091715 Edge of the Weekend

Page 1

on the

September 17, 2015

of the

Vol. 13 No. 3

weekend

SIUE’s Arts & Issues page 4

Wings and Wheels page 5

Coal Country Fall Festival page 6

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September 17

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What’s Inside 4

Arts & Issues

SIUE set to launch annual program.

5 Wings and Wheels

Classic cars and airplanes in Bethalto.

6 Fall Festival

Benld to host family-friendly event.

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Rollin' on the river

Mississippi River cruises offered this fall.

19 "Steve Jobs"

New film pulls no punches.

20 At The Fox

Johnny Mathis to perform.

24 Rainbow Springs "A Garden of Eden."

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What’s Happening Friday Sept. 18___________ • Emerson Free Family Night, The Magic House, St. Louis, 5:30 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. • Hermann Heritage Days, Hermann (MO), 11:00 a.m. • Augusta’s 12th Annual Harvest Festival, Augusta (MO), 5:00 p.m. • Hell Night, Traindodge w/ Zebulon Pike, DayBringer, The Firebird, St. Louis, Doors 7:00 p.m. • Ross Christopher (Bar Stage), Cicero’s, University City, 8:30 p.m. • The Saville Band, Revolution, The Works, Cicero’s, University City, 8:30 p.m. • The Road to Pointfest: Session 1, Round 4 w/NDP, Lafayette, Deedzstl, Diamond Back Kings, Pop’s, Sauget, 6:30 p.m. • Willie Akins/Montez Coleman Group, Jazz at the Bistro, St. Louis, 7:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. • St. Louis Symphony Opening Weekend w/Joshua Bell, Powell Symphony Hall, St. Louis, 8:00 p.m. • Kacey Musgraves, The Pageant, St. Louis, Doors 6:30 p.m. • An Evening with Josh Rouse, Blueberry Hill, St. Louis, Doors 7:00 p.m. • Material Revival, Edwardsville Arts Center, Edwardsville, 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., Runs through October 16. • The Rep presents All The Way, Loretto-Hilton Center Browning Mainstage, St. Louis, 8:00 p.m., Runs through October 4. • The Black Rep presents Tell Me Somethin’ Good, Edison Theatre, St. Louis, 8:00 p.m. • Stages presents The Full Monty,

Who We Are

Robert G. Reim Theatre, Kirkwood, 8:00 p.m., Runs through October 4. • Wyatt Kahn: Object Paintings, Contemporary Art Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m., Runs through December 27. • Inspired by Nature: A Collection of Wildlife Art by Robert Bateman, Saint Louis Zoo, 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m., Runs through October 31. • Thomas Cole’s Voyage of Life Exhibit, Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs through September 20.

Saturday Sept. 19___________ • The Wildey Celebrates Fashion, Wildey Theatre, Edwardsville, 7:00 p.m. • Hermann Heritage Days, Hermann (MO), 11:00 a.m. • Augusta’s 12th Annual Harvest Festival, Augusta (MO), 8:00 a.m. • Harvest Moon Festival, Queeny Park, St. Louis, 6:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. • Valley w/Goldtooth, Echo Bravo, Planet Eater, The Firebird, St. Louis, Doors 7:00 p.m. • Mitchell Ferguson (CD Release), Nicole Grace, Supercousins, Big Ass Winners, Cicero’s, University City, 8:00 p.m. • Dirtbag Metal Showcase: D-Railed w/Brutal Harmony, Threat Point, Enslaved by Fear, Avant Scarred, Tongue & Groove, Pop’s, Sauget, Doors 6:30 p.m. • St. Louis Symphony Opening Weekend w/Joshua Bell, Powell Symphony Hall, St. Louis, 8:30 p.m.

• Ginuwine, Lumiere Live, St. Louis, 7:00 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. • Johnny Mathis, Fox Theatre, St. Louis, 8:00 p.m. • Ozzie & Friends Concert, Peabody Opera House, St. Louis, 7:30 p.m. • Tom Segura, The Ready Room, St. Louis, Doors 7:00 p.m. • Material Revival, Edwardsville Arts Center, Edwardsville, 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., Runs through October 16. • The Rep presents All The Way, Loretto-Hilton Center Browning Mainstage, St. Louis, 4:00 p.m., Runs through October 4. • The Black Rep presents Tell Me Somethin’ Good, Edison Theatre, St. Louis, 8:00 p.m. • Stages presents The Full Monty, Robert G. Reim Theatre, Kirkwood, 4:00 p.m. and 8:00 p.m., Runs through October 4. • Wyatt Kahn: Object Paintings, Contemporary Art Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs through December 27. • Modoc, The Demo, St. Louis, Doors 8:00 p.m.

Saturday Sept. 19___________ • Ikillya w/Final Drive, The Firebird, St. Louis, Doors 6:00 p.m. • St. Louis Symphony Opening Weekend w/Joshua Bell, Powell Symphony Hall, St. Louis, 3:00 p.m. • Fifth Annual Interfaith Concert, Sheldon Concert Hall, St. Louis, 5:50 p.m. • Idle Hands, Author, The Demo, St. Louis, Doors 6:00 p.m.

ON THE EDGE OF THE WEEKEND is a product of the Edwardsville Intelligencer, a member of the Hearst Newspaper Group. THE EDGE is available free, through home delivery and rack distribution. FOR DELIVERY INFO call 656.4700 Ext. 20. FOR ADVERTISING INFO call 656.4700 Ext. 35. For comments or questions regarding EDITORIAL CONTENT call 656.4700 Ext. 28 or fax 659.1677. Publisher – Denise Vonder Haar

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On the Edge of the Weekend

Editor – Bill Tucker

Cover Design – Desirée Bennyhoff • Advertising Manager – Amy Schaake

September 17, 2015


September 17, 2015

Vol. 13 No. 3

SIUE's Arts & Issues page 4

Wings and Wheels page 5

Coal Country Fall Festival page 6

DOUBLE COVERS September 17, 2015

On the Edge of the Weekend

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People SIUE set to begin Arts & Issues series Lucky Plush Productions to present "The Queue" Sept. 23 By JULIA BIGGS Of The Edge

S

IUE Arts & Issues is about to embark on its next season which is filled with thought-provoking presentations and quality entertainment. Tickets sales for the season begin this week.

This year ’s Arts & Issues season kicks off during SIUE’s Xfest, a week-long festival that highlights experimental theatre productions. One of Xfest’s planned performances, Lucky Plush Productions’ The Queue, begins Arts and Issues 2015-16 season at 7:30 p.m. on Sept. 23 in the Dunham Hall Theater. Sponsored by Commerce Bank, Lucky Plush Productions brings equal parts dance and theater to “The Queue.” The story of “The Queue” unfolds in a fictional airport where travelers stumble humorously, tragically and awkwardly into each others’ private lives. Created by Lucky Plush Founder/Director Julia Rhoads and Collaborator Leslie Danzig, “The Queue” finds its influences in early 20th-century forms of slapstick, vaudeville, Busby Berkeley-style choreography, creaky one-act plays and a 1746 farcical play about a family inheritance. Lucky Plush is often recognized for its complex choreography, surprising humor and incisive commentary on contemporary culture. This program is partially supported by a grant from the Illinois Arts Council Agency. In October, the orchestras of both SIU campuses combine together once again for an extraordinary musical event at 7:30 p.m. on Oct. 26 in the Dunham Hall Theater. SIUE Professor of music and SIUE Director of Orchestral Studies Michael Mishra joins Edward Benyas, Music Director of the SIUC Symphony Orchestra, as the two conduct the combined university’s orchestra in concert. Sponsored by Scott Credit Union, this unique musical presentation will feature Grammy Award-winning cellist Sara Sant’Ambrogio as the guest artist. At the concert, Sant’Ambrogio will play Dvorak’s much-loved “Cello Concerto.” Sant’Ambrogio leapt to international attention when she was a winner at the Eighth International Tchaikovsky Competition in Moscow, Russia. Be sure to purchase your tickets early for this special event. The last time Arts & Issues

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For The Edge

Lucky Plush Productions will bring "The Queue" to SIUE on Sept. 23. presented this concert, it sold out. Veteran White House Correspondent Peter Maer will share memories of “My Journey from Granite City to the White House” at 7:30 p.m. on Nov. 12. in the Meridian Ballroom of SIUE’s Morris University Center. Maer, an SIUE graduate, retired from CBS News in January after nearly 40 years on the presidential beat. When he returns to SIUE for his Arts & Issues presentation, he will describe how his hometown roots guided his reporting, and he will recall some of the personalities -known and unknown - who he encountered during a journalism career that took him from small town Illinois radio to the pinnacle of network coverage. Maer will also offer his own opinions on the ongoing media and information revolution that will have a profound impact on the 2016 presidential campaign. Maer is a five-time recipient of the Merriman Smith Memorial Award for presidential coverage under deadline pressure. He has also been recognized with the Edward R. Murrow Award and other honors. He twice served as commencement speaker at SIUE and treasures his Honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters from his alma mater. In December, solo pianist George Winston will return to the Arts and Issues stage. Winston will present “The Winter Show” at 7:30 p.m. on Dec. 13 in the Meridian Ballroom. Sponsored by TheBANK of Edwardsville, Winston’s

On the Edge of the Weekend

performance will include melodic fall and winter type songs, some of Vince Guaraldi’s “Peanuts” pieces, compositions inspired by the New Orleans piano and the stride piano traditions, and songs from his latest album, “Spring Carousel - A Cancer Research Benefit,” which was released in 2015. Winston grew up mainly in Montana, and also spent his later formative years in Mississippi and Florida. His favorite music was instrumental rock and instrumental R&B, including Floyd Cramer, the Ventures, Booker T. and the MGs, Jimmy Smith, and many more. Inspired by R&B, jazz, blues and rock (especially the Doors,) Winston began playing organ in 1967. Four years later he switched to the acoustic piano after hearing recordings from the 1920s and the 1930s by the legendary stride pianists Thomas “Fats” Waller and Teddy Wilson. In addition to working on stride piano, he also came up with his own style of melodic instrumental music on solo piano, called “folk piano.” His main influences currently are the New Orleans R&B pianists Professor Longhair, James Booker and Henry Butler. The SIIUE Arts & Issues season takes a break over the holidays and continues in 2016 on March 31 at 7:30 p.m. when The Center of Spirituality & Sustainability presents R. Buckminster Fuller: The History (and Mystery) of the Universe written and performed by D. W. Jacobs from the life, work and writings of R. Buckminster Fuller. Fifty years ago, Bucky warned, “Spaceship Earth’s in danger. Find out what needs to

September 17, 2015

be done! “This critically acclaimed solo show is about the man best known as the Leonardo da Vinci of the 20th Century, grandfather of the sustainability movement and PR man to the universe,” the Arts & Issues brochure states. “He was an architect, engineer, geometer, U.S. Naval officer, inventor, poet, utopian thinker and lecturer. This legendary designer, futurist and social commentator continues to grow in stature, as generation after generation discovers the power of his ideas to help each of us define and solve the biggest problems we face as citizen/crew members of Spaceship Earth. Bucky’s whole career was an action oriented homage to the powers of the human heart, mind and imagination.” You may never think the same again after seeing this show. An interesting side note, Fuller designed the Center for Spirituality and Sustainability at SIUE in partnership with architect Shoji Sadao. A former member of the SIU faculty, he created the dome as a transparent replica of planet Earth. The 2015-16 Arts and Issues season comes to a close on April 15 when The SIUE Department of Physics’ Shaw Lecture Series and Arts & Issues presents “Capt. Jim Lovell Apollo 13: A Successful Failure” at 7:30 p.m. in the Meridian Ballroom. A great A mer ican h ero, a stronaut J im Lovell is m ost f amous f or his role in th e A mer ican space age, specif ically f or his calm and caref ul comman d of A pollo 1 3.

Lovell stoically articulated the five-word message, “Houston, we have a problem,” which quickly became a part of the American lexicon. The infamous problem was the explosion of the oxygen system inside the Apollo 13 spacecraft-a malfunction that seemingly doomed the NASA team. Through teamwork and decisive leadership Lovell and his crew modified the lunar module into an effective lifeboat to safely return to Earth. As captain, he was instantly transformed into a national hero, and received the nation’s most distinguished honors including the Congressional Space Medal of Honor and the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Harkening back to the incredible early days of space exploration and the Apollo program, Lovell applies the “time when we did bold things in space to achieve leadership” to the goals and ambitions of any organization, proving that even during challenging times, innovation and new heights of leadership can be attained. Lowell’s presentation is sponsored by the Madison County Regional Office of Education and the SIUE Graduate School. Arts & Issues tickets can be ordered on-line at artsandissues.com or in-person at the Morris University Center (MUC) Welcome Desk. The MUC Welcome Desk is open Monday through Friday 7:30 a.m. until 7:30 p.m. and Saturday 11 a.m. until 3 p.m. The Welcome Desk is closed on Sunday. To place your order by phone call 1-866698-4253.


People

Wings and Wheels The Wings and Wheels Fly In and Car show will take place Saturday, Sept. 26, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Sunday, Sept. 27, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at th St. Louis Regional Airport, 8 Terminal Drive, in Bethalto. The public is invited to the two-day event which features vintage automobiles as well as aircraft displays, flybys and formation flying. On Sunday children ages 8-17 can experience the thrill of flight in a single engine airplane provided by The Experimental Aircraft Association and the Young Eagles for free. More than 100 airplanes and 300 automobiles will be on display. The event will take place weather permitting. For more information call 618-259-2531 or visit www.stlouisregional.com. Pictured are some past participants as well as some scheduled to appear at this year's event.

