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Your Community Recorder newspaper serving all of Campbell County C AMPBELL C AMPBELL COUNTY RECORDER $1.00 THURSDAY, APRIL 14, 2016 BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS Vol. 19 No. 17 © 2016 The Community Recorder ALL RIGHTS RESERVED The Campbell County Recorder 654 Highland Suite 27 Fort Thomas, KY 41075 For the Postmaster Published weekly every Thursday. Periodicals postage paid at Newport, KY 41071 USPS 450130 Postmaster: Send address change to The Campbell County Recorder 654 Highland Suite 27, Fort Thomas, KY 41075 Annual subscription: Weekly Recorder In-County $18.02; All other in-state $23.32; Out-of-state $27.56; Kentucky sales tax included News ................... 283-0404 Retail advertising .. 513-768-8404 Classified advertising 513-421-6300 Delivery ................. 781-4421 See page A2 for additional information Contact us WHO HAS TIME FOR INJURIES? WE DO. Call 859-301-BONE (2663) www.OrthoNKY.com The #1 Choice in NKY Orthopaedics HOW TO REACH US Delivery - To start or stop delivery, or for information on making payments, call 781-4421. Classified ads - To place a classified ad in Community Recorder papers, call 513-421-6300. Display advertising - For information on display ads, call 513-768-8404. Obituaries - Email obituaries to [email protected]. ALEXANDRIA - Campbell County Fiscal Court wasn’t ready to debate the idea of cre- ating a needle exchange Wednesday night. Supporters and an opponent of a free needle exchange plan showed up to the meeting any- way to share their views. Campbell County Judge-ex- ecutive Steve Pendery said he talked with people before the meeting started to ask them to keep their comments brief be- cause needle exchange was not on the night’s agenda. “It (needle exchange) will be on the agenda for a future meet- ing,” Pendery said. Opponents and supporters will be invited to speak to Fiscal Court at any meeting where a needle exchange program is be- ing considered, he said. Kenton County approved a plan March 29 for a mobile nee- dle exchange unit in Covington. Kenton County and Covington officials have both stipulated ei- ther Campbell County or Boone County need to join them in cre- ating a needle exchange for a plan to move forward. The Northern Kentucky Indepen- dent District Health Depart- ment’s District Board of Health still has to give approval as well. The health board approved an initial plan for needle ex- changes at health centers in Co- vington, Newport and Florence to fight the spread of hepatitis C and other diseases. Erik Hermes, of Wilder, said he is concerned a needle ex- change program will cost tax- payers and “perpetuate” heroin use. Hermes said he hasn’t found statistics to back up claims a needle exchange will improve public health. “Why is this needed,” Her- mes said. Hermes said he believes any Campbell County commission- er with ties to St. Elizabeth Healthcare, which is advocat- ing for the needle exchange, should recuse themselves from any needle exchange vote for ethical reasons. Commissioner Tom Lampe of Fort Thomas is a St. Elizabeth Healthcare Foundation board member. Lampe did not re- spond to Hermes’ comments. Pendery said there are good statistics about health impacts the Fiscal Court already has. “And on the evening when we treat the subject of heroin, we hope to do it in a comprehensive way and look at the broad spec- trum of things that we are al- ready doing to combat the scourge of heroin and not just individual portions of the pro- gram,” Pendery said. Campbell County, which is creating a jail drug treatment program, has already been working to address heroin, he said. “The epidemic is in full swing and getting worse,” Pen- dery said. Northern Kentucky Hates Heroin’s Noel Stegner, of Fort Thomas, said a needle exchange is needed to work in concert with more treatment beds. Stegner’s grandson Nicholas Specht died three years ago from a heroin overdose at age 30 at his parent’s Fort Thomas home. Stegner said needle pro- grams are working in 225 other U.S. communities – some oper- ating for as long as 30 years. Drug users can already get heroin as easily as people can order a pizza, he said. “If you also need a syringe it will cost a little bit more, but it will be delivered,” Stegner said. “It might be a new one or a used one, a dirty one or hopefully a clean one.” A needle exchange is not the answer for stopping heroin by Campbell County nears needle exchange talk FILE PHOTO Campbell County Fiscal Court is preparing to discuss a possible needle exchange to prevent disease and prevent accidental needle sticks from used syringes like this one found on a street. Chris Mayhew [email protected] See EXCHANGE, Page 2A CALIFORNIA - Local groce- ry store chain owner Vic Dawn has purchased the southern Campbell County golf course where he is a member. Dawn and his Marketplace grocery store chain business partner Scott Schoulties have purchased the 120-acre Flagg Springs Golf Course at 3670 Smith Road in California, Ken- tucky, off the AA Highway. Schoulties, 47, and Dawn, 54, purchased the privately owned course in March from Campbell County businessman Jack Mor- ris for an undisclosed price. The course, which is closed for improvements, will reopen to the public April 23. Flagg Springs members are able to play for free at either the North- ern Kentucky Golf Club in Pen- dleton County or A.J. Jolly Golf Course in southern Campbell County off U.S. 27. Schoulties and Dawn, High- land Heights natives, own Mar- ketplace grocery stores in Cali- fornia near the Flagg Springs course and in Ludlow and Day- ton, Kentucky. Dawn said he is an avid golf- er and saw the course needed renovations and new market- ing. “It was for sale and we thought we could add some things with our retail experi- ence,” he said. About $20,000 has already been spent to make the greens smoother. “It really needed some TLC,” Dawn said. Several holes were 300 yards for par. For women golfers, new tees were created with shorter distances to meet par. “We added 14 new tee boxes to make it challenging, but fair,” Dawn said. Flagg Springs Golf Course may not be the name for much longer. A Saturday, April 16, “Nam- ing Rights Invitational” will be a tournament to choose a new name. Golfers or anyone can post name suggestions by April 13 at the Flagg Springs Golf Course Facebook page. Dawn and Schoulties will pick four finalists to compete in the tournament themselves or have another player represent them. “Not only will the four final- ists be the first golfers to play on our new and improved course, but the winner will get to choose the new name of the course,” Dawn said. Golfers returning to play at the course will find an im- proved course and new meal specials at the course’s club- house restaurant, he said. “We’re going to take care of the golfers,” Dawn said. For Flagg Springs Golf Course information, visit bit.ly/flaggcourse Grocers buy Campbell County golf course THANKS TO FLAGG SPRINGS GOLF COURSE A worker fertilizes the greens at Flagg Springs Golf Course in California, Kentucky, as part of a revamp new owners Vic Dawn and Scott Schoulties are undertaking at the 18-hole course in southern Campbell County. THANKS TO VIC DAWN Highland Heights residents and Marketplace grocery store chain owners Scott Schoulties and Vic Dawn have purchased Flagg Springs Golf Course in California, Kentucky. Chris Mayhew [email protected]

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Page 1: Campbell county recorder 041416

Your Community Recordernewspaper serving all ofCampbell County

CAMPBELLCAMPBELLCOUNTY RECORDER $1.00

THURSDAY, APRIL 14, 2016 BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS

Vol. 19 No. 17© 2016 The Community

RecorderALL RIGHTS RESERVED

The Campbell County Recorder

654 HighlandSuite 27

Fort Thomas, KY 41075

For the PostmasterPublished weekly every Thursday.

Periodicals postage paid at Newport, KY 41071USPS 450130

Postmaster: Send address change toThe Campbell County Recorder

654 Highland Suite 27, Fort Thomas, KY 41075Annual subscription: Weekly Recorder In-County $18.02; All otherin-state $23.32; Out-of-state $27.56; Kentucky sales tax included

News ...................283-0404Retail advertising ..513-768-8404Classified advertising 513-421-6300Delivery .................781-4421See page A2 for additional information

Contact us

WHO HASTIME FORINJURIES?WEDO.

Call 859-301-BONE (2663)

www.OrthoNKY.comThe #1 Choice in NKY Orthopaedics

HOW TO REACH USDelivery - To start or stop delivery, or for information on makingpayments, call 781-4421.Classified ads - To place a classified ad in Community Recorder papers,call 513-421-6300.Display advertising - For information on display ads, call 513-768-8404.Obituaries - Email obituaries to [email protected].

ALEXANDRIA - CampbellCounty Fiscal Court wasn’tready to debate the idea of cre-ating a needle exchangeWednesday night.

Supporters and an opponentof a free needle exchange planshowed up to the meeting any-way to share their views.

Campbell County Judge-ex-ecutive Steve Pendery said hetalked with people before themeeting started to ask them tokeep their comments brief be-cause needle exchange was noton the night’s agenda.

“It (needle exchange) will beon the agenda for a future meet-ing,” Pendery said.

Opponents and supporterswill be invited to speak to FiscalCourt at any meeting where aneedle exchange program is be-ing considered, he said.

Kenton County approved aplan March 29 for a mobile nee-dle exchange unit in Covington.Kenton County and Covingtonofficials have both stipulated ei-

ther Campbell County or BooneCounty need to join them in cre-ating a needle exchange for aplan to move forward. TheNorthern Kentucky Indepen-dent District Health Depart-ment’s District Board of Healthstill has to give approval as well.

The health board approvedan initial plan for needle ex-changes at health centers in Co-vington, Newport and Florenceto fight the spread of hepatitis Cand other diseases.

Erik Hermes, of Wilder, saidhe is concerned a needle ex-change program will cost tax-payers and “perpetuate” heroinuse. Hermes said he hasn’tfound statistics to back upclaims a needle exchange willimprove public health.

“Why is this needed,” Her-mes said.

Hermes said he believes anyCampbell County commission-er with ties to St. ElizabethHealthcare, which is advocat-ing for the needle exchange,should recuse themselves fromany needle exchange vote forethical reasons.

Commissioner Tom Lampeof Fort Thomas is a St. ElizabethHealthcare Foundation boardmember. Lampe did not re-spond to Hermes’ comments.

Pendery said there are goodstatistics about health impactsthe Fiscal Court already has.

“And on the evening when wetreat the subject of heroin, we

hope to do it in a comprehensiveway and look at the broad spec-trum of things that we are al-ready doing to combat thescourge of heroin and not justindividual portions of the pro-gram,” Pendery said.

Campbell County, which iscreating a jail drug treatmentprogram, has already been

working to address heroin, hesaid.

“The epidemic is in fullswing and getting worse,” Pen-dery said.

Northern Kentucky HatesHeroin’s Noel Stegner, of FortThomas, said a needle exchangeis needed to work in concertwith more treatment beds.Stegner’s grandson NicholasSpecht died three years agofrom a heroin overdose at age30 at his parent’s Fort Thomashome.

Stegner said needle pro-grams are working in 225 otherU.S. communities – some oper-ating for as long as 30 years.

Drug users can already getheroin as easily as people canorder a pizza, he said.

“If you also need a syringe itwill cost a little bit more, but itwill be delivered,” Stegner said.“It might be a new one or a usedone, a dirty one or hopefully aclean one.”

A needle exchange is not theanswer for stopping heroin by

Campbell County nears needle exchange talk

FILE PHOTO

Campbell County Fiscal Court is preparing to discuss a possible needleexchange to prevent disease and prevent accidental needle sticks fromused syringes like this one found on a street.

Chris [email protected]

See EXCHANGE, Page 2A

CALIFORNIA - Local groce-ry store chain owner Vic Dawnhas purchased the southernCampbell County golf coursewhere he is a member.

Dawn and his Marketplacegrocery store chain businesspartner Scott Schoulties havepurchased the 120-acre FlaggSprings Golf Course at 3670Smith Road in California, Ken-tucky, off the AA Highway.

Schoulties, 47, and Dawn, 54,purchased the privately ownedcourse in March from CampbellCounty businessman Jack Mor-ris for an undisclosed price.

The course, which is closedfor improvements, will reopento the public April 23. FlaggSprings members are able toplay for free at either the North-ern Kentucky Golf Club in Pen-dleton County or A.J. Jolly GolfCourse in southern CampbellCounty off U.S. 27.

Schoulties and Dawn, High-land Heights natives, own Mar-ketplace grocery stores in Cali-fornia near the Flagg Springscourse and in Ludlow and Day-ton, Kentucky.

Dawn said he is an avid golf-

er and saw the course neededrenovations and new market-ing.

“It was for sale and wethought we could add somethings with our retail experi-ence,” he said.

About $20,000 has alreadybeen spent to make the greenssmoother.

“It really needed some TLC,”Dawn said.

Several holes were 300 yardsfor par. For women golfers, newtees were created with shorterdistances to meet par.

“We added 14 new tee boxesto make it challenging, but fair,”

Dawn said.Flagg Springs Golf Course

may not be the name for muchlonger.

A Saturday, April 16, “Nam-ing Rights Invitational” will be atournament to choose a newname. Golfers or anyone canpost name suggestions by April13 at the Flagg Springs GolfCourse Facebook page.

Dawn and Schoulties willpick four finalists to compete inthe tournament themselves orhave another player representthem.

“Not only will the four final-ists be the first golfers to playon our new and improvedcourse, but the winner will getto choose the new name of thecourse,” Dawn said.

Golfers returning to play atthe course will find an im-proved course and new mealspecials at the course’s club-house restaurant, he said.

“We’re going to take care ofthe golfers,” Dawn said.

For Flagg Springs GolfCourse information, visitbit.ly/flaggcourse

Grocers buy Campbell County golf course

THANKS TO FLAGG SPRINGS GOLF COURSE

A worker fertilizes the greens at Flagg Springs Golf Course in California, Kentucky, as part of a revamp new ownersVic Dawn and Scott Schoulties are undertaking at the 18-hole course in southern Campbell County.

THANKS TO VIC DAWN

Highland Heights residents andMarketplace grocery store chainowners Scott Schoulties and VicDawn have purchased Flagg SpringsGolf Course in California, Kentucky.

Chris [email protected]

Page 2: Campbell county recorder 041416

NEWSA2 • CAMPBELL COUNTY RECORDER • APRIL 14, 2016

CAMPBELLCOUNTY RECORDER

NewsNancy Daly Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .578-1059, [email protected] Chris Mayhew Reporter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .578-1051,[email protected] Laughman Sports Editor . . . . . . . . . . . .513-768-8512,

[email protected] James Weber Sports Reporter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .578-1054, [email protected]

AdvertisingTo place an ad . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .513-768-8404,

[email protected]

DeliveryFor customer service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .781-4421 Sharon Schachleiter Circulation Manager . .442-3464,

[email protected] Judy Hollenkamp Circulation Clerk . . . . . . . . . .441-5537,

[email protected]

Content submitted may be distributed by us in print, digital or other forms

To place an ad in Community Classified, call 513-421-6300or go to www.communityclassified.com

Find news and information from your community on the Webcincinnati.com/northernkentucky

Calendar ................6AClassifieds ................CFood .....................7APuzzle ....................8BReal estate ............. 6BSchools ..................5ASports ....................1BViewpoints .............8A

Index

Family and Cosmetic DentistryThomas More Parkway

859-757-1002 • www.BeitingDental.com

No Dental Insurance?Ask about our wonderful discount plan!

Used by families, retirees, self-employed…Anyone without dental insurance!

CE-0000642503

The St. Elizabeth Healthcare mobile mammography vanwill be at a location near you this month.

www.stelizabeth.com

Call (859) 655-7400to make your appointment.

No cost screening mammograms for uninsured thanks to a generous grant from Greatergood.org.

Private insurances billed.

April 15 | 8-10 a.m.St. Elizabeth Physicians Walton, KY

April 15 | 2-3 p.m.United Ministries Erlanger, KY

April 16 | 8 a.m. to 12 p.m.Richwood Flea Market Walton, KY

April 20 | 9:30-11:30 a.m.Boone County Fiscal Court Burlington, KY

April 20 | 1:30-4:30 p.m.Burlington Elementary Burlington, KY

The upcoming mobile van schedule is as follows:

ALEXANDRIA -Campbell County SchoolsBoard of Education plansto hire a new superinten-dent this month.

Board members are in-terviewing superinten-dent candidates from apool of 14 applicants tolead the district’s 700 em-ployees and almost 5,000students. Campbell Coun-ty ranked 21st out of Ken-tucky’s 173 public school

districts onstate testscores in2015.

Camp-bell Coun-ty’s last su-perinten-dent, GlenMiller, re-

tired Nov. 1, 2015, after be-ing arrested Sept. 23 bypolice in Erlanger on a do-mestic violence charge.Miller took over as super-intendent in CampbellCounty in 2011. Boardmembers voted unani-mously in 2013 to extendMiller’s contract through

2018.Miller pleaded guilty

Jan. 14 in Kenton Countycourt to assaulting hiswife. Miller was given adiversionary programwhere he will complete asix-month program in-cluding an anger manage-ment course. Donald W.Pace was hired by theboard Nov. 2 last year tobe interim superinten-dent through June 30.

Board chairwomanJanis Winbigler saidboard members arechecking references.Candidate interviewshave been completed,

said Winbigler, the Dis-trict 1 representativefrom Highland Heights.

“The board hopes tomake a decision beforeMay 1,” she said.

Campbell County re-ceived “a very good poolof candidates,” Winbiglersaid.

Board members tooktheir time evaluating can-didates since they knew anew superintendent wasneeded since last October,she said.

“We’ve been vettingcandidates very thor-oughly and obviously westill are,” Winbigler said.

Winbigler said ascreening committee metto review candidate qual-ifications and forwardedrecommendations to theboard.

Screening committeemembers were:

» District 2 boardmember Gary Combs ofCold Spring (board repre-sentative).

» Campbell CountyHigh School Englishteacher Bridget Brown(teacher representative).

» District elementaryteaching and learningspecialist Myssi Turner(teacher representative).

» Campbell CountyMiddle School PrincipalJason Smith (principalrepresentative).

» Christy Eby of Alex-andria (parent repre-sentative elected byschool parent teacher or-ganization presidents).

“The screening com-mittee did a good job ofnarrowing down the can-didates,” Combs said.

Committee membersmet twice to review re-sumes and qualifications,he said.

“I was a little surprisedwe did not have more ap-plicants,” Combs said.

School board closing in on new superintendentChris [email protected]

Winbigler

itself, Stegner said. A needle exchange,combined with more treatment and oth-er programs, is the answer, he said.

For an email copy of Fiscal Courtmeeting agendas call Campbell County

Fiscal Court Clerk Paula K. Spicer at 859-547-1803 or email [email protected]. Agendas are re-leased the day before each meeting.

Campbell County Fiscal Court meetsat 7 p.m. each first Wednesday of themonth in Alexandria and at 5:30 p.m.each third Wednesday of the month inNewport.

ExchangeContinued from Page 1A

A new drug use surveyof students in GreaterCincinnati and NorthernKentucky shows that mar-ijuana is more popularthan cigarettes for kids inthe region.

PreventionFirst re-leased results March 22 ofits 2016 Student Drug UseSurvey.

Alcohol remained themost highly reported use,with 16.3 percent of stu-dents self-reporting thatthey used it within thepast 30 days.

Tobacco stood at 8.2percent use in the past 30days and marijuana at 11.7percent

Nearly 40,000 studentsin grades seven through12 from 88 public and pri-vate schools in severalcounties in Greater Cin-cinnati and Kenton Coun-ty in Northern Kentuckywere among those sur-veyed.

They were askedwhether they’d used anyof 21 drugs, includingsmokeless cigarettes. Itwas the first of Preven-tionFirst’s surveys thatincluded the electronic orvapor inhalers, and 13.4percent of students re-ported using them.

Some good news: Alco-hol, tobacco and marijua-na use has declined sig-nificantly since 2000, ac-cording to the survey, andkids’ perception of theharm that drugs cause isfor the most part growing.

The exception wastheir perception of mari-juana harm as they getolder, said Mary Haag,president and CEO of Pre-ventionFirst.

As the students age,“their perception of harmdecreases and use in-creases,” Haag said.

She said Prevention-First and its parent-driven prevention coali-tions oppose the legaliza-tion of marijuana for med-ical or recreational use.Students hear and readabout the issue in themedia and on social mediaand can form their opin-ions in part from whatthey see, she said.

“We will continue to ad-vocate to keep marijuanaillegal, and medical mari-juana illegal as well,”Haag said.

“Marijuana has be-come very prevalent and

it’s becoming more so,”said Hamilton CountyCommissioner DennisDeters, who chairs theHamilton County HeroinCoalition. “It’s dangerousto our children and it en-hances their risk whenthey become adults for se-rious addiction.”

Nonmedical use of pre-scription painkillers,which has been linked tothe heroin epidemicacross the country, amongstudents was at 4.6 per-cent, and heroin use, thesurvey results show, waslow, at 1.4 percent, the sur-vey shows.

The heroin result wascomforting to MaryWolff, director of the Co-alition for a Drug-FreeClermont County, whosaid her county is feelingthe scourge of heroin ad-diction.

“We’re very thrilled to

see that our youth reallyseem to understand thedanger,” Wolff said. “Un-fortunately, we have a lotof kids that while they’renot using, they’re seeingothers in their family ...using.”

Wolff and Haag saidanother of their concernsis that students are re-porting their first use of adrug at 13, “a pivotal age,”Haag said.

PreventionFirst is anonprofit organizationthat works to improvehealth of residents by theprevention of substanceabuse throughout life.Haag said the organiza-tion uses a multi-prongedapproach to curbing sub-stance misuse that in-cludes, but isn’t limited to,community involvement,evidence-based research,parent, school and peereducation and support.

Survey: Kids use pot over cigarettesTerry [email protected]

THE ENQUIRER/CARA OWSLEY

Mary Haag, president and CEO of PreventionFIRST, releasesthe 2016 Student Drug-Use Survey on Tuesday.

Page 3: Campbell county recorder 041416

APRIL 14, 2016 • CCF RECORDER • 3ANEWS

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Because of the cold andrainy weather, the Com-munity Recorder has ex-tended the deadline in our“Beautiful Spring Placesin Northern Kentucky”project. The new deadlineis Monday, April 25.

We are inviting read-ers to take photographs ofthe most beautiful springscenes at identifiableplaces in Boone, Camp-bell and Kenton counties.Please tell us about yourphoto in no more than 50-75 words so we can sharethe location with readers.Local landmarks are en-couraged but not a re-quirement.

Photos selected for anonline gallery and forprint publication will bechosen on the basis of vi-sual impact, originalityand local interest. The Re-corder staff, with assis-tance by The CincinnatiEnquirer’s photographerof the year Patrick Reddy,will select photos for pub-lication.

Submit your photo as adigital JPG, minimum of 1MB. Include your nameand hometown so that wecan give you credit if your

photo is used. Email to“Spring Places” at [email protected] by April 25. Goodluck!

Deadline extended for ‘NKYSpring Places’ photos

THANKS TO AMY STEWART

A magnolia tree blossom holds some rain on Second Street,the Licking Riverside Historic District, in Covington.

Big Bone Lick is look-ing for campground hostsfor the 2016 camping sea-son.

Campground hosts areunpaid, but are providedfree camping with elec-tricity and water hookupsin exchange for work. Thehosts are expected to stayat least two months, butcan stay the entire season.

The season runs fromApril 1 to Oct. 31.

Hosts are required towork 30 hours a week andget two days off. Dutiesinclude directing late ar-rivals to their campsites,after-hour fee, and distri-bution of park and activ-ity information. There arealso custodial duties.

Hosts will also receive

staff shirts, two-way ra-dio communication,weather radio and a golfcart.

If interested in becom-ing a camp host at BigBone Lick State HistoricSite, contact Park Man-ager, Dean Henson or call859-384-3522.

Big Bone Lick is lookingfor campground hosts

Page 4: Campbell county recorder 041416

4A • CCF RECORDER • APRIL 14, 2016 NEWS

Savings oG special order Dixie, Masland or Fabrica carpet. Not valid on previous purchases or anyother oGer. Cannot be combined with any other oGer. Photos are for illustration purposes only.Expires 4/30/16.

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INDEPENDENCE -Experience life under thebig top when Kelly MillerCircus visits Independ-ence May 13-14.

“We are one of the lastgood family eventsaround,” said Dave Wil-liams who does booking

for the circus. “The bestpart of the circus is thatyou can take a greatgrandmother and a 2-year-old and there’s noth-ing here to upset or offendthem. You can’t even dothat with a movie thesedays.”

Founded in 1938, thecircus travels on a fleet of36 vehicles and the color-

ful circus big top has aseating capacity of 1,100.Over the years, the KellyMiller Circus has gath-ered performers frommany nations.

This is the second timeKelly Miller Circus, oneof the few traditional cir-cuses left in the nation,will visit Independence.This year, they will host

four shows under the bigtop at 4:30 p.m. and 7:30p.m. Friday and 2 p.m. and5 p.m. Saturday at the In-dependence Town Center.

“We are coming backbecause we like Inde-pendence,” Williams said.“We had a good day lastyear and have agreed toexpand our perfor-mances. We really like thepeople of Independence.This year’s show will bedifferent than last year’s.We always change theshow to keep it fresh.”

This year’s show willhave a Western theme andfeature Lamont, the hu-man volcano who enter-tains with fire, a ropespinner and a zebra whowill perform math prob-lems with the audience.Williams is especially ex-cited about the show’sopening which will fea-ture a motorcycle riderwho will travel a wire thatstretches from theground to the top of thetent. The rider will per-form flips and varioustricks.

