the death penalty in the case. The maximum punishment range will be life in prison without parole.
The case is expected to last several days, and the court has calendared the trial until June 8.
Babcock is accused of beating his four-year-old son, Chance Mark Jones, who died on January 5, 2011.
In related news, Donley County Sheriff Butch Blackburn said Babcock’s mother, Gayle Edes, was briefly jailed again Monday morning, May 21, by the order of District Judge Stuart Messer after she failed to appear for a docket call of the district court in Clarendon. She was released shortly afterward, also on the judge’s order.
Edes is also facing a first degree felony charge of Injury to a Child by Omission because the state alleges that she, by omission, caused serious bodily injury to Jones by her failure to get medical attention for the boy.
Greenbelt okays groundwater contract with city
The Greenbelt Water Authority Board of Directors last Thursday unanimously approved a contract with the City of Clarendon for the purchase of groundwater from the city.
Greenbelt General Manager Bobbie Kidd said the contract includes a price of 45 cents per thousand gallons that the authority will pay the city. The price will be renegotiated every three years.
“It’s a pretty simple contract, and it’s written in the city’s favor,” Kidd said. “Our board really didn’t have any problems with it.”
Greenbelt is still waiting on final submission of engineering report on the project to refurbish the city’s old water wells and build a pipeline to the Greenbelt filter plant.
“They’ve got preliminary numbers but are still waiting on some figures from the hydrologist,” he said.
Kidd said the contract now goes back to the city for its final approval. City Administrator Lambert Little said the board of aldermen will have a called meeting next Tuesday, May 29, to consider that.
Fire department presents awards

Memorial Day services planned in Hedley, Clarendon
The Adamson-Lane, Post 287 of The American Legion, Hedley, Texas will hold its annual Memorial Day service at the Rowe Cemetery, Monday morning May 28, 2012, at 10:00 that morning.
The Post members will place American Flags on the graves of 227 Veterans buried in the Rowe Cemetery. The Flags will be places on the graves on Friday May 25, 2012 and remain till the end of the day Monday. In Honor of those departed comrades that have served this Country.
The Memorial Day program will be conducted by members of the American Legion that will include the raising of the colors, the National Anthem, Pledge to the Flag and the ceremony honoring the missing in action and the prisoners of War still unaccounted for.
The Memorial Day address will be given by Troy Wilson, a member of Post 287, Troy graduated from Hedley High School, and married his high school sweetheart, and served in the U.S. Army as a medic. The Post adjutant will read the names of the 227 Veterans buried in the Rowe Cemetery. The program will be concluded with the laying of the memorial wreath and the playing of taps.
VFW Post 7782 will be conducting a Memorial Day Ceremony on May 28th at 11:00 a.m, located at the Donley County Veterans Memorial in Clarendon. Post Commander Nathan Floyd will be speaking.
Republicans casting primary votes
Early Voting ends Friday, May 25, in the Republican Primary, and Election Day will be Tuesday, May 29.
Local voters can cast early ballots at the Donley County Courthouse Annex for several candidates, including those seeking to represent Donley County in the State House of Representatives – Rep. Jim Landtroop, former Rep. Gary Walker, Mac Smith, and Ken King.
Candidates seeking to represent Donley County in the State Senate are Sen. Kel Seliger and Randy Rives, and Congressman Mac Thornberry is being challenged in the primary by Pamela Lea Barlow.
Check your voter’s registration card for your proper polling place the day of the election. Polling will be conducted at the following locations: Precinct 101 – Bairfield Activity Center; Precinct 102 – Howardwick City Hall; Precinct 201 – Courthouse Commissioners’ Courtroom; Precinct 301 – Assembly of God Church; and Precinct 401 – Church of Christ Family Life Center.
Friends of the Library receive flag
TSgt. Ben Vorheis, son of Mary Vorheis, who is stationed at Kandahar Airfield, Afghanistan with a Combat Search and Rescue team, sent a special American flag to the library that was flown on one of their missions.

Along with the flag is a framed document stating that it is presented to Burton Memorial Library in appreciation for support and caring for our military troops involved in “Operation Enduring Freedom.”
Friends of the library sent recordable story books to a unit in Afghanistan so that the military members could record their own voices as they read the story to their children at home. The military members then sent the books to their sons and daughters who are anxiously waiting for Daddy and Mommy to come home to them.
This shipment is just one of the many that have been sent overseas to the troops by Friends of the Library members and patrons who put items in the Troop Box at the Library.
If you would like to contribute items to be sent overseas, stop by and get a list of the items needed by the men and women serving there and in Iraq.
Williams jumps to bronze at state contest
By Sandy Anderberg
Senior Wes Williams’ suitcase was a little heavier when he came home from Austin last weekend where he participated in the State Track Meet.

For his efforts in the long jump, Williams brought home the bronze medal for third place in that event. His jump of 22’ just missed the second place silver medal by one-half of an inch.
“Wes competed well,” coach Johnny Nino said. “He had a little trouble getting on the board, but he kept his composure and fought though that. He got the 22’ jump on his next to last jump.
“Wes has worked hard all year and it showed with the success he had in the long jump and the 100-meter dash. I would like to thank Wesley for all his hard work this year and throughout his high school career. I would also like to thank Coach Gaines for all his hard work with all of the jumpers – girls and boys.”

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