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People For The Edge When the Coal Country Chamber of Commerce 17th annual Fall Festival opens from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday, September 26, the Benld City Park will be filled with a rich variety of things that will delight children and adults alike. The Festival caters to all ages with free entertainment, a multitude of vendors, a free petting zoo, and many food choices in the food court. The newest highlight this year is a traveling Dinosaur Exhibit. Come and walk among the Dinos. There will be at least one life-size dinosaur, multiple life-size heads of dinos, and other educational displays. This exhibit is brought to you partially courtesy of Dairy Queen of Gillespie. A petting zoo with live fullgrown Alaskan White Reindeer with antlers will be returning. Some of the other full grown animals are two-hump camels, donkeys, buffalo and pygmy goats. Children and adults can thrill to the sight of these creatures. They will be on display from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the children’s area. Admission to the petting zoo is free and animal feed is available for $1 per bag. Another popular animal show is the Reptile Show shared with the Festival by Dr. Richard Crowell. Even though Dr. Crowell has retired his teaching at the Biology Department of Blackburn College, he and some students from Blackburn are interested in sharing their knowledge with young people of all ages. Crowell brings a collection of native and exotic snakes and lizards. Persons attending the free Reptile Show from around 1:30 until 2:30 p.m. will learn about various species as well as be able to handle some of the reptiles. One of the favorite offerings for families is the free rides on the Coal Country Choo Choo which will be running through and around the park all day. The train, which was originally built by Illinois Valley and maintained for the last few years by Rick Konneker, is sponsored by Chamber members whose plaques

are displayed on the train. A s e r v i ce fo r c hildre n and their parents will return to the Fall Festival this year with the cooperation of the Masons of Southern Illinois that includes the chapters in Gillespie and Hillsboro and the MacoupinMontgomery Counties Crime Stoppers. The Masons will be offering fingerprinting, a digital photo, a video, and DNA sampling of each child in case that child is lost or abducted. All materials will be given immediately to the parents of each child for their safekeeping. The Crime Stoppers volunteers will

also share information with families and will have give-aways for the children. A traditional part of this Festival is the Craft area where this year will again be over 70 vendors with a wide variety of products to be purchased. Decorations and gifts that are appropriate for fall and the upcoming holiday seasons will brighten the day with color and design. Yard ornaments, pet items, knick knacks, cutlery, rugs, vintage and antique furniture, Halloween, Christmas and Thanksgiving décor, books, children’s services, raffles, clothing, sports memorabilia,

baskets, purses, cooking products and tools are just some of the many wares that will be available to the consumer. In the Food Court, the Festival has brought back old favorites and new vendors as well. Available for purchase will be the famous Ribs to Go of London Simmons, pork steaks, “Smokies”, Italian beef sandwiches, hot dogs, burgers and cheeseburgers, Kettle Korn, funnel cakes, pork rinds, pretzels, French fries, Walleye, corn dogs, tenderloins, brats, chili dogs, cheese dogs, egg rolls, gyros and Cabbage Rolls, and other delicious foods. The Festival gives local non-profit groups an opportunity to fund raise or just promote their services. Some of the groups that will participate in some way are the Illinois Valley “Barn in the Garden” Gift Shop, several church groups, H.E.I.D.I., Macoupin County Military Support Group, Build Benld, and Adopt-aPet of Benld. The Health Fair section of the festival will be presented this year by Carlinville Area Hospital. Stop by for an overview of their services and to see what services they have brought for you on this day. Local Chamber members will have displays of their products or services. Some are planning to register people for free drawings and to give away free gifts. The festival gives them the opportunity for a relaxed venue to get to know new customers and socialize with their old friends and customers. Some of the Chamber members

who have already signed up are Adopt-a-Pet, Carlinville Area Hospital, Drew Ford, Fireside Eye Care, FNB/Benld Banking Center, HeadBangerz Hair & Tanning, Illinois Valley, JoDanni’s Amore, Madison Communications, Phylbena’s, Quality Flooring, Roma’s of G illesp ie, UCB of Gillespie, and The Village Toy Chest. The Fall Festival and Tour de Coal are sponsored by the Coal Country Chamber of Commerce. Specific businesses that have donated generous amounts of financial support and/or volunteer help throughout the year leading up to this events are: 1st BancFinancial, Greg Craine, Agent; Carlinville Area Hospital; Country Financial, Tina Olroyd, Agent; Dairy Queen of Gillespie; Drew Ford, Inc.; FNB, Benld Banking Center; Furniture Rescue of Gillespie; Gina Guicciardo, CPA; Hampton Inn of Litchfield; Hebenstreit Apartments of Benld; JoDanni’s Amore; Macoupin County Journal; Madison Communications; Michelle’s Pharmacy; Quality Flooring; Reid’s Electric Service and Heating & Air Conditioning; Roma’s Pizza; State Farm Insurance, Jessica Ely, Agent; Sullivan Drug; UCB, Gillespie Banking Center; WSMI and WAOX Radio. If anyone still wants to have vendor or exhibitor space or to ride in the Tour de Coal, they should visit the chamber web site at www. coalcountrychamber.com or email mrer@madisontelco.com or call 217710-5218.

Pictured are scenes from previous Coal Country Fall Festivals. Photos for The Edge.

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On the Edge of the Weekend

September 17, 2015


People Fall cruises offered on the Tom Sawyer and Becky Thatcher For The Edge The Gateway Arch Riverboats – Becky Thatcher and Tom Sawyer – cruise into the fall season with a variety of specialty cruises, including Lock-N-Dam cruises; daylong excursions to Kimmswick, Mo.; and a Halloween costume party. A special New Year’s Eve celebration to ring in 2016 will end the season. Fall cruises are popular and sell out early, so reserve a riverboat adventure today! Sightseeing Cruise: Daily through November 30 Take a journey back to a time when steamboats ruled the Mississippi River. Narrated by the boat captain or National Park Service ranger, this one-hour cruise highlights the history of St. Louis and the mighty river’s role today. (Call for availability. $18/adults; $8/ kids 3-15; children under 3 are free. Save up to $3 with the Captain’s Combo, which includes a One-Hour Sightseeing Cruise and a Journey to the Top tram ride at the Gateway Arch.) Skyline Dinner Cruise: Every Friday & Saturday through October 30 Enjoy live jazz music while dining alongside the most stunning evening view of downtown St. Louis. This two-hour dinner cruise includes a delicious buffet meal of chicken breast, a beef carving station, pasta Romano, mixed greens salad, fruit and vegetable medleys, dessert and more. ($46/adults; $20/ kids 3-12; children under 3 are free.) Sunday Brunch Cruise: September 20 It’s a midday getaway, riverboat style! Indulge in a delectable brunch buffet including French toast, eggs,  prime rib, stuffed chicken breast, pasta and more, while enjoying upbeat sounds of live Dixieland music.  ($40/adults; $18/kids 3-12; children under 3 are free.) Blues Cruise: Thursdays; September 24, October 15 and 29 Begin your weekend early with an evening of live blues tunes from Skeet Rodgers and the Inner City Blues Band on September 24, Billy Peek on October 15, and Soulard Blues Band on October 29. It was named the “Best Place to Slow Dance” by the Riverfront Times, so don’t forget your dancing shoes! ($20/person. Must be 21 or older to attend.) Lock-N-Dam Cruise: Saturdays; September 26, October 3, 10, 17 and 24 Cruise to the mouth of the Missouri River while learning about the impressive lock and dam system that allows boats to travel upstream and downstream, as explained by the captain. Live Dixieland music and a delicious buffet meal featuring s t u ff e d c h i c k e n b re a s t , f re s h vegetables, salad and dessert are included. ($49/person) Kimmswick Cruise: October 8 and 22 Take a ride on the Mississippi River to the quaint riverside town of Kimmswick. On this day-long  excursion, cruisers can enjoy lunch at the famous Blue Owl Restaurant a n d B a k e r y i n b e t w e e n  sightseeing and shopping. On-board the cruise, keep entertained with

For The Edge

The Tom Sawyer sits docked on the St. Louis riverfront. bingo, card games and river-style  music. ($80/person) • Express Cruis: Passengers will depart St. Louis via riverboat at 10 a.m. and will return to St. Louis via motorcoach at 4 p.m. • Leisure Cruise: Passengers will depart St. Louis via motorcoach at 9:30 a.m. and will return to St. Louis via riverboat at 5 p.m. Oktoberfest Cruise: October 11 and 18  Channel your inner German

spirit as you celebrate the annual German Oktoberfest festival on the Mighty  Mississippi. Savor authentic German food with a tasty buffet, dance to live German music, and toast to  good friends and fun times on the river. ($39/adults; $18/ kids 3-12) Halloween Costume Party Break out your best costume – spooky or not – and dance the night away on the Halloween cruise  featuring a live DJ, costume contest,

hors d’oeuvres and a cash bar. The costume contest’s winner  receives two tickets to the New Year’s Eve cruise. New Year’s Eve Cruise: December 31 Ring in the New Year with dancing, champagne, and magnificent views of the illuminated St. Louis skyline. Complete with an open-bar and a dinner of beef medallions, shrimp, potatoes, vegetable medley, and the chef’s

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special dessert, this 3 1⁄2-hour cruise is the perfect way to say goodbye to 2015 and hello to 2016. ($85/person. Must be 21 or older to attend.) HOW: Reservations are required for all cruises except the sightseeing cruises, and can be made  by calling 1-877-982-1410 or visiting ticketsforthearch.com. A complete 2015 sightseeing cruise schedule, along with a listing of all specialty cruises, is available at www.gatewayarch.com.

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Edison's hosting car cruises Edison’s Entertainment Complex has teamed up with the Piston Pushers Car Club for a series of classic car cruises this summer. The first cruise is Saturday, May 23, and cruises will be held in Edison’s parking lot from 6-9pm on the fourth Saturday of every month from May to October. All cruises are free and open to the public, and a live DJ will be spinning tunes all night. Classic car owners are invited to show up, show off their vehicles, and join the cruise each month.

Edison’s full-service bar and restaurant will be open, and light refreshments will be available for purchase in the parking lot. Members of the public are encouraged to check out the cars and then enjoy Edison’s bowling, laser tag, and arcade attractions. “We’re always looking for new ways to build excitement through special events that appeal to all ages,” said Edison’s CEO and managing partner Matt McSparin. “There are truly some impressive

www.JacobExteriors.com

classic vehicles that will be here and we hope the community enjoys the opportunity to be a part of these events,” continued McSparin. Here is the full schedule of classic car cruises at Edison’s: • September 26 • October 24 Edison’s Entertainment Complex is located at 2477 S. State Route 157 in Edwardsville. To learn more about the event, visit www.edisonsfun.com, e-mail info@edisonsfun.com, or call (618) 307-9020.

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People People planner Peanuts train coming to St. Louis

Peanuts The Great Pumpkin Patch Express Train Ride arrives at St. Louis Union Station this fall. Meet Snoopy and Lucy in the St. Louis Union Station pumpkin patch and join the Peanuts crew as they travel around St. Louis on a real train ride. Ti c k e t s f o r t h e r e a l t r a i n rides are on sale at www. STLPumpkinExpress.com or by dialing 314-690-1105. The fun-filled trains will depart St. Louis Union Station on Saturdays and Sundays, October 10-11, 17-18, 24-25 and October 31 and November 1 at 12:30 p.m., 2 p.m., 3:30 p.m., and 5 p.m. Special Friday evening trains will run on October 23 and 30 at 4:30 p.m., 6 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. The excursions, which are themed after Charles M. Schulz’s classic story, “It’s The Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown,” will leave from historic Union Station’s train tracks. Guests will experience great views of St. Louis including Busch Stadium, the Gateway Arch and the Mississippi River. Riders will listen to themed music and hear the narration of Schulz’s story by one of the crew members as the train travels along the rails. Prior to the train adventure, passengers will be greeted by Peanuts characters and have a photo opportunity with Lucy and Snoopy at the Great Pumpkin Patch.

Kids can pick, decorate and bring home the perfect pumpkin, enjoy cider and sugar cookies, write a letter to the Great Pumpkin, and take part in festive, family-oriented activities. Kids (and their parents) are encouraged to wear their Halloween costumes to the event. Three classes of train tickets are available for the Great Pumpkin Patch Express. Coach tickets are $25 for children 12 and under and $35 for adults. First-class seating is $35 for children and $45 for adults in the train’s scenic dome car. Peanuts characters ride along on the VIP class train cars, priced at $59 each, sold in sets of four tickets only. Discounted hotel rooms are available for Great Pumpkin Patch Express Train Ride ticket holders at the St. Louis Union Station Hotel, a DoubleTree by Hilton. For hotel information, click on www. STLPumpkinExpress.com or dial 314-690-1105.

World War I art exhibit open

War looks different, before you’re in it. In 1914, as Europe lumbered optimistically to battle, a proxy fight was joined in the pages of popular media. Combatant nations, seeking cultural as well as military dominance, deployed visual propaganda to rally support and

attack enemies. Yet as the death toll mounted, a generation of artists, many of whom served in uniform, sought new artistic languages to convey the grief and horror they had witnessed. This fall, the Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum at Washington University in St. Louis will present “World War I: War of Images, Images of War.” Drawn primarily from the Getty Research Institute in Los Angeles, where it debuted in fall 2014, the exhibition features more than 150 objects that together chart a chronological path from exuberant outbreak through years of grinding combat and into the long, unsettled aftermath. The exhibit will be on display through Jan. 4. Included are paintings, prints, drawings, photographs, illustrated journals, correspondence from the front and other materials by artists such as Max Beckmann, Umberto Boccioni, Georges Braque, Otto

Dix, Natalia Goncharova, George Grosz, Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, Käthe Kollwitz, Fernand Léger and Kazimir Malevich. War of Images The exhibition opens with “War of Images,” which explores how different nations sought to elevate their own cultural symbols while denigrating the supposed national traits — German barbarism, British imperialism, French decadence, Russian cowardice — of opponents. French artist Jean Cocteau, whose health prevented enlistment but who later drove a Red Cross ambulance, co-founded the journal Le Mot (“The Word”) with designer Paul Iribe. The cover of their second issue depicts Kaiser Wilhelm II as the German hero Lohengrin, but wittily replaces the knight’s legendary swan boat with a red, grasping crayfish. Conversely, the German magazine Simplicissimus, a longtime government critic, now voiced

patriotic support. A striking cover from October 1914 — by Thomas Theodor Heine, who’d once been jailed for caricaturing the Kaiser — shows a colonial Englishman, pith helmet ajar, clutching precariously at a blood-soaked globe. Other works play on visual codes such as the Russian bear and the French Marianne. A series of rarely seen images by avant-garde artist Kazimir Malevich and poet Vladimir Mayakovsky, modeled on popular Russian prints known as lubki, depict idealized peasants in traditional costume fearlessly routing enemy troops. Images of War But for witnesses on the ground, arguments about cultural superiority quickly paled. “Images of War,” the exhibition’s second section, collects artworks, letters, diaries and other first-person accounts that demonstrate the yawning gap between rhetoric and the reality of battle.

