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Saturday-Monday, October 9-11, 2021 1CThe Telegraph
Zoned BD - Downtown Business District. Currently hair salon with ALL equipment included. Freshly painted exterior. Newer architectural roof. Two 90+ HVAC systems & two 100-amp breaker panels. Upstairs storage. Kitchenette & full bath w/6 separate rooms for nail tech + wash + dry stations. Agent Michael Paslay • 618-530-7355
COMMERCIAL
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VISIT WWW.TARRANTANDHARMAN.COMTO VIEW ALL LOCAL REAL ESTATE LISTINGS
* Not your average yard sale*** 1 Mom who Shops and
Decorates***Name Brand, very gentlyworn, excellent conditionGirl’s and Boy’s clothing-
sizes 5-10 YearsShoes and Boots- 12-3
* Kid’s Toys, Games, Booksand Bikes
* Household, Home Ac-cessories, Art, Mirrors
* Men’s Name Brand clothing,sizes XL
Wood River, #2 Mimosa,Fri & Sat 7:30a-12:30p,
Boy/Girl Newborn to tod-dler, last baby sale! Owlet
smart sock, highchairs,baby furniture, baby
products, baby nutribullet,bottles, binkies, sippycups, car seat, bases,stroller combo, diaper
bags, pregnancy body pil-low, maternity clothes,
books, dish ware, cups,purses, knick knacks,
household items & moreto come still cleaning outthe house. 2 family sale!Most items $1 or less.
Your
is over...find in in the classifieds
LEGALS
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS
The Housing Authority of the County of Jersey, Jerseyville,Illinois will receive sealed bids for:
TITLE: Site Work and Plumbing WorkVarious Housing Sites
Jerseyville, Illinois
PROJECT DESCRIPTION: Work shall include various siterenovation projects at Jersey Acres, Jersey Villas and JerseyHomes housing sites and plumbing renovation work including
new kitchen cabinetry replacement at Jersey Acres. This projectis to be bid under one prime contract for all trades.
Bid Opening: All bids shall be delivered in sealed envelopes,furnished by the Contractor, to the Office of the Housing
Authority of the County of Jersey located at 505 Horn Drive,Jerseyville, Illinois 62052 on or before 2:00 P.M. prevailing time
on Wednesday, November 3, 2021. No bids will be acceptedafter that time and date. Immediately after the closing time for
receiving bids, they will be publicly opened and read aloud.
Pre-Bid Meeting: A Pre-Bid Meeting will be held on Wednesday,October 20, 2021, at 10:00 A.M., prevailing time, at the Jersey
County Housing Authority Administration Office Buildinglocated at 505 Horn Drive in Jerseyville, Illinois.
Each bid shall be accompanied by a bid deposit in theform of a certified check, bank draft, U.S.
Government Bonds or bid bond secured by a surety companyacceptable to the U.S. Government and authorized to do
business in the State of Illinois, in the amount of 5% of the basebid, payable to the Housing Authority of the County of Jersey,Jerseyville, Illinois 62052. A Performance Bond and Payment
Bond will be required of the bidder to whom a contract isawarded.
A plan deposit made payable to the Architect in the amount of$50.00 will be required of all Contractors requesting plans. Thisdeposit is refundable only to those Contractors who return the
plans and specifications in good condition within 10 daysfollowing the bid opening.
All contractors requesting Bid Documents to be sent to them willbe shipped via UPS Ground and the contractor shall remit a
separate check (non-refundable) made payable to the Architectin the amount of $20.00 per set for shipping and handling.
All bidders are advised that the law concerning Federalprevailing wage rates issued by the U.S. Department of Labor
under the Davis-Bacon and Related Acts must be compliedwith. Prevailing wage rates have been determined and are
included within the Project Manual.
No bid may be withdrawn for 60 days after date of opening ofbids, and the Owner reserves the right to waive any and all
informality on bidding and the right to reject any or all bids orany part thereof and to accept the bid or bids being most
favorable to the Housing Authority of the County of Jersey afterall bids have been examined and evaluated.
Plans and specifications for the subject project will be availableat the Office of the Architect, Allied Design Consultants, Inc.,
1413 South MacArthur Blvd., Springfield, IL 62704,(217) 522-3355; and on file for viewing at the Office of the
Housing Authority of the County of Jersey located at 505 HornDrive, Jerseyville, IL 62052; Dodge Data and Analytics; Central
Illinois Plan Room in Springfield, IL; and Southern IllinoisBuilders Association in O'Fallon, IL.
HOUSING AUTHORITY OF THE COUNTY OF JERSEY505 HORN DRIVE
JERSEYVILLE, JERSEY COUNTY, ILLINOIS 6205221-0890 10/7 10/8 10/9
LEGALS
PUBLIC AUCTION
Date: October 25, 2021at 4:30 p.m.
At: Airline Drive SelfStorage
490 E. Airline DrEast Alton, IL 62024
(618) 259-2376Auctioneer:
Keith Jackson#040000642
Unit #201/243Bill TuckerUnit #221
Excedrine DavisUnit #228 Penny Price
Unit #244John & Missy
ShimchickUnit #248/624
Matthew DanielsUnit #334
Ryan OglesbyUnit #348
Charles FishUnit #433
Amanda SmithUnit #442
Bobby ShanksUnit #444
Diangelo JacksonUnit #612/632Randy Betts
Unit #618/708/739Monty Wallace
Unit #646 Amber WellsUnit #717 Kaitlyn Ulery
Unit #750Derek Gentry
Unit #809Vern Phillips
Unit #821 Lucas CobbUnit #832
Jason WinshipUnit #848
Chris Hackworth
Mask andsocial distancing
recommended21-0895 10/9 10/16
PUBLIC NOTICE
Foster Township'sannual audit wasconducted by C.J.
Schlosser & Co, LLCfor the period
beginning April 1, 2020and ending March 31,2021. The audit report
may be publiclyinspected at:
Foster Township Hall2919 Main Street -
FosterburgAlton, IL, 62002, duringregular business hours,
Monday - Thursday10:00 am to 2:30 pm.
21-0908 10/9
LEGALS
STATE OF ILLINOISIN THE CIRCUIT COURT OFTHE THIRD JUDICIAL CIR-CUITMADISON COUNTY
COURTNEY CASTELLI, Peti-tionerandMICHAEL BARQUERO, Re-spondent
Case Number: 2021D000777
NOTICE OF PUBLICATION
Notice is given you, MI-CHAEL BARQUERO, re-spondent, that this cause hasbeen commenced against youin this court asking for a DIS-SOLUTION OF MARRIAGEand other relief. Unless youfile your response or other-wise file your appearance inthis cause in the office of theCircuit Clerk of MadisonCounty, Courthouse, Ed-wardsville, Illinois, on or be-fore the 8th day of NOVEM-BER, 2021, a DISSOLUTIONOF MARRIAGE and other re-lief may be granted as prayedfor by the petitioner.