The circus will also of-fer, for purchase, facepainting, traditional cir-cus foods, and pony, cam-el and elephant rides.

Independence Parksand Recreation DirectorNita Brake said last year’sshow was “awesome” andshe’s looking forward toanother great event. Sheenjoys most the “unbe-lievable” trapeze artist.

“The show is really aunique experience,” shesaid. “Where else can youget two hours of enter-tainment that you don’tsee everyday for such anaffordable price. I’m real-ly looking forward to it. I

encourage people to pur-chase their tickets early.”

Pre-sale tickets areavailable at the Independ-ence City Building, AceHardware and Kroger inIndependence, andRemke Markets at Tur-keyfoot Road and TaylorMill. The cost is $12 forages 12 and up; $6 for ages

2 to 11 and children under2 are free. Cost the day ofshow is $16 for ages 12 andup; $8 for ages 2 to 11.

In addition to the show,the public is invited to seethe set-up, which will be-gin about 7 a.m. May 13. Acircus expert will be onhand to answer questionsduring this time.

Kelly Miller Circus to return to IndependenceMelissa [email protected]

PHOTOS THANKS TO KELLY MILLER CIRCUS

Founded in 1938, Kelly Miller Circus travels on a fleet of 36vehicles and the colorful circus big top has a seating capacityof 1,100.

A zebra will do math problems with the audience.

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SCHOOLSSCHOOLSACHIEVEMENTS | NEWS | ACTIVITIES | HONORS Cincinnati.com/northernkentucky

COMMUNITYRECORDEREditor: Nancy Daly, [email protected], 578-1059

FLORENCE – Boone CountyHigh School will be the homefor a new event for young cre-ators happening in April.

Northern Kentucky Maker-Space will present the WorldMaker & Inventor Expo from10 a.m. to 4 p.m. April 23 atBoone County High School.

The event is an opportunityto engage students in makingand inventing. According to apress release, more than 3,000students and parents are ex-pected to attend.

There will be presentationsand workshops focusing onrobotics, 3-D printing, drones,electronics and coding.

The event will kick off withthe running of the flamelesstorch, an Olympic-style relaywith student representativesfrom local high, middle andelementary schools.

More than 70 schools, com-panies and organizations inGreater Cincinnati will presentprojects and workshops.

“The Maker & InventorExpo is a celebration of prob-lem solving, invention, innova-tion and cutting-edge technol-ogy in our world and in educa-tion. The event will inspirestudents, parents, educatorsand the community with 21stcentury technology.” said Ryan

Kellinghaus, Expanded Learn-ing Opportunities Coordinatorfor Boone County Schools.

There will be a number ofcompetitions as well.

A 3-D Modeling and In-vention Competition is open toK-12 students. Prizes includecash and a Gorilla Maker 3-Dprinter.

The Outlaw Derby Race andthe Sumo-Bot Competitionswill showcase student innova-tion. There is also a Lego sculp-ture competition.

The Makerspace inviteseducators, parents, students,homeschoolers and schoolgroups in Northern Kentucky

and Greater Cincinnati to at-tend. Tickets can be purchasedat themakerexpo.com/tickets.html.

Students can register toparticipate athttp://bit.ly/MakerExpo.

Tickets cost $4 per student

and $6 per adult if purchasedonline and $5 per student and$7 per adult if purchased at thedoor. Educators get in freewith ID.

Profits will benefit theBoone County Education Foun-dation and NKY MakerSpace, a

regional program serving K-12students through field trips,workshops and internships.NKY MakerSpace is located inBurlington on Boone CountyFairgrounds.

3,000 young creators expected toattend NKY Maker & Inventor Expo

THE ENQUIRER/CAMERON KNIGHT

Ryle High School students David Holley, left, and Chandler Hoh work on their entry for the first RoboticsCompetition at the NKY MakerSpace.

Sarah [email protected]

WHAT IS AMAKERSPACE?A makerspace is an open communi-ty where individuals come togetherto share resources in a space thatfosters creative exploration for thebenefit of art, science and culture.They are places where people canexperiment with everything from3-D printers to a hammer and nailsunder the philosophy that everyonecan learn by having fun.Makerspaces have sprung up acrossthe nation in recent years, and nowBoone County Schools has provideda facility to create Kentucky’s firstK-12 makerspace facility open tostudents and families from acrossthe region.

In a 1938 issue of The NewYorker, Charles Addams pub-lished a single-panel cartoon ofa deeply cadaverous familywho would come to be knownand loved as the darkly co-medic Addams Family. Sincethe days of Addams’ first pub-lications, his cartoons havebeen adapted in almost everymedium. The charm of hischaracters comes from theirunapologetic fascination withthe deathly and gruesome andtheir playfully satirical dis-cussion of what it means to bea family.

More recently, “The Ad-dams Family” characters wereadapted for the stage, bringingnew life to the classic charac-ters obsessed with death.

“The Addams Family” tellsthe story of cartoonist Addams'iconic characters when theyare placed in a new and un-charted territory: normality.When a grown-up Wednesdaydecides to invite her new boy-friend and his plain, Midwest-ern family over to the AddamsFamily mansion for dinner, theAddams try to give their visi-tors a very normal evening,hiding their macabre sensibil-ities and their obsession withall things deceased. However,between a secret engagementannouncement, an array ofvibrantly dead relatives, and atruth-telling game of epic pro-portions, the Addams can'tseem to keep their morbidnature hidden.

Overall, Taylor HighSchool's production of “TheAddams Family” was brilliant-ly comedic and ghoulishly

charming. The cast's incred-ible chemistry brought theAddams' "family first" attitudeto life, and roped the audienceinto a quirky family tree, exag-gerated, yet reminiscent of ourown familial ties.

With his impeccable co-medic timing, Antonio Ortizperfectly embodied the iconicGomez Addams. Wielding afencing sword and a thickSpanish accent, Ortiz took anyopportunity to garner a laugh,while still allowing the charac-

ter to be heartfelt and genuine.Equally wonderful was hiscounterpart Eliana Batsakis asMorticia Addams. Batsakis notonly captured the suave indif-ference and nightmarish senti-ments expected of the charac-ter, but also added her ownflair with her wonderful vocalsand witty comedy.

In a cast of absurd and idio-syncratic characters, NateHawkins' portrayal of UncleFester proved to be a standout.With his goofy innocence and

hopeless romanticism, Haw-kins stole the show with "TheMoon and Me,” fully embrac-ing his character's ridiculousantics and allowing the audi-ence a break from the risingtensions of the second act.Additionally, Lucy Osbornestood out as the wildly eccen-tric Grandma. Never missingan opportunity for a comedicone-liner, whether scripted orad-libbed, Osborne gave one ofthe most memorable perfor-mances.

From a technical aspect, theshow was also brilliantly con-structed. Allison Leone, KayleeMcGinnis and Alex Kleier's setwas simply magnificent. Thestudents' hard work was evi-dent in the massive interior ofthe Addams mansion, reminis-cent of the iconic mansion ofthe 1964 TV series, but stillunique in its decorations fea-turing portraits of the cast'sown ancestors. The show'slighting crew was also to becommended, never missing abeat on its sharp and atmos-pheric cues.

At Taylor High School,Charles Addams' classic car-toon characters came to life,just as morbidly vibrant asthey've been since their firstappearance. “The AddamsFamily” was a darkly comedicexperience not soon to be for-gotten.

Charming ‘Addams Family’ delightsaudiences at Taylor High School

PROVIDED

Grandma (Lucy Osborne), Lurch (Eddie Couch), Wednesday (Jessica Lawrence), Pugsley (Nick Swope), and Fester(Nathan Hawkins) snapping along to “When You’re An Addams.”

ABOUT THE CAPPIES OFGREATER CINCINNATIThe Critics and Awards Programstrives to recognize Greater Cincin-nati’s talented community of youngwriters, performers, and technicalcrews. High school theater andjournalism students who participatein the Cappies program are trainedas critics, attend shows at otherschools, and write and publishreviews. At the end of the schoolyear, the student critics vote to giveawards to their fellow students foroutstanding productions, group andindividual performances, andachievements in technical cate-gories. Awards are presented at theannual Cappies Gala at the AronoffCenter. Learn more at cappies.org.

Ellie ConniffHighlands High School Cappies Critic Team

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C H E E R U P A L A M O P A S T R YL A T R I N E J U D A E A E L A I N EA V E N G E R A T L A N T I C O C E A NS E R I O S I N O U B O A TS A N E R U N E S C O A N N U S BI G A R A F T A L E R O N T A PC O L O R A D O R I V E R G O N D O L A

L E V E R E T G R A N D C A N A LG E E S E N A S S T E E L M I L L

O R S O R O O S T S M I T E N A EH I C S R O B C A T A S S B E I TI D A W A C O A S P E N S A S K SO I L T A N K E R H A N V E R S AA R A B I A N S E A T R A W L E RN O T A S T E C H E S A P E A K E B A YS N O R T S T E P P A R D O B E

S R S B A I M A I T R E C R O S SF E R R Y R U T H H O T E L

N E W Y O R K H A R B O R E V E L I N EA V A T A R A G E O N E R E E L E C TH A R D L Y N O W A Y E X P O S E S

FRIDAY, APRIL 15CruisesBB Riverboats Craft BeerfestCruise II, 9-11 p.m. Boarding at8 p.m., BB Riverboats, 101 River-boat Row, 15 craft breweriesrepresented and 60 differentbeers available to sample on this2 hour evening cruise. Eachticket includes 20 beer samples.VIP tickets include a private deckspace, appetizers, exclusive VIPbeer sample options, and earlyboarding privileges. Ages 21 andup. $50 General Admission; $75VIP. Reservations required.261-8500; www.bbriverboat-s.com. Newport.

Dining EventsAED Heart-Savers DinnerGala, 6:30 p.m., ReceptionsBanquet and Conference CenterErlanger, 1379 Donaldson High-way, Dinner, salsa dancing,entertainment, cash bar. $75couple, $40 single. Reservationsrequired. Presented by AEDHeart-Savers. 513-633-1321;www.aedheartsavers.org.Erlanger.

ExhibitsSilent Storytellers: SharingFamily Histories throughArtifacts, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.,Behringer-Crawford Museum,1600 Montague Road, Featuresselection of Northern Kentuckyfamily heirlooms and illustrateshow photos, clothing, art andother artifacts can be clues topast, revealing fascinatingdetails about lives of ancestorsand origins of family traditions.Included with admission. 491-4003. Covington.

Seahorses: Unbridled Fun, 10a.m. to 6 p.m., Newport Aquari-um, 1 Aquarium Way, A new,interactive exhibit where guestscan discover 10 species of sea-horses, sea dragons, trumpet-fish, shrimpfish and pipefish.The way the exhibit is designed;guests will be completely im-mersed in the world of seahors-es with something new toexperience around every corner.$15.99-$23.99; Free for childrenunder 2. 800-406-3474;www.newportaquarium.com.Newport.

Silent Storytellers Exhibit, 9a.m. to 5 p.m., Behringer-Craw-ford Museum, 1600 MontagueRoad, Features selection ofNorthern Kentucky familyheirlooms, showing how photos,clothing, art and other artifactscan be clues to past and reveal-ing fascinating details aboutancestors and family traditions.Included with museum admis-sion. $9. 491-4003; bcmuseu-m.org. Covington.

Health / WellnessSt. Elizabeth Healthcare Car-dioVascular Mobile HealthUnit, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., KrogerMarketplace Hebron, 3105 N.Bend Road, Screenings, riskappraisals and education tocommunity members. Free.Presented by St. ElizabethHealthcare. 962-4900;bit.ly/1M0tr0l. Hebron.

Literary - LibrariesTrivia Night, 7-8 p.m., BooneCounty Main Library, 1786Burlington Pike, Play trivia justfor fun. Bring own team orlibrary can put teams together.Free. Registration required.Presented by Boone CountyPublic Library. 342-2665. Bur-lington.

Used Book Sale, 4-8 p.m.,Boone County Main Library,1786 Burlington Pike, Hard-backs, paperbacks, CDs, videos,reference materials and more.On Sunday, all items sold bybag. Free. Presented by BooneCounty Public Library. 342-2665.Burlington.

AARP Tax Aide, 9-10 a.m.,Boone County Main Library,1786 Burlington Pike, Instead ofnumber system used in past,must call and make appoint-ment. Check AARP website(aarp.org) after Jan. 15, fornumber to call. Free. Regis-tration required. Presented byBoone County Public Library.342-2665; www.bcpl.org. Bur-lington.

On Stage - TheaterThe Last Five Years, 7:30 p.m.,The Carnegie, 1028 Scott Blvd.,Through April 24. $28. 957-1940;www.thecarnegie.com. Coving-ton.

RecreationJunior Class Bingo, 7 p.m., HolyCross High School, 3617 ChurchSt., Cafeteria. Doors open 6:30

p.m. Jitneys 7 p.m. Regularbingo starts 8 p.m. All proceedsbenefit the senior class trip toWashington, D.C. Ages 18 andup. Benefits Senior class trip toWashington D.C.. $5. 431-1335;[email protected].

Mahjong, 1-2 p.m., BooneCounty Public Library - SchebenBranch, 8899 U.S. 42, All skilllevels welcome. Free. Presentedby Scheben Branch Library.342-2665; www.bcpl.org. Union.

Bingo, 5:30-10 p.m., ErlangerLions Club Hall, 5996 BelairDrive, Clubhouse. Jitney starts at7 p.m., regular games at 7:45p.m. Ages 18 and up. Prices vary.Presented by Erlanger LionsClub. 727-0888. Erlanger.

SATURDAY, APRIL 16Cooking ClassesSushi Rolling and Dining, 5:45p.m., 7 p.m., Sushi Cincinnati,130 W. Pike St., Learn to roll andenjoy sushi, or polish rolling andcutting skills. Deb and Jack give10 minute sushi assembly, rollingand cutting demonstration.BYOB; eat sushi you roll. $18.Reservations required. 513-335-0297; www.sushicinti.com.Covington.

Exercise ClassesCommunity CrossFit Class,10-11 a.m., 11 a.m. to noon,Triumph Strength and Condi-tioning, 7859 Commerce Place,Certified trainer leads workoutin group class setting. Free.Presented by Triumph StrengthConditioning. 414-5904; tri-umphstrength.net. Florence.

Free CrossFit CommunityWorkout, 9-10 a.m., CrossfitNorthern Kentucky, 5785 BConstitution Drive, All levels andabilities welcome. Bring waterbottle. All workouts scaleable toeach individual. Ages 15-99.Free. 496-0995; www.crossfit-northernkentucky.com/. Flor-ence.

ExhibitsSilent Storytellers: SharingFamily Histories throughArtifacts, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.,Behringer-Crawford Museum,Included with admission. 491-4003. Covington.

Seahorses: Unbridled Fun, 10a.m. to 6 p.m., Newport Aquari-um, $15.99-$23.99; Free forchildren under 2. 800-406-3474;www.newportaquarium.com.Newport.

Silent Storytellers Exhibit, 9a.m. to 5 p.m., Behringer-Craw-ford Museum, $9. 491-4003;bcmuseum.org. Covington.

Karaoke and Open MicKaraoke, 8 p.m. to 1 a.m., South-gate VFW, 6 Electric Ave., WithDJ Ted McCracken. Free. Pre-sented by VFW Post 3186. 441-9857. Southgate.

Literary - LibrariesPAWS to Read (grades K-5),10-11 a.m., Boone County PublicLibrary - Scheben Branch, 8899U.S. 42, Read to therapy dog.Call to schedule 15-minute timeslot. Presented by SchebenBranch Library. 342-2665;www.bcpl.org. Union.

Used Book Sale, 9 a.m. to 5p.m., Boone County Main Li-brary, Free. 342-2665. Burling-ton.

Evening with the Ancestors,6:30-10 p.m., Erlanger BranchLibrary, 401 Kenton Lands Road,After hours genealogy lock-inwith presentations, computerprograms and camaraderie.Ages 18 and up. Free. Regis-tration required. Presented byKenton County Public Library.962-4070; www.kentonli-brary.org/events. Erlanger.

Music - DJNoir, 10 p.m., The SouthgateHouse Revival, 111 E. Sixth St.,Revival Room. Monthly dancenight with 80s alternative, newwave, classic goth, industrial,and new music in keeping withstyle. Ages 18 and up. $7, $5.431-2201; www.southgatehouse-.com. Newport.

Music - Indie500 Miles to Memphis, 9 p.m.,

The Southgate House Revival,111 E. Sixth St., With WarsawFalcons and 90 Proof Twang.Ages 18 and up. $12, $10 ad-vance. 431-2201; www.south-gatehouse.com. Newport.

Music - PopLive Music, 7-10 p.m., ArgentineBistro, 2875 Town Center Blvd.,Free. Reservations recommend-ed. 426-1042. Crestview Hills.

NatureAll About Wild Rabbits, 4:30-6p.m., Campbell County Environ-mental Education Center, 1261Race Track Road, Learn aboutlifecycle and habitat. Includestrail walk. Free. Reservationsrequired. 572-2600;ces.ca.uky.edu/Campbell. Alex-andria.

A Visit from Sunrock Farm, 11a.m. to noon, Campbell CountyPublic Library - Fort Thomas,1000 Highland Ave., Meet andpet baby animals includingchicks, lambs, goats and more.Ages 1-5. Free. Registrationrequired. Presented by CampbellCounty Public Library. 781-6166;www.cc-pl.org. Fort Thomas.

On Stage - TheaterThe Last Five Years, 7:30 p.m.,The Carnegie, $28. 957-1940;www.thecarnegie.com. Coving-ton.

PetsFish: Tank Maintenance, noonto 2 p.m., Pet Supplies Plus, 2180Dixie Hwy., Learn about aquari-um set up and maintenance,proper feeding and fish selec-tion. Raffle for free 10-gallonfish tank. Free. 331-0111. FortMitchell.

RecreationHam Shoot, noon to 7 p.m.,Campbell County Game & FishAssociation, 11218 S. LickingPike, Trap Range. Luck shoots,trap shoots, scatter boards,prizes. Food and beverageavailable. Free. Presented byCampbell County Game & Fish.428-2954. Alexandria.

ShoppingYard Sale, 7 a.m. to 3 p.m.,Florence Christian Church, 300Main St., Activity Center. Varietyof household items, furniture,toys, Christmas decor and more.Benefits Church ministry. Free.647-5000, ext. 550; florencechris-tian.org. Florence.

Support GroupsOvereaters Anonymous,10:30-11:30 a.m., Lakeside Pres-byterian Church, 2690 DixieHighway, white building in backparking lot. Offers program ofrecovery from compulsiveovereating, binge eating andother eating disorders using theTwelve Steps and Twelve Tradi-tions of OA. No dues or fees.Addresses physical, emotionaland spiritual well-being but isnot religious organization anddoes not promote any particulardiet. Free. Presented by Overeat-ers Anonymous NKY. 428-1214.Lakeside Park.

ToursRiverside Food Tours, 11 a.m. to2:30 p.m., Riverside Food Tours,473 W. 5th St., Tour combinesdining, sightseeing and walking.Visit 6 restaurants. $59, $49children. 513-289-0035; www.ri-versidefoodtours.com. Coving-ton.

Cincy Bourbon Bus: UrbanBourbon Distillery and Tast-ing Trail, 11:45 a.m. to 5 p.m.,New Riff Distillery, 24 DistilleryWay, Front of New Riff Distillery.Opportunity to visit and tourNew Riff Distillery, Second SightSpirits, Horse and Barrel Bour-bon Bar, The Littlefield BourbonBar, Newberry Prohibition Barand more. Ages 21 and up. $65.Reservations recommended.Presented by Cincy Brew Bus/Cincy Bourbon Bus. 513-258-7909; www.cincybrewbus.com.Newport.

SUNDAY, APRIL 17Antiques ShowsBurlington Antique Show, 6a.m. to 3 p.m., Boone County

Fairgrounds, 5819 Idlewild Road,Over 200 vendors with antiques,vintage jewelry and furniture,primitives, architectural ele-ments, mid-century collectibles,American and memorabilia.Early buying, 6-8 a.m. with $5admission. $3, free ages 12 andunder. Presented by BurlingtonAntique Show. 513-922-6847;www.burlingtonantiqueshow-.com. Burlington.

BenefitsNDUEC Night at The Theater,5:30-9 p.m., Notre Dame Acad-emy, 1699 Hilton Drive, CarlislePerforming Arts Theater. Pro-duction of Seussical the Musical,reception with beer, wine,dinner-by-the bite, raffle basketsand more. Benefits Notre DameUrban Education Center. $75 percouple, $50 single. Reservationsrecommended. Presented byNotre Dame Urban EducationCenter. 261-4487; www.ndeu-c.org. Park Hills.

ExhibitsSilent Storytellers: SharingFamily Histories throughArtifacts, 1-5 p.m., Behringer-Crawford Museum, Includedwith admission. 491-4003.Covington.

Seahorses: Unbridled Fun, 10a.m. to 6 p.m., Newport Aquari-um, $15.99-$23.99; Free forchildren under 2. 800-406-3474;www.newportaquarium.com.Newport.

Silent Storytellers Exhibit, 9a.m. to 5 p.m., Behringer-Craw-ford Museum, $9. 491-4003;bcmuseum.org. Covington.

MuseumsHeirloom Quest, 1-4 p.m.,Behringer-Crawford Museum,1600 Montague Road, Localhistory and artifact expertsexamine heirlooms and otherartifacts and possibly tell ownersmore about their origins andpurposes. To assist in the re-search process, email a photoand description of your object inadvance to [email protected]. Limit 2 itemsper person. $9. Registrationrecommended. 491-4003; bcmu-seum.org. Covington.

NatureSnakes, 5-6:30 p.m., CampbellCounty Environmental Educa-tion Center, 1261 Race TrackRoad, Learn about snakes, howto identify and what to do ifencountering one. Slide showand hike. Free. ces.ca.uky.edu/Campbell. Alexandria.

On Stage - TheaterThe Last Five Years, 3 p.m., TheCarnegie, $28. 957-1940;www.thecarnegie.com. Coving-ton.

RecreationBingo, 6-9:30 p.m., SouthgateVFW, 6 Electric Ave., Early gamesstart at 6 p.m., regular games at

7 p.m. Free. Presented by VFWPost 3186. Through Dec. 27.441-9857. Southgate.

Quarter Auction, 5 p.m., Flor-ence Elks Lodge 314, 7704 DixieHighway, Doors open 4:15 p.m.746-3557. Florence.

MONDAY, APRIL 18Dance ClassesLine Dance Classes, 5:30-6:30p.m., Elsmere Senior Center, 179Dell St., $3. Presented by HollyRuschman. 727-0904. Elsmere.

Exercise ClassesGentle Yoga, 6-7 p.m., BooneCounty Main Library, 1786Burlington Pike, Learn basicpostures and flows. Bring yogamat. $30 per month. Reserva-tions required. Presented byBoone County Public Library.334-2117. Burlington.

Yoga, 7:10-8:10 p.m., BooneCounty Main Library, 1786Burlington Pike, Explore Hathayoga postures. Bring yoga mat.$30 fee for month. Registrationrequired. Presented by BooneCounty Public Library. 334-2117;www.bcpl.org. Burlington.

Senior Stretch Class, 10-11 a.m.,Elsmere Senior Center, 179 DellSt., Gentle but effective exercisewith dance moves thrown in.Ages 21 and up. Free. Presentedby Holly Ruschman. 727-0904.Elsmere.

ExhibitsSeahorses: Unbridled Fun, 10a.m. to 6 p.m., Newport Aquari-um, $15.99-$23.99; Free forchildren under 2. 800-406-3474;www.newportaquarium.com.Newport.

Health / WellnessSt. Elizabeth Healthcare Car-dioVascular Mobile HealthUnit, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., St. Pius XChurch, 348 Dudley Road,Screenings, risk appraisals and

education to community mem-bers. Free. Presented by St.Elizabeth Healthcare. 341-4900;bit.ly/1M0tr0l. Edgewood.

Literary - CraftsDecorative Picture Frames,6:30-8 p.m., Newport BranchLibrary, 901 E. Sixth St., Displayfavorite memory in one of kindpicture frame designed by you.Ages 18 and up. Free. Regis-tration required. Presented byCampbell County Public Library -Newport Branch. 572-5035.Newport.

Literary - LibrariesMicrosoft PowerPoint Basics,6:30-7:30 p.m., Boone CountyMain Library, 1786 BurlingtonPike, Learn how to customizeslides, print handouts and addtransitions, images, hyperlinksand sounds. Registration re-quired. Presented by BooneCounty Public Library. 342-2665.Burlington.

In the Loop, 10-11 a.m., FlorenceBranch Library, 7425 U.S. 42,Knit or crochet in relaxed,friendly company. Learn for firsttime or pick up new tricks. Free.342-2665; www.bcpl.org. Flor-ence.

Royal: Reviewers of YoungAdult Literature, 6:30-7:30p.m., Boone County Main Li-brary, 1786 Burlington Pike,Read new books before they hitshelves. Free. Presented byBoone County Public Library.342-2665; www.bcpl.org. Bur-lington.

