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Ten years for Brighton ballot on track to being the largest ever Colborne jamboree

By Ray Yurkowski

News - Brighton - Last week, the remaining two incumbents—Councillors John Martinello and Mary Tadman— signed up for a run at another term on municipal council. That makes a total of 13 candidates vying for six seats with only one week remaining before the September 12 filing deadline for next month’s municipal election. When asked why he added his

name to the ballot this time around, Martinello cited fiscal responsibility, efficiency, infrastructure and transparency. “I believe that every expenditure of Brighton taxpayers’ money must be based on credible evidence of necessity,” he said. “I believe all municipal services must be delivered in the most cost-efficient manner possible.” “It’s my belief that reliable, effi-

cient infrastructure is the backbone of economic development and essential to the protection of environmental resources, such as Presqu’ile Bay,” he added. “I believe that accountability and transparency become the norm in everything council does.” Martinello changed the subject when asked how “credible evidence of necessity” and “accountability and

Please see “Residents” on page 2

Citizen group to play a role in Brighton municipal election

By John Campbell

News - Brighton - Ticked off with the way the municipality has been managed the past four years, a citizen group has emerged set on improving how local government operates. Brighton Citizen Group (BCG) spokesman Dale Carter said its intention is “to bring closer scrutiny to several initiatives undertaken” by council

and to question whether they “are in the best interest of the community” or represent “the best use of taxpayers’ money.” The group also intends to play a role in the municipal election by “vetting first-time candidates and directing attention to the four-year record and beyond of incumbents,” he said in a news release.

It’s also making plans to hold an allcandidates meeting. Carter described BCG as “an ad hoc group of like-minded citizens,” some of whom “have contributed dramatically to the community” and are “wellrespected, prominent people in town.” They all share “an opinion that things are not quite right in the munici-

Please see “Group” on page 3

Val and Dale Coulter, of Gravenhurst, spend much of the year travelling around to jamborees and camping, starting out in May and continuing until October. They “love” the Auction Barn Jamboree and Dale got up onstage to perform during the open mike program. Photo: John Campbell Please see “Colborne” on page 4

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2YIGBrighton Independent - Thursday, September 4, 2014

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toorn and Mark Walas are in the race for mayor. OfďŹ cially, voters go to the polls on October 27, but in Brighton, municipal council approved retaining vote by mail for the local electorate and the use of vote-counting equipment for election day. The alternative voting system has resulted in an increase in the local voter turnout, which was 56.1 per cent in 2006 and 58.23 per cent in 2010. Across Ontario, the average voter turnout was 38.6 per cent in 2006 and increased to 49 per cent in 2010 thanks, says the Association of Municipal Managers, Clerks and Treasurers of Ontario (AMCTO), to more municipalities using alternative voting methods. The municipal ofďŹ ce, at 35 Alice Street, will be extending their hours at election time: from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday, October 18, and from 8:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. on October 27. Voters are encouraged to log onto <www.voterlookup.ca> to ensure they are on the list and eligible to cast a ballot. The Brighton-Cramahe Chamber of Commerce will be playing host to two all-candidate nights. The ďŹ rst, on September 25 at the Keeler Centre in Colborne, will focus on the Cramahe contenders while another, on September 29 at the King Edward Park Community Centre, will give attention to the Brighton ballot. Both election events get under way at 6:30 p.m.

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Group to play a role in election Continued from page 1

MIKE’S MISSION… To be the next Mayor of Brighton. Look for Mike’s ads here over the next several weeks where he will lay out his Four Year Guarantee, the main priorities facing our municipality & more!

town,” Carter said, and the time to make the best use of that interest is now when “the election has everyone’s attention.” Although Carter blamed Rittwage for his resigning as chair of the Brighton Public Library Board last December and has “never made a secret” of his support for Mayor Mark Walas, he said the group will “treat everyone impartially.” It’s “absolutely non-partisan,” MacDonald agreed, pointing out members differ in their support of council members. He was prodded into taking

a key role in its development as more people came to him with complaints about council that he shared as well. “Some people weren’t happy [and] they wanted to make their presence felt,” he said. Those feelings of anger and frustration eventually coalesced into a desire to effect change by acting in concert. There was no intention of forming the group when the first of several informal meetings took place last winter, “it just kind of happened,” MacDonald said.

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Dale Carter is the spokesman for the newly formed Brighton Citizen Group, whose members include former chamber of commerce president Drew MacDonald, retired brigadier general Ian Douglas who received the Brighton Community Builder Award last year, Brighton Probus Club president Doreen Cable, artist Joe Burrell, and local businessman Adrian Ellis, who regularly comments on local politics through his blog, Musings of a Smiling Idiot. Photo: John Campbell

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pality and are frustrated in how to deal with it.” The decision to get involved in local politics came about after a growing number of disenchanted citizens began meeting informally, with financial adviser Drew MacDonald, former president of the local chamber of commerce, serving as host for the get-togethers. Their grievances include: “a lack of attention to failing infrastructure, over-reliance on outside consultants and services, dubious asset management decisions, rising taxes along with approvals of unbudgeted projects, a dysfunctional council and, with a few exceptions, minimal council outreach and communication.” Carter, a candidate in the last election, told the Independent the group is looking to “restore some sort of sanity [and] stability to council and council proceedings,” along with civility and transparency. Although the group itself is non-partisan, there are members such as himself who believe “a group of four” on council—Deputy-mayor Mike Vandertoorn and Councillors Tom Rittwage, Craig Kerr and Emily Rowley—is “leading this municipality in a non-inclusive manner, where they’ve ganged up and set their own agenda.” Their actions are “hurting the community [and the] people in it, and it’s destroying our reputation at Queen’s Park,” he said. MacDonald said “some good people aren’t running because they feel there’s a toxic environment right now.” What the group wants to see after the October 27 municipal election are politicians working “a little more cohesively,” and votes that aren’t “predictable” along the fault lines of a divided council. “This has been going on for years now in Brighton and it’s got to come to an end,” he said. Still in the process of establishing an identity, BCG will “probably wind up looking like an advocacy group” who helps people in their dealings with council, Carter said. “There’s always strength in numbers and strength in shared experience,” he said. “We want to present a more collaborative approach than a confrontational approach” and promote respect on both sides. Anyone interested in learning more about the group is invited to email <BrightonCGroup@gmail.com>. “We are starting to get a buzz around

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Colborne jamboree marks tenth anniversary

By John Campbell

Entertainment - Colborne - The Auction Barn Jamboree celebrated its tenth anniversary last weekend at the Keeler Centre.

Cramahe Township Mayor Marc Coombs was the first of three elected officials to offer congratulations Friday night to jamboree founders Gary Warner and Linda Grills for putting on “a great

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event for our community” each year, and he presented them with a pair of Hoselton sculptures from the municipality. Northumberland-Quinte West MP Rick Norlock said “you don’t have to go down to Nashville to enjoy music; you can come right here to Colborne once a year.” MPP Lou Rinaldi welcomed the audience to “Nashville North” and praised Warner and Grills for creating “a niche for country music in this part of the province and this part of the riding.” “It’s a wonderful event,” Coombs said in an interview. “It started small and … keeps growing all the time. “It’s just great to see all the people coming into the village from all over,” including the United States and other provinces, he said. “It’s really put Colborne on the map … It’s neat seeing all the trailers around the property, and everybody’s always having a good time.” The jamboree “means a lot to the community … It has to be the biggest event [in Colborne] just in sheer numbers and the fact they do it over multiple days. Obviously it brings money into the Keeler Centre … and into our community, so that’s a great benefit to everybody.” More than two dozen artists performed over the five days. All were Canadian except last Wednesday when a Nashville act kicked off the jamboree. It included Leona Williams, who has made numerous appearances at the Grand Ole Opry, and Marty Haggard, son of country music legend Merle Haggard. “We draw in three, four, five thousand people every year into the town of Colborne over the period of five days,” Warner said. This year he told people at the jamboree who shop in town to bring back their receipts to put in a draw for a prize of free registration for camping next year. “That will give us a little bit of a handle on how much dollars [are spent locally],” he said.

Linda Grills and Gary Warner, organizers of the Auction Barn Jamboree in Colborne, were congratulated, l-r, by local MP Rick Norlock, Cramahe Township Mayor Marc Coombs, and MPP Lou Rinaldi on the show’s tenth anniversary during the opening ceremony August 29. Photo: John Campbell

Organizing a jamboree was “something I always wanted to do,” said Warner, a full-time auctioneer. “It’s a lot of fun” and he gets to meet a lot of people. With Grills, a long-time friend, “it’s something we do as a hobby,” he said. Warner said the open mike program is “a very popular” part of the jamboree. “A lot of the people who come here like to pick and sing and this gives them their five minutes of fame on the stage. We hire a professional band to back them.” Warner said he and Grills “have made some sizable donations to the arena” over the years, including 700 chairs. “Next year we’ll probably donate some tables.” One disadvantage to holding the show indoors is “that some days it does get warm in here, but if it’s raining, and cold and windy, you’re not sitting outside with an overcoat on trying to stay warm.” Warner said. “Love it,” Val and Dale Coulter both Dozens of people, including Shirley McNickle, of chimed in when asked for their opinion Bobcaygeon, performed during the open mike of the jamboree. “We love country music, and it’s a portion held in the afternoon over four days at the nice floor to dance on,” Dale added. Auction Barn Jamboree. Photo: John Campbell

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Brighton-By-The-Bay residents complain about speeders on their streets

News - Brighton - The Brighton-By-The-Bay Homeowners Association says motorists travelling through their area are going too fast and not obeying stop signs. In a letter sent to the Brighton Police Services Board, association secretary David Green said the inter-

sections of Mills Road and Nesbitt Drive, and Nesbitt Drive and Sandpiper Way, “are of particular concern.” He said incidents of speeding and “non-adherence to posted stop signs” occur most often between 6 and 9 a.m. Monday to Friday, “usually by people on their way to work [in Trenton].”

Sixth candidate joins race to become Cramahe councillor News - Cramahe Township - There are now six people hoping to garner three of the six councillor positions in next month’s municipal election. The latest to join the field of candidates is Murray McCullough, a retired teacher. “I am interested in agriculture [and] particularly interested in what our community can do for seniors, because that’s a growing part of our population,” McCullough said. He also sees a need for road improvements and “more access to recreational facilities, not only for seniors but young people. There has to be a reason why they want to stay here. And we have to provide employment for them.” Born and raised in the Colborne area, McCullough, 63, taught from senior el-

ementary up to university and did most of his teaching in other countries. He taught English as a second language, agronomy, and North American history in places such as Botswana and Peru. McCullough retired in 2011 following a career that spanned 31 years. The Dundonald resident recently sold his farm property he had rented out and continues to live in the farmhouse with his sister. As a councillor, “I would certainly listen to what [people] wanted … [and] certainly try to represent their interests more so than my own.” McCullough joins incumbent Clinton Breau, former councillor Tim Gilligan, Ken Awender, Daniel Smith and Donald Clark in the race, which will be decided at the polls October 27.

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The majority of BrightonBy-The-Bay residents are seniors, he noted, but their concern for the safety of pedestrians extends to visiting children and grandchildren “who may be less observant due to the nature” of the community,” Green wrote. He asked for more enforcement. “It’s starting to get people really upset,” said Doug Zinnicker, a member of the police services board and chair of Neighbourhood Watch. They’re “very concerned about the volume of people coming through, and the speed that they’re using.” The situation has become “quite dangerous” in their view, he told the board August 27. Green said residents are “getting more and more frustrated” with the motorists. “They have never got to the point of vigilantism” but “they stand out there pots and pans and whistles to try to get the drivers’ attention.” Board chair Chuck McLeod suggested speed bumps might be one of the solutions but pointed out that’s a decision for council to make. Mayor Mark Walas said there are a number of options

available, including having the portable digital radar set up where the problem is greatest “to alert people when they’re speeding.” Green suggested more signs be posted in selected spots to make it known the speed limit is 40 kilometres an hour. But Northumberland OPP’s detachment commander, Acting Inspector Phil Pike, said the speed limit for the streets in question is actually 50 kilometres an hour, not 40, unless otherwise marked. Only about 700 metres of the whole area is a 40-kilometres-an-hour zone, he said. “I can almost guarantee you we wouldn’t be [catching] people speeding in there, such that tickets would be warranted,” Pike said. “I find it difficult that people are doing 60 to 70 kilometres through the streets, but they might be.” The typical speed limit in built-up areas is 50 kilometres an hour, but he acknowledged additional signage will be needed to remind motorists. Green and Zinnicker admitted they were surprised to learn the speed limit was higher than what they and others living in the neigh-

bourhood had assumed was the case. “The residents will now go insane,” Green said. Pike said the detachment has “never had any calls from these people down there” and he asked that police “be given a chance to deal with it,” in par-

ticular, the rolling stops by motorists at stop signs. Walas said it was “a reasonable approach” to let the OPP “do their job first and then report back with any findings,” and the board went along with the commander’s request.

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News - Brighton - There’s a feeling of disbelief and disgust from local heritage groups after the recent announcement by Mac’s Convenience Stores proposing to raze the historic Morrow block to make way for a larger outlet and gas bar at the corner of Prince Edward and Elizabeth Streets. “It is terrifying news,” wrote local resident Fred Piller in a letter to the editor, appearing in the Brighton Independent one week after the Mac’s proposal was presented to municipal council. “It comes down to the last decade,” he said, in an interview last weekend. “We’ve progressively let one thing after another fall to the wayside on the promise of business development and the way it’s looking now, it’s past the point of interest for visitors. The town is suffering as a historical location and I just don’t see how tearing down a 112-year-old building is going to warrant better business. There must be alternatives.” Piller says there is some interest in trying to save the site. In

response to his letter, he’s been contacted by residents who want to help. The next step, he says, is forming an activist group and affiliating with the local branch of the Architectural Conservancy of Ontario (ACO). The advocacy group has been involved in preserving architectural and environmental heritage across the province since 1933. Throughout its history, ACO has helped save hundreds of buildings and raised awareness of the importance of preserving community heritage. “There is a continuing indifference on the part of Brighton Council to the loss of our heritage buildings,” said East Northumberland ACO vice-president Gordon Tobey. “At the rate we’re losing them it won’t be long before they are mostly gone. “I’m not against new development, I’ve been a developer, but why can’t we preserve our past along with new development? Surely in a historic town like Brighton it is better to have architecture that represents the history and development of the

community. I appeal to Brighton Council and the citizens of Brighton to save the Morrow block and stop demolishing our built heritage.” As for the municipal Heritage Advisory Committee (HAC), they are a committee of council and, as the name suggests, work only in an advisory role. “Our hands are kind of tied,” says committee member Nanci Anderson. She points to efforts to save the former Brighton Public School building, which was demolished in 2012 to make way for the new facility that stands at the site now. “It’s a matter of public record that the Heritage Advisory Committee advised council to designate the building [as a property of heritage interest] and they refused to look at it,” she said. “The HAC has worked away quietly for a few years now to establish the importance of heritage conservation to the economic and social well-being of our community,” added committee chairperson Dave Cutler. “Simply stated, Please see “Petition” on page 8

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OPINION

The Kagame Dilemma

Editorial - “Whoever betrays the country will pay the price, I assure you,” Rwanda’s President Paul Kagame told a rally soon after the country’s former intelligence chief, Patrick Karegeya, was found strangled in a South African hotel room last January. Karegeya had quit the government and become a leading opponent of the regime, which President Kagame would certainly see as a betrayal of the country. It’s not unusual for dictators to see their own interests and those of the country they rule as one and the same thing. It’s not even uncommon for dictators to have people killed. What’s really rare is a dictator who has had quite a lot of people killed, but is congratulated by other countries for his excellent administration and showered with foreign aid. That is the happy lot of President Paul Kagame. Fewer than half of Rwanda’s 12 million people have personal memories of the terrible genocide 20 years ago, but the country as a whole is still haunted by it. Kagame has ruled Rwanda for all of that time, and he is convinced that only he can stop it from happening again. It’s only a small step from there to believing that he has the duty to maintain his rule by any means necessary, including even murder. All the murders are officially denied, but nobody believes it. Last week four not very competent assassins, one Rwandan and three Tanzanians, were found guilty by a South African court of trying to kill the former Rwandan army chief of staff, Faustin Kayumba Nyamwasa, in Johannesburg in 2010. They shot him in the stomach, but he survived after months in intensive care—and they didn’t get away. The South African judge, Stanley Mkhair, said diplomatically that the plot to kill Nyamwasa came from “a certain group of people from Rwanda.” The South African authorities even know how much the assassins were paid: 80,000 rand ($7,500). But it was just not worth naming Kagame. Last March, when South African Justice Minister Jeff Radebe warned Rwanda to stop after another attempt on Nyamwasa’s life, the two countries went through a ritual round of tit-for-tat expulsions of diplomats. Once a year is enough, but at least South Africa complains occasionally.

Gwynne Dyer

Brighton Independent

P.O. Box 25009, Belleville, ON K8P 5E0 250 Sidney Street Phone: 613-966-2034 Fax: 613-966-8747 Published weekly by:

Just try your best to avoid election fatigue

Most other African countries look the other way when Kagame’s hit squads turn up, people like Tony Blair accept lifts in his private jet, and the aid agencies don’t even flinch. These people aren’t fools or knaves (except By Stephen Petrick Tony Blair, of course), so why are they all giving Kagame a free pass? Because they secretly Editorial - In recent weeks you’ve read stories forced to a polling station with a gun to their suspect that Kagame is right: that only he can in this newspaper on the last provincial elec- head, more would likely mark an X beside a spot prevent another genocide in Rwanda. And maybe tion, the upcoming municipal elections and the that says “I don’t care” before they’d vote for our pending 2015 federal election. On the municipal mayor, our premier or prime minister. they’re right. Those saddened by that fact—and that includes The 1994 genocide killed an estimated 800,000 election side, there have been stories about the people, about ten per cent of the population. election for mayors and council positions. On the most journalists, including myself—can only There is no reliable estimate of how many of the federal election side, we’re now seeing stories hope to change that fact by keeping the upcoming victims were Tutsis, who were once the dominant about the election within the Conservative party elections in the forefront of people’s minds no caste but by 1994 were a persecuted minority. A just to determine who should run in the next fed- matter how redundant and easy to criticize the fair guess is that more than half of those murdered eral election in the new Bay of Quinte riding. Do coverage becomes. Yes, election season is full of clichés and were Tutsis (the rest were “moderate” Hutus), you notice the word “election” keeps coming up virtually every candidate will say the same thing and that at least half of the total Tutsi population here? I recently asked a friend in Toronto if he was about the need to spend on infrastructure and died. The Tutsi survivors, and more importantly looking forward to the upcoming municipal keep taxes low. But voters who make an effort to the Tutsi exiles who fought their way home with election so his city could get rid of its current learn about the candidates, not only through the Kagame’s Rwanda Patriotic Front, still provide crack-smoking mayor. He answered no, media, but also by meeting them personally, will the core leadership of the country 20 years later, explaining he was suffering from “election discover there are good leaders out there. That’s although Tutsis are now down to around ten per fatigue.” I now understand what he means. And something I’ve discovered through 15 years in cent of the population. Kagame insists that “we while personally I love reporting on, voting in the news business. I won’t give the old, “if you don’t vote, you are Banyarwanda” (all Rwandans), and that there and being engaged in elections, I’m also wary are no separate tribes in Rwanda. Technically he of what an onslaught of election media coverage can’t complain” lecture. Rather, I’ll offer a is right. But in practice he is wrong, and he knows will do for a voting public that’s become horribly warning about the consequences of voter apathy. apathetic. In Toronto, there were about 1.6 million eligible it. One could argue that this past spring’s voters for the 2010 municipal election. But The Tutsis and the majority Hutus both speak the same language, Kinyarwanda. Once upon a provincial election was a case study in how much only about 50.5 per cent of those voters turned time the Tutsis were herders and the Hutus were people loathe elections. It was a gamble by NDP out on election day. Rob Ford won the election farmers, and even longer ago they probably were MPPs, who assumed their decision to not support with 47.7 per cent of the popular vote. But if you separate ethnic groups. But in the present, they the Liberal budget would lead to an election factor non-voters into the mix, really just fewer are better seen as castes defined by their (former) where they’d win more seats. Voters essentially than 24 per cent of that mayor’s constituents put occupations. Indeed, even the herdsman/farmer punished both the NDP and the equally opposed an X by his name. Progressive Conservatives for the move by As we all know, since becoming mayor, distinction no longer really applies. Yet the “caste” distinction is just as strong, and returning the Liberals to power, this time with a Ford has been linked to gangs, has admitted potentially just as lethal, as it was in 1994. That’s majority government. Only a little more than half using illegal drugs, has been caught using racist why Rwanda is a thinly disguised dictatorship, run of the 9.2 million eligible Ontario voters turned and homophobic slurs and has used municipal by a man who kills people—but only individuals up at polls that day, and that was considered one resources for his own selfish acts. What’s worse of the best turnouts for a provincial election in is that if more voters in that city had looked into who threaten his rule, not whole groups. his past before election day, they could have seen Kagame has produced a very impressive rate years. Municipal elections usually draw even it coming. of economic growth in Rwanda (an average of Rob Ford had a well-documented history of eight per cent annually in 2001-12), in the hope smaller percentages, which is sad considering that prosperity will ultimately defuse the Tutsi/ the majority of your tax dollars are spent at the substance abuse and violence before his election Hutu hostility. But he dares not allow a truly municipal level. During the 2010 Belleville to mayor. And now he’s heaped his own train free election, for the Hutus, still strong in their election, about 42 per cent of the city’s roughly wreck of a life onto all Torontonians and brought identity, would vote him out of office. And almost 32,000 voters came out. Federal elections usually shame to a great city. Yet fewer than one in four everybody else goes along with his behaviour, gather more attention. In 2011, about 61 per cent people ever approved of him being mayor. Keep that in mind on October 27, when you’re because they buy into his belief in his own of Canadians voted in the election that sent Prime Minister Stephen Harper back to power. faced with the decision on whether to go to the indispensability. But these numbers show that, if everyone was voting booth or stay home and watch TV. But all his efforts may ultimately amount to no more than a finger in the dike. Rwanda was already one of the most densely populated countries in Africa in 1994, but its population has increased by half since the genocide. There We welcome letters to the editor on any subject. or edit for clarity, brevity, good taste and accuracy, and is little evidence that everybody (or even most All letters must be signed and include the name of to prevent libel. Please include a phone number where people) thinks of themselves as “Banyarwanda”. the writer’s community. Unsigned letters will not be you can be reached during the day. Please E-mail your Kagame is just playing for time. published. The editor reserves the right to reject letters letters to tbush@metroland.com

Vice President & Regional Publisher Mike Mount mmount@perfprint.ca 613-283-3182, ext 104 Regional General Manager Peter O’Leary poleary@perfprint.ca 613-283-3182, ext 112 Publisher John Kearns jkearns@theemc.ca 613-966-2034, ext 570 Regional Managing Editor Ryland Coyne rcoyne@perfprint.ca

Letters to the editor policy

Distribution Inquiries 613-966-2034 ext 512 Sales Manager Melissa Hudgin 613-966-2034, ext 504 ADVERTISING SALES Jean Convey, 1-800-267-8012, ext 201 Tim Sheppard, 1-800-267-8012, ext 206 Louise Clutterbuck, 1-800-267-8012, ext 205 CLASSIFIEDS Heather Naish, 613-966-2034, ext 560 hnaish@theemc.ca • 1-888-Words Ads

EDITORIAL Editor Terry Bush, 613-966-2034, ext 510 tbush@metroland.com Brighton News John Campbell jcampbell@metroland.com PRODUCTION Glenda Pressick, 613-966-2034, ext 520 gpressick@theemc.ca This edition serves the following communities: Brighton, Colborne and area THE DEADLINE FOR DISPLAY ADVERTISING IS MONDAY AT 11:00AM

Read us online at www.InsideBelleville.com

Brighton Independent - Thursday, September 4, 2014 7


Petition opposes Mac’s gas bar plans heritage conservation preserves a distinct community identity and acts as a draw for residents, visitors and entre-

preneurs, who will start new business. The results can be seen in the Community Development Plan, the branding exercise and the new downtown

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revitalization planning process. “Council has supported considerable investment in these initiatives and they have evolved as their comprehensive economic development strategy. I can’t see council supporting a redevelopment proposal that flies in the face of this strategy.” Chief administrative officer Gayle Frost says most of the concern she’s heard from citizens coming into the municipal office

centres around vehicle traffic at the busy downtown location, which also affects Prince Edward and Main Streets. Traffic studies are now under way to help determine the feasibility of the project. As well, a petition in opposition to the plan has been started by the proprietors of the gas bar already in operation at Prince Edward and Elizabeth Streets. “I’d like to get going before it’s a done deal,” said Piller. And, giv-

By Bill Freeman

News - Hastings - The Hastings Amateur Butter Tart contest was a success last year and will be even sweeter the second time out. The second annual amateur competition will fill the Royal Canadian Legion Branch 106 on September 27 and will build on last year’s entertaining inaugural event. Once again there will be three categories: traditional, freestyle and gluten-free with prizes for the top three entries in each category of $50, $25 and $10. Last year a small group of butter tart makers entered the event with butter tart fanciers tasting and add-

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8 Brighton Independent - Thursday, September 4, 2014

intend to file municipal applications upon the completion of traffic and other studies, including community consultation,” planner Ruth Ferguson Aulthouse told council last month. “That’s the point,” says Piller. “They will have a consultation, but it’ll be too late. Then, the argument isn’t ‘how do we stop it,’ it’s more ‘how do we live with it.’” Email <savethemorrow@gmail. com> for more information.

