Hannibal Magazine

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Did you hear? You can get your mammogram with results, well woman exam and bone density test done in one day...sometimes even an hour*! Visit hannibalregionalmedicalgroup.org for more information.

LOCATIONS: Canton: 573-288-5360 Hannibal: 573-624-3400 Monroe City: 573-735-2506 Pittsfield: 217-285-5012 Shelbina: 573-588-4131 *Hannibal location only

A service of Hannibal Regional Hospital and Hannibal Regional Medical Group.


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Health & Fitness

2011 Regional Medical Services Directory

3rd Annual Medical Services Directory

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he 3rd Annual Medical Services Directory is your reference guide for all types of medical, dental, fitness and retirement living services in the region. Be sure to keep it as needs arise. Many changes are taking place regarding available medical services in the region. Our Regional Medical Services Directory will help you to navigate all types of medical services, where the medical services can be found, what choices are available and how to access these services. We have made every attempt to make our directory comprehensive through our research and with the help from area medical services providers. We thank all who helped us in our compilation and we apologize for any omissions. The region has come a long way since the time when a great deal of travel was necessary to obtain a full range of medical services. The region offers a huge range of services and people have many choices between qualified service providers.

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An affordable alternative to nursing home placement Whether for a few minutes, all day or even overnight— we afford caregivers respite from the demanding responsibilities of care-giving. You can have peace of mind knowing your senior loved one is spending the day in a safe, fun and socially engaging environment while receiving expert care. Beth Haven is an equal opportunity provider.

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Faith Based Community Not-for-ProďŹ t Since 1957

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HANNIBAL MEDICAL CAMPUS

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22 locations Counties Over 950 team members

1 Mission To lead, support and encourage excellence in health

Hannibal Regional Medical Group – Directory Hannibal Regional Medical Building:

Second Floor

Third Floor

Cardiology: 629-3300 Occupational Medicine: 629-3330

Family Practice: 629-3400 Internal Medicine: 629-3400 Allergy/Immunology: 629-3450 Outpatient Mental Health: 629-3370 Center for Child Success: 629-3370

Audiology: 629-3500 General Surgery: 629-3500 ENT: 629-3500 Pain Management: 629-3500 Plastic Surgery: 629-3500 Podiatry: 629-3500

Other HRMG Locations:

Outlying Clinics

Vision Institute

Canton: 573-288-5360 Monroe City: 573-735-2506 Pittsfield: 217-285-5012 Shelbina: 573-588-4131

Main Campus: 406-5730 Monroe City: 735-2506 Canton: 288-5360 Northport Plaza: 221-7999 Pittsfield: 217-285-5012

First Floor:

Express Care Inside Hannibal Walmart: 231-0660 Main Campus: 629-3330

hannibalregionalmedicalgroup.org | 573.629.3400

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Hannibal Children’s Center Pediatric Therapy

Hannibal Regional Hospital Foundation 175 Shinn Lane (573) 629-3577 hrhf.org

HRH Physical Therapy and Sports Medicine

Social Security Office

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hannibalhealth.org | 573.406.1600

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ϯϵϬϬ ϯϵϬϬ ϯϵϬϬ ϯϵϬϬ

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ĞƌŵĂƚŽůŽŐLJ

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ŶĚŽĐƌŝŶŽůŽŐLJ

WƵƌǀŝ WĂƌŝŬŚ͕ D ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ϯϭϮϲ

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ϯϭϯϵ ϯϭϰϭ ϯϭϰϯ ϯϭϰϱ ϯϭϰϳ

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WŽĚŝĂƚƌLJ

DŝĐŚĞůůĞ &ƌŝĞĚĞƌƐĚŽƌĨ͕ WD ͘ ͘ ϯϳϳϴ ^ĐŽƩ &ƌŝĞĚĞƌƐĚŽƌĨ͕ WD ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ϯϳϳϯ

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ZŚĞƵŵĂƚŽůŽŐLJ ϯϭϱϳ ϯϭϱϵ ϯϭϲϭ ϯϭϲϱ

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ZŽĚĞƌŝĐŬ ĂƌƚůĞƩ͕ D ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ϯϭϭϴ DĞĞƐŚĂ 'ǁĂŶͲEƵůůĂ͕ D ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ϯϴϰϳ ^ƚĞƉŚĞŶ ,ĂůƉŝŶ͕ D ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ϯϭϮϬ 'ĞŽƌŐĞ <ĞƌŬĞŵĞLJĞƌ͕ D ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ϯϳϴϯ WƌŝƐĐŝůůĂ >ŽŶŐ͕ D ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ϯϭϭϲ ƌŝŬ DĞŝĚů͕ D ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ϯϭϮϮ ƵƚŚĂŝŶĂ ZŝĐŚĞŚ͕ D ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ϯϭϲϯ WŚŝůŝƉ dǁĞĞĚLJ͕ D ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ϯϭϮϰ

DĞĚŝĐĂů KŶĐŽůŽŐLJ

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EĞƉŚƌŽůŽŐLJ

DĂƌŬ 'ƌĞĞŶǁĞůů͕ D ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ϯϳϲϳ WƌĂƐŚĂŶƚŚ WŽĚĂƌĂůůĂ͕ D ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ϯϳϵϴ

EĞƵƌŽůŽŐLJ

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'ĂƐƚƌŽĞŶƚĞƌŽůŽŐLJ 'ĞŶĞƌĂů ^ƵƌŐĞƌLJ

>LJŶŶ tĂůůĞLJ͕ D ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ϯϭϭϰ DŝĐŚĞůĞ ůůĞŶ͕ t,EWͲ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ϯϭϭϮ

^ĂŶĚƌĂ ŚůƵŵ͕ D ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ϯϭϬϴ :ŽŚŶ ĞŶŶĞƩ͕ D ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ϯϭϭϬ >ĂƵƌĂ DĂƉůĞ͕ D ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ͘ ϯϳϴϴ

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ŵďƵůĂƚŽƌLJ ĂƌĞ ĞŶƚĞƌ ; Ϳ

;ϱϳϯͿ ϮϯϭͲϯϵϬϬ DŽŶĚĂLJʹ&ƌŝĚĂLJ ϳ Ăŵ ƚŽ ϴ Ɖŵ ^ĂƚƵƌĚĂLJ ϵ Ăŵ ƚŽ ϲ Ɖŵ ^ƵŶĚĂLJ EŽŽŶ ƚŽ ϲ Ɖŵ EŽ ĂƉƉŽŝŶƚŵĞŶƚ ŶĞĐĞƐƐĂƌLJ

KƵƌ ^ĂƚĞůůŝƚĞ &ĂĐŝůŝƟĞƐ

ŽǁůŝŶŐ 'ƌĞĞŶ ϳϭϬ ƵƐŝŶĞƐƐ ϲϭ ^ŽƵƚŚ ;ϱϳϯͿ ϯϮϰͲϮϬϲϯ :ĂŶĞƚ DLJĞƌƐ͕ K Θ >ĞĂŶŶĂ >ĞĂŬĞ͕ &EW ĞŶƚĞƌ ϰϬϭ ,ǁLJ ϭϵ ;ϱϳϯͿ ϮϲϳͲϯϯϭϴ DĂƌŬ dƵĐŬĞƌ͕ K Θ WĞŐ ŽůLJĂƌ͕ &EW DŽŶƌŽĞ ŝƚLJ ϰϬϬ E DĂŝŶ ;ϱϳϯͿ ϳϯϱͲϰϱϰϭ ZŽĚŶĞLJ zĂŐĞƌ͕ K WĂůŵLJƌĂ ϭϴϭϭ ^ DĂŝŶ ;ϱϳϯͿ ϳϲϵͲϮϮϯϭ ĂǀŝĚ <ŶŽƌƌ͕ K͕ 'ŝŶĂ WŽŶƟƵƐ͕ D Θ ĞǀĞƌůLJ ŚƌŝƐƚLJ͕ &EW sĂŶĚĂůŝĂ ϰϮϱ E 'ĂůůŽǁĂLJ ZĚ ;ϱϳϯͿ ϱϵϰͲϯϴϯϮ :ĞīƌĞLJ ƌĂŵƉ͕ K Θ >ĞĂŶŶĂ >ĞĂŬĞ͕ &EW

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HANNIBAL MEDICAL CAMPUS

NORTHEAST MISSOURI AMBULATORY SURGERY CENTER &ƵůůLJ ĐĐƌĞĚŝƚĞĚ KƵƚƉĂƟ ĞŶƚ ^ƵƌŐĞƌLJ &ĂĐŝůŝƚLJ ŝŶ ,ĂŶŶŝďĂů͕ DK As northeast Missouri’ s only multi-specialty y

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surgery center, we offer the community a

ĐŽŶǀĞŶŝĞŶƚ ĂŶĚ ĐŽƐƚͲĞī ĞĐƟ ǀĞ ĂůƚĞƌŶĂƟ ǀĞ ƚŽ ƚƌĂĚŝƟ ŽŶĂů ŚŽƐƉŝƚĂů ĐĂƌĞ in a friendly, caring g atmosphere.

