Rim Review 011112

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Critic says ‘We Bought a Zoo’ is solid, family friendly drama

FREE JANUARY 11, 2012 16 PAGES

AS GOOD AS IT GETS — FOR WHAT ‘IT’ IS, SAYS REVIEWER — P4

the rim review

INSIDE

THE PAYSON ROUNDUP • PAYSON, ARIZONA

Food Healthy Weight Week brings ideas to create dishes that are good for you without sacrificing flavor.

Travel Ken Brooks shares information about the latest river cruising trends.

GRAND CANYON PAGE 8

Health Dr. Donohue tells how the inner ear is often the cause of dizziness.

History Tim Ehrhardt explores early Hunter Creek history.

Hiking Payson Area Trails System program plans group hikes.

GO: Your guide to going out P3

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SAVINGS: Latest special from PaysonDealZ.com P3

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HOROSCOPE: Salome’s Stars P14


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RIM REVIEW • JANUARY 11, 2012

Good go

2

THIS WEEK’S REVIEW Welcome to The Rim Review. The cover story in this edition is about the geologic history of the Grand Canyon by Pete Aleshire. Also in this edition, learn about some of the history in the Christopher Creek area from historian Tim Ehrhardt. In his Travel Talk column, Ken Brooks shares more information about the river cruising trend. He has information on

cruising the Mississippi in modern versions of the famous old paddle wheelers as well as details about cruises on the historic rivers of Europe. Andy McKinney reviews the movie, “We Bought A Zoo.” He makes a glowing recommendation of the film as perfect for family viewing. This week’s food feature highlights “Healthy Weight Week” (Jan. 15-Jan. 21)

and includes recipes for healthy breakfasts, lunches, dinners and snacking. The calendar information on this page and Page 3 highlights some of the events coming up around town, including upcoming Payson Area Trails System hikes and a performance by a Nashville recording artist presented by the Tonto Community Concert Association. Thanks for reading.

Rim Country Celts Ceilidh and Burns tribute The Rim Country Celts’ second Ceilidh is Saturday, Jan. 28 at the Payson Senior Center, 514 W. Main St. The Senior Center chef will prepare stews, bread and scones that will be available for donations. Dinner, with Celtic and Gaelic music is at 5 p.m., followed at 6 p.m. by a performance by The Maschino School of Highland Dance with Klaire Rouse, Kiana Campbell, Kelly Lahera, Jessica Maschino, accompanied by piper Andrew Lahera. At 7 p.m. there will be a tribute honoring Robert Burns, Scottish poet, by Dennis MacAlister, trustee and chairman of the Trust Executive Committee of Clan MacAlister. A Burns supper is a celebration of the life and poetry of the poet Robert Burns, author of many Scots poems. The suppers are normally held on or near the poet’s birthday, Jan. 25, sometimes also known as Robert Burns Day or Burns

TAKE A HIKE

The Payson Area Trails System program has free, guided hikes planned once a month, now through May. On the agenda are American Gulch South Saturday, Jan. 21; Monument Peak Loop Trail, Saturday, Feb. 18; Cypress Trail and Boulders Loop Trail, Saturday, March 17; Peach Loop Trail, Saturday, April 14; and Boulders Loop Trail, Saturday, May 19. Participants in the January hike are asked to meet at the American Gulch South Trailhead, 2.6 miles west of Highway 87 on Main Street (at the Doll Baby Ranch Road) at 9 a.m. The route includes majestic views off of high points in the Rim Country toward Fossil Creek, along with mountain meadows. The three-mile hike is considered to be of moderate difficulty. The February hike also starts at 9 a.m. Participants will meet at the Monument Peak Trailhead, 4 miles east of Highway 260 on Granite Dells Road. This is a beautiful route, which features occasional views of the Mogollon Rim and a yearround spring. It is an easy, threemile hike. Participants should bring water and wear proper hiking boots and dress in layers for the varying temperatures of the area. Look for details on the other hikes in future issues of the Review or visit paysonparks.com.

Night (Burns Nicht), although they may in principle be held at any time of the year. Burns suppers are most common in Scotland and Northern Ireland. From 7:15 p.m. to 9 p.m. there will be Celtic and Gaelic music organized and staged by Anne James and the Cinnamon Twist Celtic Band. Dress is informal, but Celtic dress is encouraged. Celtic T-shirts will be for sale. Memberships to Rim Country Celts will be available. There will also be a table set up to provide information on genealogy by the Northern Gila County Genealogy Society. Tickets are $5 for adults and $2 for children under 16. For additional information, please call Lloyd Gibson at (575) 649-5015 or go online to: www.rimcountrycelts.org; http://rimcountrycelts.webs.co m; or e-mail: info@rimcountrycelts.org

THE MYSTERY PIC

Photo courtesy of The Maschino School of Highland Dance

The Maschino School of Highland Dance will perform after the Ceilidh dinner on Saturday, Jan. 28 at the Payson Senior Center.

ON THE

COVER The Grand Canyon represents the most vividly revealed slice of Earth’s history anywhere on the planet.

Tom Brossart photo

RIM REVIEW • VOLUME 14, NO. 2 REVIEW STAFF TERESA McQUERREY

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What is it? Read next week for the answer and a new puzzle. The last mystery pic was the contents of a holiday gift basket.


JANUARY 11, 2012 • RIM REVIEW | 3

RIM PLANNER

Getaway AROUND THE RIM COUNTRY

Nashville recording artist Billy Dean will perform at 7 p.m., Thursday, Jan. 12 at the Payson High School Auditorium. The program opens the second half of the Tonto Community Concert Association’s 2011-2012 season. Photo courtesy of Live on Stage

Nashville recording artist in concert Billy Dean, Nashville singer and songwriter and No. 1 smash recording artist will appear in a unique and intimate performance at 7 p.m., Thursday, Jan. 12 at the Payson High School Auditorium. Dean has recorded 12 albums and has had 11 top 10 hits. Among the awards bestowed on Dean are The Academy of Country Music’s “New Male Vocalist” and “Song of the Year,” a Grammy award and the BMI “Million Air Plays Award.” Hit songs aside, Dean is most noted for his dynamic musicianship and vocal styling, and warm, genuine presence on and off stage. A gifted songwriter and fabulous guitarist, Dean is also an accomplished actor and has appeared in many television shows. After decades of churning out hits, Dean gives every audience an unforgettable performance. Single tickets are $35 as available. Children and youth, grade 12 and under, will be admitted free when accompanied by a ticket holding adult. For more information visit the association Web site at www.tccarim.org or call (928) 478-4363 or (928) 474-4189. Community Breakfast Shepherd of the Pines Lutheran Church is hosting a community breakfast from 8 a.m. to 8:45 a.m., Friday, Jan. 13 at 507 W. Wade Lane. The breakfast includes scrambled eggs, sausage, biscuits and

gravy, hash browns, coffee and juice. Rim Country residents and visitors are invited to join for food and fellowship. A free will offering will be accepted. The church will host a breakfast on the second Friday of every month from 8 a.m. to 8:45 a.m. For more information, call (928) 474-5440.

PAL Studio Tour call for artists The Payson Art League is now organizing its annual ’Neath the Rim Open Studio Tour, which will be held May 4, 5 and 6. PAL welcomes new artists to participate, showcasing your work at your own studio or by joining another artist at their site. For applications and information, please contact tour director Jan Ransom at (928) 468-8593. Lip Sync contest entries wanted The 4th Annual Lip Sync contest will be Feb. 18. All students from area high schools, both private and public, along with home-schooled students are invited to compete. There will be $1,100 given in prizes. Choice of music and preparation needs to be completed by Jan. 18 when tryouts will take place. Applications for this event can be obtained from the Payson High School Drama Department, the Rim Country Optimist Club’s Web site: www.rimcountryoptimist.com and Payson High School www.phslonghorntheatre.com.

Register now for AARP Driving Safety Class The next AARP Driving Safety Class is scheduled from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., Saturday, Jan. 14 at the Payson Senior Circle, 215 N. Highway 87. Call (928) 472-9290 to register. Payson Art League Payson Art League begins its 36th year at 6 p.m., Tuesday, Jan. 17 with a presentation by last year’s president Sue Jones. Jones has spent many years painting and teaching porcelain art — a 2,000-year-old hard fired process. After working in oils and watercolors from her teens, porcelain became her passion 30 years ago. Though her subject matter is endless, she is drawn to a Victorian style. Before moving to Arizona in 1995, she had a gift shop featuring her hand-painted china. During this time she specialized in matching globes on antique lamps, and doing custom tile work for interior decorators. Her work has been shipped throughout the world and can be seen locally at Granny’s Attic Antiques and her home studio. To learn more, contact Jones at susieq42@npgcable.com or (928) 472-8147. The Payson Art League meets at Rim Country Health & Retirement Community, 807 W. Longhorn Rd. The meeting opens with a Show

and Share of members’ artwork and a social reception, followed by Jones’ presentation at 6:30 p.m. after a short business meeting.

Tree recycling The Town of Payson is accepting Christmas trees for recycling at the Payson Event Center parking area, 1400 S. Beeline Hwy. (across from the Mazatzal Casino). Christmas trees will be accepted, free of charge, until Jan. 29, 2012. Barricades and cones are set up on the north side of the event center parking lot to designate the drop off location. No yard waste, tree trimmings or other household debris can be accepted. This service is provided to help the community responsibly dispose and recycle their cut Christmas trees. Local area residents interested in receiving free Christmas tree chips from these spoils should stop by the Community Development building, at the Payson Town Hall Complex, and request to be placed on the Excess Materials list for Christmas Tree Chips. All excess materials are distributed on a first come, first served, basis. Questions can be addressed to either the Payson Parks, Recreation & Tourism department, (928) 474-5242, extension 7 or Payson Community Development, (928) 474-5242, extension 263.

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4

RIM REVIEW • JANUARY 11, 2012

AT THE MOVIES

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WE BOUGHT A ZOO

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As good as it gets – for what ‘it’ is This PG- rated family film is about as others. good as it gets in its niche. We are treatA very strong performance by Matt ed to two hours and four minutes of Damon is the center for the film. He is a solid, family friendly drama. father and bereaved husband. He is The plot, briefly, is about a recent also a good man who stands by his valwidower and his two children who buy ues as he wends his way through a bad a derelict zoo. It is a kind of therapy for situation. Damon brings a sober the father, an adventure for the young humanity to the character. Apparently, daughter and a wrenching nightmare Andy McKinney he can play anything. He has become for the troubled, early teenage son. one of the most versatile stars working Reviewer It has heartwarming interaction today. between the dad and the troubled son. We are 30 minutes into the film There is heartwarming teen romance. We are before we see Scarlett Johansson as the astonishgiven heartwarming grown up romance with the ing beauty that she is. Prior to that moment we zookeeper and the dad. We even have heart- see her without makeup as she does the physical warming, very tasteful and sad end of life issues labor necessary in a working zoo. When she does with an aged tiger. You have the idea by now. wash up, she of course is spectacular. I take it as Bring a hanky if you are like I am and the true confidence in her acting ability that allows heartwarming stuff gets to you. her this risk and it is justified. She makes her I liked it a lot and started tearing up at least character an appealing, honest country girl, a twice. I saw We Bought a Zoo alone to save any good match for the Damon character. personal embarrassment. My tough guy image Thomas Hayden Church is very good as the would not survive being caught crying in a dark- accountant brother, complete with sage advice. ened theater. Elle Fanning is the girl half of the teen romance. Writer/director Cameron Crow (who wrote the She has a wonderful smile and portrays the iconic Fast Times at Ridgemont High, wrote sound country virtues that our culture reveres. directed and produced both Jerry Maguire and Combine a $50 million budget with really great Vanilla Sky) might have let all this heartwarming writing and you can still go wrong. If you add business move into pure smaltz, but stops just careful, unobtrusive directing and well above short. Crow, a man for all seasons, even had a average acting, you have a winner, but not always hand in the soundtrack. And it is a terrific track a financial success. The film has brought in only too. Besides the original work, with lyrics by $41 million domestically in 10 days and it is open Crow, we have cuts by Bob Dylan (the teen boy is to question as to how well it might do overseas. I named Dylan, but named after a dog, not the however liked this four saw blade family film artist) Cat Stevens, Neal Young and jonsi, among quite a bit.