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People People planner to 11 p.m. Snacks and specialty cocktails will be sold at lobby concession stands. Readings from independent psychics and tarot card readers will be available throughout the evening at an additional cost. The St. Louis Paranormal Research Society will be offering two sĂŠances each night; one at 7 p.m. and one at 9 p.m. Those interested will be able to purchase tickets at Fox Guest Services in the main lobby during the evening of the tour for a $20 fee. There will be a limited number of tickets available for each sĂŠance.

The Fox offering ghost tours

The Fabulous Fox Theatre is thrilled to announce the return of the exceedingly popular Ghost Tours this October. The Fabulous Fox Ghost Tours will explore the untold history of the many ghost sightings and unexplained occurrences reported at the Fabulous Fox during its 86-year history. The Fabulous Fox Ghost Tours will offer an evening of spine-chilling tales from Fox staff members and first-hand accounts from investigations by paranormal researchers. Go behind the scenes of the Fabulous Fox to see what happens after the shows have closed and the stage lights go dim. Guided tours will be offered at 8 p.m. and 9 p.m. on Monday, October 5 and 6 p.m., 7 p.m., 8 p.m. and 9 p.m. on Tuesday, October 6 and Wednesday, October 7. Tickets are $35 each and include a onehour guided tour of the Fabulous Fox and parking. Tickets will go on sale Monday, September 14 at 10 a.m. at the Fabulous Fox Box Office, by calling 314-534-1111 and online at MetroTix.com. All tickets are available without a service charge, regardless of purchase method. Ghost tours are not recommended for young children. In addition to the guided tours, other activities and attractions will be available to guests from 5 p.m.

Model train show planned

The 25th annual Greater St. Louis Metro Area Model Train Show will be held at the Kirkwood Community Center on October 11 and 12 beginning both days at 10 a.m.. St. Louis’ best “home grown� model train show organized by one of the area’s oldest model train clubs. This is a family event and all children attend free. The show features an entire gymnasium full of operating model train layouts and a second gymnasium with model trains for sale. National awardwinning layouts will be operating throughout the weekend and alll major scales of model trains will be represented. In addition to seeing large train layouts, the show offers the opportunity to purchase

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hard-to-find model trains from dealers from across the country; including everything from wooden Thomas trains to large indoor/ outdoor G scale trains and railroad memorabilia. Door prizes will be awarded every hour. Attendees might catch a glimpse of long model trains consisting of a hundred coal cars, model trains with working horns and lights, and model steam locomotives with whistles and steam. Kids will have the chance to get up close and personal with a large “Garden Railroadâ€? featuring multiple trains running on the gymnasium floor. Operating model train layouts include: Large operating layout made entirely of LEGOs. Thomas the Tank EngineŠ model train. Five-time first place award-winning layout. Dozens of meticulously detailed scenes including a lock and dam and automobile plant. The latest in digital remote model train control and authentic train sounds and

more. Cost:$7 for adults, free for kids and students with ID. The Kirkwood Community Center is at West Argonne Drive and South Geyer Road, just 2 minutes from the historic Kirkwood Train Station. Road signs are placed throughout the neighborhood to make it easy to find. There is always plenty of free parking. This annual event is sponsored by The Mississippi Valley N Scalers, the area’s oldest exclusive N scale model train club.

Flea market returns to Grafton

Mark your calendars now for the official start of the shopping season at The Riverside Flea Market in Grafton, IL. On Saturday, March 28, the popular flea market will open for its 2015 season, boasting more than 75 vendors with a wide selection of antiques, crafts and the

usual flea market fare. The flea market will be held in its long time location at the Historic Boatworks, nestled alongside The Loading Dock, located at 400 Front St. in Grafton. The market will be open Saturday, March 28 and Sunday, March 29 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. The flea market will be open monthly on the fourth weekend of the month through October. The Grafton Riverside Flea Market is the largest flea market in the Alton region. The 2015 flea market schedule includes the following dates: April 25 & 26, May 23 & 24, June 27 & 28, July 25 & 26, August 22 & 23, September 26 & 27 and October 24 & 25. After shopping for your wares, head over to The Loading Dock restaurant to enjoy a meal, drinks and a great view of the Mississippi River. For more information or to be a vendor, please contact Trudi Allen at (618) 786-8210 or go to www. GraftonLoadingDock.com/market.

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On the Edge of the Weekend

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The Arts Arts calendar Thursday, Sept. 10

The Rep presents All The Way, Loretto-Hilton Center Browning Mainstage, St. Louis, 8:00 p.m., Runs through October 4. The Black Rep presents Tell Me Somethin’ Good, Edison Theatre, St. Louis, 7:00 p.m. Thomas Cole’s Voyage of Life Exhibit, Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs through Sept. 20. New Media Series – Alex Prager: Face in the Crowd, Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs through November 1. A Walk in 1875 St. Louis Exhibit, Missouri History Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m., Runs through February 14, 2016. Senufo: Art and Identity in West Africa Exhibit, Saint Louis Art Music, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs through Sept. 27. The Dream is a Manifesto Exhibit, International Photography Hall of Fame and Museum, St. Louis, 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs through October 25. Courageous and Faithful: The Cavalry, Jefferson Barracks Museums, St. Louis, Noon to 4:00 p.m., Runs through December 28. Fred Sandback 64 ThreePart Pieces, The Pulitzer Arts Foundation, St. Louis, 10:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Solomon Thurman: An Artistic

Practice, Sheldon Art Galleries, St. Louis, 12:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs through Sept. 19. Our People, Our Land, Our Images, Sheldon Art Galleries, St. Louis, 12:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs through November 21. The Art of Maurice Sendak, St. Louis Public Library, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 8:30 p.m., Runs through October 18.

Friday, Sept. 11

Material Revival, Edwardsville Arts Center, Edwardsville, 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., Runs through October 16. The Black Rep presents Tell Me Somethin’ Good, Edison Theatre, St. Louis, 8:00 p.m. The Rep presents All The Way, Loretto-Hilton Center Browning Mainstage, St. Louis, 8:00 p.m., Runs through October 4. Stages presents The Full Monty, Robert G. Reim Theatre, Kirkwood, 8:00 p.m., Runs through October 4. Relationships and Representation: Perspectives on Social Justice Work, Kemper Art Museum, St. Louis, 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs through January 4, 2016. Fall Exhibitions Opening, Contemporary Art Museum, St. Louis, 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. Inspired by Nature: A Collection of Wildlife Art by Robert Bateman, Saint Louis Zoo, 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m., Runs through October 31.

Thomas Cole’s Voyage of Life Exhibit, Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs through Sept. 20. A Walk in 1875 St. Louis Exhibit, Missouri History Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs through February 14, 2016. Senufo: Art and Identity in West Africa Exhibit, Saint Louis Art Music, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs through Sept. 27. The Dream is a Manifesto Exhibit, International Photography Hall of Fame and Museum, St. Louis, 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs through October 25. New Media Series – Alex Prager: Face in the Crowd, Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs through November 1. Courageous and Faithful: The Cavalry, Jefferson Barracks Museums, St. Louis, Noon to 4:00 p.m., Runs through December 28. Fred Sandback 64 ThreePart Pieces, The Pulitzer Arts Foundation, St. Louis, 10:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Solomon Thurman: An Artistic Practice, Sheldon Art Galleries, St. Louis, 12:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs through Sept. 19.

Our People, Our Land, Our Images, Sheldon Art Galleries, St. Louis, 12:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs through November 21. The Art of Maurice Sendak, St. Louis Public Library, St. Louis, 9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., Runs through October 18.

through January 4, 2016. Inspired by Nature: A Collection of Wildlife Art by Robert Bateman, Saint Louis Zoo, 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m., Runs through October 31. Thomas Cole’s Voyage of Life Exhibit, Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs through Sept. 20. A Walk in 1875 St. Louis Exhibit, Missouri History Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs through February 14, 2016. Senufo: Art and Identity in West Africa Exhibit, Saint Louis Art Music, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs through Sept. 27. New Media Series – Alex Prager: Face in the Crowd, Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs through November 1. Courageous and Faithful: The Cavalry, Jefferson Barracks Museums, St. Louis, Noon to 4:00 p.m., Runs through December 28. Fred Sandback 64 ThreePart Pieces, The Pulitzer Arts Foundation, St. Louis, 10:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. Solomon Thurman: An Artistic Practice, Sheldon Art Galleries, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m., Runs through Sept. 19.

Saturday, Sept. 12

Material Revival, Edwardsville Arts Center, Edwardsville, 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., Runs through October 16. The Black Rep presents Tell Me Somethin’ Good, Edison Theatre, St. Louis, 8:00 p.m. The Rep presents All The Way, Loretto-Hilton Center Browning Mainstage, St. Louis, 4:00 p.m., Runs through October 4. Stages presents The Full Monty, Robert G. Reim Theatre, Kirkwood, 4:00 p.m. and 8:00 p.m., Runs through October 4. Wyatt Kahn: Object Paintings, Contemporary Art Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs through December 27. Relationships and Representation: Perspectives on Social Justice Work, Kemper Art Museum, St. Louis, 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs

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On the Edge of the Weekend

September 17, 2015


The Arts Artistic adventures The Black Rep announces season

In 1976, as a student at Washington University in St. Louis, Ron Himes began staging upstart theatrical productions across the Danforth Campus. Thirty-nine years later, The St. Louis Black Rep has grown to become one of the nation’s largest and most respected professional African-American companies. On Sept. 2, Himes and The Black Rep will launch their 2015-16 season with “Tell Me Somethin’ Good” in Washington University’s Edison Theatre. The decades-spanning musical revue, which runs through Sept. 20, is the first of three shows The Black Rep will present in Edison this year. “Washington University is where it all began,” said Himes, The Black Rep’s producing director as well as the Henry Hampton Artist-inResidence in the Performing Arts Department in Arts & Sciences. “We’ve been staging shows in Edison for several years now, but this is the first time we’ve had the resources to present three in a single season,” Himes said. “The Edison Series, as we’re calling it, represents a great new opportunity for us, and a whole new level of commitment on the part of the university. We’re very grateful for that support.” Following “Tell Me Somethin’ Good,” The Edison Series will

continue Jan. 13-31 with Dominique Morisseau’s family drama “Sunset Baby.” The series will conclude with “The Family Reunion: In My Father ’s House,” a companydeveloped work-in-progress, April 20-May 1. “The Black Rep is a St. Louis — and indeed a national — institution,” said Mark Rollins, chair of the Performing Arts Department. “Theater is creative laboratory that helps shape the ways we see ourselves and the communities in which we live. We are extremely proud of the work Ron has done as a student, as an alumnus and as a teacher, and we’re thrilled to welcome The Black Rep back to campus for the coming season.” “This season has something for everybody,” Himes said. “Music and drama; the personal and the political; new works and old favorites — they’re all part of the theater, and they’re all part of human experience.” The Black Rep 2015-16 ‘Edison Series’ Sept. 2-20 “Tell Me Somethin’ Good” Conceived by Ron Himes, this critically acclaimed revue — one of the most popular shows ever produced by The Black Rep — is a stroll down musical memory lanes, from the street-corner doo-wop of the 1950s through ’60s soul, ’70s funk and the birth of hip-hop. Jan. 13-31, 2016 “Sunset Baby”

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Written by Dominique Morisseau, “Sunset Baby” tells the story of Kenyatta Shakur, a onetime Black Revolutionary and political prisoner. After the death of his wife, Kenyatta desperately tries to reconnect with his estranged daughter, Nina, but finds that reconciling with his past means conquering the most challenging revolution of all: fatherhood. April 20-May 1, 2016 “The Family Reunion: In My Father’s House” This company-developed workin-progress celebrates the trials, tribulations and triumphs of the African-American family through poetry, music, dance and dramatic literature.

Fox to host "The Great Russian Nutcracker"

Tickets are on sale now in St Louis for Moscow Ballet’s celebrated Great Russian Nutcracker at Fox Theatre on Monday November 30, 7:00 p.m. It’s the ultimate holiday tradition from the youngest to the seniors in the family. See Moscow Ballet’s Great Russian

Nutcracker and create memories for a lifetime. Moscow Ballet’s company of almost 40 dancers is the only internationally touring ballet group to perform to critical acclaim in over 75 North American cities annually. The renowned, award-winning principal dancers and corps de ballet thrill audiences with their expertise, dramatic expression and stunning leaps, turns and drops. The production is known for its dedication to world peace: naming Act II the “Land of Peace and Harmony;” featuring a rose shooting cannon and a stunning “Dove of Peace” with a 20’ wingspan. All ages feel the spirit of the season at the Great Russian Nutcracker through the romantic costumes and shimmering backdrops splashed with highlights of Russian history. Additional fanciful effects include life-sized Matrushka Dolls; 3-headed Rat King and authentic Troika Sleigh escorted by Father Christmas and Snow Maiden through the magic Snow Forest. Tickets start at $31. Special two and four pack offers will also be available. Groups of ten or more, and Girl Scout troops, receive discounts by calling 800320-1733. Seniors 65+, Military

and AAA discounts are available at the theater box office with appropriate identification. For Gold Circle Gift Package and single tickets call Fox Theatre BO 314-534-1111 or go to www. metrotix.com. "Real beauty,” New York Times; “Dazzling” Calgary Herald; “Powerful,” D.C. Metro Theater and Arts; “Breathtaking;” Cleveland Plain Dealer and “Spectacular” Denver Post ~ from 2014 tour In addition to the Great Russian N u t c r a c k e r, M o s c o w B a l l e t repertory includes classic ballets Swan Lake, Sleeping Beauty, Romeo and Juliet, Cinderella and more. For more than 20 years the company has featured award-winning and rising star dancers, from Lilia Sabitova in 1994 to Alisa Voronova in 2014. The company performs 100 engagements annually across North America and in 15 of the top twenty demographic market areas. Moscow Ballet receives critical acclaim and is regularly invited to present at National Press Club events. In addition to public performances, the company’s mission and national platform enables it to share the Russian Vaganova ballet training with over 5000 American dance students annually in Dance with Us.

