July 20, 2015 - The Jamestown Gazette

Transcription

July 20, 2015 - The Jamestown Gazette
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Article Contributed by
Walt Pickut
“The World Series of Cars joining
together with the Babe Ruth World
Series is a great thing for our city,” said
John Bauer who has been a key event
organizers since 1980. “It boosts our
local economy and it promotes some
really fine kids.” This is the second year of
both organizations joining forces under
the Babe Ruth banner. Organizers say it
is shaping up to be a bigger success than
ever – Sunday, July 26, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at
Jamestown’s Bergman Park.
(716) 736-3963 / (814) 725-1650
Got
The Chautauqua Lake Region Antique
Automobile Club of America (AACA),
founded in 1957, now serves as advisors
(for Split your own firewood)
Call for a free no obligation estimate
Save
$25
With
Coupon
e?
MicEhrlich
Judges rate cars on a long list of critical factors.
to the Babe Ruth Committee instead
of in their previous role as the main car
show organizers. The annual event also
continues to be proudly supported by the
City of Jamestown.
This year marks the 32nd annual World
Series of Cars in Jamestown. “We expect
400 to 500 of the most beautiful antique
cars in the country once again,” Bauer
said, “assuming we have a sunny day,
which we usually do.”
Because of the car show’s continuing
support, Diethrick Park will be the site
of the 16th Babe Ruth World Series to
be hosted in Jamestown since 1980. The
first pitch of game-1 in the 2015 World
Series for 13-year-olds will be thrown out
at noon on Saturday, August 15 with the
official Opening Ceremonies scheduled
for 7 pm on Saturday evening.
Great Support
The car show has supported the Babe
Ruth World Series with more than
$300,000 of its show day earnings since
the AACA first dedicated its proceeds to
Babe Ruth, according to Russ Diethrick,
one of the founders of both events.
Pest Control
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Vol. 5 • No. 29 | Week of July 20, 2015
Babe Ruth and World Series of Cars Team Up
The Babe Ruth World Series committee
took over the job of organizing and
running its biggest annual fundraiser, the
World Series of Cars, last year. “That was
our initiation,” said Babe Ruth’s Ralph
D’Angelo, a car show Registration Tent
volunteer in 2014. “Now we appreciate the
work it took during all those years to put on
one of the country’s premier car shows.”
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Babe Ruth World Series for 13-Year-Olds brings action packed baseball to Jamestown.
“The car show has been incredibly
generous to us over the last 32 years,”
said Felix Muzza, vice president of the
Jamestown Babe Ruth World Series group,
and Coordinator of Experiential Learning
at JCC. “Now it is our turn to take over the
hard work of putting the show together.
They have a lot to teach us and we want to
carry on in the grand style they turned into
such a wonderful tradition.”
Continued on Page 10
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JAMESTOWN GAZETTE
www.JamestownGazette.com
July 20, 2015
5th Annual
Charity Golf Classic
To benefit
Maplehurst Country Club
Published the week of July 27th
Sunday, August 16, 2015
11:30 am
Don’t miss out on showing your support for this event & showcasing your business!
Registration
Four Person
Scramble
&
Men’s,
Lunch
Women’s
1:00 pm
&
Shotgun Start
Mixed
presents the LUCILLE BALL COMEDY FESTIVAL issue
Call today: 716-484-7930
$75/person: non-members of Maplehurst or $60/person: members of Maplehurst
For more information visit www.stsusancenter.org or call 664-2253 ext. 3
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THOUSANDS of Promotional items available
www.chautauquamarketingsolutions.com
(716) 484-7930
JAMESTOWN GAZETTE
www.JamestownGazette.com
EDITOR’S MESSAGE
July 20, 2015
Jensen-Haglund Memorials
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[email protected]
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The People’s Paper.
Publisher.....................................................Stacey Hannon
Editor................................................................. Walt Pickut
Graphic Designer / Account Executive.........Lori Byers
Graphic Designer / Layout ............................Tesla Grobaski
Web Management.......................................Nick Trussalo
Sports Writer......................................................... Bill Burk
Sports Writer...............................................Cody Crandall
Journalist................................................... Julia Eppehimer
Circulation........................................................ Victor Mull
Circulation..................................................David Peterson
FAST & Slow
“Take your time, hurry up, the choice is yours, don’t be
late,” Kurt Cobain, founder and lead singer of everybody’s
favorite (?) grunge band Nirvana advised us all the way
back in 1991.
But the conflict is nothing new. Our lives seem to be a
constant tossup between the need for speed and the urge
to slow the pace of life and find some peace. We even get
ourselves stressed out with meticulous planning for a
relaxing vacation.
Instant gratification and speed are gaining ground as
life’s minimal expectation. Fast service, on-demand
video, high- and hyper-speed internet connections…
even tankless instant hot water heaters so you can scald
yourself in the shower long before you can reach for the
cold water tap. But at least you can make a cup of instant
coffee right from the tap without the dreaded delay of a
microwave which is faster than your stove.
Speed even comes together with sport and luxury in our
cars. Not many of us have a 200 mph, formula-1 speedster
lurking in our garage, but a 600 HP high-end roadster that
goes from 0 to 60 in 3.8 seconds can make a car fan’s heart
race any day.
But what about “Take your time?” America’s own traditional,
homegrown sport is fondly called a pastime. Today, some
critics say baseball is too slow for the 21st Century.
Maybe it is just what we need from time to time. Consider
a long, lazy afternoon, a summer breeze wafting across
the outfield grass, just the right tall, cold beverage in your
hand and a few friends with you watching those 18 boys
of summer ponder the motion of a single white ball and
that slow, sometimes graceful duel between pitcher and
batter. Three or four hours can disappear into the sunset
– and you never knew the time had passed at all.
Fast cars and a leisurely afternoon at the ballpark
occupy the far ends of the “hurry up and take your time”
spectrum of 21st century American life. Maybe you have
found the magic middle of that spectrum, with just the
right measure of haste and peace in your life. If you have,
then congratulations and a long life are your due.
CONTRIBUTING WRITERS
Jared Hill .................................................... Picture Privateer
Janet Wahlberg.................................... Finding Your Family
Joanne Tanner............................................... Down to Earth
Patricia Pihl............................................Pieces of the Past
Pastor Scott Hannon...................................... Faith Matters
Pastor Shawn Hannon.................................... Faith Matters
Vicki McGraw................................. Join Me in the Kitchen
In case that perfect formula has escaped you, though, this
week’s Jamestown Gazette has your prescription ready for
this summer. The World Series of Cars rolls into Bergman
Park this week and the Babe Ruth World Series will be
coming to Diethrick Park next month.
QUESTIONS OR COMMENTS
Write to us at:
PO Box 92
Jamestown, New York 14702
Cars, both antique and modern, do represent speed to the
hurry-up folks of the modern world, but when automotive
engineers meld form with function in their road machines
they also become artists. Smooth and sleek in their
polished precision, the 400 or so cars at Bergman Park
will tempt any speed demon to slow right down. Beauty
has a way of doing that. Go see a century’s worth of hurry
up transformed into just that beauty. It will be worth the
slow day’s pleasure.
Contact us...
News- [email protected]
Information- [email protected]
Events- [email protected]
Then make your plans for a few relaxing afternoons
enjoying the leisurely pace of America’s pastime down
at Diethrick Park. Those young men have convened in
Jamestown from all corners of the United States to play
on our field of dreams. Hurry on down and take your time
for a relaxing summer afternoon.
And for a somewhat deeper conversation about the value
– the virtue – of slowing down, visit page 7 and have a
chat with our Pastor Scott Hannon and his Faith Matters
column. That old hurry-up habit might be speeding you
right past the most important things in your life.
And whether you are a speed reader or a slow studier
of the written word, as long as you have your very own
Jamestown Gazette in your hands right now, please enjoy
the read.
Walt Pickut
OFFICE: 716-484-7930
FAX: 716-338-1599
ONLINE: www.jamestowngazette.com
AD DEADLINES: Friday at 12:00 pm
[email protected]
DISTRIBUTION:
The Jamestown Gazette is a locally owned Free weekly, community newspaper
that highlights the notable events and remarkable people who make the
Greater Jamestown region a unique and vibrant place to live. The Jamestown
Gazette is published every Monday and distributed to dealer locations in
Chautauqua and Cattaraugus Counties in New York and in Warren County,
Pennsylvania.
The entire paper, including supplemental content, is posted to our website
www.jamestowngazette.com. Previous Issues are also archived on the website.
All content is copyrighted and all rights reserved. No part of the Jamestown
Gazette may be reproduced without permission. Opinions expressed by
contributing writers, columnists and submitted press releases are their own
and do not necessarily reflect the opinions or positions of the owner, staff or
management of The Jamestown Gazette.
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JAMESTOWN GAZETTE
www.JamestownGazette.com
WE’LL PUBLISH YOUR
UPCOMING EVENTS!
Email your event info to
[email protected]
by Thursday at 5 p.m.
UPCOMING EVENTS
Jamestown’s Jive
LOCAL ENTERTAINMENT
LUCY FEST The Lucille Ball Comedy Festival
Thurs. July 30 Noon-Sun. Aug. 2 6pm
Lucy-Desi Center, 300 N. Main St.
Jamestown, NY 716-484-0800
VS
TERRE HAUTE
:('1(6'$<‡-8/<‡
7+856'$<‡-8/<‡
VS
CHILLICOTHE
6$785'$<‡-8/<‡
VS
BUTLER
681'$<‡-8/<‡
VS
WEST VIRGINIA
7+856'$<‡-8/<‡
)5,'$<‡-8/<‡
Russell Diethrick Park
485 Falconer St. Jmst
716.664.0915
ART:
National Parks and BeyondSolo Exhibit by Thomas Annear
Now-Aug. 23 10am-4pm
Roger Tory Peterson Institute
311 Curtis St., Jmst
716-665-2473
"A Stir of Artists"
Fine Art Show & Sale
Village Park, Bemus Point
July 25 & 26 11am-6pm
716-969-3028
Art & The Animal
55th Annual Opening Exhibition
Aug. 28-Oct. 25
RTPI, 311 Curtis St., Jmst
716-665-2473
AUDUBON NATURE EVENTS:
JULY:
MAPS Bird Banding 22nd 6am-noon
Wildlife Heroes-Prendergast Library
July 22 2-3pm
Photography Walks 22nd 7-8:30pm
Butterfly Gardening 23rd 7-9pm
Wild 5K 25th Reg-8am Race 9am
Taste of Nature: Mushroom Walk
(Call for details-Adult)
CALL 716-569-2345
JAMESTOWNAUDOBON.ORG
BENEFIT EVENTS:
Marcia A. Conrad Memorial
Wine & Music Festival
July 24th & 25th
Frewsburg Fireman's Grounds
localwineevents.com
Food & Canning
demos, live
entertainment,
lunch vendors &
seating and various
market activities all
season long!
