Brighton101917

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THURSDAY

OCTOBER 19, 2017 ®

Independent. BRIGHTON

CONNECTED TO YOUR COMMUNITY INSIDEBELLEVILLE.COM

Presqu’ile Beach Motel owners issue $10,000 reward after August fire

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Brighton – Owners of the Presqu’ile Beach Motel say they want answers following a fire that damaged several rooms there this August. John and Valerie Campey have operated the Presqu’ile Beach Motel for about 41 years now. “We’re offering a $10,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons responsible,” said John, on Monday, Oct. 16. John believes someone may be responsible for the fire, which started sometime after 11 p.m., on Sunday, Aug. 27. Damages were previously reported at an estimated $300,000, with about nine rooms on the east side of the motel affected by the fire. “This has caused us a lot of grief,” said John, who added the motel is still suffering financially, as those rooms affected by the fire still cannot be rented out. The owner says he left feeling as though “this is all we can do now” by issuing the reward. The motel has complied completely with all fire and building regulations, he said. “We’re never had anything like this happen in 41 years,” he added. John recently put up reward posters at the local grocery stores, which state if more than one person comes

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The Presqu’ile Beach Motel is shown here the day after the fire in August. Metroland file photo.

forward; the $10,000 will be shared equally. He’s pleading for anyone to come forward and to contact him directly at the motel. “All information will be treated with the highest confidence,” the

poster reads. The fire is still under investigation, Brighton’s deputy fire chief Rick Caddick confirmed Monday. The Ontario Fire Marshal’s office is still looking into it and no further

details will be available until their official findings are complete, said Caddick. It’s the owners’ decision to issue the reward and there’s no confirmation of arson or anything of that sorts at this time, he said.

See what’s happening by visiting our online community calendar. http://www.insidebelleville.com/ bellevilleregion-events/

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forcement on Highway 401 in Brighton measured a Ford F150 travelling 157 kilometres per hour in the eastbound lanes. The driver, a 19-year-old Clarington man, was charged with stunt driving — excessive speed and driving while under suspension. The truck was towed from the highway and impounded for seven days. Oct. 6 A Brighton resident on Oliphant Street reported all four of her car’s tires had been slashed sometime overnight. Police responded to four mental health-related calls in Hamilton Township, Brighton and Trent Hills, resulting in all involved individuals being taken to a hospital as they posed a danger to themselves or others. An investigation has been launched into the discovery of a six-inch weapon made in prison that was seized by corrections officers at Warkworth Institution on Oct. 4. Charges are pending. Northumberland OPP officers also investigated 10 accidental 911 calls, 12 motor vehicle collisions and 70 trafficrelated complaints over the Thanksgiving weekend. They also conducted four RIDE programs. Northumberland OPP ask that anyone with information concerning the theft of the ATV and the slashing of the tires to call the nearest OPP detachment. To remain anonymous, call the Peterborough/Northumberland Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477 (TIPS) where you may be eligible for a cash reward of up to $2,000 and not have to appear in court.

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Oct. 9 A mother with two small children travelling through the area called Northumberland OPP at 1 a.m. after finding herself lost in downtown Brighton looking for gas. Officers followed her to Trenton where she found an open gas station. Officers conducting a RIDE program on County Road 30 in Brighton around 3:40 p.m. stopped a Dodge Journey which led to a 24-year-old Campbellford resident being charged with driving while under suspension. A properly licensed passenger drove the vehicle away from the scene. Oct. 8 Police responded to a family dispute over visitation with children that broke out during a Thanksgiving dinner in Campbellford. Loud arguing could be heard from the roadway when officers arrived. All the people involved were spoken to and they agreed to calm down. No charges were laid and no further calls to that address were received. A homeowner on Goacher Road in Trent Hills reported the theft sometime overnight of an older black Suzuki four-wheeler ATV that was not plated. Oct. 7 Police assisted paramedics with an elderly resident suffering from dementia. The Campbellford man was eventually apprehended by officers and taken to a nearby hospital for assessment and treatment. An officer conducting radar en-

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Local actor represents Brighton in Montreal musical BY SARAH HYATT

Brighton — Brighton resident Ian Simpson will join an all-star Canadian cast this month as they bring centre ice to the stage in Montreal, Que. The actor and singer auditioned and secured his role as Father Delisle in the musical The Hockey Sweater at the start of 2017. “In its entirety, I’d say this story is really about acceptance, which certainly people can relate to in our present day,” said Simpson in a telephone interview from Montreal last weekend, as he and the cast started rehearsals in late September. Based on the short story by Roch Carrier, the tale has long been a treasured Quebec piece, but also considered a “quintessential Canadian classic.” The reinvention of the tale into a modernday musical is a first and there will be actual skating on stage, which may also be a first. “That’s a question I get asked a lot, considering the show is about hockey,” said Simpson. “It’s being done in a truly ingenious way too, people will just have to see how that’s done and I can’t say I’ve ever heard of that happening before.” Commissioned and produced by the Segal Centre for Performing Arts, the Canadian Ian Simpson. production is directed and choreographed by Stratford Festival hitmaker Donna Feore “… He’s very much a pillar for his comand also features Emil Sher and Jonathan munity and this young boy [Carrier] looks Monro as part of the creative team. The trio is widely known for their work up to him,” said Simpson. Originally published in 1979, The Hockey and when Simpson saw these names attached to the show, he knew right away this Sweater recalls Carrier’s real-life childhood was something he had to be a part of, he hockey mishaps during the winter of 1946. Like many young people in small towns, a said. “This is something that’s brand new and budding Carrier and his friends lived for one never been done before … so, it’s been both thing only — hockey. “They idolize the Montreal Canadiens' exciting and exhilarating to be a part of new star player Maurice Richard, each emulatpiece like this,” he said. Simpson, who’s well known in Brighton for his work and for his and Stephanie Bird’s annual Christmas production, has worked • Elite • Graber • Hunter Douglas with Feore before on the Sound of Music. Custom Order Blinds & Shutters But the story itself set in a small town is also something Simpson We Promise Good Quality and Value can relate to, as he calls a small on all Our Window Fashions town home. In his latest role, Simpson plays 47 B Elizabeth Street the village priest and referee/hock- Brighton ey coach as Father Delisle. MON-FRI 8:30-5:00, SAT 8:30-3:00 613-475-3349

small, and his mom insists he gets a new one. His mom doesn’t speak English and orders a new jersey, but what arrives is a Toronto Maple Leafs sweater, said Simpson. And that’s kind of the kernel of the show and she’s too proud to send it back, Simpson continued. The young Carrier is forced to wear “enemy colours,” while all his friends’ wear their Habs shirts and he “must learn the importance of what’s in your heart, even when it’s not on your sleeve.” For some they may find it a little cute and funny, but it’s also sad when you think of this young boy and your heart breaks a little, said Simpson. Meanwhile the young lad looks to Simpson in his role for guidance and to find his lesson in this story. Though perhaps the Father also has something to learn and some things he needs to face up to, “but I don’t want to give away too much,” said Simpson. The musical will showcase these people’s journey and the obstacles they have to overcome, Simpson said. The show premières Thursday, Oct. 19, running until Nov. 12. More information on the production and cast, which includes a number of performers renowned for their Submitted photo work in theatre, including many young Canadian talents, is available via www.segaling ‘The Rocket’s’ every move,” a release on centre.org. the show states. Simpson will return home in time for his Carrier’s journey begins when his favouChristmas show slated for Dec. 22. rite “tricolore” hockey sweater with the iconic #9 becomes frayed, overworn and too

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‘Emergency’ at Premier Tech provides learning experience BY SARAH HYATT

Brighton — It started with the smell of gas detected on the main production floor at the Loyalist Drive Premier Tech building. The company wasted no time evacuating the building and made the call for help. But four employees didn’t make it to the meeting area in the main parking lot out front of the building. One of the employees had been stacking drums in the warehouse, outside of the flammable filling production area. That’s when two drums fell off a pallet and one drum ruptured the main gas line, another ruptured the low-pressure steam line from the boiler. Product was leaking out of the drums onto the warehouse floor, but the driver didn’t know. He got off the lift truck to see what had happened. It was then, the low-pressure steam burned him and he fell unconscious from the gas fumes. Another three workers in the north production filling area of the building were still at work; they didn’t hear the call for evacuation. Soon, they were disoriented from the leaking gas fumes. The Brighton Fire Department, Union Gas, Northumberland County paramedics and police arrived on the scene and knew none of this — all they know is, four employees are un-

Union Gas employees respond to a mock emergency at Premier Tech. Submitted photo

accounted for and the building smells of gas. This was the scenario emergency responders were faced with this year, as Premier Tech recently asked responders to participate in a mock emergency exercise at the facility. “They’re completely blind when the

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mier Tech produces a professional line of products — pesticide license is needed in order to purchase. With these materials, it’s important these mock emergency scenarios are run through, said Somerville. Premier Tech invites emergency responders, as well as employees and the company’s own emergency response team (ERT) to participate in the exercises every other year, for about 14 years now. “A big part of this is community awareness,” said Somerville. “It’s helpful for us and especially with outside agencies for them to be aware of the products we produce here in our facility. This is certainly something we look forward to doing with a different scenario every other year.” As employees and emergency responders participate in the exercise, the hope is areas for improvement can be identified. That’s one of the biggest reasons the company continues to host the exercise, said Somerville. Putting it all down on paper is one thing, but it’s totally different when it’s physically being acted out and people are involved in the exercise and “you’re watching this scenario unfold,” she said. Following the conclusion of the exercise all those involved review how things went. This year’s exercise was “very successful,” said Somerville, who noted this was the first year Union Gas participated. “They said they were quite impressed.” Planning for the unexpected helps the company to maintain high standards when it comes to safety and helps people to better understand their roles in an emergency, said Somerville. For others, it’s important they’re familiar with the building layout, as well

they come in here, they have absolutely no idea what they’re walking into,” said Jackie Somerville, a quality technician for the company. Premier Tech has been operating in Brighton for more than 35 years, with 20 of them in chemical manufacturing for the lawn, garden and agricultural industries. The company houses a number of flammable and combustible materials and on any given month, Somerville estimates there could be around 30 different types of these materials present. “Lawn care products are our main forte here,” she said. “So, the Wilson product brands you’d find at Canadian Tire or Walmart, a big bulk of our work goes there (to those places).” For the agriculture industry, Pre- as products, she added.

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Brighton Independent - Thursday, October 19, 2017 5


MPP defends raising the minimum wage to $15 an hour tend the length of time to get to that $15 an hour” to give businesses time to adjust? Jack Oliver, general manager of Empire Cheese, asked the same question. “It's going to affect us quite a bit ... The big guys (in the cheese industry who are largely automated) aren't going to have to put their price up, we are. It's the only way we can make up the difference ... It will be a shock.” Oliver pointed out a higher minimum wage will also mean employees with more experience and responsibilities will be looking for a pay raise as well. “That's why we're looking to offsets” to help businesses cope with what will be a “substantial shift,” Rinaldi responded. “Certainly, we want to be able to try to help the best we can.” The “opportunity” to raise the minimum wage by such a large amount is now while the economy is “somewhat hot,” he said. “We think that we can afford this.”

