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The Paducah Sun | Saturday, July 23, 2011 | paducahsun.com
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D
Whitehaven garden helps fill table
JOHN WRIGHT | The Sun
A sign marks the Governor’s Garden on the grounds of the Whitehaven Visitors
Center in Paducah.
JOHN WRIGHT | The Sun
Paducah Sun columnist Carolyn Roof speaks with Ronnie Wilson, a member of the crew that tends the Governor’s Garden at the Whitehaven Visitors Center in Paducah. This is the second year for the garden — an initiative of First Lady Jane
Beshear — to produce vegetables. The produce goes to local food banks such as Martha’s Vineyard.
The Governor’s Gardens include peppers, squash, tomatoes and zucchini
here is a joke that zucchini is
so prolific, gardeners resort
to leaving their excess on the
doorsteps of neighbors, friends
and strangers in the middle of the
night. The vegetables from the
garden at Whitehaven garden are
left on a more appreciative doorstep – that of Paducah Cooperative Ministry. The garden is part of
the Governor’s Garden, Home &
Community Gardening Initiative
of First Lady Jane Beshear.
Each morning before they
clock in, Kentucky Department
of Transportation employees at
Whitehaven Welcome Center voluntarily water, weed, and harvest
the fruits and vegetables that are
given to Paducah Cooperative
Ministry.
Whitehaven supervisor Ronnie
Wilson said that vegetables were
chosen for their ease of growth at
each of the six Governor’s Gardens
throughout the state. The garden,
which includes peppers, squash,
tomatoes and zucchini, are all
thriving. Each row of nine plants is
laid out north to south for maximum sun.
The garden is dominated by
T
peppers that range from sweet
to spicy. The five rows of banana
are easy to identify by the large
squash plant in the middle.
Wilson said that the pepper is
very sweet and popular. In addition to sweet red and yellow bell
peppers that are often used for
stuffing, Wilson planted mildly
spicy Mexibell that is also good
grilled.
For those who avoid cucumbers for the burp factor, Burpless
Hybrid was planted. According
to the Bonnie Plants tag, it is the
mildest on the market, completely burpless with no bitter taste,
and is good sliced or pickled.
The garden has had some
failures. Wilson speculates the
reason the first rows of tomatoes
died was that too much fertilizer
was sprayed in the Roma tomato
area. The cabbage stopped growing during the drought and when
rains came, the cabbage grew so
fast that it split in half. Wilson
did set up a unique method of
watering plants. To get water to
all plants evenly Wilson elevated
sprinklers by attaching them to
saw horses with duct tape.
Things to do
15-Minute Gardening — Make
a batch of hummingbird syrup —
red food coloring is not needed.
Use sugar, not artificial or honey.
Change hummingbird feeder
syrup every two to three days
and wash it with vinegar water
before refilling it.
■ Garden — When daylilies
and hosta stop blooming, cut the
stems to the ground. Pull stems
only if completely dried and you
feel no resistance. Collect seed
and store in recycled medicine bottles. Date and label the
container. Sow pansies for fall
planting. Deadhead flowers by
pinching or cutting back to a leaf
JOHN WRIGHT | The Sun
This large yellow squash is part of the crop produced in the Governor’s Garden at the
Whitehaven Visitors Center in Paducah.
node. Cut roses back to a fiveleaflet. Spray plants to control
chewing insects.
■ Trees and shrubs — Take
softwood cuttings of crape myrtle,
forsythia, hydrangea and witchhazel. Stems should be this year’s
growth, 3 to 5 inches long, and
have two sets of leaves. More on
How-to next week. Trim hedges.
Vertical sides should be slanted
slightly in so that sun can reach
the lower branches. When pruning diseased branches, cut into
healthy wood and clean pruner
blades with alcohol before making the next cut to avoid transferring the disease. Tree limbs that
naturally reach the ground should
not be limbed up unless they are
a danger to the house or people.
The cascading leafed-branches
and fallen leaves keep roots cool
and retain moisture.
■ Vegetables — Pick leafy
vegetables in the most. Harvest
vegetables before they reach
maturity for the best flavor and
tenderness. Keep vegetables
off the ground by placing straw
underneath or tying up the plant.
Start planting the fall garden by
transplanting cabbage. Improve
germination of seed for the fall
garden by refrigerating it for 24
hours before planting. Let dill,
coriander, and fennel self-sow.
Contact Carolyn Roof, the Sun’s gardening columnist, at carolynroof@att.net.
Choose outdoor rugs that will look good and last
BY MARNI JAMESON
McClatchy-Tribune News Service
ORLANDO, Fla. — I was very
excited when I brought home
my first outdoor rug five years
ago. “Outdoor rug” it said, right
there on the label. So, silly me,
I thought, “Hey, this might be a
good rug for outdoors!”
I put it on the back deck, where
it did everything an area rug is
supposed to do indoors, only
outdoors. It defined the space and
added welcome pattern, texture,
color and pizzazz. My thrill was
short lived.
By the end of the summer, the
rug had begun to disintegrate. I
would pick it up to shake it out,
and it would fall apart in my hand.
It’s once vivid sage green pattern
had faded to muted muck. I knew
the feeling.
So I did what I do in these cir-
cumstances. I chose not to believe
this was happening to me. I let the
rug lie, all year long. By the next
summer, it looked worse. Eventually, I shook off my denial and
faced facts.
“But this is an outdoor rug!
It’s supposed to last outdoors!”
Nobody cared or listened for that
matter. Next I did the other thing I
do when I make a mistake. I made
the same mistake again! I bought
another outdoor rug.
What happened next will shock
you. Two summers later the rug
was in shreds. I picked it up to
move it and it fell apart in my
hands, yet another casualty of the
Colorado sun.
Now that summer’s here, I
want to spiff up my patio at my
new place in Florida with — you
guessed it — an outdoor rug. Here,
we don’t have the harsh UV rays of
high altitude. But we have brutal
heat — oh, honey — and humidity
so heavy that mushrooms sprout
on your car overnight.
I decided to call an expert
to help me dodge disappointment and better manage my rug
expectations. I told my saga to
Jean-Rene Pelletier, manager
for Outdoor RugsOnly.com, who
seemed to listen and care.
Like a good salesman he said,
“Well, obviously, you need to buy
a higher quality rug.”
“Oh, no, you don’t!” I stopped
him. “I spent $150 to $200 for
my two 8 x 10 rugs, which I know
is not a lot for a rug, but now
that I’ve literally burned up that
money, I’m not paying more!”
People must think I’m so gullible.