Butter tart fest will sweeten your day ing their own assessments for a people’s choice winner. Three judges under the supervision of local expert Carol Darling of Campbellford graded the three categories. “This is certainly worth doing again because it’s been a lot of fun to organize,” organizer Skye Morrison said during last year’s event. Butter tarts were common in pioneer Canadian cooking and are considered one of the few recipes of genuinely Canadian origin. Last year’s freestyle winner Melissa Gruntz of Corbyville enjoyed herself. “It’s definitely worthwhile,

V L N V V P F H R F S T G V W I A N R O K A S E U Y O N W A Special C H A T L C A J O F P U K T U M J J E I E Q N B A E B E E E N B W Y N C G F G S P G B X I D D A M E H X P N M K A E G B X O R E N H F Y I G K P V to All the Entrants S R J Z R T O D B Z R S E G V W S for our C T A L A P R I O G U T P Q F Z Y N T D W C Q O L C Z Z N Campbellford/Warkworth N I E T G A V T R L Y L E V S M O A I U Z L B I F X C E N I Q Y L E I D B V X R E V F C Z W year this N S V S U F O D P J O P M D L I M M E Q S D to our W K A Congratulations R Z N R P OAugust 28 winners! drew Macdonald 613-475-1475/866-246-2487 www.myadviser.weebly.com

en the news that Mac’s has already signed tentative deals with the property owners at the proposed site, he wonders if it may already be too late. During the presentation to municipal council, Mac’s officials said construction on the $4-million project is planned to start next spring with an opening sometime in 2015. “We have been meeting with municipal staff since the spring and

I encourage more people to do it; young and old can do it,” Gruntz said. “You get better as you go; each batch gets better until you master it.” “You like them sort of custardy, not too gooey,” Carol Darling said. “Eye appeal is the first thing.” Darling is a long-time judge of baking, preserves, knitting, crafts and sewing at fairs across Ontario. The entry fee for participants is $10 plus one dozen tarts at the door; the entry fee includes two tickets for tea and tarts. Public admission is $5 which includes tea/coffee and tarts.

Participants should hand deliver their butter tarts to Legion Branch 106 between 9 and 10:30 a.m.; judging takes place from 10:30 a.m. until noon. There will be a “celebration” of the masterful tarts and auction from noon until 2 p.m. The winners will be announced at 1 p.m. with the auction to follow shortly afterward. Judging will adhere to the rules and regulations set down by the Ontario Association of Agricultural Societies (OAAS). For more information contact Morrison at 705-6961382.

MUNICIPALITY OF BRIGHTON

NOTICE OF PROPOSED ROAD CLOSURE

The proposed stopping up, closing and conveyance of a portion of two unopened Municipal Road allowances, specifically: 1. Road Allowance between Lot 2, Concession 8 and Lot 36, Concession 6; 2. Road Allowance between Lots 34 & 35, Concession 6 Notice is hereby given pursuant to Section 34(1) of the Municipal Act S.O., 2001, Chapter 25 that the Council of the Corporation of the Municipality of Brighton has received a request that proposes that the Council pass a by-law to stop up, close and convey the above noted unopened road allowances to abutting owners. A map of the general location is included with this Notice. The proposed plans, by-law, and descriptions showing the lands affected may be viewed at the Public Works Department, 67 Sharp Road, Brighton during normal office hours (8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.), or by contacting Ken Hurford, Manager of Planning Services at 613-475-1162 (e-mail: khurford@brighton.ca). On Monday, October 6th, 2014 at 6:30 p.m. in the Council Chambers, at the Brighton Municipal Office, 35 Alice Street, Brighton, the Council of the Corporation of the Municipality of Brighton will hear, in person, or by counsel, solicitor or agent, any person who claims his/her land will be prejudicially affected by the said Bylaw and who applies to be heard. Written submissions, including e-mail submissions are welcome and should be submitted no later than Friday, September 26th to Ken Hurford, Manager of Planning Services at the above noted address. Any person who wishes to make comments regarding this matter at the October 6th meeting of Council should, no later than Monday, September 29th, make application to: Vicki Kimmett, Deputy Clerk Municipality of Brighton 35 Alice Street, Brighton, ON K0K 1H0 Tel 613-475-0670 / fax 613-475-3453 E-mail: vkimmett@brighton.ca


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Who’s next for a bucketload?

At the end of the week, the executive directors of the Brighton Rotary Club took their turn under the bucket, challenging other district clubs to do the same. Photo: Ray Yurkowski

thanks to the phenomenon, ALS Canada raised its fund-raising goal to $3 million. A day later, that number was upped to $5 million. ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis), also known as Lou Geh-

rig’s disease, is a neuromuscular disease that kills nerve cells leaving the muscles paralyzed. There is no cure and 90 per cent of ALS patients die within five years of diagnosis.

R0012873424

News - Brighton - The ALS Ice Bucket Challenge has become a regular sight on social media and has been more successful in raising money than efforts in previous years. As reported last week,

(right) Two more noteworthy dares in the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge were fulfilled in Brighton last week. The first, at the downtown fire hall, involved the creative use of firefighting equipment and included, from the left, Fire Chief Lloyd Hutchinson, Deputy Fire Chief Rick Caddick, municipal Councillor Craig Kerr, Anthony Rinaldi and local MPP Lou Rinaldi. Photo: Ray Yurkowski

10 Brighton Independent - Thursday, September 4, 2014


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Clement Poultry

75+ Years of poultry farming by the Clement family has provided Brian Clement with a wealth of experience and expertise passed on to him growing up and working the family farm. Starting up raising poultry and continuing on into produce of apples, corn & strawberries allowed the Clement family to expand the business. The result was finding a permanent spot in the famous St. Lawrence Market in Toronto Ontario.

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Raising, processing and packaging for over 30 years. In 1990 Brian took over the family farm and carried on the tradition. Brian chose the quaint town of Brighton to begin a new journey. His new market located at 15617 Hwy#2 in Brighton will provide a healthy alternative to the community. When it comes to general poultry the chickens are naturally raised on organic grains, free roaming outside during the spring & summer season. During the off season the chickens are provided with a good bedding of wood shavings instead of straw. This technique provides better circulation of air and moisture absorbing ability. All these carefully monitored details ensure you of excellent quality poultry. Along with proper regular feeding (NOT FORCE FED), scheduled lighting in the barn and environmental requirements consistently monitored for humidity and airflow provides a healthier and stress free condition. Brian also offers the pre-order service of farm fresh capons, turkeys, ducks and geese for Thanksgiving, Christmas, Easter or any special occasion. We hope to see you at our grand opening. Come see what makes Clement Poultry different from the rest!


self, most agree, the pastime, as we know it today, originated as folk dancing in Europe and as tribal dancing with many other cultures in many other countries. These days, line dancing has a cowboy image but not the way Brown teaches it. Country music makes up a minority of the dancers’ playlist with the balance including anything that has a regular beat. “The difference is, we’re able to adjust our dances to whatever they play,” she said. “The beauty of this program is, once you learn those ten dances, you can dance to whatever you want, and it’s wonderful exercise.” “When we started out, the average age of our dancers was 65,” she added. “It’s pretty in-

credible that they can get up and dance for an hour to whatever music is available any night of the week.” Brown figures a novice can learn all ten dances if they show up for three Thursday morning sessions in a row. And there’s no

pressure. Participants can dance as long or as little as they want. “Once they’ve learned those, they can drop by any time they want or they can join in whenever they want,” she said. “It’s better than sitting at home doing nothing.

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News - Campbellford - It’s a busy night at Campbellford Memorial Hospital (CMH) and Bachelor of Science in Nursing degree program student Rebecca Butler is gaining some valuable hands-on experience caring for patients in the hospital’s special care unit. Butler is in her second last semester as a nursing student at the Trent/Fleming School of Nursing based at Trent University in Peterborough. To gain her degree in Nursing, she must complete a 300-hour placement that gives her, under the guidance of a preceptor, an opportunity to integrate, synthesize and evaluate nursing knowledge and skills in a real setting. “Mentorship is hugely valuable in nursing and is one of the most important aspects in learning how to be a nurse,” said But-

ler. “Nothing replaces having the ability to ask questions in the moment as things unfold, and having people support me in building my confidence in making decisions and having the confidence to make clinical decisions that are in the best interests of our patients. This is not something you learn reading in a book,” she added. Butler is particularly appreciative of the investment of time and expertise her preceptor Jennifer Woods, a Registered Nurse at CMH, is making in her future. “The nursing team here works very hard. I am grateful for the time Jennifer and the other nurses are taking to teach me when they already have full schedules. They are helping me to learn so I can be a better nurse,” she said. Butler also values the breadth

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and depth of experience she is gaining by working in a smaller, team-oriented environment offered by Campbellford, where everyone pitches in to support each other and patients. “There are a lot of benefits of being in a smaller hospital. It is a more personal environment. You get to know people better, do more and see more. People are very welcoming at Campbellford. People seek me out when there is something different happening so I can experience new things. I also appreciate the opportunity to support others and contribute when things get a little crazy,” she commented. For Woods, the experience is equally gratifying. “I know how important it is to have a good experience as a student. As a preceptor, we learn a lot about ourselves. We under-

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band plays.” And, she adds, her group prefers their music live. “In traditional line dancing, they don’t often dance to live music. They’re used to matching that song to that dance and a lot of bands don’t know the songs you want.” Lessons are on Thursday mornings but the group gets together for the regular Monday music nights at the centre to strut their stuff. Over the summer months, smaller groups travelled “all over the countryside” taking in live music shows from Belleville to Campbellford to Colborne and all points in between. While some theorists say line dancing is as old as man him-

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Lifestyles - Brighton - What started out as a three-week experiment will celebrate its fifth year today (September 4) at Codrington Community Centre as instructor Bonnie Brown launches the fall session of the fine art of line dancing. “This is not traditional line dancing,” she explains, in a recent interview. While the normal method is to learn a new dance for every song, which could amount to learning hundreds of moves, Brown teaches a total of ten. “I took the basic dances I learned and experimented with how it would work with other types of music. We’re ready for a polka, a waltz or whatever the

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Go Hog Wild at this year’s Warkworth Fair By Sue Dickens

News - Warkworth - “Go Hog Wild and Get Your Oink On” is the theme of the 2014 Warkworth Fair. “Our new feature event this year is Ken Jen’s Celebrity Pig Racing as the Percy Agricultural Society goes hog wild at this year’s fair,” said Tracy Russell, secretary and long-time volunteer. She got involved with the fair board many years ago and has remained a staunch supporter and believer in what the fair means to the community.

“I started out years ago as director of the junior work, that’s part of how I got involved,” she told the Trent Hills Independent. “The fair is a big part of our area and our history,” she added. She isn’t shy about promoting the fair either and has taken on many roles with the fair board over the years. “I talk about the fair all the time. It’s a great sense of pride and accomplishment when you can work together as a team and pull off the event,” she commented. “There’s a lot to be done to pull

it all together but when the weekend comes, when you’ve worked as a team, it’s very rewarding,” she said. The Battle of the Bands kicks off the fair weekend on Friday night. Following the opening ceremonies on Saturday at 11:30 a.m. Strut Your Mutt registration will take place. And what would the fair be without the traditional much-loved baby show which is on Saturday at 12:30 p.m. From the 25th anniversary cele-

MUNICIPALITY OF BRIGHTON

NOTICE OF PROPOSED ROAD CLOSURE The proposed stopping up, closing and conveyance of a portion of a Municipal Road allowance known as Princess Street in the urban area of Brighton. Notice is hereby given pursuant to Section 34(1) of the Municipal Act S.O., 2001, Chapter 25 that the Council of the Corporation of the Municipality of Brighton has received a request that proposes that the Council pass a by-law to stop up, close and convey Princess Street, north of Main Street and south of Sanford Street. A map of the general location is included with this Notice. The proposed plans, by-law, and descriptions showing the lands affected may be viewed at the Public Works Department, 67 Sharp Road, Brighton during normal office hours (8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.), or by contacting Ken Hurford, Manager of Planning Services at 613-475-1162 (e-mail: khurford@brighton.ca). On Monday, October 6th, 2014 at 6:30 p.m. in the Council Chambers, at the Brighton Municipal Office, 35 Alice Street, Brighton, the Council of the Corporation of the Municipality of Brighton will hear, in person, or by counsel, solicitor or agent, any person who claims his/her land will be prejudicially affected by the said By-law and who applies to be heard. Written submissions, including e-mail submissions are welcome and should be submitted no later than Friday, September 26th to Ken Hurford, Manager of Planning Services at the above noted address. Any person who wishes to make comments regarding this matter at the October 6th meeting of Council should, no later than Monday, September 29th, make application to: Vicki Kimmett, Deputy Clerk Municipality of Brighton 35 Alice Street, Brighton, ON K0K 1H0 Tel 613-475-0670 / fax 613-475-3453 E-mail: vkimmett@brighton.ca

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bration of the Truck Show & Shine to the new antique tractor display and carving demo to the 4-H Beef Show and the OPP Golden Helmets as well as Homecraft exhibits, the fair has something for everyone … kids especially. “We’ve vamped up the kids’ stuff this year,” said Russell. “We’ve added a magic show on Saturday and Malibu Bob The Party Guy (a.k.a. the silt walker) will be strolling Ken Jen’s Celebrity Pig Racing is an exciting new event at this year’s Warkworth Fair. Celebrity Racing around on Saturday Hogs Show is a Canadian Style Back Woods Hillbilly Show with non-stop entertainment for the whole and Sunday,” she family, filled with crowd participation and lots of action. Photo: Submitted commented. “We’ve also added a rock wall The annual Elimination Car this year’s barbecue featuring as an outdoor venue and RONA Draw (this is the 60th year for it) is pulled pork with Laver’s corn on will be returning with their craft the fair board’s main fund raiser. the cob. making,” she added. “We did a smaller version of The Warkworth Fair takes place Jungle Cat World from Orono the kids car draw at a benefit for September 5, 6, and 7. will be at the fair again with some volunteer Ann Marie Switzer last Admission is $8 for adults and of their exciting and exotic ani- year and it was quite a hit so we free for public school-age chilmals. thought we’d bring it to the fair dren. “We are also holding the Junior with the larger draw,” she exNo admission fee on Friday Farmer Challenge which takes plained. night. place on Sunday, at 1:30 p.m., And to make sure everyone For more information and the (registration at 1 p.m.) and there’s gets a real taste of the fair, Wark- schedule of events go to <http:// a new kids car draw,” she added. worth Minor Baseball is hosting www.warkworthfair.com/>.

Training future healthcare providers

Continued from page 13

stand what our strengths are and we are also challenged by the questions they ask,” she commented. Jan Raine, chief nursing officer at CMH, talked about the partnership. “I am really proud of our nursing team members, like Jennifer, who are taking the extra time and

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14 Brighton Independent - Thursday, September 4, 2014

making an effort to give back or ‘pay it forward.’ We are a compassionate profession and it is heartening to see that compassion extend to each other as well as our patients with this kind of partnership and mentoring.” A small hospital also offers the student a chance to work with a variety of patients.

Cyndi Gilmer, assistant professor at Trent/Fleming School of Nursing commented too. “Our partnership with CMH is one of many we have with hospitals providing clinical experience for nursing students who are required to have a certain number of clinical hours before graduation.”


Construction delays opening of new Public School News - Belleville - The new Harmony Public School is expected to open on Monday, September 8, nearly a week after the normal start date for most Hastings & Prince Edward District School Board students. The construction delay caused a public relations nightmare for the board, as it had to help parents find alternative day care for their kids for an unexpected extra week of summer. The delay impacts

the families of roughly 590 students, ranging from Kindergarten to Grade 8. They learned about it through voice mail messages sent out by the board on August 26. “Our new Harmony Public School is very close to being ready,” said Director of Education Mandy Savery-Whiteway in a statement to media. “It will be an outstanding learning facility. The four-day delay is to allow for the resolution of several construction tasks that have arisen in recent

days, for cleanup work to be done and for the learning environment to be set up and ready for students. “While I acknowledge the challenge that a delay in the start of school will cause families and community partners, I want to assure our school community that plans are in place to provide safe, welcoming learning and working environments on September 8. We are providing this information so that families can make alternative plans for the first week of school.”

The site of the new Harmony Public School doesn’t look like a place ready to welcome students back. Construction workers remained on site during the final week of August moving debris left from the previous school. The school board announced Harmony would have to delay its opening until September 8.

Edward District School Board, said Harmony students and staff will not have to make up for the four lost school days. “Teachers will use their professional judgment to ensure the required curriculum expectations are taught,” she said. She also said the new school is expected to hold an opening celebration, but no date has been announced yet.

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Sports - Colborne - Cramahe Township council has a design for a skate park but it’s asked for other options to bring the cost of construction down. The preliminary cost estimate for the facility as designed by New Line Skateparks Inc was nearly $305,000, even though it “spent a considerable amount of time” trying to bring it under $300,000, director of operations Dan O’Brien said in a report to council, “but they were unable to.” He stated New Line believes its number “is realistic to build the design as currently shown,” he stated, but the Cramahe Skate Park Committee, which would have to raise money for the project to proceed, suggested other options be considered to lower the cost. Those options include pre-cast modular which could be 40 per cent less to build than a poured-in-place concrete

In a press release, the school board said construction is progressing and the site is busy with workers addressing a number of last-minute construction tasks. The first day of school for students will be Monday, September 8, with the school day starting at 9:25 a.m. and ending at 3:45 p.m. Kerry Donnell, a spokesperson for the Hastings & Prince

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The new Harmony Public School is being built on the grounds of the former Harmony Public School at 629 Harmony Road, in Belleville’s north end. The former school held its final days of classes in June. Construction of the new 59,000-square-foot school started last fall, following an $11.6-million funding announcement by the Ministry of Education.

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Toll Free 1.866.377.1797 Brighton Independent - Thursday, September 4, 2014 15


Trent Port Marina carries its weight in history

By Kate Everson

News - Quinte West - It may only be a few piles of sand on the shore right now, but the $12-million marina will be a step forward in history. “The new marina will be named the Trent Port Marina,” said Sally Freeman, chair of the Corporate Assets Committee. There were 37 with that name out of 288 submissions. Several other suggestions were made by the public, but this was the most popular. It traces its roots back to the first port at the mouth of the Trent River called Trent Port, which also gives the name to the Trent Port Historical Society, Trent Port Museum and the Trent Port Mall. The town was later named Trenton, then amalgamated with four wards of

the city of Quinte West: Trenton, Frankford, Murray and Sidney. The name was moved by Fred Kuypers and seconded by Keith Reid. In agreement were other committee members Sally Freeman and Leslie Roseblade. The progress on the marina “has had some issues” according to local workers but the machinery for dredging is all in place behind city hall and Mayor John Williams insists everything is fine. “It’s going good,” he says. “Everything is on schedule.” The dredging is the first step which is expected to be completed by the end of September. The 388-slip marina is expected to be in operation for next year’s boating season. It has been contracted to Catalina Excavating of Stony

Creek. The marina will eventually include a 5,500-squarefoot building with amenities, plus landscaping and roadways, docks and breakwaters. Approval for the marina came after four years of planning and negotiations with final permits issued recently by the Ministry of Natural Resources and the Department of Fisheries and Oceans. The Ministry of the Environment had approved the location on the west side of the river, noting that the east side was polluted with sediment on the bottom carried downstream from the local paper processing plant. The Robert Patrick Marina on the east side will eventually be replaced by a zipline sport and a mini-putt operated by local Work on the dredging for the marina is progressing with excavation machinery on site. Photo: Kate Everson entrepreneurs.