jamestownrenaissance.com
July 20, 2015
BINGO:
Fluvanna Fire Hall
Every Tuesday Night 7-10pm
Sinclairville Fire Hall
716-962-2025
Every Wednesday Night 7pm
COMEDY:
Lucille Ball Comedy Festival
Stand-Up Showcase
July 30, 8pm
Melissa Rivers & Kelly Carlin Talk
Comedy July 31 - 6pm
Nick Offerman July 31 8:30
Story Pirates-Kids Comedy Show
Aug. 1 - 11am (Free Show)
A Carlin Home Companion
Growing up with George
Aug. 1 - 3:30
Jerry Seinfeld-LIVE
Aug. 1-7pm
Reg Lenna Center for the Arts
116 E 3rd St., Jmst
716-484-7070
COMMUNITY EVENTS:
World Series of CarsCar Show & Flea Market
July 26, 8am-5pm
Bergman Park
487 Baker St. Ext, Jmst
71st Annual Gerry Rodeo
Aug. 5-8
Gerry Rodeo VFD Grounds
4351 Route 60, Gerry NY
888-895-4847
6th Annual Great Rhythm Revival
August 7-9
2361 Wait Corners Rd, Panama
412-401-8091
(Movies at Reg continued)
Bull Durham
Wed, Aug. 19, 7pm
A League of Their Own
Thurs., Aug. 20, 7pm
The Natural
Fri.,Aug. 21, 7pm
Dipson Theaters
Lakewood Cinema 8
Chautauqua Mall
Cinema I & II
Warren Mall Cinema III
For info on movies & times:
www.dipsontheaters.com
MUSIC:
The First Annual
HERON Bluegrass Festival
Sherman Ny
Aug. 14-16
2361 Waits Corners Rd
Motor Mayhem
Aug. 14, 15, 5-11pm
3rd Street, Jamestown
716-664-2477
Summer Concert Series
Lucille Ball Memorial Park
Wed's 6-8pm Now-Aug. 12th
1st Annual Jamestown
RiverWalk Festival
Sunday., Aug. 23, 10am
Jamestown RiverWalk
Jamestown NY
716-483-5772
Concerts in the Park
Richard O Hartley Park Gazebo
Thursdays 7pm til Aug. 6
Frewsburg Fire Gala Days
Thurs. Aug. 27 - Sat. Aug. 29
Grand Parade Sat. 5pm
Frewsburg, NY
Chautauqua Institution
Season Now-Aug 30
Visit website for events
www.ciweb.org
EDUCATIONAL:
James Prendergast Library
Call 716-484-7135 ext 225
For Event Days & Times
www.prendergastlibrary.org
Planetarium Shows
July 25 starting at 11:15am
Lucile M. Wright Air Museum
300 N Main St., Jmst
r
Concert in the Park Series
Lakeside Park Mayville
Thursday Nights 6:30-8:30
Beginning July 10th til Aug 28th
SPORTING EVENTS:
Jamestown Babe Ruth
World Series of Cars
Judging School
Bergman Park
July 8, 15, 22, 7pm
716-484-0727
Jamestown Chiefs Semi-Pro
Football Home Schedule
Kick-Off 5:30pm Strider Field
July 25th vs Nickel City Kings
Aug. 8th vs Lockport Rampage
Chautauqua Lake Rally
Sat., Aug. 15, 9am-11am
Village Casino, Bemus Point
716-661-8915
Tweens 2 Teens College
Monday, July 27-30, 9-4pm
JCC, 525 Falconer St., Jmst
716-338-1005
2015 Babe Ruth World Series
Aug. 15-22
Russell E. Dietrick Park
485 Falconer St., Jamestown
Wee College 2015
Aug 3-6 9am-4pm
JCC, 525 Falconer St., Jmst
716-338-1005
Mister & Miss Jamestown Hott
International 2015
Sunday Aug. 16, 7pm
Jamestown Savings Bank Arena
319 W 3rd St., Jmst
716-484-2624
FAITH:
Dr. Gena Bedrosian
Musical Presentation
July 20, 7-8pm
Chautauqua's Hall of Philosophy
Bringing Scripture to Keyboard
Spirit Wing Concert
Sun., Aug. 23, 7-9pm
UUCJ
1255 Prendergast Ave., Jmst
716-484-1619
HISTORY:
Brown Bag Lecture Series
2nd Wed of the mo. of
Now-Oct.
Fenton History Center
67 Washington St, Jmst
716-664-6256
Walking Tours of Jamestown
Beginning the last Sat. in Maylast Sat. in Sept. 12:45pm
716-664-6256
MOVIES:
Movies at the Reg:
116 E Third St, 716-664-2465
Love & Mercy
July 22- 7pm
The Bad News Bears
Sat., Aug. 15, 7pm
Field of Dreams
Sun., Aug. 16, 7pm
Eight Men Out
Mon., Aug. 17, 7pm
42 Tues., Aug. 18, 7pm
Chaut. Lake Outlet Paddle
Every Wed thru Aug. 26
McCrea Point Park Boat Landing
Jones & Gifford Ave, Jmst
716-763-2266
CHQ Lake Dragon Race
Sat., Aug. 29, 8am
Celoron Park
21 Boulevard Ave., Celoron, NY
Old Dogs New (Hat)Tricks Hockey
Every Tues - 8pm-9pm
Jamestown Savings Bank Arena
SUPPORT GROUPS:
Bariatric Support Group
1st Mon. of each month
James Prendergast Library
Conference Rm 2nd fl 6-7pm
509 Cherry St., Jamestown
716-244-0293
JAMA 15 S Main St, 2nd fl
3rd Thurs of the mo. 5:30pm
Fluvanna Com. Church,
3363 Fluvanna, Ave. Ext.,
716-483-5448
Miracle of Recovery Fellowship
Mondays & Wednesdays 7-8pm
Healing Words Ministries
1006 W. 3rd St. Jamestown,
716-483-3687
THEATER:
Friend of Fest: Dog Sees God
Fri., July 31 4pm
Spire Theatre, 317 E 3rd St., Jmst
"Route 66" Musical
Sat., Aug. 1 12:30pm & 5pm
Sun. Aug. 2 2pm
Lucille Ball Little Theatre of
Jamestown
18 E. 2nd St., Jmst 716-483-1095
WARREN AREA EVENTS:
Struthers Library Theatre
302 West Third Ave, Warren
814-723-7231
You're A Good Man, Charlie
Brown
July 23-25 8pm &
July 26 2pm
85 Anniversary
Warren County Fair
Aug.11-15
Warren County Fairgrounds
Barton Run Road, Pittsfield, PA
814-563-9386
BINGO:
Russell VFD
Tuesday night Bingo
Doors open 4:30 PM
Pleasant Twp VFD
Every Thurs. Night 4pm
Warren Senior
Community Center
Doors open 4pm.
Smoke free game.
SPORTING EVENTS:
Conewango Creek
2015 River of the Year
Celebration Activites:
Hatch Fun Catching Event
Sat. Aug. 1st
7th Annual Allegheny River
& Conewango Creek Cleanup
Week of Sept 12-19
River of the Year Gala Oct 22
814-726-1441
www.conewangocreek.org
10th Annual Kinzua Country
TANGO Adventure Race
Aug 1, 7am Warren Holiday Inn
Kinzuacountrytango.com
Thad Turner 814-726-0110
2015 USCA National Kayak &
Canoe Championships!
Aug. 11-16, 2015
www.wccbi.org 814-723-3050
Farmers Markets
Chautauqua Mall Farmers Market
Every Wednesday June-Aug. 26
318 E Fairmount Ave., Lakewood
------------------------------------------Downtown Jamestown Farmers Market
Every Thursday through end of Oct.
Cherry St between 2nd & 3rd
-----------------------------------------Falconer Farmer's Market
Every Saturday morning 9am-2pm
til Oct. 31st.
Davis Park, 100 W Main St.
-----------------------------------------Fredonia Farmers Market
Every Saturday 9am-1pm til Oct. 31st
Church St., Fredonia
-----------------------------------------Lakewood Farmers Market
Every Tuesday June-end of Aug.
140 Chaut. Ave., Lakewood
------------------------------------------Warren Co. Farmers Market
Every Saturday 8am-Noon til Oct
Liberty St. Between 2nd & 3rd
------------------------------------------Westfield Farmers Market
Every Saturday 9am-2pm
through Sept.
JAMESTOWN GAZETTE
www.JamestownGazette.com
ENTERTAINMENT
July 20, 2015
PICTURE PRIVATEER
Contributing Writer
Jared Hill
The Jamestown Gazette is pleased to bring
our readers insightful and informative
reviews of some of the nation’s most
popular, current films. Jared Hill’s past
commentary and reviews will be archived
at Jamestown Gazette’s website, www.
jamestowngazette.com.
Movie Reviews
Minions
Director: Kyle Balda, Pierre Coffin
Starring: Sandra Bullock, Jonn Hamm,
Michael Keaton, Allison Janney, Geoffrey Rush
The prequel to Despicable Me is a rumbling,
bumbling, stumbling tale of the fruitful
(preferably Banana-full) history of the
“Minions”. They are a species that emerged
from the primordial ooze whose only
purpose was to serve the meanest and most
despicable boss-man/lady they could find
on Earth. There is nothing logical about
these Looney-Toon-like creatures. There are
only nonsensical hijinks, outrageous songand-dance numbers and an abundance of
goofiness. The main story takes place in
1968, where 3 Minions – Kevin, Stuart, and
Bob -- take on a mission to save their tribe
parading the globe for a new boss. 1968
sets up for refreshing gags on things such as:
Richard Nixon, Jimi Hendrix, The Dating
Game, a young Queen Elizabeth, and even
The Beatles.
Ant-Man
Rating:
Director: Peyton Reed
Starring: Paul Rudd, Michael Douglas,
Evangeline Lilly, Corey Stoll, Bobby
Cannavale, Judy Greer, Michael Pena
Wow, you may not think this right away.
I know how cheesy this may sound, but
believe me when I say this: Ant-Man packs
a great punch! As skeptical as I was going
in, I was blown away with what Ant-Man
had to offer. The science behind it all, the
closing of distances between atoms, and
the metaphysical concepts are absolutely
unreal! Marvel has delivered a cold splash
of water to our faces during this hot, hot
summer. It’s booming with originality,
teaming with comedy, and packed with
superb action sequences. The science
sounds great, and again: As a project
within the Marvel Universe, it ties together
perfectly with everything else!
Suggestion of the Week
Nightcrawler
Rating:
Director: Dan Gilroy
Starring: Jake Gyllenhaal, Rene Russo,
Riz Ahmed
Jake Gyllenhaal is in-arguably one of
the greatest actors of the 21st century;
and if you’re feeling skeptical about that
fact, Nightcrawler will surely put those
doubts to rest. His character – Louis
Bloom – is incredibly smart (too smart),
and incredibly hard working (too hard
working). Fate has seemingly found him
a career in local crime journalism. With
an enormous character arc, Gyllenhaal
transforms Bloom from an every-man to
what is essentially a demon comparable
to the likes of Hannibal Lecter. He is a
cold, shadowing stalker of the Earth; A
Nightcrawler by profession and by nature.
New York Strip Steaks,
Porterhouse, or
Chicken Breast
T-Bones
1
$ 79
7
$ 99
WE ACCEPT
MANUFACTURER’S
COUPONS!
Shurfine
Ice Cream
2/ 6
$ 00
FARM
FRESH
2
1
pound
pound
48 oz.
Cooked
Ham
Hellmann’s
Mayonnaise
$ 99
$ 79
30 oz.
pound
Home Grown
Rating:
NO HASSLE
SHOPPING!
NO CARD!
NO LIMITS!
