102716 Edge of the Weekend

Page 1

October 27, 2016

SIUE Campus Caddies

Vol. 14 No. 9

The Fox to host "The Lion King"

page 3

page 14

Celtic Woman returns page 22

RESIDENTIAL CUSTOMER Permit # 117

PRSRT STD ECRW55 U.S. POSTAGE PAID Edwardsville, IL


October 27

11

14

What’s Inside 3

Campus Caddies SIUE exploring new program.

11 "Certain Women" Dern, Williams are spellbinding.

14 "The Lion King"

Smash hit to appear at The Fox.

15 "Passing Strange"

New production underway at the Edison.

18 At the lake

Fishing, golfing event scheduled.

19 Mickey and Minnie Chicago to ring in the holidays.

22 Celtic Woman

Fan favorite returning to The Fox.

15

18

19

What’s Happening Friday October 28_______ • Roots Of A Rebellion, The Driftaways, The Firebird, St. Louis, Doors 7:00 p.m. • All Get Out, w/Gates, Young And Heartless, Blueberry Hill, St. Louis, Doors 7:00 p.m. • The Wonder Years, w/Real Friends, Kuckle Puck, Moose Blood, Pop's, Sauget, Doors 6:00 p.m. • B l a n k A n d N e u ro - L o g i c , Cicero's, University City, Doors 8:00 p.m. • Old Salt Union, w/Head For The Hills, The Ready Room, St. Louis, Doors 6:30 p.m. • Sharel Cassity, Ingred Jensen, Ben Wolfe, Jazz at the Bistro, St. Louis, 7:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. • Beauty and the Beast, Touhill Performing Arts Center, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. • The Ugly Duckling, Coca, St. Louis, 1:00 p.m. to 2:00 p.m. • Textiles: Politics and Patriotism, Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs until March 5, 2017 • Conficts of Interest: Art and War in Modern Japan, Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs until January 8, 2017 • N e w Me dia Se rie s : Dara Birnbaum, Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. • Until The Flood: Repertory Theater of St. Louis, Loretto-Hilton Center, St. Louis, 8:00 p.m.to 11:00 p.m., Runs until November 6, 2017

• Follies: The Repertory Theater of St. Louis, Loretto-Hilton Center, St. Louis, 7:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. • Outside In: Paint for Peace Exhibition, Coca, St. Louis, 11:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m., Runs until October 30, 2016 • Mark Bradford, Contemporary Art Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. • Kings, Queens, and Castles, World Chess Hall of Fame, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. • Little Black Dress: From Mournin to Night, The Missouri History Museum, St. Louis • Route 66: Main Street Through St. Louis Exhibit, Missouri History Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs until July 16, 2017 • The Women of 1916 Exhibition, Historic Hawken House Museum, St. Louis, 11:30 a.m. to 3:00 p.m., Runs until November 10, 2016 • Self-Taught Genius: Treasures f ro m t h e A m e r i c a n F o l k A r t Museum, Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.

Saturday October 29_______ • N e e d To B r e a t h : To u r D e Compadres, Chaifetz Arena, St. Louis, 7:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. • Umphrey's McGee, w/(TBA), The Pageant, St. Louis, Doors 7:00 p.m. • Money For Guns CD Release Halloween Costume Party, w/

Accelerando, Soma, Blueberry Hill, St. Louis, Doors 7:00 p.m. • Attila, Pop's, Sauget, Doors 6:00 p.m. • Looprat, Armani, Less, Spliff The Hippie, Jai Imani, Cicero's, University City, 9:00 p.m. • Andrew W.K. The Power Of Partying, The Ready Room, St. Louis, Doors 7:30 p.m. • Sharel Cassity, Ingred Jensen, Ben Wolfe, Jazz at the Bistro, St. Louis, 7:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. • 2016 IPHF Hall of Fame Exhibition, Internation Photography Hall of Fame and Museum, St. Louis, 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs until February 4, 2017 • Love Jones- The Musical, Fabulous Fox Theater, St. Louis, 3:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. • Beauty and the Beast, Touhill Performing Arts Center, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. • The Ugly Duckling, Coca, St. Louis, 1:00 p.m. to 2:00 p.m. • Textiles: Politics and Patriotism, Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs until March 5, 2017 • Conficts of Interest: Art and War in Modern Japan, Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs until January 8, 2017 • New Media Ser ies: Dar a Birnbaum, Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. • Until The Flood: Repertory Theater of St. Louis, Loretto-Hilton Center, St. Louis, 8:00 p.m.to 11:00 p.m., Runs until November 6, 2017

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, through home delivery and rack distribution. FOR DELIVERY INFO call 656.4700 Ext. 20. FOR ADVERTISING INFO call 656.4700 Ext. 35. For comments or questions regarding EDITORIAL CONTENT call 656.4700 Ext. 28 or fax 659.1677. Publisher – Denise Vonder Haar

2

On the Edge of the Weekend

Editor – Bill Tucker

Cover Design – Desirée Bennyhoff • Advertising Manager – Amy Schaake

October 27, 2016


People

For The Edge

The driving forces behind Campus Caddies. In front are, from left, Paityn Fiets, Kaitlyn Von Behren, Shauna Bayles, Jessica Bax, Danielle Atwood and Rachael Lucas. In back are, from left: Wyatt Neisler, Burak Eslik Jared Sweeney and Wyatt Teague.

Campus Caddies look to serve SIUE Class project teaches business in the most real sense

By JULIA BIGGS Of The Edge

A

nyone who has walked from the red parking lots on the eastern side of the SIUE campus to any of the main buildings will attest that it can be a sweaty hike in the Illinois heat and a frigid walk during the winter months. But a group of students in a unique SIUE communications class has come up with a solution to this problem as part of a classroom project. The students launched a Kickstarter campaign on Oct. 10 to help fund the start-up of Campus Caddies, a golf cart transportation service. Wyatt Teague and Wyatt Neisler, senior SIUE students and representatives of Campus Caddies, explained that the Campus Caddies idea came about as part of a class project for their SIUE Organizational Communications Theory class. “Going in we figured it would be textbook heavy, lots of theories and lectures,” Teague explained about the class. “And from day one our professor said, “Nope that is not the case. This is all going to be application based.” Dr. Zachary Schaefer, the students’ professor, gave the class the task to brainstorm and come up with a product they wanted to sell, decide the basic organization of the “company” and its logistics as well as how they could utilize Kickstarter, a popular crowd-funding website, to raise the start-up money needed.

“We split up into two groups. Our group has 10 people. The other one has 12. From there it was pretty much free reign. He gave us a ton of time in class to do it. We threw around a bunch of ideas and finally decided on Campus Caddies,” Neisler said. As with all new business ventures, the Campus Caddies idea has been evolving over the past few weeks, but the latest generation of the idea involves students purchasing a package of rides in the Campus Caddies golf cart from the red parking lots to “hot spots” around campus. “Say they buy 10 rides, they can use those rides whenever they want. They can save it for rainy days or when it’s too hot or too cold,” Teague explained. Campus Caddies can only afford a single golf cart for the initial start-up, but they hope to expand the service as its popularity catches on. “So right now what we’re doing is trying to find hot spots that students frequent both in the parking lot and in the academic buildings themselves and then creating a route to service them,” Teague added. “Currently we’re going to have a few stops interspersed between these parking lots that students can walk to and await the golf cart coming around from its last pass. It will pick them up and take them to these hot spots on campus that we’re calling Caddy Corners right now.” Initially Campus Caddies would be manned by the 10 communication students on a volunteer basis. “Depending on the amount of revenue we generate, we could start actually paying students, and that’s something that I’m speaking with the

administration about is turning this into an actual student organization. That way it survives after our graduation,” Teague noted. The students have also been advertising to the administration the idea that Campus Caddies could be utilized as a service for night class students. “SIUE is a pretty safe campus overall, but this just adds an extra security to be escorted to your car rather than having to walk through that wooded area between parking lots and the buildings. They’ve been receptive to that,” Teague said. In order to fund the start up of Campus Caddies, the students launched a Kickstarter campaign on Oct. 10. Kickstarter is a web-based platform used to generate funding support for creative and start-up ideas. “Our goal is $5,000,” Neisler said. “We have about a month to raise that money. Seventy-five percent is going to be used on a golf cart. The other 25 percent of that will go towards maintenance of the golf cart, miscellaneous fees and part of the rewards we’re going to give to early backers.” The students’ ultimate goal is to create a service that they leave as a legacy for future students. “This is by students for students with the goal in mind that we’re going to create this organization to keep it alive,” Teague pointed out. “This is something of a commuter outreach program as well. We’re hoping to pass this on to commuter students just as a way to make them feel more welcome – you have someone to talk to as they take you to your destination.” “We view this as a way to get commuter

October 27, 2016

students more involved,” Neisler added. “Because sometimes there’s not a sense of belonging when you drive in to school, and you’re not really a part of a group. Campus Caddies is something where they can meet new people and they can volunteer to drive.” Whether the students are able to acquire 100 percent funding through their Kickstarter campaign or not, Teague emphasized that the project itself has been an invaluable learning experience. “From a leader standpoint, this is hands down the most rewarding class I’ve ever taken because it’s just providing leadership experience, it’s helping to educate us in conflict management, troubleshooting, contingency plans, formal meetings, phone interviews,” he said. “We’re getting experience with videography, with Kickstarter, social media, creating questionnaires and surveys and using them as ammunition to show the administration that hey, 6,000 students want this. It’s having dividends in all sorts of way.” “I honestly feel like this type of venture would not be possible at any other university,” Teague added. “The reception and the feedback that we’ve been getting from the administration has been as insightful as it is appreciative. They are really supporting us in this because they want us to succeed. So, I’m really grateful in that.” Visit the Campus Caddies Facebook page for the latest updates on the launch of the Kickstarter campaign or follow @ CampusCaddies on Twitter.

On the Edge of the Weekend

3


People People planner St. Louis Union Station to host holiday extravaganza

The happiest season of the year is going to be bigger and better than ever at St. Louis Union Station. This year 14 new attractions and experiences will make Holidays at Union Station the biggest holiday hot spot in the Midwest. T h e S a n t a E x p r e s s Tr a i n Ride is the centerpiece of this expanded holiday event. Real trains pull out of St. Louis Union Station - the 1894 National Historic Landmark terminal - beginning November 18 and continuing through December 30, 2016. Trains will leave the station at 4:45, 6:15, 7:30 and 8:30 p.m. Wednesdays through Sundays. Hotel ticket packages for The

Santa Express and Holidays at Union Station activities are on sale now. Individual Santa Express tickets went on sale Tuesday, August 30 at 9 a.m. Ti c k e t s m a y b e p u r c h a s e d online and the full calendar of train rides and ticketed activities are available at www. HolidaysAtUnionStation.com or www.SantaExpressTrainRide. com. For tickets by phone, dial 877-TWAS-STL (877-892-7785). For recorded information, dial 844-4 INFO 25 (844-446-3625). Magical and castle-like St. Louis Union Station will stand in for The North Pole throughout the holiday season with fun indoor and outdoor holiday activities for everyone. The station will be decorated with elaborate seasonal displays and twinkling with holiday

decor designed to rival the biggest holiday celebrations in the nation. A new Fire & Light Show under the outdoor train shed will create a spectacular backdrop for family activities and photos. Before and after the Santa Express train ride, visitors can enjoy the Glacier Park outdoor ice skating rink at Union Station. The rink will be open starting November 18, seven days a week. Next to the rink, guests can whoosh down an ice slide on a snow tube, do battle in a snowball fight arena, and sip a cocktail or drink hot chocolate on Glacier Park's Winter Deck. Inside St. Louis Union S t a t i o n ' s N o r t h P o l e Vi l l a g e , visitors can follow the smell o f f re s h g i n g e r b re a d t o M r s . Claus' Kitchen where Christmas goodies will be available for

purchase and train passengers will receive complimentary gingerbread cookies and hot chocolate. Good girls and boys can enjoy a storybook time featuring cookies and milk

with Mrs. Claus on Saturdays at 3, 5 and 7 p.m. throughout the season. They will leave the experience with a Mrs. Clausautographed copy of Twas the Night Before Christmas.

66th ANNUAL SAUSAGE SUPPER Lutheran Parish Hall, Worden, IL given by Trinity Lutheran Church

SUNDAY OCTOBER 30th Serving 12(Noon) - 6 PM

ADULTS AND CARRY OUT $10.00 CHILDREN $4.00

Liver, Pork, Blood Sausage, Ribs & Backbones. Sold At Parish Hall, Friday 8am - 5pm & Sat. 8am - Noon. Fresh Homemade Sausage For Sale At Parish Hall, Sunday, Beginning At Noon.

Welcomes Dr. John Felder Plastic Surgeon

Dr. John Felder, MD, has joined Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery at Alton Memorial Hospital and is on staff at AMH. He is accepting new patients at his office located in Suite 101 of Medical Office Building A on the AMH campus. For more information or to schedule an appointment, call 618-433-6006. Dr. Felder came to St. Louis after completing his Plastic Surgery residency at Georgetown University. He just completed a year-long fellowship in hand and peripheral nerve surgery at Washington University. Dr. Felder specializes in a full spectrum of plastic surgery services, including reconstructive and cosmetic, as well as hand surgery and peripheral nerve surgery.

Friday, November 4th, 2016 Doors open at 7:00 a.m. Program starts at 8:15 a.m. Program ends at 3:00 p.m.

Tickets cannot be purchased at the door.

Troy/Maryvile/St. Jacob/Marine Chamber of Commerce 647 E. US Highway 40 • Troy, IL 62294 www.troymaryvillecoc.com • 618-667-8769

ALTON MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

Villa Marie Winery Maryville, IL

★ Cummings Inc

Heating & Cooling

NOW ACCEPTING NEW PATIENTS

Plastic and Reconstuctive Surgery at Alton Memorial Hospital Medical Office Building A, Suite 101 Call 618-433-6006 to schedule an appointment

We Rely on our Reputation. • All makes & models • E.P.A. Certified • Fully Insured • Bonded • Veteran Owned & Operated “Call Our Grandpa, He Does Great Work!”

E. Missouri & S. Illinois

Rely on Ruud

618-656-8953

For more information or to schedule an appointment, call 618-433-6006.

4

On the Edge of the Weekend

October 27, 2016

www.cummings.ruudreliable.net 3885 Schipkowski Rd. • Edwardsville, IL


People People planner Zoo announces upcoming events

The Saint Louis Zoo has announced its schedule for the fall and winter. For more information, visit www. stlzoo.org. November 2016 Weekends through Nov. 27, 2016 F i r s t B a n k S e a L i o n S h o w. Saturdays and Sundays only at 1 and 2:30 p.m. (weather permitting). $4/person. Children under 2 are free. More info: stlzoo.org/ sealionshow Sea lion superstars will thrill you with flipper walks, ball balancing and lots of splashing! Shows will be held at the Lichtenstein Sea Lion Arena, which features an 811-seat amphitheater for seasonal shows, a large stage, a rock bridge extending into the audience and a high diving platform and slide. Nov. 10-Dec. 24, 2016 Holiday Zootique at Treetop Shop. The Living World offers animal-related clothing, ornaments, plush animals, toys, books, home dĂŠcor and many items only available at the Saint Louis Zoo. Holiday Zootique is open daily November 10 to December 24 during Zoo hours with a special Zoo members preview on November 9. More info: stlzoo.org. Nov. 24, 2016 (Thanksgiving Day) Zoo is open 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Nov. 25-27, Nov. 30-Dec. 4, Dec. 7-11, 14-23, & 26-30, 2016 U.S. Bank Wild Lights. 5:30-8:30 p.m.