^ƵƌŐĞƌLJ ĞŶƚĞƌ WƌŽǀŝĚĞƌƐ Sandra Ahlum, MD Richard Baumann, MD John Bennett, MD Christopher Bieniek, MD Michael Bukstein, MD Curtis Burton, MD Steven Cockrell, MD Scott Friedersdorf, DPM Shelly Friedersdorf, DPM Mark Greenwell, MD Daniel Gwan-Nulla, MD Aphrodite Henderson, MD Patricia Hirner, MD Justin Imhof, DO Kevin Imhof, DO Bhagirath Katbamna, MD Michael Koenig, MD Laura Maple, MD Erik Meidl, MD Alan Stoll, DDS Lynn Walley, MD Tria Wilhite, MD

ĂǀĂŝůĂďůĞ ĨƌŽŵ ƚŚĞ ĨŽůůŽǁŝŶŐ ƐƉĞĐŝĂůƟ ĞƐ͗

ͻ Ăƌ͕ EŽƐĞ͕ dŚƌŽĂƚ ͻ 'ĂƐƚƌŽĞŶƚĞƌŽůŽŐLJ ͻ 'ĞŶĞƌĂů ^ƵƌŐĞƌLJ ͻ 'LJŶĞĐŽůŽŐLJ ͻ /ŶƚĞƌŶĂů DĞĚŝĐŝŶĞ ͻ EĞƉŚƌŽůŽŐLJ ͻ KƌĂůͬDĂdžŝůůŽĨĂĐŝĂů ͻ KƌƚŚŽƉĞĚŝĐ ͻ WŽĚŝĂƚƌLJ ͻ WƵůŵŽŶŽůŽŐLJ ͻ hƌŽůŽŐLJ

The NEMO Ambulatory Surgery Center is fully accredited by the Accreditation Association of Ambulatory Health Care (AAAHC).

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Older Adults Living Life to the Fullest 573-588-4175

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655 Clinic Road, Suite 110 Hannibal, MOÂ 63401Â Â

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Beth Haven Nursing Home We offer the following services to our residents: • Certified Medicare and Medicaid Home • Skilled Nursing and Personal Care from a Professional Staff of RNs, LPNs, Certified Nurse Aides, and Certified Restorative Aides

Alzheimer’s Care • Dementia Care provided by specially educated staff • Daily Scheduled and Sporadic activity program designed for individuals with memory impairment by in-house Recreational Therapist

Rehabilitative Services

• Secured residence with access to secured patio and courtyard • Semi-Private and Private rooms featuring

Beth Haven’s well-trained, experienced team of in-house professionals takes pride in providing an interdisciplinary approach to helping individuals regain independence and rebuild strengths and capabilities. Complete rehabilitation services include:

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• Speech therapy • Occupational therapy All therapy is personalized with the goal of helping people get well and return to their normal daily routine as quickly as possible.

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Pleasant View • Private rooms w/private baths •Choice of 2 floor plans

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Women of Wellness Offers Quick One-Stop Services E\ 5RELQ 'R\OH

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he Women of Wellness program, provided by Hannibal Regional Medical Group and Hannibal Regional Hospital, is an integrated approach for women to receive annual health care services in one brief appointment that will last about an hour. During the appointment, as recommended by a provider, women receive a bone density test, gynecological exam, pap test, and mammogram results. Mammograms are scheduled in conjunction with the wellness exam and provided by Hannibal Regional Hospital Medical Imaging Services. This service is offered at five convenient Hannibal Regional Medical Group locations: Canton: Tuesday, 9:00–11:00 am Pittsfield: Tuesday, 9:00–11:00 am Hannibal main campus: 9:00–11:00 am Monroe City: Wednesday, 1:00–2:00 pm Shelbina: Thursday, 9:00–11:00 am

Hannibal Regional Hospital utilizes digital mammography with computer aided detection to provide the most accurate screening and diagnosis of breast disease. Bone density is checked with a DEXA scan (dual energy x-ray absorptiometry.) This painless, quick procedure is used to screen for osteoporosis. The gynecological exam and pap test are performed by nurse practitioners with Hannibal Regional Medical Group. Most insurances are accepted. However, if you are under insured or uninsured, are between the ages of 35-64, and meet the income guidelines, you may be eligible for these tests under the “Show Me Healthy Women� program. Contact any Hannibal Regional Medical Group clinic for more information. For more information on this program visit hannibalregionalmedicalgroup.org. Q

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Wellness Programs Saving Businesses Money E\ $EE\ 6FKOLSPDQQ

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ellness programs at work are not only good for the waistline; they’re good for the bottom line. Companies across the nation are adopting employee wellness programs to drive down expenses associated with insurance, disability claims, workers’ compensation, and absenteeism. In fact, Johnson & Johnson adopted a corporate wellness program in 1995 and have since seen a two-thirds reduction in smokers, but companies do not need to have the Johnson & Johnson budget to start such a program. Abby Schlipmann, Corporate Wellness Coordinator at Quincy Medical Group, will coordinate a wellness program to companies at little to no cost and customize the services based on the company’s needs. A wellness program can be as simple or comprehensive as the company size, employee number, and goals dictate or allow. Schlipmann says, “These programs can include stress management, health screenings, fitness programs, insurance education, nutrition, and tobacco cessation. It is really a cafeteria-style plan for businesses to choose and customize their specific needs. Some companies may just need flu shots; others may need a wellness makeover. And it doesn’t matter if the company has 10 or 1,000 employees; we can provide any and all our services to them.” Quincy Medical Group can help employees and their families reach personal health goals through fitness classes, workshops, nutritional guidance, and more; and all of these programs can be held on-site at the convenience of the company. Additional benefits include corporate memberships to local fitness centers, online personal wellness tracking, and progress reports. The American Association of Occupational Health Nurses conducted an employee survey, and found that over 75% of wellness program participants perceived the program as a good

way to improve their health, and over 60% of the participants consider the programs an incentive to stay with the company. A paper in the December 2010 Harvard Business Review found that the return on each dollar a large company invests in an employee wellness program can be as high as $6. A full-service, comprehensive plan would begin with collecting biometric data from all participants and using this data to populate a Health Risk Assessment (HRA) to determine the company’s needs based on the employee profile. HRA’s are the best way to determine what kind of workplace wellness program intervention will hold the highest likelihood of success, measure its progress, and track the changes in health of the aggregate employee population. Every company’s wellness goals and priorities will be different based on the employee profile, and Quincy Medical Group will individualize the program to bestsuit these goals. Quincy Medical Group adopted an employee wellness program and can attest to its success. In the first year, over 75% of employees participated. Many employees have since quit smoking, lost weight, and excercised 30 minutes five times a week. Bob Johnson, Executive Director of Human Resources for Quincy Medical Group, says, “Because our employee number was over 500 people, we wanted to lead as a corporate citizen and as a health care provider. Our wellness program has created a work environment of people who feel valued because we are doing everything we can to provide them with the tools to reach their personal wellness goals. On top of that, we can measure the benefits from the program, including decreased health care costs and absenteeism. This is a comprehensive program designed to assist individuals in meeting their wellness goals.” For a complete list of wellness services, contact Abby Schlipmann at 222-6550 ext. 6459 or aschlipmann@quincymedgroup.com. Q +DQQLEDO 0DJD]LQH $SULO


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Blue Light Photodynamic Therapy for Acne Treatment E\ %HWKDQ\ .QREORFK

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uincy Medical Group’s Dermatology Department has recently introduced a blue light photodynamic therapy, known as BLU-U®, to treat patients with acne. BLU-U is an effective treatment for patients of all ages with moderate Acne vulgaris inflammatory. BLU-U benefits the patient in that it reduces acne, there is no downtime and there are minimal side effects (some have reported dry skin). BLUU provides fast treatments with no discomfort, and it can be used in conjunction with or as an alternative to antibiotics and topical treatments. The unique blue light kills the bacteria in your skin in simple, 17-minute sessions. The treatments, depending on the severity of the case, last approximately five weeks once or twice per week and are based on individual needs. Dermatologist, Dr. Sheldon Shore, and Registered Nurse, Dana Simons, are there to help patients determine their best treatment options. Acne affects nearly 85% of people at some time in their lives and can cause depression and anxiety for some people. Mother of 11-year-old MaKayla said that her daughter’s “self-confidence was fading. Acne was controlling my daughter’s life. I could see results after the first treatment, and after the fourth treatment her acne was gone. She had been wearing make-up since the second grade, and now she doesn’t need it. I am so thankful I called QMG and that Dana was there. My daughter’s confidence is restored; this has changed her life.”