Music - BluegrassBluegrass Jam Session, 8-11p.m., Molly Malone’s Irish Puband Restaurant, 112 E. FourthSt., Pub. Northern Kentucky’sbest bluegrass musicians play infront of fireplace on first floor.All bluegrass pickers invited toparticipate. Ages 21 and up.Free. 491-6659; covington.molly-malonesirishpub.com. Coving-ton.

RecreationMonday Night Bingo, 7:30-10p.m., Newport Elks Lodge, 3704Alexandria Pike, 441-1273. ColdSpring.

Support GroupsOvereaters Anonymous,7:30-8:30 p.m., Union Presbyteri-an Church, 10259 U.S. 42, Churchoffice entrance in back lot andfollow signs to room. Programof recovery from compulsiveeating using 12 Steps and 12Traditions of OA. Not a diet/calories club and no weigh-ins.Free. Presented by OvereatersAnonymous NKY. 525-6932;www.cincinnatioa.org. Union.

Al-Anon Meeting, 7-8 p.m.,Lakeside Presbyterian Church,2690 Dixie Highway, Enterbasement off Maian Dr. Al-Anonoffers strength and hope forfamilies and friends of alcohol-ics. Beginner meetings available.Free. Presented by Al-AnonFamily Group. 760-6178. Lake-side Park.

TUESDAY, APRIL 19Art EventsThe Mini (Microcinema), 6 p.m.Closing night, The Carnegie,1028 Scott Blvd., Experimentalfilm theatre with rotatinggalleries and screenings pro-grammed by curator C. Jacque-line Wood. Through April 23.Free. 957-1940; www.mini-cinema.org/. Covington.

THINGS TO DO IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD

ABOUT CALENDARTo submit calendar items, go to Cincinnati.com/share, log in

and click on “submit an event.” Send digital photos [email protected] along with event information.Items are printed on a space-available basis with local eventstaking precedence. Deadline is two weeks before publicationdate.

To find more calendar events, go to Cincinnati.com/calendar.

FILE PHOTO

A Used Book Sale is planned for 4-8 p.m. Friday, April 15; and 9a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, April 16; and 1-5 p.m. Sunday, April 17,at Boone County Main Library, 1786 Burlington Pike,Burlington. Choose from hardbacks, paperbacks, CDs, videos,reference materials and more. On Sunday, all items will sold bybag. Admission is free. Call 342-2665.

PUZZLE ANSWERS

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APRIL 14, 2016 • CCF RECORDER • 7ANEWS

We were planting potatoes andonions today and I kept thinkingabout Goshen reader Bill Kirby, who

needed a recipe forhalf runner beans likehis wife cooked. Re-member I put out hisrequest a couple weeksago?

Well, the responsewas amazing andequally amazing werethe stories connectedwith this heirloomrecipe. So I’m takingcreative liberty and

devoting the column to half runnerbeans, those special “country” beansand how to cook them. Bill Kirby,know that people care and want youto enjoy a big ole’ pot of beans!

Rita Nader Heikenfeld is an herb-alist, educator, Jungle Jim’s Eastgateculinary professional and author. Findher blog online at Abouteating.com.Email her at [email protected] with “Rita’s kitchen” in thesubject line.

Margaret Felix’s beans

Margaret Felix says: “I can answer the question about how to cookthese beans.”

String beans and break into 1 1/2 to two-inch pieces. Rinse thoroughlyand put in pan and cover them with water. Add ham hock or piece of hamand an onion. Bring to boil and simmer until very tender. At this point youcan add small new potatoes or cut up potatoes. Cook till potatoes are ten-der. Add salt and pepper. You can remove ham and pick it apart and addback into beans. The beans will take a couple of hours to get to the verytender stage. Just keep checking them.

Jean Newman’s beans

Jean Newman, a North Bend reader, is in her 80s and has been makingthese for 45 years.

“My husband’s aunt had these beans when we were at her house fordinner when we were first married,” Jean told me. Jean and her husbandare celebrating 60 years in June. “My family loves them, and they are withregular green beans but sounded much the same. Maybe Bill would like totry them.”

3-4 pounds green beans1 piece jowl bacon

Snap beans into small pieces and place in large pot with jowl bacon(discard bacon at end of cooking time). Add salt and cover with cool water.Bring to bubbling boil, then reduce to low and cover and cook 5 hours.Check often to see how they are cooking down and if they need more salt. “

Greg Marshall’s beans

Greg is a Goshen reader. He said: “This is my recipe for“country beans” for Bill Kirby, also from Goshen, Ohio. I use halfrunners, cooked down with a chunk of salt pork, to make adelicious mess of beans. Recipe adapted from my Grand Mother& Mother, both from Blackey, Kentucky. Enjoy!”

2 - 3 lbs. half runners (regular green beans work, don’t cookas long)

1/4 - 1/3 of a chunk of salt pork (unsliced if you can find it)1/3 - 1/2 stick of unsalted butter, or margarineAbout 2 TBL bacon greaseBlack pepper to tasteEnough water to cover about 2 inches (can add 1 can

chicken broth with water)

“Break ends of beans and remove strings on both sides ofbeans & break into desired size pieces. I break some into thirdsand some into halves for a good mix. Rinse and put into largepot. Add salt pork, butter, grease, and pepper. Add water, andbroth if using, to cover about 2 inches. Cover pot with lid askewand bring to boil on med/high heat. Lower heat to med low andcook till tender, about 1-1/2 hours- occasionally checking to addwater if necessary. Remove lid and cook on med high just a bit toevaporate some liquid. Can be cooked ahead and left in pot onstove and reheated when ready to serve. CHECK SEASONING forenough salt and pepper!! Hope you enjoy enjoy a treat fromAppalacia!”

Jan Bowling’s beans

Jan, a Florence, Ky. reader said: “My husband and his family were fromdown in the mountains of eastern Kentucky. His mother always grew andcanned half runner beans. Here is how she fixed them. Very simple and easy.They are the best you will ever eat. Yes, they are cooked to death.”

A small piece of jowl bacon scoredApprox. 3 lbs of half runner beans, strung and broken in piecesOptional small amount of chopped onionPlace all in in a large pot and cover with water.

Bring to a boil and simmer for 5 or 6 hours. You can’t beat the flavor ofthese beans. Granted, the nutritional content of the beans is probablycooked away, but, they are really good. The jowl bacon is not usually eaten.Salt when served if necessary. No salt during cooking it tends to make thebeans tough. Small new potatoes may be added for the last 20 minutes orso. “Hope this works for Bill Kirby.”

Linda Raker’s beans

“We have grown half-runners in our garden every summer for severalyears. We like to can them so we can enjoy them over the winter. I normallycook a minimum of 2 quarts at a time. I rinse my canned beans well whilestill in the jars and fill with water to cover beans. I usually buy Hormel saltpork (NOT SLICED). Rinse pork well, and put in bottom of pan, fat sidedown. Add beans, and 1-2 tablespoons sugar. Cover, and cook slowly untilbeans are done, and water has cooked down somewhat. Do not add addi-tional water. Half-runners, like soup, taste better the second day!”

Beans: Many recipes, many storiesTHANKS TO RITA HEIKENFELD

There are many ways to make these simple runner beans.

Rita HeikenfeldRITA’S KITCHEN

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Page 8: Campbell county recorder 041416

VIEWPOINTSVIEWPOINTSEDITORIALS | LETTERS | COLUMNS | CH@TROOM Cincinnati.com/northernkentucky

COMMUNITYRECORDEREditor: Nancy Daly, [email protected], 578-1059

CAMPBELLCOUNTY RECORDER

Campbell County EditorNancy [email protected], 578-1059Office hours: 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday-FridaySee page A2 for additional contact information.

228 Grandview Drive, Fort Mitchell, KY 41017654 Highland Ave., Fort Thomas, KY 41075phone: 283-0404email: [email protected] site: cincinnati.com/northernkentucky

A publication of

A8 • CAMBELL COUNTY RECORDER • APRIL 14, 2016

Vibrancy is a core and es-sential feature of our NorthernKentucky River Cities – it’s achief reason why so manychoose to live, work and playhere. Each city has an iconiccharacter and special charm,stemming from unique histor-ies and assets that many resi-dents proudly embrace andcall their own.

I join my Dayton neighborsin this pride and support ef-forts that promote and show-case this vibrancy. We’re excit-ed to invite people from acrossthe region to Dayton and Belle-vue for the April 24 Beyondthe Curb Urban Living Tour sothey can see our cities shine.

A vibrant, walkable commu-nity was what drew me heresix years ago. Dayton andBellevue feature historic main

streets with avariety ofrestaurants,stores andparks within ashort walkingdistance. Vic-torian housesline the streetsin their pre-served archi-tectural beau-

ty, front yards bloom withtulips and host Little Libraries,volunteers tend communitygardens, public art adornsbuilding walls, and churchbells ring from century-oldtowers.

And the view of DowntownCincinnati is striking. TheReds, Bengals, CVG, universi-ties and hospitals, Music Halland museums are only a short

ride away on Red Bike orTANK/Metro. It’s a fantasticplace to live.

Beyond the Curb will spot-light our communities andshow how our urban area is aspecial one, with a wide varie-ty of residential properties andamenities to accommodate alllifestyles. With a diverse ten-ant mix, lively small businessdistricts, more green spaceplans in development, and newconstruction along the river-front, Dayton and Bellevueoffer exciting opportunitiesright now for residents, visi-tors and businesses.

Dayton’s economic incen-tive program is encouragingnew stores and restaurants toopen their doors here, andspecial events like Shop Belle-vue First Fridays and Dayton’s

Memorial Day parade and KiteFestival bring hundreds out tocelebrate.

These efforts align with theVibrancy Goal asserted lastyear as a regional prioritywhen Skyward’s myNKY planwas created, a goal to create an“intentionally inclusive, cre-ative and connected communi-ty.” Part of the myNKY plan’sfive-year, $5 million goal for aNorthern Kentucky VibrancyFund is the plan to build a $2million urban pre-developmentfund.

Northern Kentucky’s cur-rent urban renaissance hasbeen accelerated by the Cata-lytic Fund through its targetedinvestments in redevelopmentprojects. The growth andchange we are seeing in ourcommunities illustrate the

importance of pre-develop-ment funds. Beyond the Curb,a project of the Catalytic Fund,will highlight on the tour somehomes and buildings currentlyin redevelopment – showingthe great potential and possi-bilities that investment and afresh focus bring.

Thanks to the work of many,we’re watching our River Cit-ies transform and thrive. Howgreat to see progress and to bea part of it. An ongoing com-mitment to the vibrancy of ourcommunities is required of allof us, in and beyond the bor-ders of Dayton and Bellevue. Ihope you’ll join us in support-ing it. For tickets and to learnabout Beyond the Curb, go towww.beyondthecurb.org.

Ben Baker is vice mayor ofthe city of Dayton, Kentucky.

Committing to vibrancy in our communities

Ben BakerCOMMUNITY PRESSGUEST COLUMNIST

Last week’s questionEarth Day is April 22. In what “green”

efforts do you partake?

“April 23 at the Boone County Arbo-retum from noon to 4 p.m.”

Joan Marzluf Klahr

“As a daycare provider, I teach aboutthe importance of Earth Day and wemake crafts from recycled items andplant flowers.”

Ashley Harwood

“I have ALS and I conserve water be-cause I don’t shower every day.”

Jami McCashland Smith

CH@TROOM

THIS WEEK’S QUESTIONBatman or Superman? Why?

Every week we ask readers a question they canreply to via email. Send your answers [email protected] with Ch@troom inthe subject line.

Whether someone is lying about anissue, or if they are just misinformed,is always tough to judge. Regardless,when it comes to legislation in Frank-fort, it is really difficult to hear peoplesay, or repeat, things you know aren’t

true. At the top of thelist for me this weekwas the line, “Anyonethat votes for the Ken-tucky Local OptionSales Tax is voting toraise your taxes.”

It isn’t true, and it isjust one of many is-sues we need to starttalking about.

Not just about theLocal Option Sales Taxissue itself, but also

about the deceptive tactics used bysome to advance their agenda.

Voting for the Local Option SalesTax legislation, (aka LIFT – Local In-vestments for Transformation), wouldnot raise anyone’s taxes.

First, the bill in Frankfort is a con-stitutional amendment, so it would takea vote of the entire commonwealth tochange the constitution. Then, localcommunities around the state wouldhave the ability to raise a local salestax, if and only if, the majority of citi-zens in that local community vote forit. So, it would take two additionalvotes – one statewide and one local –for a tax increase to occur.

Put another way, LIFT gives you theright to vote on a tax increase. See thedifference?

To say that it will raise your taxes issimply untrue.

Now, if they would have said, “Any-one voting for LIFT is voting for some-thing that could potentially lead to atax increase.” that would be accurate.Personally, I think leaving out “themajority of your fellow citizens have tovote for it” is an important point, but Iunderstand why they might leave itout.

One person in particular, the pri-mary opponent of Adam Koenig, has apost online that simply says “KY SalesTax Bill” and shows Koenig voting forit. I’ve got a real problem with that ad,and so should you.

The uninformed person might con-clude that Koenig voted for a tax in-crease. He didn’t.

That ad didn’t inform people. Itsintent, in my opinion, is to misleadpeople.

It didn’t mention that the majorityof Kentucky representatives in theHouse recently voted for LIFT on abipartisan basis. The ad didn’t say thatthe minority leader in the House, (aRepublican), supported the bill and theSenate President, also a Republican,

publicly stated he would vote for it.Mayors from all around the state, in-cluding Lexington and Louisville, arefor it. Eight former governors, and ourcurrent governor, Matt Bevin, have allendorsed it. And to top it off, businessleaders at Chambers of Commerce allaround the state are in favor of thelegislation.

Why would all these people, manyvery conservative, be in favor of a “KYSales Tax Bill”?

I can assure you that small businessowners and business executives didn’tgo to the Kentucky Chamber of Com-merce and say, “Hey, we’re just nottaxed enough. Let’s support a sales taxincrease for no good reason!”

The LIFT legislation was debated atlength at the Kentucky Chamber, andwas eventually supported for the fol-lowing reasons:

» A majority of local citizens haveto vote for it. Don’t want it, don’t votefor it.

» It can only be used for specificprojects. So, limited scope.

» Once the project is paid for, thetax goes away.

It is a tool that has been successful-ly used all around the country, partic-ularly in cities we view as competingwith ours.

Now, a minority of folks, on bothsides of the aisle, are against the ideaof LIFT for differing reasons.

One argument is that LIFT wouldgive the state an excuse not to fundprojects. I understand the concern, butdid I miss some windfall of cash com-ing our way from Frankfort, ever? Allthis does is give us the ability to bettercontrol our own destiny, if the majorityof citizens vote for it.

Another argument against LIFT isthat sales taxes are regressive anddisproportionally hurt the workingpoor. Believe me, I appreciate thatconcern. But the tax is limited to amaximum of 1 percent, and things likegroceries, utilities and medicine (es-sential items) are exempt. Again, it’sup to the local community.

Regardless of arguments for oragainst LIFT, the point is this: Let’shave an honest debate about the bene-fits and potential pitfalls of legislation.I respect those that disagree, and Imight change my mind if an argumentis compelling.

But deceiving people, eitherthrough honest ignorance or deceptiveintent, is not the way to win electionsor advance our community. Helpspread the truth so people can honestlydecide for themselves.

Brent Cooper is president of C-For-ward in Covington and a resident ofFort Thomas.

How about some truthon local option tax?

BrentCooperCOMMUNITY PRESSGUEST COLUMNIST

The Campbell County ExtensionService will be offering a six-month

series “Flower Buds” forpreschoolers aged 3-5 andtheir caregivers.

This will be a joint col-laboration between ourFamily and ConsumerSciences and Horticulturedepartments.

Beginning in July,Flower Buds will meet forstory time, tour the edu-cational gardens at theCampbell County Exten-sion Service and partici-

pate in an engaging activ-ity in which the child andcaregiver will createsomething together, fol-

lowed by a light, healthysnack.

In previous years,written evaluationsshowed 100 percent ofthe caregivers said the

series helped them bond with theirchild. 86 percent said they learnednew ways to interact with their child,and 86 percent learned ways theirfamily could be healthier. A total of100 percent said their child’s knowl-

edge about gardening increased, and66 percent noticed growth in theirchild’s development.

Nine-month follow-up written eval-uations showed 100 percent of theparticipants were making healthiersnacks for their child, and 100 percentwere gardening with their child. Someof the comments from the caregivers:“It was a special time together, and weshared and talked about these experi-ences after class.” “My son has beenhelping me make meals more.” “Wehave started gardening together,which I never thought we would do.”“I enjoyed learning about differentrecipes and ways to make healthychoices.”

The new series will meet from 10 to11:15 a.m. on July 6, Aug. 3, Sept. 7,Oct. 5, Nov. 1 and Dec. 7. Space islimited to 12 children plus one care-giver per child. Preference will begiven to children who have not en-rolled in the class previously. Registerby July 1 at 859-572-2600. For informa-tion, ask for Kate Thompson or TerriTurner.

Kate Vaught Thompson and RondaRex are the Campbell County Exten-sion Family and Consumer Scienceagents.

Flower Buds havereturned for preschoolers

Ronda RexCOMMUNITYPRESS GUESTCOLUMNIST

KateVaughtThompson COMMUNITYPRESS GUESTCOLUMNISTS

Volunteers areessential to hospice

April 10-16 is National VolunteerWeek and every single volunteer de-serves our appreciation and gratefulacknowledgment.

Across the United States, an armyof trained volunteers – more than430,000 – gave more than 19 millionhours of service last year to care forhospice patients.

Right here in our community, morethan 100 trained volunteers work withHospice of the Bluegrass to servepatients and their families in Boone,

Campbell, Carroll, Gallatin, northernGrant and Kenton counties.

Even when time together may beshort, there can be a lot of living to do.Hospice volunteers make more spe-cial moments possible every day forthe patients they serve. Our communi-ties are better, more compassionateplaces because of their service and wethank them.

To learn more about hospice or howto volunteer, I encourage you to con-tact our office at 859-441-6332.

Carla FosterNorthern Kentucky Site Director

Florence

LETTER TO THE EDITOR

Page 9: Campbell county recorder 041416

APRIL 14, 2016 • CCF RECORDER • 1B

SPORTSSPORTSHIGH SCHOOL | YOUTH | RECREATIONAL Cincinnati.com/northernkentucky

COMMUNITYRECORDEREditor: Melanie Laughman, [email protected], 513-248-7573

SOFTBALL» Bishop Brossart defeated

Calvary Christian in the 10th Re-gion All “A” finals. It markedthe first time that CalvaryChristian had reached the tour-nament championship and thefirst time Bishop Brossart hadwon back-to-back titles.

In the championship gameMegan Seiter allowed threehits and struck out nine to leadthe Mustangs

Amanda Graus, playing on asprained ankle, was the cata-lyst, scoring three times, walk-ing twice, stealing two basesand being hit with a pitch. RileyOrth, Amanda Lloyd, and Ash-ley Childress all had two hitswhile Lloyd, Childress and Kait-lyn Seiter all had two RBIs.

Brossart advances to the All“A” state tournament April 30-May 1 in Owensboro.

TMC NOTES» Softball: The Saints swept

a Presidents’ Athletic Confer-ence doubleheader with Way-nesburg on April 10. The Saintswon game one 5-0 and the night-cap 9-1 in six innings. With thesweep, the Saints improved to20-6 overall and 5-1 in the PAC,while the Yellow Jackets fell to11-15 overall and 3-3 in the PAC.

In the first game, the Saintsscored four runs in the fourthand one run in the seventh.

Senior pitcher Mamee Sal-zer (St. Henry) earned the winas she pitched a complete gameshutout, giving up seven hitsand striking out six.

In the nightcap, the Saintsscored one run in the first, threein the second, one in the fifthand four in the sixth and heldthe Yellow Jackets to a run inthe fourth.

Sophomore pitcher DallisKnotts (Boone County) earnedthe win as she pitched four in-nings giving up one unearned

run on three hits and struck outtwo.

» Baseball: TMC swept aPAC doubleheader with Betha-ny April 10. The Saints wongame one, 2-1, and the nightcap,10-2. With the sweep the Saintsimproved to 15-5 overall and 9-1in the PAC, while the Bison fellto 6-15 overall and 3-7 in thePAC.

In the first game of the day,the Saints plated two runs in thesecond and held Bethany to onerun in the fifth.

Senior pitcher Tim Baldrick(Elder) earned the win as hepitched seven innings and gaveup one run on six hits and struckout two.

In the nightcap, ThomasMore had one run in the first,three in the third, one in thefourth and fifth and four in thesixth, while holding Bethany totwo runs in the sixth.

Senior pitcher BrandonHumphrey (La Salle) earnedthe win as he pitched six inningsgiving up two runs on four hits,while striking out six.

BASKETBALL» The Kentucky Lions All-

Star Classic, which annuallymatches the top Kentucky highschool basketball playersagainst the best in Indiana, is setfor Sunday, June 12. The girls’game will begin at 1 p.m. withthe boys facing off 30 minutesafter the conclusion. Bothgames will be played at Bellar-mine University in Louisville.

The teams are comprised ofthe top athletes from around thestate, including Kentucky Asso-ciation of Basketball Coachesregional players of the year, Mr.and Miss Basketball, and play-ers who were nominated by se-lected KABC coaches of theyear.

The 2016 boys’ team will becoached by former Tates CreekHigh School coach Wayne Bree-den and includes Ben Weyer of

SHORT HOPS

James [email protected]

See SHORT HOPS, Page 2B

Heading into the spring out-door season fresh off of a statechampionship is a boost for thelocal athletes and teams whoearned titles at the KTCCCA In-door State Championship inMaysville on March 5.

St. Henry’s girls and BishopBrossart’s boys each claimedteam titles in the Class A divi-sion, in addition to several indi-vidual first-place finishes. InClass AA, Highlands’ MikaylaReichert won the shot put, best-ing teammate Mary Claire Red-den. Reichert’s throw qualifiedher for the New Balance Nation-al Indoor meet in New YorkCity. In Class AAA, Simon Ken-ton led the field, notching fourstate titles.

“I am very proud of the in-door season that we had. It’s al-ways tough to get out in the coldweather and train,” said St.Henry girls coach Tony Harden.“To end the season with a indoorstate championship is alwaysnice for the team.”

Jack Dean-Brown led thePioneers’ boys, placing first inthe 400 meter dash. MeredithHiles and Michaela Dukes fin-ished 1-2 in the 800, as did SimonKenton teammates Sophia Del-isio and McKenzie Lachmann inthe 1,600. The Pioneers also won

the girls 4x800 relay.Holmes’ Shawndale Mincy

placed second in the boys 400.Dixie Heights also had sever-

al top performers, led by Daya-na Gutierrez, who placed sec-ond in the girls 3,000 and fourthin the 1,600. Colonels eighthgrader Lorali Shworles im-pressed against varsity compe-tition, placing third in the 800and the 1,600. Hannah Cook fin-ished third in the shot put.

The Class A meet was dom-inated by Northern Kentuckyprograms. Beechwood hadthree state champions – HaleyHolbrook in the 1,600, BrettSlusher in the 55, and Grant Bi-rindelli in the 800. Aiden Justicenearly joined them, finishingsecond in the long jump. DaltonEverett placed third in the 55meter hurdles, while the Tigersrelay team placed second in theboys 4x800.

Ludlow’s Amber Victorplaced second in the 800 andhigh jump, and Tiffany Victorplaced third in the long jump.Ludlow’s boys, led by CameronVan Huss and Kyle Trimpe, wonthe 4x400 relay. Newport Cen-tral Catholic’s Parker Osburgedged out Holy Cross’s DrewMcIntosh to win the shot put.Lloyd’s Jamorrow Dawson wonthe triple jump and the highjump, and finished third behindBrossart’s T.J. Moore andBeechwood’s Justice in the longjump.

Brossart’s boys were led bychampions Adam Hartig in the3,000 and Joey Hickman in the400.

St. Henry won the boys 4x800and the girls won both the 4x400and 4x800. Renee Svec won the3,000, Kayla Riegler won the800, and Janelle Tobler won the

high jump.All of this success provided a

springboard to the outdoortrack and field season.

“I think training for indoor is

very beneficial for distancerunners and field events,” saidHarden. “I think winning indooris huge for momentum goinginto outdoor.”

Indoor success boosts athletes

Adam [email protected]

JAMES WEBER/COMMUNITY RECORDER

Adam Hartig of Brossart, middle, won the 3,000 for Brossart in indoor track.

Northern Ky.featured a numberof state winners

Two of Northern Kentucky’s three boys’ highschool lacrosse teams are growing under first-year head coaches who are familiar with andheavily invested in their programs.

Logan Jeffries, a former Northern KentuckyWarriors player, is in his first season as headcoach of the club program. Conner McKee tookover as head coach at Covington Catholic thisseason. Jeffries and McKee were teammates onthe inaugural Warriors team in 2006 and McKeejoined his high school team once CovCath start-ed a program. McKee spent the past two seasonsassisting Dan Hooper, now the area’s longest-tenured boys’ lacrosse coach, at Dixie Heights.