BY JOHN CAMPBELL

Warkworth — MPP Lou Rinaldi says his Liberal government is committed to helping businesses adjust to the minimum wage being raised from $11.40 an hour to $15 by Jan. 1, 2019. The Ministry of Finance is currently “going through the math” to “come up with a whole menu of potential offsets” that will help employers “transition to the new regime,” he told members of the Trent Hills Chamber of Commerce at a recent breakfast meeting. The MPP for NorthumberlandQuinte West said “there's been somewhat of a shift” in attitude among business owners in recent weeks toward the proposed wage increase contained in Bill 148, which was introduced in June and will, after amendments, become legislation before the end of the year. Rinaldi said he was told by the owner of a large grocery store in the riding that he will have to raise the price of every item by one to two cents to cover higher labour costs, but he didn't see it as a burden if offsets are provided. Also, he won't “have to worry about (his) competitor down the street because he's faced with the same circumstance,” Rinaldi added. “It's not that they think the problems are all solved, there are still some issues,” he said, but with the assistance the government is looking to offer,

“we'll able to bridge that.” Rinaldi said “the economy has rebounded” since the recession of 200809, but “not everybody has been able to have a piece of that pie.” Ten per cent of Ontarians depend on minimum wage to survive, which “is really scary stuff ” because “the living wage” is around $16 an hour, he said.

“There are people working two, three part-time jobs” to get by, and “a percentage of them are probably collecting some kind of social assistance,” he said. “The majority of businesses we talk to, they don't deny that something has to be done,” said Jeff Hamilton, chair of the local chamber, but “why not ex-

MPP Lou Rinaldi said his government will do the best it can to help businesses cope with a substantial increase in Ontario's minimum wage. John Campbell/Metroland

Community-York Road WI hears of plans for Our TMH how things have come along since We were pleased to have Sha- it inception. The committee’s motto - To ron Urquhart as guest speaker Preserve - To Protect - To Enfrom Our TMH. We were given an update on hance seems to have done just that. TRUSS & FLOOR To date they have over 18,000 For Professional, Friendly Service, Contact members with a goal of 20,000. They have formed a doctor recruitment and retention committee and are still working to bring a veterans unit to the area. Our TMH representatives have sat on • Residential the Health Hub Committee and • Commercial • Farm Custom Engineered will continue to watch the progRoof Trusses & Floor Systems ress, support it but only if it is No charge dial erected on hospital property. 1-800-461-6898 or 613-966-966-8137 www.ontariotruss.com There is another large comotinfo@ontariotruss.com mitment to TMH to open our 732 Ashley St., Foxboro, Ontario own dialysis unit. Many people BY MARLENE SMITH

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have to travel outside the area for treatment three times a week. Local hospitals should be supported by their citizens so that when in need you don’t have to travel a long distance for care. We thanked Sharon and continued with the remainder of our meeting. We discussed our celebration of Women’s Institutes’ 120th Anniversary. Please come join our “Fashion Thru The Decades”, Wednesday, November 1 at 1 p.m., at Masonic Hall, 157 Main St.; Brighton. Monetary donation to: Fare Share. Point of Interest: Federated Women’s Institute of Ontario made a resolution in 1962 - To make mandatory the use of a breathalyzer and blood tests to determine sobriety. Response: became law in 1969. This is just one of many resolutions WI has been able to achieve.

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Adult supervision needed at White House Here’s the scenario. Late one evening Donald Trump is watching Fox News and a report comes on that North Korea is planning to launch a missile that can reach the United States. (Kim Jongregime has said Gwynne Dyer un’s it is going to do that one of these days – but only as a test flight landing in the ocean somewhere, not as an attack.) Trump misunderstands, and thinks Pyongyang is going to launch a missile at the United States. After all, there was a graphic with the report that shows the trajectory of the North Korean missile reaching the US, and Trump trusts Fox much more than his own intelligence services. So he orders all US strategic forces to go to DEFCON 1: Defence Readiness Condition One – nuclear war is imminent. The North Koreans spot all the unusual activity in the American forces – leave cancelled in Strategic Air Command, US nuclear subs in port sailing with zero warning leaving part of their crews behind, etc. – and conclude that an American preemptive attack is imminent. The North Koreans go to their own equivalent of DEFCON 1: mobilizing and dispersing their armed forces, evacuating their leadership from the capital to some bunker in the countryside, and so on. American intelligence reports all this activity, and this time Trump actually listens to them. So he orders a disarming strike on all North Korean nuclear weapons and facilities. With US nuclear weapons, of course. Nothing else would do the job. That’s how the Second Korean War starts. Not many Americans would be killed, and probably no civilians, because in fact North Korea doesn’t yet have any long-range missiles that can accurately deliver nuclear weapons on the United States, but millions would die in both parts of Korea. With luck, the Chinese would stay out even as their North Korean ally is reduced to rubble. It’s just a scenario, but it’s one that keeps many people awake at night – including many senior people in the US military. That’s why reports have been surfacing recently that the US Secretary of Defence, General James Mattis, the National Security Adviser, General H.R McMaster, and Trump’s Chief of Staff, General John Kelly, have made a secret

pact that all three will never be abroad at the same time. Why not? Because at least one very senior military officer must always be in the country to monitor orders coming from the White House, and countermand them if necessary. I cannot vouch for the accuracy of these reports, but I believe them. I was already assuming that some arrangement like that was in place. Mattis, McMaster and Kelly are serious, experienced and professional military officers, and it would be a dereliction of duty for them not to ensure that there is always at least one responsible adult between Trump and the nuclear button. If one of these generals actually found himself in the position of having to stop Trump, he would face an agonizing decision. All his training tells him that he must obey civilian authority, and he will certainly be court-martialled if he disobeys a presidential order. On the other hand, he must not allow millions of human beings to die because of a stupid mistake. I’m sure they think about it, and I doubt that any of them knows which way he would actually jump if the situation arose. Providing adult supervision is a tricky business, especially when the child is technically your superior. And having said all this, it occurs to me that some senior military officers in North Korea must face the same dilemma. They too have a child-man in charge, and they will be all too aware that if “little rocket man”, as Trump calls him, stumbles into a war with the United States, then they, their families, and practically everybody they have ever met will be killed. Their dilemma is even worse, because they serve a petulant god-king who has the power of life and death over them and their families. To stop Kim Jong-un, if he were about to make a fatal mistake, they would have to kill him and accept that they would almost certainly be killed themselves immediately afterwards. Would they actually do that? They don’t even know the answer to that themselves, but I‘m sure they think about it. There is probably not going to be a Second Korean War. Probably neither set of senior officers is ever going to face this ultimate crisis. A subtle form of adult supervision is exercised on a daily basis in both capitals, because even the loosest of loose cannons has to work through other people in order to get his orders turned into actions. But things have come to a pretty pass when we can have this discussion without sounding crazy.

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Editor Chris Malette chris.malette@metroland.com 613-966-2034, ext 510 Regional Managing Editor Ryland Coyne rcoyne@metroland.com

Editorial by Chris Malette This editorial is being written in the cavernous, mostly empty shell of the former Nortel building. You remember Nortel? The corporate goliath that was the world-beating electronics and research leader that saw its infancy in the former Northern Electric, which begat Northern Telecom which eventually became the global rock star known as Nortel. It all went pffffft! in a spectacular cloud of corporate greed and mismanagement. Look at the headlines today in Belleville. Sears – Sears of all companies – is dissolving like butter in a skillet after several years of, wait for it… corporate greed and mismanagement. Why, in this region alone, between the corporate losses of Nortel and Sears in Belleville and GE in Peterborough, upwards of 3,000-well paying jobs – jobs with good pay, healthy benefits and pensions – have gone into the ether. That’s a heavy blow for any part of the country, let alone one without a particularly dense manufacturing sector. But, the boardroom bandits will have made out okay, you can bet. It’s not anti-capitalistic commie-speak to deride the sorts of individuals who have gutted companies like Nortel and Sears while lining their pockets with multi-million dollar dividends and payouts. This isn’t a knock on free enterprise, it’s a call for a bounty on the types of corporate players, weasels and manipulators who play roulette with the lives of people who counted on those jobs, pensions and benefits. All that’s left in their wake, after all, are shelf-stocking zombie jobs at places like dollar stores with not a sniff of dental care or a pension in sight. Toronto Star business columnist David Olive painted a grim picture of the most evil among the players in the downfall of Sears and Sears Canada’s decision last week to begin liquidating all its Canadian assets. Eddie Lampert, 55, is a U.S. hedge fund manager who has long controlled Chicago-based Sears Holdings and is still the largest shareholder in its Canadian affiliate, Sears Canada. Lampert, said Olive, “has a demonstrated incompetence in retailing with few equals in the annals of North American merchandizing.” But, he’s making out like a bandit in the collapse of the company he’s ridden into the dust. According to Business Insider, Lampert has blamed the company’s decline on everything from shifts in consumer spending to the rise of e-commerce, and even — at times — the weather. More recently, he’s taken to attacking the media, saying reports speculating on a Sears bankruptcy are thwarting his efforts to turn the business around. “Every time people use the word bankruptcy,

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somebody who reads that doesn’t get past that word,” he told the Chicago Tribune in a recent interview. “It makes it very unfair for us, and it’s a very uneven playing field for us.” Sears Canada having struggled for so long – its liquidation follows four straight years of losses – makes it possible to miss how significant a place on the retail landscape Sears Canada has occupied. Deeply-rooted in Canada, having launched in the 1950s, Sears Canada at the time of its death had a sprawling network of big-city and suburban department-stores, a network of small-town catalogue distribution outlets and the renowned Wish Book catalogue. While 2,900 Sears Canada employees are losing their jobs, benefits and pension plans, the company’s CEO and senior managers are getting bonuses. The managers are receiving retention bonuses over the next few months, under Sears Canada’s Key Employee Retention Plan (KERP). It was approved by the Ontario Superior Court last week when it also approved the company’s liquidation plans. The terminated employees, meanwhile, will not be getting any severance pay and will lose all benefits and pension plans. Court documents show many examples of terminated employees who have written their concerns about the lay offs. “I am one of the Sears employees having a termination without severance,” said one. “I am 60 years old and have been employed 34.74 years by Sears Canada. I’ve always held a manager or assistant-manager position. The recent turn of events has seriously threatened the financial security and health of my family. The loss of severance is a significant loss.” Some 20 years ago, there was hoopla and fanfare like few could remember in Belleville – save perhaps the days when the city went on a threeday bender when the hockey Macs brought home the world championship – when Sears built the massive catalogue distribution centre. There were grand feasts, spectacular toasts, that only matched the Herculean construction job that took almost two years to complete to build one of the most state-of-the-art wired warehouses in the country. In the end, nothing worked to save that marvel of modern retailing or the jobs that came with it. But the top execs and hedge fund investors lined their pockets as employees in places like Belleville’s Quinte Mall store and the catalogue distribution centre started nervously watching mid-level managers eye the door for a safe, fast get-away.