“It didn’t just fall apart,” I added. “It turned black with mildew
or mold, or something disgusting.”
“The rug didn’t mildew,” Pelletier patiently explained. “The dirt
on the rug mildewed.”
“All right, all right,” I said. Then,
because I still really like outdoor
rugs in a masochistic sort of way,
I asked him how to make a better
choice this time:
■ Lasting is relative. Some rugs
are more durable than others, but
typically you can expect to replace
an outdoor rug every couple of
years if you leave it exposed to
the elements year round. They
will last longer if you put them
in a covered area and keep
them clean. ■ Hang and hose.
Sometimes a good shake and a
spot clean are all an outdoor rug
needs. You can also vacuum it.
For a good cleaning, however,
hang it up, hose it off and let it
dry completely before putting it
back.
■ Read the label. When buying
a rug, look for a label that says
100% polypropylene. The tag
should also say that the rug is UV
stabilized.
■ Okay for indoors. Because
outdoor rugs are made of synthetic, durable, all-weather
materials and are often very affordable, they’re a good option for
indoors, too.
■ Skid protection. Add a mesh
pad under the rug if it’s slipping.
If the rug is thin, a pad will make
it look thicker.
■ What’s hot? So many more
styles are available since the days
when the only choice looked like
Astroturf. Though traditional
oriental designs are still popular,
more consumers are choosing
bold colors and patterns, especially florals, geometrics and
botanicals.
2D • Saturday, July 23, 2011 • The Paducah Sun
Obituaries
paducahsun.com
Funeral notices
Paid obituaries furnished to The Paducah Sun by mortuaries.
Floyd Stout
VIENNA, Ill. — Floyd Stout,
84, was born November
17, 1926, to Floy Albert
and Mamie Leah (Pearce)
Stout. He passed away at
4:35 a.m. July 22, 2011, at
his home.
He married Gloria Wilhelm October 11, 1968, in
Cleveland, Ohio, and she
survives. In addition to his
wife, he is survived by his
children, Warren and his
wife, Brandi Stout of Tunnel Hill, Ill., Karen and
her husband, Reggy Cox of
Karnak, Ill., Keith and his
wife, Tanya of Copperas
Cove, Texas. He is also survived by his sisters, Phyllis
and her husband, Glenn
Webb of Tunnel Hill and
Donna and her husband,
Don Stealey of Cocoa, Fla.;
and by 10 grandchildren,
Brittany McCarver, Kaleb,
Kalissa and Rachelle Cox,
Cassidy, Adrian, Alexander, William and Jacob
Stout and a stepgranddaughter Heather Cox.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in
death by two infant sons,
Gary Lynn and William Albert Stout; and by a brother, Donald Lee Stout. Floyd
took great pride in his family. He loved his children
and grandchildren and
was always interested in
their accomplishments.
Floyd was a man of many
talents. He served in the
Army from February of
1945 until November of
1945. He was honorably
discharged to return home
to assist his family due to
his father’s illness. For the
years 1953-1976 he was
involved with manufacturing. He was a supervisor
and held other important
positions throughout his
career with several companies. In 1976 he was
employed by the Illinois
Department of Corrections
and continued with the department until his retirement in 1991.
Floyd had a passion for
education. He was a graduate of Vienna High School.
Floyd had a wide range of
interest in subjects to be
studied. He not only had a
passion for his own education, he was very interested that each of his children
continued their educational pursuits.
During the years in
which he was involved in
manufacturing and the Department of Corrections,
he always found time to
pastor churches and provide ministry in a variety
of ways.
He was ordained a minister in 1954 at Mt. Zion
Baptist Church. He continued his pastoral ministry
following his retirement
serving as a Hospice Chaplain at TIP-VNA from 1992
until 2005.
In addition he served on
the Advisory Council for
the Department of Aging,
the Medical Ethics Committee of Southern Illinois
Hospital, The Family Violence Committee, The Five
County Literary Initiative
Program and many other
activities with the desire
to always be of service to
his fellow man. This is evidenced by Floyd’s wish to
donate his remains to SIU
School of Medicine so others my continue to learn.
Floyd also found the time
to help his brother-in-law,
Glenn Webb make hay,
feed cattle or any other
thing that Glenn called
upon him to do.
Memorial services for
Floyd will be at held at
11:00 a.m. Saturday, August 6, 2011, at First Baptist Church of Vienna,
with Pastors Ed Hollis
and Glenn Webb officiating. Military honors will
conducted by the Illinois
Honor Guard. Interment
will follow at a later date.
Memorials are suggested
to Oliver Cemetery or to
Mt. Zion Cemetery.
A
husband,
father,
grandfather, brother and
friend has been removed
visibly from the outward
eye, but the lessons he
taught, the grand sentiments he uttered and his
holy deeds by which he
was characterized still
survive and on the tablets
of memory in the light of
morn, noon and dewey
eve. Though the grave buries his dust, Floyd’s life will
speak out eloquently as a
benediction in the midst of
us. Peace to his memory.
You are invited to share
your memories of Floyd
and leave condolences at
baileyfh.com.
Ida Launa Story, 104
SCALE — Mrs. Ida Launa
Story, 104, of the Scale
community died Thursday
night at
Lake Way
N u r s ing and
Rehabilitation
Center in
Benton.
L a u na was
born in
Story
Briensburg, Ky., January 18,
1907, to the late Amos Culp
and the late Blanche Culp
McWaters. She worked at
the Cigar Factory in Benton, then was a cook in
several local restaurants.
She enjoyed working crossword puzzles, crocheting,
watching game shows on
TV and playing cards, she
did so until she was past
one hundred. Another love
was Marshall County High
School sports, especially
the Lady Marshals basketball team; she never missed
a game by listening to them
on the radio. She celebrated
her one hundred first at a
Lady Marshals basketball
game.
She’s a member of North
Marshall Church of Christ,
where she was a member
from the day it was established.
She is survived by a
daughter, Bonnie Rose and
husband, Jerry of Scale;
three grandchildren, Connie English and husband,
Loyd, Roger Story and wife,
Cathy, all of the Scale community, and Randell Rose
and wife, Pam of Moors
Camp; 11 great-grandchildren, seven great greatgrandchildren and several
nieces and nephews.
Launa was preceded in
death by her husband, Lex;
son and daughter-in-law,
Joe and Velma Jo Story;
grandson, Russell (Rusty)
Rose; father, Amos Culp;
mother and stepfather,
Blanche and John McWaters; two sisters, two brothers, two half-sisters and six
stepbrothers.