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Patient Diane S. never had problems with acne until she reached her 40’s. She had tried every cream and acne treatment on the market, and said, “They would work for a couple weeks before my acne came back. I scheduled an appointment with Dana, and she suggested that I try the BLU-U. I saw improvements the next day. After four treatments, I haven’t had a break out since November.” BLU-U is not a laser and does not emit ultraviolet light but delivers a fluorescent light scattered over a large surface area. Simons adds, “the light is not hot; it doesn’t hurt. Sometimes it

leaves redness similar to mild sunburn, but the minimal side effects are greatly out-weighed by the outcomes of the treatment.” BLU-U is also an alternative for people who may have difficulty swallowing pills or following regimens of applications of topical prescriptions for lengthy periods of time. BLU-U is one of many tools available to treat moderate acne that can be done in combination with other treatments. While most insurance plans do not cover the costs of BLU-U treatment, the treatments are affordable and initial consultations are complimentary. Q

Quincy Medical Group Now Offers VASER® Lipo A gentle body contouring procedure with smooth results and fast recovery E\ %HWKDQ\ .QREORFK

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undreds of thousands of people choose to undergo cosmetic body contouring procedures each year, but now many are looking for safer, less painful alternatives to traditional tumescent liposuction. Dr. Ethan Philpott, Board Certified Plastic Surgeon at Quincy Medical Group is now using the much talked about VASER Lipo System to meet patients’ demands for gentle body contouring procedures that produce natural looking results with minimal downtime. Glori Traeder, Certified Nurse Practitioner, says “VASER Lipo is a great choice for patients who want to contour a body part when healthy diet and exercise aren’t giving them the results they would like. This procedure is minimally invasive and allows physicians to perform liposuction for minor touch-ups as well as major transformations.” An alternative to the harsh techniques of traditional liposuction, VASER Lipo uses advanced ultrasound technology designed to gently reshape the body. The sound energy is transmitted through small probes that diffuse the ultrasound waves and liquefy the fat for easy removal. The sound energy is gentle enough that it can break apart only the fat, preserving important nerves, blood vessels and connective tissues to promote smooth, predictable results with fast patient recovery. “We are getting impressive results with VASER Lipo,” said Dr. Philpott. “Our patients are happier right away because they start

to see results immediately after the surgery. With VASER Lipo, I get predictable outcomes with noticeable skin tightening and patients have less bruising and less downtime.” The VASER Lipo System was FDA cleared for body contouring in 2002 and over 100,000 procedures have been performed worldwide. Clinical studies of the procedure have demonstrated excellent results. In a recent study, blood loss during the VASER Lipo procedure was found to be on average 7.5 times less than with traditional liposuction. “We looked at all of the current technology for office-based fat reduction procedures, and found VASER Lipo to be the most selective in targeting unwanted fat,” added Dr. Philpott. “Results begin immediately and continue to improve with time as areas heal. I was pleasantly surprised with the patient’s quick return to work and normal activities.” Dr. Ethan Philpott is board certified as a diplomate of the American Board of Plastic Surgery after completing an integrated Plastic surgery residency at University of Missouri Hospitals and Clinics. He was chief resident in 2008-2009. Dr. Philpott received his Medical Degree from the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio School of Medicine, where he was elected a member of Alpha Omega Alpha. His interests include the use of innovative technologies in cosmetic surgery to enhance results allowing for minimal recovery. The Department of Plastic Surgery is located in a private setting at Quincy Medical Group, 1118 Hampshire St., Quincy, IL. Consultations are complimentary. Q +DQQLEDO 0DJD]LQH $SULO


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he telegram was waiting for her at the desk of the Ritz Hotel. Margaret Brown and her daughter, Helen, were enjoying an extended tour of Europe and the Middle East and had decided to spend a few days in Paris, booking rooms in the famous hotel. The telegram she received did not contain good news: her son, Lawrence, beckoned his mother to return to America. His son, Margaret’s first grandson Lawrence Jr., whom she had yet to meet, had fallen ill. Without hesitation, Mrs. Brown booked passage on the first vessel available to carry her across the Atlantic and back to Missouri where the babe was being cared for. Helen decided to stay behind in Paris to enjoy the company of her friends. The vessel was, of course, the Titanic. Mrs. Brown’s life, and her legacy, would be forever linked to the fateful tragedy that was to befall the Titanic on its one and only voyage across the sea, the anniversary of which now being commemorated one hundred years later. Margaret Tobin was born in Hannibal, Missouri, on July 18, 1867. The proud parents, John and Johanna Tobin, had both migrated from Ireland to the United States during the potato famine of the 1840s. The Tobin family lived in a modest, four-room cottage on Denkler’s Alley in an area of Hannibal that had become a tightly knit community of primarily Irish Catholic immigrants. John Tobin worked as a laborer at the Hannibal Gas Works located on Palmyra Road, earning a modest wage that was barely enough to provide for his growing family. Even with their hardships, Margaret Tobin’s childhood years in Hannibal, between 1867 and 1886, were an idyllic time. Hannibal had survived the Civil War and was a growing center of commerce. The railroads had put Hannibal on the map, making it a river town known for its innovations and prosperity. During her time here, Margaret would witness miraculous events and enjoy civic improvements that exemplified the wealth and cultural sophistication of Hannibal. Post-war Hannibal was a town abuzz with energy, literally. Sixteen lumber firms had taken up shop along the banks of the Mississippi River and Bear Creek and their sawmills churned

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out millions of linear feet of lumber per year. In 1867, the year that Maggie was born, the main east-west thoroughfare in downtown Hannibal, previously known as Market Street, was now being called Broadway. From Third Street westward, entire city blocks of Broadway were under construction. The unpaved, dirt streets were crammed with horse-drawn delivery wagons while the wood-plank sidewalks provided those on foot an easier path to navigate. Hannibal could boast three hotels, four banks, 15 boot and shoe makers, 22 physicians, and 53 grocery stores. There were 28 saloons and 13 churches. Railways brought passengers and goods from back east to the rapidly-growing metropolis – the 1850 census of Hannibal cited just over 2,000 residents, but by the time Margaret was born, the population totaled more than ten thousand. Counted in this number were just over “1,600 Negroes” and “one Indian”. Railroads drove the local economy. The Hannibal-St. Joseph Railroad, which had been completed just in time for the Civil War, had been a phenomenal success and was instrumental in the growth of the town. In 1870, the mechanics of H&SJ, who had constructed many of the engines, freight and passenger cars used by the railway, were commissioned by Chicago’s George Pullman to build six special cars for his new company – some of the first Pullman cars constructed. Later that year, the first train heading for Denver left Hannibal’s depot with passengers


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',6&29(5 seeking the riches and adventure that awaited them in the “Wild West� -- gold and silver had recently been found in a small town called Leadville, Colorado. In Margaret’s birth year of 1867, the Hannibal Board of Education was instituted and named Charles Spring the first superintendent of schools. The first building purchased by the new district for school use was a church building on the northeast corner of Fourth and Center Streets, which they called Central School. While Maggie Tobin was a still a toddler on Denkler’s Alley, a residence on the southeast corner of Sixth and North Streets was purchased by the Hannibal Board of Education and used as Hannibal High School. The first high school graduate was Miss Ida Volk, whose commencement was held in June of 1873 in a schoolroom at Sixth and North Streets under the direction of Joe McVey, principal. In 1868 the Missouri Legislature had passed a bill that mandated segregation in all Missouri schools. To provide for the education of African-American children in Hannibal, Douglassville School was built on Rock Street between Ninth and Tenth and the first day of school was September 15, 1870. Each of the three rooms housed a separate class taught by a white teacher: Mr. A. D. Kinzer (who also served as the school’s principal), Miss Amelia Kaley and Miss Georgia Barde. After pressure from the