CLASSIFIEDS 1-888-657-6193 EDITORIAL Brighton News John Campbell jcampbell@metroland.com Sarah Hyatt sarah.hyatt24@gmail.com PRODUCTION 613-966-2034

Read us online at www.InsideBelleville.com Brighton Independent - Thursday, October 19, 2017 7


Celebrate Waste Reduction Week keep even more out of our landfill

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Celebrating Local Government Week October 15 – 21, 2017 Bringing together people, partnerships & possibilities for a strong and vibrant Northumberland

Kate Campbell: 905-372-3329 x2335 campbellk@northumberlandcounty.ca Alternative formats of this information are available upon request: accessibility@northumberlandcounty.ca or 905-372-3329 ext. 2327. 8 Brighton Independent - Thursday, October 19, 2017

NOVEMBER 15TH 2017


Brighton’s Own:

Tackling the ‘three monsters of cancer’

Photo by Vic Schukov

They Sauciers both volunteer at Victory for Animals shelter, and are active in Trinity St. Andrew’s Church. Last month, they started a Brighton cancer support group: “Our goal,” said Carol. “is to get people together who are either going through cancer treatment or are done, and also their care-givers. We encourage people to do different things to escape from the cancer bubble. During my treatment, we met so many wonderful and brave people. At the end, I felt that I had to give something back. I tell cancer patients: A butterfly doesn’t see her wings, but everyone else sees her beauty. Ron added, “At our meetings, we brainstorm topics dear to people’s hearts like what do I do now? What’s my next step? Or I have a friend who has been diagnosed with cancer, what should I do and

say? We meet people in different stages, some are angry, some are in denial. With cancer, there is the physical problem, the emotional and the spiritual problem. Carol and I call them The Three Monsters. People need a shoulder or an ear, and we are here to provide that with no judgement on our part.” The next support group meeting is on October 19th at Trinity St. Andrew’s Church Community Hall, at 730 pm. Info: 613 439 9547. (Brighton resident Vic Schukov is a long-time journalist and writer of biography books for everyday people; victorschukov@gmail.com )

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It is widely accepted that nurses and teachers place extremely high on the scale of honourable and humanistic professions, caretakers of our minds and bodies. Between them, Ron and Carol Saucier have served compassionately in both trenches, so to speak. Carol, born in Montreal, moved to Ottawa in 1985, where she met Ron through a friend that said to him, “I think that I have the perfect lady for you.” According to Carol, “He called me and, first of all, we were on the phone for a week, an hour at a stretch. I liked his voice. When I finally met him I said to myself, Okay.” Ron added, “We met at a restaurant, and sat until they kicked us out. I fell in love with her right there and then and knew we were going to get married. I loved her personality. She had a sense of humour. And she had the ability to keep a conversation going in an intelligent way.” The couple got married two years later. Ron taught high school in the Ottawa Valley for 23 years, retiring in 2008. Carol went back to school and became a pharmacy technician, then a registered practical nurse, and finally a practicing RN for 12 years. The Sauciers came to Brighton in 2012. It was Ron’s suggestion: “I did some research and we came here and just fell in love with the area. Carol always said she wanted to live near water, so it’s no longer Lake Ontario. It’s Lake Carol (laughing.)” In 2015, Ron went through seven and a half weeks of (successful) radiation treatment for prostate cancer: “When the doctor told me the diagnosis, I said to him, ‘Okay how am I going to beat this? Tell me what the steps are.’ He said that’s the attitude to have, and I said that’s the attitude I do have. I said let’s get started (laughing.) He said, ‘Give me a chance to call the other doctors.’ The experience hasn’t changed my philosophy at all, which is just live life as best you can.” Carol got breast cancer last year, and recently completed her treatments: “When I went in, I said I little prayer asking, Please take care of the doctors and nurses taking care of me. Then a calm came over me suddenly. I don’t take anything for granted, and always live every day.”

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Demand booming for Barns of Brighton 2018 calendars BY SARAH HYATT

Brighton — The Barns of Brighton 2018 calendar project appears to have touched many Brightonians. “We anticipated a positive response, but it was beyond our expectations,” said Catherine Stutt, one of four Brighton Digital Archives (BDA) volunteers. The calendar is part of a larger initiative known as the Brighton Barn Project, which the BDA group started to ensure Brighton’s farming history would live on in years to come. The group just recently celebrated the completion and launch of the calendar project, alongside volunteer photographers as they showcased their work for the calendar during a gathering outside the picturesque Archer Farm on County Road 30. Following the celebratory gathering — which invited volunteer photographers involved in the Brighton Barn Project, barn owners, members from the Brighton heritage advisory committee and other dignitaries — a limited number of calendars were made available to residents. Stutt said about 550 calendars were printed. A few were given to the photographers and owners of the barns featured in the calendar, and then some were reserved for residents and distributed at Applefest and the municipal office later on. “Both distribution spots were depleted within a few hours and people continue to come into the municipal office asking for the calendars,” said Stutt. The idea behind the Brighton Barn Project is to give people, in 50 to 100 years, an idea of the evolution of farming and what Brighton’s farming life once looked like. The group’s goal is to preserve Brighton barns in digital format, as local barns are

Cindy Conlin displays her photograph of the Down barn at the Barns of Brighton 2018 calendar launch. Sarah Hyatt/Metroland

disappearing. The calendar project was also dedicated to David Down, who recently died. The well-known local farmer had served as co-chair for the Brighton Barn Project. The dedication was the group’s way of honouring Down’s contribution to the project. But another important part of this calendar

project was the promotion of Brighton, said Stutt. And since the launch of the calendar, Stutt and others have heard residents have been making driving tours through rural Brighton, trying to find the barns featured in the calendar. With such a positive response to the project and residents still inquiring about the calendar, Stutt approached Deputy Mayor Laura Vink, who sits on website.

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the Brighton heritage advisory committee, to see if it was at all possible to have more calendars made. The BDA is a volunteer-based group and the heritage committee had previously funded distribution for calendars. Working with municipal staff, the deputy mayor and staff were able to find some funds through the tourism budget, Vink has confirmed. “It’s a great calendar — it’s absolutely beautiful,” said Vink. “Tons of volunteer hours went into this project and we’re hearing people are taking tours of Brighton to find the barns. It’s great promotion for Brighton and honestly, promotion at its best thanks to the volunteers behind this project. "Really, the volunteers did everything to get this calendar out, it was just the cost of printing they needed help with.” Another two distribution events are now in the works. Calendars will be distributed Monday, Oct. 23, at 35 Alice St. from 10 a.m. to noon. There will also be some calendars available at the Codrington Farmers’ Market on Oct. 22, from 10 a.m. to noon. The 2018 wall calendar gives people a glimpse into the work being done through the Brighton Barn Project and features 14 local barns, which represent a cross-section of barn styles. Volunteers have been photographing all barns within the municipality for the project. The barns are not only showcased through the calendar, but also online via the BDA website: vitacollections.ca/ brightonarchives. Volunteers are currently in the process of attaching historical information to the barns photographed and posting those images and stories to the

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Cramahe exhibit offers a broad view of the 1800s locally and abroad Colborne – Heritage Cramahe’s newest exhibit takes a look at the 1800s that goes beyond what was happening locally to include the world. “Simple words or even events presented without context do not convey much meaning,” Robin Young, the chair of Heritage Cramahe, said in a news release announcing the group’s upcoming exhibit, “19th Century Timeline - Cramahe, Canada, World!”, in the Heritage Room of the Colborne

Art Gallery, “As Cramahe’s century homes were being erected and the settlement was growing into a vibrant community, many important events were happening locally, nationally and internationally,” Young said. In 1812, for example, when some of the first permanent structures were being carved out of the Cramahe forests by the United Empire Loyalist settlers, the British and American navies were

engaged in battle on Lake Ontario, “adding political uncertainty and fear for personal security to the already monumental task” the pioneers faced housing and feeding their families, Heritage Cramahe said in its release. 1865 was a boom year for development in Cramahe Township, according to land use records, with sturdy houses being built by the township’s blacksmiths, grocers and carriage makers, That same year Abraham Lincoln,

the president of the United States, was assassinated, and the first Atlantic cable was completed, revolutionizing international communications. Heritage Cramahe mounted parts of this exhibit for a previous Heritage Day but this time the displays provide a broader context. “Many visitors took the time to read a lot of the detail in the previous exhibit and now we have given them more substance,” Young said, such as the causes

and effects of the 1837 Rebellions in Upper and Lower Canada, and the cholera epidemic in Quebec in 1832. The range of subjects includes politics, business, science and the arts. After an opening reception Oct. 19, starting at 7 p.m., the show will run Thursdays to Sundays, from noon to 4 p.m., until early December. The free admission includes the current show at the Colborne Art Gallery, 51 King St. E.

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Colborne OEYC open, programs still available in Brighton of the provincial changes and starting in January 2018, funding responsibilities for the centres will move from the ministry, to the consolidated municipal service manager at Northumberland County. The county manager will then be responsible for the local management of the new centres. Once the new Ontario Early Years Child and Family Centres plan is approved, more will be known with regard to management and the new model for the centres. Under the new model, it’s said the scope of services in Northumberland will broaden to reach a wider age range. The new centres will be looking to reach parents and caregivers with newborns and kids up to age 14. Part of the criteria for the updated Ontario early years policy framework includes having

BY SARAH HYATT

Brighton — Details surrounding access to Ontario Early Years Centre (OEYC) programs for local residents appears to have been sorted out, at least for the remainder of 2017. Last week, YMCA Northumberland announced the Colborne Public School OEYC was officially now open and also that OEYC programs would be offered at the Brighton Children’s Centre, which is housed at Brighton Public School. As of August, there was no longer a permanent Brighton-based OEYC, with the centre slated to move to Colborne as a result of policy changes stemming from the Ministry of Education. The Brighton-based OEYC was formerly housed in the Brighton Health Services Centre with the YMCA. It was unknown in August exactly when the Colborne-based centre would start operating in September, though, it was anticipated the centre would open in either the first or second week of the month. The YMCA has now released details for the new centre. Hours are Monday, Tuesday and Thursday, from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m., Wednesdays from 9 a.m. until 7 p.m. and on Fridays the centre will be open from 9 a.m. until noon. Those looking for more information are asked to call 905-376-3387. Northumberland County had previously been collaborating with Brighton Public School, in an effort to negotiate options for OEYC programs to be offered at the school. The hope was at least some programs could be kept in Brighton.

the OEYC hubs based in local schools.

Last week, the YMCA confirmed early years’ programs will be offered at the children’s centre in Brighton. Hours of operation are as follows: Monday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday, from 9 a.m. until noon. Residents are asked to call the Brighton Children’s Centre on 613-4751811 for more information. For the remainder of 2017, the YMCA Northumberland remains the lead governing agency for the Ontario early years programs. As part

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Grade 10 ENSS student is ‘Mayor for the Day’ BY SARAH HYATT

Brighton – A Grade 10 ENSS student has got an insider’s perspective after spending last Monday as ‘Mayor for the Day.’ Jolene Bishop spent her after school time last Monday, on a tour with Brighton Mayor and Northumberland County Warden Mark Walas, learning about local government and the various roles and responsibilities within the municipality. She also helped kick off Monday’s council meeting, as part of Local Government Week in Brighton and shared her experience with the public. “After school today, I had the privilege of being escorted by Mayor Walas, where I was able to view the various aspects of the municipality,” she told attendees at Monday’s meeting. “In doing so, I was able to learn about the different departments within the municipality.” Jolene visited the municipal offices, the water treatment plant and industrial park as part of her tour and also spent time chatting and learning from Brighton staffers. “From these visits, I learned about our wells and water systems and the different roles of the employees here…” said Jolene. “Overall, it was very informative and I’d like to thank you, Mayor Walas, for the opportunity,” said the Grade 10 student, as she concluded her reflection of her day spent walking in the mayor’s shoes. Jolene’s experience was topped off, as Walas, on behalf of the municipality, continued the tradition of presenting Jolene with a commemorative ‘Bishop Drive’ street sign, like those featured throughout the town. “This is a small gift and token of our appre-

Grade 10 ENSS student experiences ‘Mayor for the Day’1-Mayor Mark Walas presents Grade 10 student Jolene Bishop with a commemorative gift following her experience as ‘Mayor for the Day.’ Sarah Hyatt/Metroland

ciation for you coming out today,” said Walas. “Congratulations and it’s well deserved.” Local Government Week, which aims to increase youth and public awareness about the important role local governments play in Ontario communities, takes place this year from Oct. 15

to Oct. 21. Annually, Brighton embraces the week by inviting students to tour the municipality and speak with staffers and members of council, and one student gets the chance to participate in what the municipality calls, ‘Mayor for the Day.’