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JANUARY 11, 2012 • RIM REVIEW | 5

TRAVEL TALK | KEN BROOKS

CRUISING THE GREAT RIVERS River cruising has grown more than 200 percent in the last 10 years. Each year more and more riverboats are added to the cruise lines inventories. Today we will discuss where you can go and the companies to contact for more information. Let’s start with the Mississippi River. In 2008 and 2009 the major riverboat companies closed their doors due to the down economy. This year two companies will begin cruising America’s largest river with two exciting boats, one new and one completely refurbished. American Cruise Lines is in the finishing touches of building a 140passenger paddle wheeler, the Queen of the Mississippi, which will begin cruising the river in August. Visit americancruiselines.com to learn KEN BROOKS more. The Memphis-based Great American Steamboat Co. is in the final stages of renovation on its 400-passenger Great American Queen, which will be relaunched in April. For details go to greatamericansteamboatcompany.com. Both companies tell us that the cabins will be larger than those on American riverboats in the past and the onboard food will be near gourmet, with local and seasonal selections on the menus. The service crews and officers on both boats will all be American. The entertainment will be as American as apple pie with Dixieland bands, big bands, ballroom dancing and concerts played on the boat’s calliope. These two boats will be competitors and it will be interesting to read the passengers’ comments and travel writers’ reviews. I hope to cruise on one of these myself this year. Both boats will sail between Louisiana and Minnesota on the Mississippi and go as far east as Pittsburgh on the Ohio River. I had the pleasure of experiencing this four years ago and I can guarantee the experience will be well worth the ticket price, which will not be cheap. American crews demand fair wages living in the United States, unlike most of the foreign cruise ships, which employ crews from other nations. River cruising is very popular in Europe. Probably the most popular rivers are the Rhine and Danube. Cruising both the Rhine and Danube allows sightings of the Black Forest and storybook castles located along

the river. And one of the best parts of a river cruise is being able to disembark your boat at the dock in the middle of the towns and cities and either take a sightseeing tour of the local area or simply go into the middle of the town and roam the interesting streets looking for interesting articles to bring back home and perhaps having a bite at a local eatery. There will always be land viewing from your stateroom window as the boat cruises along. Most of the riverboats today are rather large and long, permitting generous size staterooms and offering entertainment, lectures, get-togethers and present fine cuisine in the dining rooms. These boats are quite like a cruise ship today. Most river cruises are from seven to 12 days in duration. The companies that cruise the Rhine are: AMA Waterways, phone 800-626-0126, amawaterways.com; Avalon Waterways, phone 877-797-8791, avalonwaterways.com; Grand Circle Travel, phone 800-959-0405, gct.com; Tauck, 800-788-7885, tauck.com; Uniworld, 800-733-7820, uniworld.com; and Viking River Cruises, 800-785-7374, vikingrivercruises.com. The Danube River is equally as scenic and interesting as the Rhine and the same companies as mentioned above also cruise this waterway. If you can do both in one vacation, do it. With airfares getting higher every month this might not be a bad idea if your pocketbook permits. The Danube is considered the grand dame of rivers stretching from the Black Forest to the Black Sea. This would be one of my choices of the several river cruises that are available. The Seine River passes through Paris, as you know, and this would also make for a wonderful and romantic vacation. You would have time in Paris, docked in the middle of town, to explore the City of Light on your own or take a couple sightseeing tours. A cruise here would take you through the serene Normandy landscapes that inspired Claude Monet. I understand the food presented on the boats is next to gourmet and you would also have time to go ashore and sample the foods in the small restaurants. A trip to Paris and cruise in Normandy will be full of photo opportunities. The boat will be rather small giving you the chance to make new friends enroute. The boat companies that offer the Seine River include Avalon Waterways, Grand Circle Travel,

Uniworld, and Viking River Cruises. By the way, three-quarters of the newly built riverboats will offer more cabins with balconies. A few do now, but it’s nice that more balcony cabins will be available in the future. The Rhone River is food lover’s territory, traveling through the wine regions of Burgundy, the lavender fields of Provence, and the culinary capital of Lyon. All six of the above mentioned riverboat cruise companies offer this region. The Elbe River features rugged cliffs and sandstone formations, flecked with baroque cities and wine villages. Grand Circle Travel and Viking River Cruises offer itineraries through this area. The Douro River in Portugal features terraced vineyards of the world’s oldest demarcated wine country, where sweet sticky port is made. If this is your taste, Uniworld can cruise you here. The Volga River in Russia is gaining popularity, allowing travelers to tour Moscow and then cruise the river past onion-dome cathedrals, fascinating towns and ending in St. Petersburg where there is a selection of great castles and museums to explore. This vacation will last at least seven days. The cruise lines that offer this trip are AMA Waterways, Grand Circle Travel, Uniworld and Viking River Cruises. Gaining popularity also is the Dnieper River in Russia, which allows you to cruise through tranquil countryside — dotted with pine and birch forests — that gives way to the elegant gold domes of Kiev. Viking River Cruises can take you there. You might like to know that Viking River Cruises is the favorite of river travelers. The others do a fine job, however. Another area that is surprisingly gaining popularity is the Mekong River in Southeast Asia. Several newly built vessels are coming on line allowing you to cruise through Vietnam, Cambodia and elsewhere. I have friends that have returned from this area recently and they report that a trip here is most interesting. Only a few years ago we were fighting a major war in this area and now American tourists are visiting. I understand that veterans of that war are returning to see what the countries are like today. River cruising is gaining popularity because it is one of the most enjoyable vacations you can have. Try it this year if you can.

TO YOUR GOOD HEALTH | PAUL G. DONOHUE, M.D.

INNER EAR OFTEN CAUSE OF DIZZINESS DEAR DR. DONOHUE: I am 82 and in pretty good health except for a recent problem. During the day everything is fine, but when I lie down to go to sleep, the room starts to spin. It lasts about 10 seconds. Then if I turn my head to look at the clock, the dizziness returns. In the morning when I wake and turn my head again, the room spins. Do I have an inner-ear infection? How can this problem be fixed? — J.C. ANSWER: Although I can’t give you 100 percent assurance, I can say on solid ground that you have benign positional vertigo, BPH. Vertigo is dizziness. BPH is not an inner-ear infection. It comes on just as you have written, with a change in the position of the head — lying down, turning to the side or looking up to a cupboard shelf. The attacks are brief but disrupting. Crystals normally found in one part of the inner ear have migrated to another part. Moving the head activates the displaced crystals, and they send a message to the brain that brings on dizziness. The inner ear is not only for hearing; it’s also for balance.

You can bring the crystals back to their original site through a series of movements called the Epley repositioning maneuvers. Sit on the side of a bed and bend your head to the shoulder on the side that triggers dizziness. Let’s make it the right side, so you can follow the instructions. If it’s the left, just change the direction. With the head turned to the right, lie down so your head projects off the other side of the bed. When dizziness stops, turn the head to the left side, with the left ear facing down. Next, roll over on your left side so the head faces down for 10 to 15 seconds. Finally, return to the sitting position with your head bent slightly down in front. You might have to repeat the procedure more than twice. If this is too confusing, have your family doctor or an ENT doctor put you through the motions. The booklet on vertigo explains the common causes of it and their treatment. To obtain a copy, write: Dr. Donohue — No. 801W, Box 536475, Orlando, FL 328536475. Enclose a check or money order (no cash) for $4.75 U.S./$6 Canada with the recipient’s printed name and address. Please allow four weeks for delivery.

DEAR DR. DONOHUE: Why doesn’t the heart ever get cancer? I’ve never seen this question asked or talked about on TV. Blood feeds tumors, so it makes sense that the heart would be a target. — C.V. ANSWER: Tumors do arise in the heart. A somewhat-common benign tumor is a myxoma. It can disrupt the flow of blood through the heart. Malignant cancers, ones that spread and grow rapidly, also arise in the heart. They are quite rare. A rhabdomyosarcoma is a malignant tumor of heart muscle. The blood contained in the heart doesn’t feed heart muscle. If it did, we’d never have heart attacks. Heart muscle is nourished by its own arteries. So are heart tumors. Dr. Donohue regrets that he is unable to answer individual letters, but he will incorporate them in his column whenever possible. Readers may write him or request an order form of available health newsletters at P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 328536475. © 2012 North America Synd., Inc. All Rights Reserved


6

RIM REVIEW • JANUARY 11, 2012

IN THE KITCHEN | FAMILY FEATURES

HEALTHY WEIGHT WEEK

Healthy Weight Week is Jan. 15 through Jan. 21. Do you know what your healthy weight is? For years our doctors and an occasional magazine article, based on data provided by the insurance industry, doled out that particular piece of information. With today’s boom in the health and diet business, you can get the information in a blink of an eye from the Internet, out of hundreds of books on the market, from gyms and weight loss programs. Maintaining healthy weight is a several-step process. Arguably the most difficult thing about losing weight isn’t losing the weight itself, but keeping it off once it’s been lost. Those who have struggled with their weight often admit their weight fluctuates regularly, illustrating the struggle that maintaining a healthy weight can present. While every person is different, there are ways to keep weight off, and many of them are relatively minor. What these methods all have in common is the commitment level they require. Making a long-term commitment to each of the following changes cannot only help you lose weight, but keep that weight off as well. • Closely monitor fat and sugar intake. Reduce consumption of foods high in fat and sugar, or substitute with reduced-calorie and reduced-fat foods and beverages. The fat in your diet should be limited to 30 percent or less of total calories each day. • Get daily exercise. Exercise comes in many forms, and it’s best to determine what type of physical activity best suits each individual and each lifestyle. Initially, you should work your way up to regular aerobic exercise, such as brisk walking, jogging or swimming, since it is a key factor in achieving permanent weight loss and improving health. For maximum benefits, most health experts recommend exercising 30 minutes or more on most, and preferably all, days of the week. • Be aware of your eating habits. Negative eating habits can include overindulging, eating when bored or looking to food for comfort. Many times people don’t even realize they are routinely treating food in these ways. Keeping a food diary, in which you write down when you eat, what you’re eating and why you’re eating is a good means to discovering just what your eating habits are and determining if they are healthy or not. • Remember the value of balance when planning a diet. Mom, Dad and no doubt school teachers extolled the virtues of a balanced diet, and for good reason. Don’t forget the five food groups (milk, meat, fruit, vegetable, bread) when planning a diet. If you have a specialty diet, due to an existing condition (i.e., diabetes) or lifestyle (i.e., vegetarian), consult with a physician as to how to best balance your diet, as there will no doubt be certain foods that are off limits. MAKE BREAKFAST A PART OF EVERY DAY

Start your day with a meal that helps give healthy eating a jump-start. You can create a versatile, fulfilling breakfast by adding almonds, in all their forms to your morning meal to help provide you with the energy you need. Matthew Biancaniello, master mixologist at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel’s Library Bar is known for his innovative cocktail creations and use of fresh ingredients. His creativity extends to healthful smoothies that help rev up your metabolism. For an easy smoothie, Biancaniello suggests using almond butter or almond milk for a creamy base with a burst of flavor. “One of my favorite smoothie recipes uses a combination of both almond butter and milk, along with fresh fruit, juices and seasonings for a unique blend that’s sure to get your day going,” says Biancaniello. “It takes no time at all to add and blend the ingredients, and the result is a satisfying drink that you can take with you on the go.” Including a handful of almonds in your breakfast is

Blueberry Smoothie

one simple solution that not only packs a powerful nutritional punch, but also helps keep you satisfied throughout the morning. There are all kinds of ways almonds can help boost your breakfast: • Toss a handful of whole natural almonds and fresh berries into your morning yogurt. • Look for cereals containing crunchy sliced or slivered almonds. • Top whole wheat toast with almond butter and sliced bananas, or spread almond butter onto apple slices. • Use almond milk in your oatmeal, and top with dried or fresh fruit. • Sprinkle sliced almonds into your breakfast parfait layered with low-fat yogurt and fruit. • Toss toasted, sliced almonds into scrambled eggs or a veggie omelet for an extra healthy boost. Try out Biancaniello’s delicious The Southside of Morocco Smoothie recipe to help get your day started, and visit www.AlmondBoard.com for more recipes and breakfast ideas.

THE SOUTHSIDE OF MOROCCO SMOOTHIE Yield: 1 smoothie 3 strawberries 2 ounces pomegranate juice 5 mint leaves 1/2 ounce fresh lime juice 1/2 ounce agave syrup (1-to-1 ratio with water) 1 slice fresh ginger 1 pinch cayenne pepper 1 to 2 tablespoons almond butter Add each ingredient to blender or food processor; mix until well blended. Serve in glass with or without ice; garnish with mint sprig. For a slushy texture, blend ingredients with ice or substitute with frozen strawberries. Nutritionals: Calories 158; Fat 9.8g; Saturated Fat 1.7g; Mono Fat 14.3g; Poly Fat 2g; Protein 8.9g; Carbohydrates 18g; Fiber 2.4g; Cholesterol 0mg; Sodium 79.8mg; Calcium 51.9mg; Magnesium 54.9mg; Potassium 243.8mg; Vitamin E 4.3mg Source: Almond Board of California

GIVE YOUR BODY A BOOST WITH BLUEBERRIES

You may have heard the saying that if you take good care of your body, it will take good care of you. Well, taking care of your body is a lot easier when you can enjoy delicious and healthy fresh fruits, such as blueberries. Blueberries are considered a superfood by leading nutrition and medical experts, and are a recommended

Fresh Blueberry Chicken Salad With Almonds

diet staple for health, skin care and longevity. Here are just a few of the benefits of this little blue dynamo: • A half-cup of blueberries packs plenty of fiber, vitamin C, potassium and antioxidants into only 40 sweet calories. • Blueberries contain more disease-fighting antioxidants than red wine or green tea. • Half a cup of blueberries a day may help improve brain function. • Some scientific evidence suggests that blueberries may be beneficial for the skin. New skin care treatments include blueberry extracts to help revitalize the skin and hasten healing. • Blueberries provide the same bacteria fighters as cranberries to help guard against urinary tract infections. You can enjoy fresh blueberries all year thanks to blueberries from Chile, where it’s summer during our winter.

