100809 Edge

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OCTOBER 8 ISSUE

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What’s Inside

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What’s Happening

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Memory maker

Thursday Saturday October 8_________ October 10_ ______

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Get ready to rock

Phantom of the Opera, -Fox Theatre, St. Louis, Mo., 8 p.m. Fall Festival -Edwardsville/Glen Carbon/ SIUE

Old school bell goes on display.

Roger Clyne and the Peacemakers to visit.

10 "Fame"

It's NOT a remake.

12

Fencing

Academy opens in St. Louis.

14 Sweet sounds

SIUE lines up a season of music

17 Off to paradise

Calabash Cove offering deals.

19 Apples

Because it is that time of year.

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Friday October 9_________ Fall Festival, -Edwardsville/Glen Carbon/ SIUE Phantom of the Opera, -Fox Theatre, St. Louis, Mo., 8 p.m. Alpha Players present Big River: The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn -Florissant Civic Center Theatre, #1 James J. Eagan Dr., Florissant, Mo., 8 p.m. Kelly Miller Circus -R.P. Lumber front lot, Troy, 4:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m., tickets: www. troymaryvillecoc.com Home and Remodeling Show -St. Charles Convention Center, St. Charles, Mo.; free 12 Angry Men -Hard Road Theatre Production, Highland Elementary Auditorium, 1800 Lindenthal Ave., Highland, 7 p.m.

Fall Festival -Edwardsville/Glen Carbon/ SIUE Phantom of the Opera -Fox Theatre, St. Louis, Mo., 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. Alpha Players present Big River: The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn -Florissant Civic Center Theatre, #1 James J. Eagan Dr., Florissant, Mo., 8 p.m. Kelly Miller Circus -R.P. Lumber front lot, Troy, 2 p.m. and 5 p.m., tickets: www.troymaryvillecoc.com Home and Remodeling Show, -St. Charles Convention Center, St. Charles, Mo.; free 12 Angry Men -Hard Road Theatre Production, Highland Elementary Auditorium, 1800 Lindenthal Ave., Highland, 7 p.m.

Sunday October 11_ ______ Fall Festival -Edwardsville/Glen Carbon/ SIUE Phantom of the Opera

-Fox Theatre, St. Louis, Mo., 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Alpha Players present Big River: The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn -Florissant Civic Center Theatre, #1 James J. Eagan Dr., Florissant, Mo., 2 p.m. Jeff Dunham -Mizzou Arena, Columbia, Mo., 5 p.m. Home and Remodeling Show -St. Charles Convention Center, St. Charles, Mo.; free

Tuesday October 13_ ______ Phantom of the Opera -Fox Theatre, St. Louis, Mo., 8 p.m.

Wednesday October 14_ ______ Phantom of the Opera -Fox Theatre, St. Louis, Mo., 8 p.m. Good ‘N’ Plenty, SIUE Theater and Dance -Dunham Hall Theater, www.siue. edu/THEATER/, 7:30 p.m.

Who We Are 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, either through home delivery or 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. 30 or fax 659.1677. Publisher – Denise Vonder Haar | Editor – Bill Tucker | Lead Writer – Debbie Settle | Cover Design – Desirée Bennyhoff

October 8, 2009

The Edge – Page

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People

Marci Winters-McLaughlin/The Edge

Ted Frisbie examines an old iron bell rescued from the Quercus Grove Schoolhouse for a date of origin or manufacture.

Old school bell will be displayed By STEVE HORRELL Of The Edge The cast iron bell that signaled Larry Brown and his classmates at the old Quercus Grove School that it was time to come in from recess will be on display starting next month at the Madison County Historical Society near downtown Edwardsville. The bell dropped out of its belfry during a fire two years ago that destroyed not only the belfry but much of the one-room schoolhouse. The Quercus Grove Rural Club, which had bought the 2-acre site from Madison County in 1984, has since sold slate chalkboards, chairs and other relics from the school, but the bell continues to be stored at a house across the street. Ted Frisbie estimates its weight at 200 pounds, and its diameter, at the bottom, at about 30 inches. Frisbie, who lives in Edwardsville and taught anthropology for three decades at SIUE before retiring in 1997, has spent years researching the history of Quercus Grove School.

October 8, 2009

Recently he discovered that the original schoolhouse opened July 13, 1868. That discovery came during his research of transcripts belonging to a man who had lived across the street. “He was still alive when the foundation was being poured,” Frisbie said. “The bell was probably made that year.” It was hoisted up to the belfry again when the school was rebuilt, in 1937. Norma Meyer attended the school from first through eighth grades, starting in 1940. Two years ago, she told the Intelligencer that during the winter months teachers allowed students to skate on the pond behind the school, and sometimes she allowed one of them to ring the bell, calling them all back to class. Larry Brown attended the school from the first through the fourth grades. “The teacher would go in the library and pull the rope for recess,” he recalled on Thursday. “Once in a while somebody would be allowed to ring it.” The bell already had a crack in it before the

2007 fall, he said. Now it has a second. “The Liberty Bell has one,” Frisbie said. “We’re one up on them.” The club recently bought back about 350 bricks that were at the old school, and Frisbie wants a 4-foot by 4-foot cube to be made with them, upon which the bell would rest. One side would have a dedicatory stone, and a 20-inch by 20-inch bronze plaque upon which the bell’s history is inscribed. Frisbie has already signed papers donating the bell, and the bell’s papers, over to the museum. MCHS President Joyce Williams could not be reached for comment. The Quercus Grove Rural Club meets next month to determine which of 14 local not-forprofit entities will be awarded $80,000 the club realized from the sale of the Quercus Grove property. By then, museum officials may have already decided where they want the bell to be displayed. Asked whether had a location in mind, Frisbie said only, “Somewhere outside on the grounds.”

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People People planner Washington Bible will be displayed The Bible upon which George Washington rested his hand on April 30, 1789 when taking the oath of office as first President of the United States will be displayed for one day, Friday, October 9, at the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library in downtown Springfield, Illinois. The public is invited to view this one-ofa-kind historic artifact free of charge from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. that day. The Inaugural Bible has been brought to Illinois for the first time by the Grand Lodge of Ancient Free and Accepted Masons of Illinois and is provided as a courtesy by the St. John’s Lodge of New York for use during the installation of the Grand Master and Grand Lodge Officers on Friday evening, October 9 at the Springfield Hilton. The Bible complements an original 1799 George Washington letter featured in the exhibit Illinois Stories: “How Vast and How Varied a Field…” The Agricultural Vision of Abraham Lincoln, which may be seen at the adjacent Abraham Lincoln Presidential Museum. The letter is on loan from the St. Louis Mercantile Library and will be displayed through November 2009. Paid admission is required to visit the Museum, while there is no charge to visit the Library. After the conclusion of the War of Independence, New York City became the first Capitol of the United States, and it was there on April 30, 1789 that George Washington, a Brother of the Ancient Free and Accepted Masons, was to be sworn in as the nation’s first President. Gathered on the Inaugural platform were members of Congress, Washington, and Chancellor Robert R. Livingston, Grand Master of Masons in the State of New York. Everything was ready for the oath of office when it was

discovered that a Bible had not been provided upon which the PresidentElect could swear allegiance to the Constitution. Jacob Morton, marshal of the Inaugural Parade and Master of St. John’s Lodge, offered to get the altar Bible of St. John’s Lodge, which met nearby at the corner of Water and Wall Streets. Chancellor Livingston asked Morton to fetch the Bible, and the ceremony proceeded. Washington took the oath with his right hand resting on the Bible which had been opened to the Book of Genesis, chapters 49 and 50. Washington concluded the oath with “I swear, so help me God!” then bowed over the Bible and reverently kissed it, whereupon Chancellor Livingston exclaimed, “Long live George Washington, President of the United States!” The King James Version Bible has since been used at four other inaugurations: President Warren G. Harding in 1921; President Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1953; President Jimmy Carter in 1977; and President George H.W. Bush in 1989. It was also to have been used for the inauguration of President George W. Bush in 2001, but rain prevented its use. It has also been present at numerous public and Masonic occasions, including Washington’s funeral procession in New York, December 31, 1799; the introduction of Croton water into New York City, October 14, 1840; the dedication of the Masonic Temples in Boston, June 24, 1867 and Philadelphia on May 24, 1869; the dedication of the Washington monument in Washington, DC on February 21, 1885 and its rededication in 1998; and the laying of the cornerstone of the Masonic Home at Utica, NY on May 21, 1891. It was also used at the opening of the present Masonic Hall in New York City on September 18, 1909. More recently it was featured at the World’s Fair in New York, has

been displayed at the CIA Offices outside Washington DC, and at the Famous Fathers & Sons exhibition at the George H.W. Bush Presidential Library near Dallas, TX in 2001. The Bible is still in active use by the Lodge. When not being used by St. John’s Lodge or on tour, it is on display at Federal Hall on Wall Street in New York City. For information about programs and exhibits at the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum, visit www.presidentlincoln.org.

Porter’s Steakhouse to host Oktoberfest A taste of Germany is coming to Collinsville. For the first time, the Doubletree Hotel Collinsville a n d P o r t e r ’ s S t e a k h o u s e a re

celebrating Oktoberfest on Oct. 22 from 5 to 9 pm. The celebration taking place on the hotel’s lush new outdoor terrace, will include live music by Johnny Chase and all food and beverage for just $25 per person. The real Oktoberfest is a traditional 16-day Bavarian celebration dating back to 1810 and hosted annually in Munich, Germany. While this celebration will be far shorter, it will feature many of the same types of food and beverage. Porter’s Steakhouse C h e f , J o n a t h a n H o ff m a n , h a s created a menu including traditional favorites such as mini rouladen, sauerbraten, potato p a n c a k e s , s a u s a g e s a m p l e r, spaetzel and red cabbage. There will even be mini apple struedels to top it off. In Germany, no

Oktoberfest celebration is complete without “brezel,” so local baker Companion will be on hand with their brand new Bavarian-style pretzel sticks served with their famous mustard dipping sauce and a homemade cheese fondue. In keeping with another Oktoberfest tradition, the Mayor of Collinsville, John Miller, will tap the inaugural keg of the evening, which will be St. Louis’ own Schlafly Beer. The event will feature a variety of the brewers’ flavorsome fall beers. The Doubletree Hotel Collinsville re-opened in March 2009 after a massive renovation headed up by new owners, St. Louis-based Lodging Hospitality Management. To m a k e a r e s e r v a t i o n f o r Oktoberfest, please contact Aimee Wyatt-Smith at 618-345-2800.

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People People planner MOBOT presents “Losing Paradise” “Losing Paradise? Endangered Plants Here and Around the World,” an exhibition of botanical artworks, will be on display at the Missouri Botanical Garden from Oct. 1 through Nov. 15. The exhibit will be displayed on the upper level of the Ridgway Visitor Center from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily and is included with Garden admission. The free opening program, sponsored by the Garden in conjunction with the Center for Plant Conservation takes place on Oct. 7 at 5:45 p.m. in Shoenberg Theater and includes remarks by Dr. Peter H. Raven, president of the Missouri Botanical Garden; Carol Woodin, exhibitions coordinator for the American Society of Botanical Artists (ASBA); Dr. Kathryn Kennedy, executive director of the Center for Plant Conservation (CPC); and Dr. Matthew Albrecht, conservation biologist at the Missouri Botanical Garden. A reception will be held on the upper level of the Ridgway Visitor Center immediately following the program with hors d’oeuvres, wine and conversation. The opening event is free and open to the public.

Featuring 44 botanical artworks of endangered plants, the traveling exhibition is celebrating its national opening at the Missouri Botanical Garden. The juried exhibition was curated by the ASBA in collaboration with the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History. Works by some of the world’s most well-known botanical artists are included, as are pieces by some relative newcomers to the field. Technical assistance was provided by the Center for Plant Conservation, which is based in St. Louis, and many artworks portray subjects in its National Collection of Endangered Plants. In order to highlight the beauty and the stories of the world’s at-risk plants, artists sought out these endangered plants in botanical gardens, in the field and in horticultural collections. About half of the plants represented are from around the world and half are North American, including such fascinating plant stories as that of Utah’s dwarf bearclaw poppy (Arctomecon humilis), one of the rarest poppies in the world and one of the first species in the United States to be listed as endangered in 1979, and the Wollemi pine (Wollemia nobilis), thought to be extinct for 2 million years but found in a remote Australian canyon.

The exhibition and accompanying book ($29.95) are the result of a three-year project undertaken by ASBA members from the United States, Australia, Israel, Brazil, South Korea, South Africa and the United Kingdom. Many of these artists will attend the opening event. Dr. Peter Raven wrote the book’s introduction, and Dr. Kathryn Kennedy contributed an essay. In addition to the opening program and reception, the Garden hosts a Beginning Botanical Painting -- Autumn Gourds class on Oct. 8 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. During this course, visiting artist Marilyn Garber, president of the ASBA and founder of the Minnesota School of Botanical Art, teaches the basic techniques used in traditional botanical watercolor painting. Some materials will be provided; students should bring a pencil, eraser, notebook, two small containers to hold water and a sack lunch to the class. Registration is $75 for Garden members and $85 for non-members. The class will be held in the first-floor conference room of the Monsanto Center, located at 4500 Shaw Boulevard at the intersection of Shaw and Vandeventer. Pre-registration is required at www. mobot.org/classes.

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Music

Roger Clyne and The Peacemakers Rockers scheduled to appear at Blueberry Hill By DEBBIE SETTLE Of The Edge A fun music group is heading to St. Louis and while you may not recognize the name so quickly, you will likely recognize their sound. Roger Clyne and The Peacemakers are a searing rock and roll foursome from Arizona who have achieved great recording success and fierce fan loyalty. Touted “the best live band in America” by the New Haven Register, Roger Clyne and The Peacemakers bring their popular live show back to Blueberry Hill in St Louis on Thursday, Oct. 15, with The Coal Men opening. You may not have realized it, but you have likely heard the band yourself – if you have ever watched “King of the Hill” (Clyne did the ever-popular theme song) or listened to the ‘90s band The Refreshments (Clyne headed the band and penned many songs on their Heatseekers No. 1 album featuring “Banditos” and “Down Together.”). These guys are not some little indie band trying to make it. They’ve been there, done that, and are now doing it their way, and loving the party on the way. The band, which has had six

For The Edge

Roger Clyne and The Peacemakers albums debut in the top 10 of Billboards Internet Sales Chart, has opened for John Fogerty, Kid Rock, Sammy Hagar, Willie Nelson and more, and at their wildly-popular annual south-of-the-border bash Circus Mexicus in Rocky Point, Mexico (which has drawn thousands of fans -- from every state and 15 countries), RCPM turned the tables and had bands like Cross Canadian Ragweed open for them.

Along with hundreds of dates on the road, this year has marked record ticket sales at concerts i n Tu c s o n a n d L a s Ve g a s , appearances at Major League Baseball Arizona Diamondbacks games (RCPM wrote/recorded the team’s official fight song), and a performance and guest panel position at the Americana Music Festival in Nashville, Tenn. The band’s current web-

only release, “Glow In The Dark,” is available now at www. azpeacemakers.com. Tom Jurek of Paste Magazine says “Roger Clyne and The Peacemakers (RCPM) are proof that the crazy, reckless, restless, swaggering soul of American rock is still burning a hole in the night sky – guitars blaze, quake and quiver, drums slip, thud and thunder with killer melodies and hooks and the occasional reggae

or mariachi rhythm laced through the middle to keep it all honest and interesting.” Blueberry Hill is located at 6504 Delmar, in University City, in The Loop. For information about Blueberry Hill, call 314-727-4444 or visit www.BlueberryHill.com. For tickets, call 800-745-3000 or visit www.ticketmaster.com. Shows are limited to ages 21 and up. Doors open at 8 p.m.

Band Bio: The Darrin James Band By DEBBIE SETTLE Of The Edge Members: David Johnsen,, Bill Mead, Darrin James, Jordan Shapiro Playing Stagger Inn on Thursday, Oct. 8, 104 E. Vandalia, Edwardsville. Darrin James has been a guitarist for 15 years and a songwriter for just under a decade, drawing on his love for blues, soul, country and other roots genres to create songs with a timeless quality. “As a songwriter, I have wanted to combine honest, dark lyrics with old school blues and a fusion of styles, to express the emotions and stories of tragic or flawed characters.” Darrin has succeeded mightily at this aim with his debut album, “Thrones of Gold.” “The Lovely Ugly Truth” is the follow up album, and it’s filled with parables that illustrate moral dilemmas and regret, outlaw

October 8, 2009

stories, murder ballads and even a contemporary protest song that confronts the immigration debate. The tracks were recorded between 2007 and 2009 in numerous studios in New York by Matt Gill, who has worked w i t h b a n d s l i k e F i s c h e r s p o o n e r, Aimee Mann, The Raveonettes and Aqualung. Taking up guitar at 13, James’ main focus was playing blues, which gave way to jazz, folk and world music. He began playing shows as a teenager, playing lead guitar for many local acts in Michigan. After moving to Ann Arbor in 1996 he met some of his future band mates and collaborators, including Jordan Shapiro, Stuart Bogie, Jeremy Bronson and Matt Gill. In 2002 he formed the Darrin James Band to perform his growing repertoire of original songs. To learn more or to hear some of the DJB original songs, visit www.

For The Edge

The Darrin James Band from left: David Johnsen, Bill Mead, Darrin James, Jordan Shapiro The Edge – Page

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Music Music calendar Thursday, Oct. 8 • Tommy Emmanuel, The Sheldon Concert Hall, St. Louis, 8 p.m. • Chippewa Chapel Traveling Guitar Circle, Medicine Show and Open Mic, Iron Barley, South CitySt. Louis, Mo., 8 p.m. • Sam Makler, Springers Creek Winery, Edwardsville, 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. • Big Easy Band, Bottleneck Blues Bar, Ameristar Casino, St. Charles, Mo. • Darren James Band, 10 p.m., Stagger Inn, Edwardsville • Hill Country Revue, The Duck Room, Blueberry Hill, The LoopUniversity City • Kim Massie, The Beale on Broadway, 701 S. Broadway, St. Louis

Friday, Oct. 9 • Swing, Swing, Swing, St. Louis Symphony Orchestra, featuring guest conductor, Victor Vanacore, Powell Hall, 7:30 p.m. • The Bottle Rockets, The Duck Room, Blueberry Hill, University City-The Loop • Sam Makler, Springers Creek Winery, Edwardsville, 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. • They Might Be Giants, The Pageant, University City, Mo. • Wyld Stallyns, Bottleneck Blues Bar, Ameristar Casino, St. Charles, Mo. • Butchiken and Jordon, 5 p.m. to 8 p.m., The Station, 10 p.m. to 2 a.m., Stagger Inn, Edwardsville

Saturday, Oct. 10 • Party in the Park with The Billy Peek Band, St. Ferdinand Park by the lake, Florissant, Mo., 6 p.m. • Midsummer Night’s Dream, featuring Carolyn Banham, English Horn, Women of the Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra, Powell Hall,

St. Louis, 8 p.m. • The Bottle Rockets, The Duck Room, Blueberry Hill, University City-The Loop • Raven Moon, Waterloo Fall Fest, Historic Waterloo Court House, free • Sam Makler, Springers Creek Winery, Edwardsville, 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. • Dave Attell, The Pageant, University City, Mo. • Wyld Stallyns, Bottleneck Blues Bar, Ameristar Casino, St. Charles, Mo. • Melissa Neils Band, 10 p.m., Stagger Inn, Edwardsville

Sunday, Oct. 11 • Midsummer Night’s Dream, featuring Carolyn Banham, English Horn, Women of the Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra, Powell Hall, St. Louis, 3 p.m. • Open Mic w/Butch Moore, Stagger Inn, Edwardsville, 9:30 p.m. • St. Louis Jazz Club event, Doubletree Hotel, 1273 Craigshire Rd., St. Louis, 314-837-4089/www. stlouisjazzclub.org • Marquise Knox, The Beale on Broadway, 701 S. Broadway, St. Louis

Monday, Oct. 12 • SIUE Music Dept. presents Coffee Concert, 7:30 p.m., Abbott Auditorium, Lovejoy Library, SIUE Campus

Duo Trio, 9:30 p.m., Stagger Inn, Edwardsville • Dinosaur Jr., The Pageant, University City, Mo. • Wyld Stallyns, Bottleneck Blues Bar, Ameristar Casino, St. Charles, Mo.