The experience helps to shine a light “on what it is exactly we do here,” said Walas. Leading up to Local Government Week, another 20 to 30 students from East Northumberland Secondary School and Pamela Vanderburg’s civics class visited with the mayor and staff, so they could learn about government at both the municipal and county levels and the responsibilities that come with governance. Out of that came a series of questions from the students, most of which came not at the time, but through a series of e-mails and following that, Vanderburg recommended Jolene participate this year as ‘Mayor for the Day,’ explained Walas. It’s increasingly important that people have an understanding surrounding municipal government and not only to understand the governance model of council and staff, but to get an idea of the many and varied types of assets the municipality has and the complexity around the operations of those assets, said Walas. Walas hopes the exposure and experience for students may be helpful as youth carve out their career paths and options down the road. There are a lot of options for careers at the municipal level, there are the environmental and administrative sides, there is engineering and planning too, said Walas. And perhaps too often, students aren’t looking at those types of careers in municipal government, added the mayor. He hopes by Brighton shining a light on some of those roles, it may give students a better idea of how a municipal career could work for them one day.

Brighton Independent - Thursday, October 19, 2017 15


Candidate hopes to repeat history It’s Time. When you’re always worried about how mom’s doing. Let Seasons help.

BY JOHN CAMPBELL

Port Hope — David Piccini beat out former MPP Rob Milligan as the choice of the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario to run in the new riding of Northumberland-Peterborough South, and now he's looking to do what Milligan did in 2011 — unseat current office-holder Lou Rinaldi. The Port Hope resident likes his chances: “After 14 years of this tired and self-interested government, Ontarians have really lost faith” in the Liberals and “do not trust” Premier Kathleen Wynne. “Ontarians want change.” The ruling party has been plagued by controversy, such as cancellation of the gas plant projects and the soaring cost of energy, which it has tried to stem by reducing hydro bills in the short term but will cost ratepayers more in the long run. Piccini said he supports increasing the minimum wage but to raise it from $11.40 an hour to $15 by Jan. 1, 2019, as the Liberals propose to do, is “too fast” and it was done without consulting businesses. The Canadian Federation of Independent Business “was left out of the first round of consultation” and was brought into the process only after it and the Opposition “made a stink about that.” “How do you ignore the largest association in Canada representing businesses (when making) such a drastic change?” Piccini asked. It's an “out-of-touch government” that is trying “to cling to power and is no longer governing in the best interests of our community.” Piccini said Rinaldi, who has been Liberal MPP for the area since 2014 and 11 of the last 14 years, “is a good man, he's just running for the wrong party. He's

going to have some tough questions to answer come election time (next June). He's had a seat at the table when these decisions were made.” Piccini, who's 29 and married, graduated from the University of Ottawa with a joint honours degree in political science and history. He worked first as an international market analyst at Agriculture Canada and then as a policy adviser at Service Canada. He served as an adviser in the office of then minister of international trade Ed Fast before trying his hand as a Tory candidate in 2015 but failed in his bid to oust Liberal MP Mauril Belanger, who had held the riding of Ottawa Vanier since 1995. Piccini subsequently joined the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada as an adviser, providing advice on a full range of policy, business and operational issues related to the College's international activities. Piccini said he has seen “first-hand the challenges the health-care system is facing” and based on that experience has concluded the government is “no longer listening” to the experts. It's “taking the decision-making out of the hands of professional health-care professionals and placing it in the hands of bureaucrats. Ultimately that's not good for the patients.” Piccini said he has a “sound understanding” of business, health care, education and trade as well as a solid work ethic. “I've made an effort of getting out there and listening to everyone and speaking to key stakeholders in our community,” he said. “We're going to shake things up.”

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John Campey (613) 475-1010 All information will be treated with the highest confidence. Brighton Independent - Thursday, October 19, 2017 17


Mental health needs to be a focus at work, says health unit Pine Ridge District Health Unit. It’s important supports are available at workplaces and having such supports in place also helps to reduce stigmas attached to mental health illnesses and issues, the health promoter insists. In any given year, one in five Canadians will experience a mental health issue or illness, costing the economy more than $50 billion, as reported by the Mental Health Commission of Canada. To date, this is one of the more widely-known statistics surrounding mental

BY SARAH HYATT

Northumberland — Employers have the potential to make a real difference for someone who may be struggling with mental health issues, say public health officials. This is also the message public health staffers are urging companies and organizations to consider during ‘Healthy Workplace Month’ this October. “People need to feel safe in their workplaces — they spend eight to nine hours a day there,” said Lisa van der Vinne, a health promoter with the Haliburton, Kawartha,

MUNICIPALITY OF BRIGHTON NOTICE OF PROPOSED ROAD CLOSURE The proposed stopping up, closing and conveyance of a portion of the Municipal Road Allowance between Part Lot 2 and 3, Concession 7, Village of Orland, east of 2353 County Road 30, Municipality 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 proposes to pass a by-law to stop up, close and convey a portion of the Road Allowance between Part Lot 2 and 3, Concession 7, Village of Orland, east of 2353 County Road 30, Municipality of Brighton. The owner of 2353 County Road 30 has requested that the Municipality stop up, close and convey approximately 607 square meters (6500 sq. ft.) of the unopened Road Allowance that is to the rear of their property to expand the lot area of 2353 County Road 30. A map of the general location is included with this Notice. The proposed plans 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 Judith Jeffery, Planner by email (jjeffery@brighton.ca) or by phone at 613-475-1162 Ex, 119. On MONDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2017 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 their land will be prejudicially affected by the said By-law and who applies to be heard. Any person who has written comments regarding this matter or wishes to be heard at the November 13, 2017 Council meeting should make application to: Candice Doiron, Clerk Municipality of Brighton 35 Alice Street, Brighton ON, K0K 1H0 Tel 613-475-0670 EX 215 / fax 613-475-3453 E-mail: cdoiron@brighton.ca Dated: October 12, 2017

health. But did you know by the time Ca- employees don’t struggle alone. “When workplaces take the time and nadians reach 40 years old, an estimated one in two have or have had a mental ill- effort to support employee mental health, they are making a valuable investment that ness? can pay off in many ways,” said Van der Vinne. The Centre for Addiction and This is the message the health unit is tryMental Health also reports that in ing emphasize for workplaces this month. Public health staffers want to help emany given week, at least 500,000 ployers too, they say. the statistics and a strong busiemployed Canadians are unable nessConsider case can be made for implementing programs and policies that support workto work due to mental health place mental health, said Van der Vinne. problems. “Workplaces that support staff members help to keep employees more engaged, And so, this October, Northumberland productive and healthy at work, while republic health officials are reminding em- ducing sick time,” Van der Vinne added. ployers to support mental health at work It’s a win-win for both the individual and the importance of doing so. who is struggling and the entire organizaStress is a part of life, but too much tion, the health promoter said. stress — especially at work — is bad for For resources and information to supbusiness, as well as the health of an orga- port employee mental health, local worknization, says staffers, who are asking em- places can contact the health unit at 1-866ployers to make it their business so their

BY SARAH HYATT

Northumberland — Habitat for Humanity Northumberland is asking residents to help spread some Christmas magic in coming months. An estimated 2,500 people in Northumberland currently need access to affordable housing, Habitat for Humanity Northumberland’s executive director Meaghan Macdonald recently reported. The organization is asking residents to think about what it means to have a home this holiday season. The group is also reaching out to folks throughout the county who may be eager to help Habitat tackle the current affordable housing crisis. Residents who are eager to lend the organization a hand

can help build houses in the coming weeks — more specifically, gingerbread houses. “All proceeds from the fundraiser will go towards Habitat’s home building program,” staff said in a recent release and as the organization announced its third annual Habitat Gingerbread House Festival. This year’s festival will run from Nov. 24, to Dec. 16., and includes all Northumberland communities. Habitat is encouraging Northumberland schools, community groups and organizations, as well as bakeries and residents, to enter a “gingerbread creation for the festival.” The idea is the decorated houses will create a type of ‘Gingerbread Trail’ throughout Northumberland. The

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fessional entries by silent auction. The minimum bid for a professional entry will be $25. Donations for Habitat will be welcome at all ‘Gingerbread Trail’ locations. On Dec. 16, winners will be drawn for the community decorated houses and the silent auction for professional entries will be closed. A panel of judges will also announce the top three winners from each decorating category on that date, with prizes and ribbons given to decorators. The homes should have a winter holiday theme. Cobourg residents are required to deliver their homes to the Habitat offices at 764 Division St., no later than Tuesday, Nov. 21. Entries from Brighton, Colborne, Warkworth, Port Hope and Grafton will be picked up and placed in those towns. Those interested in participating should contact Heather Jopling for more details at 289252-0999 ext. 28 or by email at hjopling@habitatnorthumber-

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houses will be set up in stores throughout the county and on display for people to follow and for shoppers to marvel at. Those who follow the Gingerbread Trail can also enter their name into a draw to win their favourite gingerbread house, as the homes will later be raffled off or bid on. Community groups and those interested in participating can use a bare gingerbread house as a starting point for their design and may pick up bare homes from Habitat’s admin. offices, from Nov. 13 to Nov. 18. (Hours are from 9 a.m. until 4:30 p.m.). Professional entrants and school culinary departments are encouraged to build their entries from scratch. The festival launches on Nov. 24, coinciding with Cobourg’s Christmas Magic tree lighting ceremony. Habitat volunteers will be distributing gingerbread cookie kits to kids attending the event. The community entries for the festival will be awarded through a free draw and pro-

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888-4577, ext. 1256, or visit the website www.solutions2workstress.ca. There are a lot of free resources and tools as well as programs available to help employers, and the health unit can help guide companies and organizations to those tools, resources and programs, noted Van der Vinne. “Just give us a call and we’ll start with a conversation,” said Van der Vinne. Staff can talk with employers about what’s been done already and what maybe the employers’ needs, wants and questions are. The health promoter encourages workplaces and employers to think of mental health in the same way as other health and safety issues. “The mental health and safety of employees is just as important as their physical health and safety,” she said. “That’s just common sense, when you consider that both physical and mental factors can affect

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Songs from the Heart for New Life Girls’ Home BY ERIN STEWART

Belleville — Enjoy an evening of music in support of New Life Girls’ Home during the Songs from the Heart Gospel Concert at Maranatha Church in Belleville Nov. 18. The Daughters of the King will perform along with Wendell Ferguson, Don Reed, Dan Washburn, Andy Schick, Kiley-Joe Masson and Frank Woodcock during the gospel concert, with all of the proceeds going to New Life Girls’ Home. Debbie McLean, house and ministry co-ordinator at New Life Girls’ Home and member of the Daughters of the King alongside Kim Inch, said the second annual concert is important because the nonprofit organization has solely depended on support from businesses, community organizations, churches and individuals for 28 years. New Life is a not-for profit Christian residential program for young women ages 18-30 who are struggling with life controlling issues like drug and alcohol addiction, sexual, mental, and physical abuse and mental health illnesses. Its mission is to provide a safe place for young women with life controlling problems to experience healing and transformation through the love of Jesus. “It’s close to my heart, I’ve dealt with a few mental health issues myself in regards to depression and personally I had a nervous breakdown a few years ago, and now I get to work with young women who have some similar issues that I can help,” said McLean. New Life Girls’ Home is a large farmhouse located in Consecon, which can house nine women at a time. Depending on the situations, women can stay for four months or a full year program that has three semesters, said McLean. “The majority of ladies do tend to stay for the year,” she said. “We work with the girls to get to the root issues so that they can heal, and move on with their lives and have a productive life,” she said. “We do have girls that come here from with-

Lace up for the W8 Run BY SUE DICKENS

Warkworth — Runners, walkers, joggers and budding athletes still in preschool are being invited once again to this Saturday’s W8 Run in Warkworth. Serving up three races — an “eight-miler,” a five-kilometre and a kids one-kilometre — the W8 offers fun, safe opportunities for participants to take a foot tour of the scenic roads and trails around Warkworth on Oct. 21, all in support of The Bridge Hospice. Now in its 13th year, the “allcomer” is well-organized, chiptimed, and famous for homebaked goodies for finishers and unique prizes for winners.