Thomas McRaeCircuit Clerk
STANGE LAW FIRM, P.C.D r e w D o s s e t t , A R D C# 6 3 3 5 8 0 3115 Lincoln Place Court,Suite 101Belleville, Illinois 62221Phone: (618) 310-6062Fax: (618) [email protected] for Petitioner8220-91851621-1236 10/9 10/16 10/23
IN THE CIRCUIT COURTTHIRD JUDICIAL CIRCUITM A D I S O N C O U N T Y ,I L L I N O I S
IN RE THE MATTER OF:
TRISTAN RENCH, A MINOR
CASE NO. 12-P-127
Not ice is g iven to you,JAMES IZARD, Respondent,that this cause has been com-menced against you in thisCourt regarding a Motion toModify Guardianship.
Unless you f i le your re-sponse, or otherwise file yourappearance in this cause, inthe office of the Circuit Clerkof Madison County, Edwards-ville, Illinois, on or beforeNovember 4, 2021, the Courtmay grant the Petitioner'spending Motion to ModifyGuardianship.8220-91852121-1238 10/9 10/16 10/23
LEGALS
IN THE CIRCUIT COURTTHIRD JUDICIAL CIRCUITM A D I S O N C O U N T Y ,I L L I N O I SJUVENILE DIVISION
TO: ANY AND ALL UN-KNOWN FATHERS AND TOALL WHOM IT MAY CON-CERN
IN THE INTEREST OF:MARIA MILLER, A MINOR
CASE NUMBER: 19-JA-38
NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION
Take notice that on MARCH5, 2019, a petition was filedunder the Juvenile Court Actby Thomas A. Haine in theCircuit Court of MadisonCounty entitled "In the In-terest of MARIA MILLER"CASE NUMBER: 19-JA-38,MARIA MILLER, a minor, andthat on NOVEMBER 4, 2021at the hour of 10:00 AM or assoon thereafter as this causemay be heard, an adjudica-tion/disposition hearing on apetition to terminate parentalrights will be held upon thepetition to have the child de-clared to be a ward of thecourt under that Act. Thecourt has authority in this pro-ceeding to take from you thecustody and guardianship ofthe minor, to terminate yourparental rights, and to ap-point a guardian with power toconsent to adoption. You maylose all parental rights to yourchild. If the petition requeststhe termination of your par-ental rights and the appoint-ment of a guardian withpower to consent to adoption,you may lose all parentalrights to the child.
(SEAL)THOMAS McRAEClerk of the Circuit Court8220-91850621-1237 10/9 10/16 10/23
Location: In Greene County Il., 820 S. HWY 67, Kane, IL 62054, 4 mi. North of Jerseyville Fair Grounds or ¼ mi. South of Kane Road on HWY 67. (watch for signs) Contact Terry @ 618-396-2563. House showing by appointment only contact Whitney @ 618-823-2379House: This 1800’s 2 Story 8 Room, 2 Bathroom house w/open Stair Case closed in front & back porches & foyer has natural gas heat. There is an unattached 28’x25’ Garage w/ Work Shop, Loft, & Smoke House. This stately old house sets on 1.6 acres w/ large trees on HWY 67 just a short distance from Carrollton & Jerseyville. The House sell as is with no warranties. House will sell @1:00 if not sold before day of auction. Buyer is to pay 10% down day of sale, the rest at closing in 30 days. Owner has right to accept or reject all bids.Stoneware, Antiques & Collectibles: Sleepy Eye Pitchers, Steins, Blue, Green & Brown Spongeware Bowls, Pitchers, Steins, Graduating Bowls, Tea Pot, Soap Dish, Bed Pan, White Hall Blue Bird Pitchers, WH Saw Tooth Pitchers, Brown Grape Pitchers, Blue Grape Pitchers, Ripley Crocks & Jugs, Stizilburger Pottery, Upper Alton Pottery Jugs, Preserve Jars, Crocks, Butter Churns, & Pitchers, Rug Loom, 2-Spinning Wheels (lg.& sm.) Silver Tea Set & Trays, Harker Table Set( Salt & Pepper shak-ers, Rolling Pin, Pitcher & other pieces, Bennington Crock Bowls, Creamer & Sugar, Steins, 4 Wooden Butter Molds, 1 & 5 gal. WH Whiskey Jugs, 2& 15 gal. WH Crocks, 5 WH Brown Mugs, 2 Wooden Bread Bowls, Wooden Salt Box, Royal Copeland Chickens, Advertisement: Stag Beer Tray, Irish Setter tray, The Sleepy Eye Mill, Griesedieck Beer Cooler, Lights, & Beer Glass, Bluff City, Hyde Park, Schlitz &Stag Memorabilia, Bottle Stoppers, Sad Irons, Cast Iron Trivets, Corn Bread Molds, # 12 Lodge Dutch Oven, Copper Long Handle Bed Warmer, Cast Iron Dog Door Stop, Oil Lamps, Weather Vane, Baskets, Copper Bucket w/stand, 2 Civil War Cannon Balls from Greene County, Mammoth Bones from Greene & Jer-sey County, Fossils: Dinosaurs Eggs, Bones, Turtle, Whalen Knife Metal Candle Mold, Old Quilts, Native American: Artifacts, Blankets, Birch Basket, Gourd Bowls, Necklaces, Iron Axe Heads, Old Books, Wooden Weighted Clock, Baby Sleigh, Egg Baskets, Old Medicine Bottles, Stove, Furniture & Misc.: Kenmore Country Kitchen Stove Converted to Electric, Hutch w/ drop down desk, Corner Cabinet, Possum Belly Cabinet Lots of Old Books, Old Trunks, 4 Post Bed, Benches, Desks, Sm. Round Oak Table w/2 chairs, Wrought Iron Baby Bed, Child Toys: 720 JD Petal Tractor, 2 Marx Train Sets, Doll Buggy,2- Red Wagons, Lots of other Toys, Riding Mower, Old Tools & Misc.: Cub Cadet LTX 1046KW 21.5hp. 48” cut V Twin Hydrostat, 8x10 Shed (portable), Iron Wheeled Wagon Frame, Iron Wheels, Old Pitcher Pump, Klem, 2-50’s Style Metal Tables, Miter Saw, Table Saw, Platform Scale, Bench Grinder, Lots of Primitive Tools, Ladders, Lawn Furniture, Yard Tools, Yard Ornaments,
Other Items Too Numerous To Mention.Greg was an avid collector, this is a small listing come and enjoy the day.
Announcement made day of sale take president over printed matter.
Terms of sale: Cash or check with proper ID, Driver’s License or Photo ID. FOID Card Required All Gun Laws Apply Announcements
made day of sale take Precedence Over All Printed Matter. Owner and Auctioneer not responsible for accidents day of sale.
LUNCH WILL BE SERVED
“Have Gavel Will Travel”
Klocke’s Auction ServiceAuctioneer Terry Klocke LIC# 440000568
311 W. Batchtown Rd., Batchtown, IL 62006Ph# (618)396-2563
Images may be seen at auctionzip.com
Check out our
Classifi eds for
bargains!
Check out our business & services In the classifieds everyday! Check out our
Classifi edsonline!
Saturday-Monday, October 9-11, 2021 3CThe Telegraph ALTON TELEGRAPH CLASS 02 100921
Cleaning & Maintenance
We will haul anything at any time! We also tear down buildings - barns, garages, mobile homes, etc. Let ME clean out your junk!
• Houses• Attics• Basements• Garages
• Barns•Rental Properties• Hoarding
• Crime Scene Cleanup• Power Washing
DIRTY JOBS
You got a mess? Anything dirty, nasty, or stinky
I’m the guy for you!