Homecrafts organizers hope to see venue grow through celebration, education and participation, the fair is all about family and the focus of the Percy Agricultural Society’s fair. The Homecrafts are a major attraction to not only exhibitors but fair-goers too. “It’s a way for people to show

off their handicrafts at a friendly competition,” said Janet Torrance, chair of the event. She has been doing this for about five years and talked with the Trent Hills Independent about what is new this year. She looks after the adult division of the Homecraft

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section. Apparently Wendy Mahoney is the one to beat when it comes to baking. “She usually wins the most points in the Homecraft section. She does a lot of baking,” said Torrance. “We have a new novice division for ages 16 to 19 years, in our adult division,” she noted. “It’s a special section for young people so they won’t have to compete against more experienced exhibitors,” she explained. Photography and art are also included in the Homecraft section. The goal is to bring more young people into the fair and have them start exhibiting. “It’s a way of highlighting their talents and handicrafts and showing what they’ve got … that’s kind of what the fair is all about,” said Torrance. She noted there are close to 60 exhibitors that enter each year. “We get a real mix of people, all ages but we need to encourage the

younger ones to get involved,” she commented. For Torrance it’s all about “seeing the tradition of the fair carried on.” Another dedicated volunteer with the fair board is Tracy Russell, the secretary, but she also looks after the junior section of the Homecraft competition, for young people age 15 and under. “The youngest exhibitor is usually about three years old,” said Russell, with a grin. In fact her daughter Jessica, who is now 18, started exhibiting at the fair at the age of four. “When she first entered she won overall and she’s been entering the fair ever since,” said Russell. Of course now her daughter enters in the adult division categories. Russell also believes it is important to get youngsters involved so they will continue to keep the fair going. “The kids enjoy it even though it’s a little bit of work ahead of

time. At fair time they can come and see how they did with their entries and hopefully they will have earned some prize money too,” she commented. “You have to start them young to keep them entering. If they didn’t the fair wouldn’t be successful and hopefully they will continue to enter exhibits as adults,” she added. “If they are entering they are participating they keep the fair growing.” A new category to encourage youngsters is the Abundance Project, a vegetable growing contest in which students at Percy Centennial Public School are participating. First prize is $10. This year there will be an entry fee of $8 per exhibitor, which will get them into the fair with a oneday pass. Exhibitors can bring their entries to the arena at the fairgrounds Thursday, September 4, from 6 to 8:30 p.m. or Friday, September 5, from 8 a.m. to noon. R0012805657

News - Warkworth - Baking, sewing, knitting, crafts and quilting are some of the categories that bring exhibitors together to participate in the Warkworth Fair. Dedicated to showcasing agriculture, the community of Warkworth and Percy Township area

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Council News

A Look Inside Our August 2014 Newsletter Northumberland County Cycling Master Plan on a roll The Northumberland County Cycling Master Plan is rolling ahead. Adopted in June 2012, this 20-year plan sets out guidelines for building and promoting cycling routes across the County in order to increase cycle tourism and, in turn, support local businesses and communities. Over the last two years, important work has been done by the County and member municipalities to lay the foundation for a network of cycling routes throughout Northumberland.

With the work done to date, we are well on our way to creating a safe and effective County-wide cycling network that will make Northumberland a unique cycling destination of choice, said Councillor Gil Brocanier. (Read more about milestones reached, and plans to improve local cycling experiences.)

Subscribe to find out more >

Also in this issue online: E-version of Council News coming in October Praises for retiring County Clerk Diane Cane after 30 years of service Council delegates some authority as of Nomination Day 40-year old County Communications Tower to be dismantled

Connect with Council

County Council Meetings: The next meeting is September 17, 2014 Minutes & More: Visit www.northumberland.civicweb.net/Portal/ News & Notices: Go to www.northumberlandcounty.ca/newsroom y

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Visit www.northumberlandcounty.ca/subscribe to sign up today. y. Brighton Independent - Thursday, September 4, 2014 17


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DID YOU KNOW... #9 The main tool Realtors use to help homeowners determine the best asking price for their property and to help attract serious Buyers is the Comparative Market Analysis (CMA). The scope and complexity of a CMA depends on the business practice of each Realtor and may indicate the level of effort a Realtor will put forward when selling your home. A comprehensive CMA report compares a subject house with similar homes in age, size, location and features. The CMA is necessary to provide the Seller with enough information for pricing the house, to identify the competition (Active listings) and the house’s Market Value (Sold listings). Expired listings may also provide information for correctly pricing a home. The CMA is fundamental in helping homeowners make an informed decision about how to successfully price and sell their property. Watch for more practical tips next week!

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ç >GAA[ ?[IcA MLS#21405186 wz ™zzÂ?Æ Âœ ‚™or an ManyRÂ?™œ possibilities - a large\ÂœzÂ? family ‚Â?™‚yz home, a B&B ideal spot for those with extended family!DÂ?–}zÂ?Â?™ Welcoming wzvÂ?œ‚{Â?ÂˆÂˆÂŞ –zÂ?Â?¤vÂœzy Â?ŠzÆ verandah, hardwood floors & attractive pine kitchen, v–yÂĽÂ?Â?y™Ë {Â?ÂˆÂˆÂŞ formal dining room & –‚x bright xvw‚Â?zÂœÂ–ÂŞĂ‹ eating area overlooking 17x40 inground pool. Three on the main Â?Â?yvÂœzy †‚œx zÂ? vÂ?y bedrooms wvÂœ –Â?Â?Š™Ë Šv‚Â? floor. Upstairs a sitting area, family room & full in-law Ă„Â?Â?– ˆvÂ?Â?y–ªË {Â?ˆˆ wv™zŠzÂ?Âœ9 iÂ?Â?Â?} suite - 4 pc bath, dinette, living room & 2 more \œ–zzÂœLower Â?Â?–œ ÂœÂ?–Â?family ÂĽz™œ bedrooms. levelÂ?{has\Â?wzª™Ë two bedrooms, room & exercise room.vÂ?y Triple garage & drive> zz–9 shed. Â?Â?ÂœÂ? ?Â?–ŠvÂ? –‚} Âœ Â?Â?ÂœÂ?

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OPEN HOUSE Popular 2 + 1 bedroom, 3 bath home in Custom built open concept country Deeded water access and boating dockage on Whether it’s your retreat from the city Family sized home a short walk to Saturday, September 6th 1:00 to 3:00 Presqu’le Bay. 4 Level split with 1 ½ garage, or your 4 season home, you will want to the water, 3 bedrooms, 2 bath, open Brighton By the Bay. Attractive hardwood bungalow. 3 nice size bdrms, 2 baths. NEW PRICE look at this solid all brick 4 bedroom side & ceramic flooring. Rich kitchen 3 bed, central air & vac, main flr Attached garage with inside entry to concept layout opening onto a deck. West on Main Street to Ontario Street. cabinetry with indirect lighting. Inviting house. Basement partly finished w/ Gas Furnace to be installed in great family Family room with gas fireplace & hardwood split with a view & deeded access to Lake Finished downstairs with rec room, 4th gas fireplace in living room. Main floor Ontario. Ceramic flooring throughout floors, Over looking large lot. Freshly large family room. Above ground home with beautiful perrenial gardens and the main level and a cozy wood burning bedroom, family room & workshop. painted and new carpet. laundry. Basement has family room, 3rd park like setting with mature trees and pool off 2 level back deck. fireplace in living room. Call Marian to view. Newer gas furnace & central air. bed & 3 pc. bath. backs on to green space.

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18 Brighton Independent - Thursday, September 4, 2014

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Quinte Ex Fall Fair stands test of time

come one of Ontario’s biggest 1980s, or their grandparents in the 1960s. Events - Belleville - It’s amazing how Jersey shows. Across the street, chickens The event has undergone in an era of video games, kids will still spend a summer weekend prepar- and roosters strutted their stuff some changes. A new event in the poultry show. this year was the Quinte X ing cows for a Jersey show. And immediately south, Factor, a contest where budAnd in a generation when people have long been accustomed to fast hundreds of children lined up ding musicians performed in food, locals still grow peppers with to ride rides and win prizes front of judges, not unlike the such passion that they enter them at a midway, not unlike how television show of nearly the for a chance to win a ribbon in a fall their parents might have in the same name. fair. In a period where stereotyping is frowned upon, fair board volunteers can still promote a lawnmower race for “rednecks.� And, even after the auto industry has spent millions of dollars improv

ing safety standards, fans can still pack a grandstand to watch cars flame

out in a demolition derby. That might be the beauty of the ZZZ MDFTXLHDQGFKULV FD Quinte Ex Fall Fair. At 193 years old, the annual Labour Day weekend event in Belleville has stood the test of time, and some of its leading events have changed little over the years. Rows of ribbon-winning vegetables lined tables in one barn at the Quinte Exhibition & Raceway at Sid-DFTXLH $UEXFNOH &KULV +HUULQJWRQ Families walk through the midway area with the large Ferris wheel domi- ney Street and Bridge Street West last 6DOHV 5HSUHVHQWDWLYHV nating the skyline. Hundreds of people played games and bought tickets weekend. Meanwhile, in a barn next 2IÀ FH MDFTXLHDQGFKULV FD for the rides over the four days of the fair, from August 28 to 31. door, kids showcased calves they had MDUEXFNOH#UR\DOOHSDJH FD _ FKHUULQJWRQ#UR\DOOHSDJH FD raised as part of an event that’s beJustin Riga twists By Stephen Petrick

But the event remains, for the most part, a celebration of rural life. It’s a weekend full of horse pulls, tractor pulls and bluegrass music. It’s the country coming to a city, under the shadow of a rickety green-painted grandstand, at a fairground where time seems to stand still. ‘–‡† ‘”–Š—Â?„‡”ŽƒÂ?†ǯ• —‹Ž†‡” ‘ˆ –Š‡ ‡ƒ” ˆ‘”

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Brighton Independent - Thursday, September 4, 2014 19


Is a pie in the face for Parkinson’s the next big fad?

By Stephen Petrick

News - Belleville - You’ve heard of the ice bucket challenge for ALS. So, how about a pie in the face for Parkinson’s disease? Stephanie Bruder is hoping the fad catches on. Anything that can raise funds and awareness for the neurodegenerative disease would be a good thing, she says, especially in advance of the Parkinson Super Walk in Belleville, on Saturday, September 6. “Parkinson’s and ALS are neurological cousins if you will,� said Bruder, explaining the connection. Bruder is the Belleville Super Walk

facilitator and a person living with Parkinson’s disease. She says some Parkinson’s fund raisers have launched a campaign that’s similar to the ALS social media phenomenon. This one asks people to put a pie in their face then pour a bucket full of ice over them. Upon doing it, they can make a donation to split between the two causes and challenge others to do the same, via Facebook. Bruder was brave enough to do it last week, outside her home, to promote the upcoming Super Walk. If the pie-ice bucket challenge doesn’t catch on, those concerned with Parkinson’s still have another fund-rais-

such as depression or dementia. Bruder said funds from the Super Walks go to four areas: advocacy, support, education and research. The research going into Parkinson’s is already making a difference, Bruder said, because there seems to be more ways to treat the disease now than there were a few ago, but researchers still need to test different medications. “We do hope it will bring some form of relief in the future,� she said. “With that being said, it takes funding and that’s why we have the Super Walk.� Bruder expects to have at least 20 people out at the walk. It’s in its fourth year in Belleville, but momentum seems to be growing. She recently founded a support group for people with Parkinson’s disease, which

NORTHUMBERLAND COUNTY

NOTICE OF STUDY COMPLETION

Trent River Crossing and Arterial Road Network Municipal Class Environmental Assessment in the Municipality of Trent Hills Northumberland County has completed a planning study in accordance with the Ontario Environmental Assessment Act, following the approval process for Schedule ‘C’ projects under the Municipal Class Environmental Assessment, for a new Trent River crossing in the Municipality of Trent Hills’ community of Campbellford. The recommended design alternative for the project includes the following key elements s ! NEW TWO LANE BRIDGE WITH SIDEWALKS PLUS LEFT TURN LANES AT THE TERMINAL INTERSECTIONS EXtending from the intersection of Grand Road and Alma Street on the west side of the Trent River to Second Street near Front Street South on the east side, to be designed to meet the river crossing requirements of the Trent-Severn Waterway; s 3IGNALIZATION OF THE 'RAND 2OAD !LMA 3TREET INTERSECTION s 2EALIGNMENT OF 3ASKATOON !VENUE UNDER THE EAST SIDE OF THE NEW BRIDGE s 'EOMETRIC CHANGES TO !LMA 3TREET AND 3IMPSON 3TREET 3OUTH INCLUDING MINOR WIDENING WHERE required and construction to urban design standards; and s %VENTUAL REPLACEMENT OF THE EXISTING TWO LANE "RIDGE 3TREET BRIDGE AT THE END OF ITS STRUCTURAL DESIGN LIFE ESTIMATED TO BE APPROXIMATELY YEARS "Y THIS .OTICE THE %NVIRONMENTAL 3TUDY 2EPORT %32 IS BEING PLACED ON THE PUBLIC RECORD 3UBJECT to comments received as a result of this Notice, plus the final detailed design and receipt of all necessary permits and approvals, the project may proceed to construction. 4HE %32 WILL BE AVAILABLE FOR PUBLIC REVIEW FOR A PERIOD OF CALENDAR DAYS FROM AND INCLUDING 3EPTEMBER TO /CTOBER AT THE FOLLOWING LOCATIONS AND AT THE WEBSITE BELOW The County of Northumberland -ONDAY TO &RIDAY A M TO P M Clerk’s Office 0HONE 4OLL &REE 555 Courthouse Road Cobourg, ON K9A 5J6 Municipality of Trent Hills -ONDAY TO &RIDAY A M TO P M Clerk’s Office 0HONE &RONT 3TREET 3 #AMPBELLFORD /. + , ,

Stephanie Bruder bravely put a pie in her face and then washed it off by dumping a bucket full of ice water on her head. After the success of the ALS ice bucket challenge, fund raisers for Parkinson’s disease are hoping the pie-ice bucket challenge takes off. People who do it are encouraged to donate to both causes. Photo: Stephen Petrick

ing campaign to fall back on. The Super Walks, which will take place in communities across Canada during the first weekend of September, have a goal of raising $2 million in the central/northern/eastern Ontario region alone. The Belleville walk takes place at Zwick’s Island Park. Registration is at 12 noon, and the walkers are expected to hit the waterfront trail by 12:30 p.m. Bruder says raising funds for Parkinson’s is important because it’s a life-altering

condition and few people realize how complex the disease is. She was first diagnosed with the disease about a decade ago when she was 35. Her first sign of symptoms were tremors. However, other people can show symptoms in different ways. Parkinson’s is generally known as a disease that affects a person’s muscle movement. However, it can also lead a person to lose the ability to speak or control their digestive tract. It can also trigger other conditions

has six regular attendees. Those participants represent a tiny fraction of the roughly 100,000 Canadians believed to be living with Parkinson’s disease. Bruder also said she hopes the recent news of Robin Williams’ death will raise more awareness of the disease and the symptoms it can trigger. The famous comedian took his own life, and his family later revealed he had been recently diagnosed with Parkinson’s. “Parkinson’s has a very emotional affect on a person,� Bruder said. “Nobody wants to hear they have Parkinson’s.� To register or find more information on the walk, visit <www.parkinsonsuperwalk.ca>. For more information on the support group contact Bruder at <sbruder. parkinsons@gmail.com>.

Family history workshops News - Belleville - The Belleville Public Library is pleased to be participating in this year’s Culture Days by providing two free workshops on researching your family history Friday, September 26, and Saturday, September 27, from 1 to 4:30 p.m. We will be exploring the many ways the library can assist genealogists in compiling their family history. We will begin with a tour of our facilities including our local history collection and we will finish the afternoon with some hands-on training using both Ancestry.com and our Belleville History Alive database. There are a limited number of spaces available so pre-registration is required. To register, please call 613-968-6731 ext. 2237.

HTTP WWW NORTHUMBERLANDCOUNTY CA EN DEPARTMENTS?PUBLICWORKS 4RENT?2IVER?#ROSSING?%! ASP

Please direct any enquiries with regard to this PROJECT TO Mobushar Pannu, P. Eng. Director, Transportation and Waste Management Northumberland County 555 Courthouse Road, Cobourg, Ontario, K9A 5J6 4EL OR EXT &AX % MAIL pannum@northumberlandcounty.ca 4HIS .OTICE &IRST 0OSTED 3EPTEMBER 20 Brighton Independent - Thursday, September 4, 2014

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Kidney Walk to raise funds for the troubling, chronic disease

Need Our Help?

one-stop shop, the BDIA says. There are multiple retail and service outlets providing everything from dĂŠcor and invites to venues and catering, to (of course) the purchase of the beautiful wedding dresses. “The downtown core has so many businesses that cater to all of your wedding needs,â€? says BDIA Executive Director Karen Parker. “This is our first event where we are able to showcase them all. Businesses are really enthusiastic to open their doors and share their services and products. “Whether you’ve just recently got engaged or are planning your wedding for next year, we encourage you to come out and see what downtown Belleville has to offer.â€? For more information regarding the Downtown Bridal Walk, please with the BDIA web site <www.discoverdowntown.ca> or its Facebook page.

A proper diet and plenty of exercise might be the best way to prevent being diagnosed with kidney disease. Still, one in ten people is at risk of developing kidney disease, McCloy said. And, while a person’s overall health sometimes plays a factor, it can also be passed on through genetics. That’s why it’s important to get checked regularly, as many people may have early stages of kidney disease, but do not realize it, because symptoms are hard to detect. McCloy said the walk allows people with kidney disease to “get together and realize they’re not alone. And it shows we’re doing something that’s good for the body.� For more information on Kidney Walks visit <www.kidneywalk.ca>.

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Events - Belleville - Throughout the year there are many wedding trade shows that take place in the area, and Belleville Downtown Improvement Area (BDIA) officials are excited to announce that this year they will be taking part in the prenuptial festivities. For the first time ever, downtown Belleville will be offering brides-to-be the ability to explore what the downtown core has to offer to help them prepare for their big day. On Saturday, September 6, between 11 a.m. and 4 p.m. businesses will be opening their doors to showcase the wedding-related services. Brides-tobe are asked to stop by the BDIA office at 267 Front Street to pick up a passport of participating businesses, and at the end of their walking tour they can return to the office to be entered into a grand prize. When it comes to wedding planning, downtown Belleville is like a

receive dialysis treatments regularly or receive a kidney transplant, something that’s not easy to get given that the waiting list is more than 1,000 people long. To receive dialysis treatments, Belleville residents with kidney disease used to have to travel to Kingston General Hospital. Now, KGH has a satellite dialysis clinic on College Street East, but even so dialysis treatments take a toll on people’s lives. “A lot of them can’t work and a lot of them are on the poverty line,� McCloy said, adding that the disease can strike a person of any age. “It’s hard to live a regular, normal life when you have to have dialysis three or four times a week.� McCloy said the walk represents, not only the need to raise funds and awareness of kidney disease, but also the importance of living a healthy lifestyle. She said people with high blood pressure or diabetes are most at risk of being diagnosed with kidney failure.

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ton branch office, which is co-ordinating the Belleville walk. “It needs more awareness and recognition.� The Kidney Walk in Belleville debuted last year and walkers raised just under $3,000. This year, organizers expect to have 40 to 50 people out and hope to surpass last year’s total. Registration starts at 10 a.m., with walkers hitting the waterfront trail at 11 a.m. McCloy said the walk is important because The Kidney Foundation does not receive any government funding. Yet the charity has put $110 million into kidney disease research over the last 50 years through its own fundraising efforts. Funds from the walk will also support education and advocacy and provide financial assistance to those living with kidney disease. Despite a strong history of fund raising, a cure for kidney disease is still elusive. McCloy pointed out that dialysis is a treatment for kidney disease and not a cure. Those who hit Stage 5 must

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That’s why the Kidney Foundation is hosting a Kidney Walk on Sunday, September 7 at Zwick’s Island Park. The walk will hopefully lead to more research dollars and more awareness for the life-altering disease. “It’s a really tough, chronic disease that people have to deal with,� said Kerry McCloy, a fund raiser with the Kidney Foundation of Canada’s Kings-

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News - Belleville - Life isn’t easy for those living with kidney disease. For people who reach Stage 5 kidney failure, it could mean a trip to a hospital for dialysis treatment four days a week, for up to five hours each day. And that often leads to losing employment, losing a social life and clinging to hope that one day there will be a cure.

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Social media whiz Likes Summer Company experience By Stephen Petrick

summer businesses. She started a business called Digitalize Your Brand, Digitalize Your Life while on hold from her studies at Humber College, where she’s pursuing an advertising degree. “It was a challenge,” she said, reflecting on the experience. “I knew there would be challenges to overcome. There were a lot of late nights, just getting it all together.”

Tepylo’s businesses provided two services. The Digitalize Your Brand part of the title referenced her offer on social media services for small businesses. She landed an opportunity to train staff at Habitat for Humanity on how web sites like Facebook and Twitter can be used to improve business. She also took over Trenval’s Facebook page and launched a campaign which quadrupled its “Likes.”

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News - Belleville - Kate Tepylo got plenty of people to “Like” Trenval’s Facebook page this summer. In turn, the young entrepreneur grew a fondness for Trenval and its Summer Company Program. Tepylo earned the Business of the Year award among participants in the Summer Company Program, which offers grant money and mentoring to help students launch

The Digitalize Your Brand part of the title referenced her service of taking people’s old VHS tapes and transferring them to DVD. Tepylo said she made some good money on this service, especially after advertising it from a booth at Quinte West’s Canada Day celebrations. She offered the service for $10 and used some special technology she had at home to make many old wedding and family videos available for view on modern platforms. She plans on continuing with the business throughout this school year. “It’s something I’m passionate about and want to keep doing in the future,” she said. The Summer Company Program has been helping students like Tepylo for several years. The program is funded through the Ontario government and carried out by staff at small business development centres, like the one at Trenval. Students ages 15 to 29 are eligible for the program, providing they’re returning to school the next year. Participants can, with the help of Trenval staff, submit a business plan to Summer Company administrators. If it’s deemed as a viable business, the student is awarded $1,500 for start-up costs. Participants are then paired with a business mentor from whom they can seek advice throughout the summer. If they maintain the business all year and complete all required tasks, they’re awarded another $1,500 at the end of the summer. The grant money complements whatever income they’ve earned through the business. Nineteen businesses, from 20 students, were launched in the Quinte area this summer through Trenval’s Summer Company Program. Those students were feted at a yearend celebration at Maranatha Church on August 26. Two other major awards were given. Phoenix Toomath won the award for best marketing for his business, Phoenix Rises, which provided people with aerial photographs, taken by a remotecontrolled helicopter. Meanwhile, Katie Turriff and Corrine Codina were awarded the Entrepreneurial Excellence Award for their business, ReDuo Design.