703 W. Third St., Jamestown, NY
Ph. 483-3933 • Fax 483-3943
Boneless Skinless
5
Sweet Corn
4
$ 00
dozen
Washington State
Cherries
$
2
77
pound
Red Seedles
Grapes
.97¢
Hours: Mon.-Sat. 7am-8pm, Sun. & Holidays 7am-5pm
pound
Sale Prices Good
7/20/15-7/26/15
We accept Cash, Personal Checks, Visa, MasterCard, Discover,
Food Stamps & NY & PA Direct Debit Cards.
6
JAMESTOWN GAZETTE
www.JamestownGazette.com
PUZZLES
E
N
I EE
H
W FF TTHH !
O
700 square foot Walk-In Humidor
Over 500 Brands, Styles & Sizes of
Premium Cigars
Too Close
for Comfort
K
E
WE
O
Discount Program (visit for details)
I parked my car between the lines at the
mall. But then you slid your car into the
next spot right up beside my car so close I
could hardly open my door. I may have eaten onetoo-many Big Macs to be a ballerina, but I know you saw
me squeezing myself like a tooth paste tube to get out of my
car. Couldn’t you have moved over just a few
of 7/20/15
inches? Or wereWeek
you waiting
for more- 7/26/15
fun at my expense when I got back?
Please be a friendly parker.
Submitted by: Les Blok D. Driver
The Weekly Crossword
ACROSS
1 Mouth off
5 Flu symptom
9 Pulitzer, e.g.
14 One opposed
15 Bank transaction
16 Clear
17 Super Mario
character
18 Tough spot
19 Moving right
____....
20 Like some hands
21 Coddling
23 Wrestling hold
25 Mr. Bridges
26 Cooking smell
28 Used car deal
33 Goteborg native
36 Keyed up
38 Caked deposit
39 Cod's cousin
41 Zilch
43 Satan's doings
44 Eagle's nest
46 Type of sandwich (alt.)
47 Sniff out
49 Word relative
51 URL starter
53 They fall in the
fall
57 Formal greeting
62 Mud deposit
63 Goodbye, in
Guadalajara
64 Calculator
symbol
65 Peter the Great,
e.g.
66 Figure out
67 Dot on a map
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by Margie E. Burke
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Copyright 2015 by The Puzzle Syndicate
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Smidgen
Get gussied up
Ancient Brit
Ship personnel
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Graphic symbol
Galvanizing metal
Border
Slow, in music
Sandwich cookie
Lincoln, for one
DOWN
1 Wedding dress
Big name in kids'
material
book publishing
2 Positive terminal 30 Opera solo
3 Play
for time
31 Air
bag?
Week
of 7/13/15
- 7/19/15
4 Riding style
32 Irritable
5 Pigment-deficient 33 Storage building
6 Slot feeder
34 Ocean motion
7 Coach product
35 Prepare for
8 Provide
publication
9 Epidemic
37 Black gemstone
disease
40 Like some
10 Ann of true crime
remarks

42 For whom the
bell tolls
45 Turn off
48 Selected
50 Coat or linen
follower
52 Subject
54 Part of a cap
55 Tickle pink
56 Barn bedding
57 Gate closure
58 Foul smell
59 Bit of cunning
60 Gospel music
award
61 Lackluster
Edited by Margie E. Burke
Difficulty : Medium
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
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
 
Copyright 2015 by The Puzzle Syndicate

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July 20, 2015
HOW TO SOLVE:








(Answer appears elsewhere
in this issue)
1974 W. Perimeter Road, Steamburg, NY
(Next to the Turtle Pit)
Open 10am-7pm Mon-Sat
716-354-2100
Chautauqua County Housing and
Neighborhood Revitalization
Grant Funds Available
Article Contributed by
Chautauqua County
Department Of Planning And
Economic Development
As recommended in the County Comprehensive
Plan, the Chautauqua County Department
of Planning & Economic Development is
announcing the availability of housing and
neighborhood revitalization funding to
undertake innovative housing-related programs.
This flexible and efficient program is intended
to increase investment in the county’s housing
stock, target investment based on the strategic
priorities of each community, and create a
partnership with the private sector leading to
additional opportunities for revitalization.
The purpose of the program is multi-faceted,
and includes creating vibrant communities;
enhancing economic development; enhancing
the tourism industry; increasing the percentage
of owner-occupied homes; creating economic
diversity in communities and neighborhoods;
creating vibrant downtowns, town and
village centers; decreasing urban sprawl; and
improving the quality of life in the county.
The program will provide a 25% match in the
form of a grant, not to exceed $10,000/project.
Applicants must demonstrate that they have a
well-conceived plan that supports the purpose
and eligibility requirements of the program;
that the program is innovative; and that it will
have demonstrated tangible results.
A broad range of programs are eligible for
funding, including hands-on training and higher
education programs that provide instruction
in housing rehabilitation and real estate
investment that are financially self-sustaining;
property management initiatives geared
towards identifying and strategically removing
existing, derelict properties to right-size the
housing stock and improve neighborhood
conditions; programs that aim at right-sizing
the housing stock and returning high-demand
properties to the tax roll; housing development
initiatives for retirees that are linked to the
“World’s Learning Center” branding initiative;
development, promotion and implementation
of housing-related urban revitalization
initiatives, such as Jamestown’s Urban Design
Plan and Neighborhood Revitalization Plan
and their associated recommendations; design
and energy efficiency education programs,
especially as they relate to available financing
mechanisms; and code enforcement compliance
initiatives aimed at educating Code Enforcement
Officers and the Local Judicial System.
The deadline for submission is August 7, 2015.
For application guidelines and additional
information, please contact Mark Geise at 716661-8912.
JHS Health Teacher Presents
at NYSCAP Conference
Article Contributed by
JHS Public School
Jamestown High School health teacher,
Michele Schnars, was recently invited to
present as part of a panel discussion at the
New York State Council on Adolescent
Pregnancy (NYSCAP) conference in
Albany, NY. The panel of school leaders
from Buffalo, Rochester, New York City
and Jamestown talked about the value
of high-quality comprehensive sexuality
education (CSE) in their schools and
their efforts to support sustainable
sexuality education programs. About
60 school and community stakeholders
attended the conference.
“I was honored to be asked to present
at the conference,” said Ms. Schnars.
“The progress in health education that
Jamestown has achieved is heavily
based on the coordinated efforts of the
school, the parents, and the community.
With researched based curriculum and
trained health educators at the core of
our efforts, our school community is
continually looking for ways to support
teen pregnancy prevention education
and skills with all of our youth through
the support and collaborative efforts of
school, community agencies, students
and the students’ families. As a health
educator, I’m so happy to be involved in
this conference and will be bringing back
additional CSE ideas to my district so that
we can continue our progress with this
crucial health topic.”
The statewide conference’s goal was
to educate school and community
partners, including legislators on the
importance of comprehensive sexuality
education in schools that is medically
accurate, developmentally appropriate
kindergarten to grade 12, and biasfree as part of a comprehensive health
education program taught by certified
educators. NYS Education Department
Commissioners Regulations currently
requires that elementary and secondary
school curriculum include a sequential
health education program for all pupils
K-6 and a half year course in both middle
and high school. Family life/sexual health
education is not required.
A growing body of research shows that
comprehensive sexuality education
increases parent-child communication,
delays the onset of sexual activity,
reduces the frequency of sexual activity
and number of sexual partners, increases
condom and contraceptive use, and
decreases unintended pregnancy, STDs,
including HIV, and dating violence. It
has been linked to academic achievement
and student success. It is also one of the
recommendations in Governor Cuomo’s
Blueprint to End the AIDS Epidemic,
released in April 2015.
As part of her trip to Albany, Ms. Schnars
was also able to speak to NYS assembly
members and legislators about the
importance of age-appropriate, standardsbased comprehensive sexuality education
in the schools.
JAMESTOWN GAZETTE
www.JamestownGazette.com
CONTRIBUTING WRITERS
July 20, 2015
FaithMatters
JOIN ME IN THE KITCHEN with Vicki McGraw
Summer Berries
Over…Worked,
Booked, Run
or in a big ole’ blueberry muffin (sided with
a hot cup of coffee, of course, to be enjoyed
after I‘ve been up for three or four hours!).
Blueberries fall into the group of fruits
considered “super-fruits” because of their
high antioxidant value. This makes them
extra appealing to me because anytime
I can sneak something healthy into my
menus, I consider it a bonus!
Contributing Writer
Vicki McGraw
Well, we have made it through the big
Fourth of July celebrations and now we
are deep into the season of vacations, kids
college and summer get togethers…what
better way to deal with the fun that ensues
than to go buy fresh berries??
Berries are available year round, being
grown in warmer climates when we are
enduring not so warm weather, but nothing
beats homegrown berries. Strawberries,
blueberries,
raspberries…the
mere
mention of them makes my mouth water!
Strawberries grow low to the ground
and can be –literally – a pain to pick.
Blueberries, however, are grown on
bushes and are in my opinion much easier
to pick. I remember my grandmother
taking me to pick blueberries in East
Otto, of all places. As with any sort of
“you pick” fruit farms, I’m always glad
the picker isn’t weighed before and after
the picking! It is just so tempting to pop
those fresh ripe berries into your mouth,
it becomes a reflex action! One in the
basket, one in my mouth…
I love blueberries any way they are
prepared…in a fruit bowl, in a pie, as jam
As with all produce, berries are the best
when they are fresh, but they can be frozen
very easily by simply rinsing them, laying
them out in a single layer on a baking tray
and freezing until hard. Once they are
frozen, they can be placed in a zip lock bag
and returned to the freezer for future use.
By freezing them this way, you can simply
remove the portion you want and return
the rest to the freezer; the berries don’t
need to be thawed before using, either. By
adding them to your application frozen,
they will retain their shape and not mush
and turn everything their color!
I always try to keep fruit on hand,
preserved in this manner; you can freeze
most any berry like this. Frozen berries
make a fun alternative to ice cubes, too. I
like to garnish punch bowls and cocktails
with a few frozen berries to add both color
and coolness to my beverages. I also make
ice cubes and punch rings out of a light
colored fruit juice or lemonade to which
I have added berries. By using juice rather
than water to make the ice, your drinks will
not be watered down when the ice melts!
To read more of Vicki McGraw’s commentaries
on good cooking, fine recipes and perfect party
treats, visit www.jamestowngazette.com and
click on Join Me in the Kitchen’s own page.
The Jamestown Gazette is proud to present
our county’s most creative and original writers
for your enjoyment and enlightenment.
My favorite Raspberry Pie
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
thought I was being productive, but in
the long-term I was hurting myself and
my relationships with others.
Contributing Writer
Pastor Scott Hannon
St. John Lutheran Church Amherst, NY
I forgot to eat the other day. I had
meetings from 7 a.m. through 9 p.m.
Around dinner time I caught 45 minutes
of free time and meant to grab a bite, but,
like I said, I forgot.
And so, when I arrived at home at 9:30
that evening, I was cranky.
My wife wanted to talk about her day. I
shrugged her off.
My older daughter used every delay
tactic she knows so she could see me
before going to bed, so she was still up
and wanted a story. Standing at her door,
I quickly scrambled through a lame-duck
narrative.
Once upon a time there was a girl named
Molly. She was tired. So was her dad. So she
went to bed. And they all lived happily ever
after. Good night.