BLUEBERRY GREEN TEA FUSION 2 cups water 1 cup fresh Chilean blueberries 2 green tea bags Honey or agave to taste Bring water to a boil. Add fresh Chilean blueberries. Boil 5 minutes; strain. Add 2 green tea bags and steep 3 to 5 minutes. Add honey or agave to sweeten. Drink hot or pour over ice. Nutrients per serving: 8 servings each, 11 calories, 0.5 grams dietary fiber

FRESH BLUEBERRY GREEN TEA SMOOTHIE 1 banana 1 cup plain yogurt 1/2 cup fresh Chilean blueberries Zest of one orange 4 ice cubes 1 cup Blueberry Green Tea Fusion Blend well and top with a twist of orange peel or a sprig of mint. Nutrients per serving: 80 calories, 2g dietary fiber, 42mg sodium, 4g protein

FRESH BLUEBERRY CHICKEN SALAD WITH ALMONDS Serves: 6 2 whole cooked chicken breasts 1/2 cup red onion chopped 1 tablespoon rice vinegar CONTINUED ON PAGE 11


JANUARY 11, 2012 • RIM REVIEW | 7

RIM HISTORY RIM HISTORY RIM COUNTRY HISTORY | TIM EHRHARDT

Early Hunter Creek history Near Christopher Creek sits the Hunter Creek Ranch subdivision. This gated community has its own water and sewer system, and a certified 100year water supply. But how did it get its name? Here’s a look at it, including a look at one of the forgotten early settlers of this region. A survey was done in 1905 of some of the Christopher Creek area. Isadore Christopher can be found where the TIM EHRHARDT heart of the Christopher Creek area is today, but when looking at where Hunter Creek Ranch is located one finds the Williamson name. This is a name that is not familiar and research has shown an incomplete picture of this family. It appears that it was the home of Nicholas C Williamson, who was born in Illinois in the early 1860s and who would die in Globe on Feb. 24, 1930. Williamson can be found on the 1900, 1910, and 1920 censuses in this area. 1900 is particularly telling, as Christopher is on the next line. Clearly this gentleman was in the Christopher Creek area at that point. He appears to have been single and not gotten married until the decade before his death. There are a couple of other Williamsons, Dan and Al, that can be found mentioned in newspaper clippings in this same era, but it does not appear that they are related to Nicholas. At the time the creek that runs through Hunter Creek Ranch was named Williamson Creek on the 1905 map. Yet it also ran by the place of another early settler — Josine Roxwell Hunter. Hunter would go on to patent land at the junction of today’s Highway 260 and the Colcord Mountain Road, though the land is no longer privately held. This is for whom Hunter Creek Ranch is ultimately named, as the creek would become known as Hunter Creek. Josine Hunter was born March 24, 1865 in Pennsylvania. He first shows up in this region when he voted in 1896 and it is assumed that he was out in the Christopher Creek area at that time, though on his homestead paperwork he states that he settled on the land he would patent in July of 1897. He applied for this patent on Feb. 13, 1908 and received it March 6, 1911. His four witnesses for his patent were William McFadden (for whom McFadden Peak south of Young is named), William Voris, John Henry Thompson and John Wentworth. All four of these gentlemen were notable people during that time. According to his homestead paper-

work, he had been absent from his property once since he settled it — for a year-and-a-half during the SpanishAmerican War. He stated that he was employed as a packer in Puerto Rico during that time, but had someone there to manage the ranch for him. He grew corn, cane and a “little garden truck” on this property, which he lived on with his wife. At the time of his patent, he also held a grazing permit for 240 cattle and owned about six horses and 100 chickens according to the paperwork. Assistant Forest Ranger Claud B. Delbridge recommended his claim for approval on Oct. 18, 1910. Hunter would die on July 28, 1922 in Winslow, Ariz. As for the land on which Hunter Creek Ranch actually sits, it would be patented on Sept. 8, 1925 by William H. Eubank, who was born in Texas and had settled on the land on March 3, 1920 according to his homestead paperwork. Lewis Kohl, Buford Hunt, Lewis Bowman and Charles Allenbaugh were his witnesses. The house that he lived in was on the land at the time he settled there. He grew beans, hay, corn, and some alfalfa in addition to having a garden. Much thanks to the Arizona Heritage Research Foundation for usage of the homestead paperwork that was a source for much of this article. These documents, available for a fee from the National Archives in Washington D.C., provide invaluable information about patented land.

Copies of the Arizona Heritage Research Foundation’s homestead paperwork (above) show maps and signatures from the Hunter Creek area during the late 1800s and early 1900s.


8

RIM REVIEW • JANUARY 11, 2012

COVER STORY | PETE ALESHIRE

WOE AND BEAUTY ON AN ANCIENT EDGE Grand Canyon’s geology offers solace and an education in time I took a step — a long step — a million years step. Then I stopped, turned and faced north. Perched on the jagged edge of my life, I looked down deep into the shadowed layers of lost worlds — terrible deaths, fractured continents, vanished seas, mass extinctions. Taking a breath, I took another step — a long step — another million years. Curiously, I felt better — my troubles for the moment shrunk to no more than a ledge of Tapeats Sandstone in the wall of the Grand Canyon opposite. A layer of fossilized beach sand laid down 570 million years ago, the Tapeats Sandstone lies atop a mystery of missing stone — dubbed the “Great Unconformity.” I studied that light, crumbling layer of sandstone in the canyon wall just across the way, knowing that all the great, riotous thrust of life that took us from pond scum to troubled writers has taken place since the lapping waves of a vanished sea left that layer of crumbling gray stone on a barren beach. Perched on the wind-tormented branch of a twisted juniper nearby, a glossy black raven croaked at me. “Nevermore,” he gurgled in my mind’s ear. “You raise a good point,” I said to the raven and the wind that rose up out of the canyon’s 1.8-billion-year gash of time. I let loose a breath, a sigh, a puff of steam — frail and fleeting as life in the shadow of so much time. It should have depressed me, to stand so mite-like on the edge of such immensity. All I had dreamed or hoped or failed to do would not amount to a swirl of dust on this crumbling edge. I ought to have felt insignificant. Instead, I felt obscurely better. So I took another step. A long step — a million years. They had not built the Trail Through Time along the edge of the Grand Canyon between the El Tovar and

Pete Aleshire photo

The Grand Canyon reveals a 1.8-billion-year glimpse into Earth’s past from views like these along the 1.2-mile-long Trail Through Time, with displays of rocks from each of the two dozen rock layers in the mile-deep canyon.

Yaqui Point the last time I lingered on this edge. Now, it offers the most exciting crash course in geology I’ve ever encountered, although I’ve sought after rocks and unconformities all my life — and have even written geology books for confused people. The 1.2-mile-long trail presents sliced and polished rocks representing almost all of the 24 major rock layers laid bare in the canyon wall from the 240-millionyear-old limestone, siltstone, gypsum and chert layers of the Kaibab Formation to the 1.8-billion-year-old

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Vishnu Schist in the canyon bottom, among the oldest exposed rock’s on the planet’s surface. Each step along the 1.2-mile path represents a million years, starting in the present and ending up at the 1.8-billion-year-old start of everything. The Grand Canyon represents the most vividly revealed slice of Earth’s history anywhere on the planet. That makes the canyon one of the few places a person can grasp both the astonishing violence and the tor-

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JANUARY 11, 2012 • RIM REVIEW | 9

Pete Aleshire photo

A layer of 230-million-year-old Kaibab Limestone caps the rim.

Grand Canyon FROM PAGE 8

mented timescale of the planet that sustains us all. This unique cross-section of time comes as a result of the relatively level uplift of the Colorado Plateau in the past 5 million to 8 million years. In most places, such a vast uplift would jumble the buried rock layers. But much of the 130,000 square miles of the Colorado Plateau rose at the rate your fingernails grow without deforming the miles-deep layers of sandstones, limestones and shales laid down on the bottoms of long-vanished seas and deserts. As the Colorado Plateau rose, the northern edge crumpled into the Rocky Mountains. The southern edge dropped away along a 200-mile-long chain of 1,500-foot cliffs — which north of Payson forms the Mogollon Rim. Oak Creek cut back into that rising edge of the plateau to uncover the striking red rock formations of Sedona. The Colorado River did the same thing, but on a grand scale. Many geologists believe the Colorado River originally ran north into a vast, interior sea. But as the Colorado Plateau rose, another river that ran south cut backward until it captured the northflowing ancestral Colorado River, reversing the flow so that it now ran south into the Gulf of California. This capture some 6 million years ago began the process of carving out the Grand Canyon. As the plateau rose, the flood-prone Colorado River cut down through it, like pressing a log up against a chain saw. Meanwhile, the steep tributaries widened the canyon by carrying those soft layers of sedimentary rock down to the main stem of the Colorado. That process started at about the time the genetic evidence suggests humans, chimps and gorillas last shared a common ancestor and continues to this day. As a result of this vast uplift, the relatively young Colorado River has revealed in the walls of the Grand Canyon the long buried history of the Earth going back nearly halfway to its creation. That encompassed the entire period in which life progressed from single celled organisms in the ocean to its present, dazzling complexity. CONTINUED ON PAGE 10


10

RIM REVIEW • JANUARY 11, 2012

Grand Canyon CONTINUED FROM PAGE 9

The meander down that Trail Through Time reveals much of that history, preserved in the rock layers and the fossils they contain. Of course, erosion has already removed more than 200 million years of that history, so that the youngest rocks on the rim of the canyon are older than the dinosaurs. A few dominant layers stand out. Near the top, the fossilized desert sand dunes of the light Coconino Sandstone bear witness to a vast desert that covered the Southwest some 260 million years ago. At that time, what would become North America was part of a “supercontinent” that gathered almost all the dry land on the planet into a single mass. In the middle of the canyon, lies the great, blood-red wall of Redwall Limestone, formed on the bottom of a shallow sea between 300 million and 400 million years ago. Today, the fused layers of microscopic skeletons of ancient sea creatures forms a sheer 500-foot-tall band of cliffs that pose the greatest single barrier to reaching the canyon bottom from the rim. All of the trails to the bottom must pass through fault lines in the Redwall Limestone, stained red by iron oxides leaching out of the layers above. Farther down, the easily eroded Bright Angel Shale forms the shelf above the 1,800-foot-deep inner gorge. Shales form on shallow sea bottoms, compared to the deeper marine environments that create limestones. Most of the trails in the canyon run along its wide shelf. Formed 530 million years ago, the Bright Angel Shale represents the era when trilobites ruled the world. Just below the Bright Angel Shale lies the Great Unconformity, where erosion in the inconceivably distant past removed 1.2 billion years worth of rock. This records another period of uplift, when erosion carried off layers of rock many times higher than Mt. Everest. Below that unconformity, the story continues — down through a dozen more layers in the inner gorge, each one mounted alongside the trail and polished smooth. The Grand Canyon Supergroup spans the period between 570 million and 1.2 billion years ago, again recording the meanderings of the continents and the ebb and flow of oceans, as the planet breathes in, breathes out. After another, smaller unconformity, the river finally reveals the inconceivably ancient Vishnu Schist and Zoraster Granite. The schists started as sandstone, limestone and shale, before they were buried, reheated and fused into this dense, primordial rock. The Zoraster Granite ooze up from the molten depths of the Earth, forming veins revealed finally by the relentlessly downcutting river. I could not see the metamorphosed Vishnu Schist from my perch atop the rim, but I have seen it on raft trips in the dark heart of the canyon where it has been fluted and carved and sandblasted by eons of floods. Finally I stood stock still, my breath coming still in moist, warm, puffs as the planet spun so that the dust of the atmosphere gave the sun’s long light a warm red glow, reflected off the ancient worlds across the way. My raven friend — or one of his kin — flew past with an audible whoosh of his wings, then banked to consider the possibilities. He croaked, that guttural warble that only ravens dare. Odds are, he noted my proximity to the edge and so paused to ponder my potential as carrion. But I prefer to think that he felt our shared pulse of life and caught the updraft of my yearning. In either case, he settled on the branch of a weirdly stunted ponderosa pine nearby and we shared the sunset. The shadows rose up out of the canyon, swallowing continents and oceans. I kept my gaze on the glow of the Redwall Limestone until the shadow took it, then shifted to the luminous yellow of the Coconino Sandstone. For I came to the canyon full of woe holding my life in my fingernails, my heart in the shadows. But now my troubles seemed fleeting, the world full of marvels, my life aglow like that desert turned to sandstone in the last light of day. My breath came in a puff, transparent but warm in the still, cold air. “Nevermore,” quoth the raven, “nevermore.”