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community, the first black teachers at the school replaced the white staff in 1874. Joseph Pelham became the principal and taught alongside Miss Ella Gordon and Miss Jenny Golden. Not long after the opening of Douglassville School, just a short distance away on Prospect Street, the Tobin children began attending Mary O’Leary’s grammar school. Mrs. O’Leary, an aunt of the Tobin siblings, tutored many of the Irish immigrant’s children in the neighborhood. It was during this time that Margaret’s friends and family began to call the young lass “Maggie� -never in her lifetime was she actually referred to as Molly. (“Molly� was a fictional caricature based on Margaret Brown’s life for the 1960 Broadway play, The Unsinkable Molly Brown.) On warm summer nights, it is possible that the Tobin family would head south to join the throngs of Hannibalians who marveled at the new game of baseball. The Hannibal Nationals, the


town’s first baseball team, was also organized in 1871, five years before the founding of the National League. None of the ball players used gloves in those days; a familiar saying of the time was that the only protection a catcher had was a prayer seeking good luck and no injury. The earliest baseball fields were near Collier Street and Maple Avenue. Although a path was carved out for the bases, the baseball diamond had clumps of grass throughout the field and at times the outfielders had a hard time digging the ball out of a tangle of weeds while the runners leisurely rounded the bases. One game of note occurred between the Nationals and a team from Payson, Illinos – the hometown boys won, beating Payson by a score of 99 to 60. The team was unhappy with the win as Louie Towne, caught trying to steal home, prevented the team from reaching the score of 100. Just a few weeks after Margaret celebrated her fourth birthday, on August 1, 1871 the new Wabash Bridge was dedicated and officially opened for traffic. For many years, Hannibal merchants dreamed of their own bridge across the Mississippi, which would further the advancement of Hannibal as a center of commerce and bring even more business opportunities to the small river town. The cost of the bridge was $485,000, an enormous sum of money at the time. The bridge spanned 1300 feet, stretching across the narrowest part of the Mississippi River; unfortunately, this location brought the bridge up against the face of a limestone bluff. Nitro glycerin was used to blast through the bluff to create a 302-foot tunnel for the tracks to continue westward from the bridge. To allow river traffic to pass uninhibited, one span of the bridge was able to rotate horizontally and then swing back into place once the steamboat had passed. The bridge was constructed for the railway but could also be used by other modes of transportation. Planks could be laid across the tracks which would allow other traffic to flow across the river for a modest fee: those travelling by foot paid 5 cents each, a man on horseback paid 15 cents, a wagon pulled by two horses cost 30 cents, and hogs, sheep and goats were charged 3 cents each. In 1873, the Hannibal City Council voted to allow construction of a street railway system. The tracks were laid from North Main and Hill Streets to Collier Street on South Main, and from Main Street westward on Broadway to the wedge at Market and Broadway. May, 1878 saw the enormous celebration for the opening of the streetcar line; newspaper accounts claimed that every citizen of Hannibal witnessed the inauguration, and it is possible that the Tobin family was part of the cheering crowd of onlookers gathered on Broadway to celebrate the event. The first shiny new street car was pulled by a lively mule team. At the end

of the line, the team was unhitched, led around to the other end of the car, and re-hitched facing the opposite direction. Among the passengers on this maiden voyage were two enthusiastic teenage boys, Harry Green and Robert Coontz, blowing horns and waving to the crowd. Young Robert would one day work for the streetcar company as a driver; by age fifteen he would be named superintendent of the line; and by 1919 (seven years after the Titanic disaster) Robert Coontz would rise to the rank of Admiral of the entire U.S. Navy. During the 1870s, many of the mansions of Millionaires’ Row were built, including the magnificent Italianate Villa for David Dubach on the southwest corner of Bird and 5th Streets. Also during this time, the Eastlake-style home of Sumner McKnight was completed on the bluff overlooking Bird at Tenth Street. This structure would later be moved by mule team some 300 feet west to make room for the construction of the Cruikshank mansion, today called Rockcliffe. In 1879, the magnificent Park Hotel was built on Center Street facing Central Park. That same year, the first telephone in the state of Missouri was installed in Hannibal, beating St. Louis by only a matter of hours. The first commercial telephone line ran from Hayward’s wholesale grocery on Front Street and connected directly to the office of his lime kiln near Riverside Cemetery. Telephone poles were yet to be invented, so the telephone cable was strung from building to building and tree to tree. Many people in Hannibal were skeptical of the practicality of this new-fangled invention. Charles W. McDaniel, who was responsible for hand-making the first telephone used in Hannibal, recalled in his book, Reminiscences of Hannibal Missouri, his attempt to install a telephone at the office of Hannibal’s largest lumber dealer, John J. Cruikshank. “I don’t need a telephone as I have a horse and buggy and drive around to all of the lumber yards every morning,” Cruikshank told McDaniel. However, the elder businessman wanted to help the upstart’s new business venture, and agreed to allow the installation of the telephone to take place. Not long after, Cruikshank sold his horse and buggy to McDaniel. “By using the telephone, I was enabled to get a purchasing agent for a railroad company to stay over for another train and succeeded in selling him a very large bill of lumber,” Cruikshank explained. “I made a sale today that will pay my telephone expense for the rest of my life.” Maggie Tobin graduated from Mary O’Leary’s grammar school in 1880. The thirteen-year-old was now expected to contribute to the household and took a job at D. J. Garth & Bro., a massive four-story tobacco company on Palmyra Avenue. The company processed over a half million pounds of leaf tobacco +DQQLEDO 0DJD]LQH $SULO


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each year, producing plug, twist, chewing and rolling tobacco as well as cigars. Maggie worked as a leaf-stripper, pulling the papery leaves away from the prickly stems. It is also believed that in her late teens Maggie took work as a maid or food server in the Park Hotel near Central Park; during those years, many of the servants in town who worked at the hotels, restaurants, or in private homes for families such as David Dubach and John Cruikshank were Irish immigrant young ladies.

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The lure of the riches of the gold mines had convinced Maggie’s older brother Daniel to travel west to Colorado to seek his fortune. In 1886, Margaret Tobin, persuaded by her brother to join him, packed her belongings and boarded a train at the Hannibal station headed for Leadville, Colorado. There, she would marry a man of modest means, J. J. Brown. Seven years later, Mr. Brown would facilitate the opening of a new mine which would turn out to be the largest gold and silver mine in Leadville; for his efforts, the mining company he worked for would give him partial ownership of the company. J. J. and Margaret Tobin Brown would become instant Millionaires. During her life, Maggie would travel the world and make headlines every where she visited. However, she would return to Hannibal and visit her hometown many times, staying at her sister Catherine (Tobin) Becker’s home at 422 North Street. This month, one hundred years after the sinking of the Titanic, which took place on April 14, 1912, we remember Margaret Tobin Brown with hometown pride as the heroine of Lifeboat #6. Her remarkable life, which began right here in Hannibal, Missouri, is now the stuff of legend and folklore and her memory lives on in the small cottage on Denkler’s Alley, the birthplace of “The Unsinkable Molly Brown�. Q


Common Sense

2

h, April, where have you been? I find myself impatient to end the cold days of Missouri winters. April seldom seems to arrive soon enough. Admittedly, we had a mild winter this year, but I am always happy to see the browns and grays of winter give way to the greens and bright colors of April. Usually by April the advocates of beautiful lawns and flower beds are well on their way to another year of lawns that look like those found on magazine covers. I appreciate a good lawn as much as the next person. It reflects pride and dedication as to where you reside. If I told you I have been prepping for a year where I could submit a photo of my yard to Better Homes and Gardens magazine, however, then I would be leading you astray. I think it all begins when the annual seed and garden catalogs are mailed about the time my Bass Pro Shops and Cabela’s catalogs arrive. I am just trying to present my case here. It is not my fault that I have a short attention span. Once I open these outdoor supply and equipment magazines, it somehow affects my rational thought process. I begin second guessing myself immediately. I can’t justify buying plants for flower beds when I can invest the same monies in fishing tackle and have ten times the fun. Flowers are just weeds with something pretty on the end of them. Who needs a new weed-eater when you can buy a quality fishing combination or a shotgun for turkey season? When you start thinking about investing in a new riding lawnmower, forget about it. The grass can wait; a new fishing boat can’t! If you give my logic a little consideration, it makes a lot of sense. How many times can you put loved ones and friends on a riding lawnmower with you? The answer from the boat owner’s perspective is obvious. I have actually had loved ones and friends refuse to get on my lawnmower. Period. They do not hesitate to come right out and say “NO” to my face. Just do the math on owning a lawnmower versus owning a boat. It totals up to quality time on the water versus mowing when you consider getting bitten by mosquitoes and horseflies as you mow, getting covered with dust as you change direction on your mower, potentially mowing over ground bee nests or under wasp nests and constantly servicing %\ +LFN )LQQ

and dealing with the upkeep of a mower. Lawnmowers just radiate stress. I can sympathize if you have a spouse or a significant other who doesn’t embrace this philosophy on lawn care. Sometimes spouses and significant others can be equally hard on your stress level. There comes a time when you just have to take matters into

your own hands. Treat yourself to some new outdoor gear. Buy some new fishing tackle. Pull up in front of your house with a new boat in tow. Forget those crazy concepts of yard improvement others in your home keep talking about. If you leave at dark and come home at dark, then having a pretty yard is irrelevant. Who cares if you even have grass, let alone mow it? You are probably wondering if I have a boat and live a life like this. Well, the answer to that question is no. You can bet that as soon as this article goes to press, though, I will be in my garage sweeping it out. I figure if even a few of you heed my advice, then there will be a few new boats for sale because of separation and divorce. I am always up for a good deal. Fishing boats are twice the fun at half the price! Have a wonderful spring! I hope to see many of you in the outdoors, and I look forward sharing more time with you this year in Hannibal Magazine! Q +DQQLEDO 0DJD]LQH $SULO


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Down Country Announces Conference Attendees