$7/members, $8/non-members Monday-Thursday $9/members, $10/non-members Friday-Sunday Children under 2 are free. More info: (314) 646-4771 or stlzoo.org/ wildlights. Get a glimpse of the North Pole at the Saint Louis Zoo, where you can walk through an arctic wonderland of twinkling holiday light displays. Enjoy special menus, fireside storytelling, family activities and more. Sponsored by U.S. Bank, Prairie Farms Dairy, and Build-ABear Workshop at the Zoo, with media support by 102.5 KEZK. December 2016 Dec. 1-4, 7-11, 14-23, & 26-30, 2016 U.S. Bank Wild Lights. 5:30-8:30 p.m. $7/members, $8/non-members

Monday-Thursday $9/members, $10/non-members Friday-Sunday Children under 2 are free. More info: (314) 646-4771 or stlzoo.org/wildlights. Get a glimpse of the North Pole at the Saint Louis Zoo, where you can walk through an arctic wonderland of twinkling holiday light displays. Enjoy special menus, fireside storytelling, family activities and more. Sponsored by U.S. Bank, Prairie Farms Dairy, and Build-ABear Workshop at the Zoo, with media support by 102.5 KEZK. Dec. 3-4, 10-11, 17-18, 2016 Breakfast with Santa. Seating times: 9 and 11 a.m. Members: $20/adult, $18/child (2-12) Non-members: $22/adult, $20/

Custom Draperies - Furniture - Accessories Design Services - Blinds & Shades

25A%MOPSFF L

Join the Young Zoo Friends and other young professionals for a free Hump Day Happy Hour at the Saint Louis Zoo. Come mix and mingle, get up close and personal with animals, enjoy cocktails from our cash bar and learn more about the Zoo. Business casual. Dec. 16-19, 2016 Dinner with Santa. Seating times: 5 and 7 p.m. Members: $23/adult, $21/child (2-12)

SAM’S PAWN SHOP

Family Owned and Operated for over 25 Years!! M-F 9-5; Sat. 9-4

• 618-462-5696 samspawninalton.com p Follow us on Facebook

208 E. Broadway Alton, IL

DEBIT

NEED GET STOCKED UP TODAY FOR HUNTING SEASON! EXTRA

NEW & USED of compound bows FIREARMS in stock ALL AT DISCOUNTED and crossbows PRICES!!! on SALE!!

MONEY? HUGE SELECTION

USE OUR 90 DAY SAME AS CASH LAYAWAY

NEED EXTRA MONEY?

rder

pecial O tock and S

In S

child (2-12) Children under 2 are free. More info: (314) 646-4897 or stlzoo.org. Festive holiday breakfast includes a photo with Santa, a gift for kids, visits from costumed characters, free parking and more. Pre-paid reservations are required, and seating is limited. Dec. 14, 2016 Hump Day Happy Hour. 5:30-8:30 pm. Adults only. More info: stlzoo. org/yzf

ber 31st

ends Octo

415 East Vandalia Street Edwardsville, IL 62025 • 618.692.1574 10 a.m.-5p.m. Monday-Thursday • 10 a.m.-1p.m. Friday or by Appointment www.finishingtouchdecorating.com

Call Us Today For An Exciting New Look! We Think Outside The Box!

COMPARE DELIVERY Jimmy Johns $1.50 per Sandwich only 1.5 miles from store. Wang Gang is $1.89 Flat Fee - No Matter How Big the Order!

We are your “MetroEast Area Property Specialist�

www.LegacySells4u.com Welcoming New Agents Call Today For Interview! 9537 Brighton Bunker Hill Rd., Bunker Hill Many custom features! Open floor plan, 3 BR, FP in great room, finished walkout LL w/2nd kitchen, bath & FR, deck, patio, pond, 30’ x 60’ pole barn w/tall doors on 12’ walls! $339,900 MLS#16068233

Jeff Landreth (618) 541-1094 14631 Staunton Bunker Hill Rd., Bunker Hill 1700 sq ft home attached to a 2300 sq ft insulated gar w/2 overhead 12x16 doors, concrete floor, elec & office. Living space has lrg rooms, stone FP, large master suite, bonus room. $231,000 MLS#16065855

Wang Gang says...opera is only place where a guy gets stabbed and instead of bleeding, he sings. Call 655-0888 for The Best Delivery Value in Town only $1.89

1111 Georgia, Edwardsville 1 story home on beautiful lot! Move-in condition. Open great room w/2 sided FP, split BR design. Gourmet kit w/SS appl, screen porch w/deck & hot tub. Finished LL. $315,000 MLS#16067880

Michelle Abernathy (618) 610-8222 3BR, 2BA w/finished basement is move-in ready! It’s been updated from floor to ceiling. New maple cabinets, quartz counter tops & SS appl. Don’t miss this gem in Edwardsville schools. $194,900 MLS#16071054

Kathy Kreutzberg (618)910-8044

8452 Foehrkolb Lane, Edwardsville

523 N. Prairie, Bethalto

Shelly Niemeier (618) 781-3857

Meticulously maintained home. Covered patio, drive through garge, extra lot included in sale! Loads of room,m custom kitch w/Schmidt cabinets & SS appl, lots of natural light & mostly wood floors. $149,900 MLS#16063833

Shelly Niemeier (618) 781-3857

TWO LOCATIONS TO SERVE THE COMMUNITY: 324A W. Bethalto Drive Bethalto • 717-0800

Text “WANG� to 223344 for VIP STUFF *$10 Minimum

Buy 1 Entree, Get 1 Free w/Purchase of 2 Beverages

(Includes Noodles & Rices) Cannot be combined with any other offer. Expires 10-31-16

Safe, Secure Environment......

135 Bayfield Dr., Glen Carbon

Shelly Niemeier (618) 781-3857 Sprawling tri-level brick combo, 5+/- acres, sunroom screened in porch, large deck around above ground pool. Pole bldg w/18 horse stalls & over 10,000 ft. under roof. Quick I-55 access. $424,900 MLS#16065508

1035 Century Dr., Edwardsville wanggangasian.com

Free Entree

1002 N. Main St. Edwardsville • 692-5000

In the Comfort of Your Own Home Visit our Showroom at 6001 Godfrey Rd, Godfrey, IL

• Tub to Shower Conversions • Roll-in Showers • Bath & Shower Wall Systems • ADA Bath Safety Products • Certified Installations %$7+ 6+2:(5 ,1& • Free Estimates • 0% Financing for Qualified Buyers!

618-466-1100 October 27, 2016

On the Edge of the Weekend

5


People People planner Returning to St. Louis’ iconic Forest Park for the fourth year, Fair Saint Louis has announced its 2017 dates. The 37th annual Independence Day celebration will be held July 2, 3 & 4, 2017, as fans pack the grounds that once hosted the 1904 World’s Fair. Fair Saint Louis has also announced volunteer leaders James Boldt, 2016 vice chairman, as general chairman for the 2017 event, and David Estes, 2016 venue management chairman, as vice chairman. “With nearly 235,000 attendees and a dozen entertainers at Fair Saint Louis 2016, we’re looking forward to an even bigger and better 2017,” said Boldt. “Forest Park is truly an incredible venue to host America’s Biggest Birthday Party, and we’re once again looking forward to showcasing America’s No. 1 city park to St. Louisans and visitors alike during next year’s celebration.” Fairgoers are encouraged to check www.fairsaintlouis.org, and the Fair ’s Facebook (www.facebook. com/fairsaintlouis), Twitter and Instagram (@fairsaintlouis) pages for more updates and announcements leading up to the event. The Fair St. Louis Foundation, a 501(c)3 organization, operates the Fair each year and has donated numerous gifts to the St. Louis Community in conjunction with these events. Over the years, the foundation has contributed to the lighting of the Eads Bridge, the Mississippi River Overlook and the mile-long Riverfront Promenade, and was a partner in providing the Grand Staircases beneath the Arch as part of the National Park System and to the irrigation system as part of Forest Park Forever.

Museum celebrates Route 66 in St. Louis

On Nov. 11, 2016, Route 66 celebrates its 90th anniversary. To mark this milestone, the Missouri History Museum developed Route 66: Main Street Through St. Louis,

a 6,000-square-foot exhibition that explores the local history of the world-famous highway. Route 66: Main Street through St. Louis is open from June 25 through July 16, 2017. Route 66 touched eight states and connected more than 100 cities from Chicago to Los Angeles. St. Louis was the largest city in between. As the road meandered through the city, it passed by a number of stops that were unique to St. Louis – from popular restaurants to scandalous motes. Route 66: Main Street through St. Louis tells St. Louis' distinctive story on the Mother Road. Visitors will get their kicks learning about the motels, custard stands and tourist traps that could be found along the road as it passed through St. Louis. Route 66 through St. Louis wound its way from the bridges through downtown streets and depending on the year, provided travelers with several options for navigating through the

Visit our NEW Location! 612 W St. Louis Ave. • East Alton

Fair Saint Louis announces 2017 dates

city to the county and west. Locals will recognize some of the iconic places they still visit today such as Ted Drewes, Crown Candy Kitchen, Carl's Drive In and The Chase Hotel. They will also rediscover places that are gone with the passage of time such as the Coral Court Motel, the Parkmoor, the Chain of Rocks Amusement Park and the 66 Park-In Theatre. Artifacts include neon signs like the original sign from the La Casa Grande Motel on Watson, and classic cars including a 1963 Corvette Stingray convertible and a 1957 Airstream Travel Trailer. Route 66 opened on Nov. 11, 1926, as the major highway connecting Chicago and Los Angeles. Route 66 bore the hardships of the Great Depression, taking migrants west to find a new life. It carried military transports through World War II. At its height in the 1950s and '60s, tourists traveled its length to see the sights of the Southwest and California.

Quality Furniture...

Fall is Coming! Is Your Furnace Ready? Call us at 656-9386

www.garwoodsheating.com CALL NOW: 618-656-9386 “Serving the community since 1983”

Score big with our special rates!

1.00% APY

21 Month Certi cate

1.61% APY

35 Month Certi cate

1.86% APY

59 Month Certi cate

Wholesale Pricing

Alton • Bethalto • East Alton Edwardsville • Godfrey • Granite City Jerseyville • Wood River

618-258-3168 • 800-345-4216 • www.1stMidAmerica.org Dividend rates effective 9/30/16 and are subject to change. Min. balance required to obtain Annual Percentage Yield (APY). Minimum deposit amount is $1000.00 for 21 month certi cate at 1.00%/1.00% APY or 35 month certi cate at 1.60%/1.61% APY or 59 month certi cate at 1.85%/1.86% APY. Dividends paid quarterly. Early withdrawal may affect dividends earned. Fees could reduce earnings. Early withdrawal penalties apply. Shares federally insured by NCUA to at least $250,000. Shares are insured up to another $250,000 through ESI, a private insurer. Membership requirements apply.

618.258.4850 58 485 0

Lenny’s CARPET

& Floor Center

Call us today to schedule your appointment.

CARPET - HARDWOOD - CERAMIC LAMINATE - VINYL

618.288.2970

Over 70,000 sq. ft. in Stock

ext. 113

October SALE

NEW PATIENTS

FREE PAD WITH CARPET on select carpet styles only 6 lb Density 7/16” Bonded Urethane Cushion only EXCLUDES Promotional and Discounted Products.

welcome

expecting a special delivery? We are committed to bringing the highest quality medical service to you. Our all female staff has experienced many of the same things that you, as women will experience. We offer a warm, beautiful setting where your medical needs are met under one roof. • Routine and High Risk OB • On-Site Laboratory Services • Tubal Ligation • Infertility • Female Surgery • Minimally Invasion Surgery • In-Office Ultrasound sound Services • Robotic Surgery • Menopause, Perimenopau Perimenopause • 4-D Ultrasound d Services • Laparoscopic Surgery • Essure Procedure for Permanent Sterilization

123 N. BLUFF HWY. 157, COLLINSVILLE, IL Hours: 618-344-7060 By Home Depot and Wal-Mart

Mon-Fri 9-6 • Sat 9-12 • Sun Closed

PRICES starting at 89¢ per sq. ft. FREE ESTIMATES! SERVING THE AREA SINCE 1996

FI NA NCI NG A ND I NSTALLATION AVA I LABLE

www.lennyscarpet.com 2016 Vadalabene adalabene Drive • Maryville, Maryville IL • www www.MyMWC.org MyM

6

On the Edge of the Weekend

October 27, 2016

Please recycle this newspaper


October 27, 2016

On the Edge of the Weekend

7


People People planner Family Arena set to host Jerry Lewis

A consummate entertainer and world-renowned humanitarian, Jerry Lewis is not just a cultural icon in the U.S. and France, he’s one of “The Most Recognized Personalities on the Planet,” named so by Newsweek magazine. He is also the only entertainer ever to be nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize. One of the most successful performers in show business history – with worldwide box office receipts in excess of $800 million (when most tickets were sold for 25-50 cents) – Jerry has received global acclaim for his groundbreaking comedy. “An Evening with Jerry Lewis” features Jerry sharing incredible stories, telling timeless jokes and showing clips from his most iconic films and from special moments throughout his life and career. Ample time is allowed for the audience to ask Jerry questions. This is truly a walk through history with a Hollywood legend. "An Evening with Jerry Lewis" is scheduled Saturday, November 12 at The Family Arena in St. Charles. Tickets go on sale Friday, May 20 at 10 a.m. and can be purchased at the Family Arena Ticket Office or online at www.metrotix.com. Prices: $80 (Gold Circle), $70 (Floor), $60 (Lower Level), $50 (Upper Level) To charge by phone call MetroTix at 314-534-1111. For help purchasing accessible seating, please call The Family Arena ADA Hotline at 636-8964234.

Airshow to mark SAFB's 100th anniversary

Scott Air Force Base will celebrate its centennial anniversary in June of 2017. To commemorate this historic milestone, the base will host an open house and airshow featuring the U.S. Air Force's Thunderbirds, set for June 10-11, 2017. The land today known as Scott AFB was initially leased in June of 1917, and by September of that year, it was officially established as Scott Field. Scott AFB is the fourth oldest continuously active base in the U.S. Air Force, and the only Air Force base named in honor of an enlisted member, Corporal Frank S. Scott. Scott Field originally served as

a pilot training field during World War I and hosted a modified Curtiss JN-4 “Jenny” aircraft used as an air ambulance. By 1921, the mission at the field changed and Scott became a lighter-than-air station hosting balloons and dirigibles. By 1937, the lighter-than-air era ended for the entire Army Air Corps and the War Department intended to move the General Headquarters Air Force from Langley Field, Virginia to Scott Field. America’s entry into World War II would change that plan. The Army Chief of Staff changed Scott’s primary mission in 1939 making it a communications training location. Even after the birth of the U.S. Air Force in 1947, Scott AFB would continue as a communications training

installation graduating over 150,000 communications operators and maintenance personnel by 1959. By 1964, Scott became responsible for all aeromedical transportation within the U.S, and by 1975, the base was responsible for worldwide patient movement.

Throughout the 70s, 80s and 90s, the Scott AFB’s mission continued to evolve and change with the addition of new aircraft and units. Scott’s present flying mission showcases the integration of the Active Duty, Reserve, and National Guard components of the U.S. Air Force.

HIT THE ROAD! Brake Sale 25% OFF Brake Pads

EDWARDSVILLE PLUMBING

618.692.4144

Lic.#058097635

FREE BRAKE INSPECTIONS

Sales, Service, Repairs & Remodeling

MARK MUFFLER SHOP

Gas & Electric Water Heaters

OIL CHANGE

LICENSED, BONDED, & INSURED

AIR CONDITIONING TIRES

Serving the Community Since 1988

MAINTENANCE

www.edwardsvilleplumbing.com

Servicing The Edwardsville Area For Over 30 Years!