There has been a steady growth in the number of female participants, as well as runners from farther afield. Last year, the W8 saw participants set a couple of records, including a record number of runners (130) and a total of $7,000 for the Bridge Hospice. This year, organizers are hoping to top both those figures. Online registration is now open online at www.thebridgehospice. com/events and on race day from 8 a.m. at the Warkworth arena. The kids one-kilometre starts at 9 a.m., while the eight-miler and five-kilometre start at 9:15 a.m.

The Municipality of Brighton invites applications from members of the public who are interested in serving on a Committee of Council. We are seeking interested people from the Brighton community to serve on the following Committees. To apply you must be a resident of Brighton.

in the local area and then we have girls that come from all over Canada actually.” The program focuses on Christ-centred nurturing, intensive Christian education, one-onone coaching, life-skills training and community ministry opportunities. The Gospel Concert will begin at 6:30 p.m. on Saturday Nov. 18. Tickets are $25 in advance and $30 at the door, children 12 and under are free. Ticket outlets are Riverside Music in Trenton, Pinnacle Music in Belleville, Sam the Record Man and the Chamber of Commerce in Picton. For more information on New Life Girls’ Home, visit newlifegirlshome.com.

Applefest Advisory Committee: This Committee is responsible for Applefest each September. It is a working Committee that needs people ready to get on with the work it takes to make Applefest a successful event. The Committee is looking for: Street Fair & Vendor Committee Member Do yearly budget for Vendors & Street fair, send out applications for vendors, collect all vendor applications and money, set up street fair and take set up/take down vendors the morning of the event & monitor the day of the event, confirm that all vendors have proper insurance & applications completed Children’s Village Committee Member Do yearly budget for Children’s Village. Book all activities and events for the Children’s Village. Set up Children’s Village day of event with the help of Parks and Recreation. Co-ordinate with other activities happening at King Edward Park on the Saturday of Applefest Events Committee Member Co-ordinate all events surrounding Applefest weekend for all advertising. Website and brochure. Help with Sponsors. Public Appointments: 3 people from the public

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Committee of Adjustment: The Committee of Adjustment is a quasi-judicial tribunal appointed by Brighton Council. It derives its jurisdiction from the Planning Act of Ontario and its function is to: • Consider and make decisions on applications for Minor Variances from the provisions of the Municipal Zoning By-law • Consider and make decisions on applications which deal with the enlargement or extension of a building or structure that is legally non-conforming, or a change in non-conforming use Public Appointments: 1 person from the public If you are interested in becoming a member of one of these committees, please express your interest and applicable background, in writing by Thursday, November 30, 2017 to: Vicki Kimmett, Deputy Clerk vkimmett@brighton.ca P.O. Box 189, Brighton, Ontario K0K 1H0 Or, drop off your application at the Municipal Office at 35 Alice Street. Please be sure to include your residential address, telephone number and email address. Brighton Independent - Thursday, October 19, 2017 19


28th regional “spinin” brings several guilds together BY SUE DICKENS

Campbellford – Spinners and weavers gathered at St. John’s United Church hall Tues., Oct. 3 for the 28th annual regional “spinin”, a day that included shared expertise and interest in this ancient craft. A variety of fibres for sale gave spinners the opportunity to stock up as the hall filled with members from many local clubs who brought their spinning wheels with them. Hosted by the Warkworth Spinners and Weavers Guild participants came from as far away as Brockville and Bel-

leville, Prince Edward County and as close as Norwood, Havelock, Campbellford and of course, Warkworth. This year Joan McCulloch, who has organized the regional spinin since it started, turned the task over to Grace Clare, of Campbellford, who has won many awards at the Royal Winter Fair for her sheep fibre. In 2011 she won the Grand Champion Fleece Award and in 2012 she won the Reserve Champion Fleece Award. Clare, whose sheep farm is called Shepherd’s Hill, had a table set up with her fibre which was for sale.

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She has been with the Warkworth group for 17 years. Jill Purcell of Campbellford who has been a member of the Warkworth group since 2005 said she finds spinning to be very relaxing. “I can fall asleep doing it,” she said laughing while spinning. The “County Spinners” from Prince Edward County, most of whom are also members of the Belleville Spinners and Weavers Guild, were gathered in a group to socialize and spin. Mary Connor of Picton, who is a newcomer to the guild said, “It’s a good group of women. I find it relaxing and you have control over the yarn you use, the colour and the projects you make.” Karen Lammes of Cherry Valley said she finds spinning “very medita-

tive.” She makes mitts, hats, scarves and more. The club’s president Diane Torney of Wellington has been a member of the guild since about 2003. “I love the colours of the different yarns,” she noted. June Johnstone of the Belleville guild spoke of when she first began spinning. “I was a failure for nine of the 10 lessons I took way back in the 1970s but on the 10th I made a thread so I was overjoyed and I bought a spinning wheel. Once you get the knack it’s easy,” she said with a grin. The Warkworth guild has about 40 members who get together the second Wednesday of each month at the library in Campbellford.

Northumberland County’s plans are moving ahead to divert 75% of all waste from our landfill over the long-term! Help do your part to reduce waste by using all of the many services in our ‘waste line’ for your disposables. And keep an eye out for our new Green Bin organics collection program, coming in 2019!

2014 - recycling facility upgrades

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2019 - organics collection

For more information, please visit www.northumberlandcounty.ca/WasteMasterPlan.

The (Prince Edward) County spinners, most of whom are also members of the Belleville guild, enjoyed the day-long spin: left to right, Sandra Emlaw of Milford; Marie Connor from Picton; and Karen Lammes of Cherry Valley. Sue Dickens/Metroland

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Brighton Independent - Thursday, October 19, 2017 21


Sports www.insidebelleville.com

Special Olympics Ontario holds soccer Northumberland having no luck after 60 minutes qualifying matches in Brighton BY JOHN CAMPBELL

BY JOHN CAMPBELL

Brighton – It was the Special Olympics in soccer mode at East Northumberland Secondary School last week. About 90 students from places such as Kingston, Cobourg, Napanee and Campbellford took part in the event, which held at ENSS for the first time, said organizer Kimberly Leger, a special education teacher at the high school. The qualifying tournament for the provincial championship was divided into three divisions, based on the abilities of the students who were taking part, from all grades. “Special Olympics are for students who have developmental disabilities, all ranges,” Leger said. Each team was guaranteed three games, which were played in two 10-minute halves on smaller soccer pitches laid out across the sports field with smaller nets. Each team was limited to four players and a goalie on the field at one time. Approximately 60 ENSS main stream students assisted Leger in running the tournament held on Oct. 11, serving as ambassadors, referees and scorekeepers. Many helped out as leaders in the school’s Buddies and Mentors program. “We’re super-excited to host this event today,” principal Charlotte Filip said. “This is something we wanted to do at ENSS for a long time. A

Haylee Rollings found her path blocked by a Napanee player in pursuit of the ball. The visitors won the contest 6-0. John Campbell/Metroland

huge special shout-out to Kim Leger who has really spearheaded all this to happen.”

Filip said the school’s bocce ball team won gold at the Special Olympics last year with Leger as its leader. Paul Grasby, school event developer with Special Olympics Ontario, said the organization holds 60 qualifying competitions across the province, from Thunder Bay to Cornwall to Windsor. “It means just as much to the athletes as it does to our main stream volunteers,” he said. Inclusivity is “what Special Olympics is all about. A lot of times it’s an opportunity for these athletes to put on their school colours. Usually they’re the ones in the stands cheering on, and now we’ve got their peers here cheering them on as they compete for their school.” The top team from the Oct. 12 competition will advance to the provincial championships that will take place in Peterborough next May, hosted by the Peterborough Police Service and the public and Catholic school boards. The results won’t be released until the middle of November, Grasby said. “We like to contact the school and get the teacher and their administration approval before we announce who’s coming just so the athletes don’t get too excited and their parents if they’re not able to attend for some reason.”

Colborne — Overtime has not been kind to the Northumberland Stars. Three of their four losses have come after regulation play, including a 4-3 defeat at home on Oct. 13 against the Oshawa Riverkings. The Colborne squad out shot the visitors 45-34, but Oshawa's Jack Randall was named the game's first star with a 0.933 save percentage. His teammates Ryan Dreossi and Liam Banavage were the game's two other stars, each potting two goals. Northumberland overcame a 2-0 deficit with a pair of power-play goals less than two minutes apart in the second period. Andrew Pankhurst tallied the first one and assisted on Tyler Markin's. Oshawa regained the lead midway through the third but Matt Davies at 18:31 sent the game into overtime where Banavage decided it for the Riverkings. The Stars' Ilshat Zaripov stopped 30 of the 34 shots sent his way. Northumberland suffered its first loss of the season in regulation on Oct. 14, 6-1 at home against the Bradford Bulls. Brackin broke Liam Cooper's bid for a shutout with a goal at 15:24 of the third period. He leads the team with eight goals. Northumberland (3-1-3) sits squarely in the middle of the South Division of the Greater Metro Jr. A Hockey League, with nine points, fewer than five teams above it, but more than five teams below it. The Stars' next game at the Keeler Centre is on Oct. 20 against the Toronto Predators, who have been more prey than hunter, having won only once in eight games, bad enough for last place in the division. Game time is 7:30 p.m.

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Sweet success in Hershey: Belleville Senators win

Win column still blank for the Rebels

BY JOHN CAMPBELL

Campbellford — If adversity builds character, the Campbellford Rebels are grooming a group of remarkable young men. A string of one-sided defeats certainly has tested their fortitude and still they show up week after week knowing the odds are stacked against them of ever winning a game. The team was crushed 14-1 at home by the first-place Napanee Raiders on Saturday and then 11-2 by the Jets in Amherstview the next day. The Rebels' record now stands at 0-9-0-0 in the East Todd Division

of the Provincial Junior Hockey League. The team has given up 103 goals while managing just eight in response. Discipline is another problem area. Campbellford has racked up 320 minutes in penalties, most in the division, which suggests their patience is growing thin as their frustrations mount. Kurt Gibbs and Mac Giles scored for the Rebels in the loss to the Jets. Travis Frankland stopped 39 of 50 shots. Jordan Davis has the lone Campbellford goal in Saturday's match. It came on the power play at 8:41 of the third period. The

visitors fired 61 shots at the home team; Frankland stopped 30 of the 35 he faced, while Mike Ellis turned aside 17 of 26. Brady Cross was handed his second suspension of the season by the league, this time for one game. Campbellford travels to Port Hope Oct. 19 to play the Panthers who hold down second spot. Then it's back home Saturday for the Rebels. Their opponents will be the equally hapless Gananoque Islanders whose lone win, however, came against Campbellford, 10-3, on Sept. 24 at 7:30 p.m.