618-974-8234
We will haul anything at any time! We also tear down buildings -
barns, garages, mobile homes, etc. Let ME clean out your junk!
• Houses• Attics• Basements• Garages• Barns
•Rental Properties• Hoarding• Crime Scene Cleanup• Power WashingYou got a mess?
Anything dirty, nasty, or stinky, I’m the guy for you!
618-974-8234Concrete & Masonry
MADISON COUNTYMASONRY & CONCRETE
Basement Walls & FoundationsRepair or Replace• Driveways
AUSTIN, Texas — A federal appeals court Fri-day night allowed Texas to temporarily resume banning most abortions, just one day after clinics across the state began rushing to serve patients again for the first time since early September.
Abortion providers in Texas had been bracing for the 5th U.S. Court of Appeals to act quickly, even as they booked new appointments and reopened their doors dur-ing a brief reprieve from the law known as Senate Bill 8, which bans abor-tions once cardiac activ-ity is detected, usually around six weeks.
On Wednesday, U.S. District Judge Robert Pitman, an appointee of President Barack Obama, issued an order suspend-ing the Texas law that he called an “offensive deprivation” of the consti-
tutional right to an abor-tion. It came in response to a lawsuit filed by the Biden administration, which warned that other GOP-controlled states could rush to adopt simi-lar measures.
But the New Orleans-based appeals court quickly granted Texas’ request to set aside Pit-man’s order for now while the case is reviewed. It ordered the Justice Department to respond by Tuesday.
Texas had roughly two dozen abortion clin-ics before the law took effect Sept. 1, and not all Texas abortion providers resumed services while it was on hold. Many physi-cians had feared a swift reversal from the appeals court that risked putting them back in legal jeop-ardy.
The new law threatens Texas abortion providers with lawsuits from private citizens, who are entitled to collect at least $10,000
in damages if successful. That novel approach is
the reason why courts had not blocked the law
prior to Pitman’s rul-ing, since the state plays
no role in enforcing the restrictions.
The Telegraph4C Saturday-Monday, October 9-11, 2021 ALTON TELEGRAPH CLASS 03 100921
EMPLOYMENT
MARKETPLACE
Like New Memory FoamCovertible Futon (Black)
Pd $125 Asking $20;Never Opened (2 sets -
18 piece each) ChristmasDinnerware 1 Set Asking$12 Both Sets Ask $20;
Two Punch Top StagCans, Excellent Condi-tion, Over 60 Years Old
$5 EachCall 618-363-6878
6' Ficus Artificial Tree withBaseket Base Pd $88
Asking $10; Like New L/REnd Table with Glass TopPd $65 Asking $10; Over250 Beer Cans $15 for All
Call 618-363-6878
Cannonball Style Bed (full orqueen) w/ Dresser and Mirror,
Asking $100 618-791-3860
Lawn Chairs & Stools, 6Chairs, 4 Foot Stools $45;White Fiberglass CamperShell, Fits 6.5' Bed Toyota
$100; Wood China Hutch withBuffett Drawer, Very Heavy
$125; Cash and Carry618-467-7098
Two Knitted Afghans $40Each, Kids Life Vest $25,2 Gold Chair Cushions,
New $15,Baby Lock Serger Sewing
Machine Used Once,Bright Red 3 Piece Bath Rug
Set, New $30CASH ONLY 618-466-7110
Variety of Ammunition ForSale, All Items Sold ForCash - As Is, FOID Ap-
plies, Alton area618-304-3166
Guns For Sale,-Black Power Cartidge-
(1) 1873 Springfield TrapDoor 45/70 Rifle,
(2) 1884 Springfield TrapDoor 45/70 Rifle,
(3) Colt "Lightning" FirstModel of Pump Gun 32/20
Caliber,(4) Remington M14 Pump
32/20 Caliber, SeveralOther Single Shot E.P.
Musket/Rifles FOID RulesApply SOLD AS IS,
CASH ONLY618-304-3166
EMPLOYMENT
MOSCOW (AP) — Journal-ists Maria Ressa of the Philip-pines and Dmitry Muratov of Russia won the 2021 Nobel Peace Prize on Friday for their fight for freedom of expression in countries where reporters have faced persistent attacks, harassment and even murder.
Ressa and Muratov were hon-ored for their “courageous” work but also were considered “repre-sentatives of all journalists who stand up for this ideal in a world in which democracy and freedom of the press face increasingly adverse conditions,” said Berit Reiss-Andersen, chair of the Norwegian Nobel Committee.
Ressa in 2012 co-founded Rappler, a news website that the
committee noted had focused critical attention on President Rodrigo Duterte’s “controversial, murderous anti-drug campaign” in the Philippines.
She and Rappler “have also documented how social media is being used to spread fake news, harass opponents and manipu-late public discourse,” it said.
Muratov was one of the found-ers in 1993 of the independent Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta, which the Nobel com-mittee called “the most indepen-dent newspaper in Russia today, with a fundamentally critical attitude towards power.”
“The newspaper’s fact-based journalism and professional integrity have made it an impor-
tant source of information on censurable aspects of Russian society rarely mentioned by other media,” it added, noting that six of its journalists were killed since its founding.
Ressa, the first Filipino to win the peace prize and the first woman to be honored this year with an award by the Nobel com-mittee, was convicted last year of libel and sentenced to jail in a decision seen as a major blow to press global freedom.
Currently out on bail but facing seven active legal cases, Ressa, 58, said she hopes the award will bolster investigative journalism “that will hold power to account.”
“This relentless campaign of
harassment and intimidation against me and my fellow jour-nalists in the Philippines is a stark example of a global trend,” she told The Associated Press.
She also pointed to social media giants like Facebook as a serious threat to democracy, say-ing “they actually prioritized the spread of lies laced with anger and hate over facts.”
“I didn’t think that what we are going through would get that attention. But the fact that it did also shows you how important the battles we face are, right?” she said. “This is going to be what our elections are going to be like next year. It is a battle for facts. When you’re in a battle for facts, journalism is activism.”
Muratov, 59, said he sees the prize as an award to Novaya Gazeta journalists and contribu-tors who were killed, including Anna Politkovskaya, who cov-ered Russia’s bloody conflict in Chechnya.
“It’s a recognition of the mem-ory of our fallen colleagues,” he said.
“Since the Nobel Peace Prize isn’t awarded posthumously, they came up with this so that Anya could take it, but through other, second hands,” Muratov said, referring to Politkovskaya.
According to the Committee to Protect Journalists, 17 media workers were killed in the Philip-pines in the last decade and 23 in Russia.
Stephen Spillman | AP , FileIn this Oct. 2 file photo, people attend the Women’s March ATX rally, at the Texas State Capitol in Austin, Texas. A federal judge has ordered Texas to suspend a new law that has banned most abortions in the state since September. The order Wednesday by U.S. District Judge Robert Pitman freezes for now the strict abortion law known as Senate Bill 8.
Nobel Peace Prize awarded to journalists Ressa and Muratov
US appeals court lets Texas temporarily resume abortion law
Saturday-Monday, October 9-11, 2021 5CThe Telegraph
By Alan FramAssociated Press
WASHINGTON — Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said Friday he would not again help Democrats extend the government’s borrow-ing authority, raising fresh doubts about how Con-gress will avert a federal default when a temporary patch expires in December.