Funeral services will be
held Sunday, July 24, 2011,
at 2:00 p.m. in the Chapel
of the Collier Funeral Home
in Benton. Daniel Hamm
and Lexie B. Ray will officiate. Interment will follow in
Marshall County Memory
Gardens in Benton.
Friends may call Saturday, July 23, 2011, between
the hours of 5:00 p.m. and
8:00 p.m. at Collier Funeral Home in Benton.
The family asks that memorial contributions be
made to North Marshall
Church of Christ 3290 Palma Rd., Calvert City, KY.
42029.
Alice Jeanette ‘Jenny’ Ward
BENTON — Alice Jeanette death by her husband of 63
“Jenny” Ward, a Christian years, Doyle E. Ward; her
mother of four daughters, sister, Dixie Alderdice; and
w e n t two brothers, Carl Jones
home to and Jim Jones.
Jenny was a member
be with
the Lord of Church Grove United
at 10:00 Methodist Church.
Her family will celebrate
a.m. Friday, July her life Sunday, July 24th,
22, 2011, 2011, at 1:00 p.m. at Filfrom her beck-Cann and King Funerhome in al Home. Burial will follow
in Benton Cemetery with
Benton.
Ward
She left David Hendrickson officiatbehind her children, John ing at the graveside. Friends
and Gale Chambers, Glenn may call from 5:00 p.m. unand Carla Wyatt, Gary and til 8:00 p.m. Saturday, July
Karen Hill and Gary and 23, 2011, at Filbeck-Cann
Kimberly McManus; her and King Funeral Home
grandchildren, Kelly Cham- and Crematory.
The family would like to
bers, Shannon Chambers
and Renee Guiton, Todd extend a heartfelt thanks
and Leigh Bright, Greg and to her loving caregivers,
Angie Wyatt, Lori Scott, Linda Lampkins, Suzann
Heather Hill, Garrick and Cass, Sandra Gossum, DotBrandi Hill and Kip Mathis tie Abell and many special
and Blair Rudsill; along others.
Condolences may be sent
with 15 great-grandchilRuby Allen Miller
online at filbeckcannking.
dren.
She was preceded in com
Ruby Allen Miller, 82, of dren, John Kevin Wallace
Paducah died Wednesday (Tara) of Sugar Land, Texat Western Baptist Hospi- as, Linda Lorraine (Rainey) Rafferty-Cortes (Cartal.
Mayetta Harris
R u b y los) of Coral Springs, Fla.,
was born Nathaniel James Miller of
CALVERT CITY — Mayetta ryman, Kristie Stevenson,
in Cadiz, Chester, Va., and Adam Harris, 85, of Calvert City, Tannya Whittington, Wyatt
Ky., Au- Larkins Miller of Paducah; Ky., passed away at 9:10 Gamble, Dylan Gamble and
gust 16, a stepgrandson, Jeremy
p . m . Kristina Keeling; and five
1928, to Ray Turner of Paducah;
T h u r s - stepgreat-grandchildren.
the late and four great-grandchild a y ,
She was preceded in
J a m e s dren.
July 21, death by one son, Larry
Preceding her in death
Orval Al2011, at Dale Harris; one grandson,
len and were a sister, Sarah May
Oakview Kerry Lynn Harris; one
Miller
D a i s y Guier; three brothers, WilN u r s i n g brother, Charles Walker;
Pearl Bridges Allen. She liam Orval Allen, James
and Re- one sister, Loretta Barrett
was a 1946 graduate of Garnett Allen and John
habilita- and her parents, Harvey
Trigg County High School. Henry “Happy” Allen;
tion Cen- D. Walker and Roxie India
On July 20, 1946, she mar- her parents, and a grandKennedy Walker.
ter.
ried Frank Larkins Miller daughter, Melodi Dawn Harris
Graveside funeral servicS h e
and in 1952 they moved to Wallace.
was a member of Vaughn’s es will be at 3:00 p.m. SunGraveside services will Chapel Cumberland Pres- day, July 24, 2011, at LeonPaducah. She worked as
bookkeeper for Forest Hills be held at 11 a.m. Saturday byterian Church. She was a ard Cemetery. The Rev.
Housing Corporation and at Mt. Kenton Cemetery Kentucky Colonel.
Wendell Ordway will officiretired after over twenty with the Rev. Harley Dixon
She is survived by her ate and burial will follow in
years employment. Ruby officiating. There will be no husband, Arthur D. Harris Leonard Cemetery. Friends
was a member of Baptist public visitation. Milner of Calvert City; one daugh- may call from 1:00 p.m. unTabernacle until it dis- and Orr Funeral Home of ter, Linda Mace of Calvert til 4:00 p.m. Saturday, July
banded, then transferred Paducah is in charge of ar- City; one son, Edward Har- 23, 2011, at Filbeck-Cann
her membership to Lone rangements.
ris of Calvert City; six step- and King Funeral Home
Contributions may be grandchildren, Kevin Ber- and Crematory.
Oak First Baptist Church.
Ruby died on the sixty- made to Lone Oak First
fifth anniversary of her Baptist Church, 3601 Lone
marriage to Frank Larkins Oak Road, Paducah, KY
Joseph Ezell
William Wallace Jr.
Miller Sr., who survives 42003-5751; or Autism
her. Also surviving are Speaks, 5455 Wilshire
Joseph Ezell, 71, of
MURRAY —
William
three children, Patricia Blvd., Suite 2250, Los AnPaducah died at 6:35 Wallace Jr., 68, of Murray
Miller Wallace (Johnny), geles, CA 90036.
p.m. Thursday at Lourdes died Friday at his home.
You may leave a message
Pamela Miller Rafferty
hospital.
Arrangements
were
(Jim) and Frank Larkins of sympathy or light a meArrangements were in- incomplete
at
J.H.
Miller Jr. (Amanda), all of morial candle at milnerancomplete at Pettus-Row- Churchill Funeral Home
Paducah; four grandchil- dorr.com.
land Funeral Home.
in Murray.
John Lenard Stephenson
WICKLIFFE — John Lenard
Stephenson, 67, of Wickliffe
passed away at 3:48 a.m. Friday at his home.
Mr. Stephenson was the
owner of Wickliffe Tire and
Trailer Repair.
He is survived by his wife,
Phyllis Bigham Stephenson;
two sons, John L. Stephenson Jr. and Ringo Ray Stephenson; two stepsons, Earl
Bartels and wife, Mary of
Wickliffe and Wesley Bartels
of Festus, Mo.; two grandchildren, Shanadean and
Misty; 10 stepgrandchildren,
including Jordan, Tiffany,
Bryan (Poo Bear), Preston
(Peewee) and Madison Bartels; nine brothers and sisters
and lots of family and friends.