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ver 300 people were in attendance for Down Country’s first annual Rhinestones & Rodeo Art Auction and Dance fundraiser on Saturday, February 4. The evening featured the final night of the “I Have a Voiceâ€? gallery tour. Kate Dougherty, founder of Down Country, announced the individuals who were selected as 2012 Conference attendees. The following individuals were selected based on the application process to attend the National Down Syndrome Congress (NDSC) in Washington, DC this year: Katie Maddox, Angie Eichor, Mike Vaia, Chuck & Michelle Todd, and Kent & Reta Richmond. Also, receiving honorary mention for their applications are Jaime Hoerr, Kindra Szarka and first runner-ups Chris & Jill Reffett. Once the attendees return from DC, they are required to share the information (Pay It Forward) with their local Tri-State Community. Upon completion of “paying it forwardâ€? attendees are eligible to attend ANY nationally recognized conference approved by the Down Country Board. The Board prescreens all conferences for their emphasis on education, technology and POSTIVE awareness. The group utilizes Down syndrome to provide an overview of disability awareness. It is not an organization only for Down syndrome, but for the entire Tri-State community that learns outside the box. It chose the NDSC as its vetting conference for attendees because 1) it’s the largest and oldest advocacy group for individuals with special needs in the country-40 years this year 2) offers15 ½ hours of continuing education for therapist and educators 3) a simultaneous Brothers/Sisters conference ( for siblings of those with special needs), as well as, a Youth & Adult Conference for self-advocates -over 500 self advocates attend and 4) Down Syndrome has no syndrome specific conditions. This means any condition someone with Down syndrome has, someone who does not have Down syndrome will have/may have/could have the same condition. For example, Autism, Cardiac Concerns, Celiac Disease, Allergy/Asthma, Ear, Nose, Throat Concerns, Digestive Difficulties, Respiratory Concerns, Speech Issues, Cerebral Palsy, Learning Disabilities/Styles, Vision Issues, Hearing, Cancer, Behavior Disorders, etc. etc. etc‌This means there is a lot of bang for your buck in a rural area! “I want to thank Down Country for making these opportunities available. Having these resources for our staff and community will truly help all the students in our school district as well as members of our community. Without Down Country’s support, these opportunities would not happen,â€? stated Eric Churchwell, Superintendent Palmyra R-1 School District.


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Celebrating the Hannibal Treescape $5%25 '$< ,6 $35,/

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f you grew up in Hannibal in the 1960’s and had Miss Gibson for 9th grade English, you were required to memorize this poem. And like me you probably didn’t appreciate the message till later in life. Several years ago, Harold Crane asked me to serve on the City of Hannibal Tree Board. I respected Harold and the work that had already been done by this new city board. Harold was the President, but by the time I was appointed his illness prevented our serving together. My experience on the board has been extremely rewarding and very educational. I want to share a little history so you too can appreciate the importance of this city advisory board. In 1991, Harold Crane, Ed Tamerius, and several volunteers formed a Northeast Missouri Community Forestry Advisory Council. Their main objective was to encourage and promote tree planting and care in Northeast Missouri. Eventually this group focused and was instrumental in encouraging the City Council to adopt a tree ordinance in 1998.

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Section 2 of the Tree Ordinance called for the establishment of a Tree Board conssisting of 5 volunteer members whose responsibility is to advise city personnel on tree management, problems and opportunities for plantings. m One of the first accomplishments of the tree board was to help the city qualify for tthe Tree City USA award. Since 2000 the city has held this designation. In the first year Hannibal was one of only 23 Missouri communities to qualify. H Although the Board’s primary purpose is to advise, the Tree Board has always been a hands-on group. For the past 14 years the Board has physically helped plant over 250 ttrees and continues to maintain them with annual mulching and pruning. They also aassisted with the planting of nearly an equal amount of trees through obtaining grants, sseeking donations, and developing planting plans for areas in the city. All of these efforts have not gone unnoticed at the state level. The City of Hannibal Tree Board has been honored to receive the following awards: T 2003 Missouri Treescape Award 2003 Governor’s Make A Difference Award 2003 Exceptional Re-Leaf Award 2011 Arbor Award of Excellence Since 2004 the Tree Board has conducted or co-sponsored the following workshops:

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2004 Storm Preparedness Workshop 2007 Tree Identification 2009 Pruning Workshop for City Employees 2011 Fruit Tree Pruning and Care 2011 Tree Care workshop for Park and Recreation personnel


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The Tree Board is collaborating with Mary Lynne Richards, Hannibal Parks & Recreation assistant supervisor for marketing,, to facilitate a tree-planting celebration at Dulaney Park on Arborr Day April 27. Fourth-graders from Holy Family, St. John’s Lutheran and Eugene Field schools will take a field trip to the park at Lemon Street off of Warren Barrett Drive. The program at 1:30 p.m. will last about 45 minutes, with Department of Conservation officials helping the children learn about Arbor Day and plant a tree. 75(( $1' %(1&+ 352*5$0

The Tree Board also works with the Parks & Recreation Department on the Park Heritage Tree and Bench program in which people can be honored through the purchase of trees and benches in Hannibal’s parks.

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One of the most recent endeavors was adoption of a Tree Preservation Ordinance. We began our study in 2008 and final passage was 2010. Undeveloped areas in the city will require a tree survey prior to development. Trees removed for development will be replaced either on-site or off-site according to a set formula. With this development tool in place the city can lessen soil movement and water runoff, provide buffer zones between commercial and residential zones, and provide landscaping for large commercial parking lots. Long term goals are part of our annual work plan. The Tree Board is committed in 2012 to develop a GPS mapping of the 250 trees we have planted and set aside new areas for future planting. We eventually want to have all of our information on-line and will be developing our own website to further our public education goals. Currently, the Tree Board has assisted the architectural firm hired by the city to design the new sidewalks on Main Street. A previous Downtown Tree Plan designed by a state urban forester funded through a TRIM grant is being used as a guideline. Planting the right trees for an urban environment is critical to an attractive streetscape. Q

8549 Country Road 404 Just minutes from Hannibal off hardtop dtop road

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KRISTY TREVATHAN VATHAN Realtor Associate www.kristytrevathan.com Office: 573-221-8171 ext. 19 Cell: 573-248-6581 kristy.trevathan@prestigerealty.net

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HLGU Announces Classroom and Online Summer Courses

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annibal-LaGrange University is offering a variety of classroom and online courses for summer 2012. “Advantages to taking classes over the summer semester include a more relaxed atmosphere, smaller class sizes, and allows the student to concentrate on one or two classes rather than a full class load, � stated Dr. David Pelletier, HLGU Vice President of Academic Affairs. Once again this year, HLGU is offering the inseat class History & Hollywood. This unique-to-HLGU-class is taught by Dr. Sam Swisher. “This course examines how films have influenced our understanding of history, and whether or not it is important for films to be accurate in what they tell us about history,� stated Swisher. The History & Hollywood class will meet from 6:00-10:00 pm on Thursdays starting June 4, and ending July 27, 2012. Other classroom courses include: Essentials of Human Anatomy & Physiology, Microbiology, Foundations of Chemistry, and Medical Calculations. Master of Science in Education courses include: Differentiated Learning, Technology Applications, Vo-

cabulary & Fluency Development, Writing to Enhance Learning, Science Inquiry for the K-8 Teacher and Topical Studies in Education. Course start dates and times vary, please go to www.hlg.edu for details. HLGU online courses for May include: Current Trends in Early Child Special Education, American Literature II, and Community Health Nursing. June’s online classes include: Art Appreciation, Old Testament Survey, Child Growth & Development, Psychology & Education of the Exceptional Child, English Composition, World History I, United States History II, Advanced Topic: World War II in Europe, Advanced Topic: Writing of C.S. Lewis & J.R.R. Tolkien, Music Appreciation, Bioethics, and Special Topic: Bioethics, Developmental Psychology. Online classes start dates vary, please go to www.hlg.edu for details. Founded in 1858, Hannibal-LaGrange University is a four-year liberal arts college fully accredited by the Higher Learning Commission of the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools and prides itself in its traditional and nontraditional educational experience in a distinctively Christian environment. For more information about HLGU or any of its various programs, please visit www.hlg.edu. Q '(/,9(5< $1' &$55<287

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HLGU Announces Roland Library Dedication and Moving Dates