When I crashed on the couch, my wife
sat next to me. She wanted a conversation
with an adult for the first time all day. I
obliged by replying “yea” and “nah” to
her questions – too tired to even put an
“s” at the end of a one syllable word.
“Thanks for the riveting conversation,
Scott.”
Pastry for double crust pie
(either homemade or store bought!)
“Huh? What?”
1 C sugar
¼ C flour*
½ t finely shredded lemon peal
Dash salt
5 C fresh or fresh frozen raspberries
2 t lemon juice
1 T butter
“Exactly. Good night.”
When my wife went to bed frustrated,
I took my laptop out so I could write a
bit. After all, I was on a role that day; I
wanted to keep things going. And then I
read this:
The apostles gathered around Jesus to tell
him all that they had done and taught.
Jesus said to them, “Come away to a
deserted place all by yourselves and rest a
while.” For many were coming and going,
and they had no leisure even to eat.
In a mixing bowl, combine sugar, flour, lemon peel and salt. Add sugar
mixture to raspberries and toss to coat fruit. Fill a pastry lined pie plate
with the berry mixture. Drizzle with lemon juice and dot with butter.
Adjust top crust and flute to seal edge.
Mark 6:30-31
Bake at 375* for 40-45 minutes, until crust is golden. Allow to cool to
room temperature before cutting.
That’s when it hit me. I’ve been going
and going. I need to eat, but beyond that,
I need a bit of rest.
* If you are using frozen berries, increase flour to 1/3 cup!
I was hungry and cranky and tired. I
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7
When Jesus sees his disciples after a long
day of healing and proclaiming, he does
not say, “Great job! Now go back out
there and do it again.” Rather, he says,
“It’s time to come to rest.” When he spots
his disciples who’re too busy to stop and
eat, he says, “It’s time to come away and
relax.”
Jesus wants us to be the most productive
disciples we can be. His call to rest, to
relax, to get away, to eat! is not an assault
on productivity. Rather, it invites us to
do what is necessary to truly produce.
See, the type of productivity God is
looking for in our lives is not the kind
that can be measured based on basic
stats and numbers. It’s bigger than that.
It isn’t about how many words we type
in a day, but how we effectively proclaim
the Word.
It isn’t about how many people we touch
base with, but how many eyes we really
look into – how many people we really
see.
It isn’t about so much about “putting a
dent” in a few things, but truly making a
difference when we are able.
It isn’t about being all things to all people,
but being the person you’re supposed to be
to the people who matter most. Like your
wife who wants a companion. Like your
daughter who wants a minute with her dad.
If we are to be effective and
productive If we are going to be able to truly see
and embrace others If we want to make a difference If we want to be present for those we
love –
Then it begins and ends with resting,
recharging, and rejuvenating for the sake
our God, ourselves and others.
Make sure you eat today. “Come away
to a deserted place all by yourselves and
rest a while.”
Wayward,
Pastor Scott Hannon
For more inspiration and insights from
Pastor Scott’s past columns, please visit
www.jamestowngazette.com and click on
the Faith Matters page. The Jamestown
Gazette is proud to present our county’s
most creative and original writers for your
enjoyment and enlightenment.
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8
JAMESTOWN GAZETTE
www.JamestownGazette.com
COMMUNITY
July 20, 2015
716-450-7357
Lister Street Railroad Crossing
Rehabilitation Coming
SPIRETHEATER.ORG
Jeffrey Lehman, P.E., Director of Public
Article Contributed by
Works for the City of Jamestown,
317 E 3rd St.
City of Jamestown
announced that Lister Street from
Street to 100 feet below the
Jamestown, NY 14701 Department of Public Works Erie
railroad tracks will be closed beginning
Wednesday, July 22, 2015 until
approximately Friday, July 31, 2015 to
facilitate railroad crossing rehabilitation.
Motorists must use alternate routes
of travel.
Holiday on the Hill
Seeking Local Artists
Article Contributed by
Holiday on the Hill
Do you know how many shopping days are
left before Christmas? This is not a question
you usually ponder on a hot summer day,
but Court Appointed Special Advocates
(CASA) of Chautauqua County, Inc. is
excited to announce this year’s Holiday on
the Hill shopping boutique, held annually
the weekend before Thanksgiving. This
year Holiday on the Hill will be at a
new location, The Dr. Lillian Vitanza
Ney Renaissance Center in downtown
Jamestown. Holiday on the Hill is more
than just a craft show; it is a two day
shopping extravaganza where everything
for sale is the perfect blend of unique items
suitable for holiday decorating and gifting.
In addition, all items are handmade by
local vendors and artists.
The Holiday on the Hill planning
committee is still looking for talented
artists and vendors to sell their handmade
creations at Holiday on the Hill. Vendor
applications are available online at http://
casahoh.wix.com/holidayonthehill or by
email at [email protected]. Holiday
on the Hill is a juried fine arts and craft
boutique; all vendor applications are
voted on and approved by the planning
committee. Anyone interested in selling
their handmade items at the event must
have their vendor application turned in
to the planning committee by September
1, 2015. The registration fee is $75 for
participating vendors.
12% of this year’s proceeds will be donated
to Court Appointed Special Advocates
(CASA) of Chautauqua County, Inc.
CASA provides a voice for abused and
neglected children in the Chautauqua
County Family Court System. Caring
volunteers stand by the child’s side and
speak up for their best interests during
court proceedings, giving them hope for
the future. For more information about
CASA of Chautauqua, Inc., the child
advocate program, or how to volunteer,
please visit www.chautauquacasa.com.
The event starts on Friday, November
20, 2015 from 4:00 pm to 8:00 pm and
continues through Saturday, November
21, 2015 10:00 am to 4:00 pm. The event
is free and open to the public. For more
event information or to complete a vendor
registration, please visit http://casahoh.
wix.com/holidayonthehill or search for
Holiday on the Hill (Fine Arts & Crafts
Boutique) on Facebook. Join us for a two
day fine arts and crafts boutique for a unique
holiday shopping experience! Come out
and support local vendors and CASA!!
St. Susan to Hold
Annual Golf Charity
Article Contributed by
St. Susan Center
St. Susan Center is proud to announce
the 5th Annual Charity Golf Classic.
This year’s Classic will be held
August 16, 2015 at Maplehurst
Country Club. The format will
be a four-person scramble (Men’s,
Women’s & Mixed) with registration
at 11:30 am and a shotgun start
at 1:00 pm. Golfers will enjoy hot
dogs, snacks and beverages as well as
prizes, giveaways and contests on the
course. At the conclusion of play,
lunch will consist of delicious soups,
sandwiches and back by popular
demand - the sundae bar!
By playing in the tournament,
being a sponsor, or remembering
a loved one with a memorial you
can partner with us in feeding our
neighbors in need, All sponsors will
be recognized on course signage,
tournament programs and all media
coverage.
St. Susan Center provides a
nutritionally balanced meal seven
days a week to those in need.
Summer is our busiest time of the
year with children out of school and
we expect to serve between 10,00012,000 meals each month. Every
dollar donated is spent in service to
the greater Jamestown community,
so we need your help!
Sponsorship forms are also available
online at stsusancenter.org or
you can register by calling the
center. Please complete and return
registration or sponsorship forms by
August 5, 2015.
If you have any questions or for
more information, please contact the
Center at 716-664-2253 or visit our
website at www.stsusancenter.org.
Bark ’n Brew Fundraiser at
Southern Tier Brewing Company
Article Contributed by
Chautauqua County
Humane Society
The sixth annual Bark N’ Brew charity
fundraiser to benefit the Chautauqua
County Humane Society (CCHS) was
held on June 17 at the Southern Tier
Brewing Company. The event fundraised
over $28,542 for the animals awaiting
adoption at CCHS. Money collected allows
the shelter to offer fee-waived adoption
programs, reduced fee spay/neuter clinics
and other adoption services year-round to
the community.
Southern Tier Brewing Company is the
generous host for the event with other major
contributors including Ludwig Auctions,
Greg Peterson, Pepsi Bottling Group of
Jamestown, Jefferson Middle School, and
the five stations of Media One Group.
“There is no better atmosphere than to be
at one of the best breweries in our country,
Southern Tier Brewing Company (STBC),
joined by individuals that are all there to
support one common cause,” said Hannah
Braun, Community Relations Coordinator
for CCHS. “It is because of STBC’s
commitment and support of CCHS that
this event continues to grow each and
every year,” said Braun.
Over 60 donors from the community made
the live and chinese auctions a success.
Some of the featured items included tickets
to the upcoming Carole Burnett and Jerry
Seinfeld shows, coffee for a year at Tim
Horton’s, a beautiful wood-crafted four
post dog bed, among many other items.
For more information on the Chautauqua
County Humane Society or to receive
information on upcoming events, visit www.
spcapets.com or follow CCHS on Facebook.
The mission of the Chautauqua County
Humane Society is to promote the
adoption of animals, prevent all forms of
animal cruelty and neglect, shelter lost,
abandoned and homeless animals, and
to provide education about the humane
treatment of animals.
Second Annual Run in Memory of
“Don’t Ask Don’t Tell” Champion
Article Contributed by
Chautauqua Region
Community Foundation
Changing hearts, minds and lives for the
better. A community comes together,
Saturday, August 1, 2015 for the second
annual Darren Manzella-Lapeira Memorial
5K Run and Fun Walk to benefit the Darren
Manzella –Lapeira Veterans Assistance
Fund administered at the Chautauqua
Region Community Foundation.
One of the first openly gay active duty
service members – Darren challenged
the U.S. Military’s “Don’t ask, Don’t tell”
(DADT) policy on national television and
became the face of LGBT military members
before being discharged in 2008 for publicly
discussing his sexual identity. Tragically,
Darren was killed in August 2013 in an
automobile accident in Rochester where he
was living with his husband Javier.
“Our family is overwhelmed by our
communities support since Darren’s
passing and also for having this run in his
honor,” said Nancy Manzella, Darren’s
mother. “We are so proud of Darren and
what he achieved, to have our hometown,
friends and family commemorate his life
in this way every year means the world to
our family. Darren would be so proud and
humbled to have this run held in his honor.”
The run will start at Brocton Central
School and finish at the Brocton American
Legion Post 434– both on Main Street in
Brocton. Registration starts at 9:00am.
The run begins at 10:00 a.m., rain or shine.
Darren Manzella-Lapeira
The certified 5K run route will take runners
and walkers through the rural countryside
past numerous grape farms and vineyards
where Darren grew up. Runners and
walkers can register online and on-site the
day of the run. All run participants and
supporters are invited back to the American
Legion Post for a post-race celebration that
includes Chiavetta’s Chicken Barbeque,
Basket Raffle and other activities.
Last year the run raised over $16,000
for the Darren Manzella –Lapeira
Veterans Assistance Fund administered
at the Chautauqua Region Community
Foundation. This fund offers financial
assistance as well as counseling services
to local veterans in need. Monies raised
from this year’s run will be donated to the
same fund.
For run details, registration and
sponsorship opportunities visit www.
manzella-lapeira-memorialrun.com
July 20, 2015
JAMESTOWN GAZETTE
www.JamestownGazette.com
COMMUNITY
Fund for the Region Supports CLA
Music and Arts Institute Camp
Article Contributed by
Infinity Visual and
Performing Arts, Inc.