The young coaches have watched their cur-rent players develop over the years, as the sporthas grown in the area.

“I coached a few of these young men whenthey were in middle school and seeing themgrow has been a real honor,” said McKee. “Wehave improved every game so far this seasonand it shows me how strong my team really is.”

CovCath is led by captains Lee Ludovicy, Ca-son Wall, Will Breen, Kyle Brake, and RyanO’Connell. Andrew Mullen has emerged as apleasant surprise. The program’s developmenthas changed the way these coaches go abouttheir duties.

“For the first time ever, I have a lot of fresh-men who have played before. Not just one or twobut, a few that have played already for severalyears,” said McKee. “Being able to quickly goover the basics and not have to worry aboutcatching and throwing is quite an amazing traitto have.”

The Warriors attract players from severalarea schools. Jeffries has seen up close how farthe program has come since its first season adecade ago when he was a player.

“It is fantastic to see that the program hascontinued to grow and improve by consistentlybringing in young athletes and developing theminto varsity-level players,” he said. “This is atestament to the commitment and excellence ofthe coaches, players, and parents to make thatdevelopment possible. Many of our current var-

sity players have been with the program formultiple years. It is great to see our program ex-tending its roots throughout Northern Ken-tucky attracting increasing numbers of younglacrosse players.”

This year’s Warriors squad is led RileyBurns, Stephen Dauer, T.J. DiSantis, and Bran-don Lichtenberg.

“They set the tone for our intensity and workethic every day and challenge their teammatesto rise to the occasion so that we can meet ourexpectations for the season as a whole,” saidJeffries. He added that his squad is “a unit of re-spectable young men who possess outstandingcharacter, work ethic, and passion.”

Dixie Heights made history last season byadvancing to its first regional tournament. TheColonels are aiming for their third straight win-ning season. They have had to replace eight sen-iors, but are led by returning starters KagenButler, Blake Alexander, Austin Kappes andAustin Miller.

NKY lacrosse grows,welcomes two newhead coaches

FILE PHOTO

Dixie Heights attacker Kagen Butler plays lacrosseagainst Covington Catholic last April.

Adam [email protected]

Page 10: Campbell county recorder 041416

2B • CCF RECORDER • APRIL 14, 2016 LIFE

All-Star weekend

GEOFF BLANKENSHIP FOR THE ENQUIRER

Newport Central Catholic’s Ben Weyer, back, rejects the shot of Nick Ward of Gahanna,Ohio, in the Ohio-Kentucky All-Star game April 9. Weyer made three free throws with 8.7 toplay, bringing Kentucky within one, 93-92 but Ohio ended up winning 94-92. Weyer had 10points and Campbell County’s Matt Wilson had 2.

With Bishop Brossartbeing a Catholic school,it’s fitting that several ofthe school’s student-ath-letes will become Saintsnext year.

While they aren’t goingto be canonized, eight dif-ferent Mustangs areheaded to play their re-spective sports at ThomasMore College. Threeboys’ soccer players –Sam Parnell, Brent Gei-man, and Dylan Geiman –signed with the Saints re-cently. On Wednesday,five more Brossart ath-letes signed to continuetheir career at the Divi-sion III college in Crest-view Hills.

A large crowd showedup to support golfer JacobZai, basketball playerEmily Schultz, footballplayers T.J. Moore andGriffin Goepper, and two-way standout Olivia Nie-naber, who plans to com-pete in soccer and track,on Wednesday afternoon.

“I’m really excited forthese kids to be able to goon and continue their ca-reers at the next level,”

Brossart athletic directorAdam Franzen said.“They all worked reallyhard and brought a lot ofsuccess to our athleticprograms.

“I don’t know the fullhistory of where our play-ers have committed in thepast, but I can’t remem-ber eight committing tothe same school. I thinkour kids see Thomas Moreas a similar place as Bros-sart. It’s small. You can gothere and really get chal-lenged academically, butstill have opportunities tocompete in sports at achampionship level.”

Nienaber led the LadyMustangs to a 10th Regiontitle on the pitch. She fin-ished with a team-high 17goals to go with nine as-sists.

Goepper recorded ateam-high 112 tackles togo with a fumble recoveryand an interception fromhis linebacker position,while leading the Mus-tangs to their best recordin school history. Moorecaught seven passes for278 yards and a touch-down.

“The really impressivething about those two is

that Moore only playedone year of football, andGoepper just started hisfreshman year,” Franzensaid. “It really says a lotabout our coaching staff’sability to develop playersthat both of those guys aregoing on to play collegefootball.”

Schultz averaged 17.1points per game on thehardwood and joined theschool’s 1,000-point club.

Zai was named honor-able mention on the En-quirer Fall All-Stars afterleading the Mustangs onthe course.

“I feel really lucky tohave kids that are willingto dedicate themselves togetting better as students,people and athletes,”Franzen said. “And alsoour coaches do such anamazing job with our kids,taking students fromsmall grade schools likeSt. Peter and Paul or St.Philip and helping turnthem into college athletes.

“We’re really fortunatethat they enjoy coachingat a place like Brossartwith our values, despitethe fact that they couldmake more money else-where.”

THANKS TO TIM MOORE

From left, Brossart student athletes Griffin Goepper, Emily Schultz, Olivia Nienaber, T.J. Mooreand Jacob Zai signed with Thomas More on Wednesday.

Brossart sendingeight athletes toThomas MoreRick BroeringEnquirer contributor

NewCath and Matt Wilson of Camp-bell County, plush the following play-ers

Trey Blevins, Wayne County; AlexCook, Male; Tyrik Edwards, ChristianCounty; Mason Faulkner, Caverna;Quentin Goodin, Taylor County; ConnorMcKim, St. Xavier; Tyler Sharpe, Bul-litt East; Caleb Taylor, South Laurel;Isaiah Tisdale, Henry Clay; Ben Weyer,Newport Central Catholic; Carson Wil-liams, Owen County; Darius Williams,Paul Laurence Dunbar; Matt Wilson,Campbell County

The 2016 girls head coach will beMuhlenberg County’s Mike Harper andincludes Dajah McClendon of HolyCross and the following players:

Mikayla Berry, Owensboro Catho-lic; Erin Boley, Elizabethtown; KayleeCotton, McCreary Central; Whitney

Creech, Jenkins; Samantha Fitzgerald,Southwestern; Malaka Frank, FranklinCounty; Bree Glover, Glasgow; I’LiyahGreen, Male; Justus Martin, ShelbyCounty; Dajah McClendon, Holy Cross;Sarah Price, Bath County; Oneisha Tur-ner, Bowling Green; Emma Young, EastJessamine.

Tickets for the June 12 game are cur-rently on sale for $12 each, on the BSCwebsite, www.bluegrasssports.org.Tickets are valid for both the boys andgirls games. All profits will support theKentucky Lions Eye Foundation andthe Bluegrass Sports Commission.

HALL OF FAME» The Northern Kentucky Sports

Hall of Fame will induct six new mem-bers in its last meeting of the 2015-16season, 1 p.m. Wednesday, April 20 atthe Villa Hills Civic Club. Inductees areCarrie (Judd) Noel, Jeremy Mills, Da-vid Maher, Tim Lenhof, LD Bell andJake Beil.

Short HopsContinued from Page 1B

Twenty-seven student-ath-letes, coaches and administra-tors will receive awards at thisyear’s Greater Cincinnati-Northern Kentucky Women’sSports Association annual din-ner, to be Monday, April 25, atthe Schiff Banquet & Confer-ence Center at Xavier Univer-sity.

Those named outstandingstudent-athletes in their collegesports include: Sydney Moss,basketball, Thomas More Col-lege/Boone County High Schoolgraduate; Pei Lin, diving, MiamiUniversity; Bea Dechant, fieldhockey, Miami University; Eri-ka Leonard, softball, OhioState/Mother of Mercy grad;Olivia Huber, soccer, Thomas

More College/Newport CentralCatholic grad; JacquelineKeire, swimming, University ofCincinnati; Erika Hurd, trackand field, University of Cincin-nati and Abbey Bessler, volley-ball, Xavier University/St. Hen-ry grad.

The outstanding student-ath-letes in their high school sportsinclude: Nia Staples, basket-ball, Lakota West; Malia Berke-ly, soccer, Badin; Ashley Vol-penhein, swimming, Mason;Morgan Hentz, volleyball, No-tre Dame Academy; MaddieWalker, cross country, Amelia;Ayanna O’Neal, track and field,Withrow; Kellen Alsip, golf,Sycamore; Emily Thomas, ten-nis, Princeton, and Tara Trainer,softball, Lebanon.

The Huismann Administra-tor of the Year is Gregory Den-

nis, Summit Country Day; theLauren Hill Courage Awardgoes to Adrian Ell and AlyssaSteller; the Lifetime Serviceaward, Carolyn Condit; Coachof the Year-High School, JoeBurke, Mount Notre Dame vol-leyball; Coach of the Year-Col-lege, Inako Puzo, Miami Uni-versity field hockey; SpecialAward to Nell Fookes; SeniorAthlete, Pat Fettig; DavidKline, Business award; DonnadeVarona Spirit of Sport Award,Theresa Cain.

Tickets are $25 for adultsand $20 for students, withschool-sponsored tables avail-able for $200. The deadline topurchase tickets is Monday,April 18. To make reservationsfor the dinner visitwww.cincywomensports.org.

Athletes to be honoredby Cincinnati-NKYwomen’s organization

JAMES WEBER/COMMUNITY RECORDER

TMC senior Olivia Huber, facing, hugs Erika LaRosa (Seton) after Huberscored her 100th career goal Nov. 14, 2015.

Enquirer [email protected]

Page 11: Campbell county recorder 041416

APRIL 14, 2016 • CCF RECORDER • 3BLIFE

Recognized for excellence in knee and hip replacements byU.S. News & World Report,

Joint care

Live without Limitsaward winning

George AlexanderGeorge “Bill” Alexander, 61,

of Newport, died Feb. 28.His parents, George and

Betty Alexandria, died previ-ously.

Survivors include his daugh-ter, Keli Alexander; brother,John Alexander; sister, BarbMilius; and three grandchil-dren.

Memorials: American CancerSociety, 2808 Reading Road,Cincinnati, OH 45206.

Betty McGuireBetty J. McGuire, 67, of

Dayton, died April 1 at St.Elizabeth Fort Thomas.

Her husband, Frank McGuire;and brother, Butch Blum, diedpreviously.

Survivors include her chil-dren, John Seyberth and LauraHammonds; siblings, ElmerBlum and Beverly Sheridan;and a granddaughter.

Viola MonohonViola Monohon, 91, of Camp-

bell County, died recently.She was the co-owner of the

Peoples Funeral Home inGrant’s Lick. She also madewedding cakes for 15 years, wasa member of the Jehovah’sWitness Congregation, and alsoworked at Hyde Park Clothes inNewport for several years.

Her husband, Earl O. Mono-hon Jr.; siblings, Robert Shean-shang and Shirley Gosney; andgrandchild, Becky Griffith, diedpreviously.

Survivors include her daugh-ter, Pamela Monohon Griffith;and three grandchildren alongwith four great-grandchildren.

Burial was at Butler Ceme-tery in Pendleton County.

Jeffrey ReinhartJeffrey A. Reinhart, 40, of

Fort Thomas, died April 3 at St.Elizabeth Edgewood.

He was a customer servicerepresentative with Amazonand graduate of NewportCentral Catholic High Schooland Gateway CommunityCollege. He was a member ofthe YMCA and avid sports fan

who loved to play softball andbasketball.

His father, William Reinhart;and brother, Mark Reinhart,died previously.

Survivors include his daugh-ter, Lilyana Reinhart; mother,Carole M. Reinhart; brothers,Bill Reinhart and Chris Rein-hart; and sister, Cindy Lucas.

Burial was at St. StephenCemetery in Fort Thomas.

Mary StoneMary “Bobbye” Rita Flannery

Stone, 89, of Fort Thomas, diedMarch 31.

She was a homemaker,graduate of Bellevue HighSchool, and member of St.Anthony Church which is nowDivine Mercy Parish in Bellevue.She was a founding member ofthe Guardian Guild at St. Jo-seph Orphanage and theNorthern Kentucky Guild and amember of NKAR. She was alsoa Kentucky Colonel.

Her husband, Robert “Ston-ey” Stone; and sons, Michaeland Danny Stone, died previ-ously.

Survivors include her sons,John Stone and Joseph Stone;daughters, Robin Lowe andBarbara Gregory; and 11 grand-children along with threegreat-grandchildren.

Burial was at St. StephenCemetery in Fort Thomas.

Memorials: New Perceptions,1 Sperti Drive, Edgewood, KY41017.

Norma TaylorNorma Taylor, 86, of Fort

Thomas, died April 2 at St.Elizabeth Edgewood.

Her husband, Orville Taylor,died previously.

Survivors include her daugh-ter, Jan Kramer; sons, SteveTaylor and Ron Taylor; broth-ers, Dick Barone and MikeBarone; and eight grand-children along with two great-grandchildren.

Entombment was at St.Stephen Cemetery in FortThomas.

Memorials: American HeartAssociation, 5211 MadisonRoad, Cincinnati, OH 45227.

Garnet YouellGarnet M. Yourell, 91, of

Cold Spring, died March 29 atSt. Elizabeth Hospice.

She was a homemaker.Her husband, Elmer Yourell,

died previously.Survivors include her son,

Max Ladnow of Cold Spring;daughters, Phyllis Dattilo ofErlanger and Loretta McLarenof Cold Spring; and eight

grandchildren along with 16great-grandchildren and ninegreat-great-grandchildren.

Burial was at St. StephenCemetery in Fort Thomas.

Memorials: St. ElizabethHospice, 483 S. Loop Road,Edgewood, KY 41017.

DEATHS

ABOUT OBITUARIESBasic obituary information and a color photograph of

your loved one is published without charge by TheCommunity Press. Please call us at 283-0404 for moreinformation. To publish a larger memorial tribute, call513-242-4000 for pricing details.

For the most up-to-date Northern Kentucky obituaries,click on the “Obituaries” link atcincinnati.com/northernkentucky.

Page 12: Campbell county recorder 041416

4B • CCF RECORDER • APRIL 14, 2016 LIFE

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Behringer-CrawfordMuseum kicks off its an-nual Thursday night con-cert series on April 21with former executive di-rector Gregg Harper, whoreturns to the museum asa singer songwriter.

Harper will bring anevening of music, somefamiliar and some new,for his friends, both oldand new. Harper will startthe series with a perfor-mance of modern folk,Americana and culturaland original tunes, aptlytitled, “Homecoming.”

Music@BCM offers

musical favorites fromaround the region for aseason of sweet melodiesand splendid entertain-ment, recognizing new re-gional talent and preserv-ing Northern Kentucky’sown musical heritage.

The sounds of guitar,drums, brass and stringresonate through the sce-nic setting of Devou Parkas local artists performjazz, salsa, brass, blue-grass, reggae and rockand more on the BCMstage.

The April 21 concerttakes place in BCM’s

Rivers Gallery at 1600Montague Road, DevouPark, Covington. Doorsopen at 6 p.m. and the per-formance is from 7 to 9p.m.

Admission is $5 foradults and $3 for childrenages 3-12. Each museummember is admitted freewith a paying guest.Adult beverages areavailable for purchase.Concert-goers can alsopurchase food by Coloni-al Cottage of Erlangersupporting local youthand community organiza-tions.

Music@BCM’s 2016season is sponsored byAshley Development, Co-lonial Cottage, Ruth Fa-ragher and family, Ersatz& Moot Point RailwayCompany and the alumniof WNOP Jazz, HummelHatfield InsuranceAgency & Grange Insur-ance, Lucarelli TacticalGroup, Reality TuesdayCafé, KW Mechanicaland WVXU.

For more information,call 859-491-4003, [email protected] orgo towww.bcmuseum.org.

Music@BCM series kicks off April 21

THE REST OF THE MUSIC@BCM 2016LINE-UP

» May 19- Wine ‘n’ Spring with MJQ Déjà vu » June 9- Beer ‘n’ Brass with the 18-piece brass choir,

Mount Auburn Brass Fellowship» June 16- Who Remembers the Freddy? With Jake

Speed and the Freddies» June 23- Whiskey in the Jar with Roger Drawdy and

the Firestarters bringing Irish rock and stories» June 30- The Grass is Blue with The Comet Bluegrass

All-Stars» July 7- Hot, Hot, HOT with salsa from Son del Caribe» July 14- Nothin’ but a Party with Robin Lacy and DeZy-

deco» July 21- Bourbon ‘n’ Blues with The Cheryl Renée Pro-

ject » July 28- Southern Comfort with the Hot Magnolias» Aug. 4- The Legend Returns with Tim Goshorn» Aug. 11- Dancin’ in the Streets with Ramona Blain out

front with The Company

PROVIDED

Behringer-Crawford Museum kicks off its annual Thursdaynight concert series on April 21 with former executive directorGregg Harper, who returns to the museum as a singersongwriter.

Page 13: Campbell county recorder 041416

APRIL 14, 2016 • CCF RECORDER • 5BLIFE

Call today for your free estimate I 513-909-3407 I www.gutterscincinnati.com

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Page 14: Campbell county recorder 041416

6B • CCF RECORDER • APRIL 14, 2016 LIFE

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Kevin, Macy, and Angela Heden-berg, of Campbell County, enjoy springbreak visiting Washington, D.C.

Are you going on vacation? Bringyour camera, along with your Commu-

nity Recorder, for a “Readers on Vaca-tion” photo. Please ID people in thephoto and tell us a little about yourvacation destination. Email to [email protected].

THANKS TO ANGELA HEDENBERG

Kevin, Macy and Angela Hedenberg enjoy spring break visiting Washington, D.C.

Campbell family visitsWashington, D.C.

ALEXANDRIA7691 Arcadia Blvd.: The Drees Co. to Teresa andDouglas Cushman; $377,500.

680 Palisade Drive: Fischer Single Family HomesIII Ltd. to Mary and William Ryan; $286,500.

3730 Ridgewood Court: The Bank of New YorkMellon to Brandon Crice; $153,000.

1153 Summerlake Drive: Rosemary and ErvinGlahn to Lauren and Jason Wilson Jr.; $167,000.

BELLEVUE219 Memorial Parkway: Melinda and MarkThornberry to John Herby; $92,500.

729 Overlook Drive: Rebecca and Nick Daneileto Addie Mann; $150,000.

132 Ross Ave.: Rivertown Development GroupLLC to Mary and Paul Krippen Stapel; $440,000.

904 Taylor Ave.: Brandon Otto to Mallory andBrian Muddiman; $100,000.

COLD SPRING574 Fawn Drive: Betty Pfeiffer to Jill James;$110,000.

800 Flint Ridge, Unit 2-202: Susan and Mark

Slaughter to Kim and Roger Welch; $120,000.

FORT THOMAS104 Highview Drive: Brennenstuhl PropertiesLLC to Danielle and Erik Witterstaetter;$245,000.

1815 N. Fort Thomas Ave.: Michele Hall toKaren Enzweiler; $430,000.

5002 Nob Hill: The Brauch Family Trust toKimberly Mayer; $288,000.

156 Sheridan Ave.: Patricia Lee, Dana and JasonLee and Tara and Matthew Wiley to Tracy andKevin Egan; $152,500.

31 Sunset Ave.: Sunset Homes Inc. to Melissaand Timothy Tinker; $260,000.

NEWPORT845 Overlook St.: GGI Real Estate LLC to FifthSt. Properties LLC; $60,000.

1022 Vine St.: Neu Properties LLC to ToddNapier and Matthew Schmidt; $217,000.

1109 Waterworks Road: Michael Barone toCharles Spenlau; $127,000.

REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS

Page 15: Campbell county recorder 041416

APRIL 14, 2016 • CCF RECORDER • 7BLIFE

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The grass is the deepforest green that onlyreveals itself in earlyspring. Keeneland’sspring meet is underway,and the Kentucky Derbyis not far away.

It is April in Kentuckyand the fish are biting allover the state.

“I caught a limit ofstriped bass last Saturdayand another on Sundayand did the same theweekend before on LakeCumberland,” said JoeMcWilliams, an avidstriped bass angler whohas owned a house on thelake for nearly 20 years.“Most of them ran 24 to26 inches, but my biggestwas 30 1/2 inches.”

Stripers ranging inlength from 24 to 26 inch-es weigh roughly 8 to 11pounds while 30 inchersrun about 14 pounds.McWilliams fishes thearea from White OakCreek down lake to FallCreek most of the time.

McWilliams bottomfishes live alewives orshad he catches in a castnet in the pre-dawn hoursto catch striped bass. Hehas a milk run of slopingbanks, channel banks andpoints and changes loca-tions and depths until hefinds fish. Store-boughtlarge shiners work forbait as well.

He employs a simpleslip rig with a 1/2- to 3/4-ounce egg sinker on themain line above a barrelswivel. He ties a leader of20-pound monofilamentline to the barrel swivelwith a 4/0 octopus-stylehook on the business end.

“I’ve caught small-mouth bass up to 4pounds recently on thisrig as well,” McWilliamssaid. Stripers are alsohitting 1/2-ounce whiteand blue bucktail jigsworked down channelbanks in the lower lake.

Crappie are biting onTaylorsville Lake andother lakes across Ken-tucky. “They are catchingmany limits of crappie,”said David Baker, CentralFisheries District biolo-gist for the KentuckyDepartment of Fish andWildlife Resources.“There are many 10- to11-inch crappie, bothwhites and blacks.”

Anglers reportedcatching black crappieover the last week bycasting to rocky bankswith 2-inch lime green orchartreuse curly-tailedgrubs. The black crappieare hanging in 4 to 8 feetof water in the mid-lakeregion. Minnows fished inwoody cover draw strikesfrom white crappie onTaylorsville.

“The lake has settleddown and that’s reallyhelped the crappie,” Bak-er said.

Crappie are also shal-low and active on centralKentucky’s HerringtonLake. The canyon-likelake is known more for itslargemouth and whitebass fisheries, but thelake holds an excellentpopulation of black andwhite crappie.

“We saw many 9- to14-inch crappie in Her-rington this past week,”Baker said. “Look forshoreline cover or stumpsjust under the water. Thefish are relatively shallowfor Herrington in 5 to 8feet of water.”

He said the fish are fatwith excellent body con-dition. Cast pearl-colored2-inch curly tailed grubsto the stumps and fish theshoreline cover with liveminnows. Black crappiepredominate the lowerlake while anglers willfind more white crappiein the upper lake aboveKing’s Mill Marina.

Anglers report catch-ing black crappie on thefamous crappie twins ofwest Kentucky, KentuckyLake and Lake Barkley,by casting chartreuse andlime-green curly-tailedgrubs rigged on 1/8-ounceleadheads to pea gravelbanks. White crappie arestill staging in the deepersections of creek arms in8 to 14 feet of water, butshould move shallowanytime with water tem-peratures now cresting 60degrees.

There is an old saying,“the white bass run whenthe redbuds bloom.” Bak-er saw many anglerscatching white bass onHerrington Lake by troll-ing medium-runningshad-colored crankbaitsbetween Kings Mill Mari-na and Dunn Island. “Oneguy even complained tous he was sick of catchingthem,” he said. “My fa-ther-in-law caught 36 thispast Sunday on Herring-ton. They are impressivewith many of them 12 to14 inches. They lookgreat.”

The white bass run atTaylorsville Lake hasbeen spotty so far. Thesmaller male white bassmade a run in the last twoweeks that seems to havepetered out.

Nolin River Lake inwest-central Kentuckyholds arguably the bestwhite bass population inKentucky. The white bassare staging in the upperlake from Cane Run toBacon Creek Ramp andthe smaller males are upin the Nolin River.

Eventually they willrun upstream as far asWheeler’s Mill.

The spawning runs ofwhite bass into the head-waters of Herrington,Taylorsville and NolinRiver lakes should startin earnest once a pro-longed warm front raiseswater temperatures a fewdegrees.

White bass strike any-

thing that flashes duringtheir runs. White in-linespinners, white or char-treuse curly tailed grubs,silver casting spoons orsmall chrome topwaterlures all draw strikes.Small 1/32-ounce featherjigs in pink, white orchartreuse suspendedunder a bobber and al-lowed to drift in the cur-rent is also a deadly pres-entation for runningwhite bass.

The redbuds areblooming, the grass isgreen and fish bitingeverywhere. Get out andenjoy; winter is gone forgood. Don’t forget to buyyour 2016-2017 fishinglicense.

Author Lee McClellanis associate editor forKentucky Afield maga-zine, the official publica-tion of the Kentucky De-partment of Fish andWildlife Resources. He isa lifelong hunter andangler, with a passion forsmallmouth bass fishing.

Redbud blooming; fishare biting everywhereLee McClellanContributor

THANKS TO LEE MCCLELLAN

Nathan Brooks, videographer for the Kentucky Afieldtelevision show, holds a 37-inch striped bass he caught fromLake Cumberland last week. April winds bring good fishingfor striped bass, crappie and white bass.