He was preceded in death
by his parents, John B. and
Gladys Crawford Stephenson; two brothers and one
sister.
A memorial service will be
held at 10:00 a.m. Saturday,
July 30, 2011, at Fort Jefferson Memorial Cross in
Wickliffe with the Rev. Dee
Hazelwood officiating. Milner and Orr Funeral Home
of Wickliffe is in charge of arrangements.
Expressions of sympathy
may take the form of contributions to the Stephenson
family. You may leave a message of sympathy or light a
candle at milnerandorr.com.
Henry Proefke
Henry Proefke, 70, of
Paducah
passed
away
Wednesday, July 20, 2011,
at Lourdes hospital.
Mr. Proefke was retired and was a member of
Friendship Assembly of Jesus Christ. He was also an
avid antique car enthusiast.
Surviving are his mate
for the last thirty-three
years, Bonnie Eggleston;
one sister, Darlene Burns of
Gobel Canady
Gobel W. Canady, 94, of
Paducah died Thursday at
Parkview Nursing and Rehabilitation Center.
He was a farmer and of
the Baptist faith.
He is survived by two
sons, Gary Canady of Bowling Green and Tommy
Canady of Arizona; nine
daughters, Clara Burgess
of Paducah, Katherine Metelsky and Verlene Estremera, both of Ohio, Peggy
McKinney, Glenda Carroll
and Linda Parker, all of
Murray, Alva Ridell of Florida, Nila Widler of Tennessee
and Rosie Browning of Kentucky; several grandchildren, great-grandchildren,
great great-grandchildren,
and nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death
by wives, Mavis Odell Canady, Nellie Canady and Loraine Canady; and one son,
Max Canady Jr. His parents
were Robert Canady and
Clara Jackson Canady.
Memorial services will be
at 2 p.m. Monday at Keeling
Family Funeral Home with
the Rev. Todd Hawkins officiating.
Jerry Moffitt
MAYFIELD — Jerry Moffitt,
63, of Mayfield died at 11
p.m. Thursday at Jackson
Purchase Medical Center.
He was a member of West
Baptist Church in Hickman.
He was preceded in death
by his wife, Peggy Webb
Moffitt; one brother and
one sister. His parents were
Thomas and Mary Tynes
Moffitt.
He is survived by son,
Jerry Moffitt of Warrensburg, Mo.; brother, Franklin
Moffitt of Mayfield; sisters,
Betty Poyner of Hickman
and Brenda Phipps of Union
City, Tenn., and one grandchhild.
Services will be at 11 a.m.
Monday at Strong Funeral
Home with the Rev. Henry
Callison officiating. Burial
will be in Hickman City
Cemetery. Friends may call
after 6 p.m. Sunday and after
9 a.m. Monday at the funeral
home.
Paducah; three brothers, Al
Proefke of Warren, Mich.,
David Proefke of Lake Orion, Mich. and John Savells
of Kasson, Maine; as well as
several nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death
by his parents, Alvin Proefkin and Ruth Burns.
No services are scheduled
at this time.
Lindsey Funeral Home is
in charge of arrangements.
Jimmy Johnson
HICKMAN — Jimmy Louis
Johnson, 72, of Hickman
died Thursday at Obion
County Nursing Home.
He was a former Tyson
Food employee.
He was preceded in death
by his wife, Ernestine Johnson. His parents were Ezell
Johnson and Verna Mae
Johnson.
He is survived by his
brothers, Bobby Joe Johnson of New Jersey, Willie
Johnson of Louisville and
Frank Johnson of Kankakee,
Ill.; seven stepchildren, Vanessa Alexander of Union City,
Carmella Cobb and Minnie
Williams, both of Chicago,
Charlotte Udley, Clementine
Warren and Leon Cobb, all
of Hickman and Alice Hiethecker of Minnesota; several grandchildren and greatgrandchildren.
Services will be at 1 p.m.
Monday at Rawls Funeral
Home with Graham McGill
officiating. Interment will be
in Hickman City Cemetery.
Friends may call after 11 a.m.
Monday at the funeral home.
Kathleen Nicolai
HARDIN — Kathleen Marie
Nicolai, 65, of Hardin died
Thursday at her home.
She is
survived
by
her
husband,
Russell
Nicolai;
daughter,
Brandi
Nunn of
Westland,
Mich.;
Nicolai
stepsons,
Jamie Nicolai of Hardin and
Todd Nicolai of Dearborn
Heights, Mich.; her sister,
Charlene Jarnot of Westland
and six grandchildren.
She was preceded in death
by her sister. Her parents
were Charles Robinson and
Kathleen Burrow Robinson.
Memorial Mass will be at
11 a.m. Tuesday at St. Henry’s
Catholic Church. The Rev.
Babu Kulathumkal will officiate. Filbeck-Cann and King
Funeral Home and Crematory handled arrangements.
Serving Your Family for Generations
Locally Owned and Operated
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Channel 2
Midnight — Arts Showcase
8 a.m. — Community Billboard
Channel 11
8 a.m. — Your City at Work: Teach An Old
Dog New Tricks
8:30 a.m. — City Profile: Richard Abraham
9 a.m. — City Profile: State of the City
9:30 a.m. — Quality of Life Matters in the
City of Paducah: Barkley Regional Airport
10 a.m. — Paducah Planning & Zoning Meeting REPLAY
5 p.m. — Break A Sweat
'REEN2OOM
5:30 p.m. — Your City at Work: Fountain Avenue
6 p.m. — Your City at Work: Recycle
6:30 p.m. — Quality of Life Matters in the
City of Paducah: Jeff Pederson
7 p.m. — Your City At Work: Touch a Truck
7:30 p.m. — Tot School
8:30 p.m. — Your City At Work: Flood Wall
9 p.m. — Your City At Work: Barkley Regional
Airport
9:30 p.m. — Quality of Life Matters in the
City of Paducah: GPEDC
10 p.m. — Your City at Work: Fire Department
Variety
4D • Saturday, July 23, 2011 • The Paducah Sun
Woman with young sons should
kick out freeloading boyfriend
Dear Annie: I am 30 yearsold and divorced with two young
sons. Two years ago, I began
dating “Brad,” who is six years
younger. He doesn’t work or go to
school, and now lives with me and
my kids. I work full time and pay
someone to clean and watch my
kids until I get home.
Recently, I’ve been getting annoyed. I love to eat out and go out
for a Saturday or Sunday so my
kids and I don’t get bored, but I’m
tired of paying his way for everything we want to do.