Article Contributed by
Chautauqua Region
Community Foundation
Chautauqua Lake Association (CLA)
Board of Directors President, Craig Butler,
and driver, Brady Wesp, give Chautauqua
Region Community Foundation Executive
Director, Randy Sweeney, an up-close
and personal look at weed cutting near
the Lakewood shoreline. The cutters are
designed, along with other measures,
to carefully control the overgrowth of
aquatic foliage. Realizing the importance
of the lake both environmentally and
recreationally, the Foundation supports
many on-going CLA projects with its Fund
for the Region.
9
Infinity Visual and Performing
Arts, Inc. will be hosting a Music
and Arts Institute Day Camp from
Monday, August 10-Friday, August
14. Students may choose to attend
each day, or to attend specific days at
drop-in rates. For more information,
please visit Infinity’s website at www.
infinityperformingarts.org, or call the
Infinity Center at 664-0991.
The Infinity Visual and Performing
Arts Center is located at 301 East 2nd
Street in Downtown Jamestown.
Jamestown Walking Tours
Fair Housing Training at the
Jamestown Renaissance Center
Article Contributed by
Jamestown Renaissance
Center
Southwestern Independent Living Center,
Inc., Jamestown Renaissance Center, City
of Jamestown, and Housing Opportunities
Made Equal, Inc. (HOME) are offering
a free fair housing training to take place
Tuesday August 18th, 2015 at 7:00PM.
The event will run for about an hour and take
place at the Jamestown Renaissance Center
(119 W 3rd Street Jamestown, NY 14701).
Participants will learn the basics of
federal, state, and local fair housing laws;
the rights of tenants with disabilities,
including reasonable accommodations and
modifications; along with some common
landlord-tenant issues such as repairs,
damages, security deposits, and evictions.
All participants will receive a free 4th
edition Guide to Landlords’ Rights book,
along with brochures geared specifically
towards landlords and tenants.
All are welcome to attend, but reservations
are appreciated to prepare enough
materials. Please contact Marie Carrubba at
(716) 661-3010 or [email protected]; or Alyssa Bergsten at (716) 8541400, ext.22 or [email protected]
with any questions or concerns.
Housing Opportunities Made Equal is a
civil rights organization whose mission is
to promote the value of diversity and to
ensure the people of Western New York
an equal opportunity to live in the housing
and in the communities of their choice—
through education, advocacy, enforcement
of fair housing laws, and the creation of
new housing opportunities.
Chautauqua Adult Day Care
Enjoys Watermelon
Article Contributed by
Chautauqua Adult
Day Care Inc.
Recently, Chautauqua Adult Day Care
Present Center, received a special Treat.
Pete and Mary Ann Carlo stopped by
the 5th Street facility with a large
watermelon. The Carlo’s donated the
tasty treat for the participants’ afternoon
snack. Mr. Carlo entertained the group
with some old familiar songs on the key
board while Mrs. Carlo sat and assisted
some participants in adding color to
some pictures of watermelon the staff
had found. The participants listened
to some fun and interesting facts about
watermelon, and then were given a test
as to what information they could recall.
Finally , the watermelon was cut, and
everyone was given a large slice to enjoy.
Article Contributed by
Fenton History Center
The Fenton History Center leads
walking tours of Jamestown throughout
the summer and fall. The schedule for
2015 is the following.
The Jamestown’s Industrial Past tour
teaches about the original industry
in Jamestown on the Fenton History
Center’s walking tour. The tour will
be near the Chadakoin River and the
early industrial area of downtown
Jamestown. Walkers will learn about
the woolen mills, the railroad, the
sawmills and the people who made
it happen. Former Fenton Board of
Trustee and Jamestown Community
College Assistant Professor of History,
Traci Langworthy, will lead the tour.
The tour will begin and end at the
Fenton History Center parking lot.
The tour is approximately 2 1/2 hours
long. It is held August 1 and 29.
The Lakeview Ave. Neighborhood tour
teaches about the upper class families
that lived on the street, the changes
over the years and what makes it the
stately streetscape it is today. What
was life like during the heyday of the
“most beautiful street in Jamestown”?
Guests are asked to arrive by 12:45
PM at the Lake View Cemetery office
lawn, corner of Lakeview Ave. and
Buffalo St. The tour is approximately
2 hours long and will end back at the
Cemetery office. The tour leaders are
former Trustees Sam Genco, Lake
View Cemetery Superintendent and
Robert Black, Architect. The tour will
be held August 8 and September 5.
The Riverwalk tour is about the
Chadakoin River, Jamestown’s original
economic engine. All are welcome to
join Fenton History Center director
Joni Blackman or former Trustee
Mat Hagberg on the tour along the
Chadakoin to learn about the changes
over the past two hundred years.
Walkers will learn about the power
plant, the woolen mills, the railroad,
the sawmills and the people who made
it happen. The tour will begin and end
at the Fenton History Center parking
lot. The tour is approximately 1 1/2
hours long. The tour will be held July
25, August 22 and September 12.
The Jamestown’s Hidden Alleys tour
teaches about five of Jamestown’s
earliest alleys. Alleys have been hidden
in the background of Jamestown’s
everyday business from the village’s
beginning. What was their purpose?
How did they get their names? What
are they used for now? Tour leaders
are former Trustee Julie Hull or
current Trustee Cynthia Rodgers.
Learn the answers to these questions
and much more on the tour. The tour
is approximately 1 1/2 hours long.
The tour is offered August 15, and
September 26.
All tours, except for the Lakeview
Ave. tour, begin at 1 PM at the Fenton
History Center in the Gift Shop. The
Lakeview Ave. Tour begins at 12:45
PM at the corner of Lakeview Ave.
and Buffalo St. on the lawn of the Lake
View Cemetery office (907 Lakeview
Ave.). Please dress appropriately for
the weather. The tours will cancel
with heavy rain. The cost is $10 for
prospective members and $5 for
Fenton History Center members.
Memberships are available prior to
each tour. Please check in and pay in
the Gift Shop prior to the 1 PM start
time. For more information visit www.
fentonhistorycenter.org or call 716664-6256.
Please send us your Community and Business News that you
would like to share with the Jamestown Gazette Readers.
Send it to: [email protected]
We’d love to hear from you!
10
JAMESTOWN GAZETTE
www.JamestownGazette.com
WORLD SERIES OF CARS
July 20, 2015
Babe Ruth and World Series of Cars Team Up
the Jamestown Jammers this
year in the Prospect League.
Jamestown makes that kind of
an impression on the players
and their families. That’s why
the World Series has been
here for the last 16 out of 32
years. Teams from across the
country even come here to
learn how to host a Babe Ruth
World Series.”
Driving for Baseball
The World Series of Cars is
recognized by antique car
enthusiasts as one of the
best regional car shows in
the Northeast. The show
also features a wide variety
of non-antique automotive
classes (see the complete
class list at: http://www.
jamestownworldseries.org/
classes).
Regional champs bring heat from the mound in Babe Ruth World series.
World Series Lineup
Saturday, August 22.
Ten World Series teams will
arrive in Jamestown by the
busload from across the
nation – from the Atlantic
to the Pacific – on Thursday,
August 13. Warm greetings
by members of the Eastside
Fellowship along with a
traditional welcome meal
will await the roughly 500
visitors, friends, coaches and
players’ families who will take
part in this year’s edition of
the 10-day event. Ultimately,
the 2015 Babe Ruth Baseball
World Series Champions will
be crowned after winning the
final game at 1:00 p.m. on
The 10-team field pits the
eight nationwide regional
champions, the Western
New York State Champions
and Jamestown (the Host
Team), split into National and
American Divisions, against
each other.
“The kids have such a
great experience here in
Jamestown,” said CJ Kelly,
a local administrator with
the Babe Ruth World Series
organization, “that a player
from one of the Babe Ruth
western divisions who played
here a few years ago in the
World Series, chose to play for
The event is billed by organizers
as a wonderful walk through
the history of the automobile.
Many participants travel
hundreds of miles every year to
place their lovingly handcrafted
and meticulously restored cars,
trucks and motorcycles on
display for the day.
Some fans travel just as far
to attend. Bill Perkins from
McAllen, Texas, for instance,
plans to drive one of his own
five restored vintage vehicles
all the way to Jamestown for
the show, perhaps next year.
He was on hand at Bergman
Park last week to attend the
Car Judging class presented
by Chief Judge Frank Tantillo,
another of the car show’s
long time organizers and a
longstanding member of the
Chautauqua Region AACA.
Something in Common!
For imaginative fans, the
Babe Ruth World Series and
Jamestown’s World Series of Cars
may have a historic connection,
though mostly whimsical.
The oldest car at the World
Series of Cars, as recalled
recently by Russ Diethrick,
was a 1902 Model-T Ford.
That great icon of the
automotive age is only one
Continued from Front
year older than the venerable
World Series itself, who’s
first modern, Major League
appearance took the field
in 1903 where the Boston
Americans of the American
League bested the Pittsburgh
Pirates of the National
League, taking the bestof-nine series five games
to three. Jamestown’s two
signature events this summer
are practically twins. Fans of
either can celebrate both.
Festival Fare
A pancake breakfast will be
hot and ready for car show fans
from 7 to 11 a.m. A Chicken
Bar-B-Q will be served from
12 to 4 p.m. Many additional
food and craft concessions,
door prizes, an automobile
related flea market and
special attractions will round
out the event. Spectator gate
donation suggested: adult
$3.00; children under 12 free.
Polish, color and chrome sparkle on hundreds of prize winning cars at the World series of Cars.
Jamestown and WNY Champs – Babe Ruth Game Schedule
Game
#
Date
(Aug)
Away
Home
Time
(pm)
3
15
Southeast
WNY State Champ
5:00
4
15
Southwest
Jamestown
7:30
7
16
Jamestown
Midwest Plains
5:00
8
16
Pacific Northwest
WNY State Champ
7:30
15
18
Middle Atlantic
Jamestown
5:00
16
18
WNY State Champ
New England
7:30
19
19
Jamestown
Ohio Valley
5:00
20
19
WNY State Champ
Pacific Southwest
7:30
Complete schedule: http://www.jamestownworldseries.org/tournament JAMESTOWN GAZETTE
www.JamestownGazette.com
WORLD SERIES OF CARS
July 20, 2015
11
FINN’S
Auto Sales & Ser vice
Expert Subaru Repair & Sales
Patrick Finnerty JR. - Owner
5982 Niobe Road, Panama
716.782.3707
TOWNLINE AUTO
PARTS AND SERVICE
Mon-Fri 8am-5pm
Sat 8:30-1pm
2877 Townline Road, Jamestown
Call Us For Honest And
Reliable Service And Parts
716.484.2353
[email protected]
Art’s Autobody
Collision-Restoration
Custom Painting
Glass Replacement
Frame & Uni-Body
Randolph
Free
s
Estimate
Auto
Supply
3429 Charlotte Hill Rd., Sinclairville, NY 14782
Owner Art Anderson • 716-962-2663
JOHN MORREALE
23 Years Experience
WE WORK WITH YOU ON DEDUCTIBLES & PAYMENT PLANS
SERVICING: Cars, Trucks, Boats, Motorcycles, Antiques...
WE WILL PAINT ANYTHING that you’d like restored to New!