Page 16: Campbell county recorder 041416

8B • CCF RECORDER • APRIL 14, 2016 LIFE

SOMETHING IN THE WATERBY RANDOLPH ROSS / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ

No. 0410

RE

LE

AS

E D

AT

E: 4/17/2016

ACROSS

1 “Things aren’t so bad!”

8 Memorable mission

13 Napoleon, for one

19 Head of the army?

20 Jerusalem’s province, to the Romans

21 Role for Julia Louis-Dreyfus

22 Iron Man, e.g.

23 Where a 28-Across was often submerged in W.W. II

25 Prefix with comic

26 Chinese leader?

28 See 23-Across

29 More sound

30 Global supporter of the arts

33 Retailer ____ Taylor

34 Kind of PC port

37 Grocery chain since 1926

38 See 43-Across

39 A or O, e.g.

41 Ready to be drawn

43 Where you might tour the Grand Canyon in a 38-Across

47 See 50-Across

49 Young hare

50 Where an Italian tourist might ride in a 47-Across

52 Honkers

54 “If I Ruled the World” rapper

56 Heavy metal venue?

57 Approximately

58 Bars frequented at night

61 Tiny bit

62 Not, to a Scot63 Saloon sounds

64 Knock over

65 Animal that an ailurophobe fears

66 Unimpressive mount

67 “So ____”

68 Where to find Moscow in the U.S.: Abbr.

69 1993 standoff site

70 Trembling trees

72 Does some grilling

73 See 79-Across

76 Solo pilot?

77 Vice ____

79 Where a 73-Across sails loaded with fuel

81 See 85-Across

84 What a vulgarian has

85 Place for an 81-Across to catch seafood

90 [Humph!]91 Put one’s foot down

92 Cowpoke’s friend

93 U.K. award

94 Yearbook sect.

95 Political writer Matt

97 École educator

99 Ticked off

101 See 105-Across

103 First name on the Supreme Court

104 Suite spot, say

105 What a 101-Across travels for some urban commuters

111 James Joyce short story in “Dubliners”

113 Self-image?

114 Time to start walking

115 Campaign poster word

116 Not quite

117 “Ain’t happening”

118 Investigative pieces

DOWN

1 Great work of literature

2 Try

3 “But thy ____ summer shall not fade”: Shak.

4 “It’s a Wonderful Life” role

5 Attention to detail

6 Article in Le Monde

7 Sell

8 They have belts and coats

9 Cholesterol inits.

10 Top of the minors

11 Aid in picking sides

12 Crunchy snack

13 Butter ____ (ice- cream flavor)

14 Buckets

15 It counts as a plate appearance but not as an at-bat, briefly

16 Trash-bag accessory

17 Retroviruscomponent

18 Appetite

20 Cabinet member who served all eight years under Bill Clinton

24 Saturn model with a scientific name

27 Awaiting

31 Basketball’s King James, for one

32 Cassini of fashion

34 Let flow again

35 Lack of compassion

36 Russian relative of a guitar

38 Party with glow sticks, maybe

40 Stumbles

41 Rouen relation

42 Makeshift beds

44 Bread spreads

45 Lawyer’s thing

46 Lake that’s the source of the Mississippi

47 Banded rock

48 “Waiting for Lefty” playwright

51 Hindu soul

52 Metal grates for grilling

53 One-way flight?

55 Hide away

57 Seven U.S. presidents, by birth

58 Notre Dame football legend

59 They’re blown in the winds

60 Tourist attraction on N.Y.C.’s Fifth Ave.

64 Charged

67 Support for ballet dancers

69 Place for a spare tire

71 Send into a swoon

74 Lifts up a mountain

75 Geom. shape

77 ____ III, inspiration for Dracula

78 Cry of mock horror

80 “Don’t forget about me”

82 Set off

83 Announcement at the end of a long car trip

86 Org. established by President Nixon

87 “Little piggy” holders

88 Lack

89 “Count me in”

91 When repeated, 1968 name in the news

95 Generic juice flavor

96 Scroll holder

98 Choking on a Life Saver, e.g.

99 Fowl language?

100 Rich kid in “Nancy”

101 Young Arab

102 Sant’ Gria brand

105 “I don’t think so”

106 Stowe girl

107 Card game for two

108 Financial report

abbr.

109 Opposite of FF

110 Dangerous pet

112 Aggravate

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18

19 20 21

22 23 24

25 26 27 28

29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36

37 38 39 40 41 42

43 44 45 46 47 48

49 50 51

52 53 54 55 56

57 58 59 60 61 62

63 64 65 66 67

68 69 70 71 72

73 74 75 76 77 78

79 80 81 82 83

84 85 86 87 88 89

90 91 92 93

94 95 96 97 98 99 100

101 102 103 104

105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112

113 114 115

116 117 118

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Leather,RunsGreat!

2008DodgeGrandCaravan

Silver,V6,7Pass,PW,PL,VacationReady!#F8126

$3,295

$8,795

$7,995

$9,977

$7,995

$6,985

$5,999

$7,995

OVER100CARS INSTOCK!

2007Chry.Town&CountryTouring,Silver,V6,Leather,Sunroof,Alum.Wheels,

VacationReady!

2007JeepCompassLTDAuto,A/C,PW,PL,

Leather,LocalTrade

2009Chev.Cobalt LSCoupe,Auto,AC,

Stereo,CD,60KMiles

2008Chry.SebringLtd.HardTopConvertible,Red,V6,Leather,ChromeWhls,PW,PL,

CD, GreatSpringCruiser!

2006ChryslerPacifica

Loaded!

2000HondaAccordLXSilver,Auto.,A/C,PW,PL,

VeryEconomical!#G-8029

1998Toyota4Runner4x4,Loaded,

44ServiceRecords

$5,488

$8,477

$7,885

$9,995

$5,988

$4,475

$6,488

Page 17: Campbell county recorder 041416

Careers

Jobsnew beginnings...

Real Estate

Homesstarting fresh...

Homes for Sale-Ohio Homes for Sale-Ohio

Homes for Sale-Ky

Real Estate

Rentalsgreat places to live...

Destin, FL, Gulf front, 2BR,Condo Rentals, in Beautiful Des-tin, Local owner. 513-528-9800Office., 513-752-1735 H

Siesta Key - Golf front beachcondo, Weekly now till December,Cincy owner Don 513-232-4854

ERLANGER- 2BR, 1.5BA, equip.kitch., skylight, cath. ceiling, bsmt, gar,deck, c/a, quiet, $825/mo. 513-615-3277

WALTON2 acre residential lots,

(Homes Only),2 mi. South of Walton.Price Reduced, $48-$52K

859-802-8058

3 Ac. Campbell Co. rolling pasture,views,double wides welcome, easyaccess to I-275, $42,900, $2,00 down

7 Ac. Kenton Co., 1/2 pasture, 1/2pasture wooded, semi-private home site,view paved road, $61,900. $2,000 down

4 Ac. Northern Pendleton Co., partlywooded, double wides welcome, citywater along street, $42,900, $2,00 down,$381 per mo.

14 Ac. Grant Co. mostly pasture, largepond, ideal home site or get away, citywater, $76,900, $3,000 down

4 Ac. Gallatin Co. secluded home site,mobiles welcome, easy access to I-71,city water, $42,900, $1,500 down, $385per mo.

3 Ac. Boone Co. all pasture, restrictedhome site, flat to gently rolling, citywater, Walton-Verona schools, $68,900Restricted home site, Walton-Veronaschs. city water, $68,900

TRI-STATE LAND CO. Walton, KY

(859) 485-1330

Software Engineer 3 DMI BDI, LLC Mason, OH.Responsible for design &

implement app systems & webapps, including prototypes,

concepts & using, JAVA, JSP, AJAX,J2EE, SQL & Oracle. Req’s Master’s

in Comp.Sci & 3 yrs exp.Travel/reloc to unanticipated proj

sites. Req’s background checks.Resumes to: Digital Management,Attn: Christina Wenek-DMI BDI,LLC, 6550 Rock Spring Dr., 7th

Floor, Bethesda MD 20817

HOME CITY ICEFull-Time Accounts

Receivable rep for a largelocal company. Primary

responsibilities will includebilling, payments, customer

service and research.

Mail resumes to P.O. Box111116 Cincinnati, OH

45211 attn: Bill Poland.

Buckhead Mountain Grill is now hiring:

Servers ** $150 Sign on Bonus

After 90 Days **Apply Monday-Thursday

between 2pm-4pm.35 Fairfield Ave

Bellevue, Ky 41073

CarpentersHigh end residential,

framing, & exterior trimCall Don 513-535-9630

All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject tothe Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegalto advertise any preference, limitation or discriminationbased on race, color, religion, sex, national origin, handicapor familial status or an intention to make any such prefer-ence, limitation or discrimination.This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertisingfor real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readersare hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in thisnewpaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.

Kentucky Commission on Human Rights 800-292-5566

H.O.M.E. (Housing Opportunities Made Equal) 513-721-4663

MORTGAGE LOAN PROCESSOR Union Savings Bank has a full time opportunity available foran experienced mortgage loan processor at our corporateoffice located at 8534 E. Kemper Road, Cincinnati Ohio.This individual is responsible for the timely and accurateprocessing of mortgage loan files, ensures files meet bankand regulatory guidelines and will check the accuracy of allloan documents. Individuals in this position will respond toinquiries, resolve problems and obtain missing documentsrequired to complete the loan file. This position requiresthe ability to prioritize and manage multiple tasks andmeet deadlines. Position may require Saturdaycommitments.

Please send resumes to:[email protected]

Mortgage Loan CloserUnion Savings Bank has a full time opening for amortgage loan closer at our corporate office located at8534 E. Kemper Road Cincinnati, Ohio. The loan closerposition is an integral part of the overall mortgage loanprocess. Individuals in this position coordinate acceptableclosing dates, handle communications with title companies,broker’s, attorney’s and loan officers. The loan closer hasknowledge of all loan products that are offered by theCompany and works closely with loan officers andprocessors in order to successfully close loans. Position mayinclude Saturday commitments.

Please send resumes to:[email protected]

Permakil Pest Control, Inc.Serving Greater Cincinnati since 1972

GREAT OPPORTUNITY FOR FAMILY PERSON

Commercial 44 Year old Pest Management Company hiring

4 Full time Positions.

• Paid Training

• Company Vehicle

• Paid Vacation

• 5 Day Work week

• Full Uniform (includes shoes)

• And Much More

Currently working as PMP? Call immediately!

Ohio – 513-621-3028Kentucky – 859-431-5611ALL CALLS ARE CONFIDENTIAL.

CE-0000645477

CE-0000645752

Duro Bag, a Novolex Company, is currently hiring at our Richwood Facility. APPLY IN PERSON MONDAY - THURSDAY 9:00AM – 3:00PMFOR SAME DAY INTERVIEWS, APPLY IN PERSON ON FRIDAY

BETWEEN 8:30 AM – 2:00 PM1 Duro Way, Walton, Kentucky 41094

(We’re located right down the road from the Richwood Flea Market)

Entry level positions do not require previous experience. We will train you on the job. All applicants are hired as Novolex employees – no temporary

agency involvement. Should speak functional English.Our employees have a unique work schedule - 3 days one week 4 days the following week. All workdays are 12 hours (7 am to 7 pm, and 7 pm to 7 am).

We offer room for advancement, competitive wage & benefits package, including medical, dental and 401K, 11 paid holidays and vacation pay that is

based on years of service.

If you would prefer to join our team in Richwood on line, go to www.durojobs.com (be sure to click the Richwood location on the drop down menu). If you are not familiar with the

on line application process or have any issues call 859-488-8440 we will be happy to help you. If you get a recording please leave a message and we will return your call.

An Equal Opportunity Employer

Adjuster/Supervisor TBD Bag Catchers $12.94 Machine Tender $15.09 Fork Lift & Clamp Trucks $14.47-$14.63

(Plus additonal .25 for evening shifts)

Starting Hours

DURO BAG RICHWOOD

CLEANI NG SERVICEPOSITION

Carole’s Personal TouchFull time cleaner neededPolice report required.

Call Carole Davis (513)470-7867

CustodianThe Indian Hill School

District is seeking asubstitute custodian.

Interested applicants maydownload an application

on our website,indianhillschools.org/

employment/ or request acopy by calling

272-4608. Please deliver ormail completed application

to: Indian Hill Board ofEducation; Mr. KenStegman, Facilities

Supervisor; 6845 Drake Rd.;Cincinnati, OH 45243.

amazon.com/applyAmazon is an Affirmative Action - Equal Opportunity Employer - Minority / Female / Disability / Veteran

Can’t make it? Apply online today:

pridebe proud fulfilling the customer promise.

Now Direct Hiring Full-Timeand Part-Time Fulfillment

Associates in Hebron!

Monday, April 1810am to 4pmBoone CountyPublic Library1786 Burlington Pike

Burlington, KY 41005

Wednesday, April 20

10am to 7pmEmbassy Suites10 East River Center Blvd.

Covington, KY 41011

Economic DevelopmentDirector

THE CITY OF HARRISON IS THEFASTEST GROWING COMMUNITY

IN HAMILTON COUNTY!Rewarding position in the one of

the last large land areas in theregion. Harrison is a leader indevelopment and is seeking

someone to guide the growth asEconomic Development Director.

Candidates should have aminimum of 5 years municipal

economic development experienceand a bachelor’s degree in an

associated field of study. To beconsidered, candidates should

forward a letter of interest andcurrent resume to:

[email protected] orto: Bill Neyer, Mayor, City ofHarrison, 300 George Street,

Harrison, Ohio 45030.Interest letters and resumes

will be accepted untilFriday, April 29, 2016.

Front Desk and Night Auditor Comfort Inn in Florence, KY is

currently looking for a Front Deskand Night Auditor

Ideal candidates would be freindly,helpful, detail oriented, and a

problem solver. Computerknowledge is a must. If you areinterested in joining our team,

please send your resume to:

Comfort Inn7454 Turfway Road Florence, KY 41042

or email:[email protected]

HIRING EVENTSecurity Guards &

Supervisors 756 Old St. Rt. 74, Suite A

Cincinnati, Ohio 45245Date: April 14, 2016

Time: 1:00pm to 4:30pmCall 513-381-7033 or

www.ussecurityassociates.comEEO

Laborers Needed

Window WasherHigh work, full time

Need car driver’s licenseGood pay & benefits

Call 859-581-3200

Look no further... We have immediate openings

for the following:

Call us today! Tel: 888-231-2888 Or apply online:

www.southernhealthpartners.com

Grant County

FT LPN (nights)

PT LPN Days (every other Wkend)

Campbell Co.

PT RN (nights)

Kenton Co.

FT LPN (nights/evenings)

*Must have KY nursing license to be eligible*

CE-0000644557

Looking to work for aCincinnati Top 100 workplace?Looking for a great company with

great benefits and excellent work environment?

Then join us for a Job FairWednesday April 13,2016

9am-6pmDue to our upcoming Memory

Care unit expansion we arecurrently seeking top talent for

the following positions:

STNA’s Full and Part Time-All shifts available

LPN’s/RN’s Full and Part Time-All shifts available

Please bring a resume. Interviewswill be conducted during

the job fair.

If you are unable to attendplease email your resume to

[email protected] call 513-561-9300

We look forward to seeing you!!!

The Kenwood by Senior Star5435 Kenwood RoadCincinnati, Ohio 4522

Male PT Youth Leader

Clermont County JuvenileDetention Center

Hiring Male PT YouthLeaders, Day/Evening Shifts

For more information & tocomplete an

application visitwww.myclermontauditor.org

JOBS HOMES RIDESPETS &STUFF

Toplace your ad visit: cincinnati.com/classifieds or search: classifiedsClassifiedscincinnati.com

VISITCLASSIFIEDSonline at cincinnati.com

Post jobs.VISITCLASSIFIEDSonline at cincinnati.com

Celebrate it.

CHECKOUTCLASSIFIEDonline at cincinnati.com

APRIL 14, 2016 μ CC-KENTUCKY - COMMUNITY μ 1C

Page 18: Campbell county recorder 041416

Management

The Cincinnati Enquirer has carrierroutes available in the following areas:

CentralSt. Bernard @ Walnut Hills @ Wyoming @ Avondale

EastAmelia / Batavia @ Bethel @ Brown County @ Goshen @

Hyde Park @ Madeira/Indian Hill/Milford/Loveland @ Montgomery / Silverton @ Oakley

WestColerain Twp. @ Groesbeck

Monfort Heights @ NorthsideWestern Hills / Westwood @ Wyoming

NorthFairfield @ Liberty Township @ Maineville @ Middletown

@ Morrow Mason @ Sharonville South Lebanon@ West Chester

KentuckyCold Spring @ Crescent Springs

Edgewood ErlangerFlorence / Burlington

Independence / Taylor MillPark Hills / Ft. Mitchell

Union @ Walton / Verona @ WarsawIndianaSt. Leon

Must be 18 with a valid drivers license and proof ofinsurance. If interested please call: 513-768-8134

Mock Jurors$$ Earn $12 Per Hour $$

Spend 6-10 hrs on a given wkdaynight, wkday or wkend serving asa juror in a mock trial to evaluate

settlement of an actual courtcase. If you have a valid OH DL or

State I.D.,a U.S. Citizen, andeligible to vote, enroll with us on:

SIGNUPDIRECT.COM (please fillout on line form completely forconsideration) or only if you donot have access to a computer

Call: 1-800-544-5798. (On-line signup preferred). *****Mock Trials

held in Hamilton Co. Ohio.

PAINTERS WANTEDExperienced residential painters wanted in Northern Kentucky.

Call 859-567-1500

PET GROOMERFT. Great Pay. Rich Benefits. Great

Schedule. Email resume to [email protected] or apply online

www.petwow.com/pages/jobapp

Rowland ConstructionIs hiring for all positions

Offers good wagesTo apply call Jon at:

(859) 743-1553

SecretaryMust have experience andexcellent communication

skills, detail orientedand ability to

multi-task. Microsoft Word,Excel, Publisher, and Accessrequired. Excellent benefit

package. EOE. Email resume to:

[email protected]

TANKBUS OPERATORS~ Fixed Route ~Full & Part Time

• Excellent Wage &BenefitPackage• Must be 21• Current MVR requiredwith application• High School Grad orGED• Will train for CDL –B• Must be available towork flexible schedule• Applications acceptednow through May 6th.

Apply at TANK,3375 Madison Pike, Ft.

Wright, KY8:30 am to 4:00 pm

Monday – FridayTANK is an Equal

Opportunity Employer

Transit Authority of Northern Kentucky

Director of Maintenance

The Transit Authority ofNorthern Kentucky is

accepting applications forthe full-time position of

Director of Maintenance.The Authority operates afleet of 100 fixed-routebuses and 30 paratransit

vehicles, carryingapproximately four millionpassengers annually. This isa grade 13 position with astarting salary of $70,000.

Final salary will becommensurate with

experience andqualifications.

Application instructions, afull job description, and listof desired qualifications can

be found atwww.tankbus.org/jobs.

TANK is an EqualOpportunity Employer.

Transit Authority ofNorthern Kentucky

Human Resources Manager

The Transit Authority ofNorthern Kentucky is

accepting applications forthe position of Human

Resources Manager. This isa grade 9 position with astarting full-time salary of

$45,000. Final salary will becommensurate with

experience andqualifications. TANK mayfill this position in a part-time or full-time capacity.

Application instructions, afull job description, and listof desired qualifications can

be found atwww.tankbus.org/jobs.

TANK is an EqualOpportunity Employer.

VETERINARY ASSISSTANT FT or PT. $27K-30K/Year (FT).WILL TRAIN. Email resume to

[email protected] or apply online

www.petwow.com/pages/jobapp

Family Dental Care Associates,J Michael Fuchs DDS Inc. seeks

dentist in Cincinnati, OH to treatpatients & provide dental services.

Resume: 8805 Governors Hill,Cincinnati OH 45249

LPN/RN 7 am-7 pm M-F in Batavia

Close to Eastgate Mall and I-275.Med/Surg NURSING experience

required. Wound andtracheostomy care, monitoring of

ventilator and assistancewith ADLs via ceilinglift for quadriplegic,

ventilator-dependent member. Contact

[email protected].

Nurse Case Manager RN case manager neededfor a growing health care

network located in theWest Chester area.LongTerm Care experience.Managed care & MDS

experience. Must possessorganizational skills,

detailed oriented, & abilityto multi-task effectively.Great Job. Great Work

Environment. Send resumeto:

[email protected] fax (513) 777-2372

Nurse CaseManager - Specialist

RN Case Managerneeded for AIR

pre-cert case mgmt.AIR and managed care

experience a plus.Must possess

Good organizationalskills, detailed orientedand ability to multi-task

effectively.Great opportunity.

Send resume to:[email protected]

orfax (513) 777-2372

CE-0000645601

Entry Level Packers

CE0000645601

Castellini Company located in Wilder, KY is a produce companylooking for entry level employees.

Candidates must be able to work in cold environment, lift upto 60 lbs, pack produce, pass background check, pass drug

screen, physical & JPA.

For any further information about the job you may contact Sarah Hartloff at 859/442-6747.

TO APPLY:You may stop by Monday thru Friday from 8:00 am to 4:00 pm

EMAIL RESUME TO:

[email protected] ONLINE AT:

www.castellinicompany.com

CASTELLINI COMPANY 2 Plum Street | Wilder, KY

EOE

AdministrativeAssistant/Clerk ofCouncil Position

The City of Milford is acceptingapplications for the position ofAdministrative Assistant/Clerkof Council. The ideal candidate

must possess the ability to carryout detailed written and oralinstructions, communicateeffectively with residents,

maintain files in accordancewith the Ohio Public Records

Act, distribute notices of publicmeetings and prepare purchaseorders for the City Manager andCity Council. This position alsoserves as Clerk of Council andprovides records transcription

for all meetings of City Council,which occur on alternate

Tuesday evenings, and budgetmeetings which occur 2Saturdays per year. An

Associate’s Degree in BusinessAdministration or equivalent

experience required. Theposition is full-time and offers acomplete benefits package and a

rate of pay dependent uponqualifications. Submit resume to

the City of MilfordAdministrative Assistant, 745Center St., Suite 200, Milford,

OH 45150 or email [email protected].

Applications will be accepteduntil April 29, 2016.

AA/EOE

ENGINEERING MANAGERSneeded by our Florence,Kentucky facility to plan,coordinate, and conductactivities regarding analyticalstudies on engineeringproposals to develop designfor products. Analyzeresearch data and proposedproduct specifications todetermine feasibility ofproduct proposal. Prepareand supports preparation ofproduct and system layoutincluding detailed drawingsand schematics fromprototyping throughproduction. Analyze CAE testdata and reports todetermine if design meetsfunctional and performancespecifications and formulatesi m p r o v e m e n trecommendations based onresults. Confers withresearch and otherengineering personnel andprepares designmodifications as required.Conduct studies regardingc r a s h ,noise/vibration/harshness(NVH), and durability ofvehicle designs thatpreferably include TailorRolled Blanks. Candidatesmust have Master’s degree inMechanical Engineering,Materials Engineering orAerospace Engineering and 1year experience in joboffered. Travel required 2 to3 weeks per month insidethe U.S. Compensationcommensurate withknowledge & experience.Send resumes to C. Sullivan,Mubea, Inc., 6800 IndustrialRoad, Florence, KY 41042.

CHECKOUTCLASSIFIEDonline at cincinnati.com

HAND OUTTHE CIGARS!

VISITCLASSIFIEDSonline at cincinnati.com

Celebrate it.

HANDOUT THECIGARS!Celebratewith aannouncement.

VISITCLASSIFIEDSonline at cincinnati.com

Pressure Washing

HOLMESBLACKTOP & CONCRETEDriveways • Patios • Steps

Drainage SolutionsResidential & Commercial

FULLY INSURED - FREE ESTIMATES

513-451-3100

***WBS Computers****Laptop/PC/ServerSales and Service

*Tune-ups/Virus Removal*Network Design/

Installation*On-Site Computer Service

*Custom Built GamingComputers

**FREE** data destructionw/ every computer/laptop

recycled w/ us.***3403 Dixie Hwy,

Erlanger KY******859-384-1500***

CLEAR CHOICEEXCAVATION

• Dump Trucks • Bobcats• Top Soil • Loader• Gravel • Excavator• Sand • Back Hoe

859-342-7777

(859) 814-4890

Peace of Mind – Master Craftsman with 30 yrs experience in all phases of construction & Maintenance

type operations. ALL WORK GUARANTEEDEconomical - Professional Services at Handyman Prices

RECEIVE 20% OFF WITH THIS COUPON

HANDYMAN + PLUSHANDYMAN + PLUS

• Electrical• Plumbing• Drywall & Repair• Roofing• Siding & Gutters• Tile, Slate &

Other Flooring• Doors & Windows

• Decks• Trim & Custom

Carpentry• Basement• Bath & Kitchen

Remodels• All types of Home

Improvement & Repairs

NKyHomeRepair.comKitchen, Bath &

Basement Remodeling,Decks, Tile, Custom

Showers, Walk-in Tubs

25 years exp. Insured.

859-331-0527

CE

-000

0642

686

CE

-000

0645

661

BUTCH SERRAL ANDSCAPING

39 Yrs ExperienceAll phases of Landscaping

Mulching, Edging, Shrubbery & Small

Tree Trimming, Installation & Removal

of Shrubbery, Small Trees & Sod.