Thursday, Oct. 15 • Chippewa Chapel Traveling Guitar Circle, Medicine Show and Open Mic, Iron Barley, South CitySt. Louis, Mo., 8 p.m. • Roger Clyne and The Peacemakers, The Duck Room, Blueberry Hill, University City, The Loop • UFO, Ameristar Casino, Bottleneck Blues Bar, St. Charles, Mo. • The Sunday Dinner Band, 10 p.m., Stagger Inn, Edwardsville • Kim Massie, The Beale on Broadway, 701 S. Broadway, St. Louis

Friday, Oct. 16 • 1812 Overture, St. Louis Symphony Orchestra featuring James Ehnes, violin, Powell Hall, St. Louis, Mo., 10:30 a.m. and 8 p.m. • That ‘80s Band, Bottleneck Blues Bar, Ameristar Casino, St. Charles, Mo. • SIUE Faculty Recital, Mac H i n s o n , L i n d a P e r r y, A b b o t t Auditorium, Lovejoy Library, SIUE

Campus, 7:30 p.m. • Don Starwalt, 5 p.m. to 8 p.m., The Schwag, 10 p.m. to 2 a.m.,

Saturday Oct. 17 • I LYA I M Y, S t a g g e r I n n , Edwardsville, 10 p.m. • 1812 Overture, St. Louis Symphony Orchestra featuring James Ehnes, violin, Powell Hall, St. Louis, Mo., 8 p.m. • Rocktoberfest, Bavarian rockthemed day, Parking lot between First and Second on Morgan St., Laclede’s Landing, St. Louis • Lucinda Williams, The Pageant, University City, Mo.

Sunday, Oct. 18 • S p e c i a l Yo u t h O rc h e s t r a , featuring the Youth Symphony of Kansas City, Powell Hall, St. Louis, Mo., 3 p.m. • The Used, The Almost, Drive A, The Pageant, University City-The Loop • Open Mic w/Butch Moore, Stagger Inn, Edwardsville, 9:30 p.m. • Raven Moon, Chandler Hill Vineyards, Defiance, Mo., 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. • Mike Doughty, w/ cellist A n d re w “ S c r a p ” L i v i n g s t o n , Blueberry Hill, University City, Mo. • Marquise Knox, The Beale on Broadway, 701 S. Broadway, St. Louis

Monday, Oct. 19 • The Sheldon Chorale, Folk Songs From Around the World, The Sheldon Concert Hall, 8 p.m.

Tuesday, Oct. 20 • SIUE Bands performance, D u n h a m H a l l T h e a t e r, S I U E Campus, 7:30 p.m. • Kim Massie, The Beale on Broadway, 701 S. Broadway, St. Louis

Wednesday, Oct. 21 • O p e n M i c w / D u c k Ta p e Duo Trio, 9:30 p.m., Stagger Inn, Edwardsville • Mike Matthews Project, Bottleneck Blues Bar, Ameristar Casino, St. Charles, Mo. • SIUE Jazz Concert, Dunham Hall Theater, SIUE Campus, 7:30 p.m.

Thursday, Oct. 22 • Ludo, The Pageant, University City, Mo. • Chippewa Chapel Traveling Guitar Circle, Medicine Show and Open Mic, Iron Barley, South CitySt. Louis, Mo., 8 p.m. • Choral Spectacular! Orchestral series, Powell Hall, St. Louis, Mo., 7 p.m.-Sound Check concert for students

Tuesday, Oct. 13 • Creed, Chaifetz Arena, St. Louis, Mo. • Dethklok/Mastodon, The Pageant, University City, Mo. • Kim Massie, The Beale on Broadway, 701 S. Broadway, St. Louis

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Music Tuning in “Cinderbottom” to be featured at SIUE A Season for the Child (SfC), the family-oriented live theater season sponsored by the Southern Illinois University Edwardsville Friends of Theater and Dance (FOTAD) and TheBANK of Edwardsville, opens its 20th season with a delightful musical, Cinderbottom, based on the tried and true fairytale, Cinderella, on Saturday, Oct. 24. The performance will begin at 7 p.m. that Saturday in the theater in SIUE’s Katherine Dunham Hall. The first FOTAD season premiered in 1990. SfC features professional theater troupes from St. Louis staging adaptations of various children’s stories, using interactive techniques that not only delight children and parents, but also provide a learning experience. Cinderbottom, to be performed by Piwacket Theater for Children, extols a message of kindness in the story about the young girl with the wicked stepmother and her equally wicked daughters. FOTAD, a support group for the SIUE Department of Theater and Dance, uses proceeds from the family theater series to help fund merit awards for talented SIUE theater and dance students. Each year, the organization awards some $5,000 in merit scholarships to qualified students.FOTAD also funds scholarships for new freshmen entering the theater and dance program. The support organization also has an endowment to help fund the merit scholarship program. Those interested in donating to the endowment may contact Greg Conroy, (618) 692-0874. Subscription tickets are $16 for four shows, a $4 savings; if purchased by Oct. 1, the season tickets are $12, an $8 savings.

Individual tickets are $5 and are available through the SIUE Fine Arts box office, (618) 650-2774.The holiday production of the 2009-10 season is Bah! Humbug! at 2 and 7 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 12.

For more information, call (31) 533-2500

SLSO adds two performances to calendar

The a cappella jazz group Take 6 belongs not only to the rich traditions of doo-wop and gospel sounds of the 1950s, but also to the jazz and pop styles that have emerged since the 1990s. Multiple Grammy winners, the Hunstville, Alabama natives have performed with such artists as Quincy Jones, Ella Fitzgerald, Stevie Wonder, Aaron Neville, George Benson and Al Jarreau. The sublime acoustics of Powell Hall will be make a perfect holiday home for the harmony-rich vocals of Take 6. The concert is at 7:30 p.m. on Dec. 17 at Powell Hall. Tickets range from $25 to $70 and may be purchased online at www. slso.org, or by phone at 314-5341700, or in person at the Powell Hall Box Office, 718 N. Grand Blvd. For group sales call 314-286-4155.

T h e S a i n t Louis Symphony Orchestra presents international superstar Julio Iglesias in concert for one night: Friday, December 4 at 8pm. Spain’s most recognizable and best-selling singer will perform classic hits and new tunes from his most recent albums Romantic Classics and Quelques Chose de France live at Powell Hall. You won’t want to miss Julio as he comes to Saint Louis for the first time in many years to perform classics such as To All the Girls I’ve Loved Before, Nathalie, Can’t Help Falling in Love and Ae, Ao as well as excerpts from his first English album in 12 years Romantic Classics - which combines his favorite songs from the ‘60s, ‘70s, and ‘80s along with new standards. T h e S a i n t Louis Symphony Orchestra DOES NOT perform on this concert. What would it have sounded like to have the Beatles play in concert with a symphony orchestra? Find out for yourself when Classical Mystery Tour performs live in concert with the Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra, Friday April 30, 2010. Hear your favorite Beatles’ songs performed exactly as they were written by musicians who look, sound and play like John, Paul, George and Ringo. “More than just an ‘incredible simulation’.” - LOS ANGELES TIMES T h e S a i n t Louis Symphony Orchestra WILL perform on this concert.

Take 6 to perform at Powell Hall

UNBEATABLE! coming to the Westport Playhouse St. Louis-based Emery Entertainment has announced the selection of a mainly local cast for the official nationwide debut o f U N B E ATA B L E ! a g ro u n d breaking new musical about the life-changing journey of a breast cancer survivor. U N B E ATA B L E ! s e a m l e s s l y weaves moments of poignant drama and well-timed comedy and reminds us and audiences that at any given moment, an unforeseen event can drastically change the course of our lives and force us to re-evaluate our priorities.

U N B E ATA B L E ! m a k e s i t s nationwide debut October 15 at The Playhouse at Westport Plaza for a limited five-week engagement. Performance times are 7:30 p.m. Wednesday through Friday; 2:00 and 7:30 p.m. on Saturday; and 2:00 p.m. on Sunday. The local actors include Michele B u rd e t t e E l m o re ( R u t h i e / D r. Louis), John Flack (James), Mark K e l l y ( S t e v e n / Te c h n i c i a n / Franklin), Pamela Reckamp (Natalie/Dr. Ossman), Landon Shaw (Brad), Stellie Siteman (Mom) and Henry Palkes (musical director). Kristy Cates (Tracy) and Charity Dawson (Ally) come from New York City, having performed in UNBEATABLE! last year in preview cities Phoenix and Houston. “We are thrilled to have such a t a l e n t e d a n d w e l l ro u n d e d lineup of local actors, as well as our leading lady, Kristy Cates, and Charity Dawson from New York,” said Paul Emery of Emery Entertainment. “We wanted the show and the cast to resonate with a St. Louis audience, an audience we know is passionate about local art and theater and especially passionate in breast cancer awareness.” S h a w, K e l l y, R e c k a m p a n d Siteman have all been directly affected by cancer in their lives, either through a family member, friend or both, making their performances even more personal and significant. ABOUT THE CAST: Elmore has been performing, producing, directing, choreographing and/or writing in more than 100 productions since the 1980s. Her credits include M y F a i r L a d y a t T h e M U N Y,

Urinetown at The Repertory Theatre of St. Louis, and Sweet Charity at Stages St. Louis. Flack, a St. Louis native, has performed at nearly every professional theatre in the region including The Muny, Shakespeare Festival of St. Louis, The Black Rep, The New Jewish Theatre, The New Theatre, Theatre Project Company, Arrow Rock Lyceum, and Stages St. Louis, where he has been an acting company member for 19 seasons. Flack was named “Best Actor in a Play” by The Riverfront Times for his portrayal of Quentin in Arthur Miller ’s After the Fall. He also performs on the cabaret scene, most recently at The Kranzberg Center Cabaret and Jazz at The Bistro, in addition to singing regularly in a revue at The Sheldon Concert Hall. Kelly is originally a Chesterfield, Mo. resident and received his BFA in theater arts from Illinois Wesleyan University. His favorite past roles include Mercutio in Romeo and Juliet, Joey Evans in Pal Joey, the Antipholus Twins in The Comedy of Errors, Harlequin in Triumph of Love and Leo Clark in Leading Ladies. Reckamp is a founding member of the Slightly Askew Theatre Ensemble (SATE), where in the past year she conceived and performed in the company’s first devised piece, PRIMAL (Kevin Kline Award nominee), and directed Sarah Kane’s 4.48 Psychosis. In addition to performing, she is adjunct faculty at St. Louis University, teaching Vo i c e a n d D i c t i o n , a n d r u n s her own production company, Spotlight Theatre, which creates issue-oriented theatre for teenagers.

OCTOBER: SPINAL HEALTH CARE MONTH. Chiropractors regard a healthy spine as important as good nutrition for general good health. Vertebral misalignments or fixations (subluxations) are very common and often do not cause pain. Symptoms are not a good way to judge health. Sometimes they appear much later. (How many times have you been told you have a cavity and haven’t experienced any pain?) A person can benefit from a healthy spine, no matter what his or her health status is. Chiropractic is not just about treating low back pain, but about making a fundamental change in the way the body works. That’s why doctors of chiropractic suggest spinal checkups for all members of the family. Help awaken your inner being by calling for a chiropractic spinal check-up today at (618) 656-0178.

October 8, 2009

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Movies

“The Boys Are Back”

This true-life drama delicately and deftly finds a balance that’s hard to strike: It depicts death, and the way a family rebuilds and redefines itself afterward, without any mawkishness. Director Scott Hicks’ film, with its dreamlike, sun-splashed landscapes of Southern Australia, is visually arresting (the work of cinematographer Greig Fraser, who recently shot Jane Campion’s luminous “Bright Star”). But the content of Allan Cubitt’s script, based on the memoir by Simon Carr, is meaty and straightforward, which gives it an unexpected power. This is easily Hicks’ best film since the Oscar-winning “Shine” way back in 1996 (since then his work has included the admirable but uneven “Hearts in Atlantis” and “No Reservations”), and much of the allure comes from Clive Owen’s complex performance. As a man learning how to function as a single father after the death of his wife, Owen shows great liveliness but also a natural vulnerability. His character, sportswriter Joe Warr, takes a “Just Say Yes” attitude in raising his 6-year-old son (Nicholas McAnulty, disarming in his film debut), which makes for a lot of fun but it also results in chaos. Joe’s frustration in figuring out this whole parenting thing by himself provides inescapable reminders of Dustin Hoffman in “Kramer vs. Kramer”: Once again we have two men sharing a home, realizing they don’t really know each other and unsure of how to relate as they work through their grief. But then the arrival of Harry (George MacKay), Joe’s teenage son from his first marriage, changes the dynamic all over again. RATED: PG-13 for some sexual language and thematic elements. ASSOCIATED PRESS RANKING: Three stars out of four.

“Coco Before Chanel”

The young Coco Chanel noticed style everywhere, even in the crisp white and basic black of the nuns’ habits at the orphanage where she was raised. “Coco Before Chanel” has a similarly keen eye for appearances, but there’s not a whole lot of passion or insight beneath the surface. Director Anne Fontaine’s film, which she wrote with her sister, Camille, traces the early years of the fashion designer who would come to define a bold kind of feminine style throughout the 20th century, one that was as no-nonsense as the woman herself. We see her in her early 20s as a struggling seamstress and parttime singer fending off advances from drunken soldiers, then as the live-in lover to a playboy racehorse owner, and finally as an independent woman honing her skills and refining her look. Audrey Tautou has great appeal as Gabrielle Chanel — Coco, as she was known — presenting the designer ’s feistiness not as bravado but as a straightforward reflection of how she felt. Of course, Tautou looks adorably chic in

October 8, 2009

Chanel’s clothes, with her petite, androgynous frame and big, brown eyes. Still, you wonder what moved her, aside from the simplicity of the men’s outfits that would inspire her own suits and hats. While living with the randy Etienne Balsan (Benoit Poelvoorde), functioning as his “geisha,” as he liked to call her, she supposedly was in love with his friend, Arthur “Boy” Capel (Alessandro Nivola), but even her involvement in that relationship seems almost passive. RATED: PG-13 for sexual content and smoking. ASSOCIATED PRESS RANKING: Two stars out of four.

“The Damned United”

You don’t have to be a soccer expert, or even know much about the sport, to get sucked into the competing personalities and personal dramas depicted here. Sure, it probably helps in terms of appreciating some of the details and nuances, especially if you’re a fan of British football. But director Tom Hooper doesn’t include very much action on the field: “The Damned United” is more about the larger-than-life figures behind the scenes, mainly Brian Clough, the real-life manager of Leeds United for a brief and tumultuous period in 1974. And you don’t even have to know who Clough was to care about him. As he did with his brilliant and underappreciated supporting work as Tony Blair in “The Queen” and David Frost “Frost/Nixon,” Michael Sheen brings this cocky coach vividly to life. It is such a joy to see him grab hold of a starring role like this, and to see him work once again with screenwriter Peter Morgan, who wrote those earlier films. Morgan has an uncanny knack for taking powerful and polarizing leaders and making us see them in a totally new and humanistic light. He did it with Queen Elizabeth II, Richard Nixon and, in “The Last King of Scotland,” Idi Amin. Clough won’t be nearly as well-known to American audiences but Morgan shows us his foibles, his vulnerability, which should make him compelling to anyone. Based on David Peace’s novel, “The Damned United” jumps back and forth between Clough’s hiring as the new Leeds coach, after the departure of the beloved Don Revie (Colm Meaney) for the English national team, and the unlikely rise Clough enjoyed with perennial cellar-dwellers. RATED: R for language. ASSOCIATED PRESS RANKING: Three stars out of four.

“Fame”

This “reinvention” of the 1980 high school musical — please, people, don’t call it a remake — stays faithful to the spirit and structure of Alan Parker’s original while sucking out all the raciness. There’s no nudity in the new “Fame,” no one gets an abortion. No one even lights a single cigarette. But at the same time, dancer and choreographer Kevin Tancharoen, making his feature directing debut, doesn’t turn “Fame” into the kind of

slick, overly edited eye candy you might expect. It’s stylized, yes, and it movies really fluidly while still maintaining some urban grittiness. And in a world where people aspire for instant recognition by making idiots of themselves on reality TV, there’s something sort of quaint about the idea of working hard for artistic glory. Starting with Debbie Allen’s famous “You got big dreams, you want fame” speech over the opening titles, “Fame” follows a group of aspiring singers, dancers, actors and musicians from their auditions for New York’s High School of Performing Arts until their graduation four years later. Among the familiar types are Denise (Naturi Naughton), a classically trained pianist who longs to branch out creatively; shy actress Jenny (Kay Panabaker); the privileged dancer Alice (Kherington Payne); the shticky wannabe film director Neil (Paul Iacono); and the misunderstood actor-rapper Mailk (Collins Pennie). Among the faculty are Kelsey Grammer as the stern but fair piano teacher; Bebe Neuwirth, formidable as always as a dance instructor, Megan Mullally as a voice coach and Allen herself, in all of two scenes, as the school’s principal. RATED: PG for thematic material including teen drinking, a sexual situation and language. ASSOCIATED PRESS RANKING: Two and a half stars out of four.

“Surrogates”

Itself a kind of surrogate, “Surrogates” is a stand-in for many of the sci-fi movies of the recent past: In it, you’ll recognize the ideas of “Blade Runner,” ‘’Minority Report” and even “WALL-E.” In a quasi-present day Boston, nearly everyone has a surrogate — a younger, thinner, cosmetically perfect robotic version of themselves. They’re controlled while you’re reclining at home and plugged into a machine. This means, most importantly, that we have a blond Bruce Willis on our hands. Willis is an FBI agent who, along with his partner (Radha Mitchell), is trying to solve two murders which, though committed on surrogates, also “liquefied” the brains of their human operators. Having a robotic stand-in has some obvious perks: Sexuality is less inhibited. If you fall, you don’t scrape your elbows. And if your helicopter crashes, you don’t die. But this crime-less utopia is also a superficial wasteland, devoid of meaningfulness. “Surrogates,” directed by Jonathan Mostow (“Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines”), is adapted from a graphic novel by Robert Venditti. Graphic novels are — for better or worse — the new pulp fiction. Like those hard-boiled novels of the ‘40s that Hollywood couldn’t get enough of, graphic novels are fueling what once would have been called B-movies. At its best, that’s what “Surrogates” is: a quality B-movie, pulpy and reflective of its times. The film isn’t shy about its feelings about technology — it’s time to unplug. But dreams of a computer-less society are as much fantasy as a blond Bruce Willis. RATED: PG-13 for intense sequences of violence, disturbing images, language, sexuality and a drug-related scene ASSOCIATED PRESS RANKING: Two stars out of four.