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ust a little over a year after breaking ground, HannibalLaGrange University will hold a dedication ceremony and preview for the Roland Library. The event will take place at 10:00 am on Friday, April 27th in front of the new library on the HLGU campus. The community is invited to attend the dedication ceremony, reception, and tour the new facility. “Individuals may also choose to join students, faculty, and staff in a human chain to move the first one hundred books,� stated Julie Andresen, HLGU Assistant Professor and Library Director. In addition, volunteers are needed to help move the collection from one building to the other on May 12, 18, & 19 starting at 8:30 am. Snacks, drinks, and lunch will be provided for the volunteers each day. “We hope the community is as excited about this new facility as we are. Moving the entire collection along with all the other pieces that are going over to the new library will be hard work but so worth the effort,� stated Andresen. For more info regarding volunteering please contact Julie at 573.629.3130. The new 20,000 sq. ft. library is named in honor of Dr. E. Earl Roland. Dr. Roland is a 1941 graduate of Hannibal-LaGrange and a long-time supporter of the University. Amenities of the new

handicapped-accessible library facility include a multimediaequipped computer classroom, computer lab, private and group study rooms, audio and video editing stations, a coffee corner and fireplace lounge, children’s reading area, and added space for expanded print and audiovisual collections. “This library is being built for our students today, and for generations of students to come. ‌ This is the best it’s ever been at HLG,â€? stated Woodrow W. Burt, president of Hannibal-LaGrange University at the new library’s ground breaking on April 15, 2011. As with the current library, this new facility will be open to the public. Anyone wanting to visit, check out books, or go through the various collections is welcome to purchase a community borrower card for $27.50 per year. The library’s official date of opening will be announced later this spring or summer. Founded in 1858, Hannibal-LaGrange University is a fouryear liberal arts college fully accredited by the Higher Learning Commission of the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools and prides itself in its traditional and nontraditional educational experience in a distinctively Christian environment. For more information about HLGU or any of its various programs, please visit www.hlg.edu. Q

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oes your family have a tradition of watching fireworks on the 4th of July? Hannibal’s annual 4th of July display represents this tradition for many area families. The Hannibal Community Promotions Group (HCPG) is hard at work to ensure that our community’s beloved fireworks celebration will continue for generations to come. The Hannibal Jaycees staged the annual fireworks display even before “National Tom Sawyer Days” was officially established. Over the years, the display has undergone many changes, from its humble beginning on a barge situated on the Mighty Mississippi to its present home atop the legendary Lovers’ Leap. The bluff is one of the safest out-of-the-way locations from which to shoot such a large display. The area under the bluff also has become a well-liked observation spot for spectators. This will be the 57th annual celebration. Given the Jaycees’ long history with the fireworks, it was a difficult decision for them to turn the show over to another group; however, they felt that the future of the show depended on sharing both the vision and the responsibility with the City and other local volunteer organizations. The Jaycees have done a tremendous job over the years in putting on the show without fail, and we wholeheartedly commend them on a job well done. The HCPG has been established to raise the funds needed for the annual fireworks display. Its members are all very active in the community. Serving as our current year’s officers are Joel Booth (President), Clare Blase (Vice President), Annette Greenwald (Secretary) and Kathy Locke (Treasurer). J.R. Bareis, Darrell McCoy, Steve Viorel, Mary Adkison, Adrienne Abright, Doug Warren, Pete Friesen and John Hark are currently serving as board members. We also have a committee of advisors which includes Terry Sampson, Mackenzie Disselhorst, Jeff LaGarce, Cindy Lovell, Don Bastian, Rae Ann Elledge, Roy Hark and Gail Bryant. Each year, the fireworks display is funded by contributions from numerous individuals and area businesses. The display has and always will be free to the community and surrounding

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area, so your donations are essential to the success of this year’s show. Although we eventually will explore alternative fundraising options, the donations we receive now will provide the seed for future success. They will allow us to expand that grand vision for downtown Hannibal in the summertime that originated with the Jaycees—a vision the HCPG intends to nurture and grow remarkably in the coming years. We view the fireworks display as a proud celebration of our nation’s independence and the many freedoms we enjoy; so we are dedicating this year’s show to Hannibal’s 2157th MP unit, and to all men and women in our area who have served and sacrificed their lives for our freedom. At this time, we are accepting pledges and donations under the Northeast Missouri Community Foundation’s 501(c)(3), which means your individual and/or business donations are tax-deductible. NEMOF is an organization that allows groups like ours to operate under a 501(c) (3) status and defer the time and expense of establishing their own. For a printable form that you can mail to us with a check or money order for your donation, please visit the HCPG Facebook page. You also can contact any HCPG member directly to make a contribution, or call President Joel Booth at 573-795-4243. No donation is too small! We will gratefully accept any amount that our area citizens and business leaders wish to offer. The HCPG also maintains a website, www.hcpg.org. While it is still a work-inprogress, the site is well on its way to getting our core message out to the public and to local businesses. Eventually, we will offer the convenience of donating right from your home or business simply by clicking the “DONATE NOW” button. The HCPG’s ultimate goal is to make a difference in the lives of Hannibal area residents and visitors by continually improving and adding to the unique “Hannibal experience” through our promotional efforts. Our first mission is to secure this 4th of July tradition for many years to come. As a group, we are very excited to take on this venture. We ask that you please partner with us in our efforts to continue the fireworks in Hannibal on the 4th of July, because the show must go on! Q


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“I like volunteering and love Mark Twain.”

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hese are what some of our wonderful volunteers have to say about working at the Mark Twain Boyhood Home & Museum. A priceless experience is waiting for you behind the counter at the Mark Twain Museum. There are two ways to become a part of the museum family:

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“Volunteering at the Mark Twain Museum is a win-win opportunity. You learn so much about Mark Twain and get to share that knowledge with guests from all over the world! Tourism is a huge part of the economy

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in Hannibal and you are an integral part of

me so proud to be from Hannibal.”

that, helping Hannibal and marketing Mark Twain. You come to realize how special it is

First, you can become an admission desk volunteer. For only four hours a week, you can be among the first to welcome tourists from all over the world to our beautiful town. It is an easy and fun way to promote Mark Twain and Hannibal.

to live in Mark Twain’s hometown.”

“I enjoy meeting people and talking with tourists.” Second, you can join the Friends of the Mark Twain Museum. Friends of the Mark Twain Museum is an exclusive group that works behind the scenes, and not on a regular basis. You will help out during special events, create fundraisers or other events. There is no limit to your options — the goal is to make sure the museum is here for many years to come.

“It is fun to share facts and points of interest about my hometown.”

In either capacity, you will be an integral part of the museum family. If you would like to join us or get more information, please call the Mark Twain Museum 573-221-9010, ext. 404. Volunteers can join us for an orientation and brunch at 10 a.m. March 13 in the museum gallery. Q +DQQLEDO 0DJD]LQH $SULO


Sports Hannibal Cavemen 2012 Roster E\ -D\ +HPRQG

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he Hannibal Cavemen have announced their roster for the 2012 Prospect League season. Among those are four returning players: pitchers AJ Martin and Dustin Lawson, outfielder/pitcher Trey Lang, and outfielder/infielder Zach Nichols, who starred at Hannibal High School in 2010. The Cavemen finished the 2011 season with a franchise� best 30�26 record. It is the third consecutive season that the team has improved its win�loss record over the previous season during their three year existence. The Cavemen will open the 2012 Prospect season on the road in Quincy on May 29th. The Cavemen’s home opener at Clemens Field will be on Thursday May 31st at 6:35 p.m. Season and group tickets are available by calling (573) 221�1010. Individual game tickets go on sale at a later date. v

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Highlights

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ost women spend much of their time taking care of everyone else. Are you guilty? Housework, homework, chauffeuring, shopping, cooking—the lists just never seem to end!

Every now and then, girls need to get away from the men and have a guilt-free girls-only weekend. It is a time spent relaxing and catching up on all the new happenings in each other’s lives. Enjoy a night on the town or a relaxing conversation over dinner. It can be with girlfriends, schoolmates, sisters, cousins or just a get-away by yourself. For years Hannibal, Missouri has hosted an all-girls weekend and you are invited to join us. Each year we offer gals a chance to purchase a bag of goodies and coupons for a small fee. You do not need to purchase the bag to participate in the numerous events, but they are coveted each year by many gals. Join in with the rest of the ladies that have discovered America’s Hometown; shop up and down the streets as we pamper you with sales, demos, fun, food, fashion and wine tasting. There are dozens of shops and numerous restaurants and pubs to stop at along the way. We have also started offering events at night to fill your night with even more fun and laughs. Book your lodging early as many ladies book rooms one year ahead. We have great B&B’s and hotels.

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Goody Bags are available to those who pre-register for $15.00 each. The bag is a screen-printed tote bag with items from local participating merchants. The contents of each bag are unique every year and the supply is limited to the first 400 who pre-register. After some t-shirt sizing issues last year, we have removed the t-shirts from the bag, but rest assured we have replaced them with other fun, useful items. T-Shirts will still be available for pre-order and a limited supply and limited sizes will be available on the weekend. Please Note: You do not have to purchase a goody bag to attend any event and you do not have to purchase a goody bag to pre-order a t-shirt. If you would like to purchase a Goody Bag or T-shirt or both please use the link below to print your registration card. Please send one card per gal but you may include muliple payments on one check. If you have any other questions please e-mail us at: historicHMC@gmail.com.