I do care about Brad, and he’s
been employed here and there,
but those jobs last about two
weeks, and then they fire him or
he simply doesn’t return. I have
tried to talk to him about it, but
he ends up getting mad and yelling or walking away. What do you
think I should do? — Minnie in
Texas.
Dear Minnie: Please throw
this guy out and get your life
back. As long as you allow
Brad to be a freeloader and
Ask Annie
treat you like his mother,
he will continue to do so. He
is 24 and needs to grow up.
You have young children,
and you are modeling behavior they will absorb and apply to their own lives in the
future. Irresponsible boymen should not be moving
in. Tell Brad it’s time for him
to find his own place, and if
he’s smart, he’ll also find a
job. If you want to date him,
fine, but don’t support him.
Dear Annie: I’ve noticed many
letters in your column dealing
with the death of a spouse. Most
are from widows, but I am a husband who unexpectedly lost his
wife.
While the whole ordeal defies
description, I must say that my
children and friends have really
stepped up to the plate. I rarely
eat alone, as my kids usually in-
paducahsun.com
Marvin
sist that I join them, and I try to
cook for them once a week. Eating
alone, for me, is deadly.
My friends, most of whom
were much closer to my wife, Blondie
continue to include me in their
activities. At times, I find myself
going to events that I’m not all
that interested in, but I want to be
asked the next time, so I make the
effort. I’ve also continued to work
into my late 60s because I enjoy
the company of my co-workers.
While I believe women cope
better with the death of a spouse
than do men, the role of family and friends is critical in both
cases. It is family and friends and Garfield
lots of activities that help us get
through the trying times. — Doing OK.
Dear Doing: For whatever
reason, people are more apt
to feel it necessary to “take
care” of widowers, while
widows often are left to fend
for themselves. It could be
the perception that men
need more assistance.
Mary Worth
Dilbert
Zits
y
ACROSS
1 __ Cup:
Canadian
football trophy
5 They’re waved
15 Sound detected
with a
stethoscope
16 Much of it is
shipped via the
Strait of Hormuz
17 What injured
parties may try to
get
18 Critical period
19 Gumshoe
20 Walked
21 “It will be fair
weather: for the
sky __”: Matthew
22 Gallery event
24 Like some
candle scents
26 Bach, e.g.
27 Reasonable
28 Dave Matthews
Band label
31 Lander at Orly
32 Library
supporter?
34 “Little Caesar”
gangster
35 They extract
oxygen from
water
36 With 40-Across,
nocturnal
noisemaker
37 “Help!”
predecessor
39 Viking language
40 See 36-Across
41 Fleshy-leaved
plant
42 Blackmailer
43 Part of NBA:
Abbr.
44 Bridge units
45 Unalaska
denizen
48 See
49 Govt.’s
Laboratory of
Hygiene, now
50 Ancient rock
engraving
53 Gershon of film
54 City near
Randolph Air
Force Base
55 Sea of __,
shallowest in the
world
56 Colorful
57 Pool member
DOWN
1 “Ninotchka” star
2 Pan’s opposite
3 Outlet type
4 Itch
5 .000001 meters
6 Mall map symbol
7 Showy trinket
8 Place to retire
9 Title spelled out
in Art. 2 of the
U.S. Constitution
10 Surfer girls
11 Restless
12 Film __
13 Olive branch site
14 Winter scene
staple
20 Comparison
word
23 1930 tariff act
co-sponsor
24 Philadelphia
suburb
25 Pens’ contents
27 Unravel
28 Overhaul
y
29 Got ready to trap
30 Occasional
stinger
32 Nomadic
grazers
33 Time to attack
35 Stylist’s stock
38 Warning to an
overindulgent bar
customer
39 Bank robber’s
aid
42 Break 90, say
43 Acoustic
44 Green stroke
45 Lhasa __
46 Spring
47 1928 destroyer
of the village of
Mascali
48 Physics unit
51 Sporty cars
52 __ cit.
53 __ order
Beetle Bailey
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:
One Big Happy
xwordeditor@aol.com
07/23/11
Horoscopes
By Barry C. Silk
(c)2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
07/23/11
SATURDAY, JULY 23, 2011
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Do your
best and move on. You cannot let what
others do or say bother you. Getting
out with people who appreciate you is
important to your emotional well-being.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You’ll
tend to overreact if someone doesn’t
like what you are doing. Don’t let your
stubbornness lead to a stupid argument that is a waste of emotional energy and likely to ruin your day.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): What
appears to be a great deal probably
isn’t legitimate. An emotional matter
concerning someone’s private affairs
will leave you in an awkward position.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Changes may cause you worry but accepting
the inevitable can prove to be a godsend. The help you offer will be repaid
in an unusual way.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Trouble is
brewing; keep a low profile. Overindul-
gent individuals will cause you grief
and stir up emotions that can lead to
a falling-out.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Steer
clear of anyone who is trying to take
advantage of you or dump responsibilities that don’t belong to you in your
lap.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): The more
you interact with new people or visit
unfamiliar places, the better off you
will be and the more encouragement
you will receive. It’s time to spread
your wings and try new things.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): A
personal partnership will cause you
trouble if you can’t come to terms with
what you both want. Take a breather
and share time with someone who will
listen to your side of the situation.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
Put your energy into moneymaking
projects or picking up additional skills
that will enable you to earn more in the
future. A change at home will turn out
to be a blessing in disguise.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Take
time out for friends and family and fixing up your digs. An opportunity will develop through the company you keep.
You have the energy to succeed at anything you put your mind to.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Too
much talk and not enough action will
lead to trouble. Don’t meddle in others’ affairs when you should be sorting
out your own problems.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Keep
to yourself. Work at developing something you’ve wanted to do for some
time. Your creative ability is skyrocketing. Self-improvement projects will pay
off and attracting new friends or a lover
is highlighted.
Birthday Baby: You are strong, stable and stubborn. You are unpredictable, strong-willed and determined to
get your way.
People
paducahsun.com
The Paducah Sun • Saturday, July 23, 2011 • 5D
Western has a dust-up with aliens
BY GEOFF BOUCHER
BY VERNE GAY
McClatchy-Tribune News Service
ABIQUIU, N.M. — You see the
strangest things in the desert. Last year, for instance,
if you followed a ridgeline
here you would have discovered a massive alien spaceship and, nearby, James
Bond strumming a ukulele
beneath a wispy tamarix
tree. “Wait around,” he muttered, “and Indiana Jones
might show up too.”