Kate Tepylo was awarded the Summer Company Business of the Year Award. It was presented to her by Charlene Bessin, of Trenval’s Small Business Centre, and Jeremy Clark, Trenval’s Youth Entrepreneurship Program Co-ordinator. Photo: Stephen Petrick

Phoenix Toomath won the award for best marketing for his business, Phoenix Rises which provided people with aerial photographs. Photo: Stephen Petrick

Katie Turriff (second from left) and Corrine Codina were awarded the Entrepreneurial Excellence Award for their business, ReDuo Design. Photo: Stephen Petrick

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Labour Day weekend leads to arrests for intoxication

News - Belleville - The Labour Day weekend was not exactly a holiday for Belleville Police, as reports of intoxicated people, an unwelcome hotel guest and a car crash kept officers busy. At 11:30 p.m. on Sunday, August 31, officers attended at a North Front Street hotel for a report of a man destroying his room. Further investigation revealed the man was wanted for breaching his recognizance in southwestern Ontario The 29-year-old was arrested and transported to the Belleville Police Service. He was released with a September court date. Police were also called to a North Front Street bar at 3 p.m. on August 31. Upon arrival they observed a male near a vehicle that was reported as possibly being operated by an impaired driver. As a result of the investigation the male was arrested for public intoxication. At about the same time, police attended a west end home on a report that a man was yelling and screaming on a front lawn. Upon arrival, officers arrested a male in his 40s and transported him to the Belleville Police Service. The Saturday of the weekend appeared just as busy. At 9 p.m. on August 30 officers attended the area of Cannifton Road North on a report of a female yelling from a vehicle at a male walking on the sidewalk. Upon arrival a female in her 20s was arrested for breach of probation and failing to keep the peace and be of good behavior. She was released with a court date in September. At 8 p.m. on August 31, officers responded to a disturbance at a west end residence. Upon arrival officers separated two males who had been fighting. As a result one male in his 30s was arrested for breach of the peace. He was released without charges. Also, at 6:30 p.m. on August 31, officers attended the intersection of North Front and College streets in regards to a three-vehicle collision. After the collision a male was observed running away from the scene. About an hour later the male attended the Belleville Police Service station and turned himself in. A Belleville male was charged under the Highway Traffic Act with failing to remain, and driving while suspended. He was released with a September court date. There were no injuries in the collision, police say. Three charged following street fight Police were called to the intersection of Tripp Avenue and Elgin Street to investigate a street fight at about 6 p.m. on Continued on page 24

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Firefighter Combat Challenge team goes gold News - Quinte West - The Quinte West Firefit Team kicked off their 2014 season with three gold medals. The team consisting of David McCue, Keith Locklin and Greg King competed in Ottawa on August 23 and 24, 2014, with the following notable results: David McCue competed in an individual event and set the Firefit Canadian record for his age group. David is 65 years old and is now the oldest person in Canada to race in the Firefit event. David is also running in the upcoming municipal election to become a councillor representing the Murray Ward. David McCue and Keith Locklin competed in the tandem relay and finished first in the over-60 category. Greg King competed in the individual event and finished first in the Chief’s/Senior Officer category. This was the first race this year for all three members and was an excellent start to the season. The first-place finishes make them all regional champions and gives them an automatic bye into the fi-

nals at the Canadian National event being held in Longueil, Quebec, September 10 to 14, 2014. The team is training hard and will be competing in a regional event in Montreal on September 6 and 7, 2014. David McCue and Greg King are planning to compete at the World Combat Challenge event in Phoenix, Arizona, November 3 to 7, 2014. David hopes to set the world record for the over-65 category and become the oldest competitor in the world. The Scott Firefit Championships is a competition based on firefighting tasks commonly performed in emergency situations. The event is very demanding and pushes competitors to their physical limits. The event includes a six-storey stair climb while carrying 45 pounds of hose, 42 pound hose hoist to the sixth floor, forcible entry simulator using a nine-pound mallet, 140-foot obstacle course, 75-foot hose advance and finally drag a 175-pound victim rescue a distance of 100 feet to the finish line. Competitors must wear full personal protective gear and

David is receiving a gold medal from Dale McRoberts, president of Firefit for his individual race performance. Photo: Submitted

a self-contained breathing apparatus (SCBA) while racing. Individual competitors must also breathe from their SCBA. The equipment and gear worn David is hitting a beam with a nine-pound mallet. The machine simulates using a fire axe to gain entry into a building. Photo: Submitted by the competitors must be certified for structural firefighting. The Quinte West Firefit team is always looking for new Firefighters who want to become “fitter, faster, stronger. Continued from page 23 The team would like to thank the City Thursday, August 28. On gation, three people were ar- cident: of Quinte West and PJ’s Custom Outfitarrival, they discovered that rested and brought to the BelLee-Anne McMuldroch, 36, of Belting for their continued support. a female had been pepper leville Police Service. One of leville; Barbara McPhee, 32, of Belsprayed by another female the involved parties who de- leville and Kyle O’Neill, 38, of Belafter attempting to assault ployed the pepper spray cross leville. her with a golf club. Several contaminated herself and All three face charges of assault with involved persons had fled the was taken to the Belleville a weapon and possession of a weapon scene in a vehicle which was General Hospital where she for a dangerous purpose and were repulled over by responding of- was treated and released. The leased with court dates of October 9. ficers nearby. following persons have been No one was seriously hurt in the fight, As a result of the investi- charged as a result of the in- police say. Police seek help in lost wheel incident Belleville police are requesting help from the public with an investigation of an incident which occurred on Tuesday, August 26, at about 11 a.m. A white pickup truck with a white cap reportwill take place at the King Edward Arena on the following dates: edly lost a wheel near the intersection of West Moira and Howard Streets. Saturday, September 6th, 10am to 12pm The wheel reportedly struck a car Monday, September 15th, 5 to 7pm parked nearby causing some damage. When police arrived at the scene the 10% off for families with suspect vehicle was gone. Anyone who 3 or more children may have witnessed the incident is Program asked to contact the investigating officer Constable Warren McCann at 613-966CanPower 0882 ext. 4063. Canskate 6 yr & over Teen charged following collision Pre-CanSkate Police were called to Sidney Street 5 yr & under north of the College Street West intersection to investigate a report of a motor Starskate (figure skate) vehicle collision involving a car and a NCCP Certified Coaches travelalerts.ca/10yearsoftravelalerts Canskate Program is Canada’s only national learn to skate motorcycle at about 2:15 p.m. on Auprogram developed to teach the fundamentals of skating gust 28. The motorcycle had been struck from in a group format. Starskate continues from the Canskate Program to promote figure skating skills in areas such as behind and the driver suffered minor indance, Freeskate and skills. juries and was taken to Belleville Gensponsored by years of eral Hospital by paramedics. The driver Registration forms can be accessed on of the car, an 18-year-old Belleville No purchase necessary. Contest open to residents of Canada over the age of majority in their province or territory of residence. our website: www.skatecanadabrighton.ca woman was charged with following too Odds of winning depend on the number of eligible entries received. One (1) grand prize will be awarded by random draw. Approximate retail value of grand prize is between $3,000 CDN and $4,300 CDN. The selected entrant must correctly answer, closely under the Highway Traffic Act Send questions to our e-mail: unaided, a mathematical skill-testing question to be declared a winner. Contest closes 11:59pm EDT on September 7th, 2014. To and was issued a Provincial Offences enter and for complete contest rules visit: http://travelalerts.ca/10yearsoftravelalerts skatecanadabrighton@yahoo.ca Notice.

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436 Transport Squadron welcomes new commanding officer

global operations. That is our mission stated the 8 Wing Commander, Colonel Lowthian. And, “time and again, it is the CC130J Hercules aircraft and our crews from 436 Squadron that are seen alongside our Canadian flag and among our international allies in all corners of the globe�. Colonel Lowthian added: “Under Lieutenant Colonel Goulden’s leadership, 436 Squadron flew the great JModel capacity from a nascent capabil-

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News - Trenton - Lieutenant Colonel Troy Paisly officially took command of 436 Transport Squadron at 11 a.m. Thursday, August 28, during an official parade ceremony presided by 8 Wing Commander Colonel Dave Lowthian. Lieutenant Colonel Paisly succeeded Lieutenant Colonel Mark Goulden as Commanding Officer of the largest squadron in the Royal Canadian Air Force and Home of 8 Wing’s Air Mobility and Centre of Excellence for

He carried on by giving his vision statement: “The one thing that is constant in Air Mobility is ‘change.’ The C130J will go through periodic upgrades to its systems and maintenance procedures thus ensuring the aircraft is always able to deliver responsive fully integrated tactical airlift anywhere, anytime. I intend to continue to move the yardsticks forward in these areas maintaining a people first mission always philosophy building on the excellent work Lieutenant Colonel Goulden has accomplished during his tenure.� Colonel Lowthian welcomed Lieutenant Colonel Paisley back to the 8 Wing family and said, “I know that you are not a stranger to CFB Trenton and I look forward to working closely with you once again. I would also like to welcome back your wife Tracey, and children Liam, Owen, and Ella, our newest 436 Squadron Canucks! I wish you the best in command.� 436 Squadron lives up to its motto: “Onus Portamus� (We Carry the Load) as their focus is material and personnel

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Colonel David Lowthian (c), 8 Wing Commander, Lieutenant-Colonel Troy Paisley (l), incoming Commanding Officer of 436 Squadron and Lieutenant Colonel Mark Goulden (r), outgoing CO of 436 Squadron, sign the Change of Command scrolls during the 436 Squadron’s Change of Command parade inside Hanger 1 on August 28, 2014. Photo: Corporal Precious Carandang

ity into one that stands on its own and continually answers the call of readiness. Impressively, Lieutenant Colonel Goulden’s team has expanded its mission sets and its ability to deploy multiple aircraft concurrently—anywhere, anytime!� In his own departing remarks, while addressing the parade, Lieutenant Colonel Goulden said: “We as a squadron faced numerous challenges over the last two years. The operational tempo was tremendous, and we never failed. Your success is a credit to those ‘Canucks’ that have served before us, a rich history that began seventy years ago in Burma and India. I leave the squadron very proud—proud of what you accomplished, proud of your dedication, and proud of your warrior spirit.� Incoming Commanding Officer, Lieutenant Colonel Paisly, certainly shared his enthusiasm for his new position, as he addressed the crowd and said, “I am extremely excited to be coming back to the squadron where my Air Mobility career began in 1995, flying the mighty C130.�

Brighton Independent - Thursday, September 4, 2014 25


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Bowling with the Bulls supports Lung Association

By Stephen Petrick

Sports - Belleville - The Belleville Bulls can play hockey, sure, but how well can they bowl? You can find that out by attending Bowling with the Bulls, a fund raiser for the local Lung Association branch, from 2 until 5 p.m., Sunday, September 28, at Quinte Bowl, located off Highway 62, just north of Highway 401. The event, sponsored by Bayview Auto Sales, typically has groups of four bowl as a team. They then get a fifth member added to their team, a member of the local Ontario Hockey League club. “Anyone can participate, moms, dads, cousins, coworkers, anyone who’s a Bulls fan,” said Lola McMurter, a special events co-ordinator for the Lung Association.

The event is in its 11th year and it’s always been well supported by the hockey team, she said. Last year, more than 20 players came out and helped the event raise $10,300. The money goes to research, education and support for those with breathing problems, such as childhood asthma. This year, the Lung Association has a goal of raising $10,500, McMurter said. The cost to participate is $25 per bowler, but those who come in with $100 worth of pledges do not have to pay the fee. The $100-pledge mark also qualifies a bowler for special perks, including a chance to get an autographed picture with their favourite Bulls player printed and framed on the day. The $100-pledge mark also qualifies bowlers for chance to win prizes, such as a $50

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Quinte Mall gift card for having the best score. The top fund-raising team will win the opportunity to view a Bulls game from a private suite, complete with food and drinks. The event will also feature a silent auction and raffle prizes. Bowling with the Bulls will take place, one day after the team’s regularseason home opener at 7 p.m., Saturday, September 27, against Sudbury at the Yardmen Arena. McMurter will be selling tickets to the event at that game and at the team’s one home pre-season game on Saturday, September 13, at 7 p.m. at the Yardmen. People can also register in advance at <http:// bowlingwiththebulls.kintera. org/faf/home/default. asp?ievent=1117210>. “If you’re a bulls fan, you definitely want to come out,” McMurter said.

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SPORTS

Dempster, Baldwin, Thompson, Hough, Pekkonen claim night two classic wins Phil Potts negotiated his way in to the top-five by the mid-point of the race and had Steve Baldwin battling him for position. The first caution of the race came on lap 26 when Matt Vanderlinden spun in turn two. Weese was sideways in turn one on the restart to bring out another yellow. On the restart, Baldwin blew past Potts and Mayhew for the second spot. Another caution on lap 29 meant a one-lap dash with Belyea and Baldwin pitted head-to-head. Baldwin carried the momentum into turn one, and found enough bite off turn two to clear Belyea down the backstretch. Baldwin glued his No.5 to the bottom in turn three and raced to his second win of the season. Rayner and Belyea won the Motosports of Trenton qualifying heats. Thompson invades for Pro Stock win A 50-lap invitational was on the card for the Brighton Automotive Pro Stocks. The redraw format placed current Brighton points leader Doug Anderson on the pole for the feature with Leslie Mowat in the co-pilot seat. Anderson led the first eight laps until a caution for Jay O’Hara. Humberstone Speedway regular James Thompson grabbed the lead on the ensuing restart. A number of cautions in the latter half of the race saw Thompson and Anderson repeatedly restarting door-to-door. Thompson was able to hold off Anderson’s push for the lead by maintaining the bottom lane. Anderson ran against a small cushion on the top to try and find a way around Thompson. The most dramatic restart was with three laps to go. Anderson got an excellent jump and led briefly by a nose, but could not clear Thompson to take away the bottom. The two raced the final three laps without contact. Thompson found enough bite off of turn four to earn the victory. Anderson held on for second ahead of Jonah Mutton. Mowat and Thompson won the Vanderlaan Building Products qualifying heats. Hough finds winner’s circle A 30-lap Bill’s Johns Comp 4 invitational capped off the main features of the evening. Five outside invaders were set to challenge the Brighton hosts for the checkered flag. Austin Reid and Barrie Speedway asphalt regular Dave Crumbie led the field to the green. Reid was fastest early on and held a 15-car length lead. A number of cautions erased Reid’s lead and allowed Crumbie to assume

the point on lap 22. The following lap, the front-end on Reid’s No.85 broke and ended his chance of victory. Crumbie saw a similar fate as a wheel fell off the No.64 on a lap 25 restart, handing the lead to Tyler French. French’s lead didn’t last long though as Terry Hough took over the top spot. Hough, whose own car was destroyed earlier in the season, was a substitute driver for Courtney Mastin.

Hough had to overcome another restart on lap 29, but held on for his second victory of the season. French settled for second and Peterborough Speedway regular Ryan Oosterholt finished third. Crumbie, Reid, and Rich Sanders won the qualifying heats. Pekkonen wins Topless Sprint Exhibition Seven Southern Ontario Sprints

drivers returned to the track to conclude the Classic Weekend with a 15-lap wingless sprint exhibition. Secondplace starter Paul Pekkonen took the lead from polesitter Dick Mahoney on lap two and never looked back. April Wilson challenged for the lead, but couldn’t find enough bite to get past Pekkonen. Wilson held off a challenging Chris Jones for the runner-up spot.

R0012861129

Sports - Brighton - The second half of the Ultramar CST Labour Day Classic Weekend saw another full pit area greet a full grandstand. A total 51 stock cars and 21 sprint cars were signed in for action presented by Lucas Oil, Extreme Rush Adventures, Mystical Distributing, Rock 107, and Sanderson’s Tire and Automotive. Dempster captures SOS season finale The 19th Southern Ontario Sprints championship was on the line Sunday night in the series’ final points night of 2014. Glenn Styres entered the night with a 65-point lead over Mitch Brown. Keith Dempster and Jamie Turner brought the 21-car field to life for the final 25-lap main event of the season. Dempster wasted little time building a convincing lead on an icy slick racetrack. The race was slowed for the first of two cautions on lap two when Frank Baranowski spun off the track in turn four. The restart allowed April Wilson to race past Turner in to second while Dempster held the lead. Despite a very slick track on the second night of back-to-back races at Brighton, a clean race led to a 21-lap green flag run. Dempster encountered lapped traffic and with most drivers running the bottom groove, Wilson closed the gap on the leader. Brown picked his way methodically through the field from his 12th starting position. He sat fourth when Charlie Sandercock up in smoke on the front stretch with 23 laps complete to cause the second caution of the night. Dempster held two lapped cars between himself and Wilson for the restart, with Chris Jones sitting third. Brown made a daring move entering turn three, moving to the high lane and somehow found enough traction to get by both Jones and Wilson for the second position. Brown ran out of time as Dempster left little doubt about the victory, grabbing the win by over two seconds and running the fastest overall lap of the race. Wilson’s third-place finish was her best of the year with the SOS. Styres, Jones, and Cory Turner won the qualifying heats. Baldwin steals late model thriller The Vanderlaan Building Products Pro Late Models ran roofless in their 30-lap feature. Rookie driver Austin King and Greg Belyea started on the front row for the race. Belyea took the early lead with Norm Mayhew riding in the second position. A good battle for the third position began early between Caley Weese, Mark Rayner and Brandon Mowat.

Brighton Independent - Thursday, September 4, 2014 27


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Sky’s the limit for these acrobatic dogs

News - Norwood - Call it canine hang time! There was certainly plenty of aerial wizardry at the first-ever Hyperflite Skyhoundz local championship hosted by the Hot Diggity Dogs Flyball Club at Norwood District High School over the weekend. Dogs competed in toss and fetch and accuracy and freestyle. It was quite a show. “It amazes me when dogs can do this and people can throw that far,” organizer Natalie Cornel said in a shout-out to the extreme disc stars. In the fetch event, handlers and dogs had one minute and one disc to pile up points based on catches in zones down the field. The dogs had to return the disc to the handler each time. Freestyle lived up to its name; think half-pipe excitement at the Olympics. “It takes a lot of training and focus but it’s wonderful when you see the dogs jumping and catching the discs in the air,” said Cornel. Although there was a small turnout, the show was up against a number of other dog events, Cornel and the club were “very happy” with the event which drew competitors from Barrie, Burlington, Cambridge, and closer to home in Colborne and Peterborough. “I think we’ll do it again but take it up a level,” she said. That would mean hosting a Skyhoundz qualifier. The Norwood meet was a local championship; a qualifier would allow the top two finishers to advance into other championships. “This year the worlds are in Atlanta and right now there are people in Ontario trying to do last-minute qualifiers. Next year if we do a qualifier we will fill this field.” Cornel and the Trenton-area club praised the school board, Norwood Please see “Up” on page B3

Kim Bond and her dog Angus from Bowmanville show off their freestyle disc skills during the first ever Hyperflite Skyhoundz local championship in Norwood. The event was hosted by the Hot Diggity Dogs Flyball Club at Norwood District High School. Photo: Bill Freeman


Decline in monarch population a concern to Presqu’ile’s citizen scientist By John Campbell

News - Brighton - Monarch butterflies are well on the way to being dethroned. Their numbers have been falling over the past decade, “with significant drops in the population in each of the last three years,� says Chip Taylor, a University of Kansas professor of ecology and evolutionary biology, and founder and director of Monarch Watch. Last winter, the total number of trees and area occupied by monarchs in Mexico’s Oyamel fir forests was less than a hectare, “an all-time low,� he said in newsletter put out by his organization. “This decline has given rise to a great deal of concern about the future of the monarch migration�—a trek the Monarch Butterfly Fund describes as “the most spectacular two-way migration

carried out by an insect,� covering 2,500 miles, and involving several hundred million eastern North America monarch butterflies. Researchers cite several environmental factors to explain the decline in monarch numbers: loss of milkweed its caterpillars need to grow and develop; drought conditions; insecticide and herbicide use, and habitat loss, owing to development and illegal logging. Taylor said the United States government has responded to the growing problem by directing federal agencies “to devote resources to offset the decline in monarchs and pollinators,� and his organization manages various programs to protect the butterfly and milkweed. Much larger projects are needed, such as large-scale habitat restoration,

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Taylor said, and tagging monarchs is an important tool “as a way of monitoring their numbers and tracking any shifts in the origins of monarchs that reach Mexico.� Citizen scientist Don Davis has been performing that role for decades at Presqu’ile Provincial Park during its annual Monarchs and Migrants Weekend. The event, which includes bird banding demonstrations, guided walks and children’s programs, celebrated its 30th anniversary last weekend and Davis was there as always to explain migration theories and to provide hands-on experiences in tagging and releasing butterflies. “It’s been good fun,� Davis said of his annual participation in the special Please see “Monarch� on page B9

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The Friends of Presqu’ile Park raised money by holding a barbecue. Volunteers included Brian Sutton, Ed Wright and, not shown, Bill White, operating the grill. Photo: John Campbell

Did your team win the big game? Please send in the details to steve.petrick@metroland.com

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Agricultural Society and Township of Asphodel-Norwood for the “gorgeous” state of the facilities. The event was sponsored by Hyperflite Flying Discs. Toss and fetch - first, Jim Hoult and Champ, Barrie; second, Kim Bond/Angus, Bowmanville; third, Carol Lawren/Thorpe, Cambridge. Freestyle - first, Kim Bond/Angus; second, Jim Hoult/ Champ; third, Kim Bond/Capone; honourable mention, Lori Latendresse/Bailey, Grafton.

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Pioneer Days a step back to the past By Kate Everson

Events - Ameliasburgh Pioneer Days at Ameliasburgh Historical Museum and Pioneer Village on August 31 was a reminder that old things are sometimes better than new ones. “A lot of people came out today to enjoy the museum,” said curator Janice Hubbs with her husband Rob at the Grimm Sap Shanty in the historical park. There were volunteers at each of the sites giving demonstrations or explaining how

things worked in the good old days. While the 1802 Station Masters from Stockdale performed in the park, Elizabeth Rolston from Belleville and Jan Nightingale from Ameliasburgh were inside the church knitting and spinning wool. “You have to shear the sheep, wash the wool, card it, spin it and then you can knit with it,” explained Jan. “People these days have no concept of time. Pioneers took so long to accomplish anything.”

Elizabeth added that pioneers would normally just have two sets of clothes, one for work and one for church on Sunday. “It was all wool,” she added. “There were no cotton mills yet.” The huge barn loom behind her is not in operation, just for display as it needs some work. Elizabeth said in pioneer days weavers would come in once a year and use the loom in the barn.

“They would live in the barn and were mostly drunk.” “They would live in the barn and were mostly drunk,” she said with a laugh. The ladies are members of the Ameliasburgh Knitters who meet at the town hall every Wednesday from 2 to 4 p.m. There are about 16 in the group now and anyone is welcome to join. “There is no membership fee,” Elizabeth added. “Just a donation to help various projects—and pay for the tea.” She said they are making doll clothes now for the third Christmas in the Village on the December 6, where events take place throughout the village. Meanwhile inside the 1860 log cabin, Jana Busse from Friends of Ameliasburgh was carding wool to make draw strings for clothes. The fire was burning on the hearth and the cabin was warm and cozy for visitors. Outside in the park, Leonard Bedford demonstrated how to make rope the oldfashioned way. A couple of curious children, Monique Vanberkel from Carrying Place and Lily Schaafsma from Stirling helped out. In the Carpenter building, Bjorn Ja-

The log cabin homestead was built in 1860 and moved to the museum in 1969. Photo: Kate Everson

kobsen from Quinte West demonstrated the old tools. “Many carpentry tools have not changed that much,” he said. “We still have planes, saws and drills.” You just can’t plug them in. The pioneer village also had hot corn on the cob, tea and treats in Amelia’s Tea Room, a blacksmith shop, bee-keeping house, general store, sap shanty, display The 1802 Station Masters from Stockdale entertained in the pioneer village. Photo: Kate Everson barns, dairy building and a gift shop. Ameliasburgh Museum will be open weekends in September. The Victoria School House is also located at the site with pioneer displays from 1904, operated by the Quinte Educational Museum and Archives.