Yard Clean Up Work

859-816-5765 (cell)

Lawn ServicesA.S.B Lawn Care

859-814-6364Reasonable Rates

No ContractsNo one knows

your yard like we do!

CE

-000

0643

859

CONCRETE LLC

Currently Offering10% DISCOUNT

• Free Estimates • Fully Insured• Over 20 Years Experience

Specializing in new and old replacement of driveways, patios, sidewalks, steps, retaining walls, decorative concrete work, basement and foundation leaks & driveway additions. We also offer Bobcat, Backhoe, Loader, and Dumptruck work, regrading yards & lot cleaning.

[email protected]

OFFICE859-485-6535

CHRIS 859-393-1138

A+ Rating with Better Business Bureau

Driveways • Sidewalks Patio • Porch • Floors

859-342-7777

CLEAR CHOICE CONCRETE

CE

-000

0643

025

CE-0000644611

Deck Staining & Pressure Washing

859-628-1937

CHARLIE HUSTLE

CE-0000644260

For your Roofing, Gutter & Siding needs, call

ROWLAND CONSTRUCTION at 859-743-1553

New & Repairs

Brown’s TREE SERVICE

& LANDSCAPING SUPPLIES

• Stump Grinding Available

Free Estimates/Insured 859-442-8406 • 859-801-6785

CE-0000644231

Service DirectoryCALL: 513-421-6300TO PLACE YOUR AD

2C μ CC-KENTUCKY - COMMUNITY μ APRIL 14, 2016

Page 19: Campbell county recorder 041416

Community

Announceannouncements, novena...

Special Notices-Clas

General Auctions General Auctions

Business

Commercialopportunites, lease, Invest...

Assorted

Stuffall kinds of things...

Electronics

Musical Instruction

Management

NIGHT SHIFT WAREHOUSESUPERVISOR

Beverage distributor seekingnight shift warehouse super-visor. Experience necessary.Salary commensurate withexperience. Backgroundcheck and drug screen re-quired. Great benefits.

Mail your resume orapply in person, 8-5.

No phone calls.Heidelberg Distributing

Co; 1518 Dalton Ave.Cincinnati, Ohio 45214.

EOE.

Immediate OpeningsManufacturing PositionsEquipment / Machine Operators

Starting pay $15.86/hourFull time w/Great Benefits

3rd Shift Openings*See job details on our website*

Apply online – or - in person:careers.ingramcontent.com

or come to:4260 Port Union Rd, Fairfield, OH

M-F 9am – 2pm.

Leader in high end architecturalseeking: Skilled cabinetmaker –

exp in all aspects of customcabinetry, incl wood veneer &

solids, PL & SS fabrication. Req’dcapabilities: reading shop dwgs,safe set up & operation of shop

equip, generating quality work ina timely manner with min

supervision. Pay & benefits basedon skills & exp.

Drivers: CDL – A 1 yr. exp., Earn$1,250 + per week, Great Weekend

Hometime, Excellent Benefits &Bonuses, 100% No Touch/

70% D & H888-406-9046

Drivers:, CDL-A: LOCALLawrenceburg, IN!! Regional &OTR Home Weekends! Sign-OnBonus!! Excellent Pay, Benefits!

Drue Chrisman Inc.:1-855-506-8599 x103

Drivers: Dedicated, Regional, OTR,Flatbed & Point to Point Lane

Openings! Excellent Pay, (New hiresguaranteed min $$$ week)!CDL-A 1yr. Exp, Orientation

Completion Bonus!: 1-855-314-1138

Dump Truck DriverCDL class B

Northern Kentucky/ cincy area Salary equal to experience

Call 859-441-4042Email [email protected]

Dump Truck DriversFayette Trucking is nowhiring for local Class B

Dump Truck Drivers with 2years or more experience.

Employment offers arecontingent upon successful

completion of DOTPhysical, Drug and Alcohol

test and clean drivingrecord. Tailgating is a

plus. Competitive wagesand benefits. Apply in

person at 100 Sierra DriveVerona KY

Make BIG Money With

OUR Fairfield Townshiplocation has a GREAT businessopportunity for you to own &

operate your own Flatbed or boxtruck delivery service!

μ BIG Income Potential with small startup costsμ Be home EVERY night with your family!μ Work for YOURSELF , not someone else!

Fairfield TownshipFor more information call

(513) 273-2180 or emailFFTPGeneralManager@

menards.com

KILL BED BUGS & THEIR EGGS!Harris Bed Bug Killers/KITComplete Treatment SystemHardware Stores, The HomeDepot, homedepot.com

Commercial Property. Daycareapproved, many possibilities off I-75Critenden/N. KY. 859-640-7063

Latonia - 3200 sq ft, first flr,Prime commercial/businessspace, high visiablity, hightraffic count, Call 859-750-2689, evening 859-331-8878

BURLINGTON ANTIQUE SHOW

Boone County FairgroundsBurlington, KY

FIRST SHOW OF SEASON!Sun., April 17

------------8am-3pm $3.00/Adult

Early Buying6am-8am $5/Adult

Rain or Shine513-922-6847

burlingtonantiqueshow.com

OHIO COUNTRYANTIQUE SHOW

Roberts Centre, Wilmington(At exit #50, I-71)

Saturday, April 169am – 3pm $6.00 adults

513-738-7256ohiocountry.com

APPLIANCES: ReconditionedRefrigerators, Ranges,

Washers, Dryers, Dishwashers. Will deliver. 90 Day Warr.

Will Remove Old Appliances.513-323-6111, 859-878-2481A+ Rating with the BBB

Absolute AuctionShop Tools Tractor Equipment

Saturday April 23, 2016 10:00 AM455 Courtney Road Crittenden KY

Directions: From Crittenden or Walton take US 25 to Eads Rd.which is between Walton and Crittenden. Cross railroad tracksand go 1.5 miles to stop sign. Turn left on Courtney Rd. Sale siteis on left. Watch for signs.We have been contracted to sell the following shop tools, tractorand equipment belonging to Roscoe and Rhonda Morrow at abso-lute auction.Tractor and Equipment: 9N Ford tractor, FD 25 Komatsu forklift(propane), 3pt scrapper blade, 3pt county line disc, 3pt frontiersingle plow, 3pt post hole digger and 3 augers, 3pt potato plow,16ft flat wagon, 3pt bale spear, wooden fence posts, steel barrels,pull behind lawn sprayer, 4 hog feeders. Shop Tools and Misc: 250Hobart mig welder, White industries air conditioner machine, 2ton Triplex chain hoist, 6 ton Alcoa ratchet hoist, 1 ton DurbinDurco chain hoist, heavy duty transmission jack, 150,000 btu Red-dy heater, 110,000 Reddy heater, Wisconsin gas water pump, Mil-waukee miter cut off saw, Stihl k-12 cut off saw, 1 in. drive air im-pact wrench, 3/8 in. drive impact wrench, seal drivers, large as-sortment smaller impact wrenches, hand porta-power craftsman15 ½in. drill press, double grinder on stand, century 80 GL migwelder, Chicago electric 40 amp plasma cutter, Craftsman radialtable saw, ready pro 110 heater, Clark 20 gal. Sand blaster, 15bags sand, 8 ton cherry picker, Craftsman stack tool box, GMgoodwrench limited edition stack tool box, truck tire changingtools, #117 A railroad jack, large barn jack, 11/2 ton ratchet come-along, metal dock ramps, metal bins full of nuts and bolts,battery charger, new 800 series Ford front chrome bumper, 2-275gal oil tanks, 12 gal parts washer, cutting torches gages and cart,2 tall jack stands, regular jack stands, floor jacks, 2-8ft sidemount tool boxes, 3 creepers, drill bits, lots of wrenches up to 2 in-ches, lots of sockets, lots of ratchets, impact sockets, ¾inch drivesocket set, ¾inch drive torque wrench, pipe wrenches, large ad-justable wrenches, drills, new ¾inch drive impact socket set (met-ric up to 50m) vice, pipe threader, pipe cutter, motor stand, 30plus clevises, Ryobi battery tool set, seal pullers, 16 gal shop vac,clamps, 4 inch ratchet straps, 22.5 truck tires and rims, Chev 15inch tires and rims, air condition hoses and fittings, compressionfittings, air fittings, 24.5 truck rims, new oil and air filters, largesockets up to 5 inches, lots of new tools, new broom handles, newext. ice scrappers, Homelite chain saw, steel post driver, ham-mers, 2-22.5 truck rims, 3-5gal buckets 80-90 wt gear oil, stainlesscart, misc steel and metal. Many more items too numerous tomention.Auctioneers Note: Roscoe and Rhonda Morrow have been in thetrucking business for a long time. Roscoe did all his mechanicwork himself. This is a large selection of good shop tools. You willnot want to miss this sale.Terms: Cash or check with proper ID. No buyer’s premium.Lunch served. Not responsible for accidents. View pictures onauctionzip.com ID# 29983.

Bailey AuctionsDry Ridge KY

Jerry Bailey-Auctioneer859-428-2612

Evergreen Cemetery MausoleumGarden Crypts #99 & 100, Tier E,side by side, $5200; 859-630-8241

Panasonic 50" PlasmaHDTV, Panasonic 50" PlasmaHDTV, Class 1080p, ModelTH-50PZ85U, fantastic condi-tion with high impact im-ages, measures 49"x29" (323/4" with TV stand), will alsosell TV console for $50 ifneeded., $250.00. (513)519-2225 [email protected]

FREE FIREWOOD -Highland Heights call ortext. 859-750-6078, Ky

BEDROOM, 7 DRAWERDRESSER & MIRROR, HEAD-BOARDGOOD CONDITION, $$100.00. (859)491-0889 [email protected]

Crate & Barrel Set: SleeperSofa, Loveseat, & Chair,Beautiful, durable and func-tional Crate & Barrel furni-ture set. Includes a SleeperSofa with a full size mattress,a Loveseat with a twin sizemattress, and a matchingchair. Decorative PotteryBarn pillows also included.All pieces are in fantasticcondition. Great for familieswith kids and pets. , $$500for all three pieces. (513)519-2225 [email protected]

King Bedroom Set, 5 PCThomasville - Elysee, 2marbletop chest, 1 masterchest, 1 marbletop drawerdresser, Originally paid$12,000, asking $6,500/obo.859-609-4335

Wooden Round table w/4 chairs &leaf, $250; Chrome shelves onwheels, resturant quality-$50 each859-802-5348

2 PIANO LESSONS49 yrs. exp.; 859-727-4264

#1 ALWAYS BUYING -Retired Vet pays topcash for antiques andvintage items. Singleitem or completeestate 513-325-7206

Cash paid for antiqueHarley Davidson, Indian orother American made mo-torcycles or related partsfrom 1900-1970. Any con-dition. Midwest Collectorwill pick up anywhere.309-645-4623

CASH PAID for unopenedunexpired Diabetic Strips. Upto $35 per 100. 513-377-7522

www.cincytestrips.com

CASH PAID!Gold, Jewelry, Diamonds,Coins, Rolexs, Antiques,

Slot Machines, Tools,Electronics, Firearms

& CollectiblesWith 2 Locations

3236 W. Galbraith3621 Harrison Ave

513-385-6789; 513-661-3633 www.americantradeco.net

Absolute HighestCash Buyer!

I BUY OLD ELECTRONICS: StereoEquip. Radio speakers guitar amp.

Records (513) 473-5518

INSTANT CASH PAID For Baseball Cards Coins, Gold,

Silver, Paper Money, Antiques, OldToys, Watches, Comics, Nascar, CaseKnives Military, Trains, Autographs,Estates, Many Others! We Pick-up

513-295-5634

LOOKING TO BUYUsed Furniture & Appliances atReasonable Prices. We can alsopick up items & auction them offfor percentage. 937-798-1257

WANTED: COINCOLLECTIONS

for the

AUCTION held in conjunction with the

33rd Annual Greater CincinnatiNumismatic Exposition

June 2-4, 2016. Sharonville Conv Ctr.This annual event is Cincinnati’s

oldest and largest coin conventionand draws buyers from all over

the US. If you have a serious coincollection for sale, this is the

marketplace-nothing else in thearea is even close! To

discuss consigning contactPaul Padget (513)-821-2143

WANTED: COIN COLLECTIONSfor the

AUCTIONheld in conjunction with the

33rd Annual Greater CincinnatiNumismatic Exposition

June 2-4, 2016. Sharonville Conv Ctr.This annual event is Cincinnati’s old-est and largest coin convention anddraws buyers from all over the US.If you have a serious coin collection

for sale, this is the marketplace-nothing else in the area is even

close! Todiscuss cosigning contactPaul Padget (513)-821-2143

WAR RELICSUS, German, Japanese

Paying Top DollarCall 513-309-1347

CHECKOUTCLASSIFIEDonline at cincinnati.com

Garage Sales Garage Sales

Garage Sales

Great Buys

Garage Salesneighborly deals...

Estate Sale - Fri & Sat 4/15 &4/16, 8am to 4pm, 9028 HeritageCt, Alexandria, 41001 , Antiquefurniture & kitchenware, ta-bles, lamps, pictures, glass-ware, sets of dishes, kitchenappliances, rooms of furni-ture & shed clean-out!All must go !

HUGE MID CENTURY,1 OWNER HOME SINCE 1962,

MOVING SALEHOUSE AND YARD WILL BE

COMPLETLY FULL.18 ARCADIA, FT THOMAS, KY

SATURDAY APRIL 16TH FROM11AM TO 3PM.

REDUCED PRICE SALE NOONTO 2PM SUNDAY APRIL 17TH .

Thousands of pieces of neatly hungor folded clean ladies clothing insizes small, medium, & large,retro clothes racks, 800 pairs ofnew women’s shoes, 100’s of purs-es, a multitude of new makeup,costume jewelry, 100’s of bottles ofhand lotion, deodorants, & soaps,maple Ethan Allen living room &bedroom furniture, refrigerator,dryer, 1960’s kitchen tables &chairs, collectible glassware, retroChristmas décor, a large kitchenfull of utilitarian items from the1960’s on, A MASSIVE AMOUNTOF SEWING ITEMS, NEATLYFOLDED FABRIC, & PAT-TERNS, towels & linens, large col-lection of records, 100’s of books,GULF OIL BARRELS, 100’s ofrolls of paper towels, toilet paper,tissues, boxes of never used clean-ing supplies, dozens of step stools,tools & hardware. VERY CLEAN& ORGANIZED HORDERS.

Newport Estate Sale403 Forest St, Newport, KY 410714/15 & 4/16/2016, Fri - 9am - 4pm#’s @ 8:45; Sat - 9am - 4pmThis is just the beginning a huge es-tate sale, this sale will take placeover a two week period. The firstpart of the sale will be the contentsof the home of 50 years and willtake place this Friday and Satur-day. The second part of the salewill be two weeks later and will bethe contents of three storage unitsthat we will bring to the house tosell. You don’t want to miss thissale! It will include antiques, oldZenith Record Player/Radio, Vtg.Clothing & purses, Bedroom Furni-ture, Tables, Chairs, Wardrobes,Old Toys, Games, Electronics, Bi-cycles, Old Car Parts, Oil Lamps,Cue Sticks, Very Lg Coll. Of oldTools, Linens, Costume Jewelry,Sports Memorabilia, Fishing items,Electric Lawnmower, Old SewingMachine, Xmas, Window Air condi-tioner, Kitchen Table & Chairs,Iron Bed, Recliner, Records, Tonsof smalls, Boxes and Boxes still togo through! Bring your flash lightsand plenty of time to shop, there’sa lot to go through. Too much to list- all priced to sell!Info & Pics - hsestatesales.com or859-468-9468.Directions - 10 st. - Hamlet - Forest St.

Reading- Estate Sale1612 Market St, 452154/15 & 4/16, Fri. 9-4, #’s at8:45, Sat. 9-4 Contents ofhome of 60+ yrs.Ant. Lions head platformrocker, ant. Empire server,cedar chest, maple full bed,chest of drawers, mirrordresser & night stand, 2-twinbeds, 60’s full bed, desks,drop leaft maple diningtable w/6 chairs, tea cart,china cabinet, hutch, couch,wing back chairs, foot stool,coffee & end tables, curiocabinet, vint. kitchen tables& chairs, sewing mach. incab., Mission style desk, lotsof signed artwork, Goebels,Rookwood, Roseville, HullPottery, china W/D, vint.working Crosley fridge, Ves-ta apt. stove, Hamilton pia-no, file cab., golf clubs, patiofurn., A/C, books, records,lawn mower, weed eater,lawn tools, some hand &pwrt toos, wagon, grill, minifridge. Too much to list. Allpriced to sell!Info & pics: hsestatesales.comor 859-992-0212Directions: Columbia Ave toMarket St. (1 Rd fromReading Rd)

Hamilton SpringShopping Expo

Saturday, April 23, 2016 10am-6pm

Butler County Fairgrounds

1715 Fairgrove Ave.Hamilton, Ohio 45011

Join us on this spring dayfor lots of shopping. Joindozens of vendors both in-side and out, rain orshine. Whether your look-ing to purchase a home-made craft or network,seeking home improve-ment ideas or just grab-bing a bite to eat andspending a day with thefamily, this is one eventyou don’t want to miss.For more info:

513-284-6617 orwww.ohiofamilyevents.com

Alexandria Barn Sale7931 Stonehouse Rd., 41059Fri. 4/15 & Sat. 4/16, 8a-2pHand tools, furniture, ladder, wroughtiron sec. door, clothing & collectibles.Lots of items for Sale! Dir: AA Hwy tonorth on Rt 1997 (Stonehouse Rd)

ALEXANDRIA KY- 1966RACE TRACK RD. Sat 4/16,9a-4p & Sun 4/17, 10a-4p:Household items, purses, an-tiques & lots of misc

Bromley Moving213 Kenton St, Fri 4/15 & Sat 4/16, 9a-?:

Everything must go

Burlington Ky- Huge Garage Sale4013 Petersburg RdApril 15th & 16th, 8am-4pmAntiques: furniture, marbles, kni-ves, cast iron & brass. Lg dish col-lection, lamps, pics & frames,books, jewlery, clothing, muchmore, to numerous to list. No EarlySales

CHARITY YARD SALE - Fri4/15, 8am-2pm, 6247 Applevalley Ct ,Florence, Clothes, books, Sportinggoods, household

Cincinnati, Ru m m ag e ,7515 Forest Rd, Fri: 9am-6pm, Sat: 9am-1pm,8:30am early entry Friday &Saturday with $2 donation,$5 Bag Sale onSaturday;United MethodistWomen Rummage Sale,Boutique, Furniture, Books,Glassware, Dishes, Baskets,Women & Men’s Clothing,Children’s Clothing & Toysand a variety of tools!, Dir:Anderson Hills UnitedMethodist Church, 7515Forest Rd, 5 Mile Exit on I-275, right on Beechmont,right on Forest Rd, churchon right.

“DID YOU KNOW THATAN ACTION FIGUREWORTH OVER $6,000SOLD FOR $1 AT A GA-RAGE SALE IN KENTUCKYLAST SUMMER? If you hadfamily members, friends, orneighbors that worked atKenner and they gave youtoys years ago, please checkwith local collectors beforegiving it away in your garagesale. Call 513.477.2557 oremail us at [email protected]. We pay topCASH prices for rare toys.”

Edgewood Ky- 3287 RIDGETOP WAYApril 16th & 17th, 9am-6pm: 2-sofa’s. antique hutch, bookshelfs,tools, grain scales, parson chairs,pool table/bar chairs, pool table &all equipment, crystal, china set,lots of misc items.

Erlanger - April 15th &16th, 9a-5p. 14 Delphi Dr .Large Sale: Antiques, collecti-bles, furniture, lots fo misc tomuch to list

Erlanger- Huge Garage/yard saleFri, Sat & Sun, 4/15-17; 9am-?3858 NARROWS RD 41018New dirt bikes, turkey fryers,riding lawn mower, Thirty-One, collectibles.

FLORENCE 143 RaintreeDr, Thurs, Fri & Sat, April14, 15 & 16. 8am-darkGodfather Part XI YardSale , I’ve been buying stor-age units all winter long!Fresh inventory of every-thing from A-Z , includingclothes, cleaned & sorted bygender & size. Bring youquarters & singles.

Florence, KY-MOVING SALE65 Grand, Sat & Sun April 16 & 17,8am to 2pm. Hospital bed, ridinglawn mower, washer/dryer, furni-ture, patio set, tools, householditems. Everything Goes!!

Fort Thomas, 14 Claras View, Sat: 7-11, MOVING SALE - too many itemsto list. Huge variety of home &garden, including glassware, boardgames, women’s accessories, and somuch more., Dir: 471 to Grand Ave.Rt on Summit. Rt on Holiday, whichbecomes Hanover. Take 1st rt offHanover onto Clara’s View. 14 is 1stdrive on right. Please park onClara’s VW and walk down drive.

Ft Thomas- 9 Ohio Ave.Sat & Sun, 4/16 & 17; 9a-2pHousehold goods, wood workingtools & assorted "stuff"

FT Thomas - Annual WomanClub Attic Sales, Sat. April 16,9am to 2pm, 8 N. Ft. ThomasAve, We have Everything!Everything has to go! * Pro-ceeds go for scholarships!

Ft. Thomas - April 16, 8a-12p.Highland MethodistsChurch. Hshld, vintage, sea-sonal, clothes. N. Ft ThomasAve, $ to Missions

GRAND ANTIQUE MALL9701 Reading Rd., Cinti,

OH 45215513-554-1919

www.grandantiquemall.comJOIN US FOR OUR

ANNUAL TENT/YARD SALE

Multi-Dealers, DJ,concessions

9:00am-6:00pmSaturday only, April 16.

GREENHILLS INDOOR & OUT-DOORSaturday 9a-4p. $10 Set-up,American Legion Hall.1100 Winton Rd,Info- 513-825-3099

Independence Moving sale55 CARRIE WAY 41051Furniture, Longaberger items,household items, appliances &more

Independence-Yard Sale6462 MARILYN DR, 41051Sat. 4/16, 8a-2pm, Carpentertools, nail guns, table & radi-al arm saws, sm. fridge, lrgpool slide & more

Moving/Garage Sale - Rainor shine, Fri 4/15, 8:30am-4:30pm, Sat 4/16, 8:30-3pm,8186 N. Dilcrest CirFlorence, KY

MOVING SALE1214 EDGEBROOK CT SAT 4/16, 8A-2PAPPLIANCES, TABLES, DISHES,CLOTHES, TOOLS, FURNITURE,TOYS & ETC NO EARLY BIRDS

Union Ky-Multi Fam Sale1322 Frogtown Rd. Sat 4/16,8a-1p. Variety of items

Yard Sale, Fri. April 15 & SatApril 16, 8am to ? 564 Stevenson

Rd, Erlanger, 41018, Old casinochips, coins, watches, shark vacuum,

tools, antiques, furniture, clocks,jewerly, knives, old fishing lures,

records, Elvis & Old Country,859-727-6112, 859-757-6310

VISIT: cincinnati.com/classifieds TO PLACE YOUR AD

Garage & Yard Sale

HANDOUT THECIGARS!

VISITCLASSIFIEDSonline at cincinnati.com

Celebratewith aannouncement.

APRIL 14, 2016 μ CC-KENTUCKY - COMMUNITY μ 3C

Page 20: Campbell county recorder 041416

OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OFFICIAL PUBLICATION

OFFICIAL PUBLICATION

INVITATION TO BIDApril 14, 2016

PROJECT: Asphalt Restoration Milling and Paving forthe District’s Service Area

SEALED BIDS WILL BE RECEIVED AT:

Northern Kentucky Water District (Owner)2835 Crescent Springs RoadP.O. Box 18640Erlanger, Kentucky 41018

UNTIL: Date: April 28, 2016 Time: 11:00 a.m., local time

At said place and time, and promptly thereafter, all Bidsthat have been duly received will be publicly opened andread aloud.

The proposed work is generally described as follows: Com-pletion of restoration of asphalt surfaces in the District’sservice area through the issuance of Work Orders over asix-month period. The restoration Work includes the mill-ing and paving of various areas where water main repairwork has been performed by the Northern Kentucky WaterDistrict in accordance with specifications prepared by theDistrict. Additional Work is expected to be added to thiscontract, but is not guaranteed. Payment to the SuccessfulBidder shall be based on the actual quantities of work re-quested by the District and successfully completed. Thebid prices shall remain in effect for the full term of the con-tract, regardless of the quantity of work, beginning June 1,2016.

All Bids must be in accordance with the Bidding Docu-ments on file, and available for examination at: NorthernKentucky Water District, 2835 Crescent Springs Road, Er-langer, Kentucky.

Copies of the Bidding Documents may be obtained fromthe office at the address indicated herein by contacting De-nise Manning at (859) 426-2718. There will be no charge forthese documents. Questions concerning this work should bedirected to Rusty Collinsworth at (859) 547-1263.

Bids will be received on a unit price basis as described inthe Contract Documents.