CALL 692-0700 Rt. 157, Edwardsville

For ALL Your Automotive Needs

Visit our Showroom at

#2 Schwarz St. Plaza • Edwardsville, IL

Do you suffer from ringing in the ears? Better Hearing Clinic has the solution. An areaffected affectedby byTinnitus, Tinnitus,better betterknown Anestimated estimated50 50 million million Americans Americans are knows as ringing in the ears. as ringing in the ears. You may get relief by seeking out our experienced & trusted Audiologist You may get relief by seeing our Doctor of Audiology and asking for and asking for Signia, the new name for Siemens hearing aids, with Signia, therapy the new feature. name for Siemens hearing aids, with tinnitus therapy tinnitus feature.

Expert Hearing Care You Can Trust!

Dr. T. K. Parthasarathy, Ph.D., CCC-A, former Professor of Audiology at SIUe: I have dedicated my expertise for the last 30 years in helping patients with hearing loss to improve their quality of life. BetterHearingClinic.com

Call Better Hearing Clinic today and our Hearing Care Professionals will provide you with the right hearing aid.

The Signia portfolio features tiny, nearly invisible hearing aids and even dustproof and sweat-proof hearing aids.

500 OFF

$

A pair of premium 7 primax or 5 primax hearing aids.

1-866-696-5958 9 Junction Drive West Suite #9 Glen Carbon, IL 62034

1-866-696-5958

eCharger™ arger™

Insio Customs ™

Ace

Pure

®

Carat™ A

Motion® SX

Motion® SA

PX Motion M ti ®

SSPECIAL OFFER

SPECIAL OFFER

FREE

FREE eCharger

Offer OfferValid Validthrough through10/31/16 3/31/16

Offer through3/31/16 10/31/16 Offer Valid through

Hearing Consultation Hearing Testing

8

1950 Edwardsville Club Plaza Edwardsville, IL 62025

On the Edge of the Weekend

450 VALUE

$

At Alton Memorial Hospital 2 Memorial Drive Suite #201 Alton, IL 62002

618-433-7961

with purchase of a pair of Siemens 7bx or 5bx hearing instruments

October 27, 2016

Sivantos, Inc. is a Trademark Licensee of Siemens AG. Copyright © 2016 Signia GmbH. All rights reserved. 7/16 D-7412D


Religion UNESCO adopts Jerusalem resolution PA R I S ( A P ) — U N E S C O ' s e x e c u t i v e b o a rd o n Tu e s d a y approved a resolution that Israel says denies the deep historic Jewish connection to holy sites in Jerusalem — and that has angered Israel's government and many Jews around the world. The resolution is not expected to have concrete impact on Jerusalem itself, but it aggravated diplomatic tensions around the city and within UNESCO, which is also facing a dispute between Japan and China that threatens funding. It's the latest of several measures at UNESCO over decades that Israelis see as evidence of ingrained anti-Israel bias within the United Nations, where Israel and its allies are far outnumbered by Arab countries and their supporters. Israel's concern has mounted since UNESCO states admitted Palestine as a member in 2011. The resolution, titled "Occupied Palestine," lays out rules about the preservation of holy sites in Jerusalem, and uses only the Islamic name for a hilltop compound sacred

IMMANUEL

UNITED METHODIST CHURCH

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

Rev. Jackie K. Havis-Shear

8:45 a.m. ~ Contemporary Worship 9:45 a.m. ~ Sunday School 10:45 a.m. ~ Traditional Worship Free Friday Lunch - 11:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m.

www.immanuelonmain.org

MOUNT JOY MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH OF EDWARDSVILLE

327 Olive Street • Edw, IL 656-0845 Steve Jackson, Pastor Sunday School: 9:30 a.m. Morning Worship: 10:45 a.m. Wed. Early Morning Prayer: 5:00 a.m. Wed. Bible Study: 7:00 p.m.

www.mtjoymbc.org

EMMANUEL CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST PENTECOSTAL 332 S. Brown Street Edwardsville, IL 62025

Pastor Carlos Bryant 618-980-1435 Saturday morning - 9:30 a.m. Wednesday evening - 7 p.m.

“The Place Where People Come To Be Healed.”

to both Jews and Muslims. The site includes the Western Wall, a remnant of the biblical temple and the holiest site where Jews can pray. Jews refer to the hilltop compound in Jerusalem's Old City as the Temple Mount. Muslims refer to it as al-Haram al-Sharif, Arabic for the Noble Sanctuary, and it includes the Al-Aqsa mosque and the golden Dome of the Rock. It is the holiest site in Judaism and the third holiest in Islam, after Mecca and Medina in Saudi Arabia. The board adopted the resolution by consensus Tuesday at the Paris headquarters of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. A draft form of the resolution had already been approved by a commission last week. Israel suspended its cooperation with UNESCO over the resolution last week, though it is not clear what programs the suspension will affect. Israel had already suspended its funding to UNESCO when Palestinian membership was

approved, along with the United States, which used to provide 22 percent of the agency's budget. "We won't negotiate and we won't take part in these ugly games," the Israeli ambassador to UNESCO, Carmel Shama-Hacohen, told The Associated Press after the ratification. "There is no place for these games in UNESCO. This noble organization was established to preserve history, not to rewrite it." The longstanding dispute is also linked to Israel's refusal to grant visas to UNESCO experts to go in the country and assess the level of preservation of the holy sites in Jerusalem. E l i a s S a n b a r, P a l e s t i n i a n ambassador to UNESCO, told the AP this refusal to allow a UNESCO mission was a "very big problem." "The aim of the mission was not to say that Israel was an occupying power or not, the whole world knows it," he told the AP. "The aim was to say: according to the field of competence of UNESCO, are the monuments and historical sites of UNESCO well-preserved, and if

restored, well-restored according to the rules of restoration?" On this issue, Shama-Hacohen said "there will not be any mission to Jerusalem under political d e c i s i o n s — w i t h t h e w o rd s 'occupying power,' with false allegations of Israel, we will never agree to such a mission. Jerusalem

DK’s MARKET Just 10 Minutes from Edwardsville Sale prices good 10/25-10/31

T-Bones Boneless Chicken Thighs Family Pack Ground Chuck Boneless Center cut Pork Loin Boneless Center Pork Chops Boneless Arm Roast Boneless, Skinless Chicken Breasts or Tenders 12 oz Smithfield Bacon

8 pc Chicken only $9.99, 8 Pc Dinner with Two Sides and Rolls $16.99

225 West State St., Hamel, IL

Live Bait e! NOW Availabl

(Intersection of Hwy. 140 & Hwy. 157)

618-633-2828 • www.dksmarket.com

ST. BONIFACE CATHOLIC CHURCH

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

LECLAIRE CHRISTIAN CHURCH 1914 Esic Drive, Edwardsville, 656-0918 “Loving People to Jesus”

“Verily I say unto thee: Of all men the most negligent is he that disputeth idly and seeketh to advance himself over his brother.” ~ Baha’u’llah The Bahá’is of Edwardsville warmly welcome and invite you to investigate the teachings of the Bahá’i Faith. For more information call (618) 656-4142 or email: Bahai.Edwardsville@sbcglobal.net P.O. Box 545 Edwardsville, IL 62025 www.bahai.us

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

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

All Are Welcome

www.st-boniface.com

EDEN CHURCH 903 N. Second Street Edwardville, IL 62025 656-4330

John Roberts, Senior Pastor

John Bollinger, Student Minister Shawn Smith, Family Life Minister Evan Shaw - Worship Minister

First Unitarian Church of Alton

Sunday Schedule: Worship at 9:00 am and 10:30 am

Serving the St Louis Metro East since 1836

110 East 3rd Street, Alton, Illinois (Across from Alton City Hall)

Please see leclairecc.com for more information.

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

EDEN CHURCH

www.edenchurch-edw.org

We are a welcoming congregation. Intergenerational Service Sunday 10:00 am Nursery is available. Youth program for ages 4-18

Daycare 656-2798 Janet Hooks, Daycare Director

leclairecc.com

$7.49lb $1.69lb $3.29lb $2.49lb $2.99lb $3.19lb $2.99lb $2.99

Tuesday Night Only 4-7 pm DK’s Fried Chicken

NEW BETHEL UNITED METHODIST

131 N. Main St., Glen Carbon, IL 288-5700 Dr. Penelople H. BarberSunday Morning Worship 8:00 & 10:30a.m. Sunday School - 9:30 a.m. Senior High Youth Group Sunday - 6:30 p.m. Mid-Week - Every Wednesday evening Wed. Night Meal - 5:30 - 6:30 p.m. Kids Connection - K-5th grade - 6-7 p.m. Middle School Bible Study - 6-7:30 p.m. Senior High Bible Study - 6-7:30 p.m. Adult Classes & Prayer Shawl Ministry - 6:30-8 p.m. Fully Accessible Facilities www.newbethelumc.org e-mail office@newbethelumc.org

is an open city. Jerusalem is a transparent city." Israel and the Palestinian authority are not members of the executive board of UNESCO. Just because UNESCO members adopt such a resolution, doesn't mean it will lead to major changes on the ground.

618-462-2462 310 South Main, Edwardsville 656-7498

www.firstuualton.org

Traditional Worship: 9:00 a.m. Contemporary Worship: 10:30 a.m. Sunday School: 10:30 a.m. Youth: 5:30 p.m. Dr. James Brooks, Lead Minister Rev. Jeff Wrigley, Assoc Minister

Let’s Worship...

www.fccedwardsville.org

Call Lisa 656-4700 Ext 46

October 27, 2016

On the Edge of the Weekend

9


Movies

QuickGlance Movie Reviews

"Denial"

Mick Jackson's "Denial" brings all the decorous polish of a British courtroom drama to the pungent libel case of a Holocaust denier. Based on Deborah Lipstadt's book "History on Trial: My Day in Court With a Holocaust Denier," the film depicts when the unapologetically anti-Semitic historian David Irving brought a libel suit against Lipstadt for calling him a Holocaust denier in one of her books. Because of the nature of libel cases in the United Kingdom (where Irving filed the suit), the burden of proof is on the defender, not the plaintiff. Hovering constantly throughout the trial — which ran eight weeks — is the question: Is it worthwhile to expend so much energy on such a loathsome liar? It's a salient question with obvious relevance to a time where willful disregard for the truth increasingly runs rampant in national politics and social media streams, alike. Should trolls be taken to task or ignored? "Denial" argues forcefully and convincingly for the vital necessity of confronting the perpetuation of dangerous falsehoods. It rises impressively to the wise and perhaps unpopular judgment that "not all opinions are equal." This is an honorable cause if not a particularly dramatic movie. Just as the legal team behind Lipstadt's case brought a full array of firepower to the proceedings, so has Jackson in his film. The cast is littered with an impervious collection of British talent, in front of and behind the camera. RATED: PG-13 by the Motion Picture Association of America for "mild action and some thematic elements." RUNNING TIME: 110 minutes. ASSOCIATED PRESS RANKING: Two and a half stars out of four.

"Deepwater Horizon"

We all know how "Deepwater Horizon " ends. When the BP oil rig exploded in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010, 11 people died and millions of gallons of oil spewed into the waters and up against the Gulf shores in the worst environmental disaster in U.S. history. The story of the aftermath, even 6 years later, is still being written. The how-did-it-happen is another thing, and the point of director Peter Berg's intensely thrilling indictment of the greed and gross negligence that contributed to the horrific outcome. Like the best true stories translated to film, this well-known ending works for Berg, not against him. He and writers Matthew Sand and Matthew Michael Carnahan know, as Ron Howard did with "Apollo 13" and James Cameron knew with "Titanic," that it's not about whether they live or they die or if the ship goes down or all are saved. It's about the process and those decisions, big or small, corrupt or well-intentioned, that made this disaster inevitable. Based on a New York Times article, "Deepwater Horizon's Final Hours," the film is about the crew — the men and women aboard just doing their jobs. Mark Wahlberg anchors as Mike Williams, a no-nonsense engineer, who leaves his wife (Kate Hudson) and precocious daughter at home for his dangerous job on the rig. An early scene with a school science project spells out exactly what he and his co-workers do and foreshadows what will go wrong. It's the kind of set up that on paper likely seems too cutesy, but here, it not only works, it actually builds tension rather effectively. "Deepwater Horizon" rises above expectations of what a movie like this is capable of at every turn — restrained where you think it might go too big or sentimental, and genuinely affecting when you think you're gearing up for an eye-roll. RATED: PG-13 by the Motion Picture Association of America for "for prolonged intense disaster sequences and related disturbing images, and brief strong language." RUNNING TIME: 107 minutes. ASSOCIATED PRESS RANKING: Three and a half stars out of four.

10

On the Edge of the Weekend

"The Birth of a Nation"

"The Birth of a Nation " has had more expectations placed on it than any movie could reasonably bear. When the film about Nat Turner and his 1831 slave rebellion premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, it was held up, unfairly or not, as everyone's great hope to save us from another year of #OscarsSoWhite. Some handful of months later, it became representative of something else when the focus shifted to the then little-known fact that its creator and star, Nate Parker, had a past that involved not only a rape allegation, but the eventual suicide of the accuser. Neither is a fair lens through which to judge "The Birth of a Nation." Complicated people have and will continue to make films. We'll all have to reconcile with that in our own way. #OscarsSoWhite, meanwhile, will never be solved with just one film — and certainly not by the first to screen after another year of homogenous nominees. The fact is, "The Birth of a Nation" is a fine and promising debut from Parker, who also co-wrote and produced. It also feels very much like a first film, too, unable to reach the lofty artistry that it's striving for in juxtaposing unimaginable human injustices with both lyrical spirituality and shocking violence. Out of necessity, "The Birth of a Nation" takes a lot of liberties with truths and unknowns about Nat Turner, fleshing out the skeleton of what the history books tell us. RATED: R by the Motion Picture Association of America for "disturbing violent content, and some brief nudity." RUNNING TIME: 120 minutes. ASSOCIATED PRESS RANKING: Two and a half stars out of four.

"The Girl on the Train"

Tate Taylor's "The Girl on the Train" may be technically set in the Westchester suburb of Ardsley-on-Hudson, but its cocktail of commuter trains, marital infidelity and alcoholism make its proper setting Cheever Country. The unhappy, martini-stained lives of New York suburbanites have long been a rich vein for writers like John Cheever, Richard Yates and Paula Fox. "The Girl on the Train" is the trashier, paperback version. Its old-school title may suggest Hitchcock or maybe Fincher (who himself is remaking Hitchcock's "Strangers on a Train"). But Taylor's film, disappointingly, is nowhere near the league of either. Instead, it's closer to the kind of early '90s psychological thriller where bad things happen in slow motion and deadly instruments are drawn from kitchen drawers. It's adapted from Paula Hawkins' popular London-set novel, the success of which was predicated on comparisons to Gillian Flynn's "Gone Girl," a trio of unreliable narrators, all women, and the way it cleverly untwisted female clichés of domestic life: the bitter divorcee (Rachel, played by Emily Blunt), the sexy 'other woman' (Megan, Haley Bennett) and the unwitting wife (Anna, Rebecca Ferguson). They are each introduced in their own chapter, but our central figure is Blunt's boozy, devastated Rachel, the so-dubbed "girl" who by all appearances is suspiciously like a woman. She spends her days riding the Metro North into and out of New York, cursing the suburban "baby factory" while mini liquor bottles fall off her lap. From the tracks, she obsessively gazes at a house where she spies who she believes is the perfect, impossibly handsome couple (Bennett, Luke Evans). "I just know they know love," she says. RATED: R by the Motion Picture Association of America for "violence, sexual content, language and nudity." RUNNING TIME: 105 minutes. ASSOCIATED PRESS RANKING: Two stars out of four.