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On the Edge of the Weekend

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17th Annual Fall Festival scheduled in Benld Free entertainment, fall crafts and merchandise, food vendors, a free petting zoo, and Chamber member participation will be highlights of the Coal Country Chamber of Commerce 17th Annual Fall Festival from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday, September 26, at the Benld City Park.

14

On the Edge of the Weekend

The Tenth Anniversary of Tour de Coal bide ride will also be held in conjuction with the festival starting with a 6:30 a.m. to 9 a.m. registration at the Benld City Hall/Civic Center. www.coalcountrychamber.com

September 17, 2015

Steve Davis in “Memories of Elvis” with his friends Anna Blair as Patsy Cline and Thomas Hickey as Buddy Holly will be the afternoon’s entertainment from 1 to 4 p.m. These three artists bring us the sounds of the 50’s and 60’s when these classic entertainers brought rock and roll to millions.


Religion People planner Federal hearing set in clerk's marriage case

MOREHEAD, Ky. (AP) — A federal judge says a Kentucky county clerk who won't issue marriage licenses to gay couples because of her religious beliefs has until close of business Wednesday to respond to the latest motion in the case. On Tuesday, as Rowan County clerk Kim Davis continued to deny licenses to couples despite a Supreme Court ruling against her, U.S. District Judge David Bunning ordered her and her six deputy clerks to appear at a federal court hearing Thursday. The couples named in the lawsuit have asked Bunning to hold Davis in contempt of court and fine her for refusing to grant licenses, but not to send her to jail. In a statement Tuesday, Davis said it's not "a gay or lesbian issue," but rather a "matter of religious liberty, which is protected under the First Amendment." She and her clerks have been ordered to appear in court on Thursday morning.

407 Edwardsville Rd. (Rt. 162) Troy, IL 62294 667-6241 Dennis D. Price, Pastor Sunday Worship: 8 a.m., 9 a.m., 10:30 a.m. & 10:35 a.m. Wednesday Youth Service: 7:00 p.m. New Life Student Ministry www.troyumc.org

Pope: Priests in Holy Year can absolve "sin of abortion"

VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope Francis is allowing priests as well as bishops in the church's upcoming Year of Mercy to absolve women of the "sin of abortion" if they repent with a "contrite heart," saying he is acutely aware that some feel they had no choice but to abort. Francis said in letter published Tuesday that he has met many women bearing "the scar of this agonizing" decision to abort. He said God's forgiveness cannot be denied to those who repent, and therefore he is giving all priests the power to absolve the sin in the Year of Mercy, which starts on Dec. 8, the church's feast of the Immaculate Conception. The church views abortion as such a grave sin that, until now, a Catholic woman who wanted to repent for an abortion could not simply go to her parish priest. Instead, her local bishop needed to delegate a priest expert at dealing with such confessions to hear the woman's confession, or reserve for himself the decision on whether to grant absolution.

MOUNT JOY MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH OF EDWARDSVILLE 327 Olive Street • Edw, IL 656-0845 Steve Jackson, Pastor

“...Be eyes to the blind, and a guiding light unto the feet of the erring. Be a breath of life to the body of humankind, a dew to the soil of the human heart, and a fruit upon the tree of humility” ~ Baha’u’llah

Sunday School: 9:30 a.m. Morning Worship: 10:45 a.m. Wed. Early Morning Prayer: 5:00 a.m. Wed. Bible Study: 7:00 p.m.

Use your eyes and breath for good! The Bahá’is of Edwardsville warmly welcome and invite you to investigate the teachings of the Bahá’i Faith. For more information call (618) 656-4142 or email: Bahai.Edwardsville@sbcglobal.net P.O. Box 545 Edwardsville, IL 62025 www.bahai.us

131 N. Main St., Glen Carbon, IL 288-5700 Rev. William Adams Sunday Morning Worship 8:00 & 10:30a.m. Adult & Youth Sunday School - 9:15 a.m. Senior High Youth Group Sunday - 6:30 p.m. Mid-Week - Every Wednesday(Summer break until Sept. 9) -

Wed. Night Meal - 5:30 - 6:30 p.m. Kids Connection - K-5th grade - 6-7 p.m. Middle School Bible Study - 5:15-6:15 p.m. Senior High Bible Study - 6:15-7:30 p.m. Adult Classes & Prayer Shawl Ministry - 6:30-8 p.m. Fully Accessible Facilities www.newbethelumc.org e-mail office@newbethelumc.org

EDEN UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 903 N. Second Street Edwardville, IL 656-4330 John Roberts, Senior Pastor

Rev. Jackie K. Havis-Shear

ST. PAUL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH of Rosewood Heights 10 N. Center Street East Alton

9:00 a.m. ~ Contemporary Worship 9:45 a.m. ~ Sunday School 10:30 a.m. ~ Traditional Worship Free Friday Lunch - 11:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m.

www.immanuelonmain.org

ST. THOMAS EPISCOPAL

Traditional Worship: 9:00 a.m. Coffee Fellowship: 10:00 a.m. Contemporary Worship: 10:30 a.m. Sunday School: 10:30 a.m. Youth: 6:00 p.m. Dr. Brooks, Lead Minister Jeff Wrigley, Youth & Children’s Director www.fccedwardsville.org

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — North Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory is distancing himself from a full-page newspaper ad about a Christian rally he plans to speak at in Charlotte. The Charlotte Observer reports that McCrory is set to speak at a rally called The Response on Sept. 26. The ad over McCrory's name and picture invites people to join him for worship, prayer, fasting and repentance. It also calls on Jesus to hear those at the rally and heal America. McCrory's spokesman, Graham Wilson, says the governor will speak on underage drinking, substance abuse and other issues. But Wilson says the governor did not give organizers permission to invite people on his behalf. Senior Rabbi Judy Schindler of Temple Beth El in Charlotte said the ad goes too far and raises questions about separation of church and state. McCrory has attended previous prayer events both as governor and as mayor of Charlotte.

NEW BETHEL UNITED METHODIST

800 N. Main Street Edwardsville (618) 656-4648

310 South Main, Edwardsville, 656-7498

McCrory distances himself from ad for Christian rally

Summit at School Street Glen Carbon, IL 288-5620

Sunday Worship: Traditional Service 8:00 AM Sunday School 9:15 AM Contemporary Service 10:30 AM

Facebook: Awakening Worship STPUMC/Awakening

Rev. Tony Clavier

Sunday Worship: 8:15 & 10:30 a.m.

Holy Eucharist at 10:30 a.m.

www.stpaulwired.org

Center Grove Presbyterian 6279 Center Grove Rd., Edwardsville Phone: 656-9485 Worship, 9:30 a.m. Sunday School for all ages 11:00 a.m. Wed. Eve. Bible Study/Prayer, Choir Children & Youth Ministries Rev. Craig Frazier, Assistant Pastor www.centergrove.org Presbyterian Church in America

Let’s Worship... This page gives you an opportunity to reach over 16,000 area homes with your services schedule and information.

Call Lisa at 656-4700 Ext 46

Sacrament of Reconciliation: Wed., & Thurs. - 6 pm Saturday - 3:30-4:00 pm Saturday Vigil Mass - 4:15 pm Sunday Mass 8:15 am, 10:15 am, 5:15 pm Spanish Mass - 12:15 pm Daily Mass Schedule - Mon., 5:45 pm Tues., Thurs., Fri. - 8:00 am Wed., & Thurs. - 6:45 pm

All Are Welcome

www.st-boniface.com

ST. PAUL UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 3277 Bluff Rd. Edwardsville, IL 656-1500

Rev. Diane C. Grohmann

Sunday Worship 10:00 a.m. Our Facility is Handicap Accessible

www.stpauledw.org

LECLAIRE CHRISTIAN CHURCH 1914 Esic Drive, Edwardsville, 656-0918 “Loving People to Jesus” Shane Taylor, Senior Minister John Bollinger, Student Minister Shawn Smith, Family Life Minister

Sunday Schedule: Worship at 9:30 am and 11:00 am Please see leclairecc.com for more information.

St. Thomas Child Care Center Now enrolling infants through Pre-K Call 288-5697

“Where Jesus Christ is Celebrated in Liturgy and Life.”

110 N. Buchanan Edwardsville 656-6450 Very Reverend Jeffrey Goeckner

www.eden-ucc.org

AWAKENING SERVICE:

Saturday’s at 5 p.m. A worship service with contemporary music where you can connect with God and others.

ST. BONIFACE CATHOLIC CHURCH

Hillsboro at North Buchanan in downtown Edwardsville 656-1929 The Rev. Ralph N. McMichael

Daycare 656-2798 Janet Hooks, Daycare Director

leclairecc.com

Sunday Services:

8:00 a.m. Holy Eucharist 10:00 a.m. Holy Eucharist Monday 5:00 p.m. Prayer Group Wednesday 8:00 a.m. Holy Eucharist info@standrews-edwardsville standrews-edwardsville.com facebook.com/Standrews.Edwardsville

September 17, 2015

On the Edge of the Weekend

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September 17, 2015

On the Edge of the Weekend

17


Movies

QuickGlance Movie Reviews

"No Escape"

Not since Saigon in the 1970s has an American operation in Southeast Asia been as ill-conceived as "No Escape," a taut, well-made and entirely dubious thriller. Where does "No Escape" take place? It's about a Texas family that arrives in an unnamed Asian country only to immediately be swept up in a horribly violent coup that sends them scampering for survival through foreign, unfamiliar streets strewn with bodies and blood. The film, co-written and directed by John Erick Dowdle ("As Above, So Below"), was shot in Thailand two years ago, after which a real-life coup by the Thai army overthrew the government. Perhaps to avoid too direct a connection to that coup, "No Escape" (initially titled "The Coup") makes no specific mention of any government. Who needs politics in a political thriller? Beside the murderous chants of a mob or the bland courtesies of a hotel clerk, the natives have no dialogue. Instead, they are merely the vague backdrop to the harrowing plight of a white American family: Jack Dwyer (Owen Wilson), his wife Annie (Lake Bell) and their two daughters (Sterling Jerins and Claire Geare). He, an engineer, has taken a job with a dominant corporation whose ownership of the city's public works has helped inspire the unrest. Having just deplaned and plopped their bags down in a hotel hours before street warfare erupts, a haze of confusion envelopes the Dwyers, just as it does us. Can a thriller about a coup contain next to zero context about the politics and people involved? Is it enough to drop "Taken," kids in tow, into a faceless Asian nightmare? RATED: R by the Motion Picture Association of America for "strong violence throughout and for language." RUNNING TIME: 102 minutes. ASSOCIATED PRESS RANKING: One and a half stars out of four.

"We Are Your Friends"

Part electronic dance music tutorial and part love letter to Los Angeles' San Fernando Valley, "We Are Your Friends" is a surprisingly accessible and sweet story of a group of friends standing on the cusp of adulthood with big ambition and little direction. Regardless of your taste for pulsing electronic music or actor Zac Efron, both are undeniably appealing in this feature debut from director and co-writer Max Joseph. Though the plot may be predictable, Joseph energizes his coming-of-age musical romance with creative animation, explosive dance scenes and a vibrant soundtrack that's like an entree to the EDM genre. And Efron brings such heart to the main character, he's easy to root for. For Cole (Efron) and his buddies, the glittery promise of Hollywood is so close, they can practically see it from their hometown 10 miles away in the Valley's suburban sprawl. Cole is an aspiring DJ, and his three childhood friends are his associates and entourage. There's his best friend and wouldbe manager, Mason (Jonny Weston), drug dealer and acting hopeful Ollie (Shiloh Fernandez), and the requisite quiet, sensitive guy, Squirrel (Alex Shaffer). All of them dream of escaping the Valley and finding success "over the hill." When Cole isn't out jogging or partying with his pals, he's in front of his computer, mixing sounds and beats into what he hopes will become the signature song that launches his career. "If you're a DJ," he says in voiceover, "all you need is a laptop, some talent and one track." Cole's luck starts to change when he meets older, established DJ James Reed (Wes Bentley), who immediately and inexplicably takes Cole under his wing and becomes his mentor. Cole covets Reed's life, from his worldwide fame and hilltop home to his gorgeous girlfriend/assistant,

18

On the Edge of the Weekend

Sophie (Emily Ratajkowski). Reed, though, doesn't seem so thrilled. Bentley is perfectly disaffected as the seen-it-all club veteran who parties away his days and nights, a personified cautionary tale. Meanwhile, Cole and his friends look for more reliable income by taking day jobs at a mortgage company run by a man with obvious wealth but dubious ethics. Here they get a glimpse into the unrewarding alternative to achieving their dreams. Thus, the career challenges for today's 20-somethings look much like those of anyone coming of age in middle-class America since the 1960s. RATED: R by the Motion Picture Association of America for "language throughout, drug use, sexual content and some nudity."