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Movies

“Fame” – a reinvention, not a remake By JAKE COYLE Associated Press LOS ANGELES (AP) — The “reinvention” of the 1980 high school musical “Fame” — please, people, don’t call it a remake — stays faithful to the spirit and structure of Alan Parker’s original while sucking out all the raciness. There’s no nudity in this PG-rated version, no one gets an abortion. No one even lights a single cigarette. So no, it’s not exactly the most realistic depiction of modern high-school life. But at the same time, dancer and choreographer Kevin Tancharoen, making his feature directing debut, doesn’t turn “Fame” into the kind of slick, overly edited eye candy you might expect. It’s stylized, yes, and it movies really fluidly while still maintaining some urban grittiness. And in a world where people aspire for instant recognition by making idiots of themselves on reality TV, there’s still something appealing about the idea of working hard for artistic glory — potentially failing and suffering rejection, but persevering nonetheless. Starting with Debbie Allen’s famous “you got big dreams, you want fame” speech over the opening titles, “Fame” follows a group of aspiring singers, dancers, actors and musicians from their auditions for New York’s competitive High School of Performing Arts until their graduation four years later. Among the familiar types are Denise (Naturi Naughton), a classically trained pianist who longs to branch out creatively; goodlooking Marco (Asher Book), who sings like Justin Timberlake; aspiring actress Jenny (Kay Panabaker), who’s too self-conscious; the privileged dancer Alice (Kherington

Associated Press

In this film publicity image released by MGM, dancers perform in a scene from, “Fame.” Payne); the shticky wannabe film director Neil (Paul Iacono); and the misunderstood actor-rapper Malik (Collins Pennie). Among the faculty are Kelsey Grammer as the stern but fair piano teacher and Bebe Neuwirth, formidable as always, as a dance instructor. (Frasier and Lilith don’t have any scenes together, sadly.) Megan Mullally plays a perky voice

coach and Allen herself, in all of two scenes, appears as the school’s principal. Some of these kids are obviously going to make it — they’re going to live forever, as the song goes — and some aren’t. It’s pretty easy to figure out. Similarly, you can see some of the plot developments coming from a mile away in Allison Burnett’s script, even if you’ve never seen

the original. You just know that the moment Denise’s strict parents see her on stage, singing in a way they never knew she could, they’ll achieve a newfound appreciation for her talent. Naughton, who played Lil’ Kim in “Notorious,” also sings the hell out of “Out Here on My Own,” the only song carried over from the original. (“Fame”

plays over the closing credits.) A n d u n d e r s t a n d a b l y, g i v e n Tancharoen’s background, the dance scenes dazzle. The mousey Jenny will flourish by senior year, the keyboard player who hates Bach will learn to enjoy classical music, and at some point they’ll all burst into spontaneous song and dance in the cafeteria. These are inescapable truisms.

You’re better off with the double feature By ROBERT GRUBAUGH Of The Edge Is the story we see presented in “ S u r ro g a t e s ” t h e w a y o u r f u t u re w i l l actually turn out? Individuals will cease to socialize with one another and the fabric of society will be completely reduced to electronic interaction. That f u t u re i s a l re a d y h e re . “ S u r ro g a t e s ” hypothesizes that it’ll continue to spiral out of control to the point where we’ll create robots to go forth on our behalf instead of simply the on-screen avatars w e u s e n o w t h ro u g h t h e a u s p i c e s o f all social networking avenues like Facebook, MySpace, and Twitter. But I digress too far, because “Surrogates” is more or less a joke of a science fiction film and not the civic commentary I’ve suggested. T h e i d y l l i c e v e r y d a y i s s h a t t e re d , in a not too distant future, by a

October 8, 2009

h o m i c i d e , o n e w e ’ re l e d t o b e l i e v e i s the first in many years. That premise o f a h a r m o n i o u s t o m o r ro w i s n i c e t o c o n t e m p l a t e , b u t n o t w h e n y o u o v e rextrapolate the idea to include android “surrogates”, as director Jonathon Mostow has done with his new film. D e t e c t i v e s G r e e r ( B r u c e Wi l l i s ) a n d P e t e r s ( R a d h a M i t c h e l l ) a re a s s i g n e d to investigate how the electromagnetic d e s t r u c t i o n o f a s u r ro g a t e h a s k i l l e d its host as he sits peacefully in an armchair in his home. They’re forced to be discreet so as not to create a panic in the hundreds of millions of innocent operators around the world. Even the two good detectives use surrogates. That is, until Greer ’s is taken away during an internal investigation into his police work. He’s been at odds with both the administration and a rival s e c t o f h u m a n s ( l e d b y a h i p p y Vi n g Rhames) opposed to the robot lifestyle.

Neither end of the spectrum trusts him or his work to get to the bottom of what he sees as a greater conspiracy. “Surrogates” is similar in tone to The Matrix, but has none of the signature visual style that made that film both a landmark in special effects history and a blockbuster hit. Wi t h t h e o u t r a g e o u s p re m i s e a t t h e heart of this film I found it unrealistic that every character ’s surrogate simply looked like a younger version of themselves (and with more hair, in Willis’s case). I found no artistic license here to be the most unrealistic part of a completely unrealistic movie. “Surrogates” runs 96 minutes and is rated PG-13 for intense sequences of violence, disturbing images, language, sexuality, and a drug-related scene. I give this film one star out of four. There is an experience coming on the horizon. Can you feel it yet? Disney

is about to let go with the first wide release double feature in the history of both Pixar and their digital 3-D format. “Toy Story” and “Toy Story 2,” featuring some of the most cherished characters of all time, are set to premiere in a oneticket double feature for a limited twoweek engagement. I was thrilled to get a chance to revisit these charming stories, especially since it had been since 1999 t h a t I ’ d s e e n e i t h e r. T h e a d v e n t u re s o f S h e r i ff Wo o d y a n d B u z z L i g h t y e a r hold up well – particularly the first one – and the 3-D special effect is simply icing on an already delicious cake. It’s also the best way I can think of to excite audiences for a third installment, due to arrive in theatres next June. “The 3-D Toy Story/ Toy Story 2 Double F e a t u re ” h a s a c o m b i n e d r u n n i n g t i m e , including an intermission of 195 minutes and is rated G. I give this experience four stars out of four.

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Movies

What’s playing, when and where St. Clair Cinema Fairview Heights Movie Listings for 10/09 to 10/15 The following movies are playing at the O’Fallon Cinema. Call 1-800FANDANGO Code 2405 for showtimes or visit on the Web at www. wehrenberg.com. All About Steve (PG-13) (Wed 10/7-Thurs 10/8) 12:35, 3:10 p.m. Halloween II (R) (Wed-Thurs) 5:50, 8:30 p.m. (Fri-Thurs) 1:20, 3:55, 6:30, 9:05 p.m. Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs (PG) (Wed thru Thurs) 12:45, 3:20, 5:40, 8:00 p.m. (Fri-Thurs) 1:30, 3:50, 6:10, 8:30 p.m. Fame (PG) (Wed-Thurs) 1:05, 3:50, 6:25, 9:00 p.m. (Fri-Thurs) 1:20, 3:50, 6:20, 8:50 p.m. Informant (R) 1:10, 3:45, 6:20, 8:55 p.m. Jennifer’s Body (R) (Thurs 10/8) 12:55, 3:30, 6:05 p.m. Inglourious Basterds (R)(WedThurs) 8:35 p.m. (Fri-Thurs) 8:05 p.m. Zombieland (R) (Wed-Thurs) 2:05, 4:20, 6:40, 8:50 p.m. (Fri-Thurs) 1:00, 3:15, 5:30, 8:00 p.m. Tyler Perry’s I Can Do Bad (PG-13) (Wed-Thurs) 12:30, 3:05, 5:45, 8:25 p.m. (Fri-Thurs) 1;15, 3:55, 6:35, 9:15 p.m. Tyler Perry’s I Can Do Bad (PG-13) 1:15, 3:55, 6:35, 9:15 p.m. Couples Retreat (Fri 10/9-Thurs 10/15) 1:00, 3:40, 6:25, 9:10 p.m.

Surrogates (PG-13) (Wed-Thurs) 1:25, 3:40, 6:05, 8:15 p.m. (Fri-Thurs) 1:25, 3:45, 6:05, 8:25 p.m. Harry Potter 6 (Fri 10/9-Thurs 10/15) 1:00, 4:15 p.m. I Hope They Serve Beer (Fri 10/9Thurs 10/15) 1:05, 3:35, 6:15, 8:45 p.m. O’Fallon 15 Cinema O’Fallon Movie Listings for 10/09 to 10/15 The following movies are playing at the St. Clair Cinema. Call 1-800FANDANGO Code 2404 for showtimes or visit on the Web at www. wehrenberg.com. Whip It (PG-13) 1:00, 3:40, 6:20, 9:00, 11:40* p.m. (*No 11:40 p.m. showing Sun-Thurs) Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs (PG) 12:20, 2:40, 5:10, 7:40, 10:05 p.m. Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs 3D (PG) 12:20, 2:45, 5:05, 7:40, 10:05 p.m. Couples Retreat (PG-13) 11:05 a.m., 1:50, 4:35, 7:25*, 10:15 p.m. (*No 7:25 p.m. showing on Wed 10/14) Couples Retreat (PG-13) Fri-Sat: 12:05, 2:50, 5:35, 8:25, 11:15 p.m. Sun-

Wed: 12:05,2:50, 5:35, 8:25 p.m. Thurs 10/15 12:05, 2:50 p.m. Informant (R) 11:15 a.m., 1:55, 4:30, 7:15, 9:55 p.m. Jennifer’s Body (R) Fri-Sat: 9:00, 11:30* p.m. Sun-Thurs: 9:00 p.m. Love Happens (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 2:20, 5:00, 7:45, 10:25 p.m. Tyler Perry’s I Can Do Bad (PG13) 11:50, 2:35, 5:15, 8:00, 10:40 p.m. Fame (PG) 11:00 a.m., 1:35, 4:20, 7:00, 9:40 p.m. Surrogates (PG-13) 11:35 a.m., 2:10, 4:50, 7:30, 10:10 p.m. Capitalism Love Story (R) 10:45* a.m., 1:45, 4:40, 7:35, 10:35 p.m. (*10:45 a.m. showing Fri through Sun only) Invention of Lying (PG-13) 11:45* a.m., 2:15, 4:45, 7:20, 9:50 p.m. (*No 11:45 a.m. showing on Sat only) Toy Story 1 & 2 3-D (G) Fri-Sun: 10:30 a.m., 2:25, 6:25, 10:20 p.m.; Mon-Thurs: 11:40 a.m., 3:35, 7:30 p.m. Zombieland (R) Daily: 1:15, 3:30, 5:50, 8:15, 10:30 p.m. Fri and Sat only: 12:25, 2:40, 4:55, 7:10, 9:25, 11:45 p.m.; Sun-Thurs only: 12:25, 2:40, 4:55, 7:10, 9:25 p.m.

Lewis Black-Stark Raving Black (NR) Wed 10/8 ONLY-7:30 p.m. Showplace 12 Edwardsville Call 800-FANDANGO or visit www.kerasotes.com. Listings for 10/9 through 10/15 SPECIAL: Met Opera: Tosca, Live, Saturday, Oct. 10 at noon Fame (PG) 2:10*, 4:50, 7:40, 10:10 p.m. (*No show for Sat. 10/10) 3-D Toy Story/Toy Story 2 Double Feature (G) Daily 12:00, 3:45, 7:30 (additional $2.50 charge applies to this 3-D show) Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs (PG) 12:10, 2:20, 4:40, 7:00, 9:20 p.m. Zombieland (R) 12:20, 1:45, 2:30, 4:00, 5:00, 6:20, 7:20, 8:50, 9:50 p.m. Whip It (PG-13) 12:40, 3:20, 6:30, 9:30 p.m. The Invention of Lying (PG-13) 1:00, 4:30, 7:50, 10:15 p.m. Couples Retreat (PG-13) 12:30, 1:30, 3:10, 4:10, 6:10, 7:10, 9:10, 10:00 p.m.

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Eastgate East Alton Listings for 10/9 through 10/15 Call 800-FANDANGO or visit www.kerasotes.com. 9 (PG-13) Daily: 4:15, 6:45; Fri-Sat: 9:15; Sat-Mon: 1:45 p.m. Zombieland (R) Daily: 4:30, 7:00 Fri-Sat: 9:25; Sat-Sun: 2:00 p.m. Gamer (R) Daily: 4:45, 7:15 Fri-Sat: 9:45; Sat-Sun: 2:15 p.m. Couples Retreat (PG-13) Daily: 3:45, 6:30 Fri-Sat: 9:05; Sat-Sun: 1:10 p.m. Cloudy w/Chance of Meatballs (PG) Daily: 4:00, 6:15 Fri-Sat: 8:45; Sat-Sun: 1:30 p.m. Surrogates (PG-13)) Daily: 5:00, 7:25; Fri-Sat: 9:35; Sat-Sun: 2:30 p.m.

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Surrogates (PG-13) 2:00, 4:20, 6:40, 9:00 p.m. The Informant! (R) 12:30, 3:30, 6:05, 8:40 p.m. First Tuesday matinee of each title is Matinee Movie Magic for Moms and Dads (baby friendly environment)

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Family

Fencing Academy opens for students in the St. Louis area By DEBBIE SETTLE Of The Edge What kid hasn’t dreamed of having a sword fight with his or her greatest nemesis? Kids turn almost any inanimate object that resembles a sword into a swashbuckling weapon. They take their stance and have an imaginary battle where at times they revel in victory or they writhe on the ground for a 20 minute slow and torturous death. Now you have a place to give your child, or even an adult, the opportunity to make those dreams a reality by learning to fence. Olympia Fencing Academy is the St. Louis area’s first dedicated training facility. Not only do their members include nationally ranked fencers who regularly compete around the country, they also have dozens of recreational fencers of all ages and skill levels who simply enjoy the

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s t r a t e g y, athleticism and camaraderie of the sport . Located in the central corridor of St. Louis county, at 8664 Olive Blvd., Olympia Fencing Academy’s main training facility features over 6,500 square feet of training space with state-of-theart equipment and a large viewing area for spectators. Olympia is owned by Paula Reed, who serves as the Vice Chair of the St. Louis Division of the United States Fencing Association. Paula also sits on the National USFA Board. Mary Bartling, who also sits on the St. Louis division board, is in charge of operations. R e b e c c a S c h n e i d e r, w h o i s dedicated to developing a strong youth program, heads the coaching staff. Before Schneider came to Olympia, she founded and was head coach of The Point Fencing Club in Champaign. For ten years prior to that, she ran the University of Illinois’ Fencing Club. Sean Horan is a highly trained epee and sabre coach, having trained under Master coaches at Golden Gate Fencing Club and First Place Fencing Club, both located in northern California. T h e s e coaches can take your fencing as far as you want it to go, whether that means participation i n a n enjoyable form of exercise or competing at the national level.

Olympia’s coaches have helped many fencers achieve nationally ranked status, as well as success at NCAA schools. Olympia’s vision goes beyond merely teaching people to fence. Everything Olympia does is approached in a holistic manner. According to Paula Reed, “The fencer can’t be isolated from the rest of the person. Regardless of whether that fencer is a child or an adult, the entire individual must be engaged.” That is why Olympia’s membership package includes access to a nutritionist, conditioning coach, physical therapist and nationally renowned sport psychologist. Olympia is even constructed and maintained as a green environment. “We don’t just teach fencing,” states Mary Bartling, “We train for life.” But, if you don’t want to become a member and prefer to just take classes for fun, Olympia can fulfill that option too. With Star Wars themed birthday parties and after school programs with names like ”Cap’n Jack Sparrow and the Pirate Anne Bonny,” it’s clear that fun is an important part of Olympia’s holistic approach. A complete list of classes is available on their Web site, www. olympiafencing.com. Enrollment for the upcoming fall session has begun with classes scheduled to begin Oct. 19 and running through Dec.11. For more information about Olympia Fencing Academy or to register for classes, call 314-9939700 or visit www.olympiafencing. com.

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Family Focus Photo booths still churn out memories By RYAN KOST Associated Press PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — In a corner of the airy, wood-paneled lobby at the Ace Hotel stands a big black booth with a curtain for an entrance and a mirror with delicate script that reads: “You are beautiful.” Two young girls duck inside. Who are they to argue? They sit on a pedestal, pay $4 and wait. POP — a flash goes off. POP. POP. POP. A machine inside whirs and clicks, and clicks some more. They wait, like hundreds of other people every week, for it to spit out a slender strip of paper with four little pictures in black and white. Photo booths — the old-school, d u n k - a n d - d r y k i n d — a re a t the same time ubiquitous and endangered. The experience of waiting for that strip, small little moments in time, is nearly universal, yet the classic-style booths are hard to hunt down. The boxes, full of wires from disparate decades, aren’t in production any longer. A Web site devoted to the booths puts the number at about 200 in the United States and about 300 worldwide. No doubt there are more of them out there, gone unreported and possibly unused, but whatever the number is, it’s only going down. They’re being steadily replaced by digital booths. In the classics — both black and white and color — an image is projected onto a single strip of photo paper and then developed as you wait. The digital doesn’t get much fancier than a home set up. A camera takes your photo, a printer sends it on out. T h e d i ff e re n c e b e t w e e n t h e two is becoming less and less disc e r n i b l e , a t l e a s t a s f a r a s q u a l i t y a n d w a i t i n g t i m e a re concerned. But enthusiasts of the older booths, dependent on photo chemicals, will tell you something gets lost in the transition from grains to pixels. Their future relies largely on people like Will Simmonds. He owns Photobooth Services, which operates classic booths in Seattle, Portland and Hawaii. He bought the business, a fleet of 25 booths, about five years ago. Despite all the practical concerns about maintaining aging machines that are out of production, the booths keep finding patrons. Simmonds has about doubled the number he owns. He has increased his booths in Portland from one to 11. There are more than just those, of course, operated by different hands than his. It’s not an easy thing to keep them running — “You’re always scrounging for parts,” he says —

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but in the right location, a booth can take hundreds of images a week and gross nearly a thousand bucks. “ Yo u c a n g o i n t o a r e a l l y happening bar where we have a classic photo booth, and there’s a line of people who are waiting to jump in with digital cameras in their hands and phone cameras,” Simmonds says. “That doesn’t make sense. It shouldn’t work.” But it does. Why? “You’re asking the guy behind the desk why people are using them,” he says, suggesting I ask the people who are using them instead. ••• The front door of the Ace Hotel opens. A mom, her 2-year-old daughter and a baby sitter walk in. The child and sitter step inside the photo booth, and the light flashes through the curtains. “I just like the old black-andwhite photo booths,” says Posy Quarterman as she watches her daughter, Frances Rudy, totter around the lobby. “It’s just classic. I know that’s cheesy.” She looks over the photos and smiles. “See, they’re awful and washed out,” she says. “And I love them.” ••• The very first photo booth appeared in 1925 on New York City’s Broadway, between 51st and 52nd streets. A Siberian immigrant, who struck up a childhood romance with photography and never left it behind, figured out how to rig a machine that would produce a series of photos on a small piece of paper, no negative needed. R e p o r t s f ro m t h e t i m e s a y thousands would show up each day. For 25 cents they’d get a

small piece of themselves back, a memory of a birthday, a first kiss, a graduation. The machines have changed. But maybe the motivations haven’t. “They’re spontaneous, there’s no preview, there’s no delete, you don’t have any idea how they’re going to come out,” says Brian Meacham, one of two men who run Photobooth.net, which keeps tabs on the machines. “It is fascinating that it does still have some kind of voice,” adds Tim Garrett, Meacham’s p a r t n e r. “ P e o p l e a r e m o r e uninhibited. There’s no photographer looking through the lens.” These two men — Meacham out of Los Angeles and Garrett out of St. Louis — are doing what they can to prop up the fading industry. Photobooth.net features artists and galleries that have somehow come to cross paths with photo booths, in addition to keeping up their catalog. They’ve also helped organize the annual photo booth convention. And Garrett runs PhotoboothStL, which rents the booths for weddings and other occasions. “The health of the photochemical photo booth industry, as it were, is declining, to put it nicely,” Meacham said. Garrett adds: “They’re a real pain when compared to digital photo booths. It just doesn’t make sense unless you really love them. It’s kind of an industry fueled by love.” Then he laughs. “That sounds pretty cheesy.” ••• On a recent Friday evening, the Ace Hotel photo booth produced a strip of photos for Bernadette

and Todd Donovan. It probably wouldn’t look like much to just anybody. The couple have fun in the photos, but they don’t do anything too spectacular. And yet, as they study the photo, their smiles broaden. “The first one, look at your face!” Bernadette says. “Aww, that’s cute. That one’s my favorite.” They were about to wrap up a cross-country road trip. It’s not so much about the pictures themselves, they said. That strip, it’s a memory. ••• Evelyn Weston pushes a key into a small hole just to the left of the photo booth camera. The case cracks open. The inside of a photo booth is a mess of gears and springs and wires and dust. The machines need constant loving. Chemicals age, water evaporates and the images grow murkier. “I’m gonna need to change these chemicals pretty soon,” Weston says. “It’s getting a little hairy in there.” She has worked for Photobooth Services for about three years. She maintains all the booths i n O re g o n . S h e k n o w s t h e s e machines better than anybody else.