358-6222
4819 Route 474
Ashville, NY 14710
PIKE’S
• Free Estimates
• Dealer Discounts
• Competitive Pricing
BOAT BUFFING
M-F: 8-5
Sat: 9-2
Auto Repair &
Detailing
763-8945
Complete Car Care Center
Brakes • Batteries
Alignment • Mufflers
Shocks • MacPherson Struts
6624 RT 60 Between
Sinclairville & Cassadaga
On the Farm Tire Service!
(716)
COLLISION &
RUST REPAIR
716-489-1414
3148 Fluvanna Ave., Jamestown
AUTO, TRUCK & FARM TIRES
PPG Paints • Batteries • Shocks •Bedliners • Exhaust Systems • Fenders
Mon, Tues, Wed 8-5 • Thurs & Fri 8-5:30 • Sat 8-1
18 Jamestown St • Randolph
Batteries
For Lawn Mowers,
rVs & Boats!
Repairs done on premises
with laser measuring system!
GAY
MARK
TIRE & WHEEL, INC.
Home Town Owned & Operated
Knowledgeable and friendly customer service.
962-9315 • 595-3408
OF
JAMESTOWN
TRUCK & SUV
ACCESSORIES!
AREA’S NEW DEALER
FOR TRUCK CAPS!
ANYTIME TOWING
Serving All Of Chautauqua County & Surrounding Areas
• LOCK OUTS
• TIRE CHANGES
• RECOVERY WORK
Auto RepAiR
BRAkes & Belts
CheCk engine
exhAust & eleCtRiCAl
BAtteRies & WipeRs
tRAnsmissions
AiR Conditioning
EMERGENCY
SERVICES
Owner: Troy Carr
716-267-9803
TRIVIA
R
A
C
1. Who built the first engine crank?
2. What two states opened the first toll roads?
3. What year was the spark plug invented?
4. In what state was the first auto insurance policy purchase?
5. At what average mph was the first Grand Prix race won?
6. In 1901 the “Curved Dash” Olds is offered for what price?
7. T/F: In 1974 National 55 mph speed limit was enacted after oil shortages.
8. What year did rear seat belts become standard on most cars?
9. What car was the infamous John Dillinger’s favorite car to steal?
10. What year was the first speeding ticket issued in the U.S.?
BED RAILS BULL BARS
SIDE STEPS GRILL GUARDS
SPRAY-ON BEDLINERS
ROLL-UP
TRI-FOLD SOFT
TONNEAU COVERS TONNEAU COVERS
3067 FLUVANNA AVE.
JAMESTOWN • 716-720-5120
(next to Kaczar Collision)
WWW.LINE-XOFJAMESTOWN.COM
ANSWERS: (1) James Watt (2) PA & CT (3) 1860 (4) MA (5) 46
(6) $650 (7) True (8) 1963 (9) Fords (10) 1902
12
JAMESTOWN GAZETTE
www.JamestownGazette.com
CLASSIFIEDS
July 20, 2015
DIETETIC
TECHNICIAN
Looking for a Dietetic Technician to lead our Nutrition Team
in a 120-bed rehabilitation/skilled nursing facility.
As the lead professional of the Nutrition team you will work hand
in hand with our team. You will be responsible for all aspects
of the nutritional care planning process to include the residents
dining experience.
Requirements:
Must be a graduate of a 2-year college with
AAS Degree in Dietetic Technology.
The candidate must appreciate the elderly.
Interested candidates may apply at:
of Salamanca
451 Broad St., Salamanca, NY 14779
P: 716-945-1800 • F: 716-945-5867
Email: [email protected]
Medical RecoRds cleRk
Absolut Care of Salamanca is seeking a
full time
Medical Records Clerk
This position is essential for assisting nursing home staff and administration
with several areas that are critical to high quality patient care, including: data
entry, patient records, charts and files management. In addition, this position
is responsible for maintaining associated logs and records in accordance with
established priorities and procedures of the Medial Records Department.
If you are a person who takes pride in their profession, who likes to learn, to
contribute and to achieve, who is looking for a challenging opportunity where
you can help make a real difference in peoples lives.....we are looking for you!
Requirements:
• Exceptional verbal and written communications skills
• Computer skills with emphasis on accuracy of patient demographic information.
• Knowledge of Medical Terminology
• Medical Records experience a must
• Strong multi-tasking, planning, organization and execution skills
• Flexibility to adapt to a fast-paced, changing environment
• High School or equivalent (GED) and medical records certification
Blackstone~Ney Ultrasonics has an immediate need for an
ELECTRICIAN OPENING
Responsibilities Include:
* Layout, wire and install master control panels, install
conduit, wireway and junction boxes on machinery.
Able to read and work from electrical schematics.
* Trouble shoot job as it is being built on a daily basis.
* Expedite all parts necessary to build project, to be sure
there will be no down time on the job which could delay
or put the machine behind schedule.
* Aid and assist engineering in the diagramming of the
machine.
* Operate all equipment necessary to perform this job,
i.e. pipe threader,pipe bender, various hand tools,
and meters, bandsaw /chopsaw,volt tester, amp clamp,
levels, wire strippers, hydraulic punch.
* Other functions as directed.
Qualified candidate must have:
High school diploma, or equivalent, with 3 years job-related
experience in a factory environment.
If interested in applying for this position, please email a current
resume with salary requirements to:
Chanelle Huesing
[email protected]
Would you like to work in an atmosphere
That offers growth and teamwork?
Join our Team of Professionals
RN Supervisor
3-11 - Full Time
Super working conditions,
Excellent compensation package
Including 401K! Weekly paycheck!
Send resume via mail, e-mail or fax to
Human Resources
Of Salamanca
Interested candidates may apply at:
of Salamanca
451 Broad St., Salamanca, NY 14779
P: 716-945-1800 • F: 716-945-5867
Email: [email protected]
451 Broad Street
Salamanca, NY 14779
Call (716) 945-1800 • Fax (716) 945-5867
Email: [email protected]
For more information go to
www.absolutcare.com
CLASSIFIEDS
July 20, 2015
JAMESTOWN GAZETTE
www.JamestownGazette.com
13
[email protected]
Fax: 716-338-1599 Phone: 716-484-7930
$
CareGivers
We are looking for
MERCHANDISE
LEGAL NOTICES
CNAs, HHAs, PCAs
SERVICES
and those who have life experience that may be applied
to training requirements. Must be dependable,
caring and meet health requirements.
Reliable transportation required.
915 Miscellaneous
Gazette Deals
1987 SKEETER BOAT
TRAILER: 70HP Johnson
12000 OBO Trade for 14’
Alum with Motor. Call
716-969-5325
FOR SALE: Honeywell
Portable Generator 5500
Watt Paid $679 asking
$550. Used once. Call
716-782-3449
PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIED
AD HERE: E-mail classifieds@
jamestowngazette.com
LEGAL NOTICE
A.G. PEASE, RN
CONSULTING PLLC
Articles of Organization
filed with the Secretary of
State of New York (SSNY)
on 7/7/15. Office in Chautauqua County. SSNY is
the designated agent of
PLLC upon whom process against it may be
served. SSNY shall mail
copy of process to: 6506
East Quaker Street, Suite
200, Orchard Park, NY
14127. Purpose: Any lawful purpose.
July 13, 20, 27, Aug. 3, 10,
17, 2015 - JG
CLASSIFIEDS@
JAMESTOWN
GAZETTE.COM
Place Your
Classified Ad
Today!
TUTORING AVAILABLE
by experienced teacher in
all Academic Areas, including Mathematics and Science, French and Spanish.
Thank You. Janice A. Rial.
118 Broadhead Avenue,
Jamestown, NY 14701
716-488-0335
EOE/AA/M/F/D/V
• Maintenance technician •
The Maintenance Department has an immediate opening for maintenance technician.
LOST AND
FOUND
LOST - At 118 Broadhead
Avenue in Jamestown,
New York, small grey/
white cat. 716-488-0335
Visit
Contact CareGivers at 484-9113
for more information.
Jamestown Gazette
ONLINE
FOOD PRODUCTION WORKERS
Local area food production company need people for
aLL ShIftS.
Will train good workers.
JOB DESCRIPTION:
• Responsible for repairing multiple types of CNC and industrial woodworking machinery.
• Performs preventative maintenance
• Provide emergency/unscheduled repairs of production equipment during production and
performs scheduled maintenance repairs of production equipment during machine service.
• Necessary skills including but not limited to;
o Mechanical
o Electrical
o Pneumatic
o Hydraulic
o Working knowledge of PLC’s and troubleshooting
o Ability to work with VSD’s
o Work from blueprints
o Ability to read and understand schematics
o Ability to work safely with 480V and lower electrical equipment
o Experience with arc and torch welding
o Perform calibrations of equipment as needed
• Comply with safety regulations and maintain clean and orderly work areas.
• Perform all other duties as assigned or needed.
QuALifiCAtioNS:
• Position is full time
• Minimum 3 years related experience
• Clean driving record, valid driver license
• Must have strong attendance record
• Must be able to lift 50 lbs.
• Must be able to follow directions given, and work unsupervised.
• Must be willing to work overtime as needed or on scheduled special projects
• Must be willing to be on call when scheduled.
EDUCATION:
• High School Diploma or GED equivalent
• Certified training in the following helpful but not required
o Electrical o Pneumatic o Hydraulic o Mechanical
Apply to
Infinity Resources, Inc.
21 East 3rd Street Suite 222, Jamestown, NY 14701
716/708-6745
www.infinityresources.jobs
PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIED AD IN THE JAMESTOWN GAZETTE
All ads are placed FREE of charge - NO Firewood, Animals, or Weaponry
[email protected]
Fax: 716-338-1599
Phone: 716-484-7930
CONTACT US TODAY
TO PLACE YOUR AD
$
SALE
HERE
interested candidates please submit resume with cover letter and salary requirements
via e-mail to: [email protected] or [email protected]
14
JAMESTOWN GAZETTE
www.JamestownGazette.com
CLASSIFIEDS
2015-2016 DISTRICT VACANCY
Anticipated Elementary/High
School Assistant Principal
Applications available at the
Southwestern District Office
or on the school website:
swcs.wnyric.org
EOE
July 20, 2015
PROGRAM AND TRANSPORTATION
ASSISTANT
Part Time Regular • First Shift (Day) • 34 Hours a week
Assist elderly clients in day program for older adults. Assist with
activity programming, transportation , nutrition and personal care.
Qualifications:
High School Diploma/GED • 1 year experience • PCA, CNA, HHA
Chautauqua Adult Day Care
358 East 5th, Jamestown, NY 14701
Email: [email protected]
Fax to 716-665-4822 Attn : Personnel
No Calls.
SERVICE COORDINATOR
RN Supervisor
Jamestown
In Jamestown
For TBI and NHTD waiver.
Qualifications: Bachelor’s degree and two (2) years experience
providing service coordination for individuals with disabilities
and/or seniors and knowledge about community resources.
Medicaid Service Coordination experience a plus!
COME JOIN OUR TEAM!
Email resume to:
Deborah@after care1.com
or
FAX: 716-894-0604
to Attn Debbie R.
Looking for RN with excellent clinical skills and leadership
qualities. Duties include clinical supervision in the home,
on the job training, Doctors orders, care planning,
and facilitating clinical team meetings.
Full and part time positions.
Email resume to:
Deborah@after care1.com
or
FAX: 716-894-0604
to Attn Debbie R.