October 27, 2016

"The Accountant"

The bean counter cometh. In Gavin O'Connor's "The Accountant," starring Ben Affleck, the paper-pushing CPA — roughly the exact opposite of Schwarzenegger or Stallone — gets his shot at action hero stardom. If we pull out our calculators, we can deduce that the odds of this are slim. Carrying the one and rounding up, you might even conclude that it's a patently ridiculous premise. Just image the tagline possibilities. "The only thing he knows better than the tax code is his moral code!" ''Don't write him off!" ''He's the Price Waterhouse Killer!" But "The Accountant" has much grander goals of implausibility. The film comes from a script by Bill Dubuque ("The Judge") that, come tax season, may well be at serious risk of an audit. It's about a secretive, autistic accountant for prominent criminals who's a muscular, military-grade hit man by hobby, plagued by his father's relentlessly militaristic parenting, who becomes embroiled in a robotic prostheses company's bid to go public. You know, THAT old story. To cite the words exclaimed by John Lithgow's CEO at a climactic moment that's both bloodbath and family reunion: "What IS this?" What "The Accountant" is one of the more unlikely movies to repeat the phrase "Just the Renoir." Christian Wolff (Affleck) is on the surface a small-town accountant outside Chicago who spends his days at his bland shopping center office and his nights in an airstream trailer parked inside a storage unit. There he punishes himself with a bar he painfully rolls over his shins and stares quietly at an original Pollack nailed to the ceiling. (His Renoir is deemed more expendable.) RATED: R by the Motion Picture Association of America for "strong violence and language throughout." RUNNING TIME: 128 minutes. ASSOCIATED PRESS RANKING: Two stars out of four.

"Certain Women"

"Certain Women" is a quiet, introspective film about three women living and existing in a frozen Montana town. Does it sound dull? Sure. But on the screen it plays out like a slowburning folk song you could sit with for hours. It's perhaps writer-director Kelly Reichardt's finest work, understated and elegant and well worth a trip to the cinema to slip into the exquisitely literary vignettes of Beth (Kristen Stewart), Gina (Michelle Williams) and Laura (Laura Dern). Adapted from Maile Meloy's short stories, Reichardt crafts her own short story-like structure to "Certain Women." There are some tangentially connecting threads, but for the most part they exist in different orbits even in and around the small, sleepy and picturesquely desolate Livingston, Montana. We meet Laura (Dern) first. She's dressing after a mid-day fling with Ryan (James Le Gros) that doesn't seem to have been fulfilling enough for the effort. Back at her office (she's a lawyer) she's dismayed to find out that a needy client (Jared Harris) has been waiting for her. She explains to him for what seems like the millionth time that he has no recourse for his on-the-job injury because he's already taken a settlement. But he wants a second opinion and they drive to Billings to meet with an older male lawyer who tells him the exact same thing. It's only then that he accepts it. "It would be so lovely to think if I were a man, people would listen and say 'OK.' Ah, it'd be so restful," Laura sighs at one point. That sentiment, a bone-deep exhaustion of merely existing and surviving and still maintaining your wants and desires and agency, flows into the next segment about Gina (Williams) and her family, made up of a bratty teenage daughter and an ineffectual husband, Ryan. It's the same guy we've already seen engaging in the extramarital dalliance with Laura. Both undermine her at every turn in familiar ways. RATED: R by the Motion Picture Association of America for "some language." RUNNING TIME: Running time: 107 minutes. ASSOCIATED PRESS RANKING: Four stars out of four.


Movies

Associated Press

This image released by IFC Films shows Michelle Williams in a scene from "Certain Women."

Dern, Williams spellbinding in "Certain Women" By LINDSAY BAHR Associated Press "Certain Women" is a quiet, introspective film about three women living and existing in a frozen Montana town. Does it sound dull? Sure. But on the screen it plays out like a slow-burning folk song you could sit with for hours. It's perhaps writer-director Kelly Reichardt's finest work, understated and elegant and well worth a trip to the cinema to slip into the exquisitely literary vignettes of Beth (Kristen Stewart), Gina (Michelle Williams) and Laura (Laura Dern). Adapted from Maile Meloy's short stories, Reichardt crafts her own short story-like structure to "Certain Women." There are some tangentially connecting threads, but for

the most part they exist in different orbits even in and around the small, sleepy and picturesquely desolate Livingston, Montana. We meet Laura (Dern) first. She's dressing after a mid-day fling with Ryan (James Le Gros) that doesn't seem to have been fulfilling enough for the effort. Back at her office (she's a lawyer) she's dismayed to find out that a needy client (Jared Harris) has been waiting for her. She explains to him for what seems like the millionth time that he has no recourse for his on-the-job injury because he's already taken a settlement. But he wants a second opinion and they drive to Billings to meet with an older male lawyer who tells him the exact same thing. It's only then that he accepts it. "It would be so lovely to think if I were a

man, people would listen and say 'OK.' Ah, it'd be so restful," Laura sighs at one point. That sentiment, a bone-deep exhaustion of merely existing and surviving and still maintaining your wants and desires and agency, flows into the next segment about Gina (Williams) and her family, made up of a bratty teenage daughter and an ineffectual husband, Ryan. It's the same guy we've already seen engaging in the extramarital dalliance with Laura. Both undermine her at every turn in familiar ways. Gina, small and platinum blonde, maintains a steely demeanor throughout it all. These are just the facts of her surroundings, and you sense that they've been rotten for a while. Reichardt and Williams, who excel in collaboration for films like "Wendy and Lucy"

and "Meek's Cutoff," have the ability to make even a conversation about buying sandstone from an elderly man transfixing and deep. It's a microcosm for Gina's entire worth. As with all of Reichardt's films, the gems are in the smallest moments — the half smiles, the nonreactions and the silences between two people barely connecting. That's more heartbreakingly explored in the third and most obtuse story, which brings us to Jamie (Lily Gladstone) and Beth (Stewart). Jamie, sturdy and sweet, works on a ranch tending to horses in cold isolation. One night she stumbles on a class at the local high school on education law. Jamie becomes fascinated with the jittery instructor Beth (Stewart), a beguiling outsider who travels four hours each way two times a week to teach.

"The Accountant" good, but not great By ROBERT GRUBAUGH For The Edge B e n A ff l e c k h e a d l i n e s t h e new film that topped the box office last weekend, "The Accountant". That's the most noteworthy thing about the film, one that features riveting action sequences and interesting commentary about how we currently are treating those with autism spectrum disorders. It a l s o , u n f o r t u n a t e l y, h a s a n expansive, talented cast - many of whom are given very little time to appropriately chew their scenery. I liked the movie, but i t d o e s n ' t c o m p l e t e l y re w a rd its viewers like director Gavin O'Connor's amazing earlier films ("Miracle", "Warrior"). C h r i s t i a n Wo l ff ( A ff l e c k ) i s an accountant who struggles

with relating to people in a s o c i a l a n d c o m m o n w a y. H e prefers to keep his relationships p ro f e s s i o n a l o r, y o u k n o w, a t arm's length. This works well f o r C h r i s . We l e a r n t h ro u g h various flashbacks that his childhood was fraught with painful lessons as his parents helped him to overcome the crippling limitations of his Asperger's Syndrome. By 'help', I don't mean the kindly, h a rd w o r k i n g k i n d t h a t c o m e s with love and devotion. His mom bounced out of the scene e a r l y, a b a n d o n i n g C h r i s , h i s brother, and his strict military f a t h e r ( R o b e r t C . Tr e v e i l e r ) . Dad, in fact, took the road to conformity quite seriously. He taught his boys that if the world were going to take advantage of either of them, they should be ready to pound back at the

first sign of trouble. Disability etiquette to him is a PC joke. In the present day, Chris is being hunted by Treasury agents (Cynthia Addai-Robinson, J.K. Simmons) who have deduced that he is the man responsible for cooking the books for many of the most dangerous organizations in the world. They suspect that he's helping cartels, mafia families, Russian gangsters, and dishonest Middle Eastern conglomerates hide, clean, or move their ill-gotten monies. The mathematically inclined mind that Wolff possesses is keenly wired to do just this. He's also dangerous enough to work with these types of people and come out clean on the other side. An adulthood spent funneling money in the ways of criminals has left him wealthy and alone t o t h e p o i n t w h e re h e s t a r t s

contemplating taking steps to normalize his career. He's no longer content to keep to his routines, eat bacon for dinner every night, or stare endlessly at a Jackson Pollock on his ceiling. Wo r k i n g w i t h a n u n s e e n handler (a British woman's voice on speakerphone who calls him "Dreamboat"), he goes to work for a Chicago-based ro b o t i c s c o m p a n y t h a t n e e d s t o u n d e r s t a n d a n i r re g u l a r i t y that a junior accounting analyst (Anna Kendrick, playing small) unwittingly uncovered. Overnight, Wolff finds that the company's executives (Jean S m a r t , J o h n L i t h g o w, A n d y Umberger) have been using $61 million worth of legitimate e a r n i n g s t o p ro p u p t h e f i r m and overinflate its value in front of a hush-hush IPO. His discovery makes him a marked

October 27, 2016

man an d they set an assassin (Jon Bernthal, whom I usually love to hate) to silence the quiet accountant. Chris is done with the running and resettling that he's built into his repertoire like part of a business reputation. Instead, he takes a stand and g o e s a f t e r t h e t h re a t u s i n g a private arsenal, an unstated code of morality, and with step-bystep revelations that tie Chris, h i s h i s t o r y, h i s f a m i l y, a n d many of the film's supporting characters into a web of selfserving cleverness that this critic, ahem, figured out with almost forty minutes left in the picture. "The Accountant" runs 128 minutes and is rated R for strong violence and language throughout. I give this film two and a half stars out of four.

On the Edge of the Weekend

11


CASSENS CASSENS

3 1

Cassen’s has achieved the highest level of Customer Experience Recognition in their people, facility, processes, customer metrics and training. 2017 ALL-NEW CHRYSLER PACIFICA

0% APR FINANCING -PLUS-

1500

$

TOTAL BONUS CASH

FOR CURRENT FCA VEHICLE OWNERS HURRY, OFFER ENDS OCTOBER 31ST NO TRADE IN OF VEHICLE REQUIRED. CURRENT VEHICLE MUST BE REGISTERED TO CONSUMER FOR 30 DAYS PRIOR TO PURCHASE TO BE ELIGIBLE FINANCING FOR WELL-QUALIFIED BUYERS THROUGH CHRYSLER CAPITAL. NOT ALL BUYERS WILL QUALIFY. RESIDENCY RESTRICTIONS APPLY. CHRYSLER AND IMPORTED FROM DETROIT ARE REGISTERED TRADEMARKS OF FCA US LLC.

TAKE ADVANTAGE OF

20

% OFF MSRP

CASH ALLOWANCE

ON SELECT 2016 CHRYSLER DODGE, JEEP, AND RAM VEHICLES IN DEALER STOCK THE LONGEST AS OF OCTOBER 3RD

ON OLDEST STOCK 15% INVENTORY OF SELECT 2016 MY CHRYSLER 300, 300C, CHARGER (EXCLUDES SRT), AND JOURNEY ON OLDEST 20% OF INVENTORY OF SELECT 2016 MY JEEP CHEROKEE (EXCLUDES SPORT & LATITUDE) DODGE GRAND CARAVAN AND RAM 1500 MODELS AS OF 10/3/16. WHILE DEALER STOCK LASTS. NOT CAMPITABLE WITH LEASE OFFERS OR ANY OTHER CONSUMER INCENTIVE OFFERS. RESIDENCE RESTRICTIONS APPLY. TAKE RETAIL DELIVERY BY 10/31/16. CHRYSLER, DODGE, JEEP AND RAM ARE REGISTERED TRADEMARKS OF FCA US LLC.

20

2016 JEEP® CHEROKEE TRAILHAWK

% OFF MSRP CASH ALLOWANCE

FOR AN AVERAGE OF $7,600 IN SAVINGS

ON SELECT 2016 CHEROKEE TRAILHAWK MODELS IN DEALER STOCK THE LONGEST AS OF SEPTEMBER 1ST HURRY,

OFFER ENDS OCTOBER 31ST

ON OLDEST 20% INVENTORY OF SELECT 2016 MY JEEP CHEROKEE TRAILHAWK VEHICLES AS OF 10/3/16. WHILE DEALER STOCK LASTS. SAVINGS VASED ON $38,305 AVERAGE CHEROKEE TRAILHAWK MSRP. NOT COMOPATIBLE WITH LEASE OFFERS OR ANY OTHER CONSUMER INCENTIVE OFFERS. SEE DEALER FOR DETAILS. TAKE RETAIL DELIVERY BY 10/31/16. JEEP IS A REGISTERED TRADEMARKS OF FCA US LLC.

See Us For All Your Automotive Needs 2 Miles North of I-270 on Hwy. 159

12

On the Edge of the Weekend

October 27, 2016


The Edge

Section II

How’s the Market?

We’re very excited to announce that RE/MAX Alliance has partnered with Move for Hunger to help feed Illinois families.

October 2016

It’s simple…when you’re moving take all of the nonperishable food items you don’t want, box them up and drop them off at any one of our four convenient locations…addresses appear below. We’ll take care of getting them to one of our local food pantries, insuring your help stays local…after all, we live in a world of abundance and there’s no reason for anyone to go to bed hungry…yet many still do. This is our way…and your way of doing something about it. Please keep in mind, you don’t need to be moving to make a donation…just go through your cabinets, collect your unwanted food items and drop them off while you’re out running errands! Thank you for caring and for helping us make this program a success! Call one of the phone numbers below for additional information and here are addresses to make a donation:

In Edwardsville at 120 S. Buchanan St. or in Collinsville at 1099 Beltline Rd., Suite M Contact a RE/MAX Alliance professional to begin your home search! We’re ready when you are…

Four convenient locations, 115 caring professionals… Collinsville…345-2111 Highland……654-2111

Edwardsville…656-2111 Glen Carbon….288-7100

Visit us on the web at: www.MetroEastLiving.com

The real estate market remains upbeat as we head into the 4th quarter of 2016. Here’s a quick glance:  Home sales in Madison County have increased 4.97% (2,681 homes sold) compared to the same period last year, while sales in St. Clair County have increased 11.61% (2,403 homes sold).  Homes in the St. Louis Region appreciated approximately 6.43% in the 12-month period ending in June 2016, the last report available.  Interest rates have recently inched upward, hovering around 3.54% for a 30-yr. fixed rate loan and 2.82% for a 15-yr. fixed rate loan according to bankrate.com. Would you like to know how this market is impacting you? Call one of our experienced professionals…

Please join us in supporting:

+

.

Learn more at moveforhunger.org

Show Your Support for our Troops! The Edwardsville Intelligencer will publish a special feature page honoring our troops on Friday, November 11, 2016. We are accepting photos for publication and would like to honor both past and present service men and women for their sacrifices 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 Attention: Bill Tucker 117 North Second Street, Edwardsville, IL 62025 or email photo and information to: btucker@edwpub.net Name:

Hometown:

Branch of Service:

Years of Service:

Brief paragraph honoring your veteran (In Memory of, We are so Proud, etc.)

VISIT AN OFFICE NEAR YOU!