Give her a strip and she’ll tell you, within a guess or two, which booth it’s from. Each time Weston adjusts a machine she has to take a set of test pictures, sometimes two. She has thousands of them at home. The best ones she puts in a box. There was the time she brought a plant in with her, the time she d re s s e d u p l i k e a n E g y p t i a n pharaoh, the time she brought in a pair of oversized scissors. After she has filled the chemicals and the door is shut, she takes her place before the camera. The box lights up. “Photos Delivered Here in 3 Minutes,” the sign over the photo drop reads. “I think it’s a little bit longer. It’s like 3 1/2 ,” Weston says. She pauses. “It’s less than five.” ••• Sara Kemple looks over her shoulder at the machine. “Is it there?” she asks. “No.” Kemple, 21, is waiting with her friend, Lauren Karcey, 19, for a set of photos they just took. The booths are fun, they say. Uninhibited. Random. Oldfashioned. “You have to wait for it, too,” Kemple says. “It’s not instant.” Is that a good thing or a bad thing?

After having joint replacement surgery, the bounce back team at Maryville Manor helped Evelyn feel like herself again.

618-288-5999 • 2133 Vadalabene Dr., Maryville www.simplythefinest.net The Edge – Page

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The Arts

A season of music SIUE lines up a showcase of sounds By DEBBIE SETTLE Of The Edge The fall semester at SIUE has begun and the campus is buzzing with all the activities under way. The SIUE Music Department is also busy preparing for the upcoming scheduled productions where the music majors and faculty showcase their talents for the students, faculty and public. According to the Music Department outline, for nearly 50 years, SIUE has prepared students to become leaders in their community and professionals in their fields of study. The performances that are made available for the public and SIUE students and staff are just a taste of what these students are working so diligently toward. Just recently, SIUE welcomed Dr. Emily Truckenbrod to its faculty. She is the new Assistant Professor of Vocal Studies. Her bio on the SIUE Web site reads, “Soprano Emily Truckenbrod has a clear voice that makes “the angels sigh with envy. (The Dispatch and The Rock Island Argus) Her most recent role with the WGO was Oscar in ‘Un Ballo di Maschera.’ Previous roles include Adele in ‘Die Fledermaus,’ The Queen of the Night and Papagena in ‘The Magic Flute,’ Marie in ‘La Fille du Regiment,’ and Yum Yum in ‘The Mikado.’ She maintains an active international recital schedule, including appearances at the Teatro Nacional “Manuel Bonilla” in Honduras, St. Mark’s Cathedral in Salzburg, Austria, and La Chapelle Notre-Dame de Compassion in Paris. She has also performed with

symphonies and opera companies throughout the Midwest.” Truckenbrod feels privileged to join the Music Department at SIUE. “I am excited to be here. Every area of this department is very proactive in getting students involved in the many facets of music.” Professor Audrey Tallent, Chair of the Department of Music, feels that not only will the music majors at SIUE, but the community as a whole, benefit from Dr. Truckenbrod’s talents and expertise that are being added to an already passionate faculty. “Every faculty member in this department has a passion for what they do and students aren’t the only ones who benefit, the entire community does. The department runs beautifully because we have a lot of support form the Arts and Sciences Dean’s office who strengthens the team mentality,” said Tallant. A number of wonderful performances are scheduled for the year. Whether you are a fan of ensemble, orchestra or jazz music, you are sure to find something you will enjoy in the upcoming season of events. The Department of Music Coffee Concert, presenting two new faculty members and a new venue will be the next performance. The first coffee concert of the season will be on Monday, Oct. 12, at 7:30 p.m. in the Abbott Auditorium of the Lovejoy Library. Parking available in lot B. The faculty showcase will present Dr. Emily Truckenbrod, soprano, and also, Shelly Monier, flutist. Joining them will be Marc Schapman, tenor; Mac Hinson, clarinet; John Korak, trumpet; Lenor Anop, violin; and Linda Perry, piano. Music will include operatic arias, Beethoven Sonata in G Major, Op. 30, No. 3, for Piano and Violin, and Saint-Saens Tarantella for Flute, Clarinet and Piano. Tickets for the coffee concert are $10 general admission, $9 seniors and $7 for students. They can be purchased through the Fine Arts Box Office at 650-3994, DH 1042b. Advance reservations are requested in order to assure seating. The rest of the season follows: • Friday, Oct. 16, 7:30 p.m. Faculty Recital, featuring Mac Hinson on clarinet and Linda Perry on piano. Abbott Auditorium, Lovejoy Library. • Tuesday, Oct. 20, 7:30 p.m., SIUE Bands, Dunham Hall Theater. • Wednesday, Oct. 21, 7:30 p.m., Jazz Concert,

7:30 p.m., Dunham Hall Theater. • Sunday, Oct. 25, 7 p.m., Friends of Music Benefit Dinner featuring Erin Bode, Dunham Hall Theater. • Tuesday, Oct. 27, 7:30 p.m., Choirs Concert, St. John’s Methodist Church in Edwardsville. • Tuesday, Nov. 17, 7:30 p.m., Jazz Band Concert, Dunham Hall Theater. • Thursday, Dec. 3. Madrigal Dinner, Information to be announced. • Sunday, Dec. 6. 2 p.m., Suzuki Concert, 2 p.m. Dunham Hall Theater. • Sunday, Dec. 6, 2:30 p.m., Choirs Concert, Eden Church, Edwardsville. • Tuesday, Dec. 8, 7:30 p.m., SIUE Bands Concert, Dunham Hall Theater. • Wednesday, Dec. 9, 7:30 p.m., Wind Symphony, Archer “Concerto for Piano” premiere, Christ Church Cathedral, St. Louis, Mo. • Friday, Dec. 11, 7:30 p.m. University Orchestra Concert, Dunham Hall. • Friday, Dec. 11 and Saturday, Dec. 12, SIUE Opera Scenes, Information to be announced. • Friday, Jan. 15 and Saturday, Jan. 16, Bi-State Band, Dunham Hall. • Sunday, Feb. 28, 2:30 p.m., Choirs Concert, Information to be announced. • Tuesday, March 2, 7:30 p.m., Concert Band, Dunham Hall Theater. • Friday, March 5, 7:30 p.m., University Orchestra Concert, Dunham Hall Theater. • Friday, March 26, 7:30 p.m., Opera, Gen. Admission $12, Dunham Hall Theater. • Saturday, March 27, 7:30 p.m., Opera, Gen. Admission $12, Dunham Hall Theater. • Monday, March 29, 7:30 p.m., Coffee Concert, Abbott Auditorium, Lovejoy Library. • Tuesday, March 30, 7:30 p.m., Jazz Concert, Information to be announced. • Sunday, April 18, 2 p.m., Suzuki Concert, LeClaire Christian Church, Edwardsville. • Sunday, April 25, 2 p.m. Suzuki Spring Fest, LeClaire Christian Church, Edwardsville. • Monday, April 26, 7:30 p.m., SIUE Bands Concert, Dunham Hall Theater. • Thursday, April 29, and Friday, April 30, Choral/Orchestra Concert, Information to be announced. • For more information about the upcoming Music Department events, visit www.siue.edu/

Above, Erin Bode. At left, Emily Truckenbrod. Photos for The Edge.

October 8, 2009

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The Arts Artistic adventures Touhill will host O Pioneers! O Pioneers! – an opera set in 1910 on the American frontier – will make its world premiere at the Touhill Performing Arts Center, October 9 & 10, for two performances. Curtain time on Friday and Saturday is 8 p.m. in the Anheuser-Busch Performance Hall. O Pioneers! is based on Willa Cather ’s novel of the same name. One of the leading figures of American literary Modernism, Cather’s work of fiction faithfully conveyed both the sharp physical realities and the mythic sweep of the transformation of the American frontier. The opera’s composer Barbara Harbach has again teamed up with lyricist Jonathan Yordy to create the O Pioneers! original musical score. Together, they have created 27 numbers for O Pioneers! They last collaborated on the musical Booth! which debuted at the Touhill in 2007 and ran in New York City this past June. H a r b a c h a n d Yo r d y h a v e assembled a nationally recognized group of opera professionals to stage O Pioneers!, complete with arias, dance and chorus. Local arts groups including Dimensions Dance Center, the St. Louis Women’s Chorale and the University of MissouriSt. Louis’ College of Fine Arts and Communication contribute talent to round out the production. The principal cast includes: Gina Galati in the lead role as Alexandra Bergstrom; Robert Boldin as Carl; Ann Hoyt as Marie; Thomas Wazelle as Emil; Ian Greenlaw as Frank; Philip Touchette as Oscar; David Dillard as Ivar; Joshua Stanton as Amedee; and Tom Sitzler as Lou. O Pioneers! is the story of a family of Swedish immigrants in the farm country near the fictional town of Hanover, Neb., at the turn of the 20th century. The main character, Alexandra Bergson, inherits the family farmland when her father dies, and she devotes her life to making the farm a viable enterprise at a time when other immigrant families were giving up and leaving the prairie. Triumph is inextricably enmeshed with tragedy in this story of people who do not claim a land so much as they submit to it, and, in the process, become greater than they were. To further enhance the patron’s live experience at O Pioneers!, the Touhill is offering the E3! program, Explore – Experience – Engage, in association with the Saturday 8 p.m. performance. E3! pre-show discussions, which begin 50 minutes prior to the performance, and postshow receptions are free to ticket holders. Tickets for O Pioneers! are $35. They are available now at the Touhill Performing Arts Center Ticket Office; online at www.touhill.org; or

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by phone at 314.516.4949. The Touhill’s Ticket Office is located at One University Blvd., St. Louis, MO 63121. All St. Louis area students receive a 10% discount on two tickets with their I.D. Group and senior discounts are also available. The Touhill Performing Arts Center is located on the north campus of the University of Missouri-St. Louis, just 10 minutes from Clayton. (Exit #240 from I-70). There is ample free parking, and the UMSL North Campus MetroLink Station is just steps from the Touhill’s main entrance.

Wehrenberg Theatres and Emerging Pictures partner to showcase the best of European opera and ballet Wehrenberg Theatres is proud to join forces with the Emerging Pictures network of cinemas and its exclusive content to present world class cultural programming. This partnership will make available the best in European opera and ballet which will all be presented in crystal-clear Hi-Definition. Three local theatres will boast this incredible series – Ronnies 20 Cine in South County, Galaxy 14 Cine in Chesterfield and O’Fallon 15 Cine in Illinois. This partnership features a rare opportunity to show some of Europe’s greatest operas in stunning Hi-Definition. The “Opera in Cinema” Fall series will bring landmark works such as director Zeffirelli’s production of Verdi’s Aida from La Scala di Milano; the renowned Salzburg Festival featuring Mozart’s Così fan Tutte; from Teatro Comunale di Bologna, a stunning performance of Bellini’s I Puritani, starring Juan Diego Flórez; from l’Opera de Paris, director Dmitri Tcherniakov’s innovative production of Tchaikovsky’s Eugene Onegin performed by the Bolshoi Opera; and as a special event, the movie La Bohème starring Anna Netrebko and Rolando Villazón. The Galaxy 14 Cine will exclusively broadcast two LIVE events: December 7th, Bizet’s Carmen, the La Scala’s opening night and December 22nd, Verdi’s Il Trovatore from the Gran Teatre del Liceu. Also, performances from Russia’s legendary Mariinsky Ballet Company (formerly Kirov) will be part of the series with the two classics Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake and The Nutcracker. These ballets will be featured at all three of the aforementioned theatres.; A full schedule of “Opera in Cinema” and “Ballet in Cinema” is below: La Boheme (Movie release) Thu., Oct. 1 – 7 p.m. and Sun., Oct. 4 – 1

p.m. I Puritani Thu., Oct .15 – 7 p.m. and Sun., Oct. 18 – 1 p.m. Swan Lake (Mariinsky Ballet) Thu., Oct. 29 – 7 p.m. and Sun., Nov 1 – 1 p.m. Eugene Onegin Thu., Nov. 12 – 7 p.m. and Sun., Nov 15 – 1 p.m. Nutcracker (Mariinsky Ballet)

Thu., Nov. 19 – 7 p.m. and Sun., Nov. 22 – 1 p.m. Carmen (Live – Chesterfield) Mon., Dec. 7 – 11 a.m. and encore – 6:30 p.m. Cosi fan tutte Thu., Dec. 17 – 7 p.m. and Sun., Dec. 20 – 1 p.m. Il Travatore (Live – Chesterfield) Tue., Dec. 22 – 1 p.m. and Encore

– 6:30 p.m. Please note the morning performances of Carmen on Dec. 7 and Il Travatore on Dec. 22 are broadcast live! Both the live p e r f o r m a n c e a n d t h e e n c o re presentation the same evening are exclusively at Galaxy 14 Cine in Chesterfield, Mo.

We’ve got a NEW Look! We’ve got a NEW Style! Sunset Hills Country Club currently has availability for your

event! It is not too late to get a gorgeous setting in a newly remodeled facility for your special celebration. There are still dates available for holiday celebrations, weddings and special parties. If you are searching for that special place, look no more. Christmas We offer many different packages, with special attention to details is less than and presentation. We cater to your expectations! 4 months away. Check us out at www.sunsethillscountryclub.com Book your Party NOW! or Call Stephanie 656-9380 ex. 40

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The Arts Arts calendar Tuesday, Oct. 13 • Harold Night and Longform Jam, The Improv Trick, 2715 Cherokee St., St. Louis, Mo., free, 8 p.m.

Wednesday, Oct. 14 • Sleuth, The Repertory Theatre of St. Louis, 130 Edgar Rd., St. Louis, Mo., 8 p.m.

Thursday, Oct. 15

• Sleuth, The Repertory Theatre of St. Louis, 130 Edgar Rd., St. Louis, Mo., 8 p.m.

Friday, Oct. 16 • Sleuth, The Repertory Theatre of St. Louis, 130 Edgar Rd., St. Louis, Mo., 8 p.m.

Saturday, Oct. 17 • Sleuth, The Repertory Theatre of St. Louis, 130 Edgar Rd.,

St. Louis, Mo., 5 p.m.

Sunday, Oct. 18 • Sleuth, The Repertory Theatre of St. Louis, 130 Edgar Rd., St. Louis, Mo., 2 p.m. and 7 p.m.

Tuesday, Oct. 20 • Harold Night and Longform Jam, The Improv Trick, 2715 Cherokee St., St. Louis, Mo., free, 8 p.m.

HALLOWEEN COLORING CONTEST Follow These Rules:

1. Color Coby the GCS Cub Club bear 2. Drop off at any GCS Federal Credit Union location or The Intelligencer by no later than October 21, 2009. 3. One Winner Per Age Group Ages 0-3, Ages 4-6, Ages 7-10 4. Winners will be contacted and published in the Halloween Scary Stories Book. 5. Provide the following information with your colored picture: Name: Address:

Prize:

Halloween Basket with $100 Savings Bond, Coupons, Books, Candy & other “Fun.”

Phone: Age: I authorize GCS and the Intelligencer to enter this in the Halloween Coloring Contest for Prize drawings Parent Signature: 7. No purchase necessary. Must be under 10 to participate. Void where prohibited by law. Entrants must have parent’s signature authorizing entry. One entry per child. Entries may be mailed to GCS Federal Credit Union, 3970 Maryville Road, Granite City, IL 62040 or The Intelligencer, 117 N. Second St., P.O. Box 70, Edwardsville, IL 62025.

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Travel

Thinking about paradise? Calabash Cove rolls out winter deals

By DEBBIE SETTLE Of The Edge

Have you let your mind wander to what it would be like if you could just go away for the holidays and just lay on the beach and enjoy the tropic tranquility? Or are those thoughts interrupted with the “Christmas with the Kranks” theory, that no matter how hard you try to forget about the hectic holiday season and skip over Christmas to get away, your family would never forgive you. Even just for one year. Maybe you can make that wish a reality by celebrating the holidays at Calabash Cove Resort and Spa on the spectacular Caribbean island of St. Lucia. If family members won’t stop pressuring you, take them with you! The rates are at an all time low and maybe if they can’t beat you, they will join you. Calabash Cove, St. Lucia’s newest boutique hotel resort, is now

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announcing holiday availability and rates beginning at just $225 per night per person, based on double occupancy, from Dec. 21 through Jan. 3, depending on accommodations and meal plan selected. Tucked away on a gently sloping, tropical beachfront on the northwest coast of the island, this gorgeous property features 26 suites, all with Jacuzzis and many with private pools, as well as a full-service spa and fitness center, infinity-edge swimming pool, restaurant, cocktail bar, library, and game room. Choose from the European Plan (EP), featuring a daily island breakfast buffet, or the Luxury Gourmet Plan (LGP), an all-inclusive option that includes all meals and beverages throughout your stay. All of the rooms feature unparalleled views of the sea, the capital Castries to the south, or nearby Martinique to the north from a private balcony.

To look and feel your holiday best, the resort’s Ti Spa overlooks the 30foot Sweetwater infinity pool poised at bay’s edge and the wide expanse of the beach. Revitalizing treatments combine European technique with St. Lucia’s rich tradition of plant – and fruit-based curatives. Each can be enjoyed in a private treatment room or in the privacy of your room. The spa’s Fitness Centre is outfitted with Cybex cardiovascular equipment, and a full beauty salon offers hair treatments and mani - pedi services. Calabash Cove’s own Windsong Restaurant offers an international menu with Asian inflections, specializing in seasonally inspired dishes made from the freshest local ingredients. Unobstructed views across the Caribbean Sea enhance the menu’s sensory delights, and the kitchen’s chef de cuisine aspires to make Windsong the first Michelin star restaurant on the island. Complementing Windsong’s elegant milieu is the convivial C-bar, which serves international cocktails and fine wines from the Calabash Cove Cellars amid festive island music. In addition to its natural beauty, St. Lucia’s increasing allure also comes from its broad array of activities and adventures to make it a holiday season never to forget. Whether its snorkeling, golf, soaking in the hot springs, enjoying world-class jazz, riding a cable through a rainforest canopy, shopping in a quaint fishing village, viewing exotic wildlife like giant turtles, rock climbing, searching for ancient petroglyphs, driving into a volcano or cooling off under a waterfall, St. Lucia has something to offer everyone. Calabash Cove will help to transform guests’ dreams into reality with full concierge service for those who wish to explore the island. For more information, or to book your summer/fall getaway with Calabash Cove’s special reduced seasonal rates, visit the resort’s Web site at www.calabashcove.com.