SAVE
Time
20% to 60%
at any given time. Sit in a room and
watch a stranger’s vacation pictures
of the Grand Canyon, and you brain
engages one clock. Sit in the same
room and watch Chevy Chase advance
on Wally World and your brain engages
another.
Contributing Writer
Bill Burk
And then one day you find
Ten years have got behind you
No one told you when to run
You missed the starting gun
Pink Floyd
Time tugs, inexorably, incessantly at
the world in general, and you and me
specifically. It doesn’t waiver, it doesn’t
sleep, it waits for no one. In sports, it
chases as you race it to the finish line;
running, swimming, the giant slalom. It
runs you down, counting backward to
nothing; basketball, football, hockey. It
stays still sometimes and waits you out;
baseball, cricket, golf. It fakes you out
in soccer. There’s the slow progress of
a baseball game, time all but ignored as
we count innings rather than seconds.
There’s the almost audible smash of a
Colorado timing system at the pool as
the LED digits climb and you still haven’t
reached the wall. There’s the anxious tick
tick tick as a game clock winds down;
10…9…8…7…6…5, and your team
is desperate to speed it up and end the
game, or make it stop (get out of bounds,
call time-out) before time literally, for
that situation, ends.
But, it doesn’t stop completely, does
it? It starts again. Hit reset, drop a new
puck, throw a first pitch, toss the jump
ball, fire the starter pistol.
And let me tell you this, time really is
relative, despite what a clock, or the
sun or the calendar tries to tell us.
You tell me if your hour in the dentist
chair is the same as your week at
Disneyland. Just because we all agree
sixty minutes makes and hour, doesn’t
mean a minute can’t feel like a lifetime
and an hour can flash by in an instant.
Time is a function of your mind; we
perceive time in terms of stimulus and
experience. The more stimulus thrown
at you, the more you have to attend,
and time literally moves faster. The less
stimulus, the slower it goes. According
to neuroscientist Warren Meck, there
isn’t a single “clock” that tells time in
our brains: There are multiple brain
clocks, all running at different speeds.
They all coexist inside our heads and
our brain decides which one to believe
IN stOre sPeCIAL
While Supplies Last
There’s a theory that we never truly
experience the present; that it takes
80 milliseconds to process the
information in front of us so that we
are, in fact, constantly experiencing
the past. This tape-delay is a product of
gathering information with the senses,
sending it through the nervous system,
our brains doing something with it,
then sending that product back out
to whatever body parts need to react.
What if you could cheat that gap in
time? What if you could cut processing
down to 70 milliseconds, or 60? Would
it make a difference?
This is how superior athletes make
their games look easy. They are able
to look at the same stimulus as you
and I and process it more quickly,
to close that 80 millisecond gap, to
move closer to the past…to slow time.
You and I look at a 100 mile-per-hour
fastball and we’re overwhelmed by the
stimulus, time speeds up and we don’t
have the time to swing the bat. The
professional baseball player bunches
the information from that same
stimulus into a single process through
experience and repetition, and handles
it more efficiently. According to
neuroscientist David Eagleman, that’s
because your brain always tries to
synchronize the sensory information
that it gets from your body in a way
that will make sense to you. It does this
by nudging your consciousness everso-slightly into the past.
A bizarre real-world implication is that
the taller you are, the further back you
live in the past, since it takes longer
for the information to travel through
your body. Shorter people actually
experience a more accurate version of
time, because there’s less of a delay in
information getting to the brain. Chew
on that for a few milliseconds.
A time to build up, a time to break down.
A time to dance, a time to mourn.
A time to cast away stones.
A time to gather stones together.
The Byrds …adapted from God
(Book of Ecclesiastes)
To read more of Bill Burk’s reflections,
astute observations and a rant or two
on the wide world of sports, visit www.
jamestowngazette.com and click on Bill
Burk’s page. The Jamestown Gazette
is proud to present our county’s most
creative and original writers for your
enjoyment and enlightenment.
√ Mark
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Appreciation Day!
Fri. July 31st
15
We are the Factory...No Middleman Markup!
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JAMESTOWN GAZETTE
www.JamestownGazette.com
SPORTS
July 20, 2015
J
OFF
Mattresses always starting
as low as $90.00!
Comparable Brand
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SPORTS with CODY CRANDALL
All-Star Week a
Huge Success for
MLB, or Was It?
Contributing Writer
Cody Crandall
Major League Baseball took center stage
this past week as the 2015 All-Star Game
took place at the Great American Ballpark
in Cincinnati, Ohio. All of the game’s top
players were on hand to determine which
league would have home field advantage
once the World Series rolls around in
October. Was it a success? Personally, I
think so. But many other people don’t feel
the same way.
Let’s start with the home run derby.
Some people were upset with the rule
changes, which included head to head
competition in each round between two
contestants and timed rounds. In the past,
the home run derby has been known for
its longer rounds, where contestants find
their groove like Josh Hamilton did in
2008, when he launched 28 home runs
at Yankees Stadium. With timed rounds,
performances like Hamilton’s will be
non-existent. But, I feel like the timed
rounds injected some life into the home
run derby. Almost all of the rounds came
down to the last second. Some of the
game’s most prolific power hitters went
toe to toe in every round until the clock
hit zero. As a fan, that brought intensity,
and that brought entertainment.
The actual All-Star game itself I feel
didn’t disappoint either. From the very
start the game had a big game feel, when
Mike Trout, the first batter of the game,
connected on a home run. Some of
baseball’s most dominant pitchers went
mokesho
S
s
’
O SUMMER HOURS
OPEN
SUN-WED 8AM-8PM
THURS-SAT 8AM-9PM
p
up against the best hitters in the game atbat after at-bat. That’s what makes the AllStar game so intriguing. The match-ups
and big plays never disappoint.
But, according to ESPN, this year’s AllStar Game drew a record low rating on
Fox. The event averaged 10.9 million
viewers, which was down from last year’s
11.3. However, you have to look at these
numbers in context. The MLB All-Star
game is still the highest rated All-Star game
in any of the four major North American
professional sports leagues. Also, this year’s
MLB’s All-Star game was Fox’s highest
rated Tuesday primetime event since game
six of the 2014 World Series.
Yes, the ratings and the average viewers
may be dropping, but the quality of play in
the All-Star game isn’t. Players play hard
in this game because of their competitive
nature, and because they want home field
advantage if their team makes it to the
World Series. This is a time to celebrate
the great shape the game of baseball is in.
Cody Crandall is an intern at the Jamestown
Gazette. To read more of his insights,
commentaries, and news about the world
of sports and the Jamestown Jammers,
visit www.jamestowngazette. com. The
Jamestown Gazette is proud to present our
county’s most creative and original writers
for your enjoyment and enlightenment.
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JAMESTOWN GAZETTE
www.JamestownGazette.com
BUSINESS
July 20, 2015
DEALER SHOWCASE
ON BUSINESS
Brick City Market & Deli
DEALER
SHOWCASE
Owner Jeremy Hirliman stands proudly in front
of his food truck in Lakewood, NY
Farmer Brown’s Beef and Moooore
Andrew Anderson stands by the brick oven where they cook
the pizzas at the Brick City Market and Deli
Article Contributed by
Julia Eppehimer
Andrew and Amanda Anderson have
been all over the world. They’ve seen
big cities, small towns and third world
countries. Through all of their travels,
they noticed something about the busy
city areas and decided to bring a new
business to the downtown Jamestown
area. Brick City Market and Deli
officially opened on July 1, 2015.
“Every downtown that I’ve been to
all around the world has a bunch of
places for people to go to mingle. It’s
not just a couple restaurants, it’s a lot
of restaurants,” Andrew described.
He believes that more restaurants
downtown will increase the overall
energy of the urban area. “The more
for people to come to the city, to walk
around and do, the better.”
The idea for a market came from the
local people. At city council meetings,
representatives would share the
residents’ desire for a local grocery store,
within walking distance downtown.
Now that they are home from living
overseas, Andrew and Amanda listened.
“All the local residents in the Hotel
Jamestown, the Chadakoin Building,
the Covenant Manor, and all the local
surrounding residencies…we found
out pretty much the main thing they
were missing here was some type of
a grocery market and deli,” Andrew
explained. When his good friend, who
owns the building on the corner of 4th
and Cherry, had a space available right
downtown, Andrew knew it was time to
move forward.
It’s only been a year since the Andersons
moved back to America. For the past
seven years they have worked as teachers
in Germany and the Dominican
Republic. That was after they lived
in Florida. That was after Andrew
managed Webb’s in Mayville. That was
after he went away to school. And after
all these years and places, he decided to
come back to Jamestown.
“I really have loved the development
in downtown Jamestown,” Andrew
explained. “Their urban design plan, and
what they’re really trying to do down
here is awesome.”
So he thought he’d get in on the action.
The former teacher tried his hand at the
culinary arts, and put together some
interesting sandwich combinations.
“The mixtures of the sandwiches were
either combos that I’d tried myself or
thought sounded good together,” he
laughed.
His fingerprints can be seen in
sandwiches like the Burns & Allen,
Andrew’s personal favorite. Slow
roasted turkey, buffalo chicken breast,
Article Contributed by
Julia Eppehimer
pepperoni, provolone and pepper jack
cheese, and a bit of ranch to ease off the
spice. “I like spicy stuff,” he admitted.
“We’ve been in different places and seen food
stands,” Jeremy Hirliman explained. “We
thought it’d be a good idea to try one.” Just as
simple as that. Jeremy and his business partner
Dennis Brown talked about the idea, and finally
decided to go ahead and try it last July.
The names of the dishes come from
famous movies, sitcoms and comedians
who have passed away. Andrew
researched old comedians and added
a few of his personal favorites to the
list. “We just decided to join in on the
comedy bandwagon down here,” he
said. At the top of the list is “The Lucy,” a
specialty sandwich that features corned
beef, sauerkraut, Swiss cheese, and 1000
Island dressing on ciabatta bread.
The family environment is mirrored in the
workplace itself, where Jeremy’s 12-year-old
and 18-year-old children come over from
their home in Busti to work in the food truck.
“Everybody comes and helps out,” Jeremy said.
He is excited to share this experience with his
Difficulty
Medium
children
and :his
wife.
It is quite the experience to eat at Farmer Brown’s
Beef and Moooore. The name hints at the fun
atmosphere Jeremy and Dennis have created
around their brightly colored food truck.






They do more than just serve food at Farmer
Brown’s. There is a “fun wheel” for customers
to spin, and special events throughout the
summer season. In June they had a cruise-in at
the food truck, complete with prizes.

He never went to culinary school or owned a
restaurant before; the food truck was just something
Week of 7/20/15 - 7/26/15
he thought would be nice for Jamestown.

 
Farmer Brown’s Beef and Moooore is located
on Route 394 in Lakewood, just past the
Chautauqua Mall. They are open May-October
Copyright 2015 by The Puzzle Syndicate
from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. To order food for pick up,
call 716-450-9862.
“People really like to sit outside and enjoy the
weather,” he said. “We don’t get a long summer,
so when it’s nice out people like to sit outside.
They can sit inside the rest of the year.”
Of course, Jeremy doesn’t mind the colder
“What the downtown needs is more
variety of things to go and do,” he
asserted. “The more people you bring to
the downtown, the livelier it gets…It’s
definitely on its way back up.”