The man with the fourstring uke was actor Daniel
Craig, who is best known
as the British spy 007 but
was on this particular day
on location with “Cowboys
& Aliens,” an audacious
$180-million film that also
stars “Raiders of the Lost
Ark” hero Harrison Ford.
Both actors have brought
grim, granite stares to the
project, which leads to a
nagging question: Is this
film as silly as its title or as
fierce as its famous faces?
“I’m not sure anyone
knows what to make of this
movie,” Craig said as he
plucked away on a Beatles
ballad. “But you know that’s
not necessarily a bad thing.”
When “Cowboys & Aliens”
makes its world premiere
Saturday night at ComicCon International in San Diego, it will introduce the biggest (and perhaps the only)
wild card in Hollywood’s
stacked-deck summer. It’s
been a season of sequels
(more pirates, more hangovers, more wizards, more
giant robots, etc.) and bigbrand heroes (Thor, Green
Lantern, Captain America),
but this is a horse of a different color.
The movie, directed by
Jon Favreau and opening
July 29, is set in the 1870s
in a blister-scab town called
Absolution that kneels before a cattle baron named
Col. Woodrow Dolarhyde
McClatchy-Tribune News Service
McClatchy-Tribune News Service
Daniel Craig (left) as a stranger with no memory of his past and director/executive producer Jon
Favreau appear on the set of ‘Cowboys & Aliens’.
(Ford). One day a wounded
man (Craig) arrives with a
strange metal device affixed
to his wrist and zero memory. The Man With No Name,
it turns out, is an Old West
victim of alien abduction.
The film, which also stars
Olivia Wilde and Sam Rockwell, is structured like a
Western and (somewhat)
resists the contemporary
approach of nonstop action
in favor of building toward
a big showdown, a la “High
Noon.” At the same time, it
promises the visual-effects
velocity and crackle of today’s summer films. If all
that sounds like a tall order,
well, check back after the
premiere.
The core of that concept
and the film’s title come
from an obscure, smallpress comic book series by
Scott Mitchell Rosenberg
and the potential of it (and
winding path of the property) has brought together a
startling posse of Hollywood
big names. Ron Howard
and Brian Grazer are two of
the producers and Steven
Spielberg, as executive producer, was so engaged by
the possibilities of the story
that he arranged for Favreau and two of the screenwriters, Damon Lindelof
(“Lost”) and Roberto Orci
(“Star Trek”), to join him for
a private screening of John
Ford’s “The Searchers.”
“He sat over our shoulders at a screening room
on the Warner Bros. lot
and gave us a running commentary,” Favreau said with
marvel in his voice. “What
happened with this film is
you had creators like Ron
Howard and Steven who
are very passionate about
the Western genre and saw
here an opportunity to tap
into that in a big and crowdpleasing way.”
One crowd that needs to
be pleased are all the money people. The movie arrives with three financiers
(Spielberg’s DreamWorks
Studios, Universal Pictures
and Relativity Media), two
distributors (Universal in
the U.S. and Canada, Paramount overseas) and 16
credited producers or executive producers. In these
tight-margin days it’s not
unusual to see a lot of Hollywood players splitting the
risk on a big project, but
Howard said the herd behind “Cowboys & Aliens”
went well beyond the norm.
“I don’t think I’ve ever
been in a situation where
there were so many people
who were accustomed to
being virtually autonomous
in terms of decision-making
on most projects,” Howard said. “It all went really smoothly though, and
I think that’s due to the respect for and belief in Jon.
He came in, and we all saw
that he understood the movie and the tone we were all
hoping for. And it was clear
he was going to elevate it all
and make it his own. It was
also clear the buck was going to stop with Jon.”
Taxidermist explains how he preserved
Lady Gaga’s meat dress for Hall of Fame
BY BOB POOL
McClatchy-Tribune News Service
LOS ANGELES — Fortunately,
requests to preserve clothing
made out of raw meat are
rare, Sergio Vigilato admits.
But when the Burbank
taxidermist got the call to
turn Lady Gaga’s infamous
Argentinean beef gown into
a museum display, he bit at
the opportunity.
Vigilato was contacted
by the Rock and Roll Hall
of Fame and Museum two
months after the pop singer
wore the meat dress on stage
Sept. 12, 2010, to accept the
trophy for the year’s best
music video at the MTV Video Music Awards.
“The first thing I asked
was, ‘Where is the dress?
This thing could have maggots by now,’” Vigilato said.
“I understood them to say it
was in a room with air conditioning. I said make sure it’s
in a freezer.”
Actually, the 35-pound
dress made of a dozen thincut flank steaks was being
kept on ice. It was frozen stiff
— and maggot-free — when
it was delivered to Vigilato’s
American Taxidermy shop 3
½ weeks later.
As he defrosted it, Vigilato found that the dress
had begun decomposing before it had been frozen. As it
thawed out, it developed an
odor.
“But the Rock and Roll
museum had already paid
me upfront — $6,000 — so I
went ahead with it,” he said.
It took more than a month to
clean and preserve the meat.
Vigilato declined to reveal
the process he used to cure
the meat dress, although
museum officials said it was
treated with bleach, formal-
Final season premiere of
‘Entouraget’ Sunday on HBO
McClatchy-Tribun News Service
Taxidermist Sergio Vigilato is photographed in his taxidermist
shop, American Taxidermist, in Burbank, California, June 21, 2011.
Vigilato preserved the meat dress Lady Gaga wore last year.
dehyde and detergent to remove bacteria.
Once the meat was preserved, Vigilato said, he had
to recondition it to make it
semi-pliable so it could be
reassembled into the dress
originally created by Los
Angeles artist and designer
Franc Fernandez and stylist
Nicola Formichetti.
He glued the meat slabs to
a mannequin outfitted with
a pattern cut to resemble
Fernandez’s original dress
and then dyed it a dark red
to resemble its color when
Lady Gaga wore it. He boxed
it up and shipped it May 20
to the museum in Cleveland.
In June, the dress went on
display as part of the Hall of
Fame’s “Women Who Rock:
Vision, Passion, Power” exhibit, which runs through
February.
“After that, it will tour
other museums if it holds
together,” said Jim Henke,
chief curator for the Hall of
Fame.
Henke said Lady Gaga
approved of the exhibition
of the dress. “They had
been talking about displaying it themselves, maybe in
a glass case that had special
ventilation,” he said.
The pop singer, known
for her over-the-top costumes, described the meat
dress as being symbolic of
standing up for one’s rights
and showing that “I am not
a piece of meat.”