Above and at left are exterior and interior views of Calabash Cove. Photos for The Edge. The Edge – Page

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Travel Travel briefs Foliage from the water: Top viewing spots for boaters CHICAGO (AP) — If you enjoy fall foliage, consider doing some of your leaf-peeping from the water. The Chicago-based Discover Boating organization is recommending 10 places nationwide to see autumn colors by boat. And you don’t have to own a boat; some places offer cruises or rentals. Starting in the Northeast, Lake Champlain, which borders New York and Vermont, offers cruises with mountain backdrops. From Burlington, try a 90-minute scenic ride aboard the Spirit of Ethan Allen III through Oct. 18, http://www. soea.com/. In New York, the Hudson River is prime fall color territory, September right through early November. New York Waterway’s “Shades of Autumn” cruise departs from Manhattan and New Jersey for a trip up the Hudson — http://www. nywaterway.com. For information on other cruises farther upstate, visit http://www.hudsonriver.com/ cruises.htm. In more southerly regions, milder temperatures result in foliage lasting later in the season. Lake of the Ozarks in Missouri and Arkansas offer fall colors mid-October to midNovember; http://www.funlake. com/. In the Tennessee River Gorge in the Cumberland Mountains, wildlife like eagles, ospreys and wild turkeys are part of the scenery; details at http://www.trgt.org/. Along the Shenandoah River in Virginia, colorful views of the Appalachian, Blue Ridge and Massanutten mountains also run mid-October to mid-November. The river is ideal for canoeing and kayaking, with Luray Caverns

and Shenandoah National Park among the nearby attractions. For information on visiting Virginia in the fall, go to http://www.virginia. org/fall/. In the Midwest, Door County, Wis., is located on a peninsula on Lake Michigan, perfect for boating and visiting small Midwestern towns

with a New England feel. Peak season is late September to late October; http://www.travelwisconsin.com/. Michigan’s southwest coast on Lake Michigan offers spectacular views of foliage, dunes, and sunsets throughout October, with Saugatuck as a prime jumping-off point for your travels; http://www.saugatuck.

Show Your Support of our Troops!

com/. T h e B r a i n e rd L a k e s re g i o n of Minnesota includes Gull, Pelican, Cross and the Whitefish

c h a i n o f l a k e s , h t t p : / / w w w. explorebrainerdlakes.com/. Peak season for changing colors along the shore is through early October.

Religious Directory Bahá’í Faith

Episcopal ST. ANDREWS EPISCOPAL

The Edwardsville Intelligencer will publish a special feature page honoring our troops on Wednesday, November 11. We are accepting photos for publication and would like to honor both past and present service men and women for their sacrifice in defense of our country. THERE IS NO CHARGE. Here’s all you have to do: Send photo along with the completed form below to: The Edwardsville Intelligencer P.O. Box 70 Edwardsville, IL 62025 Attention: Advertising Manager Name: Branch of Service: Years of Service: Hometown: Information submitted by: (Name and address will not be published.We need it to return the photo.)

All information must be received by Monday, November 2, 2009.

Toenail Fungus

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October 8, 2009

The Edge – Page

18


Dining Delights

Apples Because it is that time of year

By DEBBIE SETTLE Of The Edge Apple season is upon us and doesn’t everyone love a good crisp apple? Although it is great fun and delicious to bite into the juicy snack, you can only eat so many before you need to do something with the extras. The one great thing about apples is that there are a number of great recipes that are sure to tempt any palette. Don’t just think of apples for dessert recipes. Apples help meats and vegetables take on a whole new flavor and can add a great natural sweetness to a recipe. The Michigan Apple Committee offers some wonderful recipe options that give ideas for breakfast, lunch, dinner, desserts and snacks. Most are simple and use staples that are in the cabinet or fridge right now. Pick some apples and enjoy. Oatmeal Apple Crisp Makes 8 servings Serve this sweet apple crisp warm with a scoop of low fat vanilla ice cream or frozen yogurt. 4 cups (approx. 4 large) Michigan Apples*, cored, peeled and sliced ½ cup brown sugar

½ cup whole or quick oats ½ cup all-purpose flour 5 tbsp. butter or margarine, softened ½ tsp. cinnamon ½ tsp. nutmeg *Try Cortland, Empire, Gala, Golden Delicious, Ida Red, Jonathan, McIntosh, Northern Spy, Paula Red or Rome 1. Preheat oven to 375°. Spray an 8-inch square baking pan with vegetable cooking spray. Arrange apple slices in baking pan. 1. Combine brown sugar, oats, flour, butter, cinnamon and nutmeg together in a medium bowl. Mixture will be crumbly. Spread topping over apples in pan. 2. Bake about 30 minutes or until topping is golden brown and apples are tender. Nutrition facts per serving (with margarine): 230 Calories; 8g Fat; 38g Carbohydrate; 3g Protein; 89mg Sodium; 0mg Cholesterol; 4g Fiber Harvest Apple Cake Makes 12 servings This is a moist and spicy cake that keeps well for several days. A perfect addition to your next tailgating party! 2 cups whole wheat flour ¼ cup wheat germ 2 tsp. baking soda

1 tsp. cinnamon ½ tsp. nutmeg 4 cups (approx. 4 large) Michigan Apples*, cored, peeled and diced 3/4 cup sugar 3/4 cup brown sugar ½ cup canola oil 1 cup walnuts, chopped 2 eggs 1 tsp. vanilla *Try Cortland, Empire, Gala, Golden Delicious, Ida Red, Jonathan, McIntosh, Northern Spy, Paula Red or Rome 1. Preheat oven to 350°. Spray a 9 x 13-inch baking dish with vegetable cooking spray. 2. In a medium bowl, mix the flour, wheat germ, baking soda, cinnamon, and nutmeg; set aside. 3. In a large bowl, combine apples, sugars, oil, walnuts, eggs and vanilla. Add to flour mixture; stir gently to blend well. 4. Spoon batter evenly into prepared baking dish. Bake for 50 minutes or until cake pulls away from sides of the pan. Cool cake in the pan on a rack. Nutrition facts per serving: 342 Calories; 17g Fat; 44g Carbohydrate; 6g Protein; 227mg Sodium; 35mg Cholesterol; 4.5g Fiber Easy Apple Breakfast Cobbler Makes 4 servings What could be better than warm apple cobbler for breakfast! Put the ingredients in your crock pot overnight and wake up to the wonderful smell of cinnamon and apples. 4 medium-sized Michigan Apples*, cored, peeled and sliced ¼ cup honey 1 tsp. ground cinnamon 1 tbsp. butter or trans fat free margarine, melted 2 cups low fat granola cereal *Try Cortland, Gala, Ida Red, Johnathan, Northern Spy or Rome apples 1. Place apples in a crock pot and stir in honey and cinnamon.

Top apple mixture with granola and drizzle with butter. 2. Cover and cook on low 7-9 hours or on high 2-3 hours. 3. Serve warm and top with low fat milk or vanilla yogurt if desired. Nutrition information per serving (with margarine): 395 Calories; 7g Fat; 83g Carbohydrate; 5g Protein; 175mg Sodium; 0mg Cholesterol; 8g Fiber Wholesome Apple Muffins Makes 12 muffins These muffins combine nutrient-rich apples and whole grain flour into hearty muffins that make a perfect breakfast onthe-go! 1 ½ cup white whole wheat flour ½ cup sugar 1 tbsp. baking powder 1 tsp. cinnamon 2/3 cup apple juice 1/3 cup canola oil 1 egg 1 ¼ cup Michigan Apples*, cored, peeled and finely chopped *Suggested varieties: Cortland, Gala, Ida Red, Johnathan, McIntosh, Northern Spy, Paula Red or Rome apples Topping Mix together 1 tsp. sugar and 1 tsp. cinnamon in a small bowl; set aside. 1. Heat oven to 375°. Spray muffin pan with vegetable cooking spray or line with baking cups. 2. In a medium bowl, combine flour, sugar, baking powder and cinnamon; blend well. 3. In a small bowl, combine apple juice, oil and egg; mix well. 4. Add apple juice mixture to dry ingredients and stir until moistened. Fold in chopped apples. 5. Fill muffin cups 2/3 full and sprinkle muffins with cinnamon sugar topping mixture;

bake for 20 minutes or until golden brown. Cool 1 to 2 minutes before removing from pan. Nutrition facts per muffin: 160 Calories; 7g Fat; 24g Carbohydrate; 2.5g Protein; 68mg Sodium; 17mg Cholesterol; 2.5g Fiber Apple, Cheddar, Turkey Panini Makes 4 servings This quick sandwich can be made with a Panini press or a George Foreman grill. It is equally delicious if you choose to omit the turkey. 2 Michigan Apples*, thinly sliced 8 slices hearty whole wheat bread 2 tbsp. honey mustard 8 slices (approx. 8 oz.), 2% sharp cheddar cheese 8 thin slices deli roasted turkey *Suggested varieties: Cortland, Empire, Gala, Ida Red, Johnathan, Northern Spy, McIntosh, Paula Red or Rome 1. Preheat the Panini press or grill. Spread the honey mustard evenly over each slice of bread. Layer apple slices, cheese and turkey over 4 slices of the bread. Top each with the remaining bread slices. 2. Lightly coat the press or grill with vegetable cooking spray. Grill each sandwich for approx. 3 to 5 minutes or until bread is golden brown and cheese has melted. Remove from pan and cut in half. Serve with a green salad for a quick and healthy lunch or dinner. Nutrition facts per sandwich (with turkey): 524 Calories; 18g Fat; 58g Carbohydrate; 31g Protein; 1831mg Sodium; 65mg Cholesterol; 8g Fiber Nutrition facts per sandwich (without turkey): 465 Calories; 17g Fat; 55g Carbohydrate ; 22g Protein; 1256mg Sodium; 41mg Cholesterol; 8g Fiber

Above, Wholesome Apple Muffins. At left, Easy Apple Breakfast Cobbler. Photos for The Edge.

October 8, 2009

The Edge – Page

19


Dining Delights Chefs elevating international street foods LOS ANGELES (AP) — Peruvian rice, steaming Greek falafels, satay dripping with peanut sauce, doughy Salvadoran pupusas, slippery Thai noodles. In much of the world, they are just on-the-go eats for the masses. But in the U.S., a growing cadre of chefs and foodies are savoring these so-called street foods, elevating them beyond their humble origins, and weaving the tastes and ingredients into their own menus and homes. "We've been reclaiming flavors," said Rick Bayless, winner of Bravo TV's "Top Chef Masters," fresh off the opening of his new Chicago restaurant XOCO, based on Mexican street staples such as churros, empanadas and tortas. "After we went through the '50s, in America, when food got so processed and bland, there's been a backlash over the past 10 to 15 years," Bayless said. "A lot of the 20to 35-year-olds are into this big, bold flavor. It's the antithesis of what you get in processed food, that balance of fat, sugar and salt. Street food has a tanginess to it. You get this thing that's so incredibly exciting to eat." Ubiquitous across Latin America, Southeast Asia and the Mediterranean, street food is becoming increasingly common in the U.S., thanks partly to chefs like Bayless and Zakary Pelaccio, whose Malaysian-inspired Fatty Crab in New York gives steamed pork and veggie buns serious treatment. Credit also is due to the growing army of food trucks and carts from coast to coast. As in Los Angeles, where the roving Kogi BBQ truck and its Korean-Mexican fusion has amassed thousands of fans through Twitter. The trend is being taken seriously. Street food is regular fodder for bloggers and glossy magazines alike. John Wi l l o u g h b y, e x e c u t i v e editor at Gourmet magazine, said he expects cross-fertilization between street food and restaurants to continue for years. He called a May 2005 issue on street food the magazine's favorite travel issue.

"Here, street food has traditionally meant hot dogs, except in L.A. and New York," said Willoughby. "People thought of it as unhealthy, and sort of lowbrow. It wasn't something you thought about and looked forward to. That's totally changed in the last five years. Street food has become a lot more interesting." According to Jackie Terrebonne, Gourmet's special projects editor, a wide variety of street food recipes have cropped up in new cookbooks by noted chefs, including John Besh's "My New Orleans: The Cookbook" and David Chang's "Momofuku," named after his New York restaurant chain featuring ramen and ssam, a type of Asian burrito. The Culinary Institute of America, one of the nation's premier cooking schools, is even hosting a conference — "Frontiers of Flavor: World Street Food, World Comfort Food" — in California in November. "If you told someone 15 years ago the Culinary Institute would organize a national conference on street food, you would have been laughed out of the room. The concept of food is changing," said Greg Drescher, the conference's organizer. American food up until the mid '90s revolved around dishes from Europe, Drescher said, with notions of culinary excellence tied to schooling in France, then Italy. Foods considered "ethnic" were on the periphery. Then chefs and food writers and enthusiasts started traveling beyond those European borders. "A lot of people went to South Asia and discovered this incredible world of outdoor street food. Thailand, Singapore, Malaysia, India. It's as though you've been watching color television for the first time," Drescher said. "A street food vendor has one shot at impressing the customer. It's often quite creative and complex. Those people are doing one or two dishes for 20 to 30 years. They've gotten really good at what they're doing." The nation's immigrant communities also have helped make

street food more commonplace. In Los Angeles County alone, several thousand food trucks and carts — many run by immigrants — operate around the city. In New York, Middle Eastern food stands are staples, as are carts selling arepas, South American corn meal patties. In Chicago, said Bayless, the spicier the street food the better, from regional Mexican fare to Puerto Rican. Guatemala native Irma Alvarado, 51, moved to Los Angeles in 1986 and started selling her pupusas at farmer's markets two years ago. She learned to cook the thick meat, cheese and vegetable-filled breads while helping to care for her 11 brothers, and began working as a food vendor at age 15. Sales at her roving L.A. stand have increased four to five times since last year. "People go to a restaurant, and they have to sit down, wait. Here, you can see your food made, and it's faster and cheaper, fresh," Alvarado said. For Susan Feniger, a trip to India 30 years ago jump-started her shift away from French-style cooking. At her new Hollywoodcasual restaurant STREET squares of toasted bread with sweet coconut jam, a Singapore treat called kaya toast, come with soft-fried egg drizzled with soy sauce. Small collard leaves serve as taco shells for Thai bites, a dish seasoned with toasted coconut, crushed peanuts, dried shrimp, ginger, chilies and chopped lime. "I love street food," said Feniger. "Many chefs do. I'm drawn to it

because culturally I don't like going to fancy restaurants." ••• I n I n d i a , s a m o s a s a re t h e quintessential street food. They typically are filled with meat or vegetables or both. A sweet and spicy dipping sauce is the perfect complement to this deep-fried food. To speed up this recipe, skip the dough and substitute purchased wonton wrappers (available in the produce section at most grocers). Use a large round cookie cutter to trim the wrappers into circles. POTATO AND PEA SAMOSAS Start to finish: 1 hour 15 minutes (45 minutes active) Servings: 4 For the dough: 2 cups all-purpose flour 1/2 teaspoon salt 5 tablespoons ghee (clarified butter), room temperature 1/2 to 1 cup ice water For the sauce: 3 tablespoons garlic jelly 2 tablespoons lime juice 2 tablespoons water 1/2 tablespoon hot sauce For the filling: 1 tablespoon black mustard seeds 1 tablespoon yellow mustard seeds 1 tablespoon ghee 1 teaspoon turmeric 1 teaspoon garam masala 1/2 teaspoon black pepper 1/4-inch piece fresh ginger, grated 6 medium potatoes, boiled, peeled and cut into 1/3-inch cubes 1 cup peas, steamed Salt, to taste Vegetable oil, for frying

To make the dough, in a food processor combine the flour and salt. Pulse several times. Add the ghee and pulse until it resembles coarse breadcrumbs. With the processor running, drizzle in enough water to form a dough that is soft and elastic. Transfer the dough to a bowl, cover and let rest for 1 hour. Meanwhile, prepare the sauce. In a small bowl, whisk together the jelly, lime juice, water and hot sauce. Set aside. If desired, the sauce can be heated briefly just before serving. To make the filling, in a large saute pan over low, toast both mustard seeds. Once the seeds begin to pop in the pan, add the ghee, turmeric, garam masala, pepper and ginger. Saute for 2 minutes, then add the potatoes. Remove the pan from heat, then stir in the peas and season with salt. Set aside. When the dough is ready, shape it into a log and cut it into 16 pieces. On a lightly floured surface, roll each piece into a 5-inch circle. Use a finger dipped in water to moisten the edges. Place 1 to 2 tablespoons of the potato mixture in the center of each circle, then fold the edges together to form a half-circle. Use a fork to crimp and seal the edges. In a large, heavy saucepan over medium-high, heat 2 inches of oil to 300 F. Working in batches, add the samosas and fry until golden, about 3 to 4 minutes, using a spoon to turn them as needed in the oil. Transfer the samosas to paper towels to drain. Serve with the dipping sauce.

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HOME Garden F A L L

2 0 0 9

Garden work doesn't end with summer

By CAROLE FELDMAN Associated Press

Jeana Myers is thinking about getting her garden in Raleigh, N.C., ready for the first frost, even though it’s still likely weeks away. Work in the garden doesn’t end just because those long days of summer are over. Myers’ peach, plum and other fruit trees have stopped bearing fruit, and the tomatoes are ripening more slowly as the days get shorter and the temperatures cooler. By mid-October, she’ll begin to pull the green tomatoes off the vines, to eat or to let ripen. “If a freeze hits them, they’re done,” said Myers, a soil scientist for the North Carolina Department of Agriculture. As the season ends for tomatoes, squash and other summer vegetables, it’s prime time for leafy green vegetables like spinach and arugula. “We can really grow vegetables year-round,” Myers said. “Our challenge is that it’s going to get really hot again.” The green leafy vegetables don’t like those warmer temperatures. Historically, the first frost arrives in her area around Oct. 15. Some northern parts of the country already have been hit with frost advisories. Most places still have a month or so of growing season left, said Charlie Nardozzi, senior horticulturist for the National Gardening Association. Many gardeners will cover their plants to try to protect them from the cold and extend the growing season. Floating row covers, made of a cheesecloth-type material, let in light, air and water. “They protect the plant like a blanket,” Nardozzi said. Some people lay the row cover directly over the plants. Others build a frame. You also can use metal hoops and create a tunnel for the plants, Nardozzi said. The covers provide a few extra degrees of protection when the temperature drops below freezing. Myers puts bales of hay around special plants. “They have a lot of insulating value,” she said. She’ll also use a kelp spray, which she said improves the plant’s resistance to cell damage under cold conditions. Some plants do better than others as the weather turns cold. “All the rooting vegetables like turnips and beets, they’ll be fine,” said Christopher Gunter, a vegetable production specialist and assistant professor at North Carolina State University. He said the soil has a “buffering heat” that will keep these vegetables warm even during a mild frost.

October 8, 2009

Associated Press

Volunteer Sathya Yalvigi, right, of Avondale, Pa. helps to winterize the University of Delaware’s Garden for the Community in Newark, Del. Besides trying to coax a few more ripe tomatoes out of your plants, fall is also a good time for garden cleanup. “A lot of people are sort of tired of their garden,” said Susan Barton, an extension specialist at the University

Annual plants should be pulled and composted — provided they are disease free. Once the plants are out, compost or manure can be spread on the beds and worked into the soil. Any kind of organic matter will do, Nardozzi said. “Use your leaves wisely,” Barton said. “Leaves are a wonderful compost.” Preparing garden beds now gives the organic material time until spring to decompose and fertilize the soil. But do it before it gets too cold, Gunter said, to give the micro-organisms a chance to start breaking down the material. To prevent erosion during the winter, Nardozzi recommends planting winter rye or winter wheat seed. A t t h e c o m m u n i t y g a rd e n s in Portland, Ore., growers are encouraged to clean up their plots and then plant a cover crop like alfalfa or legumes, said botanical specialist Dan Franek. “It shows us their plot is still active.”