Evaluation of Bids and the awarding of a final contract aresubject to the reciprocal preference for Kentucky residentbidders pursuant to KRS 45A.490 to 45A.494 and (KAR 2005:400). Each Bid must contain evidence of Bidder’s qualifi-cations to transact business in the State of Kentucky or cov-enant to obtain such qualifications prior to award of theContract. The Bidder’s Organization Number from theKentucky’s Secretary of State and principal place of busi-ness as filed with Kentucky’s Secretary of State must be in-cluded where applicable.

Owner reserves the right to reject any or all Bids, includ-ing without limitation the right to reject any or all noncon-forming, non-responsive, incomplete, unbalanced, or condi-tional Bids, to waive informalities, and to reject the Bid ofany Bidder if Owner believes that it would not be in thebest interest of Owner to make an award to that Bidder.Owner also reserves the right to negotiate with the selectedBidder to such an extent as may be determined by Owner.Also if, in Owner’s opinion, a particular product and/or sup-plier offer distinct advantages over other Bidders, the Own-er may award to a Bidder that is not the lowest. Distinctadvantages may include shipping time, standardization orultimate economy. Owner reserves the right to have sepa-rate awards for individual bid items from different Bid-ders. Owner further reserves the right to reject all bids, towaive any informalities and to negotiate for the modifica-tion of any bid, or to accept a bid which is deemed themost desirable and advantageous from the standpoint ofcustomer value and service and concept of operations,even though such bid may not, on its face, appear to be thelowest price.

Minority Bidders are encouraged to bid.

Bids shall remain subject to acceptance for 60 days afterthe day of bid opening.

Amy Kramer, V.P. Engineering, Production & DistributionNorthern Kentucky Water DistrictCAM,Apr14,’16#1186395

NOTICE OF SALE OF BONDS

NORTHERN KENTUCKY UNIVERSITYGENERAL RECEIPTS BONDS,

2016 SERIES A AND2016 SERIES B

The Comptroller of Northern Kentucky University,Highland Heights, Kentucky, will until April 26, 2016, at11:00 A.M, and 11:30 a.m. E.T., respectively (or at such lat-er time and date announced at least forty-eight hours in ad-vance via the BiDCOMP™/PARITY™ system), receive inthe Office of the Comptroller, 605 Administrative Center,Highland Heights, Kentucky 41099 sealed, competitive bidsfor the purchase of approximately $27,840,000 of the Univer-sity’s General Receipts Bonds, 2016 Series A (the "Series ABonds") and $16,740,000 of the University’s General Re-ceipts Refunding Bonds, 2016 Series B (the "Series BBonds"). Electronic bids must be submitted viaBiDCOMP™/PARITY™, in the manner described below.Minimum bids are as follows: Series A Bonds - $27,422,400(98.50% of par) and Series B Bonds - $16,488,900 (98.50% ofpar); and the maximum price permitted for the entire is-sue of each series is as follows: Series A Bonds -$30,624,000 (110% of par), and Series B Bonds - $18,414,000(110% of par)Series A Bonds - $16,379,000 (110% of par) andSeries B Bonds - $26,405,500 (110% of par). Good faith de-posit is 2% of the par amount of Bonds awarded. BidForms, Official Terms and Conditions of Bond Sale, and aPreliminary Official Statement in a form deemed to be"near final" by the Board of Regents of the University maybe obtained from the Financial Advisor, J.J.B. Hilliard,W.L. Lyons, LLC, 500 West Jefferson Street, Louisville,Kentucky 40202, Attention Ms. Tammey Bibb (502) 588-1124.For further information about BiDCOMP™/PARITY™, po-tential bidders may contact the Financial Advisor orDalcomp at 40 West 23rd Street, 5th Floor, New York, NY10010, tel: (212) 404-8102. Legal opinion by Dinsmore &Shohl LLP, Covington, Kentucky. The Bonds will be issuedon a tax-exempt basis, subject to certain qualifications setout in detail in the Official Terms and Conditions of BondSale and in the Preliminary Official Statement.

Right to reject bids and to waive defects or informalities isexpressly reserved.

/s/ Michael HalesChief Financial OfficerCAM,Apr14,’16#1187552

PUBLIC HEARING

A public hearing will be heldby the City of Dayton, Ken-tucky on May 3, 2016 at 7:00p.m., 200 Clay Street, Day-ton, KY in conjunction withthe regular City Councilmeeting. The purpose of thepublic hearing is to discussroad improvements and ob-taining written or oral com-ments regarding the pro-posed use of Municipal RoadAid Program funds for2015/2016 fiscal year.501CAM,Apr14,’16#1190790

INVITATION TO BIDApril 14, 2016

PROJECT: Concrete Restoration Rates

SEALED BIDS WILL BE RECEIVED AT:

Northern Kentucky Water District (Owner)PO Box 186402835 Crescent Springs RoadErlanger, KY 41018

UNTIL: Date: April 28, 2016 Time: 9:00 a.m., local time

At said place and time, and promptly thereafter, all Bidsthat have been duly received will be publicly opened andread aloud.

The proposed work is generally described as follows: Fur-nishing all labor, equipment, materials and safety devicesfor the restoration of concrete surfaces - sidewalks, streetpavements, driveways and curbs at various locationsthroughout the Northern Kentucky Water District’s servicearea on an as-needed basis over a one-year period with anoptional one-year extension at the same unit prices Bid.Bids are to cover the actual quantities of concrete restora-tion performed for a one year period and shall remain in ef-fect for the full term of the contract regardless of the quan-tity ordered. The estimated quantities are for Bid compari-son only. Bids will be received on a unit price basis as de-scribed in the Contract Documents.

All Bids must be in accordance with the Instructions to Bid-ders and Documents on file, and available for examinationat: Northern Kentucky Water District, 2835 CrescentSprings Road, Erlanger, Kentucky, 41018.

Copies of the Bidding Documents may be obtained fromthe office at the address indicated herein by contacting De-nise Manning at (859) 426-2718. There is no charge forthese documents. Questions concerning this work should bedirected to Rusty Collinsworth at (859) 547-1263.

Bids will be received on a unit price basis as described inthe Contract Documents.

Evaluation of Bids and the awarding of a final contract aresubject to the reciprocal preference for Kentucky residentbidders pursuant to KRS 45A.490 to 45A.494 and (KAR 2005:400). Each Bid must contain evidence of Bidder’s qualifi-cations to transact business in the State of Kentucky or cov-enant to obtain such qualifications prior to award of theContract. The Bidder’s Organization Number from theKentucky’s Secretary of State and principal place of busi-ness as filed with Kentucky’s Secretary of State must be in-cluded where applicable.

Owner reserves the right to reject any or all Bids, includ-ing without limitation the right to reject any or all noncon-forming, non-responsive, incomplete, unbalanced, or condi-tional Bids, to waive informalities, and to reject the Bid ofany Bidder if Owner believes that it would not be in thebest interest of Owner to make an award to that Bidder.Owner also reserves the right to negotiate with the selectedBidder to such an extent as may be determined by Owner.Also if, in Owner’s opinion, a particular product and/or sup-plier offer distinct advantages over other Bidders, the Own-er may award to a Bidder that is not the lowest. Distinctadvantages may include shipping time, standardization orultimate economy. Owner reserves the right to have sepa-rate awards for individual bid items from different Bid-ders. Owner further reserves the right to reject all bids, towaive any informalities and to negotiate for the modifica-tion of any bid, or to accept a bid which is deemed themost desirable and advantageous from the standpoint ofcustomer value and service and concept of operations,even though such bid may not, on its face, appear to be thelowest price.

Minority Bidders are encouraged to bid.

Bids shall remain subject to acceptance for 60 days afterthe day of bid opening.

Amy Kramer, V.P. Engineering, Production & DistributionNorthern Kentucky Water DistrictCAM,Apr14,’16#1186319

COMMONWEALTH OFKENTUCKY CAMPBELLCOUNTY FISCAL COURT

CAMPBELL COUNTY,KENTUCKY

R. Yelton, d/b/a Yelton En-terprises, LLC, whose mail-ing address is 1 DallasDrive. PO Box 441 Butler.Kentucky. 41006, hereby de-clares intention to apply fora Campbell County, Ken-tucky, Permit to Operate aPlace of Entertainment. Thebusiness to he issued thePermit is located at 956 Ken-ton Station Road,Alexandria, Kentucky 41001,doing business as GrantsLick Cafe.

Any person, association, cor-poration. or body politic mayprotest the granting of thepermit by writing to theCampbell CountyJudge/Executive HonorableSteve Pendery at 1098Monmouth Street. Newport,Kentucky 41071, on or beforeconsideration of the permitat a public hearing to heheld Wednesday. April 20.2016 at 5:30 p.m., at theCampbell County Adminis-tration Building, 1098Monmouth Street, Newport,Kentucky.

I, Paula Spicer, Clerk of theCampbell County FiscalCourt, hereby certify thatthis notice was prepared byme at the direction of theCampbell County FiscalCourt.

Paula K. SpicerFiscal Court ClerkCAM,Apr14,’16#1187645

---PUBLIC NOTICE---

Notice is hereby given thatthe Northern KentuckyWater District, located at2835 Crescent Springs Road,Erlanger, KY 41018, hasfiled an application with theEnergy and EnvironmentCabinet to perform mainte-nance and repairs to theOhio River Pumping StationNumber 2. The work will in-volve: replacement of thetrash rack, influent sluicegate, suction inlet valve, in-terior access ladders andplatforms, windows, and astructural floor slab. Thework will also involve: re-moval of vegetation from thebuilding foundation, mortartuck pointing, and foundationblock repair/replacement.The property is located at611 Mary Ingles Highway,Fort Thomas, KY, approxi-mately 1.75 miles north ofthe Interstate 275 bridge onthe Ohio River. Any com-ments or objections concern-ing this application shall bedirected to: Kentucky Divi-sion of Water, Surface WaterPermit Branch, Flood PlainManagement Section, 200Fair Oaks Lane, Frankfort,Kentucky 40601. Phone:(502) 564-3410.Pub:501CAM,Apr7,14’16#1168925

ADVERTISEMENTFOR BIDS

The City of Dayton will beaccepting sealed bids for twodimensions on a section ofDodd Drive. A 30x600 sec-tion and a bid for a 50x600section. Only one dimensionwill be selected. The bidswill be received by the Cityof Dayton, at the MunicipalBuilding, 514 Sixth Avenue,Dayton, KY until 4:00 p.m.on April 26, 2016 and then atsaid office opened and readaloud. Contract documentsmay be obtained at the CityBuilding. For more infor-mation contact Rick Lucasat 859-866-7731. The Citymay reject any and all bidsCAM,Apr14,’16#1181081

INVITATION TO BIDApril 14, 2016

PROJECT: District Vehicles

SEALED BIDS WILL BE RECEIVED AT:

Northern Kentucky Water District (Owner)2835 Crescent Springs RoadP.O. Box 18640Erlanger, Kentucky 41018

UNTIL: Date: April 29, 2016 Time: 10:00 a.m., local time

At said place and time, and promptly thereafter, all Bidsthat have been duly received will be publicly opened andread aloud.

The proposed purchase is generally described as follows:The furnishing and delivering of selected vehicles from thefollowing list within the number of days specified in theBid Form upon issuance of a Purchase Order by the Own-er.

Number of Units Vehicle 2 ¾ Ton, 4x4 Pickup with Extended Cab 2 ¾ Ton, 4x4 Pickup with Utility Body 1 20- Ton Drag 1 Compact, 4x2 Pickup with Extended Cab

All prospective bidders should understand that Owner’spurchase of these vehicles is exempt from state sales tax.All Bids must be in accordance with the Instructions to Bid-ders and the Contract Documents on file, and available forexamination at: Northern Kentucky Water District, 2835Crescent Springs Road, Erlanger, Kentucky 41018. Copiesof the Bidding Documents may be obtained from the officeat the address indicated herein by contacting Denise Man-ning at (859) 426-2718. There is no charge for these docu-ments. Any questions on the bid specifications can be an-swered by contacting Jim Wren at 859-991-1646.

Bids will be received on a unit price basis as described inthe Bidding Documents. Bids may be submitted on anyone item, multiple items, or all of the items listed in theBid Form.

Evaluation of Bids and the awarding of a final contract aresubject to the reciprocal preference for Kentucky residentbidders pursuant to KRS 45A.490 to 45A.494 and (KAR 2005:400). Each Bid must contain evidence of Bidder’s qualifi-cations to transact business in the State of Kentucky or cov-enant to obtain such qualifications prior to award of theContract. The Bidder’s Organization Number from theKentucky’s Secretary of State and principal place of busi-ness as filed with Kentucky’s Secretary of State must be in-cluded where applicable.

Owner reserves the right to reject any or all Bids, includ-ing without limitation the right to reject any or all noncon-forming, non-responsive, incomplete, unbalanced, or condi-tional Bids, to waive informalities, and to reject the Bid ofany Bidder if Owner believes that it would not be in thebest interest of Owner to make an award to that Bidder.Owner also reserves the right to negotiate with the selectedBidder to such an extent as may be determined by Owner.Minority Bidders are encouraged to bid.

Bids shall remain subject to acceptance for 90 days afterthe day of bid opening or for such longer period of time towhich a Bidder may agree in writing upon request of theOwner. If a Contract is to be awarded, the Owner will givethe successful Bidder a Notice of Award during the periodof time which the successful Bidder’s Bid remains subjectto acceptance.

Lindsey RechtinActing Vice-President of Finance & Support ServicesNorthern Kentucky Water DistrictCAM,Apr14,’16#1186210

LEGAL NOTICE

Notice is hereby given bythe Campbell County FiscalCourt that a public hearingwill be held on Wednesday,April 20, 2016 at 5:30 P.M. inthe Campbell County FiscalCourt Chambers located at1098 Monmouth Street,Newport, KY.

THE PURPOSE OF THEHEARING IS TO OBTAINCOMMENTS AND SUGGES-TIONS FROM THE PUBLICPERTAINING TO THECOUNTY’S LAND ANDWATER CONSERVATIONFUND GRANT APPLICA-TION, WHICH IF AT-TAINED, WILL BE USEDTO REPLACE AND CRE-ATE A NEW BATHROOMAND SHOWER FACILITYLOCATED AT THE RVCAMPGROUND IN AJ JOL-LY PARK.

All interested parties are in-vited to be present to hear orgive testimony relating tothe above referenced grant.Further information con-cerning this matter is avail-able for public inspection atthe Campbell County Admin-istrative Offices(859.547.1810), Suite 301, 1098Monmouth Street, Newport,KY from 8:30 AM to 4:30 PMMonday-Friday.

The Campbell County FiscalCourt will make every rea-sonable accommodation toassist qualified disabled per-sons in obtaining access toavailable services or in at-tending Fiscal Court activi-ties. If there is a need forthe Fiscal Court to be awareof a specific disability, youare encouraged to contactthe Fiscal Court at859.292.3838 or TTD/TTY at1.800.545.1833 (ext. 947) sothat suitable arrangementscan be considered prior tothe delivery of the service ordate of the meeting.

Kim Serra, Assistant CountyAdministratorCampbell County Fiscal CourtCAM,Apr14,’16#1187739

INVITATION TO BIDDERSLEGAL NOTICE

SEALED PROPOSALS willbe received by the City ofNewport, Ky, in the Office ofthe City Clerk located at 998Monmouth St, 2nd Floor,Newport, Ky, 41071, until twoo’clock (2:00) p.m., onThursday, April 28, 2016 andthen publicly opened andread aloud in the Multi-Purpose Room, 1st Floor ofthe Newport MunicipalBuilding at 998 Monmouthfor the Annual Supplies Bid2016.Copies of the SpecificationDocuments may be down-loaded from www.newportky.gov or obtained or exam-ined in the Office of the CityClerk, 998 Monmouth Street,2nd Floor, Newport, Ky41071.Pursuant to specifications onfile in the Office of the CityClerk of the City of Newporttwo copies of proposals areto be submitted in a sealedenvelope labeled as follows:“Annual Supplies Bid 2016”. Successful vendors must bean Equal Employment Op-portunity Employer, whichprohibits discrimination be-cause of race, creed, color,national origin, sex, age,handicap, political affiliationor beliefs. The City ofNewport is an Equal Em-ployment Opportunity Em-ployer. In addition, the suc-cessful vendor must obtainan Occupational Licensefrom the City Finance andAdministration Departmentprior to commencing work.The City reserves the rightto reject any or all proposaland to waive anyinformalities or irregulari-ties in the proposals re-ceived.Any and all questions deal-ing with this proposal shouldbe reduced to writing andfaxed to the City Clerk at(859) 292-3669 or emailed to [email protected] OF NEWPORT, KYAmy Able, City ClerkCAM,Apr14,’16#1173826

PUBLIC NOTICEThe next Campbell County Exten-sion District Board meeting willbe April 21, 2016, 6:30 p.m. at theCampbell County Extension Serv-ice, 3500 Alexandria Pike,Highland Heights, Kentucky. TheCampbell County ExtensionDistrict Board meets the thirdThursday of each month at 6:30p.m.501CAM,Apr14,’16#1176769

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REQUEST FOR PROPOSALProposals will be receivedby the Northern KentuckyIndependent District Boardof Health (NKIDBOH) onthe date listed for the follow-ing:

PROPOSAL ITEM: AUDIT(S) SERVICESOPENING TIME: 12:30 PMEastern Standard Time(synchronized at the follow-ing web-site:http://www.time.govLOCAL TIME)DATE: May 3, 2016LOCATIONNORTHERN KENTUCKYHEALTH DEPARTMENTOffice of Administration &Accounting610 Medical Village DriveEdgewood, KY 41017

Copies of this Solicitationand issued addenda may beobtained from George Mooreby phone at (859) 344-5461,by fax at (859) 578-3689, orby e-mail at [email protected]. Proposershall submit the requestprior to the time and datespecified for the responsedeadline, and any and all re-quests must be made be-tween the hours of 8:30 a.m.and 5:00 p.m. Proposalsmust be submitted in asealed envelope or othersealed container, marked“AUDIT". Proposals will beopened and read aloud at12:00 PM EST, local time.No oral, telegraphic, elec-tronic, facsimile, or tele-phonic proposals or modifi-cations will be accepted.The NKIDBOH reserves theright to reject any and allproposals, to waive anyinformalities and to negoti-ate for the modifications ofany proposal or accept thatproposal which is deemedthe most desirable and ad-vantageous from the stand-point of customer value andmay not, on its face, appearto be the lowest and bestprice. Proposer’s authorizedrepresentatives may with-draw proposals only by writ-ten request received byGeorge Moore before theProposal Submittal Dead-line. No proposal may bewithdrawn for a period ofninety (90) days after thescheduled proposal openingdate. At no time may thesuccessful Proposer(s) with-draw his/her proposal.508ALX,Apr14,’16#1190639

M & S LAWN CARE Lookingfor Yards to Mow! AlsoMulching & clean-up. FreeEstimates. Insured. 859-446-6003

AKC English Labrador Retriever Puppies 1 Litter born 02/19/16.Colors are Black a n dYellow. Beautiful EnglishChampion Bloodlines.Pups will have Limited AKCReg i s t ra t ion , 1st set ofshots, microchipped andwormed every 2 weeks$250 will reserve yourplacement for one of ourBeautiful Pups. Please callStephanie at (740)636-0645or [email protected]

Dog, Border Collie, male,$$300.00, 6 week,Black/white, Gentle Our pup-pies are full blooded &champion bloodline. Wehave produced a state cham-pion. Our puppies are familyoriented, gentle, intelligent,play ball & Frisbee & amaz-ingly obedient. They sellquickly, so CALL NOW.(859)640-7353

Dog, German Shepherd , 2males, 2 females, $800.00 aspet, 6 weeks, Good AKCGerman Shepherd pups. Vetchecked, cage and housebroken, very smart puppies,advanced for their age. 2males and 2 females availa-ble. (513)550-4222

English Golden Retrievers, AKC, 2males, vet checked, ready to go!$1,400 859-445-2809 or 859-620-7107

German Shepherd Puppies -AKC black & red, DOB2/16/16, hips & health guar-anteed, Mother from Croatia,Father from Germany, $800859-992-5481

Golden Doodles, F1, Vet check,shots & wormed, POP,white/creme $900. 859-445-2809 or859-620-7107

REQUEST FOR PROPOSALProposals will be receivedby the Northern KentuckyIndependent District Boardof Health (NKIDBOH) onthe date listed for the follow-ing:

PROPOSAL ITEM: BANK DEPOSITORYOPENING TIME: 12:30 PMEastern Standard Time(synchronized at the follow-ing web-site:http://www.time.govLOCAL TIME)DATE: May 3, 2016LOCATIONNORTHERN KENTUCKYHEALTH DEPARTMENTOffice of Administration &Accounting610 Medical Village DriveEdgewood, KY 41017

Copies of this Solicitationand issued addenda may beobtained from George Mooreby phone at (859) 344-5461,by fax at (859) 578-3689, orby e-mail at [email protected]. Proposershall submit the requestprior to the time and datespecified for the responsedeadline, and any and all re-quests must be made be-tween the hours of 8:30 a.m.and 5:00 p.m. Proposalsmust be submitted in asealed envelope or othersealed container, marked“BANK DEPOSITORY” .Proposals will be opened andread aloud at 12:00 PM EST,local time. No oral, tele-graphic, electronic, facsim-ile, or telephonic proposalsor modifications will be ac-cepted. The NKIDBOH re-serves the right to reject anyand all proposals, to waiveany informalities and to ne-gotiate for the modificationsof any proposal or acceptthat proposal which isdeemed the most desirableand advantageous from thestandpoint of customer valueand may not, on its face, ap-pear to be the lowest andbest price. Proposer’s au-thorized representativesmay withdraw proposals on-ly by written request re-ceived by George Moore be-fore the Proposal SubmittalDeadline. No proposal maybe withdrawn for a period ofninety (90) days after thescheduled proposal openingdate. At no time may thesuccessful Proposer(s) with-draw his/her proposal.501CAM,Apr14,’16#1190660

Great Dane Puppies, AKC, Fe-males, 1 Black, 1 Fawn, Parents onsite, $700 859-967-7428 or 859-967-7427

Pomapoo/ 2 males, 1 Blue& 1 Blk/wht, DOB, 2/20/16,CKC reg, UPD shots/wormed.1yr health guarantee. Will besmall $700. 513-497-9801

ROTTWEILER PUPS- German,AKC reg., Born on 2/18/15,POP, M & F. $600. cash only.859-586-8624

SHIH TZU-- 8 wks old. White& Black. Vet checked. 1stshots & wormed. $300 cash.POP. Calls will be taken onSat & Sun only. 859-462-3402

SHIH TZU PUPS, CKC,1st shots, wormed, 6 available,$450, 859-393-5646

Toy Fox Terrier Pups - familyfriendly pets, shots &wormed, ready to go!7weeks $350-$425, 513-328-8751

Buying All Vehicles Not Just Junk $200-$2000and more. Fair cash price,quick pickup. 513-662-4955

CASH for Junk Cars, Trucks &Vans Call TODAY! Get CASHTODAY! We Pick Up! 7 Days a

Week. 513-605-0063

REQUEST FOR PROPOSALProposals will be receivedby the Northern KentuckyIndependent District Boardof Health (NKIDBOH) onthe date listed for the follow-ing:

PROPOSAL ITEM: AUDIT(S) SERVICESOPENING TIME: 12:30 PMEastern Standard Time(synchronized at the follow-ing web-site:http://www.time.govLOCAL TIME)DATE: May 3, 2016LOCATIONNORTHERN KENTUCKYHEALTH DEPARTMENTOffice of Administration &Accounting610 Medical Village DriveEdgewood, KY 41017

Copies of this Solicitationand issued addenda may beobtained from George Mooreby phone at (859) 344-5461,by fax at (859) 578-3689, orby e-mail at [email protected]. Proposershall submit the requestprior to the time and datespecified for the responsedeadline, and any and all re-quests must be made be-tween the hours of 8:30 a.m.and 5:00 p.m. Proposalsmust be submitted in asealed envelope or othersealed container, marked“AUDIT". Proposals will beopened and read aloud at12:00 PM EST, local time.No oral, telegraphic, elec-tronic, facsimile, or tele-phonic proposals or modifi-cations will be accepted.The NKIDBOH reserves theright to reject any and allproposals, to waive anyinformalities and to negoti-ate for the modifications ofany proposal or accept thatproposal which is deemedthe most desirable and ad-vantageous from the stand-point of customer value andmay not, on its face, appearto be the lowest and bestprice. Proposer’s authorizedrepresentatives may with-draw proposals only by writ-ten request received byGeorge Moore before theProposal Submittal Dead-line. No proposal may bewithdrawn for a period ofninety (90) days after thescheduled proposal openingdate. At no time may thesuccessful Proposer(s) with-draw his/her proposal.501CAM,Apr14,’16#1190575

Honda 2007 Civic , 42K miles,White, like new inside & out, $7,900859-640-7063 or 859-428-1373

V o l v o 2006 S60 2.5 T,black, 4dr, nice! 126K miles,$7,750/obo. 859-912-0070

1 BUYER OF OLD CARSCLASSIC, ANTIQUE ’30-40-50-60-70s,Running or not.

513-403-7386

LOUISVILLE SPRING CLASSICCOLLECTOR CAR AUCTION

SATURDAY, APRIL 30, 2016Now accepting quality

consignments.To be held at Clark Co. Auto Auction

1611 E. 10th St. (Hwy. 62) Jeffersonville, IN 47130

For Buy/Sell Info. - Call George Eber 615-496-2277

Toyota 1990 Celica HatchBack, Garage Kept for esti-mated 15 years, Call Frank at859-342-8700, 9:30am to4:30pm.