Fernandez, the designer,
said he purchased about
40 pounds of beef for the
dress from Palermo Deli in
Granada Hills, where his
Sylmar parents are longtime customers. He ended
up using about 35 pounds
of the meat for the dress
and its accompanying hat,
shoes and purse.
Daniel Vega, co-owner
of Palermo Deli, said he
selected cuts of beef that
would hold together and
would not be dripping
blood, after Fernandez explained what he intended
to do with it. The beef was
priced at about $3.99 a
pound, Vega said.
Some of his customers know that Lady Gaga’s
dress came from his meat
case, but not all of them.
“We didn’t make a big deal
out of it,” he said.
Vigilato’s own background is as colorful as
the mounted deer heads,
stuffed birds and other
creatures that line his Isabel Street taxidermy shop.
A onetime member of a
Brazilian rock’ ‘n’ roll band
who says he was chased
out of Brazil by death
squads, the 66-year-old
Vigilato boasts of traveling
throughout the U.S. as a
musician and working for a
dozen years as an Alaskan
charter boat captain before
becoming a taxidermist.
His shop was originally
called African American
Taxidermy because of the
safari trophies he was asked
to preserve and mount. He
said he changed the name
after a heckler called and
made racial slurs.
Acknowledging that the
meat dress preservation
was unusual, Vigilato said
it wasn’t the weirdest taxidermy job he’d encountered. A movie producer
with an elephant-skin bar
had him create a soda dispenser from the elephant’s
penis, he said.
Vigilato said he still has
several slabs of Fernandez’s leftover beef in his
shop freezer. He may seek
permission to turn it into
necklaces, bracelets and
other pieces of jewelry.
For now, he’s happy to be
working again with wildlife. And his wife, Cynthia,
is pleased that she is once
again free to grill steak for
dinner, he said.
■ Reason to watch:
Eighth and final season.
■ Catching up:
To
shorthand this, think
“Charlie Sheen.” Vince’s
(Adrian Grenier) career
and health have imploded
after he goes on a cokefueled bender at an Eminem party where a brawl
landed him in the hospital, battered and bleeding.
That pretty much killed
a planned screen test for
director Peter Berg, but a
cop also produced a baggie of drugs. Meanwhile,
Ari (Jeremy Piven) is on
the outs with “Mrs. Ari”
(Perrey Reeves); Terrance
McQuewick
(Malcolm
McDowell) is demanding
that “E’’ (Kevin Connolly)
sign a pre-nup before he
marries daughter Sloan
(Emmanuelle Chriqui);
Turtle (Jerry Ferrara)
has lined up Mark Cuban
to invest in the tequila
brand he’s pushing; and
Drama (Kevin Dillon) has
a prime-time animated gig
— something about gorillas and bananas.
■ What Sunday’s about:
To shorthand this, don’t
think “Charlie Sheen.”
Vince
spends
three
months drying out and
emerges ... Vince, again.
That dark, shrouded, unshorn Mr. Hyde? Banished, replaced by someone eager to get his life and
career back. He’s even got
an idea for a movie — one
so bad that even Lifetime
wouldn’t touch it — but the
boys keep their opinions
to themselves. The Golds
have effectively split, and
so have Sloan and Eric,
but ... he and business
partner Scott Lavin (Scott
Caan) have not.
‘Entourage’
10:30 p.m. EDT Sunday
HBO
They’ve got their own
management company now,
and their own unique headaches, including Andrew
Dice Clay, who’s been pulled
out of mothballs by Drama
to voice a major character on
“Johnny Bananas.”
■ My say: “The final
season of ‘Entourage’ ...”
Let those words and their
import sink in. Soon, no
more sunshine or gleaming
half-million-dollar toys on
wheels; no more infantilized
stars and their infantilized
agent-enablers; no more Rex
and his pink sweaters, or Ari
and his operatic outbursts
of hair-torching profanity.
Everything has a date of expiration, especially a series
— perhaps the best on the
subject — that was all about
an industry dedicated to the
proposition of obsolescence.
(Last summer’s blockbuster?
Forgotten and consigned to
Netflix.) Hollywood’s about
renewal and amnesia; it’s
aggressively rooted in the
present, disdainful of the
past, and the same with “Entourage’s” last lap. The series
has wisely hit the reset button, because the seventh season story line had nowhere
to go but to that peculiar
form of hell Lindsay Lohan
seems so familiar with. The
result is sort of deja vu all
over again; we’ve been here
before, but there’s pleasure
in the return trip.
■ Bottom line: “Entourage” is clarifying a moral
message — drugs will kill
you, terrible behavior is terrible, and real friends are
forever. It feels like a reassuring final season.
Katherine Helmond sinks her
teeth into role on ‘True Blood’
BY DAVID HILTBRAND
McClatchy-Tribune News Service
PHILADELPHIA — It probably shouldn’t have surprised us to see Katherine
Helmond turn up in the
ghastly precincts of HBO’s
“True Blood” this week.
After all, the grande
dame of the small screen
has done everything on TV
but host “Meet the Press.”
She’s guest-starred on
shows from “Mannix” to
“The Glades.” She’s had
recurring roles on series including “Coach”
and “Everybody Loves
Raymond.” In TV biopics, she’s played everyone
from Emily Dickinson to
Hedda Hopper.
Helmond also has had
long and memorable runs
on hits such as “Soap” and
“Who’s the Boss?” Funny
thing, though; even in
ensemble comedies like
those, it’s inevitably her
character who lingers
most vividly in your head.
Even after all that experience, “True Blood”
and its swampy Louisiana
setting still proved to be a
special treat for Helmond.
“I was so pleased when
they sent me the script,”
she says on the phone
from her home in Los Angeles. “It’s a subject I love
to read about because I
come from that Gulf Coast
area.
“I grew up hearing
about the walking undead.
I had a fascination with it
as a child.”
Helmond is a native of
Galveston, Texas. “Sometimes it would rain 15 days
in a row,” she says. “We’d
have to move all the furniture up to the second floor
in case of flooding.”
(We won’t be so uncouth as to reveal a lady’s
age. Let’s just say she came
into this world the same year
Mickey Mouse made his
screen debut in “Steamboat
Willie.”)
The conditions on the
“True Blood” set in Hollywood, Fla., where she shot
her first episode as Portia
and Andy’s grandmother,
Caroline Bellefleur, also
brought back childhood
memories.
“The humidity is beyond
belief. You just cannot go
outside,” she says.
Vampires aren’t the only
ones who have to worry
about sun exposure. Southern belles are delicate creatures, too.