Pete Aleshire photo

The Grand Canyon reveals the layers of limestone and sandstone that testify to vanished seas and deserts


JANUARY 11, 2012 • RIM REVIEW | 11

IN THE KITCHEN CONTINUED

CREATE HEALTHY DISHES WITHOUT SACRIFICING FLAVOR Marinate sliced chicken breast in lite soy sauce. Heat large pan or wok over high heat. When pan is hot, lightly coat with cooking spray and add the chicken and soy sauce. Cook chicken for 1 to 2 minutes; add sesame seeds and ginger powder, stir to coat. Add carrots, snow peas, water chestnuts, including liquid, and toasted sesame oil. Prepare rice according to package directions. Set aside. Cook until vegetables are crisp tender. Add rice; toss to combine. Serve hot.

FROM PAGE 6

1/2 cup minced green onion 1/4 cup chopped flat leaf parsley 1/2 cup dried cranberries 1 cup fresh Chilean blueberries 1/2 cup low fat mayonnaise 2 tablespoons plain yogurt 1/4 cup sweet mustard 1/4 cup toasted almonds Dice chicken breasts and place in mixing bowl. Sprinkle red onion with rice vinegar; toss into bowl. Add green onion, parsley, cranberries and blueberries; fold gently to mix. In small mixing bowl, add mayonnaise, yogurt and sweet mustard. Blend well; fold dressing into salad. Garnish with toasted almonds. Nutrients per serving: 322 calories, 13 g fat, 114 calories from fat, 3 g saturated fat, 66 mg cholesterol, 255 mg sodium, 3 g dietary fiber and 22 g protein Recipe may be doubled for 8 to 12 servings. For more great recipes for blueberries and other fresh fruits from Chile, visit www.chileanfruitonline.com. Developed by the Chilean Fresh Fruit Association Source: Chilean Fresh Fruit Association

SATISFY WINTER CRAVINGS GUILT-FREE

When cold weather hits, so do comfort-food cravings. And although comfort foods like cookies and quesadillas taste great, they’re not so great for your waistline. To help you satisfy your cravings without winter weight gain, here are some tasty tips from “Hungry Girl” Lisa Lillien’s new book, Hungry Girl Supermarket Survival: Aisle by Aisle, HG-Style! • Check out the seasonal options of tea bags that pop up during the holidays, such as candy cane or sugar cookie. You’ll get sweet satisfaction without all the calories. • Dunk-a-fruit. Grab some orange segments and dip them in a sugar-free vanilla pudding snack cup. Or, plunge some apple slices into no-sugar-added caramel pudding. • Portion-controlled cheeses are ideal for proteinpacked snacking on the go. Mini Babybel® Light cheeses come in a protective red wax that makes them perfect for tossing into your purse to fuel your various shopping excursions. • It’s easy to overdo it when pouring dressing straight from the bottle onto your salad. And those calories add up fast if you double or triple the serving size. So portion out a serving first, and consider using the dip-don’t-pour method to make it go further. • To make the most of a single serving of brown rice, stir in tons of diced veggies, fresh or thawed from frozen. Peas, carrots, bean sprouts, broccoli, coleslaw, shredded cabbage and finely chopped cauliflower are all great for this. Another tip? Don’t make rice your main course. Fill your plate with lean protein and veggies and then enjoy a serving of fluffy rice on the side. • For a spreadable, meltable, super-creamy and deliciously mild snack, try The Laughing Cow® Light Cheese Wedges, each with 35 calories and 1.5 to 2 grams of fat. They can be spread on apple or pear slices or even used in a gooey-good quesadilla recipe. For more tasty ideas to keep you satisfied, visit www.thelaughingcow.com and www.hungry-girl.com.

HUNGRY GIRL’S HEY MAMBO! VEGGIE ITALIANO QUESADILLA Makes 1 serving 1/3 cup canned cannellini (white kidney) beans, drained and rinsed 1/4 teaspoon Italian seasoning 1 large low carb/high fiber tortilla with about 110 calories 1 wedge The Laughing Cow® Light Mozzarella, Sun-Dried Tomato & Basil cheese 1/4 cup sliced zucchini 1/4 cup sliced red bell pepper 1/4 cup chopped onion 1 piece Mini Babybel® Light cheese, chopped Optional toppings: low-fat marinara sauce, fat-free sour cream Place beans in blender or food processor with 1 tablespoon water; blend until mostly smooth. (Or place beans in bowl with 1 tablespoon water and mash with fork.) Add Italian seasoning and mix well. Lay tortilla flat; spread half of the upward-facing side with bean mix-

Source: Uncle Ben’s

TIPS FOR FAMILY DINNERS THAT ARE BIG ON TASTE AND ANTIOXIDANTS

Hungry Girl’s Hey Mambo! Veggie Italiano Quesadilla ture. Spread cheese wedge on other half; set aside. Bring skillet sprayed with nonstick spray to medium-high heat on stove. Add veggies and, stirring occasionally, cook until softened, about 4 to 5 minutes. Transfer veggies to side of tortilla spread with cheese wedge. Top veggies evenly with chopped cheese. Fold bean-covered side of tortilla over other side and press gently to seal, forming quesadilla. Remove skillet from heat, re-spray with nonstick spray, and return to medium-high heat. Place quesadilla in skillet; cook for about 2 minutes per side, until outside is toasty and inside is hot. Cut into triangles and, if you like, top or serve with marinara sauce or sour cream. Per Serving (entire quesadilla): 295 calories, 8g fat, 858mg sodium, 44.5g carbs, 11g fiber, 5g sugars, 18.5g protein Source: The Laughing Cow

PREPARING HEALTHY FAMILY MEALS

The simple ritual of sitting down for nightly dinners with the family is no longer a thing of the past. More and more families are reaping the multiple benefits it offers, including the enjoyment of a home-cooked meal and meaningful discussions about the day. While family dinners encourage us to stay connected to loved ones, keeping up with busy schedules and making nutrition a priority is a challenge that many families face year after year. According to the Rice-a-licious Global Omnibus Survey 2010, 53 percent of consumers “would make a healthier meal” if they had time. Experts say that simple changes and the right items in your grocery cart can lead to an easier and healthier way to prepare great-tasting meals for your family. “Beginning your meal with rice opens your family’s dinner plate to healthy eating because rice acts as a powerful tool that attracts colorful vegetables, savory spices and leaner cuts of meat,” says registered dietitian and chef Michele Powers. “Remember to look for recipes that include rice to create delicious and nutritious meals for your family.” And for those families that are time-crunched, Uncle Ben’s Ready Rice products are a simple solution. Ready to eat in just 90 seconds, they can be enjoyed as part of a balanced meal plan with zero grams trans fat and zero saturated fat. With virtually no clean-up needed, it’s easy for dinner to go from the microwave to dinner plate. For more convenient and healthy mealtime solutions that can bring the family together, visit www.UncleBens.com or www.Facebook.com/UncleBens.

SESAME CHICKEN STIR-FRY Serves: 2 Prep Time: 20 minutes 1 boneless skinless chicken breast thinly sliced (approximately 1 cup cooked; 8 ounces raw) 2 tablespoons reduced sodium soy sauce or lite soy sauce 1 spray of cooking spray 1 tablespoon whole sesame seeds 1 to 2 teaspoons ginger powder 1/2 cup carrots cut into matchsticks 1/2 cup snow peas 1, 8-ounce can sliced water chestnuts, with fluid 1/2 teaspoon toasted sesame oil 1 package Uncle Ben’s Ready Rice Jasmine

The weeknight rotation of go-to family dinnertime favorites just got better — and better for you. The flavor experts in the McCormick Kitchens took up the challenge to find easy ways to add more flavor, plus antioxidants, to the top Internet-searched family dinner recipes of the season with on-hand ingredients like spices, herbs, vegetables and fruits. TOP 10 MOST-SEARCHED FAMILY DINNER RECIPES

1. Spaghetti 2. Tacos 3. Pork Chops 4. Pizza 5. Chicken Soup

6. Enchiladas 7. Meatloaf 8. Lasagna 9. Chili 10. Beef Stew Google Adwords; August-October 2010

“This list of top recipes reveals that busy cooks are searching for new ideas to add some flavorful twists to the same weeknight standbys,” explains Mary Beth Harrington of the McCormick Kitchens. “We wanted to create deliciously simple variations that can inspire healthy choices every night of the week.” Making healthier dinners is easier than you think. Wendy Bazilian, DrPH, MA, RD, author of The SuperFoodsRx Diet, believes that the best place to start is with what the family already loves — and then boost the excitement, flavor and nutrition of dinnertime with healthy ingredients. “Using ‘Super Spices’ like red pepper, oregano, ginger and garlic provides an added bonus because they are a delicious source of natural antioxidants, which play an important role in keeping the body in good health,” says Dr. Bazilian. The McCormick Kitchens have developed these easy tips to inspire healthy choices on even the busiest nights of the week: PORK CHOPS

Rub four pork chops with a blend of 1 teaspoon each Garlic Powder and Thyme Leaves, 1/2 teaspoon crushed Rosemary Leaves and 1/4 teaspoon Ground Red Pepper. Sauté in skillet with 1 tablespoon vegetable oil, 1/2 cup apple juice, a sliced apple and 1/2 teaspoon Ground Cinnamon. Adds antioxidants equal to 3 ounces of pomegranate juice per serving. CHICKEN SOUP

Give homemade chicken soup an Asian flair. Stir 2 teaspoons Ground Ginger and 1 teaspoon Garlic Powder into 4 cups soup and top with snow peas and shredded carrots. Adds antioxidants equal to 1/2 cup chopped cantaloupe per serving. MEATLOAF

Turn everyday meatloaf into a Mexican fiesta by adding 1 tablespoon each Paprika, Oregano Leaves and Ground Cumin and 1/2 teaspoon Ground Red Pepper to two pounds lean ground beef or ground turkey. Top with salsa. Adds antioxidants equal to 1-1/2 cups green peppers per serving. CHILI

Make a lower-sodium turkey chili with tons of flavor. Blend a pound cooked ground turkey with 2, 8-ounce cans of no salt added tomato sauce spiced up with 2 tablespoons Chili Powder, 1 teaspoon Ground Cumin and 1/4 teaspoon Crushed Red Pepper. Adds antioxidants equal to 1/3 cup chopped asparagus per serving. BEEF STEW

Spice up plain beef stew with 1 teaspoon each Thyme Leaves and Oregano Leaves and 1/2 teaspoon each Garlic Powder and Ground Black Pepper. Give it an extra antioxidant boost by adding sweet potatoes and chopped red peppers. Adds antioxidants equal to 1-1/2 cups sliced kiwi per serving. For additional better-for-you dinner ideas, infused with a passion for flavor, visit www.spicesforhealth.com. Source: McCormick


12

RIM REVIEW • JANUARY 11, 2012

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VANS

*CANCER CASES*

20’ X 30’ STEEL STORAGE BLDG $5,000. Unassembled, You pick up or pay-freight! Bldg is in Tonto Basin, (602-510-7820) (928-479-3300)

TRUCKS

1961 Buick Special, V-8, Auto, Runs/Drives Perfect, Second Owner, No Accidents, was $4,995. Now $3,500.obo, Must Sell, 928-978-1989

www.rim-fireguns.com

Serious Collector wishes to, Buy U.S. and German Military Guns, Colts Winchester and any Other High Quality Antique Guns. Single Pieces or Collections, Give Us A Call at 928-468-0306

2009 TANGO TRAILER Excellent Condition, 27/Ft. Lots of Storage, Price includes Sway Control Hitch, $17,500. For More Information Call 928-595-1980

2008 Lance 825 Cabover Camper, Propane, 110 Refrig., Shower, Toilet, Microwave, AC, TV Outlet for Heavy 1/2 or 3/4 Ton Pick-up Shortbed, Excellent condition, $10,000.obo, Leave Message 928-474-5129

2001 Impala LS, White/Grey Leather, Every Option, Senior Owned x 2, Perfect Car, Was $4,900, Now 4,000.obo, Must Sell, 928-978-1989

1984: 8x34 Hitchpull, 1Br/1Ba, Remodeled, RV, $1,900. ____________________________ 8x28 RV, $900. Call Don, 928-978-3423

GET RESULTS with an ad in our

CLASSIFIEDS! Call 474-5251

GENERAL

PRODUCTION MAINTENANCE ENGINEER

CAMPERS

1979 Pontiac Phoenix, 77K Original Miles, Rebuilt Tranny, New Brakes, New Tires, $2,200. Firm 928-479-2224

GENERAL Maintanance Engineer

Broken Blinds? Saggy Shades? Droopy Drapes? WE CAN FIX THAT! Dani 928-595-2968 BLINDS & DESIGNS Repairs, Sales, Blind-Cleaning & More!