Legumes also are an excellent source of nitrogen for the soil. Fall also is a good time to aerate and fertilize the lawn. New trees and shrubs can be planted — there’s still time for the roots to get established before the soil gets too cold. Nardozzi recommends putting a tree wrap or guard around young trees so mice or voles don’t do damage during the winter. And tropical plants can be dug up and brought inside. First, though, prune them back, pull off any dead leaves and check for insects, Barton said. “Sometimes it’s a matter of washing off the p l a n t w i t h a h a rd s t re a m o f water.” But what about those unripe vegetables and herbs? Some herbs, like rosemary, are perennials and come back in the spring. Annuals, like basil, won’t survive the first frost. Basil leaves can be pulled and dried. Or, you can make pesto and freeze it to last through the winter.

o f D e l a w a re . “ O n c e i t s t o p s producing they just want to forget about it. While you can do that, you allow all of those fungal spores to overwinter, and insects, too.” That can mean trouble for your garden come spring.

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$32,995 $17,263 $19,444 $13,980

B7710 T7534 91621 V90030A

1 Series 3 Series 3 Series 3 Series 3 Series 3 Series 3 Series 3 Series 3 Series 3 Series 3 Series 5 Series 5 Series 5 Series 5 Series 5 Series 5 Series 7 Series 7 Series 7 Series X3 X3 X5 X5 Z4

2008 2008 2007 2007 2007 2006 2006 2006 2006 2004 2003 2008 2007 2007 2007 2006 2002 2007 2006 2001 2008 2006 2008 2007 2007

$35,495 $30,495 $30,995 $26,495 $25,495 $27,995 $25,995 $23,995 $20,995 $17,995 $13,988 $44,995 $38,995 $30,995 $30,995 $26,995 $15,995 $47,995 $41,995 Call $35,495 $26,995 $46,995 $44,995 $30,495

B7600A B7660 B7683 B7676 B7682 B7675 B7677 B7688 B7299A T7712 T91140A B7518 B7592 B7666 B7650 B091645A B7332A B7665 B7680 6740 B7555 B7689 B7549 B7526 B7662

Century LACROSSE LACROSSE LACROSSE LACROSSE LeSabre LeSabre LUCERNE LUCERNE Lucerne Lucerne Regal Rendezvous TERRAZA

1999 2009 2009 2009 2008 2005 2002 2009 2007 2006 2006 2003 2006 2007

Call $22,495 $20,995 $19,995 $20,995 $14,500 $8,404 $27,995 $18,495 $16,995 Call Call $17,995 $19,995

P6967A P6832 P6972 P6969 P6971 P1914 91761 P7216 T90075A R1546 6776 P2441 P2302 T90175A

Allante CTS CTS CTS CTS DeVille DeVille DeVille DeVille DeVille DeVille DeVille DeVille DeVille DTS ESCALADE Escalade Escalade Escalade E SRX SRX SRX SRX STS STS

1987 2007 2006 2006 2005 2005 2004 2004 2003 2003 2002 2001 2000 1997 2006 2007 2007 2002 2007 2009 2009 2006 2004 2006 2005

$5,500 $21,995 $18,900 Call Call $12,500 Call Call $13,800 $9,200 $12,900 $9,975 $7,850 Call Call $35,995 Call Call Call $34,817 $33,764 Call Call $14,990 Call

AVALANCHE Blazer Cavalier CLASSIC COBALT COBALT COBALT Cobalt Cobalt COBALT Cobalt

2002 2003 2000 2004 2009 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008

$13,995 Call Call $7,995 $15,995 $15,495 $14,990 $14,404 $13,950 $13,495 $12,845

Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui

866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866-438-1169 866 377 3110

BMW Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Underwood Motors Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion

866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 485 3136 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146

BUICK St Louis Honda Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Ackerman Auto Plaza Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Underwood Motors Ackerman Auto Plaza Ackerman Auto Plaza Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC

877 584 1058 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-419-2762 866-438-1169 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-438-1169 866 485 3136 866-419-2762 866-419-2762 866-401-2564

CADILLAC 6629 T90420A 6731 6762 6775 6709 6750 6739 6613 6654 B7518A 6711 H6249B 6785 6774 B10011A 6756 6791 6787 P2101Z P2100Z 6767 6780 Y2033A 6761

Underwood Motors Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Underwood Motors Underwood Motors Underwood Motors Underwood Motors Underwood Motors Underwood Motors Underwood Motors Underwood Motors Ackerman Auto Plaza Underwood Motors Ackerman Auto Plaza Underwood Motors Underwood Motors Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Underwood Motors Underwood Motors Underwood Motors George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Underwood Motors Underwood Motors St Louis Honda Underwood Motors

CHEVROLET

October 8, 2009

Z90522A 097207A 097562A P6968A Z90484A P6963 X5157 R1485 R1475 P6996 P2120Z

Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC St Louis Honda St Louis Honda Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Koetting Ford Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo

P2121Z P2035Z P2045Z P2073Z P2084Z R1473 B2432 29517A 9057-1 P1500A Z90516A B2360B Z90505A P7009 R1553 P2113Z 29496A R1517 B2400 P2069Z P2093Z P2114Z P7134 P2071Z P7179 R1503 P2063Z R1514 B2307 Y261 29391A R1549 T2807 B9101S P2029Z P7206 P2029Z B90008A T10027A P1974 6771 X5203 P2425A 29585A P2065Z P7180 P7045 P7090 P7154 P7181 P7051 R1477 29115A B2321A P6943A B2423 P2109Z P2001Z Y253 R15321 Z90161C P2040Z P7213 T2710 29403A P2154 096788A P7015 P6943 B2414 P2081Z P2079Z P2094Z 29390A B2402 B2397 P2070Z B999 P2365

CHRYSLER P1507 T90219BB V90022A B9100S P6976 P2205 Y303 P2420 T953A 100051A P7095

Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui Victory Lane Ford St Louis Honda Ackerman Auto Plaza Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui Ackerman Auto Plaza Victory Lane Ford St Louis Honda Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC

877-223-2703 866-401-2564 866 377 3110 866 576 3845 877 584 1058 866-419-2762 866 377 3110 866-419-2762 866 576 3845 877 584 1058 866-401-2564

DODGE Koetting Ford Ackerman Auto Plaza Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Victory Lane Ford Newbold Toyota BMW Scion St Louis Honda Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Weiss Brentwood Volvo Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia

866-340-8597 866-419-2762 877-396-5065 877-223-2703 877-396-5065 866-438-1169 866 576 3845 866 617 6146 877 584 1058 866 377 3110 877-396-5065 866 801 9462 877-223-2703 877-223-2703 877-223-2703 877-223-2703 877-223-2703

FORD Victory Lane Ford Victory Lane Ford Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Koetting Ford Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Victory Lane Ford Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Koetting Ford Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Koetting Ford Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Ackerman Auto Plaza Victory Lane Ford Victory Lane Ford Victory Lane Ford Koetting Ford Koetting Ford Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Koetting Ford Victory Lane Ford Koetting Ford Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Koetting Ford Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Koetting Ford Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Victory Lane Ford Victory Lane Ford Victory Lane Ford Victory Lane Ford Koetting Ford Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Koetting Ford Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Koetting Ford Koetting Ford Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Victory Lane Ford Victory Lane Ford Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Koetting Ford Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Koetting Ford Koetting Ford Victory Lane Ford Victory Lane Ford Koetting Ford Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Koetting Ford Koetting Ford Underwood Motors

866 576 3845 866 576 3845 866-515-4038 866-515-4038 866-438-1169 866-340-8597 866-515-4038 866 576 3845 866-515-4038 877-396-5065 866-340-8597 866-515-4038 866-340-8597 877-223-2703 866-401-2564 866-419-2762 866 576 3845 866 576 3845 866 576 3845 866-340-8597 866-340-8597 866-401-2564 866-340-8597 866 576 3845 866-340-8597 866-515-4038 866-438-1169 866-515-4038 866-515-4038 866-340-8597 866-515-4038 866-515-4038 866-515-4038 866-340-8597 877-396-5065 866-438-1169 866 576 3845 866 576 3845 866 576 3845 866 576 3845 866-340-8597 866-515-4038 866-340-8597 866-515-4038 877-396-5065 866 496 0381 866-340-8597 866-340-8597 866-515-4038 866 576 3845 866 576 3845 877-396-5065 866-340-8597 866-515-4038 866-340-8597 866-340-8597 866 576 3845 866 576 3845 866-340-8597 866-515-4038 866-340-8597 866-340-8597 866 485 3136

The Edge – Page

22


Model

Year Price Stock#

Dealer

Phone

Model

Year Price Stock#

Dealer

Phone

Model

Year Price Stock#

Dealer

Mustang MUSTANG MUSTANG Mustang Mustang MUSTANG GT Ranger Ranger TAURUS TAURUS Taurus Taurus TAURUS Taurus TAURUS SES Taurus X THUNDERBIR

2007 2006 2006 2005 2003 2006 2006 2004 2008 2005 2005 2003 2001 1997 2001 2008 2002

$19,990 $22,990 $14,490 $14,990 $12,995 Call $17,990 $9,777 $18,990 $10,990 $7,904 $6,995 $7,990 Call Call $24,990 $19,990

J665A X5214 X5193 J481A P2198 B961 P7557 P2099ZA P5106 X5195 R1535 P3668 11705A 097600A P768S P7562A 11650B

Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Koetting Ford Koetting Ford Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Ackerman Auto Plaza Victory Lane Ford Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Koetting Ford Koetting Ford Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Koetting Ford St Louis Honda Victory Lane Ford Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Koetting Ford

866-515-4038 866-340-8597 866-340-8597 866-515-4038 866-419-2762 866 576 3845 866-515-4038 866 496 0381 866-340-8597 866-340-8597 866-438-1169 877-396-5065 866-340-8597 877 584 1058 866 576 3845 866-515-4038 866-340-8597

GRAND CHER Grand Cher GRAND CHER LIBERTY Liberty WRANGLER

2006 2007 2006 2008 2005 2004

Call $17,888 $17,995 $19,995 $10,980 Call

B959 100063A P1519A P7106 V90339B J65112A

Victory Lane Ford St Louis Honda Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia

866 576 3845 877 584 1058 877-223-2703 866-401-2564 866 377 3110 877-223-2703

Titan

2008

$20,480 Y236

Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui 866 377 3110

Custom Cru Silhouette

1992 2002

$3,500 Call

RONDO LX/E Sorento SORENTO EX Spectra

2008 2006 2008 2006

Call $15,995 Call $9,404

B947 P2204 B978 R1478-1

866 576 3845 866-419-2762 866 576 3845 866-438-1169

Discovery

2003

$9,750

2500 ACADIA Canyon ENVOY ENVOY Envoy Envoy XL Envoy XL Sierra 150 Sierra 150 SIERRA 150 Sierra 250 Sonoma Yukon Yukon XL

1984 2008 2006 2008 2008 2006 2006 2005 2008 2007 2005 2008 2003 2007 2005

Call $29,995 $14,388 $23,995 $19,995 $15,965 $19,995 $14,990 $18,990 $28,944 $21,995 $40,995 $8,850 $32,446 Call

29517AA P7078 T10284A P7114 B90210A V90504A P2310 J645A P7543 R1565 C13072A T7671 Y280 P2106Z 6784

866 496 0381 866-401-2564 866 617 6146 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866 377 3110 866-419-2762 866-515-4038 866-515-4038 866-438-1169 877-223-2703 866 617 6146 866 377 3110 866 496 0381 866 485 3136

ES 330 IS 350

2006 2006

$22,988 T7690 $29,988 T7586

Continenta LS MKX Navigator Town Car Zephyr Zephyr

1998 2000 2008 2005 2004 2006 2006

Call Call $32,990 Call $18,855 $23,990 $19,990

Elise

2005

$34,995 T7711

CX-7 MAZDA3 MAZDA6 MAZDA6 MX-5 Miata Tribute

2008 2004 2008 2008 1999 2001

Call $11,900 $13,695 $11,999 Call $7,685

C-Class CLK-Class E-Class E-Class SLK-Class

2002 2006 2006 2005 2006

Call $25,416 $28,917 $31,995 $26,495

GRAND MARQ GRAND MARQ GRAND MARQ Grand Marq Mariner MARINER MARINER PR Milan Milan MILAN Montego MOUNTAINEE Mystique Sable

2009 2001 2008 2005 2007 2006 2010 2007 2006 2006 2007 2007 2000 1999

Call Call $18,990 $11,700 $16,993 Call Call $18,990 $16,990 $14,990 $17,990 $19,975 Call $4,495

866 576 3845 866 576 3845 866-340-8597 877-396-5065 866 617 6146 866 576 3845 866 576 3845 866-515-4038 866-515-4038 866-340-8597 866-515-4038 877-223-2703 866-515-4038 877-396-5065

Bonneville G5 G5 G5 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 G6 GT Grand Am GRAND AM Grand Am GRAND PRIX GRAND PRIX GRAND PRIX GRAND PRIX GRAND PRIX Grand Prix GRAND PRIX GRAND PRIX Grand Prix Grand Prix GRAND PRIX Grand Prix Grand Prix GRAND PRIX GTO Montana SOLSTICE Sunfire Torrent VIBE Vibe Vibe Vibe Vibe Vibe Vibe

2003 2009 2008 2008 2009 2009 2009 2009 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2007 2006 2005 2005 2004 2004 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2006 2006 2005 2001 2006 2002 2008 2002 2008 2009 2009 2009 2009 2009 2005 2004

$11,995 $13,995 $15,990 $14,990 $21,904 $16,944 $15,995 $14,995 $15,995 $15,995 $15,495 $15,495 $15,495 $14,995 $14,995 $14,995 $14,995 $14,995 $14,995 $14,995 $14,800 $14,595 $14,595 $13,995 $13,995 $13,995 $13,709 $12,995 $12,628 $13,980 $13,990 Call $13,900 $10,990 $7,500 $16,495 $15,995 $15,990 $15,495 $14,995 $14,995 $14,995 $14,995 $13,995 $12,904 $16,995 $11,990 $11,444 Call $23,404 $6,995 $24,995 $6,488 $17,725 $18,495 $18,450 $17,404 $16,995 $15,483 $10,944 $9,995

P2021 B2439 X5153A X5183 R1506 R1564 P7207 B2369 P7203 P7184 P7161 P7197 P7193 P7175 P7174 P7169 P7173 P6953 P7198 P7158 B2389 P7202 P7205 P7125 P7136 P7083 P2115Z B2420 P2090Z P2244A P1813 B998 P2165 X5204 P2425 P7157 P7199 X4998 P7178 P7156 B2411 P7140 P7092 B2418 R1526 T10034A K152A 91512 M1015S R1498 4034A J64009A T7631A P2091Z P7052 R1496 R1538 B2373 Y291 91861 P2368

COOPER

2006

Call

866 576 3845

9-5

2000

$6,904

62283

Eclipse Eclipse Galant Galant Galant Lancer

2009 2006 2009 2009 2008 2009

$16,988 Call $14,988 $14,988 $12,700 $19,495

T7678 6764 T7609 T7608 B2241 B091652A

866 617 6146 866 485 3136 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 877-396-5065 866 617 6146

Altima Altima Altima ALTIMA Frontier MAXIMA Pathfinder

2009 2008 2005 2005 2009 2006 2001

$17,480 $16,980 $16,490 $13,495 $25,988 $17,995 Call

Y299 Y297 100089A Z90220AA T7646 T90411A 097149B

Aura Aura Aura ION Ion LS S-Series SKY SL Vue VUE Vue

2009 2008 2008 2007 2005 2001 2002 2009 2002 2009 2008 2008

$18,995 $16,995 $15,488 $11,495 $7,950 Call $5,700 $24,995 Call $22,995 $19,995 $19,904

B2426 B2345 P6994 Z90154A R1495 P2428 B2326A B2334A Z90501A B2436 P7085 R1518

tC

2007

$11,995 Y196B

2007 2007 2007 2007 2007 2006 2006 2006 2006 2005 2007 2009 2008 2006 2003 1998 2008 2008 2006 2007 2007 2005 2008 2006

$19,990 $19,990 $16,990 $16,888 $15,998 $19,488 $17,488 $16,488 $15,988 $16,995 $14,970 $20,888 $16,788 $16,488 $11,990 $4,688 $15,965 $24,990 $15,488 $18,998 $19,988 $13,898 $24,998 $18,989

P6993 097578A P7007 097145A P6970 P7012 P6989 P6984 P6964 T1001A Y287 097433A P7019 097143A 100209A 097131A Y294 P6979 100145A P6980 P6992 100049A 096955A P6982

H2

2006

$34,944 R1558

ELANTRA Santa Fe Santa Fe SANTA FE G SONATA Sonata Sonata Sonata Sonata

2008 2008 2005 2008 2009 2009 2009 2008 2008

$14,495 $17,888 $14,996 Call $15,995 $15,488 $14,998 $12,995 $10,980

FX35 G35 Coupe G37

2005 2006 2008

$23,188 096567A $22,843 21190A $35,995 B091593A

St Louis Honda St Louis Honda St Louis Honda St Louis Honda St Louis Honda St Louis Honda St Louis Honda St Louis Honda St Louis Honda Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui St Louis Honda St Louis Honda St Louis Honda St Louis Honda St Louis Honda Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui St Louis Honda St Louis Honda St Louis Honda St Louis Honda St Louis Honda St Louis Honda St Louis Honda

877 584 1058 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 877-396-5065 866 377 3110 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 866 377 3110 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 877 584 1058

HUMMER Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick

866-438-1169

HYUNDAI P7030 YP1222 T7669 B994 P7027 P7003 P7002 T7653 Y260

Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC St Louis Honda Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Victory Lane Ford Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC St Louis Honda St Louis Honda Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui

866-401-2564 877 584 1058 866 617 6146 866 576 3845 866-401-2564 877 584 1058 877 584 1058 866 617 6146 866 377 3110

INFINITI St Louis Honda Weiss Brentwood Volvo Newbold Toyota BMW Scion

877 584 1058 866 801 9462 866 617 6146

JAGUAR S-Type

2006

$23,944 R1559

Cherokee COMPASS

1997 2007

$5,961 29193B $14,990 X5170

Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick

866-438-1169

JEEP

October 8, 2009

Ackerman Auto Plaza

866-419-2762

LEXUS

HONDA Accord Accord Accord Accord Accord Accord Accord Accord Accord Accord Accord Cpe Civic Civic Civic Civic Civic Civic Sdn CR-V CR-V Element Odyssey Odyssey Pilot Ridgeline

P2413

George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo 866 496 0381 Koetting Ford 866-340-8597

Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion

866 617 6146 866 617 6146

LINCOLN 29460A 097126A P7555 6763 6620 P7576 P7511

George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo St Louis Honda Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Underwood Motors Underwood Motors Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur

866 496 0381 877 584 1058 866-515-4038 866 485 3136 866 485 3136 866-515-4038 866-515-4038

LOTUS Newbold Toyota BMW Scion

866 617 6146

MAZDA B996 P1517B Y295 P6974 P2442 V90503A

Victory Lane Ford Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui St Louis Honda Ackerman Auto Plaza Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui

866 576 3845 877-223-2703 866 377 3110 877 584 1058 866-419-2762 866 377 3110

MERCEDES 6742 21292 21282 B091607A B091537A1

Underwood Motors Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion

866 485 3136 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 617 6146 866 617 6146

MERCURY P917 B943S X5120 K8011A T7670 P913 T1028 P7535 P7531 P5219 J431A P1516 J574B K8009A

Victory Lane Ford Victory Lane Ford Koetting Ford Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Victory Lane Ford Victory Lane Ford Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Koetting Ford Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM

MINI COOPER B966

Victory Lane Ford

Ackerman Auto Plaza Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Koetting Ford Koetting Ford Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Ackerman Auto Plaza Ackerman Auto Plaza Victory Lane Ford Ackerman Auto Plaza Koetting Ford Ackerman Auto Plaza Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Koetting Ford Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Victory Lane Ford Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Newbold Toyota BMW Scion George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Ackerman Auto Plaza

866-419-2762 877-396-5065 866-340-8597 866-340-8597 866-438-1169 866-438-1169 866-401-2564 877-396-5065 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 877-396-5065 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866 496 0381 877-396-5065 866 496 0381 866-419-2762 866-419-2762 866 576 3845 866-419-2762 866-340-8597 866-419-2762 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 866-340-8597 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 877-396-5065 866-401-2564 866-401-2564 877-396-5065 866-438-1169 866-401-2564 866-515-4038 866-438-1169 866 576 3845 866-438-1169 877-396-5065 877-223-2703 866 617 6146 866 496 0381 866-401-2564 866-438-1169 866-438-1169 877-396-5065 866 377 3110 866-438-1169 866-419-2762

Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick

866-438-1169

SATURN

NISSAN Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui St Louis Honda Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC St Louis Honda

Trust Family Auto Sales 866-398-4214 George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo 866 496 0381

SAAB

MITSUBISHI Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Underwood Motors Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Newbold Toyota BMW Scion

T2706 P2104ZA

PONTIAC

LAND ROVER

GMC George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui Ackerman Auto Plaza Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Jack Schmitt Ford Lincoln Mercur Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Royal Gate Dodge of Columbia Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui George Weber Chevrolet Waterloo Underwood Motors

OLDSMOBILE

KIA Victory Lane Ford Ackerman Auto Plaza Victory Lane Ford Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick

Phone

866 377 3110 866 377 3110 877 584 1058 866-401-2564 866 617 6146 866-401-2564 877 584 1058

Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM St Louis Honda Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Ackerman Auto Plaza Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Bob Brockland Pontiac Buick GM Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick

877-396-5065 877-396-5065 877 584 1058 866-401-2564 866-438-1169 866-419-2762 877-396-5065 877-396-5065 866-401-2564 877-396-5065 866-401-2564 866-438-1169

SCION Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui 866 377 3110

The Edge – Page

23


Model

Year Price Stock#

Dealer

Phone

Model

Year Price Stock#

Dealer

Phone

Model

Year Price Stock#

Dealer

Phone

xB

2006

$11,487 T7639

Newbold Toyota BMW Scion

866 617 6146

4Runner 4Runner Avalon Avalon Avalon Avalon Avalon Camry Camry Camry Camry Camry Camry Camry Camry Camry Camry Camry Corolla Corolla Corolla COROLLA Corolla Highlander Highlander Matrix

2008 2008 2009 2008 2008 2005 2000 2009 2009 2009 2009 2009 2007 2007 2007 2005 2003 2000 2009 2009 2009 2008 2001 2008 2008 2009

$25,988 $24,588 $24,488 $22,988 $21,894 $19,468 Call $20,988 $19,488 $18,988 $18,831 $16,875 $19,988 $17,988 $14,922 $12,988 $12,988 $7,865 $16,988 $16,970 $15,295 $17,995 $6,995 $24,995 $23,988 $18,788

Matrix Prius PRIUS RAV4 RAV4 RAV4 SCION XB Sequoia Sienna Sienna Sienna Tacoma Tacoma Tundra Tundra Yaris YARIS

2008 2009 2008 2008 2008 2008 2005 2006 2009 2008 2008 2009 2004 2008 2007 2009 2008

$15,760 $21,988 Call $22,995 $21,988 $19,926 Call $22,990 $24,965 $20,937 $20,937 $27,988 $16,988 $26,988 $25,495 $14,388 Call

Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Victory Lane Ford Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Victory Lane Ford St Louis Honda Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Victory Lane Ford

866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 576 3845 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 576 3845 877 584 1058 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 576 3845

Eos Jetta Seda Jetta Seda Jetta Seda Jetta Seda NEW BEETLE New Beetle Passat Sed Passat Sed

2008 2009 2008 2008 2006 2008 2007 2008 2006

$27,851 $18,775 $14,980 $14,655 $12,980 Call $14,985 $22,985 $14,875

S40 S40 S40 S40 S40 S60 S60 S60 S60 S60 S60 S60 S60 S60 S80 S80 V50 V50 V70 V70 XC70 XC70 XC90 XC90 XC90 XC90 XC90 XC90 XC90

2008 2008 2008 2008 2006 2009 2008 2006 2006 2006 2006 2006 2006 2005 2007 2007 2006 2006 2006 2006 2006 2006 2008 2007 2007 2007 2006 2006 2006

Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo Weiss Brentwood Volvo

866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462 866 801 9462

S40

2008

$23,843 21253

TOYOTA T7570 T7685 T7656 T7692 T7641 T7493 P7030A T7648 T7705 T7464 T7412 Y293 T90883A T91142A 21335 T10243B T7672 T7541 T7696 T7577 T7627 Z90148A R1555 T7636 T7715 T7697

Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion St Louis Honda Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Weiss Brentwood Volvo Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Dave Sinclair Buick Pontiac GMC Four Flags Motors Pontiac Buick Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion Newbold Toyota BMW Scion

866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 877 584 1058 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 377 3110 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 801 9462 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866-401-2564 866-438-1169 866 617 6146 866 617 6146 866 617 6146

T7466 T7694 B992 T7614 T7716 T7536 B977 P6982A T7579 T7539 T7547 T7618 T7720 T7613 T7524A T7698 B951

VOLKSWAGEN Y292 V90401A Y302 Y298 Y309 B976 Y310 Y306 Y301

Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui Victory Lane Ford Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui Bommarito Volkswagen of St Loui

866 377 3110 866 377 3110 866 377 3110 866 377 3110 866 377 3110 866 576 3845 866 377 3110 866 377 3110 866 377 3110

$21,816 $20,343 $17,961 Call $16,834 $26,933 $23,623 $27,812 $20,873 $19,943 $19,807 $17,876 Call $15,784 $32,961 $24,419 $19,676 $17,903 $23,961 $22,843 $21,961 Call Call $33,887 $30,827 $28,791 $30,863 $28,746 $26,857

21243 21255 21262 21262 21315 21336 21237 21325 21310 21324 21322 21247 21272 21330 21293 21288 21321 21320 21289 21295 21266 21268 21337 21283 21302 21283 21303 21257 21260

VOLVO Jewelry

922

John Geimer Jewelry 229 N. Main St. Edwardsville 692-1497

Cleaning

958

PRISTINE CLEANING

Window Cleaning

962

• FALL CLEAN UP • LEAF REMOVAL • AERATION & SEEDING

Same Day Ring Sizing Jewelry Repair Diamond & Stone Replacement

WE BUY GOLD AND JEWELRY

Fall Cleaning Special For Windows & Vinyl Siding 10% Off

Call us today for a free quote on a weekly, biweekly or monthly cleaning

James Schlueter

(618) 920-0233

(618)977-1597

www.pristine-cleaning.biz

Fully Insured

Painting

960

967

• Mowing • Spring Clean-Up • Fertilizing • Landscape Installation • Landscape Maintenance 656-7725 GatewayLawn.com

Foster & Sons Lawn Service 966

FOR ONLY

JIM BRAVE PAINTING

Store Your RV Or Boat

Call The Coliseum

618-978-2214 958

Foster & Sons Cleaning Service OFFICE CLEANING POWER WASHING • Business • Residential • Siding, Walkways, Decks

FREE ESTIMATES Experienced & Insured References Available

618-459-3330

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

Since 1974 Licensed - Bonded - Insured Tree & Stump Removal Complete Property Maintenance Bucket Truck Track Hoe - Bob Cat

(618) 654-1349 or cell phone: (618) 444-0293

RON GARNER CERTIFIED ARBORIST

Roofing & Siding

656-5566

CONSTRUCTION, INC. Serving Edwardsville since 1978 • Roofing • Siding • Aluminum soffit & fascia • And etc.

• Free estimates • Licensed • Bonded

656-4520

• New Home or Apartment Construction • Personal Homes • Offices

969

Lawn Cutting & Trimming

Bush & Shrub Trimming & Removal Landscape Mulching Residential & Commercial

Fully Insured

618-459-3330 618-973-8422

Bonded & Insured Background Checks On All Technicians & 15+ Years Experience Professional, Safe & Reliable

ON TIME. DONE RIGHT. ®

618-659-5055

www.mrhandyman.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 Insured Call Bob Rose 978-8697

Larr y’s Lawn & Home Ser vice LET ME FIX IT! 15 YEARS

OF SATISFYING OUR

Lawn & Home Care

967

BREWSTER OUTDOOR SERVICES Specializing In ........ • • • • • • •

Landscaping Lawn Care Retaining Walls Excavation Grading Hauling Brush Removal Free Estimates Fully Insured

(618) 977-6409

TOTAL LAWN CARE Residential or Commercial LANDSCAPING Planting & Trimming CONSTRUCTION Decks, Fencing or Remodeling FALL CLEAN UP Leaves, Tree Trimming REPAIRS Installation & Projects CALL TODAY!

(618)407-6170 (618)219-6818 Free Estimates - Fully Insured

“Keep up with the Jones’—we do their yard!”

Handyman

969

Rick Mattson Handyman Services LAWN, TREE, CARPENTRY, REPAIRS, AND.....

HANDIMAN SERVICE

CUSTOMERS

961

SCHON

Kathy’s Over 20 Years Experience

TREE SERVICE INC.

20 Years Experience!

Personal Touch HOUSE CLEANING WANTED

Garner’s

Handyman

COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL

Insured

Tree Service

866 801 9462

#1 Handyman Service in the Nation

Tree Removal

$15/month

Cleaning

Lawn & Home Care

Windows and More Lawn Care Inc

Meeting & Exceeding your Expectations! RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL • Bonded & Insured • Customized Cleaning TRUSTWORTHY, ENERGETIC & PROFESSIONAL

Miscellaneous 930

Weiss Brentwood Volvo

MASTER CRAFTSMAN Carpentry, 30 Years Decks, Garages, Remodeling, Home Repair Basement Finishing Ceramic Tile Small Jobs Welcome Reasonable Rates Insured Andy 618-659-1161

Merchandise Finds In The Classified Pages

979

SKILLED CRAF TSMAN

* $30 PER HOUR *

RICK MATTSON—OWNER Glen Carbon, IL 62034

• Home Improvements • Remodeling • Custom Woodwork • Small Engine Repair • Insured Contractor W.R.N. SERVICES SERVICES

Senior Citizen Discount In business since 1995!

(618) 974-9446

WE DO ANY TYPE OF JOB YOU NEED!

618-604-7464

Air Conditioning/ Heating 976

Automotive Repair

980

AUTO BODY COLLISION REPAIR

Proudly servicing the area for over 25 years. Free estimates Financing available Repairs and installations

Call us for all of your heating and cooling needs.

• Water Heater Installation • Carpentry 656-9386 • Pressure Washing www.garwoodsheating.com • Lighting & Ceiling Fans • Drywall Home • Painting Improvements 979 • Windows & Doors

Call Lee: (618) 581-5154

Home Improvements

ANGLE & COMPANY HOME REMODELING

Serving IL/MO Insured FREE Estimates

ROBERT ANGLE

618-581-4427

SEE JIM CAULK AT

AUTO REPAIR & TOWING 818 LIONS DR @ US 40 W TROY, IL 62249

618-667-7776 Electrical

981

Randy Moore Repair Service, Inc. “24 Hour Emergency Service” 30 Years Experience - Troubleshooting - Service Repairs And Upgrades - All Electrical Items - Install Lights & Fixtures - Complete Rewire

618-656-7405 Cell 618-980-0791

“EXPERIENCE YOU CAN TRUST”

Local References

(618)980-3300

October 8, 2009

The Edge – Page

24


Classified PUBLIC AUCTION ESTATE OF GARY LEVI Park Place Mall 211 E. Vandalia St., Edwardsville, IL 10:00 a.m., Saturday, October 10th (Doors Open at 7:00 a.m.) No Reserves, No Minimums

Yard Sales

1099

ANNUAL FALL & CHRISTMAS CRAFT SALE FRIDAY-SAT., 8A.M.-4P.M. 5321 SHANNON, GODFREY (RIVER AIRE SUBDIVISION) Featuring Painted Saws, Canvasses, Trash Cans, Shelves, Banners, Wreaths, Swags, Candle Centerpieces, Snowmen, Small Trees, Jewelry, Apple Pies Rain or Shine! ANNUAL RUMMAGE SALE FRIDAY, 10/9 SATURDAY, 10/10 7AM-1PM TRI-TOWNSHIP PARK PAVILION, TROY Nice Quality Items, Bargains Galore! Bake Sale & Lunch Items St. Paul’s Lutheran Church & School (Supplemental Funds from Thrivent Financial for Lutherans)

Yard Sales

1099

BEST EVER!! ANNUAL CHURCH-WIDE SALE Proceeds To Fill Christmas Baskets For Local Families FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH 310 S. MAIN, EDWARDSVILLE SATURDAY, 10/10, 8AM-1PM Fax Machines, Baby/Toddler Clothes, Furniture, Books... TOO MUCH TO LIST! Something For Everybody; Our Traditional “Free” Table Rain-Or-Shine MICHELLE: 656-7498 MARTHA: 692-1765 MULTI-FAMILY SALE 1025 RUSKIN AVE, EDWARDSVILLE SATURDAY, 8AM Entertainment Center, Pfaltzgraff Dishes, Blankets, Nordic Track, Tons Of Home Decor & Much More! MULTI-FAMILY SALE Antiques, holiday items, baby clothes/furniture, new DVDs, 1980 Ford truck, MORE! FRI/SAT. 10/9 & 10/10 9-3PM. INDIAN HILLS DR. OFF RT.-143, EDWARDSVILLE/WOOD RIVER

This Auction Consists of a part of Gary’s life passion in art glass & antiques. This is just a portion of the sale. A complete list will be on auctionzip.com with pictures. ANTIQUES - Huge Wrought Iron Plant Stands & Others; Hand Painted Ash Keeper; Mission Oak Desk; Maple Desk; Louis 16 Settee; Vernimartin French Table; 1850’s Bohemian Fruit Lamp; Signed Hand Chaise French Chairs; Vitrene Walnut Table; Louis 15 Double Caned Chair (uncaned); Solid Bronze Newel Post Lamp, orig.; Capidimonte Cira 1915; Beautiful Piece of Steuban EXTENSIVE MINI-LARGE PERFUME BOTTLE COLLECTION - Purse Size, Hand Cut, Hand Painted, Bohemian, Mosser, European Cut Crystal, Powders-Hand Painted, Limoge, Bristol, Sterling Domestic, Purse Perfumes, Mercury Glass, Bohemain/Czech, Austrian, And More, More, More. Look on auctionzip.com ART GLASS - Fenton, Mosser, Westmorland And Many Beautiful Pieces Of Intaglio Levi Studio Art Glass. Showcase And Tables Too!!! This will be a wall to wall liquidation. Please plan to stay the day. Food will be served. Edwardsville super parking lot. Just one block west. (Ample Parking There). Announcements day of sale take precedence over all prior and printed material.

SCHLEMER AUCTION SERVICE 618-377-2897 Phil Schlemer #40000513

PICTURE IT SOLD

recycle this paper!

SELL YOUR CAR FOR LESS! 8 Passenger 2001 Montana, extended. 132 K, Exc. cond. All power, CD/Cass/AM-FM, OnStar/phone. Auto traction, FWD, newer trans. Documented bi-weekly 21 mpg, Hwy 25 mpg. Service record. $5495/OBO. 618-659-9525 (11/20/09)

ONLY $39.00 PER LISTING CALL THE “ I ” • 656-4700

Credit card rates going

2002 Coleman Pop-Up. Closed 17’, open 22’. Tongue wt. 350 lbs. Htr/AC/awning/screen room. Queen, double, single beds. Privacy curtains. Inside/Outside propane stove. Front exterior storage, spare tire. $4895/OBO. 618-659-9525 (11/20/09)

UP?

GCS provides stable, no-nonsense rates. Open a new card and enjoy a 2.9% introductory rate for 6 months and no fees on balance transfers!

(618) 797-7993 mygcscu.com This credit union is federally insured by the National Credit Union Administration. Membership restrictions apply.

October 8, 2009

The Edge – Page

25


Classified

Support Research.

Trucks, Vans, & SUV's

8 Passenger 2001 Montana, extended. 132K, Exc. cond. All Lost & Found 125 power, CD/Cass/AM/FM, OnStar/phone. Auto traction, FWD, newer trans. Documented biLOST: Meridian Rd., Timberwkly 21mpg, Hwy 25mpg. Serwolfe Subdivision. Large vice record. $5495/obo. 618SHELTIE (looks like Lassie). 659-9525 (11/20/09) 14yrs.-old, needs medication. REWARD 618-205-3294

Campers, RV's & GoCarts

TAKE THE

BULL

BY THE

HORNS When the going gets tough, our HELP WANTED pages steer you in the right direction.

210

231

2002 Coleman pop-up. Closed 17’, open 22’. Tongue wt. 350lbs. Htr/AC/awning/screen room. double, single beds. PriAutomotive 206 Queen, vacy curtains. Inside/outside propane stove. Front exterior 1976 Chevy Vega Coup. Runs storage, spare tire. $4895/obo. (11/20/09) good, 50,000 miles, needs 618-659-9525 body/interior, emergency brake Mid State Camper Sales. Come work, $750/obo. 656-6895 by and see the all new 2010 2003 Toyota Celica GTS, one Flagstaff lite weight travel trailowner, carbon blue, 117XXX ers and 5th wheels. Dealer for miles, good condition, $8000. Jayco, Flagstaff, and Springdale. Rt. 40 E of Vandalia at 656-2146 Bluff City. 618-283-4396 2008 Chevrolet Cobalt LT, 4- See our inventory @ DR, 29k miles, very clean, www.midstatecampersales.com under warranty, $10,700/OBO. 978-4813

Boats

Help Wanted General

• Full-Time • Part-Time • Permanent • Temporary New emploment listings weekly in many different fields.

Help Wanted General

Help wanted Office

dition, $325. 656-2984

315

405

8th Annual Benjamin Stephenson House Antique & Collectible

AUCTION Sunday, Oct. 11, 2009 9:00am 409 South Buchanan Edwardsville, Ill.

YOUR classified ad

AHRENS & NIEMEIER AUCTION SERVICES, LLC Website: www.a-nauctions.com

Proficiency in Microsoft Office Suite 2007, typing speed of 60wpm, three (3) years related experience, a valid driver’s license and a high school diploma are required. An associate’s degree is preferred. Madison County residency is required within six (6) months of employment.

656-4700 ext. 27 October 8, 2009

Pets

450

422

GRAND PIANO on casters: 65” front-to-back; J. Bauer & Co., Chicago. Walnut, ivory keys; w/padded bench. Excellent condition. $3,000/OBO. 618/530-0977

Misc. Merchandise

Positive, caring, and reliable individuals needed to drive and assist the public. Assignments include weekends, split shifts, and evenings. All start part time at $14.25/hr. Desire and ability to work with all kinds of people a must. Solid work experience and clean driving record required. Ability to pass USDOT physical and drug test, obtain IL CDL B license with air brakes and passenger endorsements required. EOE

If you are interested in joining a solid company and can find fulfillment by working with and helping people in your own community then apply in person at:

426

4’ White Pine Trees: delivered, planted, mulched. $64.50 per tree. Buy 10, get 1 free. Other sizes/shade trees. Call (217)886-2316; leave message.