McConnell issued his warning in a letter to Pres-ident Joe Biden a day after the Senate approved a $480 billion boost in the federal debt limit, enough to last about two months. In an eleventh-hour turnabout, the Kentucky Republican was among 11 GOP senators who provided decisive support Thursday for a procedural move that opened the door for subsequent Senate passage of that mea-sure with only Democratic support.
Some GOP senators openly criticized their lead-ers not holding out longer against Democrats’ efforts to extend the debt limit, which they said would have sharpened their message that a still-developing multibillion-dollar package of Biden’s top domestic priorities is wasteful and damaging to the economy.
McConnell said Friday that he made his decision to refuse future help because of his opposition to the huge domestic bill and because of a “bizarre spectacle” on the Senate floor by Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. After the bill passed, Schumer criticized Republicans for trying to push the country over “the cliff’s edge” by opposing the debt limit extension.
“In light of Senator Schumer’s hysterics and my grave concerns about the ways that another vast, reckless, partisan spending bill would hurt Americans and help China, I will not be a party to any future effort to mitigate the consequences of Democratic mismanagement,” McConnell wrote.
It remains unclear how Democrats would push new legislation further extending federal borrow-ing authority come December without GOP back-ing.
One theoretical way is for them to change Sen-ate rules and shield debt limit legislation from GOP filibusters, delays that require 60 votes to overcome in the 50-50 Senate.
At least two Democratic senators, West Vir-ginia’s Joe Manchin and Arizona’s Kyrsten Sinema, have said they oppose doing that, effectively thwarting that option. Republicans said one fac-tor in providing Democrats the two-month lifeline was fear that Manchin and Sinema might decide to support ending filibusters for debt limit legislation.
McConnell’s letter included a string of insults aimed at Schumer, a remarkable broadside by one Senate leader against another.
“Last night, in a bizarre spectacle, Senator Schumer exploded in a rant that was so partisan, angry, and corrosive that even Democratic Sena-tors were visibly embarrassed by him and for him,” McConnell wrote. “This tantrum encapsulated and escalated a pattern of angry incompetence from Senator Schumer.”
McConnell added: “This childish behavior only further alienated the Republican members who helped facilitate this short-term patch. It has poi-soned the well even further.”
A Schumer spokesperson declined to comment on McConnell’s letter.
Since summer, McConnell repeatedly said Republicans would not assist Democrats in push-ing a debt ceiling extension through the Senate by helping them reach the 60 votes needed for most legislation. He cited Democrats’ proposed 10-year, $3.5 trillion social, economic and tax measure, which Republicans unanimously oppose.
HUNTINGTON BEACH, Calif. (AP) — A Southern California under-water oil pipeline was likely struck by an anchor several months to a year before a leak spilled tens of thousands of gallons of crude, the U.S. Coast Guard announced Friday.
A large vessel of some kind may have struck the massive pipeline, shatter-ing the concrete casing but not necessarily causing the slender crack from which oil spewed last weekend, said Capt. Jason Neubauer, chief of the Coast Guard’s office of investigation and analysis.
The longer timeline was partly based on marine growth that was spotted on the pipe in an underwa-ter survey.
The pipe, which was found to be intact last October, may also have been struck several other times by other ships’ anchors over the course of the period, he added.
No ships have been iden-tified, however.
“We’re going to be look-ing at every vessel move-ment over that pipeline, and every close encroach-ment from the anchor just for the entire course of the year,” the captain said.
The pipeline was
dragged along the sea floor as much as 105 feet, Neu-bauer said.
That indicates a large vessel was involved, he said. Cargo ships with multiton anchors routinely move through the area from the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach.
The leak fouled beaches and killed seabirds.
At least 17 accidents on pipelines carrying crude oil or other hazardous liquids have been linked to anchor strikes or sus-pected anchor strikes since 1986, according to an Associated Press review of more than 10,000 reports submitted to federal regu-lators.
According to federal records, in some cases an anchor strike is never conclusively proven, such as 2012 leak from an Exx-onMobil pipeline in Loui-siana’s shallow Barataria Bay, where a direct strike by a barge or other boat also were considered pos-sibilities.
In others the evidence of an anchor strike was obvi-ous. During 1992’s Hur-ricane Andrew, a 30,000-pound anchor was dragged by a drifting drilling rig over a Texaco pipeline in the Gulf of Mexico, caus-ing a dent that broke open
when the line was later re-started.
In 2003, a 7,000 pound anchor was found about 10 feet from a small spill on a Shell Oil pipeline in the Gulf.
A Coast Guard video released Thursday appears to show a trench in the sandy seafloor leading to a bend in the submerged line, but experts offered varied opinions of the significance of the brief, grainy shots. An earlier video showcased a thin, 13-inch long rupture in the line.
Robert Bea, an engi-neering professor at the University of California, Berkeley and former Shell Oil engineer, said the sec-ond video appears to show a furrow in the seabed cre-ated by a dragging anchor leading to the damaged pipeline.
Investigators, however, are expected to consider other forces that could have moved and damaged the pipe, including water currents of movement in the seabed.
It will take time.“The results from
the analyses need to be validated — corroborated. This process can bring even more questions,” Bea said. “The shape of the
crack indicates that it was caused by internal pres-sures in the pipeline. But, if that is true, why didn’t the pipeline leak” earlier?
Frank G. Adams, presi-dent of Houston-based Interface Consulting Inter-national, said in an email that the slight bow in the line displayed in one video “doesn’t necessarily look like anchor damage.”
When a pipeline is hit by an anchor or other heavy object “that typically results in physical damage that may lead to a frac-ture,” he said.
Reports of a possible spill off Huntington Beach were first coming out Fri-day evening but the leak wasn’t discovered until Saturday morning. While the size of the spill isn’t known, the Coast Guard on Thursday slightly revised the parameters of the estimates to at least about 25,000 gallons and no more than 132,000 gal-lons.
The Coast Guard said about 5,500 gallons of crude have been recovered from the ocean. The oil has spread southeast along the coast with reports of small amounts coming ashore in San Diego County, some 50 miles from the original site.
Ringo H.W. Chiu | APA worker in protective suit cleans the contaminated beach after an oil spill in Newport Beach, Calif., on Wednesday. Some of the crude oil that spilled from a pipeline into the waters off Southern California has been breaking up naturally in ocean currents, a Coast Guard official said Wednesday as authorities sought to determine the scope of the damage.
Ministry of Foreign Affairs vis APIn this photo released by Pakistan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, visiting U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman, right, holds meeting with Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi, second left, at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Islamabad, Pakistan, Friday. Sherman was meeting senior Pakistani officials Friday amid a worsening relationship between the two countries as each tries to navigate a way forward in Afghanistan under Taliban rule.
By Kathy GannonAssociated Press
ISLAMABAD — U.S. and Pakistani officials held difficult talks on Friday in Pakistan’s capital amid a worsening rela-tionship between Washington and Islamabad as each searches for a way forward in a Taliban-ruled Afghanistan.
The meeting between Washington’s deputy secre-tary of state and Pakistan’s leaders came amid an array of unsettled issues. They include questions such as the level of future engagement with the Taliban in Afghanistan, and the ongoing evacuation of foreign nationals and Afghans who want to flee the country’s new Taliban rulers.