 
 
That’s possibly his favorite part, aside from
the pulled pork. He worked a variety of jobs
before he opened the food truck, but there is
something unique about this type of service.
“The amount of different people that stop every
day,” Jeremy decided was his favorite thing
about his new business venture.
But the food is far from boring. “People don’t
realize all the different food that we have,” Jeremy
said. It’s certainly a step up from a hot dog
cart. They have 10 different melt sandwiches,
sloppy joes, chicken tenders, brisket and ribs.
Their most popular dish, and Jeremy’s personal
favorite, is the pulled pork. “We smoke it every
day, so it’s excellent,” he said.
Be it planned or not, the Brick City
Market & Deli has a lot to offer
Jamestown, as far as groceries,
sandwiches and a place to hang out.
Brick City Spirits is set to open in the
next couple of weeks in the Hotel
Jamestown building, an expansion of
Andrew’s idea to bring more life to
downtown.
 
Though it’s been only a year, Jeremy believes
he has found something that he wants to do
forever. “I’m very excited. It’s a lot of work,
but it’s definitely something I want to keep
doing…I like the people.”
The tables are adorned with different colored
umbrellas and flowers. The truck itself is painted
in bright, eye-popping hues, while a red, white
and blue star-spangled trolley sits adjacent to it
as a storage unit. Even if the food were boring,
an afternoon spent there would not be.
The name Brick City also pays tribute to
Jamestown. It acknowledges the unique
brick streets that still line the town,
as well as the brick oven in which the
pizzas are cooked, and the menagerie
of bricks that support the walls of the
deli. “It ended up being a little brick city
inside of here,” he laughed. “That part
worked out later.”

PUZZLE SOLUTIONS
Solution to Crossword:
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7/1
The Jamestown native brought some flavor
to the community with the new food truck,
both figuratively and literally. Together with
Dennis, they have created a family-friendly
environment, right down to the cartoon cow
and chicken covered trash cans.
“We did a little research on it, opened it up,
and we’ve been learning ever since,” Jeremy
explained. “The people really liked the outdoor
eating experience; that’s the advantage of it.”
“It makes it interesting; nobody does it,”
Andrew said. “I mean, there are places
in NY City and Los Angeles that have
delis with movie names,” he admitted,
but a list that includes NY, LA, and
Jamestown is pretty impressive. “Big city
taste, small town flavor” is their motto.
The Jamestown Gazette is proud to
recognize our dealers, outstanding
corporate citizens of our county. This week,
the Gazette especially thanks Brick City
Market & Deli for the faithfully carrying
The Jamestown Gazette, The People’s
Paper, for the benefit of their customers, our
readers.
Even in the rain, Farmer Brown’s offers good
food. “We have the call-in service, so people
can call in their orders and just stop and pick
it up,” Jeremy explained. Some brave souls may
even dare to sit outside, sheltered under a large
orange umbrella.
Week of
In New York City, hot dog stands grace every
corner. In Miami, vendors stand on sidewalks
and call out their wares. And in Lakewood, NY
Farmer Brown’s Beef and Moooore provides a
fun eating venue for locals.
His favorite pizza is called Blazing
Saddles. The name is enough to warn
of this particular entrée’s spice, a brick
oven pizza loaded with pepperoni,
jalapeños, and the “ultimate firehouse
cheese blend.” If these fiery concoctions
seem too much, there are plenty of other
varieties to try, including the build-yourown subs.
To check out the pizza and sandwiches,
or to shop for supplies to make your own,
browse the variety at Brick City Market
& Deli on the corner of 4th and Cherry
in downtown Jamestown. Call 716-4844844, or visit www.brickcitymarket.com
for more information.
weather. He’s lived in Western New York his
whole life, and can’t imagine life anywhere else.
“Yeah, I don’t mind the snow,” he smiled. “Just
wish it didn’t rain so much.”
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Solution to Sudoku
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JAMESTOWN GAZETTE
www.JamestownGazette.com
FOOD & DINING
July 20, 2015
17
Restaurant
The
CONNECTION
“Super Pack!”
Pizza & Wings
• 15 Hotdogs or
Hamburgers
• 2 Large
Fries
Only...
• 2 Large
Drinks
Hide-A-Way
RESTAURANT
& LOUNGE
Hand Tossed-Stone Baked
DINE IN • CARRY OUT
MONDAY & TUESDAY-$27.00
Large 16” Cheese, 1 topping
NY Style Pizza & 20 wings,
Pitcher of Beer (Bud Light • Labat Blue)
21 !
19
$
Fresco
99
Dine In Only
WEDNESDAY-$12.00
Any Large 16” Specialty Pizza
15 to Choose From Dine In Only
THURSDAY-$8.99
LASAGNA Dinner Dine In Only
SUNDAY-$15.99
2 Glasses House Wine & Medium
Cheese 1 Topping Pizza
EVERY DAY SPECIALS DINE IN CARRY OUT
Large 16” Cheese 1 Topping 20 Wings $21.99
2 Large 16” Pizza, 1 Topping $19.99
824 Foote Ave.
Jamestown, NY
(716) 484-9646
2 East Second St., Jamestown
664 - 6464
Mon-Thur 11a-10p•Fri & Sat 11a-Mid•Sun noon-9p
• Breakfast served all day •
STEAMBURG, NY
716-354-6995
Exit 17 To Steamburg Left At
Stop Sign 2/10 Mile on the Left
On the way to the Casino!
Easy On...Easy Off!
Prime Rib
WE CATER ANY EVENT!
Daily Specials Available!
monday night
Includes Carrots, Celery &
Blue Cheese or Ranch Dressing
$2.00 Beer - $2.00 Mixes
wednesday night
3 Main St.
Beer & Burger
w/ ENDLESS FRIES
$9.00
MONDAY
All Day: 3 Hard Tacos for $2.49
TUESDAY
All Day: Margaritaville for $2.99
w/Food Purchase
$2.00 OFF Fajita Dinners
WEDNESDAY
All Day: Mexican Revolution
2 Dinners for $15.00
THURSDAY
Family Night: 4 to 10 pm
1/2 Price Kids Meals & Pitchers of Pop
w/Purchase of Any Dinner Entree
1 LARGE
PIZZA
FRIDAY
All Day: Cantina Fiesta! Pitchers of Pop,
Beer, Sangria Coolers $3.99 to $6.99
w/Food Purchase
(with 1 topping)
Plus
SATURDAY
20 WINGS
Margarita Pitchers $10.99
Any Flavor w/Food Purchase
Only
22
$
75
(includes tax)
902 East 2nd St., Jamestown, NY 14701
OPEN:
Mon-Thurs 11 am to 10 pm
Fri & Sat 11 am to 11 pm
Closed Sun
(716) 484-0600
Dinner Hours:
Sun.-Thurs. 4:00-10:00, Fri. & Sat. 4:00-11:30
Lunch Hours:
203 EAST THIRD ST.
JAMESTOWN • 488-0226
Wed.-Fri. 11:00-1:30
Peterson Candies Passes the Candy Baton
Article Contributed by
Steve and Chris
Frankson
Peterson’s Candies has served
the community, the country
and even some areas of the
world with friendly service
and fine chocolates since 1931.
Steve and Chris Frankson
have had the extreme pleasure
of owning and operation
Peterson’s for the past 25
years and consider the candy
store, their employees and
customers a family…a home
away from home.
Time has passed, and the
Franksons have come to a
place in life where it is time
to pass the baton. While
advancing into retirement,
the Franksons desire to make
themselves available to aid
their successor in being able to
maintain and continue the fine
quality Peterson’s has become
so well known for.
It has been a very hard decision
to make to retire, which will
require finding someone
interested in continuing the
legend and history of one of
Chautauqua County’s oldest
and finest candy stores.
Peterson’s slogan is “Candy
you remember as a childthe candy your children
will remember” and it is
the Frankson’s desire that
whoever replaces them would
continue in the tradition
of fine chocolates and
wonderful memories.
The Franksons are working
closely with Consultant/
Licensed Broker, Century
21 Turner Brokers, William
Salter, and any inquiries you
may have in regards to Peterson’s
Candies should be directed to,
Mr. Salter at 716-640-4360 or
email: [email protected].
18
JAMESTOWN GAZETTE
www.JamestownGazette.com
July 20, 2015
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July 20, 2015
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Ashlynn, Emma, Lily, Daisy,
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MaryAnn & Peter Carlo
Audene Jarosz, Rick Lunquist,
Paul & Sun Cunningham
Norm Owen, Carol Winterburn,
Brenda Moran, Sandy Gullotti,
Catie Joslyn, Shannon Neubauer
Mike Whiting shows off the
Bear carved from his tree
Barbara Bennett
Eileen Leary
Pat Solomon
selling tickets for
Maple Springs
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Louise Pillittieri
Karen Johnson
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Harbor Knights
Bill Moran & Diane Clark
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Philip Swiantek
sharing his garden
19
20
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2012 MAZDA 2
$
2012 CHEVY IMPALA
2011 CHRYSLER 200LX
4 Cyl, 4 Dr, Auto, Air, Tilt,
Cruise, PW, PL, 52K.
V6, Auto, Air, Tilt, Cruise,
Wheels, CD, Only 59K.
HURRY!
HURRY!
217
Per Mo
218
Per Mo
$
$
2013 FORD TAURUS SEL
2014 FORD FOCUS SE
Auto, Air, Tilt, Cruise, PW,
PL, 59K.
4 Cyl, 4 Dr, Auto, Air, Tilt,
Cruise, PW, PL, 69K.
4 Dr, Hatchback, Auto, Air,
Tilt, Cruise, PW, PL, 46K.
Auto, Air, Tilt, Cruise, PW,
PL, 24K.
4 Dr, Auto, Air, Tilt, Cruise,
PW, PL, 61K, Super Clean.
HURRY!
HURRY!
HURRY!
HURRY!
HURRY!
188
Per Mo
$
169
Per Mo
198
Per Mo
$
$
269
Per Mo
$
269
Per Mo
$
All payments are at 3.9% 09 and newer at 84 mo. 4.9% 08 and older @ 72 mo. for qualified buyers with approved credit. Must make at least $800/mo for guaranteed credit approval.
716-484-4300
Get PRE-APPROVED at...
www.larryspacclakewood.com
373 FAIRMOUNT AVE.
LAKEWOOD, NY
Lucille Ball Little Theatre presents...
Join us as we take a dollop of “Grease”, mix in some
“Pump Boys and Dinettes” and add a generous dose of
“Forever Plaid” for some high-octane fun!
Take a nostalgic journey with us as we travel the iconic
Route 66 from Chicago to Los Angeles.
Filled with laughs and familiar melodies that will
be sure to bring out the summer fun for all.
Creative Team:
Richard Hartling, producer
Anne Eklund, director
Holly Jones Weston, Choreographer
Jennifer Sears & Marjorie Switala,
rehearsal accompanists
PERfoRMAnCES:
Saturday, Aug. 1 12:30pm
Saturday, Aug. 1 5:00pm
Sunday, Aug. 2 2:00pm
Musical Review
Tickets available from any cast members, creative team,
at the Lucille Ball Little Theatre box office or at www.lucycomedyfest.com
All proceeds to benefit the Lucille Ball Little Theatre
18-22 E. Second St., Jamestown, NY
716-499-9884 or 716-483-1095