Agency for Community Transit Attn: Human Resources One Transit Way Granite City, Illinois 62040-7500 (No Phone Calls Please)

The successful candidate will perform receptionist duties; receive and route daily correspondence; type forms, letters, memos, statistical, financial and legal data; maintain and organize a central file; receive, route, process and does follow-up with family court referrals; assist with the development of the Department’s annual report, newsletters, program brochures, and event notices; create and maintain confidential records; take minutes at various meetings; make travel arrangements for staff; and organize reports from various data sources.

CALL

440

305

Madison County Employment and Training, a department of Madison County Illinois Government, has a full-time opening for an Administrative Assistant. The Administrative Assistant will be responsible for providing administrative support to the Executive Director and other management staff.

PLACE

420

Music

ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT

TO

Bicycles

LEGAL SECRETARY/PARALEGAL, Edwardsville: Part-time, Mon.- Women’s Timberline GT mounFriday. Experience required. tain bike w/adjustable gel seat, 618/692-4800 $150. 655-0906

Antique Furniture, Small Items, Tools, Games, Toys, Indian Artifacts, Ephemera, Ceramics, Glass.... TOO MUCH TO LIST!

$100 for 10 permanent flexible hours/week. Prefer male who can lift 150lbs for house-cleaning. 692-7335

Edwardsville Intelligencer

Wanted To Buy

410

Bus Drivers

240

BOAT & LIFT COMBO: 21Ft. 1994 Stratos Bass Boat, 175HP Evinrude, and trailer. Extra clean and loaded w/accessories. 3000lb Shore Station electric lift w/canopy. Price $7,500. Will sell seperate. 618-288-2074

Furniture

ALLISON CONCRETE is seek- 6-Drawer DRESSER, $25.00. Wanted: LOG SPLITTER, at FREE Kittens. Himalayan mothing experienced concrete wall 692-9150. reasonable price. er, tabby father. 618-980-4950 workers. 656-0999. 618/560-9275 9 Drawer dresser w/large mirror. FREE! Wanted—Good home for 2yr.-old male neutered perOUR HEALTH CLUB & SPA’s day Mahogany finish, $100. Kim: Classifieds sian cat. 618-741-5958 spa, Glen Carbon, is hiring 618-973-9105 Merchandise experienced professional stylETHAN ALLEN: TV Armoire, Here!!! ists, nail techs, and massage $100. 2 Audio Cabinets, therapists. If you have a good $100each. 618-580-1227 client base and want to change, ask about rental space! Call Recliner: over-sized cream colored, $75. 659-1951 or 444Lisa @ 618/830-5477. 2562 REFRIGERATION TECHNICIAN: minimum 3 yrs. experience & must know HVAC. Pension, medical Appliances 418 insurance, vehicle, holidays, & vacation. Pay based on experience. King AC & Htg., Godfrey,: Whirlpool washer & electric 618/466-7574 or fax 466-6471. dryer. 7 years old, in good con-

Auction

JOBS! JOBS! JOBS!

305

Please submit resume, cover letter, and references by October 16, 2009 to: Matt Jones, Assistant Executive Director Madison County Employment and Training Department P.O. Box 670 Edwardsville, Illinois 62025 EOE/ADA

Positions For Hire

Our mission is to provide opportunities for persons with barriers to employment to work and live more independently in the community. We currently have the following opportunities:

Career Counselor

Location: Aftergut (Federal & State Residential Re-Entry Center) Provide career counseling to all residents and develop relationships with business to hire residents. Bachelor’s degree required. Experience with case management and job development required, 1 year experience preferred.

Employment Specialist (EOS Placement)

Location: St. Charles Rehab Assist individuals to identify, obtain, and/or maintain employment commensurate with their social, psychological and medical needs and abilities. Assist consumers with any necessary paperwork such as applications, and pre- and post-employment paperwork. Identifies possible barriers to employment and/or job retention and makes the necessary recommendations. Maintains regular contact with the consumer. Maintains attendance records and monthly reports and submits on a timely basis. Maintains ongoing communication with referral sources. Assist with job coaching and bus training, as assigned. Bachelor’s Degree in rehabilitation counseling, psychology, education or related field or work experience equivalent. Minimum of one year experience in working with individuals with disabilities.

On call Job Coach (Part-Time)

Location: Farmington Rehab Work onsite with individuals with developmental disabilities to assist in learning job tasks and acclimating to the work environment and co-workers through monitoring and providing instruction. High school diploma required, Bachelor’s degree preferred. Experience working with individuals with disabilities required. Current Driver’s License and insurance required.

JRT Instructor/ Retention Specialist

Location: Lippman Assist individuals in obtaining and maintaining employment commensurate with their social, psychological and medical needs and abilities; assist employers to facilitate the successful employment of people with disabilities; provide classroom instruction to assist individuals with obtaining employment. High School Diploma; combination of education and experience comparable to two years of college; two years work experience; ability to communicate well verbally and in written form; Bachelor’s Degree preferred.

Director

Location: North County Rehab Office Supervise Evaluation, Placement, Supported Employment, and Skills Training programs to monitor the flow of referrals and quality of services provided in the programs, maintaining relationships with referral and funding sources, and attending to revenue and expenses generated by the programs. The position will also include direct service duties with an active caseload. Bachelor’s degree required, Master degree in Counseling or related field strongly preferred. Experience with case management and psychometric testing required, experience supervision of staff preferred.

To Apply, please visit us at www.mersgoodwill.org

The Edge – Page

26


Classified Apts/Duplexes For Rent Cleaning

532

710

Hamel: 2 Bdrm TOWNHOUSE, 1 bath, appliances included. W/D hookup. $565/mo. + 1-mo. deposit. Pets OK. 618-960-1384.

Apts/Duplexes For Rent

710

2 BDRM LOFT APT in Troy, Newly remodeled, nice neighborhood. Perfect for seniors, singles or couples. No pets. $525/mo. 618-830-4183.

Apts/Duplexes For Rent

710

2BR, part of a 4-plx, Collinsville: Avail. 10/1, secure entry, W/D hk up, gar w/opnr, cln. No pets, no smoking. $550 618/567-3013

Apts/Duplexes For Rent

710

Now Available- 2 bdrm townhomes in Eville. Limited time only, $795 at Spyglass property. We have 3 other locations starting at $825. Restrictions apply. 618-692-9310 www.rentchp.com

Christian lady’s housecleaning service. We do it all-Apts, houses, offices. References Avail. Free Estimates. 618-410-5241

1 BDR APT near SIU and downtown Edw. No pets. Quiet street. 2 BEDROOM apartment in Avail. now. $450 plus dep., Glen Carbon. W/D hookups. w/out utilities. 618/558-0151 $700 per month. 618-975-0975.

3 BR DUPLEX, avail. now: lg! 1.5 BA, gar. Quiet neighborhood. No pets, family preferred. Lease reqrd. $840/mo. +dep. 656-8306

E-Clean Cleaning Service Foreclosures, Estate, Rental Properties, New construction and Move-in/Move-Out Cleaning. Call 618-409-9363 or visit us at: ecleanco.com

1 BR APTS: $630, incl. all util. & carport, in Edw, close to post office, banks, & shopping. 6929284 leave msg.

2 BR Apt, Collinsville. On site laundry, central location. $535/mo. incl. w/s/t. Section 8 accepted. 618/304-7458

1 BR upstrs apt, downtwn Edw., remodeled. $450/mo.+ dep., 1 yr. lease. Refrences. No pets. Avail immediatly. 618-781-4444.

2 BR Duplex near SIU: C/A, yd., scrnd porch, gar, w/d; updtd BA, kit; 95 Devon Ct, Edw. $820/mo. 618-444-4658. Cats ok. 1-yr lse.

Collinsville - 2 Bdrm. W/S/T & 720 heat incl. 1 carport spot, & For Rent Kitch. applncs. App. fee, 3000 sf office space, Edw, near $550+dep. No pets. 345-6697 WalMart: ample prkng, rest rms. Collinsville: Studio Apt. Kit. 8 offices, separate or together. appliances, w/s/t incl. Off-strt Negotiable. 618/692-1794 prking. No pets. $275/mo. + Commercial Space Available. dep., app. fee. 345-6697 500-2400sq. ft. Can be used as For Rent: 3 bedroom, 1 car office or wearhouse space. garage, duplex, Glen Carbon. Located on Kettle River Dr., No pets, $850 per month. 618- Glen Carbon. Was previously a 278-4745 beauty & barber shop. 618-917Hamel, 2 BR Duplex in Oct., 9132 w/d hk up & garage. Also, imme- LEASE OR SALE: Salon Spa, Glen diate occupancy 1 & 2 BR Apts. Cbn, near 270. 2000+ sf, stylng 50 Devon Ct., Edw. 618-656- rms; equipmnt, furniture incl. 7337 or 618-656-4102 Was dr. office. Agent owned.

2 & 3 BEDROOM APTS near SIUE: 2 BR, Edwardsville, with yard: W/D incl., no pets, no smoking. appliances furnished; low utilities. Well-kept. Ideal for sin$620 & $930/mo. 656-1345 Houses gles. $525/mo. 618/920-3641 2 Bdrm 1.5 BA Apt. in Edw., For Rent 705 $600+dep. No pets. App. fee 2 BRs, Glen Carbon, Cottonrequired. Agent owned. 618- wood Sub., w/d hk-ups, APTS 1-2BR, acrss from LeClaire 977-2195 starting at $625, TH $675, DUP Prk: aplnces, W/D; ovrsz 1-car $735 (618)346-7878 gar; no smkng; referncs; must www.osbornproperties.com see! $900+dep. 618/978-9811 2 BDR, 1 Bath, 116 N. Fillmore, Edwardsville: W/D hookup; stove, refrig included. Pets OK. $750mth. 618-401-4664

FOR SALE BY OWNER

2 bedroom house, Edwardsville. 3 bedroom house, Collinsville. $875/mo.+$875 deposit. 618288-6395

Office Space For Rent

725

Collinsville/Maryville-Hwy. 159 Up to 1080 sq. ft., starting at $525/mo. (618) 346-7878 www.osbornproperties.com

805

FSBO E’ville 3B2b 2050sf Brick ranch, great area, double lot, large rooms, new furnace, AC, roof, WH, carpet, tons of upgrades. $175,000 567-6083 FSBO: 3BR, 1BA ranch, historic downtown Glen Cbn.: 151 S. Main. Fully remodeld. Reduced to $97,000! 618/910-3908

Commercial Space

$2100/ mo. lease. 618/830-4265

Homes For Sale

Homes For Sale

FSBO: 3BR, 2BA ranch: open flr plan,.536 Patton Dr., Troy; pix @ fsbo.com $236K. 618/267-1704 317 Clay, Edw. Charming 2BR, OPEN HOUSE 1pm-5pm Sun. 2BA home. Fenced yard. FSBO: Contract for deed. 2BR Applncs incl., $123,000. 110 RANCH, as-is: $85K. $3000 Maple St., Edw. Great location! down. Rent $650. Edwardsville, 2BR, 1BA $119,000. Duncan near Buchanan. 618/972-1352 Realtors 618-977-2195 FSBO: Lakefront home on 2 ac. ALTON-VERY LG. HOME on 20 ac. lake. 150’ lake frontge, w/huge FR, 4BR, 3BA, LR, DR, Edw. schls, city wtr, energy effiPvt. yard, screened porch, dbl. cient. 2BR (1224sf), 27’x24’ gar. 3,500sf, ready to move in! gar., many xtras; move-in cond; $173,900 618-462-7070 FSBO Pictures & other details on Cross-Town or Cross-Coun- Craigslist posting ID 13630try: EdwardsvilleHomes.com. 78391. For appt. 656-2952.

805

Home Buyers Relocation Services. Exclusively for buyers! 656-5588, 800-231-5588

2 BR, 1 BA in Edw., updated bath, flooring & applncs, w/d hk up, 1.5 car gar. Nice/quiet area $690/mo. + dep. 618-307-4876 2BR, 1BA, Edw: bsmt., renovated, w/d, CA, gar; no pets/smoking, wooded. $850/mo w/lawn care; 1 yr lease; dep. No 1sttime renters. 618-691-9066 3 BR, 1.5 BA, applncs & W/D provided. 1 car gar, area great for family. Maint. & lawn care incl. $1075/mo. 618-610-6300 3BD, 2BA, 2 car gar., walkout, 1800sf. #3 Singletree Ln. Glen Carbon. $975 DISCOUNTED. Call Agent: 618-789-5863 3BR, 1.5BA, 700 Hale, Edw: pets cnsidrd w/xtra dep; 2 porchs (1 enclsd), W/D hkup, DR, CA; $950/ mo. Call Mike: 618/656-2783

Apts, Duplexes, & Homes Visit our website www.glsrent.com 656-2230 Collinsvle—1530 Franklin, frnt: 4 BR,clean, nice neighborhd, A/C, frig, stve, w/d hook-up. $885/mo + dep. Look then call 288-0048. GLENWOOD ESTATES: 4 BR, 3 BA EXEC. HOME. Lg. rms., w/o FR w/ FP, w/d hookup, lg. deck, 2+ car gar, $1350/mo. +dep. 656-3256

Apts/Duplexes For Rent

710

1 excellent 3BR, 1200 sq.ft. TH: Collinsville, near 157/70; 12 min. to SIUE. FP, DW, W/D, ceiling fans, cable, sound walls, offst. prkng. Sm pets OK, yr. lse. $780/mo. No Sect. 8. 618/3459610: give AM/PM phone. Edwardsville - Silver Oaks II LUXURY 2 Bedroom W/Garage, Sec Sys, New Fitness Center, $790/mo. Immediate Availability (618)830-2613 www.vgpart.com

RENTALS!

425 Home Street, EDWARDSVILLE • $184,900

Interior/Exterior completely new, 3 Bdrm/2 Bath - 2 Story with W/O Bsmnt New Whirlpool Stainless Steel Appliances, Granite Counter Tops On large lot - Huge backyard - back deck

Each Office Independently Owned and Operated OPEN HOUSE

PREFERRED PARTNERS One 157 Center, Edwardsville, IL. 618-655-1188

OPEN HOUSE

OPEN HOUSE

(618)550-3309

GIS Technician Seeking experienced individual to work with state of the art equipment in both office and field work. Successful candidate will have at least 3 yrs experience with GIS systems, using ESRI software suite; basic knowledge of Microsoft Office; ability to work independently and maintain confidentiality. Degree from a related accredited program preferred. Driver’s license with clean driving record required. FT with benefit package. EOE

OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY, OCT. 4 1-3 PM 300 VALLEY VIEW, EDWARDSVILLE SPECTACULAR RANCH, walkout basement. 5 bd/4 ba, 3,616 sq. ft. Main floor laundry, wet bar, 2 fireplaces, game area, remodeled kitchen. $359,900 Floor plan at www.kasten.biz Call JILL CUMMINGS 978-5953

OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY, OCT. 4 1-3 PM 3720 RIDGEVIEW, EDWARDSVILLE TURN OF THE CENTURY elegance, complete renovation & addition in 1998. 4.75 acres. Wonderful outbuilding for your RV, boat or any storage you may need! Great location, min from Governor’s Parkway. Edwardsville School District. Agent owned. JIM REPPELL 791-7663 www.HomesByReppell.com

REDUCED!

282 ANDES DRIVE, GLEN CARBON LAKEFRONT 4BD/4BA, WALKOUT BSMNT. Custom Kitchen, Corian counter tops. Family Rm w/cathedral ceiling, brick fireplace. $259,900 Floor Plan at www. kasten.biz Call NORMA KASTEN 377-9933

185 CRYSTAL GATE, GLEN CARBON WELL MAINTAINED 2 story located in Crystal View. Quartz kitchen counters w/undermount sink; French doors in Formal DR, Zoned HVAC, fluted Framed doorways w/Crown Molding. $264,900 Call today for your private tour! Call SUSAN JO COKER 444-2671

OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY, OCT. 4 2-4 PM 739 AMHERST, EDWARDSVILLE $141,000 - DIRECTIONS: 159 to Montclair-Amherst

Call MARY MASTERSON 618-623-9149

Acknowledged throughout the area for her professional knowledge and expertise, Susan Jo offers superior service tailored to her client’s special needs. 618-444-2671

DEBBIE BURDGE 618-531-2787 757 BOULEVARD DE CANNES, EDWARDSVILLE WITH A GORGEOUS in-ground pool & covered sunroom, this lakeview home offers an open floor plan w/hardwood & ceramic floors. The finished lower level includes a 3/4 bath & large family room. Enjoy all of this and a private backyard. $249,900

debbieb@remax.net 409 EASY STREET, MARINE NICE BUILDING LOT in Marine. Undergrond electric, public water/sewer. Lake nearby, and bike trail. Grade school is Marine, middle school and high school Triad. $27,900

Ask Me How To Purchase Your Home With A 100% Rural Development Loan.

Call DEBBIE BURDGE 531-2787

Call DEBBIE BURDGE 531-2787

23 WASHINGTON PLACE, EDWARDSVILLE TERRIFIC NEW KITCHEN boasts beautiful maple cabinets, dramatic countertop, Jenn-Aire range, microwave, pantry, & custom pass-thru to LR. Full walk-out basement, relaxing screened porch overlooking pleasant yard. Charm w/hardwood floors and arched doorway. $144,000

5940 STATE ROUTE 157, EDWARDSVILLE GREAT LOCATION ON HWY 157 between Edwardsville & Hamel. Sparkling clean & updated full brick ranch w/ full bsmnt on 3 acres! Recently updated w/new kitchen. Huge barn for storage, horses allowed. Adjacent to new bike trail. $220,000

525 GUELTIG, EDWARDSVILLE CUTE 1.5 STORY home situated near bike/walking trail w/ a full fenced backyard & lg 22x18 patio. Very lg kitchen w/center island, walk-in pantry, newer flooring & lighting. Updates include tilt-in windows throughout, roof/facia/ siding/gutters ‘07 & AC in ‘06. $134,810

Call MARY JANE COLLINS 210-8061

Call SUSAN LANDING 618-779-7777

Call SUSAN LANDING 618-779-7777

To apply, send letter of interest and resume By October 12, 2009 to:

Edwardsville Intelligencer 117 N. 2nd St. Blind Box #130 Edwardsville, IL 62025

October 8, 2009

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27


We went to our Manufacturers for price reductions and passed them to you in...

DEEP DISCOUNTS Everything on Sale! Free Interest till 2011!* Dana $797

50” Desk

Console $498

All Leather Sofa $897

All Serta On Sale Your Choice

Desk $599 Hutch $299

Was $5279

Wall Unit $2399

Recliner $299

Serta Plush......$599 Queen Set Vera Wang Firm.......$899 Queen Set Twin Set $499 Full Set $549 King Set $899

Twin Set $799 Full Set $849 King Set $1299

Perfect Sleeper Plush......$799 Queen Set Vera Wang Super Pillow Twin Set $699 Top......$1199 Queen Set Full Set $749 King Set $1099

Twin Set $1099 Full Set $1149 King Set $1599

Showroom Hours: Mon., Thurs., Fri. 9 am to 7 pm Tues., Wed., Sat. 9 am to 5 pm Sunday 12 pm to 4 pm 2.5 miles north of I-270 on Route 157

1091 S. State Rte 157 Edwardsville, Illinois 618-656-5111

www.kettleriverfurn.com

It’s Simple - You See It You Love It, You Get It Most Times, The Very Next Day

Offer good thru 10/11/08. Prior sales exempt. Financing on approved credit with 30% down payment and purchase of $1299. Although we make every effort to ensure our advertising is correct we cannot be held liable for typographical errors or misprints. Limited quantities on all items.

October 8, 2009

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