PET OF THE WEEK! Senators players Max McCormick (right) and Ethen Werek watch the puck as Hershey Bears goalie Parker Milner tries to make a save. Submitted photo

BY STEPHEN PETRICK

Belleville – Nine hundred and thirty-eight. That’s the number of days that passed between wins by a hockey team of any relevance with the word “Belleville” in its name. But hockey futility is over in this city: the Belleville Senators are in the win column after a 5-2 victory over the host Hershey Bears in American Hockey League action Saturday. The team, which is debuting in Belleville this year two years after the city lost its Ontario Hockey League franchise, was winless in its first three regular-season games, including a 4-2 loss a night earlier to the host Syracuse Crunch. That meant that heading into Saturday, 938 days had passed since the now defunct Belleville Bulls beat the Sudbury Wolves 6-3 in an OHL regular-season game on Saturday, March 21, 2015. The Bulls would then lose their season finale on the road in Oshawa the next day, before exiting the playoffs with four straight losses to Barrie and packing their bags for steel town to become the Hamilton Bulldogs. And local hockey fans can send thank you cards to players such as Ethan Werek and Chris DiDomenico for ending the miserable period. Werek had two goals and an assist to lead the Senators in Hershey and DiDomenico had a goal and an assist; the goal coming with 2 minutes, 11 seconds to play to clinch the win. Danny Taylor made 17 saves in goal to pick up the win. The Senators peppered Bears goalie Parker Milner

with 34 shots throughout the night. The game was played in front of an announced crowd of 7,331 fans at the Giant Centre, in the small Pennsylvania town, renowned for supporting its long-standing AHL team. One night earlier in Syracuse, against the defending Eastern Conference champion Crunch, the Sens fought back from an early two-goal deficit. Second-period goals by DiDomenico and Max McCormick made it 2-2 after 40 minutes. But the Crunch’s Dennis Yan scored the eventual game-winner early in the third period and Anthony Cerilli added an empty-netter with 55 seconds to goal. Andrew Hammond took the loss in goal for the Sens, despite a 39 save performance. The Sens mustered just 26 shots on opposing goalie Michael Leighton. The Senators lengthy road trip to start the season continues this weekend, with games in New England. They play the Hartford Wolf Pack on Friday night, the Providence Bruins on Saturday and the Springfield Thunderbirds on Sunday. They won’t play at home until Wednesday, Nov. 1 when they host the Syracuse Crunch from the renovated Yardmen Arena. The Sens will bolster their blueline ahead of the road trip. Defenceman Thomas Chabot, the MVP of last year’s world junior tournament, is back with the Belleville, after being reassigned by the Ottawa Senators. Chabot’s demotion makes room for Eric Karlsson to return to the NHL club’s lineup after a lengthy injury.

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College faculty strike cancels classes, causes worry at Loyalist College BY STEPHEN PETRICK

Editor’s note: as of press time Tuesday morning, the College Employer Council and the Ontario Public Service Employee Union failed to reach an agreement. Belleville – A long line of cars were backed up from the Loyalist College entrance at Loyalist-Wallbridge Road on Monday morning. At and beyond the entrance, people were hoping the strike that was snarling traffic wouldn’t go on for long. Dozens of Loyalist faculty members were on the picket line early Monday morning after the province-wide College Employer Council and the Ontario Public Service Employee Union failed to reach an agreement by a midnight deadline. Talks between the two groups broke down Tuesday, Oct. 10 and in the first hours of the strike there were no signs of plans to get back to the bargaining table. As of Monday morning, more than 12,000 college instructors across Ontario were on strike and classes were cancelled indefinitely at 24 diploma granting institutions, including Loyalist. The pickets at Loyalist were only slowly allowing vehicles onto the grounds of the college early Monday, creating a log jam of cars at Loyalist-Wallbridge Road that backed up past the Moira Street off ramp. Around 9:30 p.m., Belleville Police dropped by to encourage the union to move things along quicker and Belleville Transit made alternative routes for people to access the college.

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OPSEU pickets stops vehicles on their way into Loyalist College on Monday, Oct. 16, the first day of a college faculty strike. Stephen Petrick/Metroland

“It’s not fun, it’s stressful,” said one striking faculty member, who did not give her name, as dozens of cars waited in line to get it. “Our students want to be in classes. And I want to be teaching.” Eric Bauer, the president of OPSEU Local 420, which represents the striking Loyalist faculty members, said he hopes the strike

won’t go long, but he blamed the Employer Council for the lack of progress. “Our teams stands at the ready to have that discussion at any point in time. I wish we had two sides at the table,” said Bauer, dressed warmly with a black toque to protect himself from the chilly fall wind. There are several reasons why faculty mem-

Choice

bers are on strike, but the biggest reason is the shift of the Employer Council in recent years to hire few full-time instructors, leaving programs to be taught mostly by part-time employees, Bauer said. There are also issues related to “parity in academic decision making” and “ fairness for contract faculty,” he added. “The Employer Council has consistently returned to spinning a position about money,” he said. “That’s not been our issue.” He acknowledged that there’s a perception that college faculty are paid large sums per hour – anything between $48 and $140 ¬– but those rates don’t reflect the full scope of work, he said. The wage is dictated by the amount of time in front of students and doesn’t reflect preparation time or helping students individually. With those elements factored in, a college instructor’s wage is far less lucrative, he said. When asked what he would tell his own students about the strike – Bauer teaches in the environmental department – he said, “as tragic as this is when faculty are on strike, it’s about attempting to get an employer to recognize the effort that’s underway to make the system better. “We can’t do any work. We must withhold the service we have to compel the employer to negotiate.” Inside the college on Monday morning, students who spoke to the Belleville News were indifferent about the situation; they just wanted to see the strike resolved so their classes could resume. Continued on Page 2...

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Faculty strike continued “It’s pretty upsetting,” said Jairus Leeson, a second-year student in Loyalist’s TV and New Media program. He was huddled with several classmates in the college’s cafeteria. They had come in to discuss how to proceed with major projects they’re working on, without the support of instructors. “In second year, our workload is pretty significant. Getting feedback is crucial,” Leeson added. He said his instructors spoke to students before the strike. They told them a contingency plan is in place so that students can still meet their learning goals, assuming the strike doesn’t last long. But the uncertainty, makes things difficult. “It’s paranoia,” he said. “I don’t know how long this will last. It could be two, three weeks.” Film and television production student Ernest Gearing expressed similar concerns. “I guess a lot of our projects we can still work on, technically,” he said. “But I like having the input of the faculty. That’s what you pay for. I want them back, but there’s nothing I can do.”

Details from Loyalist College officials were minimal. A phone call to the college’s communications team requesting comment was returned with an email to a link on the college’s website with information to for students on labour negotiations updates. The note, signed by senior vice president Ann Drennan, said the college will remain open, but no regular daytime classes will be held for post-secondary or apprenticeship programs. Some online courses and Continuing Education classes will continue. “We will continue to offer Student Success services, Student Success Mentors, Peer Tutoring, Athletics and Campus Life, Student Life, Career Centre and facilities like labs and study areas. During this time, we encourage you to catch up on work, complete homework assignments, review difficult material as well as continue with your textbook readings and research projects. “Please be assured that contingency plans are in place for you to complete your studies. No Ontario college student has ever lost a year because of a strike.”

Grannies for Africa host loving event Nov. 4

Canadian grandmothers have been at the forefront of fundraising efforts for the orphaned children of Africa, left behind by the AIDS epidemic there, and the local chapter is holding a special event in November to highlight the effort. Working with the Stephen Lewis Foundation, Canadian grandmothers have raised more than $25 million to support African grandmothers and the grassroots organizations working at the frontlines of the AIDS pandemic through the Grandmothers to Grandmothers Campaign. Now for the first time, the story of these indomitable women has been documented in a new book, entitled Powered by Love: A Grandmothers’ Movement to End AIDS in Africa, published by Goose Lane Editions. Author Joanna Henry and photographer Alexis MacDonald visited eight African countries, interviewing and photographing hundreds of grandmothers (including Sarah Obama, Barack Obama’s grandmother) who, with the sup-

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port of their sisters in Canada and now around the world, are raising their grandchildren and rebuilding their communities.

Quinte Grannies for Africa will be hosting a launch of Powered by Love on Thursday Nov. 2 from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. at Loyalist College, Alumni Hall, 376 WallbridgeLoyalist Road, Belleville. Guest speakers will include Alexis MacDonald: Photographer for the book and Director of External Relations

at the Stephen Lewis Foundation, Nompumelelo Gladys Mayaba: Grandmother with Grandmothers Against Poverty & AIDS (GAPA), Siseko Mkalipi: Executive Director of Grandmothers Against Poverty & AIDS (GAPA), This event is free and open to the public. All royalties from sales of Powered by Love will be directed to the Stephen Lewis Foundation to support organizations run by and for African grandmothers who are raising children orphaned by AIDS. Quinte Grannies for Africa has been in existence since October 2006. By the end of 2016, local grandmothers raised close to $ 300,000. They take their slogan ‘We will not rest `til they can rest’ very serious. For more information on the event contact Mieke Thorne at 613969-1782 or email miekethorne@ cogeco.ca For more information on the Grandmothers’ Movement to end AIDS in Africa, visit GrandmothersPoweredbyLove.com.

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After hours homeless service assumed by CMHA BY JACK EVANS

Hastings County Community and Human Services Committee is recommending a bid by the local Canadian Mental Health Association to take over after-hours services for the homelessness program. The change takes place Jan. 1. The county’s human services director Erin Rivers noted that the local Red Cross, which had been providing the service, served notice of termination of that role last May as it no longer fit the organization’s mandate. The department then issued a request for proposals to maintain the same services, staffing a call desk for referrals and placements from 4:30 p.m. through 8:30 a.m., including weekends and holidays. Funding, at $69,000, is provided by the province. Commenting further, Rivers said she is “very excited. The Mental Health group has the ex-

pertise and capability and shares many services with our agency. They are also equipped to deal directly with the homelessness issue, not just the crises.” Sandie Sidsworth, executive director of the Prince Edward-Hastings branch of the Canadian Mental Health Association, shared Rivers’ excitement. But she stressed the additional $69,000 funding is by no means a “windfall” for the agency. “But, it might help us place more people in desperate need,” she added. She also explained that finding adequate housing remains one of her agency’s prime activities. “There are many reasons for homelessness,” she said, and the stress involved with those in that situation often is closely related to mental health issues. “We help provide shelter for the homeless during regular working hours, so it is just an extension to after 4:30 and on weekends and holi-

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Sandie Sidsworth, executive director of the Prince Edward-Hastings branch of the Canadian Mental Health Association, File photo

days,” Sidsworth said. of affordable housing.” The difficulty is, she addSidsworth said the ed, “There is such a lack county’s move to act on

a provincial program to create a major new shelter project is a godsend, but more is needed. “I really don’t see much light at the end of the tunnel right now,” she said, noting that finding adequate funding to keep the agency operational is a major challenge. There is no guaranteed funding source from any federal or provincial government. “We rely on the Trillium and Parrott foundations, the county and the United Way mainly” she said, to support a staff of 11 and operate four separate programs. “We see about 800 people a month with various problems.” For the new after-hours homeless referral service, full and part-time staff will be in place and ready to go at one minute after midnight on Dec. 31, when the handover from Red Cross begins. Also recommended by the committee was taking part in a National Housing Day activity on Nov. 16.