Curator Janice Hubbs and her husband Ron stand in front of Grimm Sap Shanty in the pioneer village. Photo: Kate Everson SOHO’s

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Leonard Bedford shows how to make rope with help from Monique Vanberkel and Lily Schaafsma. Elizabeth Rolston spins English Leicester wool inside the church. Photo: Kate Photo: Kate Everson

Everson


TRAVEL

The St. Jacobs Farmers’ Market: fire and recovery

A sign I found in the enclosed market area.

Lifestyles - I’m quite certain that many of my readers have ventured, at some time in the past, to the St. Jacobs Farmers’ Market, located just north of Kitchener and Waterloo. After all, it’s said to be “Canada’s largest yearround farmers’ market,” and our area has many bus tours going to this destination each year. Well, you may remember that its largest building was destroyed by fire last September, on Labour Day, so I decided to take a visit there now, just about a year later, to check out what has happened and what is happening. It was on Monday, September 2, 2013, at about 2 a.m., that firefighters were called to the St. Jacobs Farmers’ Market, where the main two-storey building, housing about 60 vendors, was engulfed in flames. No one was injured in the blaze, but the building was totally destroyed, leaving only a blackened frame. Therefore, some kind of emergency planning had to take place immediately, to accommodate both the vendors and the customers. For the customers, miraculously, not a single market day was missed! The Tuesday market operates only during the summer season, and the outdoor vendors were back in operation again for both the Thursday and Saturday markets that very week. However, this left many of the indoor vendors without a home, so a fund for these vendors who would suffer financial losses was immediately set up by the Kitchener and Waterloo Community Foundation. Some of the food vendors were accommodated, temporarily, in the adjacent Ped-

dler’s Village building, and it was very quickly decided to build a temporary housing structure for all the burnt-out vendors. This temporary facility was actually built and opened before Christmas that same year, and that, indeed, seems to be very fitting for this particular community, amid the barn-raising spirit of its Mennonite inhabitants. The on-site investigation was completed very quickly, and the charred remains of the building were then turned back over to its owners, the Mercedes Corp, and demolition began almost immediately. Work on the temporary housing structure also started very quickly, and the new fabric-on-steel 15,600-squarefoot, dome-shaped building, with both heat and electricity, affectionately referred to as the “Harvest Barn,” was opened in a mere three months. I met with Jenny Shantz, of St. Jacobs Country Tourism, <www.stjacobs.com>, and she told me that this temporary structure may actually play an important role for years to come: “It could last as long as twenty years, so it’s more than just a tent. We’re probably going to continue to use it even after we build the permanent building.” I also talked to Marcus Shantz, President of Mercedes Corp, and he was very pleased with how quickly this replacement building went up. He explained how “the new permanent building will not only help to revive the market but will also actually help the market to expand.” He told me the new building should be completed next spring, and this 34,000-square-foot building will be about 40 per

The produce surrounds a Mennonite buggy in the outdoor section of the market.

cent larger than the old space. Much of this will be dedicated to customer space, with wider aisles, etc. However, it will also provide additional space for even more vendors, so Canada’s largest yearround farmers’ market will actually get even larger. The devastating fire did, indeed, hurt certain vendors, and it caused some customers to stay away, too. However, the crowds I experienced there on my recent visit were a clear demonstration that the place is bouncing back and beginning to thrive once again. I was a witness to this new structure just beginning its birth, for the foundation is being installed at this time. Mar-

cus told me this new permanent building will incorporate the heavy wooden beams that characterized the previous structure, “giving it a barn-like esthetic that’s intended as a tribute to the region’s agricultural heritage”. While in St. Jacobs, I stayed right in the heart of the village, at DH Food Inside the newly built temporary structure. & Lodging, a refurbished 1852 country inn, at 1430 King Street North, and while there I was told that its bar top was actually made from the charred remains of one of the Farmers’ Market’s burned COACH & TOURS building’s beams. Like the St. Jacobs Farmers’ Market itself, out of the ashes of the old, the new arises, phoenix-like. Life goes on.

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ENTERTAINMENT

Honey, I wrecked the house, but made it on TV!

By John Campbell

Entertainment - Brighton - Are you one of those who would use shingles to tile a foyer, or a car jack to hold up a beam in the basement? If you’ve ever done something like that, there’s a television show interested in learning more about your

attempt to be a Mr. or Ms. Fix-It, and it will foot the bill to redo what you did, but in the right way. “We’re looking, essentially, for the unhandiest homeowners of all, people who use eccentric, unconventional approaches to home repairs,” said Margaret Robitaille, communica-

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tions and post-production Patterson’s role will be manager for I Wrecked My to visit the homeowners and House, the new HGTV point out in a good-natured Canada series. way how their fixes come up short. “It’s very lighthearted, “Maybe the wife there’s nothing negative,” isn’t so happy with she said, and the homeowners will have the opportuthe way it’s turned nity to defend the solutions they chose. out.” “They could be effective but look really terrible,” People who are “more she said. “Maybe the wife your Red Green or Mac- isn’t so happy with the way Gyver type than your Mike it’s turned out.” Holmes,” she said. I Wrecked My House was The show is currently picked up as a series after on an Ontario-wide hunt to making its debut last April find the wackiest, outside- as a one-hour special on the-box solutions to home HGTV. The show featured repairs out there; those se- five homeowners whose lected will become the sub- repairs included using a ject of 14 half-hour shows fridge to support stairs, and with comedian Steve Pat- wrapping a diaper around a terson serving as host. pipe to contain a leak under Brighton is among 28 lo- the sink. The enticement cales, along with Cobourg, for appearing on the special Port Hope and Belleville, was a chance to receive a that Mountain Road Pro- major renovation project ductions has targeted for worth $50,000. do-it-yourselfers whose To see a clip from the repairs are “kooky and fun- special, visit <www.mounny,” Robitaille said. tainroad.ca.> Nothing “too, too exAnyone interested in betreme,” she explained. ing part of the new series “We’re not looking for any- should make a submission thing like foundational is- as soon as possible as filmsues, things that we really ing will start in early fall. can’t address,” because the “The sooner people apshow will “fix the unhandi- ply the better,” Robitaille work” by bringing in con- said. “The tentative schedtractors. ule right now is about seven The ideal candidates “are days of filming [at each very gregarious, fun-loving place].” [and] don’t take themselves Submissions and nomitoo seriously,” Robitaille nations can be emailed to said. <casting@mountainroad.

ca>. They must include the story behind the questionable home repairs along with photos, as well as a photo of the person making the submission and a photo of the not-so-handy per-

son being nominated. Contact information must also be provided. No date has been set as to when the episodes will begin airing next spring.

Comedian Steve Patterson is the host of I Wrecked My House, a new series on HGTV that will offer a light-hearted look at wacky do-it-yourself projects homeowners have undertaken. Brighton is one of 28 communities the show’s production company is looking at for a source of candidates. Photo: Submitted.

2014 - 2015

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B6 Section B - Thursday, September 4, 2014

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The Good Earth:

How Do I Garden?

Lifestyles - How do I garden? For older folk, that was never a question we had to ask. We grew up at a time when most everyone had a garden of some sort and agriculture was one of our country’s main employers. We had an imbedded “horti”-culture; an intimate understanding of what food was and how to produce it. The same principals were inherently applied to flowers and shrubs. We understood, to a basic extent, the relationship between growing plants and their nutritional and environmental needs. That doesn’t mean we were all gardeners, but, not to sound like a skipping record, we were all in tune. With the invention of the suburbs, as opposed to houses being built on the edge of town, a lot of oldstyle gardening disappeared and a switch to what I call the “facade” of gardening took hold. The focus was to decorate the house and property according to the convention of the day and landscape designs were drawn up in accordance with the fashionable magazines of the day. It was also the dawn of miracle chemicals and fertilisers that let us modify (the most benign word I could use) the cultural environment in a man-

the staircase one step at a time—no riding on an escalator. Here is Dan’s advice for a new gardener: Plant a vegetable garden. It could be in a squared-off plot, a container, or mixed throughout the flowerbeds on your estate. Plant only what you want to eat. Don’t like beets? Don’t plant them. This will give you freedom from all of the “you musts” that you have heard about vegetables. (It will also give you freedom from beets, an added bonus.) Understand that plants are living things with very specific needs. Learn what they like and then determine whether or not the environment on your bit of this good earth can provide those needs—possibly with a little help from you. To everything there is a season. All you have to do is learn the seasons of your estate. There is a time when the bad bugs show up, there is a time feeding is not a good thing, there is a time when weeds invite themselves over, and there is a time phenology is a good word to learn. Simply put, it is a study of what happens in nature in relationship to the climate. Along with reacquainting yourself with the rhythms of nature, you will be able to undertake certain activities at the best time. The result will be that the work you do will happen at the best time for the plant, you will do less work and have more time to enjoy the garden, and you will also learn what not to do. The next abbreviation is IPM (integrated pest management). Control is an illusion, management is a plausible delusion. IPM means you look at your gardens often (monitor), make note of bugs or weeds, determine what would happen if you did nothing, determine your comfort level (threshold) before you intervene and then decide how you will respond to your observations. Can you see how this goes hand in hand with phenology? The final bit of advice: it is your garden not Martha Stewart’s. You can do anything you like that the law, your pocketbook and time permits. Eventually, your style will emerge and people will start to ask you questions.

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Dan Clost

ner that led us astray from some basic principles. The most important two would be 1. feed the soil, and 2. the right plant in the right place. Whatever we tried to do, there was a product that would allow us to get away with it for a few decades or so. Yes, that comes across as a titch cynical but it is fair to say that the 1950s and 1960s were not the most naturally beneficial years for gardening. So, what brought up the opening question, “How do I garden? The next generation of homeowners are coming into the garden centres and nurseries. They’ve just purchased their first home, at 1234 Ramblingrosebriarpatch Lane in Muskeg Meadows (that’s the subdivision in the old swamp lands south of town) and they’re excited about plants. They have a clear idea of what they want to accomplish but only vague notions on how to do it. These folks are full of energy, they are intelligent, they are curious and they want to know everything before they make a decision. We love ’em. It is a treat to see someone else excited about our passions and they are fun to talk with. Sometimes, forgive me all you knowledgeable folks who have been tilling the soil for eleventyeleven years, it is a pleasure to leave behind all of the in-depth technical stuff and just talk about simple things. (Did you know my co-workers say that simple stuff best describes me, too?) As soon as someone asks that question, then they have already taken the first step. The rest is simply climbing

Section B - Thursday, September 4, 2014 B7


EVENTS Events

BELLEVILLE A Praise Hymn Strings Ensemble, Tuesday, September 9, Victoria Avenue Baptist Church. Playing Christian music, open to the whole community. Get your violin or cello out and join us. Info: 613962-5262 Gun and Hunting Show, Belleville Fish and Game Club, Elmwood Dr., Belleville, Sept 7, 10 am-2 pm. Admission is $5/ person, women and kids 18 years old and under are free.. Info: Mary 613-472-1448. Buy a Club membership for $20 to enter a draw for a gun. Belleville & Quinte West Community Health Centre Urban Poling Walking Program beginning September 4 and running Thursdays until October 2, 6-6:45 pm. To register: Belleville & Quinte West Community Health Centre at 613-9620000 ext. 233. Downtown Belleville presents the 1st “Downtown Bridal Walk”, Saturday September 6, 11 am until 4 pm. Bridesto-be are asked to stop by the BDIA office (267 Front St.) to pick up a passport. Afterwards, enter into a grand prize. www. discoverdowntown.ca A Praise Hymn Strings Ensemble, Tuesday, September 9, Victoria Avenue Baptist Church. Get your violin or cello

out and join us. Info 613-962-5262 Belleville Support Group, 2nd Wednesday of every month, 7:30 - 9:00pm. Eastminster United Church, Belleville Ostomy Group Belleville meets at Loyalist Collage Business and Development Centre, second Thursday of each month except July-Aug. Final Registration, Bay of Quinte Squadron Boating Courses, Monday, September 8, 7-8:30 pm. If unable to attend, contact Don 613-966-9051 or rdquibell@ gmail.com Fashion Show, Christian Women’s Club Luncheon, Wednesday, September 10, 12-2 pm, 290 Bridge St W. (Salvation Army ) Belleville $12.00. Free nursery, reservations call Darlene 613-961-0956. Monthly Nutrition Education Group, Every 2nd Tuesday of the month, 1-2:30 p.m, Community Health Centre, 161 Bridge St. W., Belleville. Registration required, 613-962-0000 x 233. Overeaters Anonymous meeting every Friday, 10 a.m. Calvary Temple, corner of Wallbridge Loyalist and Hwy 2 West. Contact Dianne 613-392-0081. Quinte Seniors Euchre Club meets at the Parkdale Community Centre every Mon. at 1:30 pm. Everyone 50 plus welcome. Cost $3.00 includes door prize, 50/50 draw and euchre score prizes

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BRIGHTON Callanetics Class: Stretch of Yoga, strength of ballet. Fridays, 10 a.m. at Trinity-St. Andrews United Church, 56 Prince Edward St. Brighton. Call Gail to register 613-967-4447. Stamps, Coins and Postcards Fair, Saturday, September 6, 10:30am - 3:30pm, Brighton’s King Edward Community Centre, 75 Elizabeth St, Brighton. Free admission and parking. MONDAY, SEPT. 8, first Annual General Meeting, Presqu’ile Point Lighthouse Preservation Society, 7 pm, King Edward Community Centre, 75 Elizabeth St., Brighton. RSVP to dsharp@koppla.ca or Dave Sharp at 613-475-5109. Billiards at The Beacon, Fridays, 7-9 PM. Open to adults for billiards, bets and bull-shooting. Three tables. All pro-

CAMPBELLFORD Campbellford Kinette Bingo every Thursday at 7pm. Campbellford/ Seymour Arena, 313 Front St. N. $1000 Jackpot in 54 numbers, consolation prize of $200. Wheelchair accessible. FLK Taoist Tai Chi Open House, Tuesday Sept.9, 9:30PM Community Resorce Centre, Acorn Room, 65 Bridge St. Campbellford. Community Diners, Sept. 11, Stanwood United Church, 2300 13th Line E, Stanwood,12pm Cost is $9. Info Sarah at 705-696-3891 Continued on B16

For more information contact your local newspaper.

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ceeds support the Beacon Youth Centre. Beacon Youth Centre, 10 Alice St. Unit 5, Brighton. Info: 613-885-1100 Apple Route Grannies meet the second Saturday of each month, Trinity-St. Andrew’s United Church Hall, Prince Edward St, 9 a.m. Supporting the Stephen Lewis Foundation African Grannies. Info: 613-475-5260. Every Wednesday: “Supper’s Ready” at Trinity-St. Andrew’s United Church. Warm food, warm welcome, free to all. From 5:00 to 6:30 pm. Trinity-St. Andrew’s United Church Clothing Depot now open. Wed, Thurs, Sat: 10am-2pm. Friday: 10am-8pm. Closed Sun-Tues. For pick ups: 613-475-2705.

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The ANAF Unit 201 Pipes and Drums is recruiting members. Free lessons and Band practices are at the ANAF Unit 201 (upper Floor) 187 Front St, Belleville, Tuesday nights from 630-830pm. All are welcome. For info: www.anaf201.ca The Schizophrenia Support Services support meetings. Every second Wednesday of the month, 7- 8:30pm. Canadian Mental Health Association Offices, 199 Front St., Belleville. For info call, Sara MacDonald (613)888-5322.

CL455839

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We Offer FREE Recruitment Services For People Aged 45 And Over Across Canada

Volunteer drivers needed Thursdays from 12:30-3:30pm to provide transportation to seniors attending our Activity Group in Belleville. Join us for the afternoon, participate in the activities and help serve tea, coffee and snacks. To register: 613-969-0130 Friends of the Library book sale daily at the Bookstore. Accepting gently used books, CD and DVD donations. Foyer of Belleville Public Library 10-4, MondaySaturday. 613-968-6731 ext 2245 Diners Club Belleville: Every Tuesday from 12noon until 2:00pm, Parkdale Community Centre, 119 Birch St. Belleville. Info: 613-969-0130 Foot Care every Tuesday, starts at 9am, Seventh Day Adventist Church, Belleville. VON offers Basic, Advanced and Diabetic Foot Care (Fee). Call 613392-4181 for appointment. Local Amateur Radio (ham) clubs Basic Course for Amateur Radio Operators Certificate. Mondays and Wednesdays, 7-9 pm from Sept 22 to mid November. $85. Info: Mike Pepper 613-969-1744. www.qarc.on.ca Open Door Café - Every Wednesday from 11:30am to 1:00pm at Eastminster United Church, 432 Bridge St. E, Belleville. There is no cost for this hot meal however donations are gratefully accepted. For more info: 613 969-5212.

Section B News - Thursday, September 4, 2014

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Monarch population a concern

Continued from page B2

weekend. He’s tagged as many as 400 butterflies during his visits to Presqu’ile, and as few as 60, as happened last year. “It was very disappointing,” Da-

Elizabeth Kellogg, a volunteer with The Friends of Presqu’ile Park, helped park visitor Marylou Dziuban, of Consecon, identify a bird, during Presqu’ile’s annual Monarchs and Migrants Weekend. Kellogg’s role was demonstrate how birds are banded so they can be tracked. Photo: John Campbell

vis said, but he drew encouragement from the numbers this time around, about 150, which, while “not great … are certainly improving.” Park naturalist David Bree said 2013 “was a disastrous season” for monarchs, “with populations at an all-time low,” but it looks like they “have recovered somewhat.” “The miracle of migration is one of the great nature wonders of the world,” he said in a news release, “and Presqu’ile is one of the great places in the world to experience some part of that miracle.” Davis, who’s chair of the nonprofit Monarch Butterfly Fund, urged people to plant milkweed, the butterfly’s sole food plant, as monarch way stations. “But we’re going to have to think bigger than that,” he said, such as doing less “large-scale mowing” on side roads where it isn’t necessary, to “allow milkweed and other flowering plants to grow to benefit not only the monarchs but other wildlife.” Davis said he’s “concerned” by the decline in the monarch population. “I’m hoping they’re going to bounce back but it’s really too early to tell,” he said.

Originally from the Colborne area and now a Children’s Aid Society of Toronto worker, Davis has been interested in monarchs since he was in high school. What he and other citizen scientists do adds data to a long-term project to save them by indicating survival rates and identifying pathways the butterflies take to Mexico. He’s delighted a southern butterfly, giant swallowtail, is now being sighted in the park. “Presqu’ile offers a real area for protection of wildlife,” Davis said. Celian Vandenheuvel, of Peterborough, was given the opportunity of releasing a monarch after the butterfly had been tagged. Photo: John Campbell

Trenton Scottish Irish Festival September 5 & 6, 2014

at Centennial Park, Trenton

www.trentonscottishirish.com

Citizen scientist Don Davis has been a mainstay at the annual Monarchs and Migrants Weekend held at Presqu’ile Provincial Park. He’s chair of the Monarch Butterfly Fund, which is dedicated to fostering the conservation of monarch butterflies in North America. Davis explained how tagging the butterflies helps in efforts to preserve habitats the monarch needs to survive. He recently met Mexico’s minister of environment at a meeting in Yellowknife and was presented with a silk tie emblazoned with monarchs for his conservation work on behalf of the butterfly. Photo: John Campbell

“Celebrating the 90th Anniversary of the RCAF”

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The Friends of Presqu’ile Park raised money by holding a barbecue. Volunteers included, l-r, Janet Zinnicker, Barbara Wright and Ruth Caverly. Photo: John Campbell

Section B - Thursday, September 4, 2014 B9


Steam engine highlights pioneer days displays

By Kate Everson

Events - Ameliasburgh - One of the largest steam engines in Canada now stands at the Ameliasburgh Pioneer Museum. The 18-foot 550-horsepower Goldie Corliss flywheel was built in Galt in 1910 and named after its inventor George Henry Corliss. “It stood on three floors at the Hancock Lumber Company in Toronto,” said James Bosma, son of Owen Bosma. “It sawed logs, planed and sanded them for hardwood floors.” The steam engine lay in the grass in Ameliasburgh for 18 years before Owen Bosma spearheaded a project to get it assembled and working again in 1985 to 1988. “I used to play on it when I was a child,” James said. The steam engine has been an active part of the museum ever since, operating during summer activities and fairs. James had a miniature steam engine on display during Pioneer Days on August 31 to demonstrate how a steam engine works. He explained that the fire boils water in a tank to make steam which makes the valves open with a power stroke in each direction. “Every revolution of the flywheel has two power strokes,” he noted. A plaque is dedicated to James Watt who invented the two-stroke steam engine in 1787.

James Bosma demonstrates how steam works in front of the Goldie Corliss Flywheel Steam Engine. The 1909 Case steam tractor does not work any more but is a fine example of the use of steam; it’s shown here by James Bosma. Photo: Kate Everson Photo: Kate Everson

“I kinda like steam,” James said with a smile. “I grew up with it as a child. My father was into old engines.” In the barn at the museum was a 1909 Case 30-horsepower steam tractor that he used to drive around the grounds during activities. Now it needs work and sits idle. The eagle design is prominent on the old tractor a proud symbol of the Case company which still makes farm equipment today.

UR O Y T E L DON’ T SE A E L E L VEHIC N. W O D U O CHAIN Y T. U O T S U B

“This would have been used to plow or bale hay,” James said. He showed where the farmer could keep an eye on the sight glass to let him know there was still water in the boiler. “You have to make sure there is enough water, or it goes boom and a bunch of people are dead,” he added. “This happened in the United States not long ago.”

He said the steam machinery is perfectly safe for a competent operator, “or it’s a ticking time bomb.” “It’s very hot,” he said. “The boiling point is 212 degrees [Fahrenheit].” The tractor has a 200-gallon tank. James operated the tractor in 1995 until it broke. “It wouldn’t pass the safety check now,” he said. The tractor was donated to the mu-

seum by the late Joseph Hugh McKibbon in the 1970s. “Joe did an awesome job setting it up,” James says. He stood on the back of the tractor to show how one person would steer while another would feed the boiler with wood or straw depending on what was available. “In the prairies they used straw left on the fields. We have more trees here,” he said.

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B10 Section B - Thursday, September 4, 2014

Lunch and coffee available through the Culinary programs Mini Spa hosted by the Esthetics and Spa Management program Tours of the Sustainable Skills, Technology and Life Sciences Centre

Join us outside the Peter F. Huff Automotive Centre

loyalistcollege.com

R0012875483

All vehicles welcome! Admission is free.


Quinte Exhibition is a big hit

From the left, Isabel Bennett with her calf Gosling, Katelyn Redner with her calf Sadie, and Philip Jeffs with his calf Elmo pose in the winner’s photo area at the Jersey show of the fair. They were the top group of three in their division.

Families walk through the midway area with the large Ferris wheel dominating the skyline. Hundreds of people played games and bought tickets for the rides over the four days of the fair, from August 28 to 31.