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Plans are being made for the fifth annual Senior Expo 2012 that will be held DP WR SP 7KXUVGD\ $SULO at the Admiral Coontz Armory in Hannibal. The theme of the expo is Seniors Build Communities, said Stacey Nicholas, RSVP director. “In the current climate of political campaigns and budget debates, it easy to forget that senior adults provide a variety of services that build our communities.� She said the expo typically has more than 300 senior adults attend. She hopes to reach that many seniors this year. “One of the objectives of this year’s Senior Expo is to help seniors see the many services that are available to them, services that enable them to help build communities.� Vendors are being sought for the event on a first-come, first served basis. To register, contact Nicholas at 573-221-3892 ext. 247. Senior Expo 2012 is sponsored by Hannibal Parks and Recreation, RSVP at Douglass Community Services, NECAC, Experience Works, the Marion and Ralls County Health Departments and NEILS.

Summer Sand Volleyball Leagues LIMIT 8 TEAMS PER LEAGUE

Tuesday Recreational League

Thursday Power League

Co-Ed 6v6 • 7PM & 8PM May 22 – July 10 July 17 Tournament $150/team

Power 4v4 • 7PM & 8PM May 24 – July 12 July 19 Tournament $100/team

Up to 10 players on roster: 3 females/3 males or 4 females/2 males on the court at all times

Up to 6 players on roster: All males, all females, or combination of both

Registration Ends May 15 Register at Parks & Recreation Office in City Hall For rules & more information visit

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$57 )520 7+( 3$5.6

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here’s no more beautiful place in the world to me than Riverview Park. I know this sounds corny, but wherever I’ve traveled, I’ve always thought that the scenery paled in comparison to what I have almost in my back yard. A recent trip to Joshua Tree National Park allowed me to see the splendor of the California desert and it was breathtaking; but I still prefer the stillness and gentle quiet of the view of Turtle Island from the first turnaround. Most people revel in the fall foliage in Riverview Park, but I prefer it snow-covered; or in the spring, when the green is just starting to show up. Often there are photographers and artists in Riverview Park, but there are 25 parks in Hannibal; and there is something lovely about each. The Hannibal Parks & Recreation Department along with the Hannibal Arts Council is sponsoring an art exhibit and competition featuring Art from the Parks. Artwork from all media: photographs, paintings, drawings, sculpture, etc., will be accepted. The exhibit won’t be until )HEUXDU\ . We want to give artists a full year to take advantage of all the seasons in the parks. If an artist wants to submit the maximum two pieces, each must be from a different season. There will be prizes for youth and adults. More information, including submission information and entry forms, are posted on the Gallery Page at www.hannibalarts.com.

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Rockin A’s Premier Rodeo $35,/

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ockin A Arena will host its second full-scale rodeo on April 13–14. The rodeo begins at 7:00 pm each night. Built by brothers Joel & Shaun Anderson, the state-of-the art, indoor arena (measuring 250 feet by 125 feet) uses laser guided measurements for setting barrels and posts and to keep the clay and sand footing level. With eighteen stalls, tack room, and a warm-up pen, the arena is an excellent venue for horse competitions ranging from team roping and barrel racing to pole bending and rodeos. Visitors will love the clean facilities, well maintained restrooms, and concessions. Originally conceived as an indoor practice arena for the horse-loving Anderson clan, the facility has expanded to meet the needs of large competitive events. Plans are underway for expanding the resources available to visiting competitors. In March the arena sold out the first annual Chase Anderson Memorial Rodeo to benefit the Muscular Dystrophy Association. Chase Anderson, son of Joel, passed away last year at the age of 17 from the disease. Outlaw Rodeo Productions is the contractor for the event. Visit rockinaarena.com for more information. Q

April 13th & 14th 7:30 pm Rockin A Arena 5303 Hwy C Palmyra, MO Tickets $12 at the door For directions & event info see

rockinaaarena.com

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Hannibal Regional Hospital Foundation to Host

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annibal Regional Hospital Foundation has once again partnered with the Missouri Sports Hall of Fame to hold the third annual Shoeless Joe’s Celebrity Golf Classic on Wednesday, June 13, 2012 at Norwoods Golf Club. Hannibal Regional Hospital Foundation is excited to announce Wells Fargo Advisors Financial Network as the Golf Classic Official Sponsor. Team registrations, as well as banner and hole sponsorships, are now open. Golf teams will have the opportunity to play with a Missouri Sports Hall of Fame celebrity during the tournament. All event proceeds benefit Hannibal Regional Hospital Foundation’s Heart to Heart campaign. “Hannibal Regional Hospital Foundation is so appreciative of the overwhelming support we have received for this event over the last two years. We look forward to another great year,” said Wendy Harrington, President/CEO of Hannibal Regional Hospital Foundation. In addition to the golf classic, the steering committee has worked with the Hannibal Cavemen to have Hall of Fame celebrities as guests during the game on June 12th against the Quincy Gems. The Hall of Famers will be available at the game to sign autographs and meet fans. “This event is not only a great deal of fun combining two favorite summer pastimes, but it also contributes back to our community through proceeds made during the Shoeless Joe’s two-day event,” commented Randy Park, member of the steering committee. “We already have several commitments from our Missouri Sports Hall of Famers including former St. Louis Cardinals, Kansas City Chiefs, Kansas City Royals and others.” The Missouri Sports Hall of Fame secured over 30 sports celebrities and Hall of Famers last year who enjoyed interacting with fans at the ball park and playing with HRHF donors in the Shoeless Joe’s Golf Classic. The Hannibal Regional Hospital Foundation Heart to Heart campaign is raising funds for a state of the art digital cardiac network. This network will unite the region in a digital cardiac network connecting patients and doctors in +DQQLEDO &DYHPHQ IDQV HQMR\HG WKH FKDQFH seconds, saving lives and creating a healthier WR PHHW DQG JHW DXWRJUDSKV IURP +DOO RI community. For more information about the )DPH &HOHEULWLHV GXULQJ WKH 1LJKW DW WKH %DOOSDUN third annual Shoeless Joe’s Celebrity Golf Classic or to register a team, contact Hannibal Regional Hospital Foundation at 573-629-3577 or visit hrhf.org. Q

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For forty years, you’ve seen him in game shows, on late-night TV, in films, variety shows and Broadway musicals, and now you will spend a night with him here in your hometown. His show features popular love songs, a John Denver Medley, a Kenny Rogers Medley, banjo medley and comedy spots that will have those of us boomers who grew up with John laughing the loudest. HCA concerts are funded in part by the Missouri Arts Council, a state agency.

The benefit concert will be performed on the Kawai grand piano graciously on loan from the family of Jason Dugger, Andrew’s piano instructor and friend.

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The Gateway City Big Band is a 17-piece dance band with two vocalists that has been entertaining audiences in the St. Louis area and beyond since 1966. The Gateway City Big Band has performed in some of St. Louis’ premier musical and dance venues, including the historic Fox Theatre, Missouri Botanical Gardens, Khorissan Room at the Chase Park Plaza and St. Louis Casa Loma Ballroom, and was a featured guest at the International Glenn Miller Festival in Clarinda, Iowa


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Student exhibit featuring works selected from each of Hannibal public and parochial schools’ 5th and 8th grade art classes. Participating art instructors are Tara Jacobs (Veterans), Cassie Sullivan (Mark Twain), Jennifer Kitzmiller (Oakwood), Michele Dent (Eugene Field), Stephen Schisler (Stowell), Shelly Lowe (Holy Family) and Sarah Krisko-Savido (HMS). <281* 0$67(56 , +$11,%$/ +,*+ 6&+22/ (;+,%,7 $SULO 0D\ ([KLELW &ORVLQJ 5HFHSWLRQ ² 7XHVGD\ 0D\ S P

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Art, wine, friends and special events make Hannibal’s downtown galleries the place to be each second Saturday.