The committee also approved the first major proposal under the new Ontario Early |Years Child and Family Centre – a unique centre to involve the Algonquin community in the Maynooth area. The new centre will use Maynooth Public School, where special classes for aboriginal children have already been part of the school’s program. In essence, the program will provide for families to access relevant, culturally-sensitive programs and services, help protect the endangered Algonquin language and culture, creating a multicultural hub. The approved submission notes that while the Algonquin territory, still non-ceded, spans a huge swath of central Ontario, including Ottawa, Maynooth is actually in the middle of it and has a strong residual Algonquin population, compared to most of Ontario.

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EVENTS

BELLEVILLE

BELLEVILLE CLUB 39 Presents the music of Heartland on Oct 20th from 8pm to Midnight. at the Belleville Legion Br. 99 132 Pinnacle St (upstairs) Singles & Couples are welcome. Members $10 NonMembers $12. Lunch will be served for info 613-395-0162 or 613-966-8696. QUINTE ARTS Council birthday bash at Sans Souci, 240 Front St. Oct. 21, 8 p.m.live entertainment and refreshments. Tickets at Quinte Arts Council. Sans Souci or by calling 613-968-2952 or by calling quinteartscouncil.org AUTHOR TALK Heather O’Neill. Oct. 21, 2:30-4pm. CBC Canada Reads and Giller Prize winning author, Heather O’Neill, will be giving a book talk in the 3rd floor Meeting Room. Info: 613-968-6731. CHURCH OF St. Michael the Archangel Fall Bazaar Oct 21st. 9-2:00pm, Free Admission, St. Michael’s Parish Hall, 296 Church St. Come for lunch in our tea room for $4.00 They’ll be sewing, knitting, bake table, jewellery, quilt and basket raffles. COUNTRY BAZAAR, Sat. Oct. 28, 10 am - 1 pm. St. Mark’s United Church, 237 Cannifton Rd.N. Free admission. Tea Room $4. YOUR OSTOMY Support Group will be holding it’s monthly meeting on October 22nd, 2pm. We have a new location 75 St.Paul St. Foster Ward Seniors Centre. THE CN Pensioners’ Association, Belleville, and District meets Oct. 25, at the Greek Hall, 70 Harder Drive. All CN pensioners, their spouses, widows, and new members are welcome. If you have not been contacted and wish to attend, please call 613-395-3250 sometime prior to the Sunday before. Seating is limited. Doors open at 11 am. BELLEVILLE PUBLIC Library will be offering another Financial Literacy workshop in partnership with Quinte First Credit Union, Oct. 27 at 2:30pm.This workshop will cover preventing identity theft and fraud. Free. Info: 613-968-6731 x2037. QUINTE GRANNIES for Africa launch of Powered By Love, A Grandmother’s Movement to End Aids in Africa, Nov. 2, Loyalist College, Alumni Hall, 376 Wallbridge-Loyalist Road, 6:30pm (doors open at 6 PM). Use the Sustainable Skills, Technology and Life Science Centre entrance. Free. Info call Mieke 613-969-1782. CHRISTMAS LIGHTS and attractions at Upper Canada Village, Bus Tour, Fri. Dec. 8/17. Depart at 2 p.m.. Cost is $125 which includes Admission, Dinner and Transportation by Coach. Call Bonnie at 1 343 263 3053 to book your seat.BR

BRIGHTON OKTOBERFEST PARTY at Trinity-St. Andrew’s United Church, October 21, 5pm-7pm. Authentic German Food, Music Recorded by the Melodeers. Cost of tickets $10 adults, kids 10 and under free. Tickets available at the door or call Sharon at 613-475-2928. MR. KARAOKE Oct. 21st, at Brighton Legion Mr. Karaoke evening with host Terry Randall, at 6:00 p.m. in the club room. Come out for a fun night singing, dancing or listening to great music. MOTHS IN Your Backyard David Bree, Head Naturalist at Presqu’ile Provincial Park, will introduce a few of the hundreds of moth species that can be discovered right in your backyard! Quinte Field Naturalist meeting Oct. 23, 7pm Sills Auditorium, Bridge Street United Church, Belleville. All welcome. Donations B4 Section B - Thursday, October 19, 2017

gratefully accepted. GARDEN CLUB Oct. 24, Brighton Garden Club, 7:00 p.m. at the King Edward Community Centre, Brighton, Demo--How to create Christmas Wreaths & Planters with Conrad Grohl 613-4759563 or 613-475-4009 “BRIGHTON COMPUTER Club meets Oct. 24, 9.30 am at King Edward Park Community Centre. Membership $20 (first 2 meetings free), refreshments included. Bring your own cup for tea or coffee. www.brightoncomputerclub.org” HALLOWEEN DINNER and dance, Oct. 27th, Halloween Dinner/dance. Create your costume and come out to enjoy a great dinner, dance to a super entertainer Neil Carter and enter our costume contest. Tickets on sale $20 at the bar in the club room at the Brighton Legion. GOURMET BREAKFAST Oct. 29th: Ladies Auxiliary Gourmet Breakfast, 9:00 to 11:00 am, a full gourmet breakfast for $8.00. THE “TAKE Time Out” group in Brighton has been closed. TOPS – Take Off Pounds Sensibly meets weekly at the Brighton Royal Canadian Legion, 25 Park St Upper Level. Group is currently looking for new members, visit www.tops.org for more information. MEALS ON Wheels Deseronto: Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, a hot meal is delivered to your door around noon. Frozen meals available also. For more information call 613-396-6591. NORTH BRIGHTON Seniors Club looking for new members. Meeting 3rd Wednesday of month. Potluck lunch at noon followed by short business meeting, guest speakers and cards. Other social events through the year. Joan Walker:613-475-4631.

CAMPBELLFORD BLOOD PRESSURE Clinic, Oct. 20 2017 at Campbellford Memorial Hospital. 1-4 pm, Room 249 2nd Floor. All Welcome. ST. ANDREW’S Presbyterian Church is holding their annual Fall Rummage Sale, October 19th ,9-5pm, Oct. 20th, 9-5 pm and Oct. 21st ,9 to noon.( bag day) A wide selection of clothes, housewares, shoes, accessories , books, CDs, toys,DVDs. Call Betty for more info 705-632-1023 CHRISTMAS IN October, Oct. 21, 10AM 3PM, 8th Annual Christmas in October - Craft & Collectibles Show, 50 Bridge St. West. Over 25 vendors selling unique handmade gifts. Free admission and parking, BBQ 10am-2pm. Visit us on Facebook “Christmas in October-Craft & Collectible Show” BREASTFEEDING CLINIC and Support, Oct. 24, Noon to 2 pm, Ontario Early Years Centre (Rotary Hall, 179 Saskatoon Ave.). Appointments preferred; drop-ins welcome. Call the Health Unit toll-free at 1-866-888-4577. CHRIST CHURCH Anglican fall lunch Oct. 28, 11am-2pm. 54 Kent St. $9 includes soup, sandwhiches, dessert, tea, coffee, gluten free available. Bake, jewellery, treasure tables too. CAMPBELLFORD LEGION Br 103, 34 Bridge St. 705-653-2450. Thurs 7:30pm open 8-ball, Sunday 3-7pm open Jam Session . No cover.

CASTLETON CASTLETON UNITED Church Roast Pork Dinner, Oct. 28, 1815 Percy St., 5 to 7:30pm, Continuous Seating. Adults $15. Children ages 6 to 12 years $6. Ages 5 & under Free. Tickets available at Castleton General Store or at Downey

Pharmacy in Colborne,or by calling Marion 4-7pm, 3rd Wednesday of the month is beef 905-375-8155 or Linda 905-344-5084 or the or chicken dinner, 4th Sunday of the month is church office 905-349-2736 Euchre tournament Mondays -1pm Senior fitness group, 1pm Cribbage Tuesday -1pm Euchre, CODRINGTON Thursday -1pm Seniors fitness group Thursday HEALTH AND Wellness fair, Oct. 22, 10am- -6:30pm Snooker. 2pm Codrington Community Centre, 2992 Cty Rd. 30. Many Health Professionals; information GLEN MILLER and handouts No charge for admission. Informa- ROAST BEEF Dinner at Christ Church Glen Miller, Oct. 25 25 from 5:00 – 6:30 pm. Cost tion: 613-475-4005 BIG FAT Greek Cooking Class in Codrington. is $13.00 for adults, $7.00 for children 6-12. Oct. 24, 6-8 pm, $10. Codrington Community Children 5 and under are Free. Centre, 2992 County Rd 30. Please call Gail in HASTINGS our Brighton office: (613)475-4190 THE GUNSLINGERS Oct. 21st , The Gunslingers are coming , to Hastings Legion, ft. Art COLBORNE EVERY SATURDAY is Meat Draw, Colborne Lajambem genres include rock n roll, country Legion. Draws at 3pm, 4pm and 5pm. $8 for nine rock, oldies, etc. a very versatile band. Lasagna dinner with dessert. Dinner & Dance: $15. Just chances to win. Everyone is welcome. the dance: $5. Open to the public... cutoff date WELCOME TO THE OTHER SIDE: is an for tickets is Oct. 14. exciting exhibition of work by Canadian painter Bob “Omar” Tunnoch at The Colborne Art Gal- LAST CHANCE wine tour Oct. 22. The legion is lery.The Colborne Art Gallery, 51 King Street having a bus tour to 4 local wineries in and around East open Thursday - Sunday 12-4 pm. www. the Picton area, followed by a stop at Tomasso’s ItalianGrille in Trenton. Bus holds 33 people. thecolborneartgallery.ca . Call Legion and ask for Vicky Seeney to book SOUP LUNCH, Friday Oct. 20 Heritage United a seat: (705)696-2363. Open to members and Church, 13875 County Road 2, (Salem). 11:30 non-members. Must be at least 19. Cost is $35.pp am to 1:00 pm. Soup, Roll, Dessert, Beverage ACRYLIC PAINTING Oct. 26, 9am-12. $10. , $7 per person.” Hastings Civic Centre Call Campbellford program office: (705)653-1411. to register. DESERONTO MONDAY, WEDNESDAY, and Friday, a HASTINGS LEGION Oct. 27, Scare ee oke, hot meal is delivered to your door around noon. our annual Halloween karaoke ft. John Coburn. Frozen meals available also. For more informa- Doors open at 8:30 pm, dance at 9pm, $5 cover. Age of majority. Security on premise. tion call 613-396-6591. DENTAL SCREENINGS, Friday, October 20, FOXBORO 10 am to Noon, Ontario Early Years Centre (6 AUTUMN GOSPEL Sing, Oct. 21 6:30 pm, Albert St. E.). Free dental screenings for children. Chapel of The Good Shepherd, 513 Ashley St. Call: 1-866-888-4577 for more details. Lunch to follow. HAVELOCK TURKEY DINNER October 25 is the Annual BUS TRIP Samko & Vaughan Mills.Nov 5, $25 Turkey Dinner at Emmanuel United Church, 458 Ashley St. Continuous sittings from 4:30 til 7. per person, limited seating so call & book tickets. Sit down or takeout tickets are $15 adults, $5 Tina 705-927-8598 or angela 705-957-3065. for children ages 5 - 12 and free for preschool- R.C. Legion br 389 havelock leaving at 8:30 am ers. Reserve tickets with Bev at 613 969 1312. HALLOWEEN DANCE Oct 28, cost $5.00 with costume, $10.00 without costume , light FRANKFORD lunch provided, r.c. legion br 389 havelock FRANKFORD LIONS Annual Christmas HAVELOCK LEGION Havelock Lions Bid Craft show and sale, Oct. 28, Frankford Lions Euchre, Every First Sunday of the Month. 12 reg. Hall, 50 Centre St., 10-3. 1pm start $5 entry, $3 Moon Shots. Havelock FUNDRAISING DINNER at the Frankford Comunity Centre.Upstairs. Legion. Chili dinner on Oct. 30, 5pm with funds raised supporting veterans with PTSD. Guest IVANHOE speaker is Paul Nichols who served in Yugoslavia. WHITE LAKE Bethesda United Church, 132 Cost is $7 per person. anniversary, Oct. 29, 9:30 a.m. Refreshments HOLY TRINITY Anglican Church, 60 North to follow service. Corner of Springbrook Road Trent Street, is having our Soup’s On Luncheon and Highway 62. on October 26th from 11:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. Cost is $7.00. Take-outs available. Everyone MADOC MADOC LEGION Branch 363, Monday Nights welcome POPPY CAMPAIGN will be starting on Oct. Washer Toss 7pm Upstairs, Thursday Night 27. Legion will need volunteers to volunteer a Mixed Darts 7pm. few hours to help out selling poppies during EUCHRE AT Madoc Legion Branch 363 Euchre October 15th and 29th. 12:00 pm Registration. the campaign. MAPLEVIEW COMMUNITY Centre 1030 OCT. 21. Sacred Heart of Mary (Madoc) CWL Mapleview Road, Frankford, Foot Care ($25.00) is hosting their fall tea and bazaar. Please join and the Luncheon ($6.00) has been changed to us at O’Neill Parish Hall (behind the church on Monday, Oct. 16th and Oct. 30th due to Thanks- Prince Albert St.) between 11:00am-2:00pm giving for further information or appointments Enjoy a light lunch while browsing one of our please contact Jody @ 613-921-3246 or Sharon many tables for that perfect gift or home baked item. Admission cost $5.00 per person. 613-395-3751 ROYAL CANADIAN Legion, Branch 387, LADIES MEETING hosted by Ivanhoe WesFrankford 1st Friday of the month is TGIF leyan Standard Church Saturday, October 21, 10