Nine-year-old twin brothers Victor (in red) and Nicholas (in blue) look at a display by the Belleville Model Railway Club. The boys, from Toronto, were visiting their grandfather in Belleville and stopped in at the fair on Saturday.

Paul Karkheck sings and plays guitar during an appearance at the Quinte X Factor, a music competition held at the fair on Saturday. The Belleville resident won the event, ahead of second-place finisher Jay Stacey of Oshawa and third-place finisher Josh Thompson of Belleville. The Stirling-Tweed 4-H Calf Club was well represented at the Quinte Ex Fall Fair on the weekend. (l-r) Sara Reed, Abby Reed and Kayley Lindsay from Stirling posed with their calves. Photo: Kate Everson

Pumpkins, potatoes, you name it. Vegetables of nearly every type were entered into contests, and judges awarded ribbons to the ones that looked the Darius Moreton, two and a half, pets a newly hatched chick with his dad Brad from Foxboro, at the best. poultry barn at the Quinte Ex Fall Fair on Saturday. Photo: Kate Everson

Section B - Thursday, September 4, 2014 B11


At L&A County General Hospital on Thursday August 28, 2014 Carl Hasler of Flinton in his 86th year. Husband of the late Anna “Joyce” Marrisett. Father of Wayne & Sandra, Flinton; Brian & Carlotta, Flinton; Cheryl & Dan Lucas, Flinton and the late Nancy Wood. Grandfather of Angela (Ray), Heather (Colin), Tanya (Bret), Joel (Beth), Caleb (Jen), Jordan (Marieve), Brittany (Brendan), Bradley (Kayla) & Christy. Great grandfather of Johnathon, Paige, Henry & Maggie. Brother of Bruce, Flinton and the late Fred, Roy & Gordon. Brother in law of Carolyn, Lillian, Jean & Leona.The family received friends at the McConnell Funeral Home, Tweed on Saturday August 30, 2014 from 11:00 am until time of service at 2:00 pm. Interment: Flinton United Church Cemetery. Donations: L&A County General Hospital (Palliative Care). www.mcconnellfuneralhome.ca CL460664

MOORE Debbie

Jack and Patricia Rumsam

CL460658

Their children would like to cordially invite friends and family to help celebrate at an “OPEN HOUSE” on Saturday, 13 September 2014 from 1:00 to 4:00 p.m. at Trenton Curling Club 293 King St., Trenton Best Wishes Only DEATH NOTICE

DEATH NOTICE

FILLION, DELAND PERCY FERN “Del”, suddenly at the Trenton Memorial Hospital on Tuesday, August 26, 2014, age 41 years. Del Fillion of Brighton, son of Joseph and Solange “Sally” Fillion of British Columbia. Cherished husband of Paula (Jarvis). Loving and devoted father of Logan Fillion and Liam Fillion of Brighton. Son-in-law of William and Nancy Jarvis of Castleton. Dear brother of Mark Fillion of British Columbia and Everett Fillion and his wife Bonnie of Beachburg. Predeceased by his sister Renée Fillion. The family will receive friends at the Brighton Funeral Home on Saturday, September 6th, 2014 from 1:00 o’clock. A Celebration of Del’s Life to follow in the funeral home at 3:00 o’clock. Cremation has taken place. Those wishing to make memorial donations are asked to consider the Peterborough Branch of the Canadian Mental Health Association, with sincere appreciation from the family. www.rushnellfamilyservices.com CL442847 B12

Peacefully at home, surrounded by her loving family, on Thursday, August 28, 2014, age 56 years. Beloved wife of Barry Caverly. Loving mother of Lindsay Moore (Matt Moriarty). Will be sadly missed by her brother Jeff Dupuis (Sheryle) and nephews Connor and Kevin. Survived by her stepmother Diane Dupuis and predeceased by her father Roger Dupuis. Friends and family are invited to visit at the Brown Chapel of Hulse, Playfair & McGarry, 805 Prescott Street, Kemptville on Friday, September 5th, 3-5 pm and 7-9 pm. A Funeral Service will be held at the Chapel on Saturday September 6th at a time to be confirmed. Donations may be made to Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation. Donations/Tributes/Condolences: www.mcgarryfamily.ca 613-258-2435

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SMITTY’S APPLIANCES LTD. 1-613-969-0287 DEATH NOTICE

Walker, Thomas Edward - Peacefully at Regency Manor, Port Hope, August 26, 2014 in his 78th year. Son of the late Ted & Molly Walker. Brother of Joyce Lillian Ashe (late Roy), Lawrence Walker (Liz), Larraine Taylor (Harold). Uncle of Steve Ashe, Derrick Ashe, Karen Thompson, & Bradley Ashe; Jason, Darren, Derek & David Taylor. A funeral service was held at BRETT FUNERAL CHAPEL, HASTINGS on Saturday, August 30th, 2014 at 2:00 pm with visitation two hours prior. Rev. Bryce Sangster officiated. Interment at Trent Valley Cemetery. Donations may be made to any local shelter or food bank in Tom’s memory. Online condolences at www.brettfuneralchapels.com. Special thanks to the staff of Regency Manor for their compassionate care and support through the years. CL442573

Section B - Thursday, September 4, 2014

For receptions, weddings, etc. Catering & bar facilities available. Wheelchair accessible.

8 weeks to an official Grade 12 Diploma in 2014! GED Preparation Course starts at Quinte S.S. Library, Belleville. Monday, September 8 at 7:00 p.m. www.gedq u i n t e . c o m 613-922-2687 or 613-474-2427.

10 Pin Mixed Adult league in Belleville needs Bowlers Tuesday nights, 6:30 pm. Join us. Sue 613-848-6496 or Debbie 613-477-2200.

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CL444152

HASLER: CARL GEORGE

AIR COND. HALL

COMING EVENTS

220 Campbell Road, Warkworth August and September Friday and Saturday 9am - 4pm (705) 924-2577

DEATH NOTICE

BELROSE, ALBERT IRVIN “SPUD”

At his home in Brighton on Sunday, August 24th, 2014, age 72 years. Son of the late Welsley Albert Belrose and the late Stella (Caudle). Loving Husband for 51 years of Shirley (Harrison). Dear father of Shane Belrose (Angie) of Cobourg, Guy Belrose, Boyd Belrose, and Bryn Belrose (Melanie) all of Trenton. Brother of Doris Belrose of Kitchener, Allan Belrose of North Carolina, United States, David Belrose (Linda) of Brantford, Lloyd Belrose (Darlene) and Erick Belrose (Kim), all of Tobermory. Sadly missed by his grandchildren, Kyle, Caleb, Tiffany, and his many nieces and nephews. Predeceased by his granddaughter Amanda. The family will receive friends at the Brighton Funeral Home, 130 Main Street, Brighton on Friday, August 29th from 1 to 4 p.m. Cremation to follow. As an expression of sympathy, donations to the Canadian Cancer Society, would be appreciated by the family. www.rushnellfamilyservices.com

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Happy 60th Anniversary

DEATH NOTICE

WE’RE BACK GOSPEL SING TIME Saturday September 20 @ 6:30 pm Chapel of the Good Shepherd 513 Ashley St. Foxboro Come join us!

COMING EVENTS

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ANNIVERSARY

DEATH NOTICE

ANNOUNCEMENT

LARGE RECORD & BOOK SALE Old Warkworth Cheese Factory 171 Old Hastings Road, Warkworth Saturday 12 – 6 Sunday 12 – 4 CL550654

Studio Tour! Plevna area, September 27 and 28, 10-4, follow the signs. Contact Jim 613-479-2464. Web: northfrontenacbackroadsst udiotour.com

www.InsideBelleville.com

COMING EVENTS

CL453226

Romeo & Juliet’s Single’s Mixer & Icebreaker Dance! Mix, mingle & meet new singles! Sept 6. Top floor, Trenton Legion, 9 p.m.-1 a.m. 613-392-9850.

COMING EVENTS

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ANNIVERSARY

LAND O’LAKES CURLING CLUB Registration for 2014/15 season Sunday, Sept. 28, 1-4 pm and Wed. Oct. 1,7-9 pm. Open House Oct. 19, 1-4 pm.

COMING EVENTS

CL443017

6th Annual Toledo Ride-A-Thon, Saturday, October 18. Registration 10 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Info: www.saddleupintoledo .com (see website for entry fee). Lunch included. Approx 25 km ride through scenic country side trails in the Toledo area. Bring your horse for a fun filled day. Proceeds to St Joseph’s School in Toledo and St Andrew’s United Church.

COMING EVENTS

CL447164

COMING EVENTS

705-632-0862


MUTTON METAL SALVAGE Free removal of scrap metal. Call Jeff at 905-344-7733.

Bowflex and treadmill $600 each; antique dropleaf table & 4 chairs, $400; glass round table w/4 chairs, $150; 4 pallets 4x4x8 Georgian Style house bricks, $1,000; 4 trailer loads 4x8x16’ assorted lumber, $1,000; MF new brush hog, never used, $2,600; garden trailer, $100; $1,000 barbecue for $100. 613-264-8448.

Winter boat storage and boat repair. Winterizing, shrink wrap, storage, from $350. Fast turn around on repairs. Christie Lake Marina 613-267-3470.

COMPUTER

Metroland Media Classifieds Residential items only

1-888-967-3237

FINANCIAL / INCOME TAX

Freelance IT

Computer Services Network Support “Home & OfďŹ ceâ€? Factory Imaging Virus Removal Data Recovery Wireless Setup Internet & Email “On-site Serviceâ€? Ph: (613) 902-5455 www.freelance-it.ca CL443237

FARM

Need a home? Call the Hastings Housing Resource Centre. Services offered in Belleville, Quinte West, North and Centre Hastings. (613)969-1748.

FOR RENT SHARED ACCOMMODATIONS BRIGHTON, 312 Raglan Street. Private home, furnished bedroom, cable, telephone, heat, hydro included, use of home. No pets. Available Sept 1. $450 monthly. 613-475-3841

PETS Dog Grooming by Bernadette. Professional services with TLC. New clients welcome. 550 TrentonFrankford Rd, 1 minute north of 401. (613)243-8245.

FARM

MARINE

Buy 1 weet 1kfree ! ge

FOR RENT

LOOK NO FURTHER!

APARTMENTS APARTMENTS APARTMENTS APARTMENTS APARTMENTS APARTMENTS APARTMENTS

PRINCE WILLIAM APARTMENTS

Airless spray painting, roofs & sides, steel roofs P R A D A P R A D A CC OO UU RR TT repairs. 5 & 6� seamless P R A D A C O U R T eavestrough, soffit, facia, P Featuring Abedroom UU RR TT PR RA AD2 D2bedroom A CC O O apartments gutterguard installed or Featuring apartments P R A D2 bedroom A C O U R T delivered. Free estimates. Featuring apartments BRIGHTON with amenities 1(877)490-9914. with P all R all A amenities A including: Cincluding: O U R T Featuring 2 D2bedroom apartments Featuring bedroom apartments

165 Herchimer Ave. Beautiful 1 & 2 bdrm suites! Great amenities! Outdoor pool, sauna, exercise rm, social rm w/events.

with all amenities including: Featuring 2 bedroom apartments

OFFICE OPEN DAILY! CALL Now!

and fridge, stove, airconditioning conditioning and with allstove, including: with allamenities amenities including: Barn Repairs, Steel roof fridge, Featuring 2 air bedroom apartments air conditioning and with allstove, amenities including: repairs, barn boards, beam fridge, wheelchair access. wheelchair access. fridge, stove, air conditioning and fridge, stove, air conditioning and repairs, sliding doors, wheelchair with all amenities including: access. eavestroughs, screw nail- fridge, stove, air conditioning and The apartments are attractive and The attractive and access. wheelchair access. ing, roof painting, barn wheelchair fridge, stove, air are conditioning The apartments apartments are attractive and painting. Call John wheelchair access. the buildings are secure. the buildings are secure. The apartments are attractive and The apartments are attractive and 613-955-8689. wheelchair access. the buildings are secure.

/FF s 2ES &RONT 3T #ENTURY 0LACE "ELLEVILLE CRAIG?MARBELLE LKS NET Each office independently owned and operated.

FARM

FARM

R. ANDERSON &!2-3 s (/53% s ).$5342)!, s #/--%2#)!, 1-800-290-3496 613-395-2857

CL442797

Sheet metal (screwnailed) Sandblasting Airless Spray Painting

334 Dundas St. E. STUNNING 1 & 2 bdrm suites, GREAT amenities! Indoor pool, social rm. w/ events, gym, secured entry. Move in incentives! CALL TODAY! 1-888-478-7169

www.realstar.ca

3 bedroom townhouse, laminate floors, 1 1/2 baths, gas fireplace, eat-in kitchen. $900/mth + heat + hydro.

Call Kenmau Ltd.

Property Management (Since 1985)

613-392-2601

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

Ask about our HALF PRICE and FREE birthday ads!

613-966-2034 x 560

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

Requires full time HVAC installers and technicians to work in our team oriented environment. We are looking for G2 or G3 and helpers eager to start in this trade. We are a customer focused business that is looking for candidates with integrity who want a future with a great company. Please apply to dowsclimatecare@live.ca All applications kept confidential. We are locally owned and operated, offer a history of a stable work environment with regular working hours, flexible vacation schedules and opportunities for advancement.

Bay Terrace Apartments

apt with fridge, stove, heat & water included. $750 /mth + hydro.

BRIGHTON

2 bedroom apartment, $800/month incl. Parking Laundry facilities, balcony, mature building. No pets. (613)392-3069

FANTASTIC FIND!

(Lingham Street) Main level 2 bedroom apartment. Private entrance. Fridge, stove and water included. For Sept. 1st occupancy. $775 /mth.

Barn Painting & Repairs

Havelock area, 1 bedroom includes heat, hydro & tv, good for retired person, no pets, $750/mnth, Sept. 1. 705-778-9866

FOR RENT

www.realstar.ca

DEBT CONSOLIDATION PURCHASE FINANCING & CONSTRUCTION LOANS

MORTGAGE BROKER Lic. #10343

FOR RENT

613-966-5599

The apartments are attractive and Ideal for orare retired couples Ideal forSeniors Seniors orsecure. retired couples theIdeal buildings are the buildings are for Seniors or retired couples apartments attractive and the buildings aresecure. secure. FINANCIAL / INCOME TAX The Ideal for Seniors or retired couples CALL Ideal for Seniors or retired couples CALL the buildings areorsecure. Ideal for Seniors retired couples CALL

1-800-706-4459 CALL Ideal for Seniors or retired couples CALL 1-800-706-4459 CALL t . 0 3 5 G A ( & 4 t 1-800-706-4459 613-475-3793 613-475-3793 1-800-706-4459 1-800-706-4459 CALL 9am - -5pm 613-475-3793 9am 5pm 1-800-706-4459 613-475-3793 L 9am - -5pm www.pradacourt.com 9am 5pm www.pradacourt.com 613-475-3793 O Craig Blower 9am - 5pm www.pradacourt.com www.pradacourt.com A www.pradacourt.com Kenmau Ltd. .BSCFMMF N Financial Services Inc. BELLEVILLE $ (William Street) Attractive 2 bedroom

FOR RENT

CL442559

Junk removal & willing to move articles for individuals. 613-475-9591

FOR RENT

Norwood- 2 bedroom apartment in adult building, would suit quiet single or couple, large deck, no pets, no smoking. $600/month plus hydro (first/last required). 705-639-1093.

FOR RENT

BRIGHTON DOWNTOWN Bachelor, 1 & 2 bedrooms with fridge & stove. $500-$650 plus utilities

Kenmau Ltd. since 1985

Property Management 613-392-2601

MANUFACTURING WORKERS

BRIGHTON Attractive 2 bdrm with fridge & stove, water and balcony. Window coverings and freshly painted. Building has security entrance & laundry facilities. $700/mth plus heat & hydro.

Kenmau Ltd. (Since 1985)

Property Management

613-392-2601

PRODUCT ENGINEERING / TECHNICAL SERVICES

Northern Cables Inc. is currently recruiting for Engineering resources for a new position in our Technical Department. Candidates will preferably be a Professional Engineer or Technologist with 5 -10 years experience in a manufacturing environment and have excellent proficiency with ERP/MRP software and database/spreadsheet creation. Critical Skills: * Develop and maintain all engineering documentation related to cable design * Develop, implement and maintain technical modules of ERP/MRP software * Integrate new and existing technical data into ERP/MRP software * Develop and maintain cable design and costing data for use with quotations * Develop and maintain manufacturing instructions for all cable constructions * Develop and maintain catalogue and website product information Our continued growth has created new opportunities in our Brockville and Prescott facilities. Applicants must have medium/heavy manufacturing experience and good math and English skills. Training provided to suitable candidates. Regular full time hours, benefits, base salary $44000 - $47000 per year.

Interested candidates are invited to submit resumes to: Northern Cables Inc. P.O. Box 1564 - 50 California Avenue Brockville, Ontario - K6V 6E6 Fax (613) 345-3147 Email: humanresources@northerncables.com Website: www.northerncables.com No phone calls please.

Section B - Thursday, September 4, 2014

CL442374_0828

DUMP RUNS

CONSOLIDATE Debts Mortgages to 90% No income, Bad credit OK! Better Option Mortgage #10969 1-800-282-1169 www.mortgageontario.com

CL455451

100’S OF VARIOUS SIZED USED WHITE VINYL, thermal pane windows for sale. Double hung vertical, fixed, singles, doubles and triples. To view, stop by our office at 1296 Hamilton Rd, Trenton Mon-Fri 8:3--4:30. Or check out our Kijijji ad under ‘Home Renovations�. Singles $50, Doubles - $100, Triples - $150.

6th Annual Toledo Ride-A-Thon, Saturday, October 18. Registration 10 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Info: www.saddleupintoledo .com (see website for entry fee). Lunch included. Approx 25 km ride through scenic country side trails in the Toledo area. Bring your horse for a fun filled day. Proceeds to St Joseph’s School in Toledo and St Andrew’s United Church.

$$ MONEY $$

10%p.a. paid quarterly in- Havelock - Great for seniors! One bedroom on come + 2% Bonus, ground level no stairs, registered or not newly decorated, centralReal Estate Mortgage ly located $700. ConNotes, $25k min., trolled access to quiet 613-475-1475 building. 2 bdrm apartment on 2nd floor $720. COMMERCIAL RENT Appliances, storage unit, parking and laundry incl. extra Warkworth Main St., 546 Utilities sq. ft. store with parking 705-778-5442. and water included, rent is $550/month plus utilities Colonial Inn Motel Madoc and HST. Call for rent daily, weekly, monthly. One Kitchenette 705-927-8409. Available (613)473-2221.

CL455452

LIVESTOCK

WANTED Lawn mower $50, grass trimmer $30, both 4 cycle, very good condition. Standing timber, hard maple, soft maple, red and 613-475-1129. white oak, etc. Quality STEEL BUILDINGS/METAL workmanship guaranteed. BUILDINGS UP TO 60% 705-957-7087. OFF!30x40, 40x60, 50x80, 60x100,80x100 sell for Wanted: Standing timber, hard/softwood. balance owed! Call: mature wanted, natural 1 - 8 0 0 - 4 5 7 - 2 2 0 6 Also www.crownsteelbuild- stone, cubicle or flat, any size. 613-968-5182. ings.ca

FOR RENT

CL449581

Music Round-up

Saturday, Sept. 6, 2014 10am until 5pm ELDORADO HALL 15651 Highway 62 North of Madoc For more information call Jim Dopking @ 613-771-1362 Admission $8.00

LARGE FUND --- Borrowers Wanted. Start saving hundreds of dollars today! We can easily approve you by phone. 1st, 2nd or 3rd mortgage money is available right now. Rates start at Prime. Equity counts. We don’t rely on credit, age or income. CALL ANYTIME 1-800-814-2578 or 905-361-1153. Apply online www.capitaldirect.ca

FINANCIAL / INCOME TAX

CL449578

9th Annual Gospel

MORTGAGES

CL453218

HOT TUB (SPA) COVERS. Best Price, Best Quality. All Shapes & Colors Available. Call 1-866-652-6837 www.thecoverguy.com/newspaper

COMING EVENTS

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Carpet, laminate, hardwood flooring deals. 12 mm laminate installed with free pad $2.29/sq. ft.; engineered hardwood $2.49/sq ft.; Free shop at home service. saillianflooring.com 1-800-578-0497, 905-373-2260.

COMING EVENTS

CL443229

FOR SALE

B13


LEGAL CRIMINAL RECORD? Canadian Record Suspension (Criminal pardon) seals record. American waiver allows legal entry. Why risk employment, business, travel, licensing, deportation, peace of mind? Free consultation: 1-800-347-2540

HELP WANTED

INTERIOR HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR SCHOOL. No Simulators. In-the-seat training. Real world tasks. Weekly start dates. Job Board! Funding options. Sign up online! iheschool.com HELPFUL WORKING gen- 1-866-399-3853 tleman, 50, single, looking for lady-friend, average size, works (single) for Survey Party Chief and coffee, dates, beach, TV, Survey Technologist. Colyard sales (lets talk). lett Surveying is looking for 613-847-5480 (message) 2 qualified people; a Survey Party Chief and also a Survey Technologist experiMetroland Media enced with calculations and Classifieds CAD skills to join our Buy 1 wetek Brockville team in a full! ge 1 free time position. Please subResidential items only mit resume in confidence to 1-888-967-3237 ols@collettsurveying.on.ca

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

Job Posting Position: Reports to:

Regional General Manager (Ottawa & Valley) Mike Mount, Vice President & Group Publisher, Metroland East

THE COMPANY A subsidiary of Torstar Corporation, Metroland is one of Canada’s premier media companies. Metroland delivers upto-the-minute vital business and community information to millions of people across Ontario. We have grown significantly in recent years in terms of audience and advertisers and we’re continuing to invest heavily in developing best-in-class talent, products and technology to accelerate our growth in the media landscape and strengthen our connection to the community. For further information, please visit www.metroland.com. THE OPPORUNITY This is a key leadership role within Metroland East, responsible for all aspects of Metroland’s operations in Ottawa & the Valley, in addition to region-wide duties as assigned by the Publisher. This is an opportunity for a senior and experienced media leader with a proven track record. KEY ACCOUNTABILITIES Develop and execute strategies to: • Increase profitability • Nurture a ‘best in class’ sales culture • Identify new revenue and business opportunities • Foster a culture of editorial excellence in community journalism • Maximize community, reader and advertiser engagement • Provide excellent cost management and organizational efficiency • Promote co-operation and collaboration within Metroland South and across Metroland • Provide ‘thought leadership’ in the division and the broader organization Qualifications/Competencies/Experience: The successful candidate will: • Be a values-based leader of exceptional integrity, with a record of developing and nurturing strong teams • Demonstrate superior command skills • Think and act strategically • Have a bias for action, balanced with thoughtfulness and the ability to accurately synthesize complex and often contradictory information • Demonstrate superb business acumen • Boast excellent communication and interpersonal skills, and be proficient in representing our team in a variety of roles • Understand, and be able to speak to, the forces at play within our industry • Have a minimum of 5 to 7 years relevant experience, including direct management and bottom line responsibility Qualified and interested applicants are to forward their resume to Karen Pogue, Regional Human Resources Manager, at kpogue@metroland.com by September 12, 2014. Job Category; Management Media CL451449_0904

B14

Section B - Thursday, September 4, 2014

CANCEL YOUR TIMESHARE. NO RISK program. STOP Mortgage & Maintenance Payments Today. 100% Money Back Guarantee. FREE Consultation. Call us NOW. We can Help! 1-888-356-5248 Professionals Needed. Looking for career-minded persons willing to speak to small groups or do oneon-one Presentations locally. Part Time or Full Time. A car and internet access are necessary. Training and ongoing support provided. Build financial security. Paid daily. Call Diana 1.866.306.5858 HELP WANTED!! Make up to $1000 A Week Mailing Brochures From Home! Helping Home Workers Since 2001! Genuine Opportunity! NO Experience Required! Start Immediately! www.TheMailingHub.com

HELP WANTED

FULL TIME & PART TIME

Contract Drivers & Dispatcher

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

RETIREMENT APARTMENTS, ALL INCLUSIVE Meals, transportation, activities daily. Short Leases. Monthly Specials! Call 866-338-2607 PRO “TRAI F N OVEESSION ING R 30 ALS YEAR FOR S”

WORK WANTED Painter or Handyman. No job is too small! Also any odd jobs. Seniors discount. Call Roger on cell 613-242-3958.