Another question on the agenda is who will provide funds to stave off a full eco-nomic meltdown and looming humanitarian crisis in Afghani-stan. Since the Taliban take-over, billions of dollars in aid have been frozen. Nearly 80% of the former Afghan govern-ment’s budget was funded by international donors.
Even as it shies away from any unilateral formal recogni-tion, Pakistan has been press-ing for greater engagement
with the all-male, all-Taliban Cabinet that the insurgents set up after they overran Afghani-stan in mid-August, in the final weeks of the U.S. and NATO pullout from the country.
Pakistan has also urged Washington to release billions of dollars to the Taliban so that they can pay salaries of the many Afghan ministries and avoid an economic meltdown. The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees has warned that s such a crash could unleash a mass migra-tion.
Washington, which spent almost two full years negotiat-ing peace with the Taliban, is still smarting from its dramatic exit from Afghanistan, after 20 years of war. Images of desperate Afghan men, run-ning alongside a departing American C-17, some falling to their death from the wheel well, have come to represent the mayhem of the U.S. with-drawal.
Still, the United States is quietly talking to some Taliban leaders and current Taliban Cabinet ministers to secure the evacuation of American nation-als remaining in Afghanistan and others. At home, Repub-lican senators are pressing for
legislation that would sanction Afghanistan’s new rulers.
The legislation introduced late last month by 22 Republi-can senators also calls for sanc-tions on Pakistan for providing safe haven for the Taliban. That has raised hackles among Pakistan’s leaders, who have slammed Washington for what they say is unjust blaming of Pakistan for America’s losses in Afghanistan — especially after seeking and receiving Islamabad’s help in the pro-tracted peace talks with the
Taliban.Pakistan has also opened
doors to tens of thousands of evacuees from Afghanistan, providing temporary shelter for both foreigners and Afghans fleeing Taliban rule.
U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman on Fri-day held meetings with Paki-stan’s army chief, Gen. Qamar Javed Bajwa, considered the leading architect of Pakistan’s Afghan strategy. She also met with Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi.
Little information has emerged from the meetings. A statement from Pakistan’s foreign ministry said “an inclu-sive and broad-based political structure reflecting the ethnic diversity of Afghan society was essential for Afghanistan’s sta-bility and progress.”
That was a clear message to the Taliban: An acceptable Afghan government is one that includes representatives of all Afghan minorities.
The statement also had a message for the world, saying “the current situation required positive engagement of the international community, urgent provision of humani-tarian assistance, release of Afghan financial resources, and measures to help build a sustainable economy to allevi-ate the sufferings of the Afghan people.”
The international community has repeatedly expressed con-cern over Taliban restrictions on access to education for girls and women, both at the high school and university level. It has warned against a return to the the harsh Taliban rule from the 1990s, when they first con-trolled Afghanistan and banned women from school, the work-place and a public life.
Pipeline anchor strike may have occurred months before spill
McConnell says he won’t help Dems raise debt limit again
US, Pakistani officials in strained talks over Afghanistan
The Telegraph6C Saturday-Monday, October 9-11, 2021
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden on Friday issued the first-ever presidential proc-lamation of Indigenous Peoples’ Day, lending the most significant boost yet to efforts to refo-cus the federal holiday celebrating Christopher Columbus toward an appreciation of Native peoples.
The day will be observed Oct. 11, along with Columbus Day, which is established by Con-gress. While Native Americans have campaigned for years for local and national days in recogni-tion of the country’s indigenous peoples, Biden’s announcement appeared to catch many by sur-prise.
“This was completely unexpected. Even though we’ve been talking about it and want-ing it for so long,” said Hillary Kempenich, an artist and member of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa. In 2019, she and other tribal members successfully campaigned for her town of Grand Forks, N.D., to replace Columbus Day with a day recognizing Native peoples.
“I’m kind of overwhelmed with joy,” said Kem-penich. She was waiting Friday afternoon for her eighth-grade daughter, who grew up challenging teachers’ depictions of Columbus, to come home from school so Kempenich could share the news.
“For generations, Federal policies systemati-cally sought to assimilate and displace Native people and eradicate Native cultures,” Biden wrote in the Indigenous Peoples’ Day proclama-tion. “Today, we recognize Indigenous peoples’ resilience and strength as well as the immeasur-able positive impact that they have made on every aspect of American society.”
In a separate proclamation on Columbus Day, Biden praised the role of Italian Americans in U.S. society, but also referenced the violence and harm Columbus and other explorers of the age brought about on the Americas.
Making landfall in what is now the Bahamas on Oct. 12, 1492, Columbus, an Italian, was the first of a wave of European explorers who decimated Native populations in the Americas in quests for gold and other wealth, including people to enslave.
“Today, we also acknowledge the painful his-tory of wrongs and atrocities that many Euro-pean explorers inflicted on Tribal Nations and Indigenous communities,” Biden wrote. “It is a measure of our greatness as a Nation that we do not seek to bury these shameful episodes of our past — that we face them honestly, we bring them to the light, and we do all we can to address them.”
White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Biden “felt strongly” about recognizing Indig-enous Peoples Day. Asked if Biden might seek to end marking Columbus Day as a federal holiday, she replied, “I don’t have any predictions at this point.”
John Echohawk, executive director of the Native American Rights Fund, said the presi-dent’s decision to recognize Indigenous Peoples Day was an important step.
“Big changes happen from each small step, and we hope this administration intends to continue making positive steps towards shaping a bright-er future for all citizens,” Echohawak said.
Biden’s acknowledgment of the suffering of Native Americans also marked a break from President Donald Trump’s ardent defense of “intrepid heroes” like Columbus in his 2020 proclamation of the holiday.
KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — An Islamic State suicide bomber struck at a mosque packed with Shiite Muslim worshippers in northern Afghanistan on Friday, killing at least 46 people and wounding doz-ens in the latest security challenge to the Taliban as they transition from insur-gency to governance.
In its claim of responsi-bility, the region’s IS affili-ate identified the bomber as a Uygher Muslim, saying the attack targeted both Shiites and the Tali-ban for their purported willingness to expel Uygh-ers to meet demands from China. The statement was carried by the IS-linked Aamaq news agency.
The blast tore through a crowded mosque in the city of Kunduz during Friday noon prayers, the highlight of the Muslim religious week. It was the latest in a series of IS bombings and shootings that have targeted Afghan-istan’s new Taliban rulers, as well as religious institu-tions and minority Shiites since U.S. and NATO troops left in August.
The blast blew out win-dows, charred the ceiling
and scattered debris and twisted metal across the floor. Rescuers carried one body out on a stretcher and another in a blanket. Blood stains covered the front steps.
A resident of the area, Hussaindad Rezayee, said he rushed to the mosque when he heard the explo-sion, just as prayers start-ed. “I came to look for my relatives, the mosque was full,” he said.
The worshippers tar-geted in Friday’s were Hazaras, who have long suffered from double dis-crimination as an ethnic minority and as followers of Shiite Islam in a major-ity Sunni country.
The Islamic State group and the Taliban, who seized control of the coun-try with the exit of the for-eign troops, are strategic rivals. IS militants have targeted Taliban positions and attempted to recruit members from their ranks.