JEEP 2004 CHEROKEELAREDO Special Edition 4x4,Exc. cond. Call 859-525-6363

Jeep 2004 Rubicon, black,w/running boards, newsofttop, all service records,$12,500 513-833-5200

JEEP 2006 COMMANDER4X4 Trail rated, Ex. cond., 100K HwyMiles, moonroof, 3rd row seat,Call 859-525-6363

KIA 2005 Sorenta EX SUV4x4, very clean, 1 owner, well main-tained, EC Call 859-525-6363

Chevy 1994 Silverado 1500-1 owner, Clean, no rust, newtires, good cond.,$2,850/obo. 859-869-1114

NOTICEFort Thomas Board of

Adjustment Public Hearing

The Board of Adjustment ofthe City of Fort Thomas,Kentucky, will hold a PublicHearing at the City Building,130 North Fort Thomas Ave-nue, Fort Thomas, Ken-tucky, on April 26, 2016 at6:00 P.M. for the followingcases:

CASE NO. 16-1404 – A hear-ing to consider an applica-tion filed by Dana and CarolDixon, owners of propertylocated at 114 Summit Ave-nue, Fort Thomas. The own-ers are requesting a frontyard Variance to allow theconstruction of a front porchand a side yard variance forthe construction of a deck.

CASE NO. 16-1405 – A hear-ing to consider an applica-tion filed by Carlos and Ste-phanie Lacourt, owners ofproperty located at 31Klainecrest Avenue, FortThomas. The owners are re-questing a Side Yard Var-iance to allow the construc-tion of a garage and deck.

Any adjoining property own-er who is unable to attendthis hearing is encouraged tosubmit signed, written com-ments to the Board concern-ing the proposed project.Said written correspondenceshall be received no laterthan the time of public hear-ing, and thereupon shall be amatter of public record. Allcorrespondence shall be di-rected to City of Fort Tho-mas, General Services De-partment, Attn: Julie Rice,130 N. Ft Thomas Ave., FortThomas, KY 41075.

The City of Fort Thomas willmake every reasonableaccommo¬dation to assistqualified disabled persons inobtaining access to availableservices or in attending Cityactivities. If there is a needfor the City to be aware of aspecific disability, you areencouraged to contact theCity Building, General Serv-ices Department at (859)572-1210 so that suitable ar-rangements can be consid-ered prior to the delivery ofthe service or the date of themeeting.

City of Ft. ThomasGeneral Services Department501CAM,Apr14,’16#1186511

REQUEST FOR PROPOSALProposals will be receivedby the Northern KentuckyIndependent District Boardof Health (NKIDBOH) onthe date listed for the follow-ing:

PROPOSAL ITEM: ARCHITECT/CONSTRUCTION MANAGEMENT SERV-ICES FOR NEW ADMINIS-TRATIVE FACILITY –ADDENDUM 1 EXTEN-SION TO DUE DATEOPENING TIME: 12:00 PMEastern Standard Time(synchronized at the follow-ing web-site:http://www.time.govLOCAL TIME)DATE: EXTENDED TO -April 22, 2016LOCATIONNORTHERN KENTUCKYHEALTH DEPARTMENTOffice of Administration &Accounting610 Medical Village DriveEdgewood, KY 41017

Copies of this Solicitationand issued addenda may beobtained from George Mooreby phone at (859) 344-5461,by fax at (859) 578-3689, orby e-mail at [email protected]. Proposershall submit the requestprior to the time and datespecified for the responsedeadline, and any and all re-quests must be made be-tween the hours of 8:30 a.m.and 5:00 p.m. Proposalsmust be submitted in asealed envelope or othersealed container, marked“AUDIT". Proposals will beopened and read aloud at12:00 PM EST, local time.No oral, telegraphic, elec-tronic, facsimile, or tele-phonic proposals or modifi-cations will be accepted.The NKIDBOH reserves theright to reject any and allproposals, to waive anyinformalities and to negoti-ate for the modifications ofany proposal or accept thatproposal which is deemedthe most desirable and ad-vantageous from the stand-point of customer value andmay not, on its face, appearto be the lowest and bestprice. Proposer’s authorizedrepresentatives may with-draw proposals only by writ-ten request received byGeorge Moore before theProposal Submittal Dead-line. No proposal may bewithdrawn for a period ofninety (90) days after thescheduled proposal openingdate. At no time may thesuccessful Proposer(s) with-draw his/her proposal.508ALX,Apr14,’16#1192647

REQUEST FOR PROPOSALProposals will be receivedby the Northern KentuckyIndependent District Boardof Health (NKIDBOH) onthe date listed for the follow-ing:

PROPOSAL ITEM: ARCHITECT/CONSTRUCTION MANAGEMENT SERV-ICES FOR NEW ADMINIS-TRATIVE FACILITY –ADDENDUM 1 EXTEN-SION TO DUE DATEOPENING TIME: 12:00 PMEastern Standard Time(synchronized at the follow-ing web-site:http://www.time.govLOCAL TIME)DATE: EXTENDED TO -April 22, 2016LOCATIONNORTHERN KENTUCKYHEALTH DEPARTMENTOffice of Administration &Accounting610 Medical Village DriveEdgewood, KY 41017

Copies of this Solicitationand issued addenda may beobtained from George Mooreby phone at (859) 344-5461,by fax at (859) 578-3689, orby e-mail at [email protected]. Proposershall submit the requestprior to the time and datespecified for the responsedeadline, and any and all re-quests must be made be-tween the hours of 8:30 a.m.and 5:00 p.m. Proposalsmust be submitted in asealed envelope or othersealed container, marked“ARCHITECT". Proposalswill be opened and readaloud at 12:00 PM EST, localtime. No oral, telegraphic,electronic, facsimile, or tele-phonic proposals or modifi-cations will be accepted.The NKIDBOH reserves theright to reject any and allproposals, to waive anyinformalities and to negoti-ate for the modifications ofany proposal or accept thatproposal which is deemedthe most desirable and ad-vantageous from the stand-point of customer value andmay not, on its face, appearto be the lowest and bestprice. Proposer’s authorizedrepresentatives may with-draw proposals only by writ-ten request received byGeorge Moore before theProposal Submittal Dead-line. No proposal may bewithdrawn for a period ofninety (90) days after thescheduled proposal openingdate. At no time may thesuccessful Proposer(s) with-draw his/her proposal.501CAM,Apr14,’16#1192447

REQUEST FOR PROPOSALProposals will be receivedby the Northern KentuckyIndependent District Boardof Health (NKIDBOH) onthe date listed for the follow-ing:

PROPOSAL ITEM: BANK DEPOSITORYOPENING TIME: 12:30 PMEastern Standard Time(synchronized at the follow-ing web-site:http://www.time.govLOCAL TIME)DATE: May 3, 2016LOCATIONNORTHERN KENTUCKYHEALTH DEPARTMENTOffice of Administration &Accounting610 Medical Village DriveEdgewood, KY 41017

Copies of this Solicitationand issued addenda may beobtained from George Mooreby phone at (859) 344-5461,by fax at (859) 578-3689, orby e-mail at [email protected]. Proposershall submit the requestprior to the time and datespecified for the responsedeadline, and any and all re-quests must be made be-tween the hours of 8:30 a.m.and 5:00 p.m. Proposalsmust be submitted in asealed envelope or othersealed container, marked“BANK DEPOSITORY” .Proposals will be opened andread aloud at 12:00 PM EST,local time. No oral, tele-graphic, electronic, facsim-ile, or telephonic proposalsor modifications will be ac-cepted. The NKIDBOH re-serves the right to reject anyand all proposals, to waiveany informalities and to ne-gotiate for the modificationsof any proposal or acceptthat proposal which isdeemed the most desirableand advantageous from thestandpoint of customer valueand may not, on its face, ap-pear to be the lowest andbest price. Proposer’s au-thorized representativesmay withdraw proposals on-ly by written request re-ceived by George Moore be-fore the Proposal SubmittalDeadline. No proposal maybe withdrawn for a period ofninety (90) days after thescheduled proposal openingdate. At no time may thesuccessful Proposer(s) with-draw his/her proposal.508ALX,Apr14,’16#1190728

NOTICE OF ADOPTION,TITLES AND SUMMARIES OF ALEXANDRIA ORDINANCES

2016-03 AND 2016-04

I hereby certify that the fol-lowing are the Titles andSummaries of Ordinances2016-03 and 2016-04 of theCity of Alexandria, Ken-tucky, which were adoptedby City Council on April 7,2016:

ORDINANCE NO. 2016-03TITLE:AN ORDINANCE OF THECITY OF ALEXANDRIA, INCAMPBELL COUNTY, KEN-TUCKY, AMENDING CHAP-TER 35 OF THE CITYCODE OF ORDINANCES,BY CREATING NEW SEC-TION 35.03 THEREIN, INORDER TO CREATE THEPOSITION OF PUBLICWORKS – LABORER – SEA-SONAL; AND AMENDINGSECTION 37.02 IN ORDERTO PROVIDE FOR THEJOB DESCRIPTION FORTHAT POSITION.

SUMMARY:This Ordinance amends theCity’s Code of Ordinances inorder to provide the legalframework for Council tocreate the new position ofPublic Works – Laborer –Seasonal, to be employees inthe Maintenance Depart-ment; and for the Mayorand Maintenance Supervisorto hire one or more qualifiedpersons to fill the new posi-tion. The Ordinance alsoprovides a detailed job de-scription for the PublicWorks – Laborer – Seasonalemployees. This new posi-tion replaces the current po-sition entitled Public Works– Parks & Green Space La-borer; and so the job de-scription in the City’s Per-sonnel Policies for that posi-tion is repealed by this Ordi-nance.

ORDINANCE NO. 2016-04TITLE:AN ORDINANCE OF THECITY OF ALEXANDRIA, INCAMPBELL COUNTY, KEN-TUCKY, AMENDING CHAP-TER 35 OF THE CITYCODE OF ORDINANCES,BY CREATING NEW SEC-TION 35.21 THEREIN, INORDER TO CREATE THENON-SWORN POSITION OFPOLICE SOCIAL SERV-ICES COORDINATOR;AMENDING SECTION 35.17TO ADD THAT POSITIONTO THE ALLOWABLE PO-SITIONS IN THE POLICEDEPARTMENT; ANDAMENDING SECTION 37.02IN ORDER TO PROVIDEFOR THE JOB DESCRIP-TION FOR THAT POSI-TION.

SUMMARY:This Ordinance amends theCity’s Code of Ordinances inorder to provide the legalframework for Council tocreate the new position ofPolice Social Services Coor-dinator, an unsworn civilianemployee in the Police De-partment; and for the Mayorand Chief of Police to hire aqualified person to fill thenew position. The Ordinancealso provides a detailed jobdescription for the PoliceSocial Services Coordinator.*****************************I, Michael A. Duncan, an at-torney licensed to practicelaw in the Commonwealth ofKentucky, for Ziegler &Schneider, P.S.C., City At-torneys for the City ofAlexandria, in CampbellCounty, Kentucky, do herebycertify that this Notice ofAdoption together with theTitles and Summaries of Or-dinances 2016-03 and 2016-04were prepared by me, andthat they represent accuratedescriptions of the summa-ries of the contents of theOrdinances. The full text ofthe Ordinances, and other in-formation relative to the Or-dinances, are on file at theoffice of the City C l e r k/Treasurer, 8236 West MainStreet, Alexandria, Ken-tucky 41001.

Michael A. DuncanMichael A. Duncan, attorneyFor Ziegler & Schneider, P.S.C., City Attorneys501CAM,Apr14,’16#1186735

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CE-0000645651

CITY OF HIGHLAND HEIGHTSORDINANCE NO. 01-2016

AN ORDINANCE CLOSING A PUBLIC WAY WITHIN THE CITY OF HIGHLAND HEIGHTS CURRENTLY KNOWN AS ROW OF HILL ROAD BETWEEN LINCOLN ROAD AND FOREST AVENUE AND MORE FULLY DESCRIBED ON THE ATTACHED PLAT.

WHEREAS, the City of Highland Heights council has determined that it is in the best interest of the City of Highland Heights to close the right of way of Hill Road between Lincoln Road and Forest Avenue and;

WHEREAS, the City has determined the identification of all property owners abutting to portion of the public way to be closed and;

WHEREAS, written notice of the proposed closing of the public way has been supplied to all abutting property owners and;

WHEREAS, the abutting property owners have all given their written notarized consent of the closing of the public way.

BE IT HEREBY ORDAINED BY THE CITY OF HIGHLAND HEIGHTS, KENTUCKY AS FOLLOWS:

SECTION 1

The right of way of Hill Road between Lincoln Road and Forest Avenue within the City of Highland Heights, Kentucky a public way and more accurately depicted in the attached plat labeled Exhibit “A” to this ordinance is closed, as shown on the attached plat and description, and shall revert to private ownership of the adjoining property owners pursuant to KRS82.405(2), which is the city itself

SECTION II

That the Highland Heights City Council has determined that the closing of this right of way is in the best interest of the City of Highland Heights, and will allow the development of the property in a manner consistent with the Official Comprehensive Plan.

SECTION III

That the City Attourney is authorized to take whatever legal action in necessary to effectuate this street closing.

SECTION IV

That this Ordinance shall be signed by the Mayor, attested by the City Clerk/Treasurer, recorded and published. Same shall be in effect at the earliest time provided by law.

First readin of this 15th day of March, 2016.

Second reading of this 5th day of April, 2016

MAYOR GREGORY V. MEYERS

ATTEST: JEAN RAUF CITY CLERK/TREASURER

Ord16.01

EXHIBIT “A”ROW OF HILL ROAD BETWEEN LINCOLN ROAD AND FOREST AVENUE

DESCRIPTION FOR PROPOSED VACATION

Being located in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, County of Campbell, City of Highland Heights, and being a portion of the Right of Way of Hill Road between Lincoln Road and Forest Avenue, bounded on the northwest by Lots 106 through 108 of Section II of the Highland baby Farms and on the southeast by Lots 185, 203-207, and the previously vacated right-of-way of Baker Road (Ordinance 3-4-2013), and being more particularly described as follows:

Beginning at the point in the northwesterly right-of-way (ROW) of Hill Road, said point also being located at a point being the common corner of LOts 108 and 109 of Section II of the Highland Baby Farms;

THENCE along the Hill Road ROW for two calls:

North 62°53’51” East, a distance of 0.91 feet to a point; North 31°56’42” East, a distance of 330.79 feet to a point;

THENCE along a line crossing through the existing Hill Road ROW having a bearing of South 77°22’03” East, a distance of 53.85 feet to a point in the southeasterly ROW of Hill Road ans a point common to Lot 208 of Section II of the Highland Baby Farms, the previously vacated right-of-way of Baker Road, and Lot 20 of Fort Thomas Land Company Third Subdivision;

THENCE along the ROW of Hill Road for three (3) calls:

South 33°23’17” West, a distance of 32.44 feet to a point; South 31°56’42” West, a distance of 329.99 feet to a point; South 62°53’51” West, a distance of 14.75 feet to a point;

THENCE along a line of crossing through the existing Hill Road ROW having a bearing of North 27°06’07” West, a distance of 50.00 feet to the POINT OF BEGINNING located in the Hill Road ROW;

Said parcel being 17,727 square feet.

WRITTEN NOTICE AND CONSENT TO CLOSING OF A PUBLIC RIGHT OF WAYThe undersigned hereby acknowledges written notice of the City of Highland Heights’ intention to close the fight of way know as Hill Road between Lincoln Road and Forest Avenue and as an abutting property owner gives their written consent.

Housing Authority of Newport, Kentucky

THOMAS L GUIDUGLI, EXECUTIVE DIRECTORCOMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY COUNTY OF CAMPBELL

Subscribed and sworn to before me a Notary Public by Thomas L Guidugli, this 15th day of March, 2016

W. THOMAS FISHER Notary Public

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©2014 HomeFinder.com, LLC. All rights reserved Equal Housing Opportunity

APRIL 14, 2016 μ CC-KENTUCKY - COMMUNITY μ 7C

Page 24: Campbell county recorder 041416

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Page 25: Campbell county recorder 041416

877.934.4699CALL TOLL FREE

www.mikecastruccifordalexandria.com

Mike Castrucci

2016 MUSTANG$189 PER

MONTHLEASE FOR

$2500 Cash or Trade Equity Due at Signing, 36 mo. lease, no securitydeposit, 10,500 miles per year, plus tax & fees

Go Further

7400 ALEXANDRIA PIKE | ALEXANDRIA, KYOPEN M-THU 9-8

FRI-SAT 9-6 | SUN 11-5

S1

Not all buyers will qualify. Ford Credit limited-term APR financing.Take new retail delivery from dealer stock by 04/30/2016. Not all Fusion models may qualify.

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MIKECASTRUCCI

36 month lease plus tax & fees. No security deposit. $2500 Cashor Trade Equity due at signing. 10,500 miles per year.

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2016 FORD EXPLORERMSRP .................................$31,995FACTORY REBATE ................-$1,450CASTRUCCI DISCOUNT.........-$3,550

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$199/MO.*OR LEASE

FOR*24 month lease plus tax & fees. No security deposit.

$2500 Cash or Trade Equity due at signing.10,500 miles per year.

2016 FORD ESCAPE

BUY FOR$17,995

MSRP .................................$23,995FACTORY REBATE ................-$1,450CASTRUCCI DISCOUNT.........-$3,550BUY FOR ............................$18,995FORD CREDIT CASH .............-$1,000

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$2500 Cash or Trade Equity due at signing.10,500 miles per year.

UP TO $7,000 OFF MSRP!

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$249 PERMONTH

LEASE FORF-1502016 FORD

SUPERCAB

Page 26: Campbell county recorder 041416

#GR379787

2016 FORD FUSION S

7400 ALEXANDRIA PIKE | ALEXANDRIA, KY • OPENM-THU 9-8 | FRI-SAT 9-6 | SUN 11-5

www.mikecastruccialexandria.com877.934.4699

*Ford Rebates include all available incentives.All prices reflect all applicable Ford Factory rebates deducted.Some offers require Ford Credit financing. Customers that choose not to finance may lose these rebates. Lease payment is a closed end 24 mo. lease through FordCredit with approved credit. All leases based on 10,500 miles per year with 20¢ per mile overage. Tax, title, license and acquisition fees not included. See dealer for complete details of any offer. Offers end 04/30/16.

S2

MIKE CASTRUCCIGo Further

$16,995BUYFOR

MSRP ................................................................... $22,985CASTRUCCI DISCOUNT ...................................... -$3,450FACTORY REBATE ............................................... -$1,450BUY FOR..............................................................$17,995FORD CREDIT CASH ........................................... -$1,000

LEASEFOR

$99 PERMONTH

$2500 Cash or Trade Equity due at signing, 24mo. lease, nosecurity deposit, 10,500 miles per year, plus tax & fees

UP TO $7,000 OFF MSRP!

Not all buyers will qualify. Ford Credit limited-term APR financing. Take new retail delivery from dealer stock by 04/30/2016. Not all Fusion models may qualify. See dealer for residency restrictions qualifications and complete details.“Get Into The New” Special Retail Trade-In Assistance Cash (Program #30142) requires trade-in of 1995 or newer vehicle or terminates a non-Ford/Lincoln/Mercury lease 30 days prior to or 90 days after delivery. Take new retail delivery

from dealer stock by 04/30/2016. Residency restrictions apply. See dealer for complete details.

PERMONTH

2016 FORDMUSTANG

MSRP ...........................................................$25,140CASTRUCCI DISCOUNT ............................. -$3,395FACTORY REBATE ......................................... -$750

$20,995BUYFOR

LEASEFOR

$189PERMONTH

$2500 Cash or Trade Equity due atsigning, 24mo. lease, no security deposit,10,500 miles per year, plus tax & fees#G5302463

MSRP ...........................................................$16,060CASTRUCCI DISCOUNT ............................. -$3,540FACTORY REBATE ...................................... -$1,000

$12,995BUYFOR

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$13,995BUYFOR

LEASEFOR

$59PERMONTH

$2500 Cash or Trade Equity due atsigning, 24mo. lease, no security deposit,10,500 miles per year, plus tax & fees#GL309674

2016 FORDF-150

4X4 SUPERCREW#GFA6872

2016 FORDFIESTA

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$59$2500 Cash or Trade Equity due at

signing, 24mo. lease, no security deposit,10,500 miles per year, plus tax & fees#GM156523

2016 FORDFLEX

#GBA05472

MSRP ...........................................................$30,690FACTORY REBATE ......................................... -$900CASTRUCCI DISCOUNT ............................. -$3,795

$25,995BUY FOR

MSRP ...........................................................$39,610FACTORY REBATE ...................................... -$2,500CASTRUCCI DISCOUNT ............................. -$4,115

MSRP ...........................................................$41,565CASTRUCCI DISCOUNT ............................. -$5,370FACTORY REBATE ...................................... -$4,700

#GEA63637

2016 FORDF-250

4X4 SUPERCAB $31,495BUY FOR

$32,995BUY FOR

Page 27: Campbell county recorder 041416

Mike Castrucci Lincolnwww.mikecastruccilincoln.com

7400 Alexandr ia Pike | Alexandr ia , KY | 877-934-4702Open M-Thur 9-8 | Fr i -Sat 9-6 | Sun 11-5

2016 LINCOLN MKXMSRP $39,720

#2LGBL46400

$2999 down payment • 10,500 miles per yearno security deposit • $3328 due at signing

per month$329

All leases & 0% o\ers through Lincoln Automotive Financial Services with approved credit. All leases based on 10500 miles per year with over milage charge of 20 cents per mile.Tax, title andlicense fees not included. 1st payment due at delivery. See dealer for complete details of any o\er. $16.66 per every $1000 financed at 0% for 60 months.

$13.88 per every $1000 financed at 0% for 72 months. O\er ends 04/30/16.

2016LINCOLNNAVIGATOR

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After $3,000 premium customer cash

Page 28: Campbell county recorder 041416

T2

7400 ALEXANDRIA PIKE | ALEXANDRIA, KY • OPEN M-THUR 9-8 | FRI-SAT 9-8 | SUN 11-5

859.448.2404www.mikecastruccialexandria.com

Mike Castrucci Ford Lincoln of Alexandria

Call to Schedule Today!(859) 838-4794 | www.mikecastruccialexandria.com

7400 Alexandria Pike, Alexandria KY 41001MON-THURS. 7:30AM-7PM • FRI 7:30AM-6PM • SAT 7:30AM-3PM • CLOSED SUNDAY

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$3995Most vehicles. Up to 5 qts. synthetic blend. Excludes diesels. Expires 04/30/16.

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OVER50 PRE-OWNEDTRUCKS IN STOCK!2004 CHEVROLET 1500 EXT CAB LS ............................ $5,485stock #520692004 HONDA PILOT 4X4 ............................................. $7,755stock #524472002 FORD F-150 SUPERCAB 4X4 ............................... $8,976stock #522492008 FORD RANGER EXT CAB ................................... $10,551stock #522672008 CHEVROLET 1500 REGULAR CAB ..................... $10,609stock #524092009 TOYOTA 4RUNNER............................................. $13,863stock #511312013 FORD TRANSIT CONNECT.................................. $16,865stock #525022012 DODGE RAM 1500 CREW CAB SLT ................... $17,563stock #518602011 TOYOTA TACOMA EXT CAB................................ $18,733stock #53182008 GMC 1500 EXT CAB 4X4 .................................. $20,304stock #523322010 FORD F-150 CREW CAB XLT .............................. $21,415stock #53542011 FORD F-150 SUPER CREW XLT ECOBOOST ....... .$23,856stock #5414

2010 FORD F-150 CREW CAB LARIAT 4X4 ................. $25,891stock #53132011 FORD F-150 SUPER CREW LARIAT .................... $26,453stock #54032011 CHEVROLET 1500 CREW CAB LTZ ..................... $26,671stock #523632010 FORD F-150 CREW CAB PLATINUM 4X4............ $29,027stock #53002015 DODGE RAM 1500 QUAD CAB BIG HORN 4X4... $30,893stock #53292012 FORD F-150 SUPER CREW FX4 ......................... $31,928stock #53852011 FORD F250 CREW CAB LARIAT 4X4 ................. $31,984stock #52902013 FORD F-150 CREW CAB LARIAT ....................... $33,451stock #523412015 RAM 2500 SLT QUAD CAB LONG BED DIESEL..$39,546stock #54662013 FORD F-350 CREW CAB DIESEL LONG BED ....... $39,863stock #54602015 FORD F-150 CREW CAB PLATINUM ................... $51,672stock #54592014 FORD SVT RAPTOR CREW CAB W/NAV .............. $54,623stock #5258