EDUCATION & TRAINING Reflexology Training. The next Reflexology Certification course runs September 13th, 14th, 20th, and 21st. Go to www.reflexologytrainingacademy.ca or call 613-391-7198 for further details.

WE A C A R CC E P T EER EI & APP SEC LIC A OND NTS

s HAIRSTYLING / COSMETOLOGY (Diploma) (All 4 Campus Locations)

s ADVANCED ESTHETICS / SPA THERAPY $IPLOMA (Oshawa Campus Only)

ENROLL NOW Earn a College Diploma in less than a year! s -ONTHLY START DATES s &LEXIBLE SCHEDULES AND PAYMENT PLANS s )NSTRUCTOR LED HANDS ON TRAINING

Women’s Native Teachings Group, 12 weeks starting September 23, 2014. 7-8:30pm. 19 Napoleon Street, Brighton. $200 Call Linda 613-439-9791.

Space is limited, secure your placement, register today!

613-962-8490

292 FRONT ST., BELLEVILLE www.artandtechnique.com

BUSINESS SERVICES

needed for Belleville/ Trenton Courier Service. Must have own vehicle. Call Tues. To Fri. 8 am - 2 pm. 613-392-5585 or 613-967-5941

County Water TreatmentSofteners, U.V. Lights, R.O. systems, chemical free iron and sulphur filters. Sales, installation, service and repair. Steven Menna. (613)967-7143.

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

s /3(!7! s #/2.7!,, s "2!-04/. s "%,,%6),,% Registered as a private career college under Private Career Colleges Act, 2005

Sell it fast! To book your ad call 613-966-2034 • 613-475-0255 • 1-888-967-3237 HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

Friendly Faces

BUSINESS SERVICES

Roger’s Mobile Wash and Detailing: For all your washing needs. Auto, Boats, RVs, Homes, Decks, Patios, Driveways, Heavy Equipment, and Monument cleaning. Also, Store Front, and Graffiti cleaning. Bug Spraying available. Free Estimates Home 613-962-8277 or Cell 613-885-1908.

Steve Collins, InsulationBlown cellulose, attics, walls, floors. Save money -live comfortably. Warm in winter, cool in summer. Quality work since 1974. Free estimates. Call (613)847-6791.

Hardwood Floor Installation and resurfacing. Ceramics. Light renovations and upgrades. Over 30 years experience. Please call for free estimate 613-394-1908. Ken Chard Construction. Renovations, decks, siding, sidewalks, fences, ceramic, windows, painting etc. Free estimates. Call: 613-398-7439.

SUNSTRUM’S HOME IMPROVEMENTS

General Home Repair & Remodeling Electrical. Plumbing. Carpentry. Painting. Flooring. Cleanup

Located an hour east of Toronto, the thriving Southeastern Ontario community of Northumberland County has a rich history of agricultural production, world-class manufacturing, and economic viability. As the upper tier of municipal government, we weave together seven diverse yet complementary municipalities.

AUCTIONS HUGE MARINE & RECREATIONAL AUCTION!!! Saturday, Sept 13th, 8 A.M. Barrie, ON Boats/Trailers, RV’S, Travel-Trailers, 5th-Wheels, ATV’s/PWC’s, Snowmobiles. For full listing & pictures visit www.aeroauctions.ca Online Bidding available. CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME! 1-866-375-6109

Births $ 21.50 Ads starting at

69,000 homes

905-355-1357 Brighton, ON

Dennis 905-269-6295 Sharon 905-925-4081

BUSINESS SERVICES

More Power with

HELP WANTED

Fantastic Scenery, Fresh Air &

BUSINESS SERVICES

BUSINESS SERVICES

Solar Panel Cleaning

Free Estimates

Cell: 613-919-2906 Bus: 613-473-2267

Accounts Receivable Clerk

CL442574

TRUE PSYCHICS For Answers, CALL NOW 24/7 Toll FREE 1-877-342-3032 Mobile: #4486 www.truepsychics.ca

HELP WANTED

CL447101

• full-time six-month contract position

Becoming part of our team, you will fill a temporary vacancy. Highly motivated and energetic, you are challenge-oriented, organized, and analytical and able to efficiently manage all A/R duties. You will prepare and enter A/R invoices for all departments, reconcile accounts, correspond with customers, and prepare, deposit, and record cash/cheque payments. Your diploma or intermediate level of a recognized accounting course is supported by at least two years of related experience, strong math and computer skills with proficiency in MS Word and Excel, and the ability to meet established timelines. Experience with Great Plains and Geoware would be an asset. Please submit a resume and cover letter, by 4:30 p.m. on Friday, September 12, 2014, to: Human Resources County of Northumberland 555 Courthouse Road Cobourg, ON K9A 5J6 e-mail: hr@northumberlandcounty.ca fax: 905-372-3046 The successful candidate will be required to submit a satisfactory Criminal Reference Check or Vulnerable Sector Search prior to the commencement of employment. We thank all applicants for their interest; however, only those selected for an interview will be notified. Please note that accommodations are available, upon request, to support potential applicants with disabilities throughout the recruitment process. Please e-mail your request to accessibility@northumberlandcounty.ca or call 905-372-3329 ext. 2327. Alternative formats of this job posting are available upon request.

www.northumberlandcounty.ca

For All Your General Home Repair Needs

Mike Chartrand, Owner 284 Ashley Street Foxboro, ON K0H 2B0 613.922.6314

Seamless Eavestrough • Soffit/Fascia • Gutter Guards • Decks • Free Estimates En Francais • Seniors Discount

NOTICES

NOTICES

TUCK’S

PARALEGAL SERVICES Representing your interests since 1995.

We handle MTO & Pardons Regulatory Issues Process serving Commissioners for taking oaths AND MUCH MORE! Call 1-888-611-5243 for assistance

CL455450

Renovated, clean, 2 bedroom apartment, 8 mins south of Tweed in Thomasburg area. $650/plus hydro. Well maintained building, beautiful rural setting. Call 613-885-5914.

HELP WANTED

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PERSONAL

CL447059

FOR RENT


From Craighurst at Hwy #93 & The Horseshoe Valley Road go east 1 km. See Signs!

REAL ESTATE 1:00 P.M: 50 acre majestic farm with lots of potential, for future development, located at 1697 Horseshoe Valley Road, OroMedonte (Craighurst), ON Highlights; 2 road frontages including north side exposure to Horseshoe Valley Road, located on the outskirts of Craighurst, 3 kms from Hwy. 400, 3 minutes from golf & ski resort, 18 minutes from Barrie, has 34 acres of productive farm land, 8 acres of Maple bush plus 8 acres of Pine trees, property has two storey home with natural gas heating, newly drilled 60’ well, plus barn. Legally known as; 1697 Horseshoe Valley Road, CON 1 N PT LOT 40 Roll No.: 4346-010-001-12500-0000 Terms: $20,000.00 down day of sale Certified cheque payable to Vendor, remainder in 90 days or on closing, Vendor guarantees Purchaser clear title to the property, Real Estate subject to owners approval! For Viewing Call: Kevin Barker VINTAGE & MODERN VEHICLES: 1914 Ford Model T 4 door Touring car loaded w/brass, running, restored, 1928 Ford Model A 2 door Roadster w/rumble seat, running, restored,1922 Ford Model T Doctor’s coupe, running,1928 Ford Model A 2 door Sedan, running “as is�,1926 Ford Model T touring car, running, 1928 Ford Model A Touring Phaeton 4 door car, restored & running, 1928 Ford Model A 2 door Sedan, restored & running, 1928 Ford Model A 2 door Coupe w/rumble seat, running, 1939 Ford blue 4 door Sedan, V-8 engine, sold running, 1957 Ford Country Sedan Station Wagon Red/White colour has V-8, automatic 4 door, sells running, 1966 Chrysler New Yorker 4 door w/ red leather interior, 360 engine, 59,000 miles, sells running, certified, 2003 Harley Davidson Custom Sportsman motorcycle, fully loaded w/ saddle bags, loaded chrome, engine guards, 4,400 kms sells certified, 2010 Dodge Caravan 7 passenger vehicle, automatic w/3.3 litre engine, 176,000 kms, sells E-tested & certified, 2006 Lincoln Town Car, 36,293 kms, auto 4 door, pastel metallic green, leather interior, V-8 engine, never winter driven, sells certified, 1998 Cadillac 4 door car w/leather interior, sold running “as is�, 1998 Dodge Ram 1500 V8 gas pick up, automatic, 219,000 kms, sold running “as is�,1952 Army Jeep running, 1973 Honda Express gas Moped, Honda Trail 110 Moped, 1976 Yamaha ET250 snowmobile, needs track & windshield, 400 Artic Cat 4x4 ATV w/blade 700 kms - Yamaha Kodiak 350 4x4 ATV, JD 620I Gator special edition, only 148 hrs. All above have ownerships! VINTAGE TRACTORS, MACHINERY & COLLECTIBLE: #40 JD gas tractor running & restored 11-2-34 rear tires, JD Model M gas tractor running & restored 11-2-24 new rear tires, JD Model H row crop gas tractor, running, restored, new tires, pto hand fly wheel start 9.5-32 rear tires, plus much more... MODERN TRACTORS, FARM MACHINERY & SHOP EQUIPMENT: 5425 JD 4x4 diesel cab tractor w/JD 542 self levelling loader plus 8’ q/a material bucket, only 1,148 original hrs, 18.4 R30 rear/12.4 R24 front tires, has 16 speed shuttle shift, plus much more... MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS: Mobile tandem ice cream trailer fully equipped, Storm TDX5 electric wheel chair w/Bruno hoist, 53’ low lying 5th wheel transport storage trailer, steel filing cabinets & lockers, 616 A.C. riding lawn tractor w/snow blower att., Ariens YT12 riding lawn mower, plus much much more! VISIT OUR WEB SITE FOR DETAILED LISTINGS & PICTURES! AUCTIONEER’S NOTE: FLOYD HAS BEEN AN AVID COLLECTOR OVER THE YEARS, THIS SALE OFFERS SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE! PLAN TO ATTEND THIS EXTRAODINARY SALE! 2 AUCTIONEER’S SELLING! Terms: Cash, Known Cheque with I.D., Visa, MasterCard, Interac NO BUYER’S PREMIUM! LUNCH NO AVAILABLE

Sale Managed & Sold by

RESERVE

Kevin Barker Auctions Ltd. 705-374-4478 (office) or 705-878-2947 (cell) Email: auctioneer@kevinbarkerauctions.com Web: www.kevinbarkerauctions.com Vendor: Floyd 705-309-9045 or Linda 705-309-9047

CL443000

The property of Floyd Sinton 1697 Horseshoe Valley Road, Craighurst, ON

139 MAIN STREET, BRIGHTON, ONT. SATURDAY SEPTEMER 13TH AT 10:00 AM COMPLETE INVENTORY OF ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLES including Quebec step back cupboard with solid upper doors and solid lower doors, oak cornet china cabinet with curved glass front, walnut sideboard with inlay, 2 maple church pews, Victorian parlour tables, Quebec pine armoire, 17 model Quebec made birch bark canoe, Quebec restored 2 door jam cupboard, 2 door pie safe, oak multi drawer typesetters cabinet, side boards, oak multi kitchen storage cabinet, single door storage cupboard, ice cream parlour chairs and table, dresser top mirrors, 2 glass top 7 ft display counters, oak 2 door glass front display cabinet, pine saw buck style dining table, flamed mahogany chest of drawers with glove boxes, walnut dresser, ĂŠtagère oak carved back side chairs, walnut traveling secretary, tin and neon signage, cast iron collectibles, Quebec folk art pieces, Sessions mantle clock, Gone With the Wind lamp, oil lamps, railway lamps, slag panel lamp, cast iron toys, treenware, industrial reclaimed pieces, flo blue, crystal pieces, enamel ware, ivory miniatures, tin ware, child’s Morse chair, child’s step back cupboard, shoe fly rocker, copper pieces, silver plate pieces, miniature cannons, figural wood carvings, stoneware pieces, buggy wheels, oak porch bench, art deco light fixtures, stain glass windows, vintage door hardware, document boxes, vintage desk telephone, sports collectibles, weigh scales, kitchenwares, medicinal collectibles, numerous other articles. TERMS - CASH OR CHEQUE OWNER & AUCTIONEER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENT OR INJURY DAY OF SALE SULLIVAN AUCTIONEERS Plainfield 613-477-2082 www.sullivanauctions.com

AUCTION SALE OF SHEEP, LIVESTOCK EQUIPMENT & FARM MACHINERY FOR FEARNLEY DAVIES & HEIDE ELLOITT OF TWEED, ONT. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 13,’14 10:00 A.M. ON SITE

CLASSIFIEDS

s s

13.00 2nd week

$

FREE! tial

20 words, residen ads only.

(BSZ 8BSOFS "VDUJPOFFS t www.warnersauction.com $&-&#3"5*/( :&"34 */ #64*/&44

HAVE AN UPCOMING AUCTION? AUCTION SALE ESTATE OF ALBERT DUTFIELD

DIRECTIONS: From Hwy 37 in Tweed take Hungerford Road (Quin Mo Lac Rd) West to Rapids Road. Follow Rapids Road North to sale site. (Please note this sale is being held in a ďŹ eld on the East side of Rapids Road, just south of 2194 Rapids Road). Watch For Signs. Sheep: This sale features a ock of approximately 20 head of mostly Corriedale X Arcott X Dorset Sheep. Also selling is a pure North Country Cheviot Ram aswell as a pure Dorper Ram & Dorper ewe. These sheep will be sheared & dewormed before sale date. Sheep are selling open & ready for fall breeding. Livestock Equipment & Machinery: Three 8’ Mar-Weld walk through sheep & goat feeders, LISTER 3 speed shearing machine with hand piece & stand, 12’ sheep race with guillotine gate at one end, 40’ Little Giant hay & grain elevator (PTO driven), New Idea corn picker, 30’ pipe frame elevator, gravity wagon on running gear, 8’ x 16’ farm utility trailer with plank oor, 2 wheeled fore cart with pole & shafts, 2 wheeled sulky, approx. 50 4â€? cedar posts, litter carrier bucket & track, 2 rolls of electric sheep net fencing, three dog crates & one dog kennel, Craftsman 9HP 27â€? snow blower (like new), 4’ snow blower off of craftsman lawn mower (like new), Lincoln Electric AC 225 arc welder, 10â€? King Canada meat band saw, 40 Gallon drum & hand pump, Flo’ N Go gas can, small qty of wippletrees, yolks & poles for horse drawn equipment and antique beam tongs. Please note this sale starts at 10:00 A.M & has very few smalls. See website for pictures. AUCTIONEERS: DOUG JARRELL & BEN TREVERTON 613-969-1033 www.dougjarrellauctions.com Terms: Cash, Debit, Visa, MC, Cheque/ID Owner/Auctioneers not responsible in case of accident.

Warner’s Auction Hall, 12927 Hwy 2, Just West of Colborne. Selling from a Belleville estate and contents of home and workshop owners have left country. Estate sale Thurs. quality modern estate home contents including oak bedroom suite with quality queen matt set, dresser with mirror, chest and 2 night stands, double bed with good box and matt, nice dressers with mirror and chest, excell oak dinette set, ex maple ext table and chairs with matching dish cupboard, living room and rec room, 2 pc sofa sets, lazy boy chairs, nearly new chest freezer, 2 quality armoirs suitable for seasonable clothes storage or every day use, artwork, selection good books, 2 flat screen TVs, small tables plus dishes, glass, china, some collectables, pots pans household articles. Sat sale from owners who have already left country include household articles and contents of nice woodworking shop, including large tools, shapers, sanders, 13� planer, dust collecting system, several table saws various sizes, nearly new compressor with lge tank suitable for spraying, some nice dry lumber, outdoor things like patio set, lawn & garden tools, new pressure washer, Toro leaf blower, Rigid shop vac, miscellaneous hand and power tools, bikes, plus household furnishings and small articles, lot of books, dishes, small appliances. Note two very large sales with something for everyone. Terms: Cash, Cheque with ID, Visa, M/C, Interac.

Get the word out to more than 69,000 homes. Call to Norah or Melissa find out how. 613-966-2034 ext 501 or ext 504

CL460661

3ATURDAY 3EPTEMBER THs AM

CL443092

METROLAND MEDIA AUCTIONS

Offering 50 acres of majestic farm land in prime location! Vintage Ford Model A & T cars, farm machinery, garage equipment, collectibles & tools!

580 %": "6$5*0/ 5)634%": 4&15&.#&3 "/% 4"563%": 4&15&.#&3 ! " .

CL442885

AUCTION SALE HAGGLE! ANTIQUES

123 CRESWELL DRIVE, TRENTON, ONT. WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 10TH AT 11:00 AM Turn SOUTH off Dundas Street West onto Dufferin Ave for 4 blocks and turn WEST onto Creswell Drive. Antique oak combination secretary/china cabinet, antique Eastlake chest of drawers, Howard and Miller glass and polished chrome grandfathers clock- like new; Germany made walnut cased ornate trimmed wall clock, Gingerbread clock, OG clock, antique pillar wall clock, mantle clock, 3 pieces of Moorcroft pottery, Royal Doulton figurines- Top O The Hill, Cissie; Royal Doulton character jugs, moustache cups, oil lamps, 24 pieces of Wallace Sterling silver flatware, Wedgewood pieces, several pieces of amber glass, Iris depression glass water set, Royalty collectibles, hand painted china, Beswick sheep, antique oak umbrella stand, antique chest of drawers with moustache pulls, antique walnut side table, antique walnut chest of drawers, maple bedroom furniture, E-Z Lift electric lift chair – like new; living room furniture, maple dinette table and chairs, pine double bed, maple TV cabinet, Frigidaire refrigerator, Kenmore electric stove, Kenmore dryer, floor model drill press, Craftsman 10�table top bandsaw, garden tools, hand tools, kitchenware’s, everyday dishes, numerous other articles. TERMS - CASH OR CHEQUE OWNER & AUCTIONEER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENT OR INJURY DAY OF SALE SULLIVAN AUCTIONEERS Plainfield 613-477-2082 www.sullivanauctions.com

CL442999

HUGE AUCTION SALE

Auctions continued from page B16

Post an ad today!

Call or visit us online to reach over 69,000 potential local buyers. Deadline: Mondays at 3 p.m.

Your ad appears in 5 newspapers plus online!

Section B News - Thursday, September 4, 2014

B15


TENDERS

TENDERS

GARAGE SALE

TENDERS

GARAGE SALE

STREET FLEA MARKET CITY OF BELLEVILLE TENDER CALL

OPEN

7 DAYS 9am to 4pm 613-284-2000 streetfleamarket.net

CL459861_0821

Entire Inventory 50% Off to make room for our new Auction Facility!

5 MILES SOUTH OF SMITHS FALLS CORNER OF HWY 15 & BAY ROAD

City of Belleville currently has information available at www.Belleville.ca listed under Proposals and Tenders with respect to the following:

EVENTS

GARAGE SALE

Multi-family, Saturday, September 6, 33 Ramsay Ave., Trenton. Kid’s toys Continued from B8 and clothes, records, Pampered Chef, Nascar, CAMPBELLFORD household items. YARD SALE 14 IROQUOIS AVE BRIGHTON Sept. 13 8 am - 2 pm Rain date September 20 Christmas village houses, angels, tree ornaments in boxes, some collectors items and much more.

CONTRACT NO. RCCS-2014-03 CONSTRUCTION OF CNR PENSIONERS GAZEBO SHELTER Closing: Tuesday, September 30, 2014 @ 1:00 p.m., local time.

The lowest or any tender or any part of any tender not necessarily accepted.

CL442990

SITE VISIT: September 15, 2014 @ 10:00 a.m. SHARP at the Site: Bay Shore Trail Foster Avenue South.

METROLAND AUCTIONS AUCTION SALE TOM AND HEATHER ANSTEY- PETTITT

Auctions continued from page B15 AUCTION SALE WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 10’14 AT 5:00 P.M. DOUG JARRELL SALES ARENA, BELLEVILLE

The property of the late Pat & Anna Reddy of Norwood, Ontario

CL460663

In Norwood, one block south of the traffic lights, on County Road 45. Watch for signs. Lawn tractor, appliances, home furnishings, antiques and much more Full list on our website. Terms are cash, Interac or cheque with ID. Foodbooth.

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2014 AT 6:00 PM, (JOB LOTS SELL AT 5:00 PM) The contents of a Oshawa home and others.

CL460662

At Stanley Auction Centre, 56 Alma St., Norwood, Ontario. From the traffic lights on Highway 7, travel south one block, then east for 3 blocks on Alma Street. Watch for signs. Appliances. Home furnishings. Very large quantity of household items. Full list on our website. Terms are cash, Interac or cheque with ID. Job lots sell at 5:00 pm. Foodbooth.