In the past, the Taliban managed to contain the IS threat in tandem with U.S. and Afghan airstrikes. Without these, it remains unclear whether the Taliban can suppress what appears to be a growing IS
footprint. The militants, once confined to the east, have penetrated the capital of Kabul and other prov-inces with new attacks.
This comes at a critical moment, as the Taliban attempt to consolidate power and transform their guerrilla fighters into a structured police and security force. But while the group attempts to project an air of authority through reports of raids
and arrests of IS members, it remains unclear if it has the capability to protect soft targets, including reli-gious institutions.
The Biden administra-tion condemned Friday’s attack. “The Afghan peo-ple deserve a future free of terror,” State Department spokesman Ned Price said in a statement.
In Kunduz, police offi-cials were still picking up the pieces Friday at
the Gozar-e-Sayed Abad Mosque. Taliban spokes-man Bilal Karimi told The Associated Press that 46 worshipers were killed and 143 wounded in the explo-sion. He said an investiga-tion was under way.
The death toll of 46 is the highest in an attack since foreign troops left Afghanistan.
The United Nations mission in Afghanistan condemned the attack as
“part of a disturbing pat-tern of violence” targeting religious institutions.
A prominent Shiite cler-ic, Sayed Hussain Alimi Balkhi, called on the Tali-ban to provide security for the Shiites of Afghanistan. “We expect the security forces of the government to provide security for the mosques since they collected the weapons that were provided for the security of the worship places,” he said.
Dost Mohammad Obaida, the deputy police chief in Kunduz pledged to protect minorities in the province. “I assure our Shiite brothers that the Taliban are prepared to ensure their safety,” he said.
The new tone struck by the Taliban, at least in Kunduz, is in sharp con-trast to the well-document-ed history of Taliban fight-ers committing a litany of atrocities against minori-ties, including Hazaras. The Taliban, now feeling the weight of governing, employed similar tactics to those of IS during their 20-year insurgency, includ-ing suicide bombings and shooting ambushes.
Abdullah Sahil | APPeople view the damage inside of a mosque following a bombing in Kunduz, province northern Afghanistan, Friday. A powerful explosion in the mosque frequented by a Muslim religious minority in northern Afghanistan on Friday has left several casualties, witnesses and the Taliban’s spokesman said.
Bruna Prado | APAn activist hangs a Brazilian flag on a clothesline on Copacabana beach amid white scarves that represent people who have died of COVID-19 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Friday. The action was organized by the NGO “Rio de Paz” to protest the government’s handling of the pandemic as the country nears a total of 600,000 COVID-19 related deaths.
By Mauricio SavareseAssociated Press
SAO PAULO — Bars in Brazil’s biggest metropolis, Sao Paulo, are full again for Friday happy hours and lawmakers in the capital have nearly done away with video sessions via Zoom. Rio de Janeiro’s beaches are packed and calls for strict social distancing seem but a memory.
These developments are part of Brazil’s bid to return to pre-pandemic normalcy, even as its death toll tops 600,000, accord-ing to official data on Friday from the health min-istry. Relief in both COVID-19 cases and deaths have been particularly welcome given experts’ warnings that the delta variant would produce another wave of destruction in the coun-try with the second-most victims. So far, that hasn’t materialized.
The country’s average daily death toll has hovered around 500 for a month, down sharply from more than 3,000 in April. Almost 45% of the population is fully vaccinated, and a booster shot is being administered to the elderly. A greater percentage of Brazilians are at least par-
tially vaccinated compared to Americans or Germans, according to Our World in Data, an online research site.
Improvement has encour-aged mayors and governors to admit fans into soccer matches, and let bars and restaurants stay open until the wee hours. Some are even contemplating the end of mask mandates, which people often ignore already. And Rio’s mayor has announced plans to bring back the city’s mas-sive New Year’s Eve party on Copacabana beach.
Gonzalo Vecina, a profes-sor of public health at the University of Sao Paulo, told The Associated Press in July that delta, which is more contagious, would cause “a new explosion” of cases within weeks. He was hardly alone among experts sounding the alarm.
Now, Vecina believes the high number of Brazilians infected earlier this year with the gamma variant -- first identified in the Amazonian city Manaus -- may have slowed delta’s advance.
“That isn’t a conclusion from a study; it is a pos-sibility we are raising in the face of what we are seeing,” Vecina said. “We are seeing
delta rise in countries that reopened just as much as Brazil, and our number of cases is still going down, with few very particular exceptions.”
Some analysts remain worried about delta’s potential to spread. Among them is Miguel Lago, exec-utive director of Brazil’s Institute for Health Policy Studies, which advises public health officials. He believes authorities are taking considerable risk by reopening too much and announcing celebrations, and that Brazil may soon see more hospital admis-sions.
“The pandemic has waned, but 500 deaths per day is far from good. And we don’t even have half the population fully vacci-nated,” Lago said. “We just don’t know enough and we have this horrific milestone to contemplate now.”
Friday morning, on Copacabana where Rio’s New Year’s party will take place in less than three months, activist group Rio da Paz held a memorial on its sands to mourn the 600,000 dead, with hun-dreds of white kerchiefs strung on lines.
Across town, at a sup-port group for family mem-
bers of the virus’ victims, Bruna Chaves mourned the loss of her mother and step-father.
“It’s not just 600,000 people who are gone; it’s a lot of people who die with them, emotionally,” Chaves said in an interview. “It’s absurd that people treat it like it’s a small number. It’s a big number.”
Many in Brazil continue to downplay the pandemic’s severity, chief among them President Jair Bol-sonaro, whose popularity has sagged largely due to his government’s chaotic pandemic response. But he hasn’t veered from his posi-tions, including staunch support for drugs proven ineffective against the virus, like hydroxychloro-quine.
He also continues to criticize restrictions on activity adopted by may-ors and governors, saying Brazil needed to keep the economy humming to avoid inflicting worse hard-ship on the poor. On Thurs-day night, during a live broadcast on Facebook, he showed a series of newspa-per articles reporting eco-nomic turmoil in Europe and the U.S. last year in an attempt to prove he was right all along.
IS bomber kills 46 inside Afghan mosque
Brazil tops 600,000 virus deaths amid doubts about delta
Biden is first president to mark Indigenous Peoples’ Day
Saturday-Monday, October 9-11, 2021 7CThe Telegraph
Dear Heloise: I read your column in the Orange County Register. I have a one-of-a kind studio photo-graph. It was origi-nally in a frame with glass. Now, since I’ve down-sized, I want to put it in an album, but there are parts stuck to the glass. Is there any way of separating it from the glass without damaging it? Thank you. — Judy Hess, Fountain Valley, California
Judy, probably not. If possible, take the pic-ture to a photography professional to have them remove it. But if you want to try, do this first: Take a digital pic-ture of the photo before you begin. You can then use a hair dryer to try to lift it off. Turn the hair dryer on a low setting and hold it about 5 inch-es from the photo’s sur-face. You don’t want it to overheat. This should loosen the picture from the glass. Then, very slowly and very care-fully, pull the corner or the side of the photo until the whole picture is taken off.
Photos stick to glass if they are in a place with humidity. Don’t put them in direct sunlight either. Instead, keep the photos in a cool, dry place. — Heloise
HIKING BOOTS NEED CLEANING?