Information submitted by: (Name and address will not be published. We need it to return the photo.)

All information must be received by Friday, November 4, 2016

Alton 1819 Homer Adams Pkwy. (618) 208-0585

EDWARDSVILLE 6663 Edwardsville Crossing Dr. 618.659.2320

Collinsville 601 W. Beltline Rd. 618.223.5212

Granite City 3405 Nameoki Rd. 618.219.8909

CLARKSONEYECARE.COM Offer valid on a complete pair of frames and lenses purchased between 9/1/16 and 10/31/16 for members of purchaser’s immediate family. Not applicable toward prior purchases, special order frames or certain frame brands. Visit ClarksonEyecare.com for complete details.

October 27, 2016

On the Edge of the Weekend

13


The Arts

For The Edge Disney Theatrical Productions and the Fabulous Fox Theatre announced today that tickets for the long-awaited return engagement of Disney’s "The Lion King" will go on sale to the public on Saturday, November 12 at 10:00 a.m.. St. Louis’ most eagerly awaited return will once again leap onto the Fabulous Fox stage on Wednesday, April 19 for a limited engagement of 3 weeks through Sunday, May 7. The opening night is Thursday, April 20 at 7:30 p.m. In St. Louis, "The Lion King" will play Tuesdays through Fridays at 7:30 p.m., Saturdays at 2 p.m. & 7:30 p.m. and Sundays at 1:00 p.m. & 6:30 p.m.. There will also be a 1 p.m. matinee on Thursday, April 20. Premium Ticket Packages, which include a prime seat location, a commemorative souvenir program and an exclusive merchandise item, are also available. Beginning Saturday, November 12 tickets will be available at the Fabulous Fox Box Office, and online at www. metrotix.com. To charge tickets, call MetroTix at (314) 534-1111. Orders for groups of fifteen (15) or more may be placed by calling (314) 535-2900. Ticket buyers are reminded that MetroTix is the only official retail ticket outlet for all performances at The Fabulous Fox Theatre. Ticket buyers who purchase tickets from a ticket broker or any third party should be aware that the Fabulous Fox is unable to reprint or replace lost or stolen tickets and is unable to contact patrons with information regarding time changes or other pertinent updates regarding the performance. Fox Performing Arts Charitable Foundation will present Kids Night at the Fabulous Fox Tuesday. April 25. A free child’s ticket will be offered with the purchase of an adult ticket at the Fox Theatre Box Office while supplies last; some restrictions apply. The evening will include pre-show activities in the Fox

14

On the Edge of the Weekend

Theatre lobby. For more information about Kids’ Night at the Fabulous Fox, please visit www.foxpacf.org. The North American touring productions of "The Lion King" have been seen by more than 17 million theatergoers and grossed over $1.2 billion to date. Having already played more than 70 cities across North America, "The Lion King" now proudly makes its St. Louis return at the Fabulous Fox Theatre. In its 19th year, "The Lion King" continues ascendant as one of the most popular stage musicals in the world. Since its Broadway premiere on November 13, 1997, 23 global productions have been seen by more than 85 million people. Produced by Disney Theatrical Productions (under the direction of Thomas Schumacher), "The Lion King" is only the second show in history to generate five productions worldwide running 10 or more years. Translated into eight different languages (Japanese, German, Korean, French, Dutch, Spanish, Mandarin and Portuguese), productions of "The Lion King" can currently be seen on Broadway; London’s West End; Hamburg; Tokyo; Madrid; Mexico City; Shanghai and on tour across North America, for a total of eight productions running concurrently across the globe. Having played over 100 cities in 20 countries on every continent except Antarctica, "The Lion King"’s worldwide gross exceeds that of any film, Broadway show or other entertainment title in box office history. "The Lion King" won six 1998 Tony Awards®: Best Musical, Best Scenic Design (Richard Hudson), Best Costume Design (Julie Taymor), Best Lighting Design (Donald Holder), Best Choreography (Garth Fagan) and Best Direction of a Musical. "The Lion King" has also earned more than 70 major arts awards including the 1998 NY Drama Critics Circle Award for Best Musical, the 1999 Grammy® for Best Musical Show Album, the 1999 Evening Standard Award for

October 27, 2016

Theatrical Event of the Year and the 1999 Laurence Olivier Awards for Best Choreography and Best Costume Design. The show’s director, costume designer and mask co-designer Julie Taymor continues to play an integral part in the show’s ongoing success. The first woman to win a Tony Award for Direction of a Musical, Taymor has in recent years supervised new productions of the show around the world. The Broadway score features Elton John and Tim Rice’s music from The Lion King animated film along with three new songs by John and Rice; additional musical material by South African Lebo M, Mark Mancina, Jay Rifkin, Julie Taymor and Hans Zimmer; and music from "Rhythm of the Pride Lands," an album inspired by the original music in the film, written by Lebo M, Mark Mancina and Hans Zimmer. The resulting sound of "The Lion King" is a fusion of Western popular music and the distinctive sounds and rhythms of Africa, ranging from the Academy Award®-winning song “Can You Feel the Love Tonight” to the haunting ballad “Shadowland.” The book has been adapted by Roger Allers, who co-directed The Lion King animated feature, and Irene Mecchi, who co-wrote the film’s screenplay. Other members of the creative team include: Michael Curry, who designed the masks and puppets with Taymor, Steve Canyon Kennedy (sound design), Michael Ward (hair and makeup design), John Stefaniuk (associate director), Marey Griffith (associate choreographer), Clement Ishmael (music supervisor) and Doc Zorthian (production supervisor). Anne Quart serves as associate producer. For more information worldwide, visit LionKing.com. The St. Louis engagement of Disney’s "The Lion King" is presented by arrangement with the Fabulous Fox Theatre and is a subscription offering of the U.S. Bank Broadway Series


The Arts

Edison Theatre hosting "Passing Strange" For The Edge Now you don’t know me And I don’t know you, So let’s cut to the chase, The name is Stew — T h e N a r r a t o r, “ P a s s i n g Strange” South Central Los Angeles, 1976. The lawns are manicured, the palm trees sway, the savings bonds are tucked optimistically away. But the Youth is restless. He stays out late. He dabbles in Buddhism. He bickers with his mother. Then something occurs. He attends church service. The sermon leaves him cold but the choir lights a fire. So begins “Passing Strange,” Stew’s semi-autobiographical account of artistic self-discovery. Washington University in St. Louis’ Performing Arts Department (PAD) in Arts & Sciences will present the Tony Award-winning rock musical Oct. 21-30 in Edison Theatre. “It’s a coming of age story,” said director Ron Himes, the PAD’s Henry E. Hampton, Jr. Artist-inResidence, and founder of The Black Rep. The lead character, known only as the Youth, “is experimental, inquisitive and open to new experiences. But he’s also selfcentered.” As the story progresses, “he is molded, he is shaped and he is colored. “He is challenged,” Himes said. “And he reinvents himself.” Following his musical revelation, the Youth briefly joins the church choir, where the pastor ’s son introduces him to philosophy and marijuana. He learns guitar and forms a punk band. But the band breaks up after a bad LSD trip. The Youth decamps for Amsterdam. “He goes to Europe to find himself,” Himes said with a laugh. “That’s what Hendrix had to do. L.A. can’t handle a freaky black man.” Life is good in Amsterdam. The Youth takes up with a group of artists. His days are happily debauched – perhaps too much

so. His music dries up. And so he leaves again, arriving in Berlin amidst a May Day riot. There, he falls in with a revolutionary cadre and falls into bed with their leader, Desi. “In Berlin, things become more political,” Himes said. “The cadre is full of angst. Everybody hates the system, and they change how he thinks and how he sees the world. They also confront him about his own commercial tastes. He’s brave, but he’s not brave enough to be adventuresome in his music.” In response, said Himes, the Youth “adopts this whole ‘ghetto

persona.’ It’s not who he is, but he can get away with it there. But Desi sees through it. She asks him to take off his mask, but he can’t. That’s when things starts falling apart. “I think the show will resonate for a lot of parents,” said Himes, noting that “Passing Strange” will coincide with Parents Weekend. “I think about myself, running around campus at 18- or 19-yearsold, thinking I knew everything. … Reflecting on your own life gives you a greater understanding for what young people are going through today.” At the same time, “I hope that

students will see that you can’t be afraid to search,” Himes said. “You’ve got to take those leaps. They help to shape the person you become. “In the end it’s all about the journey.” Cast and crew The cast of 12 is led by David Dwight as the Youth, Ebby Offord as the Mother and Charles Glenn as the Narrator. Also appearing, in multiple roles, are Brandace Anderson, Mario Davila, Chris Gauss, Tre’von Griffith, Elvin Hu, Neema Kamala, Amarachi Onyema, Alessandra Silva and Namrata

Vakkalagadda. The band is led by musical d i re c t o r C h a r l e s C re a t h , a n d features Provost Holden Thorp on bass guitar. Set design is by senior lecturer Rob Morgan, with assistance from Sydney Shafer. Costumes are by Bonnie Kruger, professor of the practice in drama. Projection designer is Sean Savoie, with lighting by Dominick Ehling and Adam Kern. Sound is by Jon Zielke. Choreographer is Michael Uthoff, artistic director for Dance St. Louis. Tickets “Passing Strange” begins at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, Oct. 21 and 22; and at 2 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 23. Performances continue the following weekend, at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, 28 and 29; and at 2 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 30. Performances take place in Edison Theatre, located in Mallinckrodt Center, 6465 Forsyth Blvd. Tickets are $20, or $15 for students, seniors and Washington University faculty and staff, and $10 for WashU students. Tickets are available through the Edison Theatre Box Office. For more information, call 314935-6543 or visit edison.wustl.edu.

Above, from left are Ebby Offord as the mother, David Dwight as the Youth and Charles Glenn as the narrator in the PAD production of “Passing Strange.” At left, another cast photo. Photo by Carol Green/Washington University.

October 27, 2016

On the Edge of the Weekend

15


Arts calendar Friday, Oct. 28

Beauty and the Beast, Touhill Performing Arts Center, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. The Ugly Duckling, Coca, St. Louis, 1:00 p.m. to 2:00 p.m. Textiles: Politics and Patriotism, Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs until March 5, 2017 Conficts of Interest: Art and War in Modern Japan, Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs until January 8, 2017 New Media Series: Dara Birnbaum, Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Until The Flood: Repertory Theater of St. Louis, Loretto-Hilton Center, St. Louis, 8:00 p.m.to 11:00 p.m., Runs until Nov. 6, 2017 Follies: The Repertory Theater of St. Louis, Loretto-Hilton Center, St. Louis, 7:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. Outside In: Paint for Peace Exhibition, Coca, St. Louis, 11:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m., Runs until Oct. 30, 2016 Mark Bradford, Contemporary Art Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Kings, Queens, and Castles, World Chess Hall of Fame, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Little Black Dress: From Mournin to Night, The Missouri History Museum, St. Louis Route 66: Main Street Through St. Louis Exhibit, Missouri History Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs until July 16, 2017 The Women of 1916 Exhibition, Historic Hawken House Museum, St. Louis, 11:30 a.m. to 3:00 p.m., Runs until Nov. 10, 2016 Self-Taught Genius: Treasures f ro m t h e A m e r i c a n F o l k A r t Museum, Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.

2017 New Media Series: Dara Birnbaum, Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Until The Flood: Repertory

March 5, 2017 Conficts of Interest: Art and War in Modern Japan, Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs until January 8,

Eden Village is Creating a Hometown Atmosphere Inside. TO SCHEDULE A TOUR PLEASE CALL: For Assisted Living: 618-205-4624 For Independent Living: 618-205-4637

Since 1998

Call Now For Your Appointment (618) 288-7408 Specializing in Providing the Best Individualized Care for You.

Maryville Office

Dr. Markel Owens Dr. Christina Midkiff

O’Fallon Office

734 Cambridge Blvd., Suite 200 O’Fallon, IL 62269

www.christinamidkiff.com

Sheet

VINYL

79¢ sq. ft.

1.88 sq. ft. (grainiac)

Don’t let money get in the way of holiday spending Get up to %*

6 or @ 2400 12%* for 12 mos.

$

Saturday, Oct. 29

2016 IPHF Hall of Fame Exhibition, Internation Photography Hall of Fame and Museum, St. Louis, 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs until February 4, 2017 Love Jones- The Musical, Fabulous Fox Theater, St. Louis, 3:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. Beauty and the Beast, Touhill Performing Arts Center, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. The Ugly Duckling, Coca, St. Louis, 1:00 p.m. to 2:00 p.m. Textiles: Politics and Patriotism, Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Runs until

Dr. Christina Midkiff, Obstetrics & Gynecology

2023 Vadalabene Drive, Suite 200 Maryville, IL 62062

200 South Station Rd., Glen Carbon, IL www.edenvillage.org

$

Louis, 7:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. Outside In: Paint for Peace Exhibition, Coca, St. Louis, 11:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m., Runs until Oct. 30, 2016

• Preventative Care • Evaluation & Treatment of all Women’s Health Issues • Medical and Surgical Management • Obstetrical Care

Eden Village

LVT/ LAMINATE

Theater of St. Louis, Loretto-Hilton Center, St. Louis, 8:00 p.m.to 11:00 p.m., Runs until Nov. 6, 2017 Follies: The Repertory Theater of St. Louis, Loretto-Hilton Center, St.

24 Months No Interest *Select Styles Exp. 10-31-16

Floor Design Center & Outlet Mark Vallow

HOLIDAY SKIP-A-PAY

Skip either November or December Loan Payments! Members can skip either their November or December loan payments by filling out the request form and paying the processing fee. *Based on Credit Worthiness & Ability to Repay. Rates based on credit score.

Seth Renken

Altonized Community 618-466-3884

HOURS: Mon-Wed-Fri 9am-7:30pm Tue & Thurs 9am-5:30pm; • Sat 9am-4pm

Federal Credit Union

1009 Plummer Drive • Edwardsville • www.vallowfloor.com • 618-656-7788

www.altonizedfcu.org

800-421-4759 4435 N. Alby • Alton

REEL IN RELIABILITY. • • • • •

All work done by our in-house team No subcontractors All installers licensed, bonded & insured Financing Available RATED #1 METRO EAST HVAC CONTRACTOR by the Suburban Journals

10off

Expires 11/30/16

$

A Clean & Check

Restrictions apply. Cannot be combined with any other offer. Call for details. MMF16

49

$

Expires 11/30/16

Service Call Restrictions apply. Cannot be combined with any other offer. Call for details. MMF16

345-7498

201 W. Main Street, Collinsville, IL

www.VivianoAir.com

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

16

On the Edge of the Weekend

October 27, 2016

SHERPA PULLOVERS AVAILABLE NOW AT 124 S Buchanan St •Edwardsville, IL • 618-655-0084


Now more than ever, you need a professional by your side! We’re here for you‌just give us a call.