928-970-0062

GUN FOR SALE! Private Owner! 602-290-7282 PAYSON RESIDENT!

TRAILERS

THE BLIND DOCTOR

Payson Roundup Newspaper is seeking an independent contractor to deliver newspapers, Tuesdays and Friday Afternoons, in Pine, Arizona. Must have knowledge of all in and outs of street locations in Pine. Must be 21 years of age, good driving record, dependable transportation, Perferably 4-Wheel Drive & proof of full coverage of insurance on vehicle. Applications available after 3:00 p.m. at 708 N. Beeline, Payson, AZ

The Door Stop, a custom cabinet door manufacturer located in Payson, AZ is conducting interviews for a Maintenance Engineer position. Minimum Requirements: - Excellent mechanical skills and aptitude. - Electrical education/experience required. - Experience in a manufacturing environment. - Flexibility to perform janitorial duties. - Ability to be on call and work odd hours as necessary. Phone: 928-468-2108 Fax: 928-468-0844 Email: gary@cabinetdoors.com Web: www.cabinetdoors.com for applications or visit 910 N. Chenault Parkway. Earn Extra $$. Jury Consultants Needed. Must be 18 year of age and Eligible for Jury Duty. Call 928-474-6727 Seeking Highly Motivated Individual, w/Web-Development and Media Skills, Strong Grasp on Information Technologies is a Plus, P/T Position, Training Available, email resume to: agregory@longevityplus.com WATER OPERATOR Brooke Utilities seeks entry level and adv. water operators, F/T, Benefits & Competitive Wage DOE. Certified Operator pref’d, but will train candidate w/mechanical & construction skills. For immediate consideration, send resumes to fax 661-633-7564 or e-mail to Applicant BUI@jaco.com

CHILDCARE

Animal Caregivers CD

ANIMAL CAREGIVERS

Humane Society of Central AZ is looking for part-time people who have: minimum 2 yrs experience working with animals. Ability to lift and carry 50 pounds; bend and reach; control large dogs on a leash; work with a variety of cleaning agents, work in an environment with daily changes in climate. Animal Caregivers are responsible for the care and well-being of the animals at HSCAZ. Please submit applications and/or resumes to 812 S. McLane Rd. No phone calls please.

SALES/MARKETING SALES PERSON: P/T position for souvenir & gift co. Est. territory. Fax resume: 888-854-9572 file1404@smith-southwestern.com

SERVICES MISCELLANEOUS

J & B Sewing

J&B Sewing

Alterations, Patterns and all sewing needs

Competitive Price$

Call Jody at 928.951.6623 Personal Assistant Bookkeeping, Errands, secretarial, Call 602-290-7282

Order: 10056337 Keywords: Audit Clerk Best job opportunity in payson See A art#: 20096750 Class: Positions Wanted Size: 2.00 X 5.00

The best job opportunity in Payson Now accepting applications for

AUDIT CLERK

JOB SUMMARY: Audits revenue records for casino. ESSENTIAL JOB FUNCTIONS: • Ensures accuracy of revenue records by performing audits on all operating departments and reconciling to actual receipts. • Responsible for the investigation of discrepancies in reconciliation’s and the notification to appropriate personnel. • Prepare income journals and related journal entries. • Review data and prepare reports for compliance with currency transaction reporting requirements. • Assists, as needed, in the filing of required tax reports. • Performs other job related duties as assigned. Benefits Offered: Great Wages; Discounts on Employee Meals. Apply with our Human Resource department. (M-F 8-4) or send resume to khinton@777play.com or email P. O. Box 1820, Payson, Arizona 85541. Drug-free work environment. EOE

Amy’s Daycare, Licensed Facility has immediate openings for Daycare/Preschool enrollment. DHS/DES Certified. Meals provided. Call 928-468-8797

HANDYMAN A Dependable Handyman Service

Excavation Work, Carpentry, Painting, Masonry, Electric, Yard Work, Wood Splitting, Hauling Payson License #P08226, Not Licensed Contractor: Barney Branstetter: 928-595-0236 or 928-595-0435

DHW Home Services Call 928-595-1555: For All Your Home Repair and Remodel Needs Specialty: Drywall Patching and Texture Matching

Dry wall repairs, Painting, Carpentry, GENERAL REPAIRS Silversmith, 25 YEARS OF GOOD EXPERIENCE, With an Artist touch! Call Tim: 928-474-1298, 928-978-0730

HOME SERVICES Call The Cheaper Sweeper

Call The Cheaper Sweeper You’ve tried the rest, now try the best!

Windows to Walls, Baseboards to Ceiling Fans WE CLEAN IT ALL!

Gift Certificates Available

Call The Cheaper Sweeper for a free estimate: (928) 472-9897

HOUSEKEEPING 2 Sisters House Cleaning, Hourly, Weekly, Monthly Rates, Licensed & Insured! 928-978-3417 and 928-978-5287 Barb’s Housecleaning is accepting new clients. Yes, I do some windows. 25yrs exp. w/local references. Call 928-474-4755 or Cell 928-951-5111

LANDSCAPING IRIS GARDEN SVCE: Complete Clean-up for New Year, Weed-eat, Remove Debris, Repair Drip System, 38yrs Payson lic., 928-474-5932, Cell 928-951-3734 not.lic.contr.

REAL ESTATE HOMES FOR SALE DEATH FORCES SALE! 2Bdrm/2Bath, 2/Carport, 1,430 sq/ft., Large Master w/Bath, Low Maintenance, Fenced Yard, $129,000. 928-978-0846

MANUFACTURED HOMES FOR SALE Remodeled Cavco, Storage shed, Fenced, Adult Park, Best Offer Over $3,500. Offer Ends 2/1/12. A Must See. 928-595-0769

MOBILES FOR SALE 1984 12x34 PARK-MODEL, Nice 1Br, Can Move, $6,900. 928-978-3423 ——————————————— ———————Mobile w/Large Rm-Addition! Quiet Star Valley Park, $5,000, Don 928-978-3423 Drive a Little, Save a Lot, Year End Close-Out, 45 New and Used Homes to Choose From, Bronco Homes: Call 1-800-487-0712


JANUARY 11, 2012 • RIM REVIEW

RENTALS APARTMENTS FOR RENT 1 BEDROOM DUPLEX Furnished (Except Bed), $675.00/month, All Utilities pd. 1st Month Rent + $300/Deposit, Smoking,No & Pets, No. (928)468-8185 1100 Sq.Ft 2BDR/2BA Apartment In Central Payson, Central Heating and A/C, F/P., Washer/Dryer Hookup $635.p/m, 480-326-7203 or 480-926-9024 2/BDRM/2BATH APTARTMENT New-Construction, Safe Location, Close to Shopping, Across from Wal-Mart, Covered-Parking , Storage-Shed Aavailable! Furnished/Unfurnished, $800/mon. 1/Month Free w/1yr lease. Deposit/ Credit-Check. 773-255-1133

APARTMENTS FOR RENT

HOMES FOR RENT 2BR/2BA Home w/Garage, In-Town, Private Country Setting, Very Clean, Smoking-No, Pets-?, $875.p/m plus Deposits and References. 928-474-4035 2BR/2BA, PAYSON PINES 2/Car Garage, Fenced Yard, Front/Back Porch, Tile Floors, Spotless!! $975/month, Deposit & Credit Check/Req. 480-694-1063 3BD/2BA, 2-Car Garage, Fenced Yard, 1 Pet-OK W/Deposit, Cleaning Dep. $250. $950/month; Avail. Now, 928-468-1618 or 928-970-0181 3BDRM/2BA. AVAILABLE New Carpet, Paint,Excellent Condition! Split Floor Plan, All Appliances,Deck, Pet-Negotiable, Smoking, No! $950/month + Deposit, 928-978-1704 3Br/1Ba, Sitting/Living/Dining Room, Lg Screened-Porch, Wood Stove, Evap.Cooler, Stove,Refrig, Trash Included, W/D Hook-Ups, Small Orchard, 706 S. Oak, $780.p/m, 928-472-7364

2BDR/1BA APT $500/mo 1BDR/1BA APT $400/mo 3BDR/2BA MOBILE $600/mo 928 474-9110 928-978-4800

Beautiful 1500sf 3Bd/2Ba Home: in Mesadel, Fenced & Gated, Vaulted Ceilings, Split Floorplan $875.mo. + $900 Dep. & Utilities: 928-472-2176

Apt Rental CD

Beautiful Main House on private estate IN-TOWN spacious 1,800sq/ft, furnished/ partially furnished,unfurnished, acreage in quality neighborhood, fenced yard. $1,175/month 602-290-7282

Aspen Cove rings in the New Year with Move-In Specials

1/2 Off 1st Full Months Rent • Large 2 bedroom/2bath units • Washers & Dryers in every unit • 2 BD/1.5 BA Townhome

Great discounts with one-year lease signing. Call for details

ASPEN COVE 810 E. FRONTIER ST. #46 PAYSON, AZ 85541

(928) 474-8042

Cornerstone Property Services

www.cornerstone-mgt.com

Completely Refurbished 2Bdr/1Ba. Apartment, All New Interior w/New Appliances, W/D, Great Location, $600/month, 513 S. Beeline 928-978-3994 FURNISHED STUDIO APT. Star Valley, All Bills Paid, $500/month, Call 928-472-9650 For More Information! Pets-No Large, Clean, Quiet: 2BD/1BA Apartment In Nice, North East Area, Back Patio, Pets-No, $700.mo Call Dennis @ 928-978-1385

COMMERCIAL FOR RENT Rim View OFFICE PARK, Executive Suites, Payson’s Premier Office Space, 708 E. Hwy 260, 928-472-7035 or 928-970-0877.

HOMES FOR RENT 1300 sf. 2Br/2Ba Manufactured Home $750.p/m; Please email inquiries to: waldron.miller702@gmail.com 928-970-2645 1Br/1.5Ba, Large Kitchen, D/W, W/D, Fenced Yard, Carport, 2 Large Storage Sheds, $675.p/m $300 Dep. 210 E. Phoenix Street, 928-478-6940 2 UPSCALE HOUSES Rent or Sale, 3Bdr/2 1/2Ba w/Office, 1103 S. Sequoia Cir (great-view) 1706 E. Lexi Lane (3-cars) 928-517-2272 2Bd/1Ba, 3 Sheds, AZ Room, Fenced Yard, Unfurnished, 1305 N. Woodland: $750.p/m $500. Dep. 928-595-1164 902 S. Coronado Way Newley Remodeled, Dramatic Great Room 2Bdr/2Ba., Large-Deck,Game Room!! 3/Car Garage, Hardwood & Slate Flooring, $1095/month, 602-620-0396

Best Rim Airport View in Town! Spacious 3Bd/3Ba Home, w/large family room, on 1/2 acre, Great in law set up, Avail, Feb. 1 $1300./mo, 2708 W. Bulla, Pets-ok, 602-763-4397

MOBILES FOR RENT

HOMES FOR RENT REMODELED 3/2 AVAIL NOW Large fireplace, Oversized fenced yard, Great Central Location, Walk to School/Park, $775.00 Owner/Agent 602-757-9007

MOBILES FOR RENT 2Br/1Ba Mobile In Town, On Private Lot, Large Living Room, Dining w/Built-ins, Heating/Cooling, W/D Hook-ups, Double-Pane Windows, $565.p/m 626-683-1589 2Br/1Ba in Star Valley, Fenced Yard, Covered Deck, Storage, All Electric, Pets-No, Includes Water/Sewer/Trash, Background Check, $500. + Dep. 928-474-8849

Nice 5Br/3Ba, 3000sf Home, w/2 Car Garage, 2 Acres, Pine Trees, Horse Property, $1,600.p/m + Dep. 480-892-4311 or 480-278-1719 PAYSON NORTH Site Built 2Br/2Ba,Attached Garage + Workshop,Fenced-Yd., Front/Back Porch, Ceramic Tile Floors Appliances, Pets Neg., Smoking-No,$850/month 928-848-4501 www.paysonhomesforrent.com

Renting Beautiful, Cozy Home, 2 Story, 3Br/3Ba, in Payson., 2 Car Garage, Beautiful Views, Very Reasonable Price Flavio Villa 602-384-7177 Cozy 2Br/1Ba, River Front Cabin, Worth 7-mi. Paved Drive, Outdoor Fun, Fireplace, Storage, Furn/Unfurn., W/D, Smoking-No, Pet-Neg. Lease $650.p/m; 928-238-0043