Dear Readers: Dur-ing the fall, hiking boots get a good workout and
get dirty, wet and muddy. But if they are covered in just dust, use a shoe brush to get rid of it. And you can use a paper towel to remove any remaining debris.
But if they are muddy, allow the boots to dry com-pletely. Then use a soft-bristled brush
to get rid of dried mud from all over the boot. Scrub the seams and hidden spots as well. Then air out the insides. When done, if the out-side is leather, apply a leather conditioner. — Heloise.
Happy Birthday for Saturday, Oct. 9, 2021:You are charming and kind. You are also alert and observant about your surroundings. People immediately sense that you are honest and sincere. This year you need to take care of yourself, and you need to take care of your family as well. It’s a time of important responsibilities. You might even do a personal makeover to rejuvenate yourself.Moon Alert: After 11:30 a.m. EDT today (8:30 AM PDT), there are no restrictions to shopping or important decisions today. The Moon is in Sagittarius.ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHH A conversation with a partner or close friend will be lively today! You might have to defend your position on something. Or perhaps someone will try to persuade you to agree with them. (You will hold your own.) Tonight: Study and learn.TAURUS (April 20- May 20) HHH At work today, or when discussing your health or a pet, you’ll be enthusiastic! You have something to say, and you are determined that others understand what you want. Tonight: Take care of your
finances.GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH This is an exciting, creative day! Enjoy social outings, especially something new and different. Playful activities with kids will delight you. It’s a great day for competitive activities, because everyone wants to win a prize. Tonight: Someone older has advice.CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHH Today you might be gung-ho to initiate something at home or start a new project, especially if it is a DIY project or something to do with home repairs. Meanwhile, family conversations will be lively! Tonight: Work hard.LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH You’re enthusiastic today, which is why you want to begin new things. You’re ready to talk to anyone to suggest new ideas. You also will feel competitive. Because you are so enthusiastic, this is a strong day for those of you in sales, marketing, teaching, writing or acting. Tonight: Practice your technique.VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHH Today you might be excited about a new financial venture, a new job or the beginning of something that will hopefully yield earnings and profits in the future.
Unfortunately, because Mercury is retrograde, wait until after Nov. 3 to begin something. Tonight: Listen to an older family member.LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH Today you’re full of energy and drive because the Sun, Mercury and Mars are lined up in your sign. Naturally, this makes you want to act on your ideas and initiate new things. You might want to convince others to jump on your bandwagon. Tonight: Study and learn.SCORPIO (Oct. 23- Nov. 21) HHH You have a lot of energy today to research something so you can find answers to old questions or solutions to old problems. You will choose to work alone or behind the scenes; nevertheless, you will be productive, because you have energy to burn! Tonight: Save your money.SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH In any group situation today, you will run the meeting in a natural way. People will follow your lead because you have the energy and the necessary enthusiasm to inspire others. That’s because you are in a take-charge mood. Tonight: Be practical.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22- Jan. 19) HHHH Bosses, parents and VIPs are impressed with you today because you have tremendous intellectual and mental energy. You will defend your ideas and explain to others how to get things done. You might even want to intellectually debate with someone because you’re hot! Tonight: Hidden answers.AQUARIUS (Jan. 20- Feb. 18) HHH You will be unusually convincing today if you are discussing controversial matters like politics, religion or racial issues. This is because your mind is wound up and full of mental energy. Naturally, this will make you persuasive and convincing! You also will be keen to travel. Tonight: Listen to advice.PISCES (Feb. 19- March 20) HHH If you are involved in a dispute today regarding shared property, inheritances or insurance issues, no one will stand a chance against you. You will be eloquent, energetic and purposeful! You have lots of energy to state your case, and everyone will know it. Tonight: Someone is impressed.
:15 +++ Carrie (1976, Horror) John Travolta, William Katt,Sissy Spacek.
PetSematary
ANPL The Zoo The Zoo "A New Reality" (N) The Zoo (N) The Zoo The Zoo BET 3:55 The Five Heartb... ++ Nobody's Fool (‘18) Tika Sumpter, Tiffany Haddish. :35++ Welcome Home, Roscoe Jenkins (‘08)
BRAVO Below Deck ++++ The Shawshank Redemption (‘94) Tim Robbins. ++++ The Shawshank Redemption (‘94)BSMW NCAA Soccer Notre Dame at Clemson (L) Tennis BNP Paribas Open Site: Indian Wells Tennis Garden -- Indian Wells, Calif. CMT +++ Tombstone (‘93, West) Val Kilmer, Michael Biehn, Kurt Russell. +++ Tombstone (‘93, West) Val Kilmer, Michael Biehn, Kurt Russell.CNN CNN Brown (N) CNN Brown (N) The Windsors (N) The Windsors (N) The Windsors (N) Life "Lost Vegas" (N)DISC Expedition Unknown Expedition Unknown Expedition Unknown Expedition Unknown Expedition Unknown Expedition UnknownESPN NCAA Football TCU at Texas Tech Site: Jones AT&T Stadium (L) Scoreb. NCAA Football UCLA at Arizona Site: Arizona Stadium (L)
ESPN2 NCAA Football (L) Scoreb. SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N)FREE Movie :40+++ Hocus Pocus (‘93) Bette Midler. :50+++ The Addams Family (‘91) Anjelica Huston. :55 Addams Family ...FMC 5:50 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Hal... :40++ Goosebumps (‘15) Jack Black. :35 Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (‘18) MovieFNC Life, Liberty & Levin Watters World Justice JudgeJeanine Unfiltered Watters World Justice JudgeJeanine
FOOD Halloween Baking Halloween Baking Halloween Baking Halloween Baking HBC Extra Spooky Halloween BakingFX :15 ACS "The President Kissed Me" :35 American Crime :50 ACS "The Telephone Hour" :55 American Crime :10 The Hangover Par...
HALL +++ The Irresistible Blueberry Farm (‘16) South Beach Love (‘21) Taylor Cole. ++ A Harvest Wedding (‘17) Jill Wagner.HGTV Love It or List It Outgrown (N) Fixer to Fabulous Fixer to Fabulous Fixer to Fabulous Fixer to FabulousHIST Pawn Stars Pawn Star "Pawn Jam" Pawn Stars (N) :05 Pawn Stars (N) :05 Pawn Stars :05 Pawn StarsKNLC Stooge :40 Stooges ++++ Frankenstein (‘31) Boris Karloff. Star Trek Buck Rogers Kolchak: Night StalkLIFE 5:00 Waking Up to Da... Dying to Belong (‘21) Favour Onwuka. :05+ No One Would Tell (‘18) Dying to Belong
NEWSN Dan Abrams Live NewsNation Prime (N) NewsNation Prime (N) Banfield On Balance NewsNation PrimeNICK 5:00 The Croods Side Hus Unfilter (N) Madagascar 3: Europe's Most Wanted (‘12) Friends Friends Friends FriendsPBS Reveal POV "Neurotypical" Latino Americans America ReFr "Five Years North" Johanna POV "Neurotypical"
PRMT 5:00++ The Equalizer (‘14) +++ Man of Steel (‘13) Amy Adams, Michael Shannon, Henry Cavill. ++ The EqualizerSYFY +++ Curse of Chucky (‘13) +++ Cult of Chucky (‘17) Jennifer Tilly. :55++ Child's Play 2 MovieTBS 4:00 MLB Baseball MLB Baseball National League Division Series To Be Announced at San Francisco Giants (L)TCM
3:15+++ Exodus(‘60) Paul Newman.