"A Walk in the Woods"

The lure of the wild has recently attracted an interesting batch of solitude seekers: Reese Witherspoon ("Wild"), Mia Wasikowska ("Tracks") and Robert Redford, twice. Two years after "All Is Lost," Redford has swapped the sea for the woods, and wordless isolation for Nick Nolte. It's not a bad trade. "A Walk in the Woods" is a broad and congenial comedy about two aged old friends trying to hike all 2,000-plus miles of the Appalachian Trail, from Georgia to Maine. It's light on its feet, even though its geriatric woodsmen are plodding and grunting. The story, taken from Bill Bryson's 1998 book, might seem like the kind of hokey comedy trotted out every now and then for older moviegoers. It is that, to be sure. But Redford and Nolte are a class, or two, above the standard stars of such fare. While "A Walk in the Woods" is tame stuff, indeed, a simple, comic stroll with pleasant company is a decent way to end a movie summer where the usual pace is a Tom Cruise sprint. Redford has been trying to adapt Bryson's book for 10 years, and he's now older than the author was when he made his trip, along with his pal Stephen Katz (Nolte). It makes their endeavor, particularly on the part of the wheezing Nolte, a little incredulous. Nolte's Katz, a former alcoholic and proud philanderer, was never an ideal hiking companion; he's the only one Bryson could get to go with him. But Nolte, 74 and so croaky he can be hard to understand, is now more convincing as a grizzly bear than a camper. This, thankfully, is not a movie where the actors are weighing down their backpacks for the sake of realism. The germ for the trip begins when Bryson returns to his New Hampshire home after a humbling book tour where he's met with questions of retirement — likely the same kind Redford has become accustom to fielding but happily (for our sake) ignoring. Authors, Bryson responds, don't retire. They either drink themselves away or blow their brains out. RATED: R by the Motion Picture Association of America for "language and some sexual references." RUNNING TIME: 104 minutes. ASSOCIATED PRESS RANKING: Two and a half stars out of four.

"Steve Jobs: The Man in the Machine"

Was Steve Jobs a brilliant visionary whose singular mind, capable of blending art, technology and commerce as never before, inspired the world to "think different" and changed the way we live? Or was he a ruthless businessman who treated co-workers callously, took credit for the work of others, and often acted out of jealousy and spite?

September 17, 2015

Documentarian Alex Gibney is known for pulling no punches when it comes to his subjects, most famously Scientology in his recent "Going Clear." And so it should come as little surprise that in "Steve Jobs: The Man in the Machine," he comes down heavily on that second, darker image of the Apple CEO. Even if you haven't read much of the copious material out there on Jobs, who died in 2011, you'll know some of this, especially his early attempt to dispute paternity of his first child, Lisa, even as he was raking in millions. But though Gibney doesn't seem to come up with anything truly groundbreaking, there's surely more negative stuff here — and lots more detail — than you've encountered before. With this, Gibney, a skilled filmmaker, has little trouble holding our attention for more than two hours. But he raises another tantalizing question, and then doesn't really do enough to answer it: What does our collective adulation of Jobs and his creations say about US? Perhaps it was all too much for one movie. The film begins, wisely, with the stunning reaction to Jobs' death of pancreatic cancer, similar to the grief that erupted with the passing of John Lennon — only expressed in 2011 technology. We see the makeshift shrines outside Apple stores, and the ubiquitous hashtag #iSad. A young boy explains, incredulously: "He made EVERYTHING!" On the news, Diane Sawyer speaks of "a global wake." RATED: R by the Motion Picture Association of America for "some language." RUNNING TIME: 127 minutes. ASSOCIATED PRESS RANKING: Three stars out of four.

"Sleeping With Other People"

Poor romantic comedies. Even our criticisms of them have grown stale. "They're not as good as they used to be," we moan, yearning for some purer time when we didn't know the time-tested beats, the inevitable outcomes, and the dynamics seemed more attuned to How We Date Now. Even the character types have started to become one big blur of clichés. How refreshing, then, that "Sleeping With Other People" gives the form a solid adrenaline boost by managing to both operate within the comforting constraints of "When Harry Met Sally's..." can men and women be friends premise, and still be its own unique, modern creation. Writer-director Leslye Headland, as a follow up to the bawdy girls' night out film "Bachelorette," accomplishes this by getting the sex out of the way first, and then making it off limits. Headland knows that the litmus test is not the theoretical happy ending, but the characters — and Jake (Jason Sudeikis) and Lainey (Alison Brie) prove to be some fascinating specimens. We meet them in college, where they lose their virginity to each other in a harried one night stand on a New York rooftop and then again a decade or so later in a meeting for sex addicts. Neither are actually sex addicts, at least in the clinical sense. But Lainey can't seem to stop cheating on her boyfriends with one old flame (Adam Scott), and Jake cheats as a way out of relationships he's too scared to end with a normal breakup. So Lainey and Jake decide, despite their mutual attraction and history, to be just friends. It is, quite simply, the story of two people who are prone to self-sabotage, falling in love and trying their hardest not to act on it. They are arrested development personified. RATED: R by the Motion Picture Association of America for "strong sexual content, language including sexual references, and some drug use." RUNNING TIME: 100 minutes. ASSOCIATED PRESS RANING: Three stars out of four.


Movies

Associated Press

In this image released by Universal Pictures, Michael Fassbender appears in a scene from the film, "Steve Jobs."

"Steve Jobs" pulls no punches By JOCELYN NOVECK Associated Press Was Steve Jobs a brilliant visionary whose singular mind, capable of blending art, technology and commerce as never before, inspired the world to "think different" and changed the way we live? Or was he a ruthless businessman who treated co-workers callously, took credit for the work of others, and often acted out of jealousy and spite? Documentarian Alex Gibney is known for pulling no punches when it comes to his subjects, most famously Scientology in his recent "Going Clear." And so it should come as little surprise that in "Steve Jobs: The Man in the Machine," he comes down heavily on that second, darker image of the Apple CEO. Even if you haven't read much of the copious material out there on Jobs, who died in 2011, you'll know some of this, especially his early attempt to dispute paternity of his first child, Lisa, even as he was raking in millions. But though Gibney doesn't seem to come up with

anything truly groundbreaking, there's surely more negative stuff here — and lots more detail — than you've encountered before. With this, Gibney, a skilled filmmaker, has little trouble holding our attention for more than two hours. But he raises another tantalizing question, and then doesn't really do enough to answer it: What does our collective adulation of Jobs and his creations say about US? Perhaps it was all too much for one movie. The film begins, wisely, with the stunning reaction to Jobs' death of pancreatic cancer, similar to the grief that erupted with the passing of John Lennon — only expressed in 2011 technology. We see the makeshift shrines outside Apple stores, and the ubiquitous hashtag #iSad. A young boy explains, incredulously: "He made EVERYTHING!" On the news, Diane Sawyer speaks of "a global wake." How to explain this impact? Gibney gathers footage both of the brash young Jobs with long hair, proclaiming how the computer, once bulky and scary, will change people's

lives, and famously giving the finger to IBM, and the older Jobs, in his second stint with Apple, pacing the stage in his black turtleneck and delighting fans at those much-awaited product launches. And there are much less flattering elements, in interviews with people who worked with (or loved) Jobs: for example, Bob Belleville, who came over from Xerox in the '80s. "How bad could this be?" Belleville recounts thinking beforehand. "I didn't realize how bad it could be." The memories cause him to weep. We hear how Steve Wozniak, the eventual Apple co-founder who began his journey with Jobs in a garage, did much of the work on a video game the duo sold to Atari, but was iced out of most of the money by his friend. And there's school buddy and Apple employee Daniel Kottke, wondering succinctly: "How much of an asshole do you have to be to be successful?" Chrisann Brennan, mother of Lisa BrennanJobs (Jobs' daughter did not cooperate with the film; nor did his widow, Laurene Powell,

or Apple itself), describes telling Jobs she was pregnant and watching him clench his jaw and slam the door. There's also sobering detail on working conditions (and suicide rates) at the Chinese factories where Apple products are made; on a scandal involving Apple stock options; and on Jobs' zealous pursuit of the tech bloggers who wrote about an iPhone 4 prototype accidentally left in a bar. We're also told how, contrary to Bill Gates and his huge philanthropy, Jobs ended Apple's charitable gifts. Yet there's admiration, too, for Jobs' creative mind, specifically the crucial connection he was able to make between a piece of machinery and the human experience it could provide. As the film says of the iPod: "It wasn't a machine FOR you. It was you." And it's Gibney himself who best describes the lure of a shiny Apple phone. "I had to have an iPhone," he says. "My hand was drawn to it like Frodo's hand to the ring."

"The Transporter Refueled" runs on empty By ROBERT GRUBAUGH Of The Edge Nothing will take you down a p e g l i k e p re p a r i n g t o w r i t e about the third film in a series, o n l y t o h a v e Wi k i p e d i a a n d the IMDb remind you that, in fact, it's the fourth one. So, yeah, that's how my day is s h a p i n g u p . I ' m re f e r r i n g t o this weekend's release of "The Transpo rter Refue led ", a lo wbudget French production that poses an elegant question: "if we replace Jason Statham, will a n y o n e n o t i c e ? " I re m e m b e r thinking to myself several months back when I first heard of this that Labor Day Weekend would be a great time to release a movie like this. I bag on the final Summer weekend a lot, but it's always a justifiable gripe

when I do. "Transporter" was the widest new release last week and opened at a miserly $7.4 million. Might we be witnessing the death of a waning franchise? In 2002, Statham launched his character Frank Martin, a tough guy who drives an Audi like a boss. He promises to deliver any package anywhere on time and he's the best in the business. But like most service providers with great track records, sometimes the rails come off. And that's what happened in "The Transporter" and "The Transporter 2" and "The Transporter 3" (apparently - don't forget I forgot about its existence). Beautiful women with beautiful accents were involved. Thugs with guns and at least a hint of E a s t e r n E u ro p e a n s t e re o t y p e w e re t h e b ad guys . Statham took almost as many punishing

punches as he gave out. And then the series took a seven-year hiatus to re-tool. B a c k a s " T h e Tr a n s p o r t e r Refueled", this may or may not be a prequel to the original films based on a cryptic series of interviews and badly-translated s o u n d b i t e s f ro m t h e F re n c h and Chinese producers. There's nothing in the movie itself that would lead you to the impression that it's naturally set earlier than the others. Ed Skrein takes over for Jason Statham. To his credit, the poster's profile picture gives them both the same jaw line. I stop just short of calling it a Bait & Switch. Frank's mission in this movie is to help deliver a trio of prostitutes (Loan C h a b a n o l , G a b r i e l l a Wr i g h t , and Tatiana Pajkovic) to various destinations in and around

Nice and Monaco to help them perpetrate a dazzling array of long-con crimes against their pimps (Yuri Kolokolnikov, Lenn Kudrjawizki). Martin's role becomes complicated when it proves that the mastermind behind the criminal organization is a former colleague from his Special Ops days (Radivoje Bukvic). When they drag i n F r a n k ' s re t i re d s p y f a t h e r (Ray Stevenson) as additional leverage, it becomes even more harrowing. Frank Sr. is the comic relief for the film, but he's more smart alec older brother than stodgy dad. If there's any reason to see this film at all, it's for the one or two really good action sequences that aren't really all that grand on th e scale of 1- to- "In ception' s" r o t a t i n g d r e a m h a l l w a y. I

September 17, 2015

particularly liked the one where Frank leaves his undriven car in gear while he slowly leads ahead of it down a narrow alley, banging skulls together before leaping back into the vehicle through its sunroof. That was both methodical and incredibly pretentious. And don't forget the time when Frank runs his jet ski aground and then uses his forward momentum to kick through the passenger side window of an SUV to take out the driver. You want farfetched? "Transporter Refueled" has got your farfetched. "The Transporter Refueled" runs 96 and is rated PG-13 for sequences of violence and action, sexual material, some language, a drug reference, and thematic material. I give this film one star out of four.

On the Edge of the Weekend

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Music Tuning in Johnny Mathis to appear at The Fox

On Saturday, September 19, Mathis comes to the Fabulous Fox Theatre to perform some of his greatest hits and personal favorites he concert is Saturday, September 19 at 8:00 p.m. Tickets are $125, $100, $90, $80, $70, $60, $50 and are available online at metrotix.com, by calling 314-5341111, or in person at the Fabulous Fox Box Office. Celebrating his 59th year in the music industry, Johnny Mathis is Columbia Records longest-running artist. A sublime vocalist whose approach to pop music eclipses passing fads and trends, Mathis has performed songs in an incredible variety of styles and categories -from music composed for stage and film to golden era jazz standards, contemporary pop hits, and holiday music, all of which has assured his reputation as one of the most enduring vocalists in music history. Best-known for his supremely popular hits like “Chances Are," "It's Not For Me To Say," and "Misty”, Mathis has recorded more than 80 albums, 6 Christmas albums, and has sold millions of records worldwide. During his extensive career he has had 3 songs inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame, achieved 50 Hits on Billboard’s Adult Contemporary Chart, and ranks as the all-time #6 album artist in the history of Billboard’s pop album charts. He has received 5 Grammy Nominations, and in 2003 he was given the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences.

The Fox to host The Festival of Praise Tour

The Festival of Praise Tour 2015 is bigger than ever! The fantastic tour features Multiple Grammy, Stellar, BET Award Winning Artists Fred Hammond, Donnie McClurkin, Kim Burrell, plus Israel Houghton. The event is scheduled Sunday, November 29 at 7:00 p.m. Tickets are $98, $68, $58, $48 and are available online at metrotix.com, by calling 314-534-1111, or in person at the Fabulous Fox Box Office. This spectacular, creativelythemed presentation also includes as ultra-talented, all-star VIP supporting vocal chorus featuring Isaac Carree, Jessica Reedy and Zacardi Cortez. Marcus Wiley of the "Yolanda Adams Morning Show" will be this year's festival host. Festival of Praise Tour 2015 will be held at Fabulous Fox Theatre. The family style tour, a phrase coined by Hammond and McClurkin, is a platform to uplift, motivate, encourage, inspire and entertain. The tour will feature some of Gospel's biggest and brightest on the same stage with ensemble performances and music by each artist highlighting the classic hits and most memorable anthems. The Festival of Praise Tour 2014 was overwhelmingly successful, and it’s back bigger and better. It will be an awesome evening of inspiration filled with a message of hope and restoration.