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he Loafers Car Club extends an open invitation to all car enthusiasts to attend the 17th annual Loafers Car Show on Saturday May 12. The show will be held in historic downtown Hannibal, and will bring more than 275 historic and special interest vehicles to our town. Cars will be displayed until mid afternoon. Spectators are welcome anytime, and there is no admission charge. Registration is $20 from 8:00 am until noon. Due to their popularity, an additional class was added this year for Mustangs from 1964 ½ to 'DQ -DQHV¾ &KHYUROHW GRRU KDUGWRS 1973. Trophies will ZDV VHOHFWHG E\ SDUWLFLSDQWV DV WKHLU IDYRULWH /RDIHUV be awarded to the &DU &OXE YHKLFOH 'DQ RZQV WKUHH ¾ &KHY\V LQFOXGLQJ D UDUH 1RPDG VWDWLRQ ZDJRQ top three vehicles

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in each of the 32 judged classes. In addition, there will be eight special awards and a large assortment of door prizes. This year a restored antique gas pump from the ’50s will be raffled off at the show. A total of only 530 raffle tickets will be sold at $10 each and are currently available from Loafers club members. Any remaining tickets will be sold at the show. The winner is not

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required to be present, and the pump will be delivered free within 100 miles. A wide range of vehicles will participate in the show, 6HFRQG SODFH ZLQQHU LQ WKH LPSRUW FODVV LQ 0HVVHUVFKPLWW including antiques, classics, street .5 RZQHG E\ 6WHYH DQG *HQ rods, lead sleds, rat rods, Mus/HQRFK RI &RUDOYLOOH ,$ 7KH 0HVV tangs, Corvettes, imports, and HUVFKPLWW .5 RU .DELQHQUROOHU more. A car that got a lot of atten- &DELQ 6FRRWHU ZDV D WKUHH ZKHHOHG EXEEOH FDU GHVLJQHG E\ WKH DLUFUDIW tion in 2011 and placed second in HQJLQHHU )ULW] )HQG DQG SURGXFHG the import class was a 1956 MessLQ WKH IDFWRU\ RI WKH *HUPDQ DLUFUDIW erschmitt KR200 owned by Steve PDQXIDFWXUHU 0HVVHUVFKPLWW IURP and Gen Lenoch of Coralville, WR 7RWDO SURGXFWLRQ ZDV IA. This year Mr. Lenoch will be RQO\ DSSUR[LPDWHO\ FDUV bringing his newly restored, rare 1958 BMW Isetta 300. Local businesses will be open and encourage spectators and car show participants to visit their shops. Children may engage in Hot Wheels “racing.� The Loafers Car Club is a not-for-profit organization with the goal of giving back to the community while preserving and enjoying historical automobiles. The public is invited to attend, at no charge, the main events of the year. Events include the April through October Hot Dog Cruise-in, sponsored by County Market and AutoZone and held in the Steamboat Bend Shopping Center the first Saturday evening each month; the annual Car Show held in May in downtown Hannibal; and the Reunion Cruise-in held each September in the Huck Finn Shopping Center. Donations received during these events are used for various charitable causes, such as Leaps of Love (helps childhood cancer families), scholarships for two graduating high school students who are planning to continue their education in an automotive related field, the Great River Honor Flight, and other needy causes. Individual club members all have a common interest of vehicles that are propelled by the internal combustion engine. There is a considerable variety of members’ background and involvement in restoring or maintaining their vehicles. Although some members are professional mechanics and body/repair-shop owners, most members “farm out� some or all aspects of the work. Loafers membership is open to everyone; however, to become a member a person must be sponsored by an existing member, have a special interest or historic car or truck, and be willing to assist in the various activities of the club. Q


April Best Bets (9(176 127 72 0,66 Better Your Health! Stay healthier when you keep our 3rd Annual Regional Medical Services Directory on hand all year to help you choose the best care for your family.

Rockin A Arena Premier Rodeo April 13th & 14th 7:30 pm See Page 50

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That Old Spring Feeling

t’s kind of like an itch, but in the back of your mind where you can’t scratch it. For me, it’s akin to the feeling I get when the creative juices start to flow but haven’t taken form yet. There’s a crescendo of expectation, a sense that anything is possible. It’s called spring fever and—guess what!—I don’t have it. Everyone seems to have it but me. When the bulbs starting peeking up out of the ground, the kids were delighted. The forsythia bloomed, and folks cheefully announced to each other that it was time to plant. Me? I was annoyed. Annoyed with spring. I couldn’t figure it out. What was wrong with me? After all, I really like having the windows open. My favorite temperature is 60–70 degrees. (Warmer than that I start gasping, “Too hot! Too hot!”) Finally, as I stood glaring at the weeds in my flower garden and enjoying the cool breeze on my face, it hit me: I’ve been really, really busy lately, and spring means even more work. I’m just not in the mood for more work right now. My husband has begun puttering contentedly around the lawn, dropping not so subtle hints that my rose garden is looking a little rough. He’s been making noises about cleaning the garage and wants to pare down my lumber stash. Is he kidding? I may need that. The kids are asking when I’m going to finish painting their fort... and add a door and shutters and a rope bucket and a canopy on

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Confessions of a Swiss Army Wife top... Good grief. No more excuses for ignoring all those projects that I could cheerfully put on the back burner during the cold months. No, spring decided to come early this year. Bummer. My 75-year-old neighbor was outside the other day on a ladder, cleaning all her windows. Et tu, neighbor? Does everyone have to show me up? Forget window cleaning. I can’t even keep up with the regular housekeeping. We have dust creatures. They’ve evolved way beyond dust bunnies into something considerably more menacing. I’ve told the kids to make a running leap into bed—the creatures lurking under there may become aggressive, even carnivorous. Best not to take any chances. And keep a flashlight under your pillow, just in case. (Don’t worry, they’ll grow up to be perfectly normal adults.) Then again, isn’t that why we have a cat? Do your darned job, Captain Cat! You’re brave enough to stalk garden bunnies, so why not dust bunnies? If you’d done your job before they mutated, this would be a non-issue. Sheesh. So what’s on my list? Let’s see. New living room baseboards. Finish the hall baseboards. Repair plaster. Paint. Finish trim work in boys’ room. Paint. Sew office curtains. Paint office

shelves I built but never finished. Fix bathroom ceiling. Paint. Outside, caulk the fort. And paint. Put door and shutters on fort so rain doesn’t continue to soak pint sized assault gear. Get someone to bust up that ugly concrete. Lay attractive flagstones. Repair and paint the fence. Help clean out the garage (no, not the lumber). Then there’s the gardening. I want to put in a raised bed for vegetables. The roses need pruning already. Wild onions are overwhelming the beds, and there are some bare spots in the garden that need color. Daisies could be nice. Ah, spring. Followed by summer. When it’s above 70 degrees. A lot. Yep, I’d better get to work. Spring doesn’t last forever, you know. Why does it have to be so fleeting? The flowers are lovely, and bumble bees make me smile. My cherry tree is gorgeous in bloom. The fresh air feels great and smells sweet. The birds are singing cheerfully. I think I’ll sit outside with Captain Cat and a nice, cool beverage, soaking it all in. Maybe my neighbor will be so overcome by spring fever that she offers to clean my windows, too. Anything’s possible. Q

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t’s hard to tell the difference between flying ants and swarming termites. Swarms of either (and sometimes both) can occur at this time of year, so it’s important to know if those gossamer wings glimmering on your windowsill are cause for further investigation. Flying termites indicate a potentially serious problem. Flying ants can also indicate a problem, although not as serious. If you’re the curious type, and want to know what insect is leaving wings behind, here is an easy way to tell: Flying ants have an hourglass figure, with a tiny waist. Flying termites have no waist. All termites have antennae that look like a string of beads. Ants have elbowed antennae. Termite swarmers have two pairs of long narrow wings; both the front and back pair are equal in size and length. Winged ants have two pairs of wings; the back pair is much shorter than the front pair.

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Flying ants could be carpenter ant reproductives or another species. While carpenter ants can’t digest cellulose, they are attracted to areas with a lot of moisture and often nest in wood that is or has been moist. They hollow the wood out for nesting, and excavate galleries that have a smooth, sanded appearance. Unlike termites, who pack the galleries with mud, carpenter ants excavate their shredded fragments of wood into little piles of what look like pencil sharpener shavings. If any ants are active in the house it is time for an inspection. Termites, with their incredible appetites for cellulose and ability to damage structures, are one of the least desirable pests. It’s at this time of year, when sunshine follows a spring rainfall, that swarms of winged reproductive subterranean termites leave their colonies to establish new homes. The prolific reproductive behavior of termites means that new colonies will rapidly increase in numbers. Depending on where they’re established, they may chew their way into


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If you’ve spotted swarmers in your home you should call a professional pest expert and have a complete inspection! The specialist will be able to determine if the pest are termite swarmers or ants, the extent of your problem, and specific recommendations to correct them. Your home will not fall down overnight, so take the time to learn about the potential options you may have for correction. Be sure to deal with a company who is recommended by neighbors and friends. Ask for references and check them out. Be sure to have exactly what will be done and with what material and why. Verify that the firm you select is a licensed and insured pest control company. Ask about a warranty for the treatment and if it is extendable and transferable. Be wary of “bargain� treatments that may not provide the level of protection you need. Seek value; avoid making decisions based solely on price. Compare written proposals, chemical treatment methods and experience in treating your home. Q *HQH 6FKROHV LV WKH 9LFH 3UHVLGHQW RI 5HOLDEOH 3HVW 6ROXWLRQV D SURYLGHU RI 3HVW &RQWURO LQ WKH 7UL6WDWH DUHD VLQFH +H LV D &HUWLILHG (QWRPRORJLVW DQG D /L FHQVHG DQG &HUWLILHG 3HVW 6ROXWLRQ 3URYLGHU +LV H[SHULHQFH LQFOXGHV PRUH WKDQ \HDUV LQ WKH 3HVW 6ROXWLRQ %XVLQHVV +H FDQ EH UHDFKHG DW RU RQ WKH ZHE UHOLDEOHSHVWVROXWLRQV FRP

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