Larry Cooper 971-9036

Laura Goggin 977-9629 Karen Schoenthal 830-5370

Tami Dittamore 531-4652

Randy & Kathy Malawy 977-2803 / 334-4255

Louie McCoy 971-7500

Mary Masterson 623-9149

Maureen Clark 616-3335

Michelle Heinlein 781-2322

Roger Reeves 531-1081

Rozanne & Bill Hunter

781-4031 / 830-9798

Sandi Lewis 304-4800

Scott Heinlein 558-1298

Sheena Valladares 530-4489

Toni Tutka 971-6716

Traci Fietsam 910-8144

Zak Dittamore 558-3449

Andrew Wilde 304-4366

Ranae Harris 973-0773

Alice Reinacher 304-6371

Alicia Griffith 444-5548

Angie Blasingim 530-3180

Bob & Jo Woodward 604-1984 / 604-1985

Jen & Jean Team 779-9205 / 541-1010

Brandi Kane-Jakel 979-2100

Chris Miller 580-6133 Judine Lux 531-0488

Christa Hohman 978-6608

Diane Wagner 779-4888

Don Whitehead 954-8000

Donna Fritsch-Klein 779-6661

Ed Bigham 781-1486

Jamie Nishwitz 314-313-1578

Jan Moore 779-4518

Jason Hale 799-6435

Jeanine Connor 781-1643

Jill Cummings 978-5953

Jim Reppell 791-7663

Julie Fleck 972-7975

Karen Currier 616-6891

Karen Menendez 781-0546

Kathy Cox 792-4951

Kevin Huelsmann 581-3211

Join our Winning Team!

4 C O N V E N I E N T L O C AT I O N S ! 11 3 + C A R I N G A G E N T S TO A S S I S T ! - C o l l i n s v i l l e 3 4 5 - 2 111 - Glen Carbon 288-7100 - E d w a r d s v i l l e 6 5 6 - 2 111 - H i g h l a n d 6 5 4 - 2 111 Tammy Anderson-Owens, Managing Broker/Owner RE/MAX Alliance 1099M Beltline Rd., Collinsville, IL 62234

October 27, 2016

On the Edge of the Weekend

17


Travel Missouri Invitational Fish and Golf Championship scheduled For The Edge

D

ion Hibdon feels comfortable with a fishing rod in his hands. But a golf club? Well, that's a different story.

When Hibdon, a legendary pro bass fisherman, entered the Missouri Invitational Fish and Golf Championship pro-am tournament last fall, he wasn't sure what to expect when it came time to tee off at the Old Kinderhook course on Lake of the Ozarks. "I had never golfed before," said Hibdon, one of few pro fishermen to win championship tournaments on both the BASS and FLW circuits, "so I wasn't sure where my ball was going to go. "But I surprised myself. I mean, I don't think I'm ready for the (golf) tour, but I didn't embarrass myself." The fishing Hibdon boys - Dion, his sons Payden and Lawson, and possibly even his famous dad, Guido - will be back November 16-18 for the unique tournament at Lake of the Ozarks that attracted national attention in its inaugural year. Other nationally known professional fishermen such as Casey Scanlon, Stacey King, Kevin Short, Mike McClelland, Jeremy Lawyer and James Watson will be paired with amateurs to chase bass and birdies. Here's how the event, based at the Old Kinderhook Golf Course and Resort, will work. The event will get underway with a banquet and auction Nov. 15, in which amateurs will bid for the pro fisherman they want to team with. The fishing will begin Nov. 16 with a full day on Lake of the Ozarks. On Nov. 17, fishermen and their amateur partners will be joined by a local golf pro and they will play 18 holes of scramble-type golf. The teams will receive the equivalent of 2 pounds of bass for an eagle, 1 pound for a birdie and

one-half pound for a par. The tournament will conclude Nov. 18 with a full day of fishing. Weigh-ins will start at 3 p.m., with the awards ceremony to follow. This event isn't all fun and games. The winning team will take home $15,000. ON WATER AND LAND That format is fitting at Lake of the Ozarks, according to Bob Renken, one of the founders of the tournament. "We wanted to come up with something to showcase two of Lake of the Ozarks's major draws - fishing and golf," said Renken,

who is executive director of Old Kinderhook. "This is the perfect way. "Some of these fishermen get out and golf quite a bit, but others tried it for the first time last year. Everyone seemed to have a lot of fun with it." Mark Wiese Jr., of High Ridge, Mo., certainly did. He and his amateur partner, Jared Williams of O'Fallon, Mo., won the first Missouri Invitational, performing well on water and land. "I and a few of the other fishermen who golf had been pushing for something like this,"

said Wiese, a top regional bass fisherman and a veteran golfer. "It was a great time. When you can fish and golf in the same tournament, that's ideal for me." The tournament combines two of Renken's passions. He is an accomplished tournament bass fisherman at Lake of the Ozarks, and he also is an avid golfer and oversees one of the most highly acclaimed public courses in Missouri. The event also showcases the Old Kinderhook complex, which includes the award-winning golf course, a luxury lodge, fine dining, a spa, an ice-skating rink and even a boat ramp for fishermen. Bob Bueltmann, who runs the www.BassingBob.com website, is co-founder of the Missouri Invitational and he too is excited about the reception the tournament has received. "This year, we moved the entry fee to $1,000," Bueltmann said. "Two weeks after we opened the entry period, we were sold out." SPECTATORS WELCOME The public can be a part of the event by following their favorite fishermen on water and land. The fishermen will launch at 8 a.m. Nov. 16 and 18 at the Old Kinderhook ramp. Weigh-ins will

begin at 3 p.m. each day at the Old Kinderhook stage by the iceskating rink. Golf will start at 11 a.m. Nov. 17 at the Old Kinderhook course, and Renken encourages galleries to follow their favorite teams while they are on the course. There will be no charge to spectators. The public is welcome to join in the festivities of the opening night, November 16, from 6 to 9 p.m. for a sit-down dinner, rub elbows and talk with the pros and enjoy the auction. Cost per person is $40. Buy your tickets at http://store.bassingbob. com/product/tournaments/ missouri-invitational-fishinggolfchampionship-at-old-kinderhookadditional-dinner-ticket-forwednesday/. Seating is limited. Old Kinderhook is located at 20 Eagle Drive outside of Camdenton, Mo. For more information on the Missouri Invitational Fish and Golf Championship, visit www. OldKinderhook.com or www. BassingBob.com. For more information on the "Best Recreational Lake in the Nation" - Central Missouri's Lake of the Ozarks - visit the Convention and Visitor Bureau's award-winning website at www. FunLake.com.

Above, James Dill (left) and his amateur partner, Dana Zander, fished in last year's Missouri Invitational Fish and Golf Pro-Am tournament. At left, Casey Scanlon was one of the pro fishermen who turned into a golfer during last year's Missouri Invitational Golf and Fish Pro-Am at Lake of the Ozarks. Photos courtesy of the Beenders-Walker Group.

18

On the Edge of the Weekend

October 27, 2016


Travel Mickey and Minnie to help ring in the holidays For The Edge The 25th Annual BMO Harris Bank Magnificent Mile Lights Festival rings in the 2016 holiday season with two days of free, family-friendly activities. The celebration culminates in an evening tree-lighting parade along North Michigan Avenue, which has become a beloved tradition in Chicago and across the nation via a one-hour television broadcast. The parade features Disney characters Mickey Mouse, Minnie Mouse and their friends from Walt Disney World. This year, for the first time, guests can be prepared to enjoy two days of family-friendly activities to kick off the holiday season the weekend before Thanksgiving. The action begins at Lights Festival Lane on Friday afternoon and continues throughout the day on Saturday. Crowd favorites Connie’s Pizza, Garrett Popcorn, Eli’s the Cheesecake Company and more will return this year, along with Santa Claus himself in a brand-new chalet. Beginning at 5:30 p.m. CST on Saturday evening, grand marshals Mickey Mouse and Minnie Mouse from Walt Disney World®, will lead a magical tree-lighting procession as they illuminate more than one million lights along The Magnificent Mile. The procession features spectacular floats, helium-filled balloons, marching bands and top musical performers. Look out for lively appearances made by Hubert the Lion, Benny the Bull and other well-known Chicago mascots from BMO Harris Bank. The Lights Festival parade is broadcast live on ABC7 Chicago and aired in more than 90% of the nation during the holiday season, with repeat airings in multiple markets. The days’ activities are free and open to the public. For a complete schedule of events and special

For The Edge

Mickey Mouse, Minnie Mouse and Santa Claus will be among those welcoming the holidays along Chicago's Magnificent Mile, beginning Nov. 18. holiday offers from area businesses, visit TheMagnificentMile.com. Lights Festival Lane: Pioneer Court, 401 N. Michigan Avenue L i g h t i n g P ro c e s s i o n : N o r t h Michigan Avenue from Oak Street to Wacker Drive Fireworks Display: North Michigan Avenue and the Chicago River

Friday, November 18 4:00 – 8:00 pm Lights Festival Lane (401 N. Michigan Avenue) opens early this year with more than a dozen family-friendly activities from Chicago favorites and popular brands—plus live music and a visit with Santa Claus! Saturday, November 19

11:00 am – 4:00 pm The fun continues at Lights Festival Lane (401 N. Michigan Avenue). 5:30 pm The BMO Harris Bank Magnificent Mile Lights Festival lighting procession steps off from Oak Street and Michigan Avenue. 6:00 pm Live broadcast of the Lights Festival parade begins on ABC7 Chicago. 6:55 pm Lights Festival draws to a grand conclusion with a spectacular fireworks display over the Chicago River at Michigan Avenue and Wacker Drive. Throughout the holidays: Special holiday and event offers continue throughout The Magnificent Mile district. About BMO Harris Bank BMO Harris Bank provides a broad range of personal banking products and solutions close to 600 branches and approximately 1,300 ATMs in Illinois, Wisconsin, Indiana, Kansas, Missouri, Minnesota, Arizona and Florida. BMO Harris Bank’s commercial banking team provides a combination of sector expertise, local knowledge and mid-market focus throughout the U.S. For more information about BMO Harris Bank, go to the company fact sheet. Banking products and services are provided by BMO Harris Bank N.A. and are subject to bank and credit approval. BMO Harris Bank® is a trade name used by BMO Harris Bank N.A. Member FDIC. BMO Harris Bank is part of BMO Financial Group, a North American financial organization

October 27, 2016

with approximately 1,500 branches, and CDN $692 billion in assets (as of July 31, 2016). About The Magnificent Mile The Magnificent Mile is Chicago’s premier destination, offering more than 460 stores, 275 restaurants, 60 hotels, unique museums and entertaining attractions to more than 20 million visitors each year. As one of the Great Avenues of the World, The Magnificent Mile district features extraordinary shopping, criticallyacclaimed dining, world-class hotel accommodations, seasonal event campaigns and exceptional urban landscaping with more than 52 separate parkway gardens that reflect the changing seasons and complement the unique architectural beauty of Chicago. For more information, visit TheMagnificentMile.com or follow The Magnificent Mile on Facebook, Tw i t t e r, I n s t a g r a m , Yo u Tu b e , Pinterest and foursquare. About The Magnificent Mile Association Organizer of BMO Harris Bank Magnificent Mile Lights Festival, The Magnificent Mile Association is a private, nonprofit membership organization with a mission of preserving, promoting, and enhancing one of Chicago’s most unique neighborhoods. The organization represents more than 750 members including retailers; hotels; restaurants; popular attractions; and commercial, institutional and residential properties. For more information, visit www. themagnificentmileassociation. com.

On the Edge of the Weekend

19


See ALL Area Homes @ WOOFFREALTORS.COM

Alton/Godfrey 463-9797 Bethalto/Wood River 377-8206 Belleville/Fairview Heights 622-9797 Edwardsville/Troy 692-1030

OPEN HOUSE, OCT. 30, 1-3 pm

Glen Carbon Beautiful 4BR w/Pool! $409,900 #16057970 Brian Stanley 779-6869

Godfrey Magnificient 4BR Home! $349,000 #44112037 Amy Wooff Flach 531-2916

Moro Beautiful 6BR on 3 Acres! $349,900 #4407398 Kelle Brown 410-4127

New Douglas Log Home on 6 Acres! $327,500 #16057793 Tim Wooff 781-1030

Glen Carbon Exquisite Atrium Ranch! $319,900 #4412491 Tim Wooff 781-1030

Staunton Like New 3BR! $209,900 #16068296 Shawna Aughenbaugh 772-2850

Shiloh Nice 3BR w/New Appliances $194,900 #16072423 Tim Wooff 781-1030

Grafton Brick 3BR on Over 1 Acre! $179,900 #16067023 Jeff Gossett 779-5097

Bethalto 4BR w/Nice Yard! $169,900 #16046444 Janet Francis 741-8277

Elsah Well Cared For 4BR!! $163,500 #4411959 Paul Eastwood 520-9786

Edwardsville Exquisite 2BR Duplex! $149,900 #16060439 Tim Wooff 781-1030

O’Fallon Well Maintained 3BR! $144,900 #16037531 Mike Lehan 581-4022

Belleville Charming 4BR w/Large Lot! $137,500 #16026915 Tim Wooff 781-1030

Troy Lovely 3BR w/Large Yard! $134,900 #16021622 Cory Smith 920-6462

Maryville Lovely 3BR on Large Lot! $129,900 #16046040 Brian Stanley 779-6869

Alton Completely Remodeled 3BR! $129,900 #16069792 Brian Stanley 779-6869

East Alton Lovely 3BR w/New Roof! $124,900 #16053462 Shawna Aughenbaugh 772-2850

Highland Adorable 2BR w/HW Floors! $97,000 #16051435 Cory Smith 920-6462

Bunker HIll Nice 3BR w/Large Lot! $87,500 #16027425 Janet Francis 741-8277

Alton Large 4BR w/New Windows! $85,000 #16071815 Jim Doerr 641-1007

Godfrey 3BR w/ New Flooring! $84,900 #16063256 Jeff Gossett 779-5097

Bethalto Darling 3BR w/HW Floors! $84,900 #16062881 Jyn Farris 531-3870

Roxana 2BR w/Large Yard! $82,000 #16023510 Tim Wooff 781-1030

Alton Well Kept 3BR Home! $79,900 #4404100 Jim Doerr 641-1007

Roxana Darling 3BR Home! $72,900 #16060445 Shawna Aughenbaugh 772-2850

The Right Sign Makes The Difference! 20

On the Edge of the Weekend

October 27, 2016


The Edge

Section III

WE ARE PROFESSIONAL GRADE

THIS OCTOBER, NO TRICKS ONLY TREATS!