Sheldon to welcome Iris DeMent

The Sheldon is pleased to announce the return of Iris DeMent,

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Sunday, November 22 at 7:30 p.m. in the perfect acoustics of the Sheldon Concert Hall. Singer/songwriter Iris DeMent returns to The Sheldon, performing music from her new release, The Trackless Woods, an album that sets Russian poet Anna Akhmatova’s words to music. Born in Arkansas and raised in Southern California, Iris DeMent grew up immersed in gospel and traditional country music. A late bloomer as an artist - she wrote her first song at the age of 25 her first release, Infamous Angel, immediately established her as a promising and talented artist. Her follow-up recordings, My Life and The Way I Should, were each nominated for a Grammy. Several of DeMent’s songs have become cultural touchstones including “Let The Mystery Be,” sung as a duet by David Byrne and Natalie Merchant on MTV Unplugged, and “Our Town,” which was played over the farewell scene in the series finale of Northern Exposure. She has recorded and performed with artists such as Ralph Stanley, Steve Earle, Emmylou Harris and Merle Haggard, and sang four duets with John Prine on In Spite of Ourselves. In 2004, she recorded an album of gospel songs, Lifeline, which included her rendition of “Leaning on the Everlasting Arms,” which the Coen Brothers chose for the closing credits for their 2012 remake of the classic western True Grit. Tickets are $35 orchestra/$30 balcony. Call MetroTix at 314-5341111 or visit TheSheldon.org.

The Sheldon to host The Lone Bellow

Lone Bellow with special guest A n d e r s o n E a s t , We d n e s d a y, October 21 at 8 p.m. in the perfect acoustics of the Sheldon Concert Hall. The concert is part of The Sheldon Sessions series, an on-going collaboration between The Sheldon and KDHX. Southern-born, Brooklyn-based indie-folk trio the Lone Bellow has earned critical and popular acclaim for a sound that mixes folk sincerity, gospel fervor and even heavy metal thunder. But, the heart of the band is harmony: t h re e v o i c e s u n i t e d i n a l o n e bellow. The group has opened for the Civil Wars, Dwight Yokam, B r a n d i C a r l i l e a n d t h e Av e t t Brothers, and their self-titled debut, produced by Nashville’s Charlie Peacock (the Civil Wars, Holly Williams) and released in January 2013, established them as one of the boldest new acts in the Americana movement. Their latest album, Then Came the Morning, produced by The National guitarist Aaron Dessner, contains some of their most emotional music to date, with most of the vocals recorded in single takes. Concert only tickets are $22 o r c h e s t r a / $ 2 0 b a l c o n y. C a l l MetroTix at 314-534-1111 or visit TheSheldon.org. VIP Happy Hour with The Lone Bellow tickets: $109 per ticket includes •One early entry ticket •Invitation to “The Happy Hour” with exclusive acoustic performance by The Lone Bellow and cash bar •One limited edition screenprinted tour poster signed by the band •One commemorative laminate •On-site concert concierge

Halen/Martin Christmas Concert rescheduled

Due to a scheduling conflict, the David Halen, Peter Martin and Friends, “Celebrate the Holidays” concert originally scheduled at the Sheldon Concert Hall for December 2, 2015 at 8 p.m., has been rescheduled to December 9, 2015 at 8 p.m. Celebrate the season with St.

Louis Symphony concertmaster David Halen and jazz pianist Peter Martin as they perform holiday favorites such as “The Christmas Song (Chestnuts Roasting On an Open Fire)” and “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas,” as well as classics by Gershwin and more! Special guests include symphony violinist, and blossoming vocalist, Helen Kim. Tickets will go on sale, as scheduled, on August 8 at 10 a.m. via MetroTix at 314-534-1111 or at www.TheSheldon.org.

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Music Music calendar Thursday, Sept. 17

Fresh w/DJ Smitty, Cicero’s, University City, 9:00 p.m. Tw o Ti m e s Tr u e w / L a r r y Johnson, Jazz at the Bistro, St. Louis, 7:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. Not Half Bad w/The Kuhlies, Babe Lords, Qu3stion, The Demo, St. Louis, Doors 7:30 p.m.

Friday, Sept. 18

Who’s Bad – The Ultimate Michael Jackson Tribute Band, Wildey Theatre, Edwardsville, 8:00 p.m. Hell Night, Traindodge w/ Zebulon Pike, DayBringer, The Firebird, St. Louis, Doors 7:00 p.m. Ross Christopher (Bar Stage), Cicero’s, University City, 8:30 p.m. The Saville Band, Revolution, The Works, Cicero’s, University City, 8:30 p.m. The Road to Pointfest: Session 1, Round 4 w/NDP, Lafayette, Deedzstl, Diamond Back Kings, Pop’s, Sauget, 6:30 p.m. Willie Akins/Montez Coleman Group, Jazz at the Bistro, St. Louis, 7:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. St. Louis Symphony Opening Weekend w/Joshua Bell, Powell Symphony Hall, St. Louis, 8:00 p.m. Kacey Musgraves, The Pageant, St. Louis, Doors 6:30 p.m. An Evening with Josh Rouse, Blueberry Hill, St. Louis, Doors 7:00 p.m.

Saturday, Sept. 19

Valley w/Goldtooth, Echo Bravo, Planet Eater, The Firebird, St. Louis, Doors 7:00 p.m. Mitchell Ferguson (CD Release), Nicole Grace, Supercousins, Big Ass Winners, Cicero’s, University City, 8:00 p.m. Dirtbag Metal Showcase: D-Railed w/Brutal Harmony, Threat Point, Enslaved by Fear, Avant Scarred, Tongue & Groove, Pop’s, Sauget, Doors 6:30 p.m.

St. Louis Symphony Opening Weekend w/Joshua Bell, Powell Symphony Hall, St. Louis, 8:30 p.m. Ginuwine, Lumiere Live, St. Louis, 7:00 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. Johnny Mathis, Fox Theatre, St. Louis, 8:00 p.m. Ozzie & Friends Concert, Peabody Opera House, St. Louis, 7:30 p.m. Tom Segura, The Ready Room, St. Louis, Doors 7:00 p.m. Modoc, The Demo, St. Louis, Doors 8:00 p.m.

City, 8:30 p.m.

Thursday, Sept. 24

Veridia w/Drew Chadwick, The Firebird, St. Louis, Doors 7:00 p.m. Jazz St. Louis @ 20 feat. Christian McBride, Cyrus Chestnut, Gregory Hutchinson, Russell Malone, Terell Stafford, Tim Warfield, Jazz at the Bistro, St. Louis, 7:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. Brandon Holland, Blueberry Hill,

St. Louis, Doors 7:00 p.m. The Go Set w/Captain Dee And The Long Johns, Forgetting January, The Demo, St. Louis, Doors 7:00 p.m. Ibeyi w/Vicktor Taiwo, The Ready Room, St. Louis, Doors 7:00 p.m. St. Louis Folk and Roots Festival, Sheldon Concert Hall, St. Louis, 7:30 p.m. Keith Dudding presents I Love You To Death, The Stage at KHDX at

Grand Center, St. Louis, 7:30 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. Fresh w/DJ Smitty, Cicero’s, University City, 9:00 p.m.

Friday, Sept. 25

Yesterday – The Beatles Tribute B a n d L i v e , Wi l d e y T h e a t r e , Edwardsville, 8:00 p.m. An Under Cover Weekend 9: Night 1, The Firebird, St. Louis, Doors 7:30 p.m.

Sunday, Sept. 20

Ikillya w/Final Drive, The Firebird, St. Louis, Doors 6:00 p.m. St. Louis Symphony Opening Weekend w/Joshua Bell, Powell Symphony Hall, St. Louis, 3:00 p.m. Fifth Annual Interfaith Concert, Sheldon Concert Hall, St. Louis, 5:50 p.m. Idle Hands, Author, The Demo, St. Louis, Doors 6:00 p.m.

Tuesday, Sept. 22

Uncle Lucius, The Demo, St. Louis, Doors 7:00 p.m. Elsie Parker & The Poor People of Paris: Edith Piaf Centennial Gala Concert, Sheldon Concert Hall, St. Louis, 7:30 p.m. Jeremiah Allen and Friends, Missouri History Museum, St. Louis, 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.

Wednesday, Sept. 23

Jazz St. Louis @ 20 feat. Christian McBride, Cyrus Chestnut, Gregory Hutchinson, Russell Malone, Terell Stafford, Tim Warfield, Jazz at the Bistro, St. Louis, 7:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. John Hodgman: Vacationland, The Ready Room, St. Louis, Doors 7:00 p.m. St. Louis Symphony String Quartet, World Chess Hall of Fame, St. Louis, 7:00 p.m. Count It! Punk Rock Themed P a r t y, C i c e r o ’ s , U n i v e r s i t y

Networking Breakfast Dennis Grubaugh Editor and Partner Illinois Business Journal

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Breakfast Buffet Welcome Video Dennis Grubaugh, SIUE Day Chair 8:30 - 8:45 a.m. Rachel Stack, Vice Chancellor for University Advancement and CEO, SIUE Foundation 9 - 9:30 a.m. SIUE Day Networking Opportunity/ Science Building ToursTours 8 a.m. 8:20 a.m.

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RSVP by October 5 to: Julie Babington Director of Annual Giving 618.650.2378 siue_day@siue.edu

6th Annual Staunton Art & Music Festival September 19 & 20 Saturday, 10am - 5pm, Music until 6pm Sunday, 11am - 4pm

Duda Garden Park 205 N. Union St. • Staunton • Fine Art Exhibition • Great Music • Local Authors • Variety of Foods & Beverages • Free Yoga Class Sunday 1-2 pm

Featured Activities & Musicians SATURDAY

Dr. Dan the Pancake Man 12-2pm Just Us Friends 10-12pm Agent 99 12-3pm Men in Heat 3-6pm Rebecca Keller, Master Art Teacher, art classes, 1-3pm, $30, registration required (16”x20” canvas provided) Call Gina (618) 635-2234

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Gary Moore Jazz Band 11-1:30pm, Big Shake Daddies 1:30-4pm Rebecca Keller, Master Art Teacher, art classes, 1-3pm, $30, For more information on this event visit www.stauntonil.com Follow us on FACEBOOK at Staunton Art Fair Funding for this event sponsored by: Staunton Art Council, Staunton Tourism Committee, First National Bank in Staunton, Firnhaber Florists and Fritz Drug Store.

September 17, 2015

On the Edge of the Weekend

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On the Edge of the Weekend

September 17, 2015


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On the Edge of the Weekend

23


Travel Rainbow Springs in the Missouri Ozarks By TOM UHLENBROCK Missouri Division of Tourism Dorothy Carpenter describes Rainbow Springs as “a Garden of Eden.” It’s fair to say the spectacular setting is one of the prettiest pieces of paradise the Missouri Ozarks has to offer. The spring, located near Dora, Mo., and thousands of wooded acres around it, has been privately owned and preserved by Carpenter ’s St. Louis-based family for more than a century. Rainbow Springs is the best kept secret among Missouri’s natural wonders, but that is about to change. A historic fishing lodge overlooking the spring is now available for nightly rental. Rainbow Springs is the third l a rg e s t i n a s t a t e t h a t b o a s t s several impressive springs. The average daily flow is more than 100 million gallons of crystalline water that empties into the North Fork of the White River. Wet weather can increase the output to more than 180 million gallons. The water bursts from the base of a wooded bluff with a boil that rises one to two feet above the surface in a rocky grotto green with ferns, mosses and watercress. Rainbow Springs originally was called “Double Spring” because the water splits into two branches as it leaves the pool, entering the river at two spots about a mile apart. The rushing water doubles the flow of the North Fork, a pristine floating and trout fishing stream in south-central Missouri, some 25 miles from the Arkansas border. A strip of bottomland forest p e rh a p s 1 0 0 y a rd s w i d e s i t s between the spring and the river. The spring branches flow around the land on their way to the river, forming an island. T h e o n l y s t r u c t u re o n t h a t island is Rainbow Springs Lodge, which was built in the mid-1960s. The lodge has four bedrooms and five bathrooms, and a distinct design with wide eaves on the roof and a stone-and-wood fireplace that soars through an atrium in the interior. “It’s a really well thought out architectural gem,” Carpenter said. “The architect was Barry Evans. He was definitely of the Bill Bernoudy-Frank Lloyd Wright ilk.” C a r p e n t e r, w h o i s 6 5 a n d without children, owns the lodge with her sister and a cousin. This May, they put it up for nightly rental through River of Life Farm, a resort a mile of so downriver. Myron and Ann McKee, owners of the popular resort, are known for their “treehouse” cabins, some by the water ’s edge and others hidden higher up the hillside in the secluded river valley. “The only problem with private ownership is you don’t have public access – Myron’s involvement solves that,” Carpenter said. “We want to make the lodge self-sustaining, and let people experience Rainbow Springs the way my family has.” Proposed for Development Carpenter ’s recounting of the family history at Rainbow Springs began with what she called “the monster on the wall.”