2Br/2Ba Town-House, FOR RENT $865.p/m, Smoking-No., Completely Furnished! Across from Green Valley Lake, Contact Virginia, Avail-January, 623-780-1394 Cell (602) 615-5142

MOBILE/RV SPACES

PAYSON TRAILER RANCH 1 & 2 Bdrms, 1st Mo + Deposit! Starting @ $435.00 Cable/Water/Sewer/Trash Included, Discount for 6-12/mo.lease. 928-517-1368

NEED TO

Large 1Br/1Ba Unfurnished Condo Bottom Floor, End Unit, $565.p/m, Smoking & Pets No. Contact Virginia: (623) 780-1394 Cell (602) 615-5142

Year Round Park, Hurry to Capture one of the Limited Spaces, w/Additional Economy Discount to New Guests, $275.mo + Elec. Great Amenities, Pool, Clubhouse, Laundry, & Free WiFi to site. In Town Close to Everything! Save Rent & Gas! 928-472-2267: 808 E. Hwy 260, Stop by and Visit Payson Campground and RV

SELL THAT CAR

ick 1997 Bure LeSab

PAYSON ROUNDUP FRIDAY, JULY 2, 2010

8B

Classifieds 474-5251ext. 102 or Email: classads@payson.com

6, 3.8L 4-door, V al AC, c, du automati dows, tinted win s. e 134K mil n. n t co ditio Excellen .b.o. $4,000 o 474-0000

Large Clean 2Brdr/1Ba, Nice Quiet NE Area, Large Fenced Back-Yard, New Carpet & Paint, Central Heating & Cooling, $850/month, 928-978-1385

NICE 2BD/2BA, $645. Carport & Storage Shed, Fenced Yard, Clean, Move in Ready, Next to Forest & Creeks, 928-978-2192

2Br/1Ba Mobile In Town, On Private Lot, Large Living Room, Dining w/Built-ins, Heating/Cooling, W/D Hook-ups,Storage Shed, Double-Pane Windows, $565.p/m 626-683-1589

When you really, really

DUPLEX PINE, Both Sides Available, 3BDR/1BA, Garage,$995/mo. & 2Bdrm/1Ba, $675/mo., Private Yards, Water & Electric Included! Security Deposit, 480-248-6144 Owner/Agent

MANUFACTURED HOME 2Bdrm/1Bath, Large Fenced Yard, Storage, $575 Month+ Deposit, Located Cedar Grove MHP Call 480-390-8901

2bd/1ba,Condo GREAT Condition 300 W. Frontier, Laundry Room/On-site, Rent Includes Water &Trash,Renter Responsible for Electric/Cable Pets-No! $500.p/m+Dep. 928-978-5240 References Required

1Br or 2 Br: Security Dep. Plus First Months Rent Pets-No, $325. to $600 928-978-3775

Park Model 4 Rent, Furnished, $675. Trailer Space $265. Water, Trash, Y-Fi, Oxbow: 928-978-0315 928-468-3689

Chaparral Pines: April 1. 1300sf, 2Br/2Ba, Lg.Yard, Hot-Tub, Dog Run, BBQ, Furnished/Unfurnished, 6mo. min. $2,400.p/m, 1yr lease, $1,200.p/m 928-978-0888

Log Sited Home, Great View (Strawberry) 3Bdrm/2Bath, Storage Unit, All Appliances, Dishwasher, New Carpet/Paint Paved Driveway,Large/Deck $825/mo.+Deposit, 602-999-8076, Avail. Now!

CONDOMINIUMS

MOBILES FOR RENT

Cute, 2Br/2Ba, Pellet Stove, All Electric, Fenced Yard, Storage Room, Pets-No, Background Check, $550. + Dep. 928-474-8849 or Cell: 602-809-8466

DEADLINES: 10AM Monday for Tuesday issue • 10AM Wednesday for Friday issue

MERCHANDISE ANIMALS Dog Adoptions, Tara’s Babies Animal Wellfare, No Kill, Rescue in Sanctuary, View Available Dogs at www.tarasbabies.org or call 928-301-9199 866-574-9655 Puppies, SHEP X MOM/DULLY DAD Adorable,12WK,3M/4F, UP#2Date,Shots,S/N, Black/White Male,Dark Coco Female,Chocolate Female,also Fawn/White,$200. View Puppies at www.tarasbabies.org or call 928-301-9199

ANTIQUES Gold Canyon Candles

GOLD CANYON CANDLES SALE

20% OFF Entire stock with this ad

At

The Carpenter’s Wife 112 W. Wade Lane 928-472-7343

BUILDING MATERIALS STEEL BUILDINGS Factory Deals - Save Thousads 30x40 - 100x200 Can Erect/will Deliver www.scg-grp.com Source# 1G6 480-772-0831

4 Tuesday Roundups 4 Wednesday Rim Reviews 4 Friday Roundups 4 Weeks on Internet

FIREWOOD Firewood For Sale. & Yard Cleaning Service. Tree-trimming, brush-removal with hauling-service. We also do Bacco-Work. Free-Estimates. (928) 468-6928 (928)-970-1348

FIREWOOD SALE 2-WEEK SPECIAL!! $175.00 for Junipter per/cord, $195.00 for Oak per/cord Free Local Delivery!! 928-474-9859

FURNITURE

$

30

MISCELLANEOUS

YARD SALES

THE BLIND DOCTOR Broken Blinds?Saggy Shades? Droopy Drapes? WE CAN FIX THAT! Dani 928-595-2968 BLINDS & DESIGNS Sales,Service & More! TILE/PAVER SAW 2 1/2 Horsepower, New Blade, Like New!!!! $150.00 928-474-8517 Wanted Diabetic Test Strips Any type, Any Brand Will pay up to $10.00 call 928-478-0021 or 928-970-0159

POOLS/SPAS

HotSprings enclosed hot tub. Redwood, smoked plexiglas sliding doors on all four sides. Runs great. Sold orignally for about $11,000. All parts and filters still available. $3500, OBO. 480-278-3806, Payson.

HOTSPRINGS SPA 3-Person Jetsetter, 10/yrs old, Always inside! $1,200/OBO 928-472-4371

YARD SALES/ AUCTIONS

ESTATE SALES ESTATE SALE Classic Sofa Off-White w/Chair & Otto., $170.00 Dinette-set, Thick Beveled Glass Table, Chairs & Buffet w/Hand crafted Wood design, $1,400. Entertainment-Ctr-Blonde w/Smoke Glass, $75.00 Blonde Headboard, Glass Coffee & End/Tables, Solid Wood End/tables, All Quality Wood Fabric & Workmanship, Offers Welcomed!! Call to View 928-474-3724 Cell 928-831-421-2640

GARAGE SALES

Beautiful Cherry Desk,w/one Large Drawer,Two Smaller Drawers, 20x31inches,5 Top Slots for Envelopes,etc.$150.OBO Technic Organ,2 Sets of Keys, Large Orchestra Button Operated for Instruments/Symbols, Book/Instructions Included, Nice for Church,etc.$1,500.OBO Very Nice Office Chair,$35. 928-951-1130 ELECTRONIC LIFT-CHAIR RECLINER, $450/OBO NEW!!! 928-468-1618 928-970-0181 Moving Must Sell! New IKEA Desk/Book Shelf Paid $175 Asking $50. 928-446-3293

GUNS/KNIVES

Basic Pistol Training Constitutional Carry & Legal Training CCW Permits Call Hank (928) 472-4444

Concealed Carry Permits

Firearms & Ammunition Fire-Arms Basic-Course, $45.00

Call Brian Havey 928-970-0062

www.rim-fireguns.com Serious Collector wishes to Buy Antique Colts, Winchesters,Lugers and Other Fine Guns. Single Pieces or Collections. Also Wanted,Antique Ammo. 928-468-0306

YARD SALES 1. 100 N. STAG PT. (Manzanita Hills) Friday & Saturday, July 2nd/3rd. 7:00 AM - ? Books, Furniture, Craft-items, Collectibles, Jeans, Household-items, Lots of Misc!!! Follow the Signs 10. 302 W. Main Street Sat. July 3 8am to 3pm Furniture, Lots of Other Misc. Items 11. 602 A North Ponderosa Circle Saturday Only! July 3rd. 7:00 AM - 3:00 PM Limited Edition Art Work, Figurines, Collectables, DVD’s, Cast Iron Banks, Glassware, Some Tools, Kids Clothes 12. 800 E. Frontier Fri. & Sat. July 2 & 3 7am to 4pm Mulit Family Sale Nice Maternity Clothes, Baby Clothes, Household Items, Many Craft Items, Some Furniture, Too Much To Mention!

13. VETERANS HELPING VETERANS 212 W. Wade (Colcord and West Wade) Thurs thru Sat. July 1 to 3 7am to 2pm Lots of Bargains, Furniture, Lamps, Miscellaneous. ALL PROCEEDS HELP FEED HOMELESS VETERANS

20 ft. and 40 ft. Shipping Containters 928-537-3257

ATTENTION GOLFERS CHAPARRAL PINES GOLF MEMBERSHIP Full Privileges, No Initiation Fee!!! Call for Details

1-970-729-0222

LOCAL BUSINESS OWNER Looking to Purchase Established Business in Payson Area 928-978-5322

TRUCKS

DAVE’S AUTOMOTIVE Recycling

15. 910 N. MUDSPRINGS SATURDAY, JULY 3 7:00 AM -12:00 PM Huge Sale! Automotive Items, Tools, Home Decor, Furniture, Much More!

I BUY JUNK VEHICLES

2. 1112 S. GOLDNUGGET (Near Green Valley Lake) Friday & Saturday, July 2nd/3rd 6:00 AM - 5:00 PM BIG YARD SALE Something for Everything! Tons of Like New Children’s Books!!! Man Things too!

5. 210 W. FRONTIER Friday & Saturday, July 2nd/3rd 6:00 AM - ? Maybe Sunday Also!!! EXTREME MOVING SALE!!! Inside & Out Large Collection of org/paintings & Signed Prints by Well-Known Artists!! Pendelum & Cuckoo/clocks, Silver/Gold & Indian-Jewelery, Carpentry & Lawn/maintance/tools, Construction-Supplies, Guns, Furniture, Appliances, Camping/Fishing Equipment, 15’ Sail/Boat & Trailer, 4x4/Tires, Wheels,Bumpers,&/Stuff, Quad/Trailer w/Ramps, No Toys or Clothes!!! 6. 5130 N. Fossil Creek Lane (Strawberry (In the Big Shop Behind the House, Plenty of Parking) Fri. & Sat. July 2 & 3 7am to ? D Not Miss This One Dirt Bikes, Antiques, Sporting Goods, Stack Washer/Dryer, Furniture, Bicycles, Lots of Ladies Stuff, Tools, Radial Arm Saw and MUch More than Room to List 7. 806 S. GREENFAIRE CIRCLE Friday & Saturday, July 2nd/3rd. 7:00 AM - 5:00 PM Computer Desk, Software, Queen-Bed, Bar Stool, Lamps, Children Clothes, Furniture, Plus LotsMore!!!!! 8. 603 N. Eagle Ridge Rd. Fri. & Sat. July 2 & 3 7am to 2pm Furniture, Tools, Household Items, Misc. Glass 9. 1103 N. Ponderosa Circle Fri. & Sat. July 2 & 3 7am to ? The Best of Everything!

AUTOS/VEHICLES ATVS 2007 Polaris 300 As New, Only 35 Hours Call Bob 468-0743

BOATS 16 Ft. Lowe Aluminum Bass Boat and Trailer, 40 HP Johnson Motor, 2 Fish Finders & Troling Motor, $6500. 7.5 Evanrude Outboard Motor $450. 928-478-0289 17’ FISH & SKI BOAT 120 Mercruiser, As Is ! Needs Shift Cable, Make-Offer! 603 N. Spur, Payson Must-Sell!! 480-528-1313 1996 Bayliner In Board/Out Board, w/Open Bow, Great Shape, Many Extras, $5,000. 928-951-3436 40 Motorguide Tracker Bow Mount Foot Controlled Trolling Motor, 43lb Thrust, $175. 928-970-1200

CAMPERS JAYCO FOLD DOWN CAMPER Good Condition!! Sleeps 6, Asking $1,500/OBO Misc Camping Stuff. call 928-468-6787 Cell 928-895-0846

Order: 10046205 Keywords: Help Wanted. art#: 20078304 Class: Restaurants Size: 2.00 X 4.00

Join our friendly Team

Wil Pick up old

Cars or Truck for Free Cash for Clunkers Part-Sales M-F 9-5, Sat 9-1

CALL DAVE 928-474-4440

WILL PAY UP TO $100. FREE METAL DUMP IN RYE CALL FOR DETAILS 928-474-6174

J&J COACHWORKS USED VEHICLES, BOUGHT, SOLD AND TRADED.