+++ Fantastic Voyage (1966, Adventure)Raquel Welch, Edmond O'Brien, Stephen Boyd.
+++ Armored Car Robbery(‘50) Charles McGraw.
*Soylent Green
++ Brighton Rock(‘47)
TLC Big Fat Fabulous Li. Welcome to Plathville Single "Bombs Away" 90Day Single Life 1000-lb Sisters Welcome to PlathvilleTNT 4:30+++ Shazam! +++ Aquaman (‘18, Act) Amber Heard, Willem Dafoe, Jason Momoa. +++ Wonder Woman (‘17) Gal Gadot.
TRUTV Tacoma InsideJoke InsideJoke InsideJoke InsideJoke InsideJoke Jokers Jokers InsideJoke Tacoma InsideJoke InsideJokeTVLAND 2½ Men :35 2½ Men :10 2½ Men :45 2½ Men :20 Two and a Half Men :55 2½ Men 2½ Men 2½ Men 2½ Men 2½ Men 2½ Men
USA Movie :45+++ John Wick: Chapter 3 - Parabellum (‘19) :15+++ John Wick: Chapter 3 - Parabellum (‘19) Keanu Reeves. 6 PM 6:30 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
CRYPTOQUIP: Popular director who made movies set exclusively in a northwest Mexican state: Sonora Ephron.
TODAY’S ANSWERS WORD SLEUTH:
Dear Annie: I’ve known my friend for nine years. We dated for about two years and then broke up. We were back and forth with each other, so we decided in 2016 that we would get married, but then we ended the relationship again. We remain friends.
Toward the end of 2019, “Edward” got seriously sick. He was so sick that he had two operations that left him with aches and pain, and loss of memory. He remembered things on a day-by-day basis. He will never be able to go back to work; he’s disabled now.
I’ve been helping him out all this time, but now it’s time for his fam-ily to take over. I do everything for him because he doesn’t know how
to do much anymore. I advised his family that
by the end of the year, I will not be helping him anymore and told them that they need to step up and come take over caring for him. Edward thinks that I’m wrong for this, but he doesn’t understand that I gave up my personal life to be there for him all these
years. For two years, my life has been
on hold, and it’s time that I get my life back. He’s telling all his neigh-bors that I’m leaving him by him-self and that he doesn’t know how he’s going to live without help. He needs 24-hour care.
It’s time for his family to help out. To be clear, there’s nothing between Edward and me. We’re
just friends. I guess I felt sorry for him because no one else would come when he needed the help.
Please give me some feedback. — Tired Friend in Vegas
Dear Tired: Even though he’s not expressing it, Edward is incredibly fortunate to have some-one in his life as compassionate and supportive as you are. With-out you, he would likely have had a very different experience these last two years.
With his health deteriorating as quickly and severely as you’ve described, it sounds like the care Edward really needs is beyond what any one person can give him. Now is the time for his family to consider at-home aides or liv-ing care facilities equipped with resources and staff that can better and more easily provide for him.
It’s time to get my life back
Dear Annie
Annie Lane
SEND A GREAT HINT TO: Heloise P.O. Box 795001 San Antonio, TX 78279-5001 Fax: 1-210-HELOISE Email: [email protected]
The Telegraph8C Saturday-Monday, October 9-11, 2021
LAND AUCTIONWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2021 AT 1:00 P.M.
The Ambrosia Land Investments, LLC property contains 93.83 surveyed acres. Tracts 1 - 4 are located at the northeast edge of Mascoutah, IL, along IL Route 4, approximately 3 miles south of I-64 and a short distance from Scott Air Force Base. Tracts 1 & 2 are further described as being located in the Southwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of Section 29, and Tracts 3 & 4 are further described as being located in the Northeast Quarter of the Southeast Quarter of Section 30, all in T1N-R6W, Mascoutah Township, St. Clair County, IL.
Tract 5 is located at the east edge of Belleville, IL, along S. Green Mount Rd, between routes 161 and 158 and approximately 4 miles south of I-64. The property is further described as being located in the Northeast Quarter of the Northeast Quarter of Section 25, T1N-R8W, St. Clair County, IL.
3 PRIME, CLASS A FARM REAL ESTATE 3 EXCELLENT DEVELOPMENT OPPORTUNITIES 3 ZONED COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL
93.83 SURVEYED ACRES • 5 TRACTS
AMBROSIA LAND INVESTMENTS, LLC Closing Title Company: Mark Cowgill, Community Title Shiloh LLC
AUCTION MANAGERS: John Borrowman (217) 430-0645 & John Sullivan (309) 221-6700
SULLIVAN AUCTIONEERS, LLC• (844)847-2161 www.SullivanAuctioneers.com • IL Lic. #444000107
101 N State St “A” Jerseyville, IL 62052
618-639-4222618-466-9922
117 W. Third StreetAlton, IL 62002618-465-2966
3413 Badley, Alton $45,000
This 2 bedroom, 1 bath home is located on a quiet Street in upper Alton, currently rented for $924/mo. Tenant has occupied for over 8 years and would like to remain. Property Sold AS/IS.
523 Sering, Alton $55,000
Great investment property currently rented for $924/month. Check out this open concept 2 bed, 1 bath in a convenient upper Alton location.
1384 N. State Rt. 267, Roodhouse $195,000
Country charmer on 3.5 ac m/l. Move in condition with 3 bedrooms, 1-1/2 baths, 30x30 detached garage, 60x40 barn w/loft, and 30x30 machine shed. Greenfield Schools
Lots 19 & 20 Elsah Hills Dr, Elsah $50,000
Great building site suited for walk out basement. Lots of trees provide privacy and a beautiful view. Call Pam Roady 618-535-2914
1800 & 1802 Cope Dr, Jerseyville $159,900
2 houses for one great price. 2 bed, 2 bath and 3 bed, 2 bath, both with open floor plan and attached garage. Live in one and rent the other. Call Charlene or Elaine 618-639-4222
Each office is Independently Owned and Operated
NEW listiNg1103 W Carpenter St., Jerseyville $84,900
Conveniently located, this very clean and well cared for 1 story home offers 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, a separate dining room, large fenced back yard and a 2 car-carport. Recently updated kitchen and bath. Call Stan Groppel 618-535-4137
OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 10/10 2-4Pm15886 Bartlett Road, Dow $205,000
Country life awaits you. Brick 3 BR, 3 baths, kit, LR, dining area, sunroom, mud room & full basement. 4 separate out bldgs w/ea having 2 car garage door all on 2.8 acres and a pond.
Hosted by: TriciaSisk 791-5510
OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 10/10 2-3:30Pm
5310 Godfrey Road, Godfrey $42,500
Carroll Wood Condos – Units 12, 16 or 34- each include 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. Close to shopping, dining, Hwy 255 And Lewis and Clark College.
31470 Bartlett Road, Brighton $425,000
Private 5.7 acres in a secluded country setting. Spacious home with 3 bedrooms, office, pantry, main floor laundry, finished lower level w/kitchenette and fireplace. Attached garage, whole house generator and 35 x 50 quonset style outbuilding.