24

Missouri DIvision of Tourism

Above, an interior view of the lodge at Rainbow Springs. Below is the exterior. She referred to a framed surveyor ’s drawing for a proposal titled “Rainbow Springs Resort and Fisheries Inc.,” dated Aug. 10, 1927. It showed the forest around the spring subdivided into hundreds of small plots, with a hotel and garage in the middle. A road led to the “golf links.” The company stocked the spring with rainbow trout and changed its name from Double Spring to Rainbow Springs. Carpenter explained that in the early 1920s, people were seeking a summer escape from the soot and heat of St. Louis. Riverside clubhouse communities sprang up, like Times Beach and Castlewood in St. Louis County. Rainbow Springs was on the drawing board. In 1928, her grandfather, Birch Oliver Mahaffey of St. Louis, discovered the project and bought a fifth of the company and some 6,000 acres surrounding the spring. “I believe from reading his letters that he wanted to gain as much control of the spring as he could,” Carpenter said. “The Depression gave him the opportunity to buy out the rest of the company and halt all development plans on the property. From then on, he strove to preserve its natural state.” A Comfortable Place Mahaffey had four daughters and three of them hired Evans, the architect, to design a lodge for their families. “They wanted to be able to see the spring from the lodge at all times of the day,” Carpenter said. “So they built it directly across from the spring, with glass corner windows for seeing every angle of

On the Edge of the Weekend

the spring branches.” The house was done in the mid-century modern style, with ingenious touches. The fireplace hearth is of poured and polished c o n c re t e w i d e e n o u g h t o s i t around. The chimney is fronted by slanting wood strips wide enough for storing fly-fishing rods. Mahaffey long had the idea of cooling the lodge with the 55-degree spring water, and Evans attempted to do it, with little success. Myron McKee of River of Life has preserved the lodge’s historic furniture and artifacts,

September 17, 2015

although he did update the heating and cooling system. A stone patio is off the first floor, and a deck is on the second floor, both within sight of the spring, which is reached by a sturdy wood foot bridge. Open the bedroom windows at night and the sound of the water tumbling along fills the rooms. “It’s a very rugged house – people came in with their waders – the oak furniture is as tough as nails,” Carpenter said. “All of us had different ideas, and the architect interviewed us and dealt

with completely diverse uses for the place. I was 18 at the time and wanted space to throw 30 sleeping bags for my friends.” Trout, Eagles and Hellbenders The bottom floor of the lodge has a kitchen, utility rooms, half bath and a large open living and dining room with two sets of sofas. The second floor has four spacious bedrooms, each with two single beds and a full bath. The second floor has a balcony looking down on the fireplace and first floor. The balcony was made wide enough to hold extra beds, or sleeping bags. Cots are provided, bringing the maximum occupancy to 14. The nightly rental price, with a two-night minimum, is $850 for up to eight people. Each additional adult is $87.50 a night; children younger than 12 are $43.75. For more information, visit RiverOfLifeFarm.com. Fed by springs and protected by national forest for the top twothirds of its 50 miles, the North Fork has one of the largest selfsustaining wild rainbow trout populations in the Midwest. \Resident bald eagles live in the valley, and the river was chosen b y w i l d l i f e re s e a rc h e r s f o r a restocking program of endangered Ozark hellbenders, a large, aquatic salamander. The family maintains control of Rainbow Springs and some 1,400 acres of land around it. “Preserving the forests of the watershed ensures protection of the spring’s purity and the North Fork’s incredible scenic beauty,” Carpenter said. Arrowheads and other archaeological evidence indicated the spring was visited by the first Americans. In later days, Jesuits used the lodge for spiritual retreats. “I can’t let the spring be desecrated – it’s a special place,” she said. “The Indians felt it was sacred. I feel that way, too.” Tom Uhlenbrock is a writer for the Missouri Department of Natural Resources.


Classified Help Wanted General Lost & Found

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LOST: Black cat, female, 9lbs, has microchip. Last seen on Matterhorn Dr in Glen Carbon. Breakaway collar. Goes by “Abby”. Call PSO Jamie Foster at 618-288-2639 or the party involved at 618-580-4862 LOST: Female Dachshund/Rat Terrier mix, black & white. Last seen around Esic/University Dr. Name is “Lucy”, friendly. Call PSO Jamie Foster at 618-288-2639 or the party involved at 618-954-1381

Automotive

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Important Message: It’s illegal for companies doing business by phone to promise you a loan and ask you to pay for it before they deliver. For more information, call toll-free 1-877-FTC-HELP. A public service message from the Edwardsville Intelligencer and the Federal Trade Commission.

Help Wanted General

305

Auto Mechanic with experience, able to diagnosis repair. References required. Benefits and insurance. Part-time/possible Full-time Appliance Delivery & Installation. Call for appointment. Broadway Battery and Tire Service. Highland, IL. 618-654-8684 Help Wanted Full time Sign Manufacture Must be creative, be able to meet deadlines, be well organized and detailed. The ability to handle multiple projects is a must. Good communication with experience with Corel Draw, Composer, Rasterlink and Photoshop. Must be able to run Gerber Edge & Mimaki printers and plotters. Prefer 1-2 years experience laying vinyl. Apply online at hr@nevco.com or in person at Nevco Inc. Greenville, IL

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HAIRDRESSERS AND BARBERS full time or part time positions available. Commission or base salary. Call 656-1545 for interview or email crvp33@gmail.com. JOIN OUR TEAM!!!! NEW STARTING WAGES FOR LPN/RN!! CLINTON MANOR IN NEW BADEN FT EVENING RN/LPN PT RN/LPN PT DAY AND EVENING CNA’S FT/PT DSP’S Clinton Manor is a great place to work!! Join a dedicated team who focuses on the quality of care of our residents. Each resident is treated with respect and given individual choices and input in regards to their care. Apply now and make a difference!!! Competitive Wages and benefits!!! Check out our website clintonmanor livingcenter.com or call 618-588-3826 Keller Construction, Inc. is looking for a full time

Diesel Mechanic

to repair and maintain various types of equipment including trucks and heavy equipment. Must furnish standard tools. Clean driving record required. Experience necessary. Must have CDL. Drug and alcohol test required 618-781-1234 Metro-East Prestress/ Precast Company is seeking plant workers for its Glen Carbon facility. Requires ability to work in a year-around outdoor environment, on a daily basis to frequently lift up to 50lbs, operate small tools, tape measures and other equipment, pre-employment and drug testing required, available for Saturday work and have reliable transportation. After 90 day probationary period union membership and benefits are available. Apply in person only at St. Louis Prestress, Inc., 16 Commercial Court, Glen Carbon, IL 62034 NO APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED OVER THE PHONE. D/F/W/E and E/E/O

Jobs!

Jobs!

Jobs!

Help Wanted General

305

Stur Restaurant and Lounge, a growing restaurant in E’ville is looking for: Waiters, Waitresses, Bartenders & Kitchen staff. Call/stop in for interview 618-307-9613 Wanted FT or PT, Mechanical Engineer

for small mfg. company in Litchfield, IL. Please send resumes to Rick at 713 W. Columbian Blvd. S., PO Box 549, Litchfield, IL 62056 or e-mail: ifmpres@ consolidated.net. Wanted full-time Corp / Real Est./Est. Planning Paralegal/ Legal Secretary for law office in Edw, IL. Ideal cand. must have 5 years exp. in areas of corp form, real est doc prep, est planning and probate. Prof app and comm are required. Candidate must be detailed oriented, able to handle multiple tasks at once and be able to work independently. Background working for mult attys preferable. Required knowledge of all Microsoft Office products and some time keeping softwares. Salary commensurate with exp. Med/Den/ 401K offered. Send resume to bar@bcpklaw.com

Furniture

410

Bed - Queen PillowTop Mattress Set New, still in plastic, $175. (618)772-2710. Can Deliver! Brand New PillowTop Mattress Sets! Still in plastic! King-$275, Full-$150. Can Deliver! (618)772-2710. Financing Available. $40 down, take home today!

Misc. Merchandise

426

4’ White Pine Trees: delivered, planted, mulched. $69.50/tree. Buy 10, get 1 free. Other sizes (217)371-8005 C.K.S. METAL CORP. (618) 656-5306 M-F 8:00-5:00 SAT 8-12

EDWARDSVILLE, IL Honest Weights & Honest Prices #1 Copper $2.05/lb. #2 Copper $1.85/lb. Yellow Brass $1.35/lb. Stainless $.32/lb. Painted Siding $.40/lb. Scrap Alum $.37-.57/lb. Alum Cans $.36/lb. Clean Alum Wheels $.57/lb. Electric Motors $.17/lb. Batteries $.23/lb. Insulated Wire #1-$.80 /#2-$.70 Scrap Iron - $80.00-$115.00/Ton

Houses For Rent

705

Apts/Duplexes For Rent

710

2 story country home: 6rms, 2ba. St. Jacob, c/a. No pets/smoking $1000/mo. 651-1400

1br apt in Highland. Recently painted, new windows. $400/mo Call 618-910-7639.

2br, 2ba house for rent/lease to own, on lake. Holiday Shores. $1,400. 618-781-6868

1BR loft apt & 1BR duplex $585/mo. + No Pets. Credit Check $585dep. 656-8953

3br, 1.5ba house, 214 Springer, E’ville. No pets. No Smoking. $1,100/mo. 656-0230.

2 BR 1 BA Duplex, Collinsville: bsmt. fam. rm; lrg yd; W/D hkup; New carpet; lots of strge, nice area! Must see! $625+dep. 618-781-7692.

Apts/Duplexes/Homes www.glsrent.com (618)656-2230 Edw-2br 1ba, No pets. 2 car gar. Near SIUE. $875 + dep. Cr. ck. MUST SEE! 656-3989.

Apts/Duplexes For Rent

710

15 minutes to St. Louis and SIUE. 2BR 1.5 BA Townhomes. SMOKE FREE. $695 mo. includes washer/dryer, water, sewer and trash service. No pets. On-site owner. www.fairway-estates.net

Apts/Duplexes For Rent

710

1BR 2nd Flr Apt in Edw. $475/mo + Dep. 618-781-0701 2BR, 1.5BA Twnhouse in Glen Carbon. No pets. 1yr lease. $645$695/mo. 288-9882. 3br TH 1200sq. ft. Collinsville, $790/mo. 345-9610. Specials!! skyviewtownhouses.com

2 BR apt, central Edw: Stove, frig, rear pking; $495/mo. + utilities. Call 619-248-8747 2BR 1BA Duplex near SIU: 97 Devon Ct., Edw.; w/d hkup. no dogs. $795. 444-4658. 2BR Loft, newly remod new kit, ba, wndws/drs d/w, w/d hkups. $725 incl. w/s/t. 593-0173 2BR Townhome: quiet Glen Carbon area, All appls includes w/d $675/mo 314-378-0513

1/2 off 1st Month! 1 & 2br avail. All utilities incl. MP30 Properties. Muriel Mohr 401-9805

Duplex for rent two units available 617-619 Garfield Edwardsville, 2br, 1ba $850/unit. E-mail Krissy at krissy gorijulianlaw.com.

GLEN CARBON PEPPERWOOD CONDOS All electric units, FP, stacked WD, Deck/ patio, all appliances. 1BR from $625. 2BR from $750. Carports available. 618-624-4610 -----------------------------VILLAGE CT. APTS 2BR, All Electric Units, Stove, Fridge, w/d hkups. NO PETS. FROM $700. 618-624-4610

WE PAY CASH ON $$ MOST ITEMS $$ CHECK ALL OUR PRICES AT

Help Wanted Medical

308

Caregiver Needed to sit w/ disabled person from 1:00am-9:00am. Light housework. Call 618-409-0740, leave name and number. NOW HIRING!!! EDEN VILLAGE CARE CENTER

CNA Weekends Only Option Pay rate is $12/hour for CNA’s working The Weekends Only Option. Apply in person or send resume to: 400 S. Station Road Glen Carbon, Il 62034 You can also apply online at www.edenvillage.org

CKSMETALCORP.COM CALL FOR TODAY’S PRICES!!

Wanted To Buy

Yard Sales

WANTED-FILL DIRT PLEASE CALL MARY @ 618-304-5754 LOCATION: EDWARDSVILLE AREA

Lawn & Garden

455

John Deere 80s model 950 Diesel with finish mower. $4,500. 618-410-2370 for more information

2-Family Sale 210 Matterhorn Ct. Glen Carbon (Meridian Hills) Fri. 09/18, 8a-7p Sat. 09/19, 8a-12p Oak chairs, Longaberger, Precious Moments, new items! Check us out! Autumn Glen Subdivision Sale (near Glen Carbon Village Hall) Multi Family Sale Saturday, 9/19 8 A.M. to Noon Lots of clothing, Household, Misc Items

CNA Full Time & Part Time Experience the delight and compassion of working in geriatrics. This person will be responsible for providing exceptional person centered care to our Elders. Must be able to work weekends Apply in person or send resume to: Eden Village Retirement 400 South Station Road Glen Carbon, IL 62034 You can also apply online at edenvillage.org

Carrier Routes 401 CARRIER NEEDED! RT1— Newspaper carrier needed in the area off St. Louis St; Banner St, S. Charles St, Fayette St, Florida St, Georgia St, Steinmeyer Woods Approx. 18 newspapers on this route. Papers need to be delivered by 5:00 p.m. Monday thru Friday and 8:30 a.m. Saturdays. If you are interested in this route, please call the Intelligencer at 618-656-4700 ext. 20

find a job here! the classifieds

Publisher's Notice

1099

Yard Sales

1099

440

Garage Sale

701

All Real Estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, status or national origin or an intention to make any such preference limitation, or discrimination.” Familial status includes children living with parents or legal custodians, pregnant women and people securing custody of children under 18. 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 opportunity basis. To complain of discrimination call HUD toll free at 1-800-669-9777. The toll free telephone number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275.

7643 Jerusalem Rd, Edwardsville Sat. 09/19, 8AM-1PM. Antiques, collectibles, misc household items. Lots of great deals!

Glenwood Estates Fall Yard Sale! Glen Carbon, Off Rt. 157, just south of I-270 SAT. 09/19, 8A-12P Many participants! Huge selection of items!

Moving Sale 8567 East Kirsch Rd Troy IL I-55 to 40 to Troy/O’Fallon Rd Follow Signs Fri. 09/18, 8a-2p Sat. 09/19, 8a-2p Sun. 09/20, 8a-2p Multi-Family Heritage Estates Subdivision Garage Sale in Glen Carbon Located about 3/4 mile from I-270 and Highway 159 intersection, just off Glen Crossing Road. Fri. 09/18, 5p-8p Sat. 09/19, 8a-12p. Offering electric dryer, vintage Singer sewing machine, home and seasonal decor, Native American art, household items, and womens/boys/young mens clothing.

Subdivision Garage Sale Fountains of Sunset Route 157 Sat. 09/19, 8a-2p Antique dealer closeout items. Budweiser & Cardinal items. Vintage poker chips, jewelry, toys, paper memorabilia and more. Radio controlled cars, airplanes, helicopters. Surfing body kites. 5500 Watt generator, industrial box fan. Queen bedroom suite; round table w/ 4 chairs. Women’s name brand boutique clothing; home decor; BBQ smoker; misc. tools. Desk chair; bassinet; misc. chairs and lamps and many more items Timberwolfe Estates Subdivision Yard Sale Glen Carbon Saturday, Sept. 19 7a-noon Huge subdivision sale featuring furniture, home décor, Halloween costumes, clothing for children and adults, toys, household items, designer purses and wallets, Ethan Allen armoire with shelves, television, Rainbow playset, doggie door, Mary Engelbreit, coffee maker, new barbies, Longaberger baskets, seasonal decorations, luggage, gas powered lawn edger.