A successful stage actress,
Helmond was thrown by her
first TV experience in 1962,
in an episode of “Car 54,
Where Are You?,” the classic
sitcom starring Joe E. Ross
and Fred Gwynne.
“They shot the last scene
of the piece the first day I got
to the set,” she says. “It was
all out of sequence. I thought
‘Good heavens, no wonder
it’s a mess.’
“I still feel that way. When
I go to work and then see the
piece on TV, I think, ‘By gosh,
they got it all put together!’
It’s still magic to me.”
CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE FIRST
AVENGER- REAL D 3D [PG-13]
1:40 4:30 7:20 10:10
CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE FIRST
AVENGER [PG-13]
12:25 315 6:05 8:55
HARRY POTTER & THE DEATHLY
HALLOWS 2- REAL D 3D [PG-13]
11:45 2:40 5:35 8:30
HARRY POTTER & THE DEATHLY
HALLOWS 2- DIGITAL [PG-13]
12:45 3:40 6:35 9:30
HARRY POTTER & THE DEATHLY
HALLOWS 2 [PG-13]
1:45 4:40 7:35
WINNIE THE POOH [G]
12:05 2:00 3:55 5:50 7:45 9:40
FRIENDS WITH BENEFITS [R]
11:50 2:25 5:00 7:35 10:10
HORRIBLE BOSSES [R]
11:55 2:20 4:45 7:10 10:15
ZOOKEEPER [PG]
11:55 2:25 4:55 7:25 10:05
TRANSFORMERS: DARK OF
THE MOON-REAL D 3D [PG-13]
12:30 6:35
TRANSFORMERS: DARK OF THE
MOON [PG-13]
2:45 8:50
BAD TEACHER [R]
12:45 3:05 5:25 7:45 10:15
CARS 2-REAL 3D [G] 3:55 10:00
CARS 2 [G] 12:05 6:10
6D • Saturday July 23, 2011 • The Paducah Sun
paducahsun.com
Fleming
FURNITURE
BENTON
FLEMING FURNITURE
STORE
IS CLOSING...
BUT NOT FOR YOU WITH
THIS SPECIAL INVITATION
YOU CAN’T AFFORD TO
MISS THIS!!!!
BENTON’S FLEMING
FURNITURE
CLOSING
SALE
3
Benton
Locatio
Open S n
unda
12-5 y
All
Locations of Furniture
Marked Down To Sell
This Is It....ONE Store
Is Closing FOREVER!
BUT WE HAVE 3
Stores Marked down
$
1,867,000
BENTON:
Bedrooms
e
storn
g
i
s
o
cl
sale!
305 North Main Street
270-527-3481 • 800-599-6224
PADUCAH SUPER CENTER:
3801 Hinkleville Road
270-442-4455 • 800-788-6224
Dear friend and
Loyal Customer,
MURRAY:
3060 Highway 641 North
270-753-6309
Dining Rooms
ACT NOW!!!
You’ve got
FIRST CHOICE
REMEMBER....
When it’s Gone,
Living Rooms
IT’S GONE!!!
Just a few of our famous brands:
Mattresses
LA-Z- BOY • BROYHILL
THOMASVILLE • LANE
ASHLEY • SERTA
EVERYTHING MUST SELL!
Recliners
INTEREST FREE
★★★ UNTIL ★★★
2012!
ALL
MARKED
N
O MONEY DOWN!
DOWN
TO GO!
After 64 years, the tough decision had
been made and soon we will
be closing our Benton store forever.
And, as one of our most loyal
customers, we wanted you to be one
of the first to know.
But before we can shut our doors in
Benton, we need to sell out
our ENTIRE inventory to the bare
walls. That’s why we’ve
set aside 5 special days when you wil
l get first pick from over
$1,867,000 worth of beautiful new hom
e furnishings – at unheard
of Store Closing prices!
Join us for HUGE LIQUIDATION
SAVINGS on living rooms,
dining rooms, bedrooms, youth bedroo
ms, leather chairs and
sofas, mattresses entertainment centers
, decorative accessories and
more. Prices will be slashed in ALL
3 Fleming stores to help us
move nearly two million of dollars of
excess inventory quickly and
efficiently.
We’ve also made special arrangements
for these 5-days only so you
can take your entire purchase with NO
MONEY DOWN and NO
INTEREST CHARGES until 2012!*
During this massive Store Closing Sal
e, delivery will be available to
you for a nominal additional charge.
Or, you can pick up your new
furniture yourself and save even more.
Don’t miss your chance to save as we
sacrifice EVERY SINGLE
ITEM regardless of cost or loss. But
don’t delay, because once
these deals are gone you may never
be able to redecorate your
home at these prices again. Please join
us.
Sincerely,
Dan and Karen Kelley
P.S. – IMPORTANT NOTE: Our stor
es will be closed
Wednesday, July 13th so we can slas
h prices on EVERYTHING
throughout ALL 3 Fleming showroom
s. Beginning Thursday,
$1,867,000 worth of beautiful hom
e furnishings will be sold at
the lowest prices you’ll see for a lon
g, long time.
*Prior purchases excluded. No other
offers apply. No money down and no
interest charges until
January 2012 on purchases of $999
or more with approved credit. Monthly
payments required.
Special orders accepted with customary
deposit. See store for details.
AT FLEMING FURNITURE ALL WE DO IS SAVE YOU MONEY!
SUPERCENTER 3801 Hinkleville Road
Highway 60 • A Half Mile East of 1-24
Paducah, KY 442-4455 • 1-800-788-6224
Open Daily 9-7 • Saturday 10-7• Sunday 1-5 • Friday 10-8
Betty Winters
Nicole Dick
305 North Main Street
Benton, Ky
3060 Hwy. 641 North
Murray, Ky
Design
Assistance
Available
Division of Kelley-Wiggins Furniture, Inc.
Visit us at www.flemingfurniture.com
Look us
up on
Facebook!
305 North Main Street, Benton KY
527-3481 • 1-800-599-6224 Open Daily 9 to 6, Fri. 9 to 6
451 South 16th Street, Paducah KY
Daily 9 to 5, Fri. 9 to 6
442-4465 • 1-800-450-6224
3060 Hwy 641 North, Murray, KY Open Mon.-Sat. 9-6,
753-6309 • 1-866-753-6309
Sun. 1-5
We Can Help You Sell
Your Old Furniture!
449 South 16th Street
Fu H
E
rn om
UR
is e
IT
hi
N
ng
R
U
F
CONSIGNMENT
Brittany Borders Greg Lahndorff
16th Street
Paducah, Ky
Supercenter, Hwy 60
Paducah, Ky
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