1997 Buick FINANCING LeSabre

AVAILABLE 4-door, V6, 3.8L 928-978-4152 automatic, dual AC, tinted windows, 928-978-4153 134K miles. 1305 N. BEELINE HWY Excellent condition. $4,000 o.b.o. 474-0000

RVS

2000 F250 4WD Auto Trans Super Cab, Long Bed, 5.4 V8 Gas, 95K Miles, Many Extras $10,500.00 928-951-0810 2001 Mazda B3000 Very Good Condition, Automatic, 6 Cyl.,Mag-Wheels,A/C., AM/FM CD, Bed-Liner, 80K Miles, $4,900. Truck located in Pine 602-432-9931 2006 Lincoln Mark LT Auto, 5.4 Triton, Cold Air Intake, Throttle Body Spacer, SVT Lightning Exhaust, Ford Racing Suspension, Dyno-tuned at Loeper’s to add 60 Rear Wheel HP and 86 ft. lbs Torque, Dyno license transfers, 20” King Ranch Chrome Wheels, A Unique Truck Combining Comfort and Performance for Only $25,500. See in Front of BeeLine Cafe 623-204-6434

EMPLOYMENT ADMINISTRATIVE/ PROFESSIONAL Business Office Manager Payson Care Center OFFICE in Payson BUSINESS

MANAGER Payson Care Center in Payson

Full-time leadership position available for a detail-oriented individual with office management experience, including bookkeeping and Medicare and Medicaid billing. Skilled nursing facility experience is required. We offer excellent pay andfull benefits including medical coverage, 401(k) and paid vacation, sick days and holidays. Karen Schalte, Executive Director

1979 RV ON CORNER LOT! w/Add On + Screened Porch, 55+ Star Valley Park, Cozy, Great-Features, Must see! $3,800.

928.474.6896 Karen_Schalte@LCCA.com Visit us online at www.LCCA.com EOE/M/F/V/D - Job#16409

928-472-9322

McDonald’s invites you to join our professional, friendly and dedicated team. McDonald’s is committed to outstanding customer service, people development and professional growth. The McDonald’s Team offers Part-Time and Full Time employment with wages starting at $7.25 per hour. Flexible hours, training, advancement opportunities, management development, employee retirement benefits, insurance, performance reviews and raises, and many other benefits. McDonald’s rewards outstanding performance.

PAYSON Please pick-up an application and learn of the opportunities available at your McDonald’s today.

To apply online visit www.mcarizona.com

Get the best results! GENERAL Help Wanted CD 1x3

ROOSEVELT LAKE MARINA

28085 N AZ Hwy 188 Roosevelt, AZ 85545

928-978-3775

1984 TOYOTA MIRAGE Was Mini-Motor Home Coverted to Work Truck R22 Engine Rebuilt Auto Trans w/Over Drive Runs-Great!! $3,500/OBO 928-951-4366 2003 ULTRA LITE 5th Wheel 8x28 with 14’ SlideMany Upgrades WEIGHT OF 5470 We’ve pulled with Short Bed 1/2 Pickup$12,500. 928-476-4238 36 Foot Park Model Remodelled, 1Br w/Tip-Outs Furnished, Air/Heat, Full Size Fridge, Cook Stove, $2,900. Call Don 928-978-3423 Mint Condition High End, 1993,Beaver Diesel 38ft M/H, Plush Interior,Professionally Maintained,All New Tires, 97,000 Miles,No Slide-outs More Storage, $34,900,Payson 928-300-5700

Starcraft Tent Trailer Stardust Classic Like New, Equipped, Ready To Go! $2,900.obo 928-468-3005 928-474-8776

DEPUTY PROBATION OFFICER SUPERVISOR position is available at Gila County Probation. Bachelor’s degree and five year’s probation officer experience with some lead/supervisory experience or combination education/experience. For info see http://www.gilacountyaz.gov/personnel/employment/probation.html or call (928) 425-7971 x 11 EOE Director Religious Retreat Facility Part-Time Good-Communiation & People-Skills, Telephone-Skills, Well Organized, Marketing Ability,Basic-Computer, Send resume to: P.O. Box 1864, Payson,AZ Experienced Housekeepers Full or Part-time, References Required! Apply at: Majestic Mountain Inn 602 E. Hwy 260, Payson, AZ

HANDYMAN

LET ME SEW FOR YOU! Alterations, Zippers, Buttons, Re-Hemming, Patches, All Types of Mending, Make Your Clothes Last Longer 928-474-3721

Energy Savings Sunscreens, Electrical,Plumbing Installation of Security Doors, Dishwashers, Microwaves, Ceiling Fans, Disposals, etc Jimmy’s Alltrades 928-474-6482 Not Licensed

APPLICATIONS FOR THE SUMMER SEASON.

• Dockhand • Shuttle Driver • Certified Marine Mechanic • Store Clerk

Retaining Walls, Stone, Block Local, Licensed & Bonded, ROC 240509 12 Year Experience, Free Estimates!! Low Prices!

Now Accepting Applications for: P/T House-Keeping & Laundry Apply in person at Best Western Payson Inn 801 N. Beeline Hwy

Learn to use Your Electronics! CELL PHONES IPODs/MP3s DVDs COMPUTERS DIGITAL CAMERA SOCIAL MEDIA Very Affordable!!! 928-951-1225

Stop in to fill out an application or submit your application online at www.rlmaz.com

Now Hiring For P/T Sales & Driver Looking For Energetic People, Sales & Automotive Experience Preferred, Apply At: autozone.com

Payson Roundup Newspaper is seeking an independent contractor to deliver newspapers, Tuesdays and Friday Afternoons, in Pine, Arizona. Must have knowledge of all in and outs of street locations in Pine. Preferably Pine Resident Must be 21 years of age, good driving record, dependable transportation and proof of full coverage of insurance on vehicle. Applications available after 3:00 p.m. at 708 N. Beeline, Payson, AZ

GENERAL CHARMING SALON & SPA Seeking-Full & Part-Time STYLIST, NAIL TECHS, MASSAGE THERAPISTS & AESTHETICIANS. Please Call 928-474-9849 Come Join Our Team!!

MISCELLANEOUS

NOW ACCEPTING

1982 YELLOWSTONE CAMP TRAVEL TRAILER, 24’ Long, $1,800.

MASONRY SERVICES

928-595-0884 TEC TUTOR

CHILDCARE LOVING, ACTIVE FAMILY CHILD CARE Provider has 30 years experience & Child Development Education. Excellent References! Extended Hours !! Jackee 928-468-5223

HANDYMAN

A AFFORDABLE 1 HANDYMAN Home Maintenance Repairs and Installations Whatever Needs to be done! Craftsman for 38 yrs. Serving The Rim Country Call: Steve @ 928-978-4861 (Not a licensed contractor)

02 SUZUKI VITARA 2.OL, 4CYL, PS, PW, PDL, AM-FM-CD, Cruise, A/C., 98K miles, $3,750.00 928-474-4443 or 928-970-1148

2002, 26’ Enclosed Haulmark Trailer, Many Extras, New Tires, Winch, Great Condition,$6000. obo 928-474-3427 or 719-232-6283

Find what you’re looking for or sell what you’re tired of looking at in the Payson Roundup Classifieds Call 474-5251

Order: 10046127 Keywords: Exp Cook Dishwasher art#: 20078161 Class: Restaurants Size: 2.00 X 2.00

If you are energetic and love working with people in a beautiful setting, you’ll want to part of the team at Kohl’s Ranch Lodge. Currently we are accepting applications for

EXPERIENCED COOK DISHWASHER

HEALTH CARE

CENTRAL SCHEDULER

HOME REPAIRS

Lawn Care

HAULING

Diversified Services IOWA BOY - HONEST, DEPENDABLE

(Inexpensive) Not a Licensed Contractor

JOE - 970-1873

HOME SERVICES Call,The Cheaper Sweeper You’ve tried the rest, now try the best! Windows to Walls, Baseboards to ceiling fans. WE CLEAN IT ALL! Gift Certificates Available, Call the CHEAPER SWEEPER for a free estimate: (928) 472-9897 Cleaning Houses 10 Years Experience Satisfaction Guaranteed Low Reasonable Rates Windows,Walls,Fans,etc. Call for Free Estimate 928-468-8490 References Available Upon Request

Excavation Work,Carpentry, Painting, Masonry,Electric, Yard Work,Hauling Payson License #P08226 Not Licensed Contractor Barney Branstetter 928-595-0236 928-595-0435

Specialty:

Drywall Patching and Texture Matching

FRESH BREEZE

Heating & Cooling Repair LIC., Bonded Insured, 19 Year Experience, 928-474-3635 Proud Member of Payson P.A.Y.S. ROC# 118391

Carpenter/Handyman

Back Office MA/Medical Records/Billing/Receptionist Needed for Busy Primary Care Office. Salary DOE. Mail Resume to PO Box 3115, Payson, AZ 85547

32yrs. Experience in Payson TOP QUALITY References available. BEST RATES IN TOWN Call 928-978-0839.

Not a licensed contractor

PRIVATE IN HOME CARE Provider w/Medical Experience!! Reasonable Rates! Payson Area!!!

928-595-2120 319-899-8027 Ask for Mary or Please leave Message

LANDSCAPING

SERVICES

IRIS GARDEN SERVICE

MISCELLANEOUS

CHOATE’S

Emmicks Solutions

Dry wall repairs

s in Town! apest Rate• 24 Hour Service

Painting

Che

• Lot Cleanups, Driveways • Ditches, Holes & Trenches • Haul Trash/Yard Work, Fencing, Etc. CALL FOR 928-478-6433 Home ESTIMATE 928-595-1143 Cell

Emmicks Solutions.com “AMISH” All Electric,

Jenny’s Tractor Services CD

Carpentry GENERAL REPAIRS Silversmith 25 YEARS OF GOOD EXPERIENCE With an Artist touch!

Flameless, Fireless, Fireplace units

Southwest Repair Facility

Call Tim: 928-474-1298, 928-978-0730

480 732 0077 or 928 472 9200

Order: 10046155 Keywords: Maintenance Techinician art#: 20078203 Class: General Size: 2.00 X 2.00

NOW TAKING APPLICATIONS

FULL TIME MAINTENANCE TECHNICIAN REQUIRES: Servicing and cleaning of small equipment and appliances and other job related duties. SALARY: DOE BENEFITS AVAILABLE Please pick up an application at MCDONALDS 101 S Beeline Hwy, Payson, AZ 85541

Ask for Desere Gonzales

Kohl’s Ranch Lodge is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

Responsible for scheduling Imaging & Outpatient hospital procedures. Prior healthcare experience preferred. Customer service skills required. Organizational and good communication skills a must. Please contact HUMAN RESOURCES OFFICE at 928-472-1293 Or FAX resume to: (928) 472-1293 EOE

HAULING Joe Joynt ad

Call 928-595-1555

Telemarketer Experienced telemarketer needed. Full Time $10/hour. Knowledge in electronics would be helpful. Send resume to info@lunags.com.

Interested candidates can contact Mary Webster, (928) 478-4211.

NOW HIRING

Reliable Pressure washing/painting: Interior-exterior,spackling, gutter cleaning, yard work, light carpentry, junk hauled. Bonded,Insured Not licensed contract 928-468-8743

For All Your Home Repair and Remodel Needs

A Dependable Handyman Service

Energetic people come join our crew! Part time, Full time, Monthly bonuses. $50 Sign up bonus, vacation pay.

TRACTOR SERVICE

TRAILERS

Hank’s Home Repair

DHW Home Services

SUBWAY Apply within, Bashas shopping center, 128 E. Hwy. 260.

SUVS

Order: 10046274 Keywords: Central Scheduler art#: 20078447 Class: Healthcare Size: 2.00 X 3.00

MISCELLANEOUS 2 Hearthstone Gas Stoves Sterling Direct Vent $1250. to $1500. Call for More Information 928-970-0283

CARS

14. 1209 Carefree Circle Fri. & Sat. July 2 & 3 Open Early Don’t Miss it, Make Offer Because Everything Must Go! Car Dolly w/Brakes and Spare Tire, His/Hers Golf Carts w/Bags and Clubs, New Ceiling Fan, Hoover Vacuum Cleaner, Loads and Loads More!!

4. 111 S. LAKESHORE RD. Friday & Saturday, July 2nd/3rd. 7:00 AM - 3:00 PM Plants, Household items, Books, Misc., Collectibles, And Much Much More!!!!

3. 703 E. Tahoe Vista Circle (Continental East to Coronado, then Left on Tahoe Vista Circle) Sat. July 3, 8am to 2pm Household Items, Collectables, Vinal Records, Clothing, Air Compressor Tool Set, Misc.