Yard Sale 500 Phillipena Edwardsville Fri. 09/18, 12p-5p Sat. 09/19, 8a-12p Bunk bed w/twin & full, lamps, pictures, space heaters, other home furnishings/ decorative items

Place A Class Ad Online!

September 17, 2015

On the Edge of the Weekend

25


Classified Apts/Duplexes For Rent

710 Important Message: Companies that do business by phone can’t ask you to pay for credit before you get it. For more information, call toll-free 1-877-FTC-HELP. A public service message from the Edwardsville Intelligencer and the Federal Trade Commission.

Great 2br apts. for rent, 1/2 off 1st month rent. MP30 properties Muriel Mohr 401-9805 LUXURY 2 BRs located at 270 & 111 Gourmet kitchens, 2 bay windows, washer/dryer included. WST included. Must See! $695. Call for our move-in specials! (618)931-3333.

Office Space For Rent

Homes For Sale

805

725 GREAT LOCATION! A MUST SEE!! Home for sale: 3457 Vicksburg Dr, E’ville. 618-410-2370 for more information.

Office/whse. space for lease, 2250/4500sq.ft. 3 Schwarz St. Plz. Edw. 618-692-4144.

For the best investment that goes beyond the present, simply fill out, cut and mail this form to: Edwardsville Intelligencer N.I.E. Program 117 North Second Street PO Box 70 Edwardsville, IL 62025-0070

Yes! I want to donate to the Intelligencer Newspaper in Education Fund! Enclosed is my donation of: ______$5.00 _______$10.00 _______$20.00 _______Other Name_____________________________________________________ Address___________________________________________________ City, State, Zip______________________________________________ Telephone_______________________ Is it okay to print your name in our newspaper? Please circle Yes or No.

RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS

Two L o c a t i o n s S e rv i n g t h e M e t ro E a s t A re a Edwardsville

O’Fallon/Shiloh

1012 Plummer Drive

1941 Frank Scott Parkway

618-655-4100

618-628-2400

Locally Owned and Operated CONGRATULATIONS TO AUGUST LISTING & SALES AGENT OF THE MONTH

OPEN HOUSE

OPEN HOUSE

OPEN HOUSE

OPEN HOUSE

CONGRATULATIONS TO AUGUST TEAM LISTING & SALES AGENTS OF THE MONTH DIANA MASSEY TEAM

SANDIE LAMANTIA (618) 978-2384 A COMMITMENT TO EXCELLENCE has made this Associate a leader in the real estate market.

(618) 791-5024 OR (618) 791-9298

3309 Hershiser EDWARDSVILLE SUN 1-3 $629,500 Diane Massey Team 618-791-5024 or 618-791-9298

112 Knights Bridge Ln. EDWARDSVILLE SUN 1-3 $598,500 Sandy LaMantia 618-978-2384

1511 Beveridge Ct. EDWARDSVILLE SUN 1-3 $595,000 Vicki Lowry 618-741-7178

7012 Monday Ct. EDWARDSVILLE SUN 1-3 $549,000 Brent Horner 618-292-7535

A COMMITMENT TO EXCELLENCE has made this Associate a leader in the real estate market.

OPEN HOUSE

NEW PRICE

NEW PRICE

FEATURED LISTING

FEATURED LISTING

FEATURED LISTING

3841 Ember Ct. EDWARDSVILLE SUN 1-3 $384,900 Betsy Butler 618-972-2225

IMMACULATE!! On 5 wooded ACRES close to town is the meticulously maintained home with walkout basement, 4 bedrooms, 5 car garage. $390,000 EDWARDSVILLE PR102473

3 bedroom, 1 1/2 bath house with hardwood floors in convenient location. $106,000 EDWARDSVILLE PR102429

A home with no equal! 14’ ceilings, American walnut flooring, travertine tile, quartz radius counters and Amish ebony cabinetry. $678,500 EDWARDSVILLE PR101867

IRRESISTIBLE 5BR/4.5BA home, chef’s kitchen with SS appliances, wood floors, finished LL, covered patio plus tree lined lot. $514,000 EDWARDSVILLE PR102155

Delightful 1.5 story, 6BR/5BA home. All freshly painted and move-in ready. $389,500 EDWARDSVILLE PR102437

FEATURED LISTING

FEATURED LISTING

FEATURED LISTING

FEATURED LISTING

FEATURED LISTING

FEATURED LISTING

Lovely split bdrm ranch with finished LL. Buyer can customize selections. $364,000 GLEN CARBON PR102370

7+ Acres & pole barn, 3BR/2BA. Just outside the city limits. Move in Ready! $294,800 EDWARDSVILLE PR102491

HISTORIC ST. LOUIS ST. 4BR/ 2BA, amazing wood detailing, wood floors, master ensuite. $235,000 EDWARDSVILLE PR102440

SECLUDED home in park like setting on 3 gorgeous wooded acres. All brick 3+ bed, 3 bath. Call for a complete list of updates. $235,000 GLEN CARBON PR102465

Country living close to town! 3BR/ 3BA home on 2.5 acres. Fenced area for horses. Pool with deck. Outbuildings. $219,000 EDWARDSVILLE PR102323

Nice 2 bedroom home in quiet neighborhood, great starter home. Must see. $94,900 EDWARDVILLE PR102288

S e a rc h N E W L I S T I N G S , O P E N H O U S E S a n d H O M E S F O R S A L E i n yo u r a re a a t

w w w. b h h s E l i t e P r o p e r t i e s . c o m ©2015 BHH Affiliates, LLC. An independently owned and operated franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc.® Equal Housing Opportunity.

26

On the Edge of the Weekend

September 17, 2015


Classified

SERVICE DIRECTORY

Insured Call Bob Rose 978-8697

BIG DADDY’S TREE SERVICE 30 Years Experience

75 Ft. Bucket Truck Stump Grinding Trimming • Removal

I NEED WORK BAD! Discount for any Reason. Will go Anywhere Anytime.

LET ME FIX IT! 618-210-3654 HANDYMAN SERVICE • Remodeling • Painting • Carpentry • Drywall • Lighting & Ceiling Fans • Electric Service Upgrade Most Home Repairs Insured 20 Years Experience

Call Lee: (618) 581-5154

HEATING & COOLING

$59 Flat, No Service Call Charge A/C Clean & Check

$200 OFF New Air Conditioner & Coil Install”

Worden, Hamel all areas North, No Problem, I Live There!

TREE SERVICE

TIM’S

TREE SERVICE

Lawn Cutting/Trimming

COMPETITIVE RATES

Landscape Mulching

• Expert Climbers • Expert Operators • Bucket Truck Service • Free Estimates • Tree Removal/Trimming • Stump Removal • Over Growth Maintenance • Full Line of Excavators • Fully Insured References Upon Request

Call or Text: 618-979-2006

• Precision Tree & Shrub Trimming & Removal • Licensed & Insured

Free Estimates

Free Estimates www.dexstreeservice.com

HOME REMODELING

C OMMERCIAL & R ESIDENTIAL • • • • •

Fall Clean-Up Mowing Landscape Installation Irrigation Landscape Lighting

Insured

656-7725 GatewayLawn.com

CLIFF’S AFFORDABLE HOME REMODELING 39 Years Experience

CARDINAL STUMP ELECTRICAL GRINDING LLC Licensed & Insured PROMPT & RELIABLE Free Estimates

Call Joe 618-973-8458

HOME REMODELING

Licensed & Insured

Siding/Soffit/Facia/Gutters Doors/Windows Powerwashing -Decks/Stairs Fire & Flood Restoration

ALL JOBS WELCOME

618-335-3330

KB

Kelley Brothers Construction FAMILY OWNED and OPERATED!

Roofs Windows Decks Carpet Vinyl Electrical Tile Siding Drywall Doors Man Caves And Much More!

PAINTING Interior/Exterior

HAUL ALMOST ANYTHING/ EVERYTHING Remove Unwanted Debris From Basement Garage, Attic; Wherever! VERY REASONABLE Retired Deputy Sheriff

692-0182

Stain/Paint Powerwashing •No job too small •Insured •Local •Will beat all competitors Written bids

DAN GRAY 656-8806 910-7874

618-623-2592 • Fall Clean-ups • Landscape Design / Install • Retaining Walls • Patios • Grading/Drainage • Rock / Mulch • Mowing / Lawn Maintenance

Aerate & Overseed specials this month!

FRIENDLY LAWN CARE • Grass Cutting • Landscape • Power Washing • Grass Seeding • Clean-Ups • Bush Trimming • Mulching We have more services.. Just give us a call.....

GARAGES

Servi c e Cal l $10. OFF

CLEANING

PRISTINE CLEANING Caring Beyond Cleaning

• Licensed, Bonded, Insured • RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL • CARPET, UPHOLSTREY, TILE & GROUT • HARDWATER REMOVAL/ SHOWER DOORS • BIOHAZARD CERTIFIED Call us today for a free quote on weekly, biweekly, monthly, one time, move in move out, repossession and foreclosure cleaning

(618) 920-0233 www.pristine-cleaning.biz

00

Not Valid on Weekends or Emergency Service. One coupon per customer.

Visit our showroom 5407 Godfrey Road, Godfrey, IL

PLUMBING

(Next door to Round Table Restaurant)

EDWARDSVILLE GLEN CARBON

(618)656-0050

Owner: Todd Edwards

Flooring Kitchen Cabinets/Countertops

Call: (618)654-0000 or cell phone: (618)444-0293

OUTDOOR SERVICES

(618) 345-9131

(618) 410-8245

• Wallpaper • Specialty Painting • Inside or Outside Work • Power Washing • Deck Refinishing

BOB’S

Call Bob

LOWEST PRICES GUARANTEED!

Over 20 Years Experience!

HAULING

DECKS/FENCES

•Fully Insured •Tree Trimming •Tree Removal •Topping Experts •Stump Removal •Storm Clean-up •Bush Trimming •Spotless Clean-up Every Time •Crane Service

618-977-5037

• Lawn Care • Clean Gutters • Painting: Interior & Exterior • Powerwashing

JIM BRAVE PAINTING

618-514-8058

SERVICE

Framing, Drywall/Tape/Paint

Free Estimates & Warranty

Fully Insured

TREE

618-409-4355

(618) 407-3093

618-459-3330 618-410-0241

DEX’S

Carpenter

No Job Too Small

Residential & Commercial

PAINTING

AVERAGE JOE’S

25 YEARS EXPERIENCE

EPA Certified • Ranken Graduate

Service Upgrades, New & Old Home Wiring Service Calls & Trouble Shooting

Tree & Shrub Trimming & Removal

• Landscape Work • Shrub Trimming & Removal • Drainage & Erosion Problems • Mulching • Power Washing • Deck & Fence Refinishing • Quality Work • Insured

FREE ESTIMATES

Quality Electrical

Foster & Sons Lawn Service

25 Years of Service Experience in Edwardsville

A+

Need an Air Conditioner?

Hellrung & Sons

LAWN & LAWN & HOME CARE HOME CARE

WWW.DANSGARAGEDOORSERVICE.COM

BOB’S HANDYMAN SERVICE Remodeling & Repair Drywall Finished Carpentry Painting Ceramic Tile Build & Repair Decks Exterior House And Deck Washing Landscaping Blinds & Draperies Light Fixture & Ceiling Fans No Job Too Small

TREE SERVICE

www.landscapeedwardsville.com

HANDYMAN

Darrell’s Carpentry Plus Ceramic Tile Decks & Fences DOORS: Entrances Interior & Trim Patio Drywall Repairs Paint & Texture REMODELING: Basements Bathrooms Kitchens Replacement Windows Room Additions Rental Rehabs Service Upgrades Storm Damage

Insured & Bonded 656-6743

618-781-7162 ALL YOUR REPAIR NEEDS

Need something done around the house? CAN BE FOUND IN THE INTELLIGENCER’S SERVICE DIRECTORY.

Discounts for Seniors & Military!

Call one of these advertisers today!

To place your ad here call Lisa 656-4700 x 46

Aaron Kelley

618-225-3082

September 17, 2015

On the Edge of the Weekend

27


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KīĞƌ ǀĂůŝĚ ƚŚƌŽƵŐŚ ϵͬϮϳͬϭϱ͘ WƌŝŽƌ ƐĂůĞƐ ĞdžĞŵƉƚ͘ &ŝŶĂŶĐŝŶŐ ŽŶ ĂƉƉƌŽǀĞĚ ĐƌĞĚŝƚ ǁŝƚŚ Ă ϯϯй ĚĞƉŽƐŝƚ͘ ůƚŚŽƵŐŚ ǁĞ ŵĂŬĞ ĞǀĞƌLJ ĞīŽƌƚ ƚŽ ĞŶƐƵƌĞ ŽƵƌ ĂĚǀĞƌƟƐŝŶŐ ŝƐ ĐŽƌƌĞĐƚ͕ ǁĞ ĐĂŶŶŽƚ ďĞ ŚĞůĚ ůŝĂďůĞ ĨŽƌ ƚLJƉŽŐƌĂƉŚŝĐĂů ĞƌƌŽƌƐ Žƌ ŵŝƐƉƌŝŶƚƐ͘ ^ĞĞ ƐƚŽƌĞ ĨŽƌ ĚĞƚĂŝůƐ͘ Showroom Hours: Monday, Thursday, Friday 9am-7pm Tuesday, Wednesday, Saturday 9am-5pm Sunday 12pm-5pm 2.5 miles north of I-270 on Route 157 1091 S. State Rte 157, Edwardsville, Illinois 618.656.5111

28

On the Edge of the Weekend

September 17, 2015


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