Section B - Thursday, September 4, 2014

COLBORNE

Waddingtons.ca/Cobourg

Food Addicts Anonymous Meetings, Wednesdays, 11-noon, Prospect House, 1 9 Elgin Street East, Cobourg Elgin Street (at King), Colborne, www. ANTIQUE ESTATE AUCTION foodaddictsanonymous.org SATURDAY, September 6th Preview @ 9:30 a.m. Sept 10, Community Diners, Keeler Auction @ 11:00 a.m. Centre, 80 Division St. Colborne, 12:00 LARGE Amount of Smalls to Include Collection of Vesta Cases, noon. Contact Brenda for cost and to reJewellery, Watch Makers Tools, Sterling & Silver Plate, Oriental serve 905-355-2989. Porcelain, Royal Doulton Figures, Continental Porcelain, Crystal, Dinner Play Group, hosted by NorthumberSets, Bronzes, Watercolours, Oils, Books & Collector’s Items. Large Selection of Antique Furnishings to include: Pine Corner Cabinet, land Cares for Children, Colborne Public School, 8 Alfred St. Colborne, Fridays, French Furniture, Mahogany Dining Table & Set of 8 Carved Chairs, Large Extending Dining Table with Set of 8 Upholstered Walnut Frame 10 a.m. to noon. Info: Cheryl McMurray Chairs, Victorian Mahogany Sideboards, Pair of Mahogany Single Beds, 905-885-8137 ext.209. Small Tables, Oriental Carpets, Decorative Items & Lighting. Men’s Social Group, Tuesdays at GIANT INDOOR ½ PRICE YARD SALE Community Care Northumberland, 11 Watch the Website for Updates & Photos. King St. E. Colborne, 10-11 a.m. Info: www.waddingtons.ca/cobourg 905-355-2989. BROWSE OUR HOME FURNISHINGS CONSIGNMENT STORE 20% OFF THIS WEEK QUALITY ITEMS AT A FRACTION OF RETAIL PRICES at www.estatetreasures.ca

Tel: 905.373.0501 Toll Free: 1.855.503.2963 Fax: 905.373.1467 Email: pn@waddingtons.ca 9 Elgin St. E., Unit 6, Cobourg ON K9A 0A1

CL442846

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 2014 AT 10:00 AM

B16

1674 COUNTY ROAD 5, STOCKDALE, ONT. FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 12TH AT 11:00 AM 2 miles WEST of Frankford on County Road 5. Antique pine lift top desk, antique primitive dining table in red, antique primitive willow and rush seat arm chair, antique pine cased Grandfathers clock with painted face, antique pine blanket box, antique pine single door storage cupboard, pine cheval mirror, antique pine chest of drawers, antique weigh scales, treen ware, antique baskets, copper tub, cobblers tray, vintage doors, porch post, repro step back cupboard, office desk, book shelves, file cupboard, Hummel figurines, antique Monarch typewriter, kitchenware’s, 7 cu ft chest freezer (new), bar fridge, garden tools, power lawn mower, 5 x 8 single axle utility trailer, numerous other articles. TERMS - CASH OR CHEQUE OWNER & AUCTIONEER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENT CODRINGTON OR INJURY DAY OF SALE 2nd Wednesday of the month, CoSULLIVAN AUCTIONEERS drington Women’s Institute 7:15 pm, Plainfield 613-477-2082 Codrington Community Centre www.sullivanauctions.com CL442998

CL460660

Kitchen, livingroom & bedroom furniture, assorted tables, large qty of new inventory including glass & china, prints, figurines, vases, plant stands etc., garden & shop tools & numerous other pieces. See my web site for detailed list & photos. AUCTIONEERS: DOUG JARRELL & BEN TREVERTON 613-969-1033 www.dougjarrellauctions.com

Campbellford IODE presents a Fundraiser featuring James Kirkham, September 12, Campbellford Legion, Appetizers 7:00 p.m. and show at 8:00 p.m. $20.00 p/p. 705-653-1823 or 705632-1228 for tickets. Every Monday, 7 p.m. Campbellford Citizen’s Choir meets at Senior Citizen’s Building. All welcome Free guided walks in Ferris Park, Campbellford, every Tuesday. Meet at the east end of the Suspension Bridge at 9 am. Enjoy this one hour opportunity to explore the park, rain or shine. Campbellford Osteoporosis Support Groups meeting Tuesday Sept 9, 2pm, Campbellford Library 98 Bridge St. Learn about your Bone Health. TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly), every Wednesday, St. Andrews Presbyterian Church, 17 Ranney St. S. (side door). Weigh-ins 5:30-6:00 p.m. Meetings 6:006:30 p.m. Join any time. All welcome. Learn the Art of Taoist Tai Chi classes available throughout the week, Community Resource Centre 65 Bridge St, Campbellford, Join at anytime. Info: 705 696 1841 or 705 243 5216. Tuesdays, 1-3 p.m., Fun Darts. All Welcome. Campbellford Legion Branch 103, 34 Bridge St W 705-653-2450 Kent YMCA Child Care Centre before and after school and PA day care. Kent Public School. Call 905-372-4318 x 404 or 705-632-9205 for rates and info. FootCare Clinic- 1st Fri, 2nd and 3rd Thurs Each Month Royal Canadian Legion. VON offers Basic, Advanced and Diabetic Foot Care (Fee for Service). For appointment call the VON at 1-888-2794866 ex 5346

door. Proceeds from this ecumenical group go to community causes. New members welcome. Info: Ray at 613 395 5139

FRANKFORD Take Off Pounds Sensibly (TOPS) Weekly Meetings, Wednesday Evenings, 7-8 p.m. Holy Trinity Anglican Church, 60 North Trent St. Frankford. For more information call Fern 613-3952345 FRANKFORD Figure Skating Club Registration: Thursday Sept 4, 6 - 8 pm, Frankford United Church. Tuesday Sept 23, 6-8pm, and Saturday Sept 27, 9am-12 pm, Frankford Arena. Annual Burgers and Corn Dinner, Frankford United Church, Wednesday September 10, 4:30 to 6:30 pm Adults $8, Child under 12 yrs. $4, preschool free. ANNUAL FLEA Market/Tailgate Sale, Lower Trent Trail Station Park, Frankford (corner of Mill and Wellington) Saturday, September 6, 9 am. Tailgate Fee $5.00 friendsofthetrail@yahoo.com Frankford Lions Hall, Moonshot Euchre, Wednesdays 1p.m. Alcoholics Anonymous Keep It Simple Group, 8 pm every Thursday at Holy Trinity Anglican Church Hall, 60 Trent St. N. (rear), Frankford. Info: www. quintewestaa.org or 1-866-951-3711 Sunday Worship Service and Sunday School at Frankford United Church 10:30 am. All are Welcome!

GRAFTON September 9, Grafton Horticultural Society Summer Flower Show, St. Andrew’s United Church, Old Station Rd. Grafton. Submit entries 6:30-7 p.m. Social networking, 7 p.m., General meeting, 7:30. Guest speaker Rick Conrad – Growing Garlic. Refreshments. Everyone Welcome.

HASTINGS Salvation Army Lunch, 11:30AM – 1:00PM on the 2nd and the 4th Friday of each month, Civic Centre, Hastings. Soup, sandwiches, salad, dessert, coffee, tea and juice. Everyone welcome 5 Pin Bowling, starting Tuesday Sept. 9, 1pm. Welcoming new members. No experience needed. Info: Lyn 705-6392895 or Dodd’s Lanes 705-696-2272 Hastings Legion: Horseshoes, Thursdays, 6:30 pm. Zumba, Mondays 6:30 pm. Summer Darts, Thursdays, 7:30 pm. Meat Draws Fridays 5 pm.

HAVELOCK

Havelock OddFellows Brunch, first Sunday of every month. All you can eat pancakes, sausage, eggs, bacon, coffee, tea, juice. Adults $6, Under 12 $3. Havelock Seniors Club Bid Euchre, first Saturday of the month, 1 pm. The Havelock Lions Club Annual Fish Fry, Saturday September 13, 5 to 7PM. All you can eat. 39 George St E FOXBORO Havelock. Tickets $15 for Adults and $7 Pancake Breakfast first Saturday for Children 12 and under, from your local of the Month hosted by Foxboro Men’s neighborhood Lions Member. Club. 8 to 10 a.m, Emmanuel United, 458 Continued on page B17 Ashley, Foxboro. Live music. $6 at the


EVENTS Continued from B8

HAVELOCK Havelock’s Wellness Program, Town Hall, 8 Mathison St., Havelock, from 9:30 am to 12:00 pm, Tuesdays and Thursdays. Weights, stretches, exercises, health education discussion. Free. The first Sunday of the month, Bid Euchre at the Havelock Lions Club. Games start at 1 p.m. $5.00/person. For information, contact Glen Shearer 705-778-3169 or Glen Ellis 705-778-3039. Havelock Legion: Mondays, Fun Darts start 1 pm. Saturdays, Meat Roll start 3 pm. All Welcome

MADOC 9th Annual Gospel Music Round-up, Saturday, September 6, 10am-5pm, Eldorado Hall, 15651 Hwy 62, north of Madoc. Info: Jim 613-771-1362. Tickets $8 Madoc AM Indoor Walk: Mon, Wed, and Fri, 9:45-10:45 AM. PM Indoor Walk: Mon, Tues, Fri, 6:45-7:45 PM. Centre Hastings Secondary School, 129 Elgin St. Open to seniors and adults with physical disabilities. Madoc Foot Care Clinic: Thursday, Sept 4, 47 Wellington St, Seniors Building Common Room, 8 AM. Open seniors and adults with physical disabilities. Call 1-800-554-1564 to pre-register if not already a registered client. Summer Sunday Musical Services, Madoc Trinity United Church, 76 St. Lawrence St. E., Sun Sept. 7: Eric Sandford Royal Canadian Legion Br 363 Madoc has mixed darts every Thursday night 7.30. Everyone invited Madoc Diners, Monday, Sept 8, St John’s Anglican Church Hall, 115 Durham St N. 12:00 noon. Bring your own plate, cup, and cutlery. Program opened to seniors and adults with physical disabilities.

MARMORA Sept 5, First Fridays Open Mic 7 PM, Marmora and Area Curling Club, 2 Crawford Dr. Perform or just enjoy the entertainment. No Charge. Marmora Blood Pressure Clinic: Tuesday, Sept 9, Caressant Care Common Room, 58 Bursthall St, 9:30-11 AM. Open to seniors and adults with physical disabilities. Marmora Diners: Wednesday, Sept 10, Marmora and District community Centre, Victoria Ave., 12pm. Bring your own plate, cup, and cutlery. Open to seniors and adults with physical disabilities.

NORWOOD Norwood Legion: Wing Night Thursdays, from 4:30pm. Meat Draws Fridays from 5 p.m. Dance with the Donegal Fiddlers Orchestra. Saturday September 6, 7-10 pm, Norwood Town Hall, 2357 County Rd 45 Norwood. Jigs, reels, 2 steps and square dance tunes. Admission is $5.00. Lunch is pot luck. All welcome. The Norwood Beautification Committee Bid Euchre, the second Sunday

of every month, 1 pm, Norwood Legion. Lunch will be available. FLK Taoist Tai Chi Open House, Monday, Sept 8, 10:00AM Aspodel-Norwood Community Centre, Norwood. Community Care Norwood’s Diner’s Club, Tuesday, September 9, Millenium Room, Community Centre. Lunch at 12 noon but doors open earlier. Cost: $10.00. Reservations: 705-639-5631

P.E. COUNTY Albury Friendship Group - Quilts for sale each Wed 10 am - 12 noon. Albury Church Rednersville Rd. Proceeds to local charities for women. September 7, Consecon Pastoral charge celebrates “Back to Church”, Consecon United Church 10AM. Communion followed by a pot-luck lunch. All welcome. The children’s program resumes. Loyalist Decorative Painters’ Guild meeting every second Wed. of the month. New members welcome. Carrying Place United Church, 7pm. Coffee & snacks at 6:30. Bring your regular painting supplies. Info: Noreen 613-475-2005 or www.freewebs.com/ldpg/ Picton afternoon Shout Sister Choir welcomes new members. Practices are Wednesdays, 2-4 p.m., St Mary Magdalene Church, 335 Main St, Picton. www.shoutsisterchoir.ca

QUEENSBOROUGH Sunday September 7, 1- 4 p.m., Historic Queensborough Day. Driving or walking tours. BBQ, 2 pm, Community Centre. Info: Katherine 613-473-2110 or Elaine 613-473-1458

ROSENEATH FootCare Clinic, 2nd Fri every other Month, Alnwick Civic Centre. VON offers Basic, Advanced and Diabetic Foot Care (Fee for Service). For appointment call the VON at 1-888-279-4866 ex 5346

STIRLING Weekly Monday Night Bingo, Upstairs of Stirling Arena. Cards on sale at 6:15pm. Starts at 6:50pm. Proceeds to support community projects. Sponsored by Stirling & District Lions Club. Stirling Blood Pressure Clinic: Thursday, Sept 11, 204 Church St, Seniors Building Common Room, 9 AM to 12PM. Open to seniors and adults with physical disabilities. Auditions for Stirling Festival Theatre Young Company production of Lord Of The Fries, September 6 and 7, ages 12 and up. Info: Box Office 613-395-2100 or 1-877-312-1162. Induction Ceremony Quinte Agricultural Wall Of Fame, September 14, 2:00 pm, Farmtown Park. $8.00 includes Ceremony, Park tour and refreshments. Info: Park 613-395-0013 or Jim Dalrymple at 613-475-2701 Stirling Legion bottle drive fundraiser, Friday Sept.5, 2:30-7 p.m. and Saturday Sept.6, 8 a.m.- 1 p.m. Drop off or call 613-395-2975 for pick up within Stirling.

Stirling Festival Theatre presents Night Fever a tribute to the Bee Gees Friday, September 5, 2pm & 8pm. Box Office 613-395-2100 or 1-877-312-1162. Stirling Al-Anon Family Group, every Friday, 8 p.m., St. Paul’s United Church, Stirling. 866.951-3711

TRENTON Toastmasters International, Trenton Library. Every 2nd and 4th Wednesday, 6:30-8 pm. New members and guests welcome. Quinte Bay Cloggers every Friday, 6:30 - 9 pm, starting September 5, Salvation Army, 244 Dundas St E, Trenton. All ages welcome, no experience necessary. First two nights free, $5/night. Info: Eve or Ozz at 613-966-7026 The Trenton Memorial Hospital Auxiliary monthly board meeting, Monday, Sept. 8, 1:30, 2nd floor boardroom. All current volunteers and anyone interested in volunteering invited. Info: Karen White 613 965 0423 Monthly Roast Beef Dinner, Knights of Columbus, Sept 11, Knights of Columbus Hall 57 Stella Cres. Trenton, 5-7pm , Cost $10.00. Take out available. Trenton Art Club. Calling all artists and would be artists. Painting every Friday afternoon, Smylie’s Independent Store (upstairs) Info: Connie 613-398-6525. 8 Wing CFB Trenton Officers’ Mess Ladies Club are hosting a Meeting and Greet Fiesta Picnic, Wednesday, September 10, 6 p.m. in the Upper Lounge Officers’ Mess. Members: dinner free with renewal of membership and invited guests of members: $15. For more info: chambersj@live.ca Cold Creek Cloggers, Mondays 6:30pm. Trenton Baptist Church 15 South St Trenton. Classes start Sept 8. First night

free. Info Debbie 613-920-9034 Friends of the Quinte West Library Book Sale, every Tues and Thurs and the last Sat of month, 10 am-1 pm. Accepting book donations as well. 25 cents to $1.50. Quinte West Public Library. Riverside Friday Gospel Music Hour. Free event, 11am-12 pm, Friday Sept 5,12,19,and 26 at Riverside Music, 16 Dundas W, Trenton. Jason Wryghte from “The Crusaders” leads a group hymn sing. Info 613-394-4891. MONARC Weight Loss Surgery Support Group for bypass, band or sleeve recipients or those interested, Monday, Sept 9, 7pm, Trenton Memorial Hospital, 2nd Floor Boardroom. www.monarcwlss. weebly.com or monarcwls@gmail.com Quinte West MS Society Support Group, every second Monday of the month, Quiet Room, Quinte West Public Library, Trenton. 6:30pm. For those affected by MS, caregivers and friends. Info: trentonmsgroup@live.ca The Trenton Memorial Hospital Auxiliary is looking for new volunteers (18 years +). Give back, make new friends and learn important skills. Training provided. Call the volunteer office at 613 392 2540 ext. 5454 Trenton Lions Club is looking for new members. Meetings 2nd and 4th Wed of each month, Sept to July. Info: Member Chairman Diane Gardy 613 392 2939

393 Main St. Deseronto, open Tuesday through Saturday from 10:00 until 4:00 Orange Lodge Dance on Sept. 6, York Rd, Tyendinga. Jeff Code and SilverWings, 8pm to Midnight. $12 per person. Dance, Lunch, Prizes. 613-396-6792 Acrylic painting classes, St. John’s United Church, Tweed. All classes taught by Bob Pennycook . Info: bob@bobpennycook.com or call 478-3926.

WARKWORTH

The Knitting Guild meets at 1:30 on the second Tuesday of the month at the Community Memorial Hall, Church St., Warkworth. Everyone interested in knitting is invited. Warkworth Fair, Sept 5-7: Battle of the Bands, horse shows, car show, strut your mutt, talent show, hot diggity dogs, baby show, magic show, firemen’s challenge, car draws, pulled pork BBQ, 4H & Beef show, truck show & shine, truck & tractor pull, RONA little hammers, junior farmer challenge, Jungle Cat World show, midway, carving demo, antique tractor display, homecraft exhibits, petting zoo, beer gardens & Celebrity Pig Races. www. warkworthfair.com Warkworth Legion hosts bid euchre at 2 p.m. every Wednesday and a dart league at 7:30 p.m. every Thursday. Everyone welcome Warkworth Spinners and Weavers, 10am, 2nd Thursday of month, Percy Heritage Building. 35 Church St. WarkTWEED Attention Teens: Are you bored? worth. Karen Richens 705-696-1460. Looking for a challenge? Join the Truth & Dare Youth Group, Fridays, 7 p.m. Fun, Have a non-profit event? Food, Games, Trips and more. Tweed Email djohnston@theemc.ca Pentecostal Church, 16 Jamieson St. W. Deadline is Mondays at 3 p.m. Please note: ads may be edited or omitted as space permits

TYENDINAGA Community Care Closet Thrift shop,

Cars, Careers, Romance, Real Estate, Merchandise & More...

Classifieds ONE AD, 5 NEWSPAPERS, OVER 69,000 HOMES

Belleville, Quinte West, Marysville, Ameliasburg, Carrying Place, Brighton, Colborne, Castleton, Madoc, Marmora, Havelock, Hastings, Norwood, Warkworth, Campbellford, Stirling, Tweed, Flinton, Eldorado, Gilmour and all points in between.

residential

commercial

social notes

20 words

20 words

with photo

includes print and online

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includes print and online

1510

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includes print and online

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2150

(1 column)

and up

TO PLACE YOUR AD: 1-888-WORD-ADS 613-966-2034 or 613-475-0255 Section B - Thursday, September 4, 2014

B17


Ballet School Recreation Division accepting registrations D A

Got Events?

E R SP THE

News - Belleville - The Quinte Ballet School of Canada (QBSC) is now accepting registrations for the Recreation Division’s fall/ winter 2014 term. The school offers dance instruction from beginner to advanced levels in ballet, modern, pointe, jazz, tap, Broadway and early dance. QBSC is also excited to introduce the option of

D R O W NEW

!

graded syllabi through Royal Academy of Dance (RAD) certification for its youngest students in Primary Ballet, Ballet 1 and Ballet 2. Students signing up for these classes will receive the same level of training as in past years, however, they now have the opportunity to go through the certification process. QBSC also provides adult

classes for those curious to try something new, fun and challenging such as tap, ballet and the new gentle Thai yoga. The school is at 196 Palmer Road in a facility comprised of six spacious studios, where professionally trained and accredited dance instructors teach. The building also has a comfortable lounge with complimentary Wi-

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with our FREE COMMUNITY CALENDAR

INSIDE

Fi, plenty of free parking and, most important, a fun and informative learning environment. Students have the opportunity to showcase what they’ve learned at the end of Term 2 in Assemblé, the Recreation Division’s annual spring performance at Centennial Secondary School’s theatre auditorium. The administrative team is available to give tours of the studios during office hours, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. from Monday through Friday. In addition, staff and informative hosts will be at the Quinte Mall on Saturday, September 6, and Sunday, September 7, to answer questions from the public, take comments and register students. Visitors to the booth can see a video of the 2014 Assemblé event, learn about the “Boyd Backs Ballet” fund-raising campaign and find out how they can become a valued QBSC volunteer. For more information visit <www. quinteballetschool.com>.

Correction The annual general meeting of the Presqu’ile Point Lighthouse Preservation Society will be held September 8 at the King Edward Park Community Centre, starting at 7 p.m. An incorrect date was provided for an article on the lighthouse that appeared in the August 28 issue of the Brighton Independent.

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fuellocal.com is an online platform to raise money through crowdfunding: an opportunity for a collection of individuals to make donations in support of a cause. Create your fundraising campaign or help fund local initiatives at fuellocal.com

Start your campaign now! B18 Section B - Thursday, September 4, 2014

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Section B - Thursday, September 4, 2014 B19


YOU COULD ROLL AWAY WITH A

NEW CAR

OR WIN 1 OF 10 SPECTACULAR PRIZES CONTEST STARTS AUGUST 22

DURING OUR AMAZING

1-5

READ CLICK

WEEKS

1 of 5 Prestige P500 BBQs Retail value $999.99 each. Draws take place August 29, September 5, 12 and 19 and 26.

1 of 4 Brookstreet Luxury 6-9 Getaway Packages WEEKS

WIN

Each package will include: - One night’s luxury accommodation for two in an upgraded four-diamond guest room - Three course table d’hôte dinner for two at Perspectives Restaurant - B Best breakfast for two - in bed or at Perspectives Restaurant - Access to our state-of-the-art Flex Fitness Studio tel reet Ho with saunas, whirlpools, salt water swimming pools Brookst - High-speed Internet access in your guest room - Parking in Brookstreet’s secure underground garage Each package is valued at $525 (tax & grats included). Draws take place October 3, 10, 17 and 24.

10 WEEK

CONTEST

A $5,000 La-Z-Boy Furniture Galleries Gift Certificate

$5,000

Gift Ce

rtificate

: E Z I R P a r t D n N a l A E GR yundai 4 Hfrom 1 0 2 A dan Draw takes place October 31.

To enter, simply visit your local community news website insidebelleville.com

find this Read Click Win icon, and click on it to complete and submit the entry form. Enter weekly for more chances to win!

Se i r o o d da,050. GL 4ers Hyun T S MPy$21,283. MSRPveinmcbluedrin7g, 2H014.$24

e No MSR kes plac Draw ta 1.8L 4 cyl, 6 speed automatic, your choice of colour based on availability and features tilt telescoping steering wheel, air conditioning, speed control, illuminated entry, remote keyless entry, MP3 decoder with Bluetooth, CD player, heated front seats and much, much more! Warranty: 60 month/100,000 km warranty, 36 months/unlimited distance roadside assistance, 60 month/unlimited distance corrosion perforation warranty, 60 month/100,000 km powertrain warranty.

l

eet Hote Brookstr

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Visit insidebelleville.com each week for more chances to win! ALL WEEKLY ENTRIES go into the GRAND PRIZE DRAW Belleville News

QuinteWest News

THE

THE

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NEWS

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See full contest rules online attached to the ballot once you click the icon. See website for contest rules on ballot. B20 Section B News - Thursday, September 4, 2014

R0012840129-0821


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