A Firearm’s Instructor

4 WEEKS

MOBILES FOR SALE Foreclosures: 45 Homes to Choose From, Free Delivery Call Bronco Homes, 1-800-487-0712

Order: 10046206 Keywords: Streets Crew Member art#: 20078307 Class: General Size: 2.00 X 3.00

HELP WANTED TOWN OF STAR VALLEY STREETS CREW MEMBER

Complete Summer Clean Up! Planting!

RemoveWeeds/Leaves/Debris Repair Sprinkler Drip System 37-yrs Payson,928-474-5932 Cell 928-951-3734 Payson lic. not.lic.contr.

PAINTING A Professional Painter Clean Work, Excellent References, Great Prices 928-436-4593 ROC #226995

REAL ESTATE HOMES FOR SALE OPEN HOUSE

Sunday, July 4 12 Noon to 2pm 5139 Juniper Loop, Pine 3br/3ba (2 masters) 2 car gar.-fireplace-propane stove -HOA-Close to Natl Forest.

PART TIME The Town of Star Valley is currently seeking a part-time crew member to perform various street maintenance duties. Eligible applicants should have a Commercial Driver’s License and previous experience in street maintenance and repair. The compensation will be based on experience and the position will be open until filled. All eligible applicants should complete a Town of Star Valley employment application, located on the Star Valley website at ci.star-valley.az.us or at Town Hall; 3675 East Highway 260, Star Valley. Applications can be submitted to Town Hall; Monday through Friday, from 8:00am to 5:00pm.

LAND FOR SALE Beautiful Wooded Land in Show Low and Heber Areas, One Acre to 40 Acres $12,500 to $99,500. 480-986-4324,480-390-0501 or 480-532-7373

MANUFACTURED HOMES FOR SALE 1984 CAVCO 2/BDRM/1BA. Distress Sale Reduced to $16,000 Located in Star Valley Star Vale MHP Call Barbara 978-1163

Bring us a photo of your car. Don’t have a photo? Bring your car down and we’ll take a picture for you.

PAYSON ROUNDUP

708 N. Beeline Hwy • 474-5251 • classads@payson.com Limit 20 words. No refunds. Private party only.

13


14

RIM REVIEW • JANUARY 11, 2012

RIM HISTORY JUST FOR FUN SALOME’S STARS

SUPER CROSSWORD

© 2012 King Features Syndicate, Inc. World rights reserved.

BRIEFLY STATED ACROSS 1 Roofing material 6 Litigates 12 Director Peckinpah 15 Bull’s babe 18 Florida eleven 20 40th president 21 Baudelaire’s buddy 22 Nabokov novel 23 Mitch Miller hit 26 “Agnus ___” 27 Throw a line to 28 She’s a sheep date 29 Bakery display 31 ___ Aviv 32 Blazing 36 Most mammoth 37 Elegant 40 Pebbles’ papa 41 ___ Leone 43 Black and white 44 Bing Crosby hit 46 Service member? 49 Tilden’s opponent 51 Seize 52 Slip of the tongue 54 Tax shelter 55 Animated Olive 56 Proofreader’s mark 58 Word with tea or pepper 59 Get more magazines 61 Jack of “Flower Drum Song” 62 Be ___ unto oneself 63 Tear to bits 64 Marry 65 Patti Page hit 67 Scold 69 Andrews Sisters hit

73 Tenor Slezak 74 Corporate VIP 75 Burlap fiber 76 Word on a pump 77 Supped in style 80 Pasta ingredient 81 Government group 82 Winter hazard 83 TV’s “Scooby- ___” 84 Too experienced 85 Flip 86 Sri ___ 88 Land mass 91 Wilbert Harrison hit 93 Doesn’t come clean 94 Daze 96 ___ Haven, CT 97 Exhausted 100 Enigmatic sort 102 Lost 104 Essen exclamation 105 Couldn’t stand 106 First zoo? 107 Concerto ___ 111 Bachelor’s last words 112 Gladys Knight hit 120 New Deal agcy. 121 ___ later date 122 Used a ewer 123 Through the nose 124 Cartoon cry 125 ___ de guerre 126 Beethoven’s “Moonlight ___” 127 Dutch artist Jan DOWN 1 Cpl.’s superior 2 Bolger/Haley co-star 3 To ___ (perfectly) 4 Petite pooches

5 Builds 6 Paid player 7 Actor Ayres 8 Musical sensitivity 9 Past 10 Wagner’s “___ Rheingold” 11 Look like Hook? 12 Cash stash 13 Qty. 14 Blend 15 Mamas & Papas hit 16 “Golden Boy” dramatist 17 Dress part 19 Turns about 24 Portrait painter Peter 25 Is in debt 30 Taj town 32 G-sharp’s keymate 33 Chow 34 Creepy Christopher 35 Stuck fast 36 Munich mister 37 Kindergarten item 38 Defeat 39 Affirmative vote 42 Sacred image 43 That’s the spirit 44 Make tea 45 Worth or Papas 47 Prior to, to Prior 48 Damp and chilly 50 Cleaned a carp 51 Schwarzenegger’s birthplace 53 Cabernet color 57 Voice type 58 It’s run of the mill? 59 Nullify 60 Tokyo, once 64 Power unit 66 Wayfarer’s whistle wetter

67 Stream 68 Earphones 69 Propel with a pole 70 Entertainer Kazan 71 Played soccer 72 Zones 74 Third degree? 75 Panel of peers 77 SHAEF commander 78 Letters of credit? 79 Johnny Horton hit 80 WWII unit 81 Dock of the bay 84 Put the whammy on 85 Galileo’s birthplace 87 Heidi’s hangout 89 Racer Luyendyk 90 Nocturnal visitor 92 Subway unit 95 Merit 97 It’s a long story 98 Caustic 99 Conversation pieces? 100 Gleam 101 Clerical title 103 Excludes 106 Smith or Sandler 108 ER exclamation 109 Painful 110 Eye appreciatively 113 Robert of “Quincy, M.E.” 114 Sticky stuff 115 Savage sort 116 La-la lead-in 117 Asian holiday 118 Nutritional abbr. 119 Writer Rand

ARIES (March 21 to April 19) Guess what, Lamb? You’re about to experience a new perspective on a situation you long regarded quite differently. What you learn could open more opportunities later. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) The Bold Bovine is tempted to charge into a new venture. But it might be best to take things one step at a time, so that you know just where you are at any given point. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) It’s a good time to go on that fun getaway you’ve been planning. You’ll return refreshed, ready and, yes, even eager to tackle the new challenge that awaits you. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) The Moon Child loves to fantasize about magical happenings in the early part of the week. But the sensible Crab gets down to serious business by week’s end. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) What goes around comes around for those lucky Leos and Leonas whose acts of generosity could be repaid with opportunities to expand into new and exciting areas of interest. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Your concern about your job responsibilities is commendable. But you need to take some quiet time to share with someone who has really missed being with you. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Aspects favor getting out and meeting new people. And as a bonus, you might find that some of your newly made friends could offer important business contacts. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) You might take pride in wanting to do everything yourself. But now’s a good time to ask family members to help with a demanding personal situation. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Pay more attention to the possibilities in that workplace change. It could show the way to make that long-sought turn on your career path. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Your need to succeed might overwhelm obligations to your loved ones. Ease up on that workload and into some well-deserved time with family and friends. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Love rules for amorous Aquarians who can make good use of their ability to communicate feelings. Don’t be surprised if they’re reciprocated in kind. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) Fishing for compliments? No doubt, you probably earned them. But it’s best to let others believe they were the ones who uncovered the treasure you really are. BORN THIS WEEK: Your good works flow from an open, generous heart. Nothing makes you happier than to see others happy as well. © 2012 King Features Synd., Inc.

LAFF-A-DAY


RIM REVIEW • JANUARY 11, 2012 | 15

JUST FOR FUN KING CROSSWORD DOWN 1 Messy guy 2 Mafia bigwig 3 MasterCard alternative, briefly 4 Gathering places 5 Intrepid 6 Mr. Robbins who partnered with Burt Baskin 7 Suitor 8 Toaster’s word 9 Cruel 10 Medley 11 Into the sunset 19 Mr. Pacino 21 “Ulalume” writer 24 Speedometer stat 25 “Caught ya!” 26 Brit’s radio 28 Ball-bearing gizmo 29 Negligent 30 Knock 31 Billboards 36 Sailor’s assent 37 Collection 38 Find not guilty 41 Therefore 42 Challenge 43 Love deity 44 Uncomplicated 46 “Do ___ others ...” 47 “Zip- ___ -DooDah” 48 ___ River, NJ 51 Struggle (for)

TRIVIA TEST 2012 KING FEATURES

1. ENTERTAINERS: Which actor’s birth name was Ramon Estevez? 2. MUSIC: What was the name of Smokey Robinson’s group? 3. INVENTIONS: Who is credited with inventing bifocal lenses? 4. PSYCHOLOGY: What irrational fear is manifested in peniaphobia? 5. LITERATURE: In which of Shakespeare’s plays does the character Shylock appear? 6. GENERAL KNOWLEDGE: During which war did Harry Truman fire Gen. Douglas MacArthur? 7. HISTORY: When did Australia become a commonwealth nation, largely gaining independence from Britain?

8. ANATOMY: About how long are the intestines in an adult male? 9. FAMOUS QUOTES: What American psychologist/philosopher once once said: “Act as if what you do makes a difference. It does.”? 10. MEASUREMENTS: Which month is named for the Roman festival of ritual purification?

MAGIC MAZE

Answers 1. Martin Sheen 2. The Miracles 3. Ben Franklin 4. A fear of poverty 5. The Merchant of Venice 6. Korean 7. 1901 8. About 28 feet 9. William James 10. February (Februa)

SUDOKU ANSWER

SUPER CROSSWORD

WORDS WITH BIG TEETH & A LONG TAIL

KING CROSSWORD Find the listed words in the diagram. They run in all directions — forward, backward, up, down and diagonally.

BIG TEETH/LONG TAIL

BY FIFI RODRIGUEZ

BY LINDA THISTLE

PREVIOUS CROSSWORDS

ANSWERS

ACROSS 1 Con game 5 Not-so-tall tale 8 Front projection 12 Needing a cane 13 Earlier than 14 Hold sway 15 Intl. cartel 16 Actress Gardner 17 Elevator name 18 Railyard sight 20 Result 22 Every last bit 23 15-Across’ product 24 Gullets 27 And so on 32 ___ Beta Kappa 33 Vast expanse 34 Blue 35 Unrelenting pest 38 Snakes 39 Storm center 40 Keyboard abbr. 42 Take out of context? 45 Small yellow fruit used in preserves 49 Vicinity 50 “Hail!” 52 Loosen 53 Optimistic 54 Family member 55 Particular 56 Being, to Brutus 57 “Of course” 58 “Piggies”

WEEKLY SUDOKU


16 | RIM REVIEW • JANUARY 11, 2012

GRAND OPENING RYO STATION 2 at Payson Chevron, 706 E. Hwy. 260

No Chem ica Adde ls d!

FREE 12 OZ COFFEE OR 24 OZ FOUNTAIN DRINK FOR RYO CUSTOMERS DURING PAYSON CHEVRON’S RYO GRAND OPENING!

190-200 Tubes, d e z i Custombacco Tobacco Pure To Taste! and Machine r To YouN-FSC NO

$

28

Not valid with any other offers. Ask for details. Offer varies by location.

Surgeon General’s Warning: Cigarettes contain carbon monoxide, can cause cancer.

• Lowest Cigarette Cartons & Packs - Largest Selection of RYO Tobacco • • Smoke Accessories • Coffee • Soda • Ice • Snacks • Arizona Lottery • ATM Inside • • Western Union / Orlandi Valuta Money Orders • Mobile & Overseas Calling Cards • • Food Stamps Accepted • Major Manufacturers Coupons Accepted • • Wide Selection of Domestic & Import Liquor, Beer & Wine •

COUPON

COUPON

COUPON

COUPON

Any Size Fountain Drink

Three Packs

12 oz. can

32 oz.

79

One coupon per person, per visit. Not valid with any other offers.

Marlboro Red Bull Gatorade

5

$ 99

2 5

$ 00

each +tax

for

One coupon per person, per visit. Not valid with any other offers. Airport Road

#

Sherwood

One coupon per person, per visit. Not valid with any other offers.

PAYSON CHEVRON

FREE One coupon per person, per visit. Not valid with any other offers.

PAYSON CHEVRON

#

E. Hwy. 260 Gr an ite

s Dell

1116 N. Beeline Hwy. • 928-474-2810

for

Manzanita

PAYSON TEXACO

2 3

$ 00

Highway 87

PAYSON TEXACO

One coupon per person, per visit. Not valid with any other offers.

Beeline Highway

¢

COUPON

706 E. Highway 260 • 928-472-2571


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