10,000 TOTAL SAVINGS

$

2016 GMC SIERRA 2500 HD CREW CAB DENALI 4WD DIESEL MSRP $68,090

SALE PRICE $58,090

T6130

EVERYONE QUALIFIES

8,424 TOTAL SAVINGS

$

2016 YUKON XL SLT 4WD MSRP $70,200

SALE PRICE $61,776 EVERYONE QUALIFIES

T6046

4,220 TOTAL SAVINGS

$

2016 GMC TERRAIN MSRP $28,720

SALE PRICE $24,500

EVERYONE QUALIFIES

T6042

$5,000 TOTAL SAVINGS

2016 BUICK ENCORE LEATHER MSRP $27,560

SALE PRICE $22,775 EVERYONE QUALIFIES

B6115

TREATS UNDER $10,000 2005 Buck LaCrosse Only 52xxx miles .............................. $9,840 2008 Chevolet Impala ............................................... $8,995 2006 Chrysler 300 85xxx miles ...................................... $8,995 2009 Ford Escape ....................................................$8,640 2009 Pontiac G5 GT ................................................. $9,730 2010 Toyota Corolla...................................................$8995

2009 Lincoln MKZ .....................................................$9,995 2008 Mercury Milan................................................. $7,840 2009 Volkswagen Jetta ............................................. $8,995 2009 Pontiac G8 ...................................................... $8,995 2010 Ford Escape ..................................................... $5,920 2007 Ford Edge ........................................................$9,995

OVER 150 QUALITY PRE-OWNED VEHICLES IN STOCK 888-378-5955 Route 3 /1620 Homer Adams Parkway • Alton

October 27, 2016

On the Edge of the Weekend

21


Music The Fox to welcome Celtic Woman For The Edge

M

ulti-platinum international music sensation, Celtic Woman, are returning with a brand new live show, ‘Voices Of Angels’ for an extensive North American tour with a stop at the Fabulous Fox Theatre in St. Louis on Friday, June 16 at 7:30 p.m. The announcement coincides with details of the release of their spectacular new studio album, also titled Voices Of Angels, which will be released on November 18th, 2016. Celtic Woman will appear at the Fabulous Fox in St. Louis on June 16, 2017, at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are 105, $75, $65, $55, $45 and are available online at metrotix.com, by calling 314-5341111, or in person at the Fabulous Fox Box Office. Celtic Woman has a remarkable twelve-year legacy of introducing the most talented singers and musicians from Ireland onto the world stage. Voices Of Angels showcases the angelic voices of Susan McFadden, Mairéad Carlin, Éabha McMahon and introduces the breathtaking new Celtic violinist Tara McNeill. The Voices Of Angels World Tour kicks off on March 2, 2017 in Lakeland, Florida, and will crisscross its way across North America with performances lined up in over 90 cities through the end of June and will feature audience favorites including music from the new album. For a limited time, every ticket purchased for the Spring 2017 tour includes a digital download of the Voices Of Angels album. The Voices Of Angels album contains some of the most

popular songs from the Celtic Woman repertoire along with several previously unrecorded tracks, all with stunning new orchestral arrangements recorded with the 72-piece Orchestra of Ireland. Following its debut on PBS

in 2005, the group has achieved massive success encompassing ten chart-topping albums, eight DVDs and nine public television specials leading to sales of over ten million albums, with platinum success in nine countries. Each of its ten CDs –

including 2016’s Destiny - has debuted at #1 on Billboard's World Albums chart. The group has been named Billboard Magazine’s #1 World Albums Artist six times. As a touring powerhouse, the group has performed for

over four million fans across 23 countries and six continents, with an especially devoted following in America. The show is renowned for its high quality entertainment, exceptional musical performances and stunning visual productions, enthralling audiences of all ages. For complete tour schedule and ticket information, visit www.celticwoman.com/tourdates

Pictured are two views of Celtic Woman, which will be performing at the Fox Theatre on June 16, 2017. Photos courtesy of Celtic Woman.

22

On the Edge of the Weekend

October 27, 2016


Music calendar

TRUNK or TREAT!

WHAT PERFECT FEELS LIKE.™ Lennox® makes the most energy-efficient system you can find. Which means the appliance you use the most will also save you the most. Learn more at lennox.com.

A Family-Friendly Event

Thursday, Oct. 27

Lemaitre, The Firebird, St. Louis, Doors 7:00 p.m. Joyce Manor, w/The Hotelier, Crying, Blueberry Hill, St. Louis, Doors 7:00 p.m. He Is Legend, Pop's, Sauget, Doors 6:00 p.m. The 442's, Jazz at the Bistro, St. Louis, 7:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m.

— RECEIVE UP TO —

1,600

$

Saturday, Oct. 29

N e e d To B r e a t h : To u r D e Compadres, Chaifetz Arena, St. Louis, 7:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. Umphrey's McGee, w/(TBA), The Pageant, St. Louis, Doors 7:00 p.m. Money For Guns CD Release Halloween Costume Party, w/ Accelerando, Soma, Blueberry Hill, St. Louis, Doors 7:00 p.m. Attila, Pop's, Sauget, Doors 6:00 p.m. Looprat, Armani, Less, Spliff The Hippie, Jai Imani, Cicero's, University City, 9:00 p.m. Andrew W.K. The Power Of Partying, The Ready Room, St. Louis, Doors 7:30 p.m. Sharel Cassity, Ingred Jensen, Ben Wolfe, Jazz at the Bistro, St. Louis, 7:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m.

Sunday, Oct. 30

Shellac, Shannon Wright, The Firebird, St. Louis, Doors 7:00 p.m. Umphrey's McGee, w/(TBA), The Pageant, St. Louis, Doors 7:00 p.m. We C a m e A s R o m a n s , CounterParts, Fire From The Gods, Reconcera,. A Promise To Burn, In My Silence, We Are Descendants, The Ready Room, St. Louis, Doors 5:30 p.m.

Monday, Oct. 31

William Fitzsimmons, Laura Burhen (of The Mynabirds), The Firebird, St. Louis, Doors 7:00 p.m. Troye Sivan, w/Astrid S, The Pageant, St. Louis, Doors 6:30 p.m. Twiztid's Fright Fest 2016, Pop's, Sauget, St. Louis, Doors 6:00 p.m. T h e S t o r y S o F a r, w / M a t Kerekes, Big Jesus, Lobby Boxer, The Ready Room, St. Louis, Doors 6:00 p.m.

Tuesday, Nov. 1

S e a s o n s A f t e r, T h e B e a r d Productions, The Firebird, St. Louis, Doors 7:00 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 2 Like Pacific, Broadside, Rarity, Boston Manor, Old State, The Firebird, St. Louis, Doors 6:00 p.m. Seven Lions, w/(TBA), The Pageant, St. Louis, Doors 7:00 p.m. Mayday!, Pop's, Sauget, Doors 7:00 p.m. Bowling For Soup, The Former Me, The Ready Room, St. Louis, Doors 7:00 p.m. Jimmy Greene Quartet, Jazz at the Bistro, St. Louis, 7:30 p.m.

600 WATER ST. • EDWARDSVILLE, IL

IN LENNOX® REBATES*

COME IN COSTUME!

WITH 0% FINANCING FOR 60 MONTHS — RECEIVE UP TO —

1,200

Friday, Oct. 28

Roots Of A Rebellion , The Driftaways, The Firebird, St. Louis, Doors 7:00 p.m. All Get Out, w/Gates, Young And Heartless, Blueberry Hill, St. Louis, Doors 7:00 p.m. T h e Wo n d e r Ye a r s , w / R e a l Friends, Kuckle Puck, Moose Blood, Pop's, Sauget, Doors 6:00 p.m. Blank And Neuro-Logic, Cicero's, University City, Doors 8:00 p.m. Old Salt Union, w/Head For The Hills, The Ready Room, St. Louis, Doors 6:30 p.m. Sharel Cassity, Ingred Jensen, Ben Wolfe, Jazz at the Bistro, St. Louis, 7:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29th 7:00 pm - 8:00 PM at TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH

$

TREATS & GOODIE BAGS!

HAVE PHOTOS TAKEN!

IN ACTONENERGY INCENTIVES*

— RECEIVE UP TO —

500

$

IN FEDERAL TAX CREDIT*

TRICK or

metroeastcomfort.com 618-887-6522

TREAT

Hamel, IL

Energy & Comfort Consultants Offer expires 11/25/2016. *On a qualifying system purchase. Lennox system rebate offers range from $275 to $1,500. Some restrictions apply. One offer available per qualifying purchase. See your local Lennox Dealer or www.lennox.com for details. © 2016 Lennox Industries Inc. Lennox Dealers include independently owned and operated businesses.

NiGHT ?

? for Owen Gunter

Thursday, October 27th 6:00 pm until 7:30 pm Villa Rose Senior Living Community

invites all children ages 12 and under to come dressed in their Halloween costume and receive treats from our residents. This event is FREE, but all children must be accompanied by an adult.

Saturday, November 5th Rox-Arena in Roxana (2 Park Drive, Roxana IL)

Doors open at 6pm

? ?

TRIVIA begins at 7pm Teams are $10 per person, max. of 10 per team Can bring your own snacks and drinks. Alcohol is prohibited.

?

-Silent Auction -Heads or Tails -Cornhole Box Raffle -Concessions Available -50/50 To RSVP your team (preferred), call Kim at 618-971-9911 Find more information at facebook.com/Owensbattle - CASH AND CHECKS ONLY PLEASE -

?

75 YEARS

307 South Moreland Road, Bethalto, IL • 377-3239 Villa Rose would like to thank the following businesses for donating candy:

Card

TheBank of Edwardsville, BJC Home Care Services, Creative Flooring by Design, First National Bank of Bethalto, Helmkamp Auto Services, Schnucks of Bethalto, and Shop n’ Save Pharmacy

Here’s My

Southern Illinois Family Medicine Dr. Jim Hong, MD - Family Physician - 11 Years in Practice

www.fischerlumber.com BEAUTIFULLY DESIGNED. IMPECCABLY CRAFTED. AND PERHAPS MOST SURPRISING THE BEST TOTAL VALUE.

Accepts All Commercial Insurance - Accepts Patients 6 Years and Older Open: Monday-Thursday 8:00 am - 6:30 pm Friday 8:00 am - 5:00 pm

104 Magnolia Drive Suite A Glen Carbon, IL Marvin Windows and Doors brings its Built around you® philosophy to life with every customer and every product it creates. A premier manufacturer of made-toorder windows and doors, Marvin offers unparalleled value with craftsman-quality construction, energy-efficient technology and the industry’s most extensive selection of shapes, styles, sizes and options.

210 N. Shamrock, East Alton, IL • 618-259-7434

(618) 288-9466

Keil’s Clock Shop 109 East Main Street Belleville, IL 62220

Grandfather Clock House Calls

(618) 257-0037

60+ Years Experience

www.keilsclocks.com Grandfather, Wall, Mantle, Cuckoo and Antique Clocks CLOCK SALES & SERVICE REPAIRS - Free estimates on clocks brought to shop Hrs: Mon-Fri 9 am - 5 pm • Sat: 9 am - 4 pm Largest Showroom in the Area!

80612980

Please recycle this newspaper

October 27, 2016

On the Edge of the Weekend

23


A ”Wicked”

GRAND OPENING At Our New Location

424 E. Broadway • Alton FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28

Join us for Dinner Downstairs in the Restaurant 4-10:30 Live Music by “The Harmans” & Drinks upstairs in the Banquet Hall 7-9

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29

Join us for Lunch & Dinner 11-10:30 downstairs in the Restaurant Live Music by “The Wherehouse Project Band” & Drinks upstairs in the Banquet Hall 8-12 Costume Contest upstairs on the 29th @ 9:30 on the Stage

100th ANNUAL HALLOWEEN PARADE

Come celebrate Halloween with us! The parade passes through the front of our new location. We will be serving food and drinks inside & out!!!

Same Great Food... Same Great Service... Better Atmosphere! • • • •

Book YOUR Holiday Parties Full Service Restaurant NOW! Sports Bar, Lounge Bar, Dining Room Banquet Room with seating over 400 Full Service Catering with Bar & Beverage Service

424 E. Broadway • Alton • 433-8288 www.bluffcitygrillalton.com

24

On the Edge of the Weekend

October 27, 2016


Tuning in Yes to perform at The Fox

Long-time Yes fans, rejoice! Jon Anderson, Trevor Rabin and Rick Wakeman are proud to announce that after a hiatus of 25 years, they are to reform the definitive Yes line-up as – Anderson, Rabin and Wakeman (ARW). Yes will perform live at the F a b u l o u s F o x We d n e s d a y, November 9 at 8 p.m. Tickets are $100, $75, $65, $55, $45 and are available online at metrotix. com, by calling 314-534-1111, or in person at the Fabulous Fox Box Office. Since they last played together in 1990 on the highly successful Yes ‘Union Tour’, there have been various hybrid versions of the band. However, none featured the iconic voice of Jon Anderson, the outstanding guitar talent of Trevor Rabin, and the keyboard wizardry of Rick Wakeman. The aim of the band will be to restore the standard of excellence in performance that they established with their 1990 shows - which saw Yes members past and present come together for the first (and only) time of the legendary band's career. "To be able to sing and perform with Rick and Trevor at this time in my life is a treasure beyond words," explains Jon. "I'm so excited to create new music and revisit some of the classic work we created many years ago, it's going to be a musical adventure on so many new levels." "Trevor and I have wanted to play Yes music together since the Union Tour," adds Rick. "And as for so many of us, there is no Yes music without Jon. The 'Holy Trinity of Yes' is for me, very much a dream come true." T h e m o s t s u c c e s s f u l p ro g rock group of all time, Yes was co-founded by Jon Anderson and the late Chris Squire in 1968 and went on to sell millions of units with releases such as Fragile, Close to The Edge, Tales From Topographic Oceans, Going For The One and 90125, as well as embarking on several record-breaking world tours. While Rick is associated with the '70s "prog era" of the band (which saw Yes become a worldwide stadium headliner) and Trevor associated with the '80s "pop era" of the band (which furthered the band's popularity - including the band's biggest chart success), Jon is the bridge between both factions (as he was a member of both eras). Not content to rest on past glory, Jon, Trevor and Rick are working on new songs, which are currently being recorded. The band will make its live debut in North America in October/ November, followed by the Rest of

the World in 2017.

Rain, a tribute to the Beatles, coming to the Fox

Opening on Sunday, March 5, 2017 for a limited engagement at The Fabulous Fox Theatre will be Rain, a tribute to the Beattles. Tickets are $100, $65, $55, $45, $35 and are available online at metrotix. com, by calling 314-534-1111, or in person at the Fabulous Fox Box Office. Experience an all new show when the internationally-acclaimed Beatles concert, Rain: A Tribute to the Beatles, returns to the Fabulous Fox Theatre Sunday, March 5 at 7:00 p.m. As “the next best thing to seeing The Beatles!” (Associated Press), Rain performs the full range of The Beatles' discography live onstage, including the most complex and challenging songs that The Beatles themselves recorded in the studio but never performed for an audience. In addition to the updated sets that include brand new LED, HighDefinition screens and multimedia content, new songs have also been included with the launch of the 2017 Tour. Together longer than The Beatles, Rain has mastered every song, gesture and nuance of the legendary foursome, delivering a totally live, note-for-note performance that’s as infectious as it is transporting. From the early hits to later classics (“I Want To Hold Your Hand,” “Hard Day’s Night,” “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band,” “Let It Be,” “Come Together,” “Hey Jude” and more), this adoring tribute will take you back to a time when all you needed was love, and a little help from your friend. Like The Beatles, the onstage members of Rain are not only supreme musicians, but electrifying performers in their own right.

St. Louis’ otherwise exceptional classical programming. “ N o o t h e r v e n u e o r g ro u p regularly hosts high profile solo recitals,” said Todd Decker, chair of music. “An entire repertory of classical music is simply missing from the live music scene. We want our students, especially those studying piano, to have access to recitals at the same high level they do for symphonic, chamber and choral music. “The Great Artist Series will offer something unique to the university and to the larger community,” Decker added. “Our goal is for live classical music to be an integral — indeed essential — part of student life, as well as a lifelong habit that continues beyond the college years.” Schedule The Washington University Great Artist Series will begin Feb. 9, 2017, with Jonathan Biss performing music of Robert Schumann, György Kurtág, Frédéric Chopin and Johannes Brahms. The series will continue April 23 with Yefim Bronfman performing music of Béla Bartók, Schumann,

Claude Debussy and Igor Stravinsky. Nathan Gunn will conclude the series May 5 with music of Schumann, Samuel Barber, Franz Schubert, Hugo Wolf and Charles Ives. Jonathan Biss Known for virtuosic energy and control, Biss has drawn worldwide praise for the “balance between clarity and wildness” (Kansas City Star) that he brings to both classic and contemporary works. His numerous albums include several recordings of Schumann as well as two short Kurtág pieces, included on “Piano Sonatas” (2009), which NPR Music named one of its best albums of the year. A prolific writer, Biss is author of the best-selling ebook “Beethoven’s Shadow” (2011) and “A Pianist Under the Influence” (2012), a tribute to Schumann. His online course “Exploring Beethoven’s Piano Sonatas” has reached more than 100,000 people in more than 160 countries. Yefim Bronfman One of today’s most “incisive and exhilarating” (Chicago Tribune)

pianists, Bronfman is renowned for his commanding technique and exceptional lyrical gifts. He has appeared with leading orchestras and given solo recitals in major halls around the world, including his acclaimed debuts at Carnegie Hall in 1989 and Avery Fisher Hall in 1993. Widely praised for his solo, chamber and orchestral recordings, Bronfman is a three-time Grammy nominee and winner, in 1997, for his recording of the three Bartók Piano Concerti, with Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Los Angeles Philharmonic. Other honors include the 1991 Avery Fisher Prize, one of the highest honors given to an American instrumentalist. Nathan Gunn Following his breakout performance in Opera Theatre of St. Louis’ 2002 production of Ambroise Thomas’ “Hamlet,” Gunn has emerged as a much sought-after baritone, praised by Opera News for his impressive arsenal of “robust legato climaxes, snarly macho lower notes and beautiful, floating upper tones.” A frequent recitalist and

Wash U. to host Great Artists Series

Yefim Bronfman is “a fearless pianist for whom no score is too demanding” (Wall Street Journal). Nathan Gunn is a baritone “with unmistakable star power” (Opera News). Pianist Jonathan Biss “radiates a confidence solidly based on prodigious technique” (Washington Post). Next year, Washington University in St. Louis will welcome three of the brightest stars in the classical firmament to the 560 Music Center as part of its new Great Artist Series. Presented by the Department of Music in Arts & Sciences, the Great Artist Series aims to fill a gap in

Trunk or Treat Trunk - or - Treat Trunk or - Treat __________________ __________________ First Christian Church First Christian First Christian Church Church _______________ _______________ th Saturday, October 29 is having their annual Trunk-or-Treat! is having their annual Trunk-or-Treat! ________________ ________________ 3 pm - 5 pm October 29th Saturday, October 310 S.Saturday, Main29th Street 3 pmEdwardsville - 5 pm 3 pm - 5 pm is having their annual Trunk or Treat!

Lot! 310 S. Main St 310 S. Church Main StParking JoinEdwardsville us for a Bone-Chilling Spooky Edwardsville themed dinner Church Parking Lot!Church Parking Lot!

_______________ _______________

Join us forspooky adonations bonespooky themed dinner bonethemed -chillingly Join us NO for aCOST, bonedinner bone-chillingly however, will be- accepted COST, will however, donationsand will be go accepted and Unicef! will go to support Unicef! NO COST, however,NO donations be accepted will to support __________________ and will go to support Unicef!

__________________ Lots of fun games with prizes! great prizes! Lots ofLots fun games with great prizes! of ___________ fun games with great ___________

in(Kids Come inCome costume yes. Come in costume (Kids Parents only- if youParents wish!) - only if you wish!) - yes. -costume (Kids YES, Parents only if you wish!) and TrunkorTreat with us! Trunk or and Trunkor--Treat with us! Trunk -or ______________ ______________ and Trunk or TreatRaffle! with us! Raffle! Raffle! Win one of 3 gift Win one of 3 giftcards! cards! Win one of 3 gift cards!

__ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ ______ ______

a teeth-chattering have ahave teeth-chattering goodtime! You'll You’ll have a You'll teeth-chattering

October 27, 2016

On the Edge of the Weekend

25


Classifieds Misc. Merchandise

4’ White Pine Trees: delivered, planted, mulched. $74.50/tree. Buy 10, get 1 free. Other sizes (217)371-8005

Wanted To Buy

Help Wanted General Trucks, Vans, & SUV's

210

TRUCK FOR SALE!!! 2000 Silverado Regular Cab Step Side Pewter Excellent Shape 164,000 Miles $5,400 Call 618-691-9898

Help Wanted General

305

NEW TODAY Edwardsville School District has the following openings: Cafeteria Worker 3-7 hrs/day, $9.83 - $10.25/hr Utility Worker 7 hrs/day, $11.55 - $12.23/hr Evening Custodians 8hrs/day $11.55-$12.23/hr Program Assistants Paraprofessional or Teaching License required 7hrs/day $9.57-$11.81/hr Please go to www.ecusd7.org for application and submit to: Dr. Nancy Spina Personnel, ECUSD7 708 St Louis St. PO Box 250 Edwardsville, IL 62025

305

NEW TODAY Local Illinois wood working manufacturer is looking for an Autocad Design Specialist. This position requires that the candidate be proficient in Auto Cad Software and Excel. Knowledge of MicroVellum and AlphaCam is a plus. Candidates for this position should be able to conceptualize, design and draw components for casework and architectural woodwork for a variety of commercial and high end residential construction projects. This position requires technical skills to develop drawings for presentation, manufacture, and installation of case-goods and architectural woodwork. The ability to communicate with Architects, Project Managers, and Owners is also part of the skill set required. A 4-year degree is preferred however not required. Must have at least 2 years’ experience in AutoCAD design. Please send resumes to position102016@gmail.com

NEW TODAY PT front desk/reception position available at SSM Physical Therapy in Edwardsville for 10-20 hours/week. Customer service and computer skills required, medical background a plus. Please send resumes Attn. Jodie Stewart c/o SSM Physical Therapy 1 Professional Dr. Suite 10 Alton, IL 62002

CAREER CHOICES •••••••••••••••••

Help Wanted General

305

Tax Preparer Both PT and FT seasonal positions available. The candidates should have 1040 preparation experience; 1065 and 1120 experience is a plus, but not required. CPA or EA would be beneficial, but not required. If interested, send resume and salary requirements to: FCB Collinsville Bank Attn: Human Resources 800 Beltline Rd. Collinsville, IL 62234 HR@fcbbanks.com Fax: (618) 343-2239

Furniture

410

NEW TODAY Beautiful Solid Cherry Kohler & Campbell upright piano with matching cherry bench. Perfect condition, African wood keys. $2000.00 Call 618-616-6376 Bed - Queen PillowTop Mattress Set New, still in plastic, $175. (618)772-2710. Can Deliver!

Apts/Duplexes For Rent

426

440

Wanted to buy! Hen of the Woods Mushrooms Call 618-304-6525

Place a Classified Ad Online? - YES, You Can!

Misc. Services 599

NEW TODAY Guitar lessons with a pro. Have performed worldwide. Beginning to intermediate. Have openings Tue/Wed/Thur night 6-7:00. Call Randy at (618)288-6911

Thur.-Fri., Oct. 27--28 8am-4pm Sat. Oct. 29, 8am-1pm (Held in commercial building behind McDonald’s) (2 bedroom-sets, sleigh-bed, four-poster-bed), vanity-dresser, chiffrobe, chest-of-drawers, couch, 2-side-chairs, old-mirrors, rocker, metal-table, cabinet, wood-chairs, (ANTIQUES--settee w/ matching-chairs, tables-cradlebutter churn, highchair, twin-bed, Western Electric antique sewing-machine), old-light fixtures, dishes, set of Mikasa-China, shop-vac, tools, lamps, file-cabinets, books/games/dolls, throws, metal-cabinet, old-chairs, coal-bucket, quilts, yard-tools, beautiful-old-bowls, set of China, yardage-of-polyestermaterial, records, lots of pictures, and much more!

NEW TODAY

2bd 1.5 ba 1 car grg. w/d hkup; Close to SIUE. No Pets. $825/mo Call 618-779-9985

Lrg. 4 bd 2ba 2 car grg house in the county outside Highland. $1250/mo Call 618-971-7639

3Br, 2Ba Duplex, Esic Area, 1 car garage. $950. 618-541-5831 or 618-558-5058.

LUXURY 2 BRs Located at 270 & 111 Gourmet kitchens, 2 bay windows, washer/dryer included WST included. Must See! $695. Call for our move-in specials! (618)931-333.

EDW 1BR, 1B, woodfloors $450/mo. 2BR, DR, LR w/fp $700/mo DEP, REF 618-407-7788

Houses For Rent

ESTATE SALE FOR John J. Lampen Sr. and Douglas Henderson 207 Suppiger Lane Highland, IL

705

3Bd 2 car grg. W/D hkup new carpets. $650/mo and deposit. trash incld. 21565 Arrow Drive Mount Olive Close to lake. Call 618-344-6351

Apts/Duplexes For Rent

Live Better For Less! SMOKE FREE Townhomes. 2br, 1.5ba $720 mo. Great interstate access. Includes washer/dryer, water, sewer and trash service. No pets. 618-931-4700 www.fairway-estates.net

3br TH 1200sq. ft. s8 OK Collinsville, $890/mo. 345-9610. Specials! skyviewtownhouses.com

1099

NEW TODAY HUGE GARAGE SALE 905 CHADERIC COURT EDWARDSVILLE

Edwardsville Intelligencer Classifieds

Fri., Oct 28 & Sat., Oct. 29 7am-Noon

1BD apartment across the street from the court house. inludes water and trash. $550/mo Call 217-851-1398

Household Items, Microware, TV’s, Furniture, Toys, Men/Women’s-Clothing, Rain or Shine

www.cassenssons.com EDWARDSVILLE/GLEN CARBON

NEW TODAY

26

Yard Sales

Edward Small, CPA

Information on sponsoring NIE, please call 656-4700 ext. 10

On the Edge of the Weekend

October 27, 2016

820

2 Cemetary Plots for sale located at Sunset Hills Cemetary, Glen Carbon, IL 62034 Selling both for $4000. 618-823-7820

710

NEW TODAY

Insurance sales. Edwardsville office. Must be honest, dependable, great people skills, goal oriented, comfortble selling, not just servicing. 9-5 M-F. Salary+bonus+401K Send resume with experience and references to 618-656-1106 (fax)

Lots For Sale

Thank You NIE Sponsors

GREAT CAREER OPPORTUNITY available immediately at locally-owned Collision facility. $IGN ON BONUS for well qualified experienced Collision Technician. flat rate pay=great earnings potential benefits pkg Includes Health, Dental, Life, AD&D, Prescription, Vacation, Holidays, Uniform, Employee Purchase Plan. 5 day work-week. Modern Shop. Well maintained equip. Submit Resume with Confidentiality in Person @ Stock Auto Body Inc. Or call Kent (618)973-4982

710

NEW TODAY

442

NEW TODAY

Apts/Duplexes For Rent

NEW TODAY

RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS

GoEdwardsville.com

Estate Sales

710


Classifieds

SERVICE DIRECTORY HANDYMAN

TREE SERVICE

LET ME FIX IT!

DEX’S

HANDYMAN SERVICE • • • • • •

Remodeling Painting Carpentry Drywall Lighting & Ceiling Fans Electric Service Upgrade

Most Home Repairs Insured 20 Years Experience

Call Lee: (618) 581-5154 BOB’S HANDYMAN SERVICE

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

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

Free Estimates www.dexstreeservice.com

978-8697

MASONRY & CONCRETE Madison Co. Masonry & Concrete • ALL BRICK WORK & REPAIR • FOUNDATION WORK • TUCK POINTING • CHIMNEYS • DRIVEWAYS • PATIOS & SIDEWALKS • SEAL ANY BRICK OR CONCRETE • REPAIR WATER DAMAGE (FULLY LICENSED & INSURED FREE ESTIMATES

Serving All Of Madison County

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

Call or Text: 618-979-2006

30 Years Experience

618-410-8245

FREE ESTIMATES

618-410-8245 Licensed & Insured

ELECTRICAL

Hellrung & Sons Quality Electrical

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

No Job Too Small

(618) 407-3093 Free Estimates & Warranty

618-670-9243

75 Ft. Bucket Truck Stump Grinding Trimming • Removal

I NEED WORK BAD! Will Beat Any Other Price by 25% - 50%

618-210-3654 Worden, Hamel all areas North, No Problem, I Live There!

656-7725

GatewayLawn.com

BOB’S

OUTDOOR SERVICES • Spring Clean-Up • Landscape Work • Shrub Trimming & Removal • Drainage & Erosion Problems • Mulching • Power Washing • Deck & Fence Refinishing • Quality Work • Insured

Call Bob

SURFACE STRIPPING

Fall is Here, Keep the Leaves Clear! • Leaf Disposal • Yard Clean-up & Brush Removal Commercial & Residential Insured & Licensed

Call for a FREE estimate!

618-531-0126

Foster & Sons Lawn Service Lawn Cutting/Trimming Tree & Shrub Trimming & Removal Landscape Mulching Residential & Commercial

618-459-3330 618-410-0241 Fully Insured

(618) 345-9131

HOME REMODELING CLIFF’S AFFORDABLE HOME REMODELING 39 Years Experience

Framing, Drywall/Tape/Paint Flooring Kitchen Cabinets/Countertops Siding/Soffit/Facia/Gutters Doors/Windows Powerwashing -Decks/Stairs Fire & Flood Restoration

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

Owner: Todd Edwards

618-781-7162

ALL JOBS WELCOME

ENVIRO-SURFACE STRIP LLC Deck & Fence Stripping House Paint Stripping Revitalize Brick & Masonry Exterior Mold Removal

PAINTING

HUG PAINTING ≈≈≈≈

Interior / Exterior Deck (Powerwashing and Staining) Wallpapering Woodwork (Staining and Varnishing) Refinishing Cabinets

Keith 654-5096 John 654-9978 Cell 618-971-7934

PAINTING

Interior/Exterior

DECKS/FENCES Stain/Paint Powerwashing

• No job too small • Insured • Local • Will beat ALL competitors Written bids

DAN GRAY 656-8806 910-7874

PLUMBING PROFESSOR PLUMBER

CONSTRUCTION & REMODELING

• RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL • PLUMBING, BATHROOM & KITCHEN REMODELS • SEWER/WATER LINE REPLACEMENT & EXCAVATION • WHOLE HOUSE FILTRATION SYSTEM • SERVING METRO EAST COMMUNITIES

618-792-8663

A.O. Smith Certified 24/7 Emergency Service High Quality Work & LOW PRICES

618

www.professorplumberinc.com ILLINOIS LICENSE 058-191883

335 3330

EnviroSurfaceStrip@gmail.com

Call one of these advertisers today!

Insured

Discount for any Reason.

Contact Mike 444-2457

Need something done around the house?

• • • • •

C ommerCial & r esidential Spring Clean-Up Mowing Landscape Installation Irrigation Landscape Lighting

25 + YEARS EXPERIENCE

MOHR’S TREE SERVICE

LAWN & HOME CARE KS Lawn Service

TREE SERVICE

25 Years of Service Experience in Edwardsville

A+

• Lowest Spring Rates • Tree Trimming • Tree Removal • Professional & Personable

LAWN & HOME CARE

TIM’S

618-977-5037

Insured

Call Bob Rose

TREE SERVICE

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

Insured & Bonded 656-6743

HAULING

HAUL ALMOST

To place your ad here call Lisa 656-4700 x 46 October 27, 2016

ANYTHING/ EVERYTHING Remove Unwanted Debris From Basement Garage, Attic; Wherever! VeRy ReAsonABle Retired Deputy Sheriff

692-0182

ALL YOUR REPAIR NEEDS

CAN BE FOUND IN THE INTELLIGENCER’S SERVICE DIRECTORY.

On the Edge of the Weekend

27


STORE CLOSING after 32 Years

Up to 60% OFF Storewide Savings

Everything MUST GO! Store Hours: TUES-FRI 10 am to 5 pm SAT 10 am to 3 pm CLOSED SUNDAY & MONDAY

199 E. H wy. 40 • Troy, IL, 62294 (618) 667-3973 - www.yourjewelbox.com 28

On the Edge of the Weekend

October 27, 2016


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.