AM. Special Guest - Joel Martin - Youth For Christ Director for the Ministry at Centre Hastings Secondary School, Madoc. Refreshments to follow. Come and bring a friend. AM INDOOR Walk: Mon, Wed, and Fri from 8:30 to 9:30am. Centre Hastings Secondary School, 129 Elgin St. Please contact Community Care for Central Hastings 1-800-554-1564 to pre-register if you are not already a member of the Indoor Walk Program PM INDOOR Walk: Mon Tues, Fri from 6:45 to 7:45pm. Centre Hastings Secondary School, 129 Elgin St. Please contact Community Care for Central Hastings 1-800-554-1564 to pre-register if you are not already a member of the Indoor Walk Program DESPERATELY NEEDED: volunteers. Volunteer drivers are desperately needed for Community Care Central Hastings and Meals on Wheels delivery. Please contact 613-473-9009, ccch@ccch.ca MADOC ACTIVE Living Exercise: Every Wednesday, at 10:30am.Timber Trails Retirement Residence,167 St. Lawrence St.E. Call 1-800-554-1564 to pre-register if you are not already a member of the Active Living Program

MARMORA MARMORA SOCIAL: Thursday, Oct.26, 43 Mathew Place begins at 11:30AM. Lunch is served at 12:00 noon. Please contact Community Care for Central Hastings 1-800-554-1564 to pre-register if you are not already a member of the Marmora Social program. ST. ANDREW’S United Church is having a Variety Concert on Friday Oct. 27 at 7pm. This is a free will event with proceeds going to Hospice. All are welcome. MEMORY CAFÉ, 2nd Thurs. of month, 1011:30am. Marmora Library W. Shannon Rm. 37 Forsyth St. 613-962-0892Bath CRIBBAGE TOURNAMENT Oct. 21 Cribbage tournament at Marmora Legion 11am, $20 per team. MEAT ROLL at Marmora Legion, Oct. 21, $2. per spin . MARMORA LEGION events Mixed Darts every Friday, 1pm-7pm. Jam Session every Monday, Club Rom 6pm-8pm. Bingo every Monday, Early Bids/Lightning, start at 6:45pm.

P.E. COUNTY 7TH TOWN Historical Society presents: A History of Women’s Institute and its 120 years of Community Service Oct. 28, 1:30pm, Ameliasburgh Community Hall, 13 Coleman Street, Ameliasburgh. TRAVEL WRITER, John Smith, will show photos of his recent Danube River Cruise through 5 countries in Eastern Europe, 7:00 pm on Fri. Oct. 20 at Rednersville-Albury Community Church, 2681 County Road 3 (Rednersville Road). REDNERSVILLE-ALBURY CHURCH Annual Spaghetti Dinner.Fri. Oct. 27, between 5:30 & 7:30 pm at 2681 Rednersville Road (County Road 3), Adults $12.00; children $6.00; under 6 free. Tickets available at the door. PRINCE EDWARD Community Theatre presents “Veronica’s Room” by Ira Levin on-stage in the Mt. Tabor Playhouse, October 21st. through October 29th. Directed by Bill McMahon. Visit www.pecommtheatre.ca for more info.

SEE MORE events on Page 5


EVENTS

PORT HOPE

MEN’S SEXUAL Health Clinic, October 24, 5-7 pm, Health Unit office (200 Rose Glen Rd.) in Port Hope. This sexual health clinic provides men with testing/treatment for Sexually Transmitted Infections and a chance to discuss their sexual health issues with a nurse. Appointments preferred, but walk-ins welcome. Call 1-866-888-4577, ext. 1205, for more information. SEXUAL HEALTH Clinic Oct. 26, 10 am to noon. The clinic provides clients with confidential access to cervical screening, low-cost birth control, pregnancy testing and sexual health teaching. For more information call the Health Unit at 1-866-888-4577, ext. 1205.

STIRLING STIRLING DINERS Oct.23, St Paul’s United Church, 104 Church St. Lunch is served at 12:00 noon. Please bring your own plate, cup, and cutlery. Please contact Community Care for Central Hastings 1-800-554-1564 to pre-register if you are not already a member of the Diner’s Program MEALS ON Wheels - Hot and Frozen meals are available year round. STIRLING CLUB 55 and Over regular euchre every Wednesday in Stirling Legion 1pm. $2 to play, prizes and treats. Also monthly birthday celebrations. Info Ruth 613-395-3559.

TRENTON TRENTON HORTICULTURAL Society meets Oct. 19. Trenton United Church, 85 Dundas Street East, 7 pm. guest speaker: Terry Sprague, “The Big Freeze”. How do plants and animals prepare for the winter, much less survive it? Guests $5. QUINTE BRANCH of Ontario Genealogical Society presents “The Skies Above Vimy Ridge and the Battle of Arras 1917” by Major William March. Everyone welcome, bring a friend. Quinte West Public Library, 7 Creswell Dr, Trenton 1-3 pm., Oct. 21. Visit www.

roostweb.ancestry.com/~canqbogs HAUNTED HISTORY Tour, Oct. 31, 7pm and 8pm. This is Family Friendly (no gouls or goblins) just Trenton pioneers stepping out of the past to tell their own stories. Seats are limited so please call or drop in to reserve your place: 613-394-1333. Hosted by The Trent Port Historical Society. TRENTON LIONESS Club Harvest Luncheon and Sale. Oct. 28 from 12:00 – 2:00 pm at the Lions Club Hall, 77 Campbell St. Includes Crafts, Bake Table, Silent Auction and Treasures From the Attic. Cost is $4 per person and includes lunch. Everyone welcome.

TWEED THE ONTARIO Presbyterian Chorus will be performing at St. Andrew’s Church, Oct.21, 7pm. There will be a Goodwill offering and then refreshments will be served afterwards. Everyone welcome. TWEED LIONS Charity Jamboree, Oct. 22,St. Edmunds Hall, Stoco, 1-4 pm. House band:Maurice O’Connell and Friends. $8 per person. Entertainers free. Open mic, dancing, canteen. THE ONTARIO Presbyterian Chorus is performing at St. Andrew’s Church again during the Sunday morning worship, Oct. 22, at 11:00 A.M. There will be a light lunch following the service. Everyone welcome. TWEED FOOT Care Clinic, Oct.20, 23 McCamon St. Call 1-800-554-1564 to make your first appointment. LEARN TO Curl, Oct. 22nd, 1-4 pm at The Land O’ Lakes Curling Club, 301 St. Joseph St.Drop in for free lessons with our experienced and enthusiastic instructors. www. curltweed.ca TWEED DINERS Oct.25,: Loin Club Hall, 65 Victoria St. N. Lunch is served at noon/ Please bring your own plate, cup, and cutlery. Please contact Community Care for Central Hastings 1-800-554-1564 to pre-register if you are not already a member of the Diner’s

Program FOWL SUPPER At St. Andrew’s PresbyWARKWORTH EVENING WITH Kathy Stinson, award COMMUNITY SUPPORT group “ Last terian (Mill St.) Oct. 28, 6:30 p.m. $15 per winning author of over 30 titles on Thursday, Breath” hosting a Death Cafe event at the adult. Tickets: Helen King 705-924-2467 OR Oct. 26, 7 pm at The Tweed Public Library, Warkworth Town Hall & Arts Center, 40 Marie Glover 705-924-9494. 230 Metcalf St. Autographed books and re- Main Street, Oct. 24 from 6:30-9p.m. No freshments available. For more information cost but would appreciate pre-registration WOOLER ST. ALPHONSUS CWL Country Bazaar in check www.tweedlibrary.ca “ at whisperingpinesstudios@gmail.com or the Church Hall, Wooler. Free Admission. LADIES AUXILIARY of the Tweed Legion call 705-924-3763. More info found at www. Baked goods and crafts. Sandwich, squares, barbphillips.ca offers Open Bingo at 7 pm, Oct. 26. Games tea & coffee for $5.00. 98 Cty Road 5. are in the Upstairs Hall and there will be games, prizes and the canteen will be open. L.A. Bingo is open to everyone, not just members. Information 613-478-1865 THE TWEED LEGION: OPEN 8-Ball on WednesDo you know someone who is involved in days starting at 6:30, worthwhile community service, is contributing Open Shuffleboard at 7 pm on Thursdays and while living with a limitation, has performed a Friday Open Darts at heroic act, demonstrates individual excellence, 7:30. We also hold or is going above and beyond to help others? bi-weekly Saturday If so, nominate them today! Euchre and Meat Draws at least once Nominations are open until November 30, 2017. a month. Next Draw Forms and information are available from this Nov. 4! Information newspaper, and from the Ontario Community 613-478-1865

Nominate a Junior Citizen.

TYENDINAGA FREE LUNCH Time Fitness with Active membership at the Tyendinaga Fitness Resource Centre. $20 for seniors (55 +) $30 for adults no taxes or contracts Open to the Public. Stop in classes 12:15pm Monday to Thursday. (613) 9622822.

Newspapers Association at ocna.org/juniorcitizen.

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ONTARIO JUNIOR CITIZEN AWARDS

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Want to see your ad included in our Homefinder section? Call Lorie Douglas at 613-966-2034 to find out how! Section B - Thursday, October 19, 2017 B5


TRAVEL

WWII sub moored at Maritime Museum at Manitowoc had to actually volunteer for this dangerous assignment, for it had the highest mortality rate of any branch of the military during WWII. I also learned that the majority of the time was spent in rather dull, very routine situations, but then would come that sudden adrenaline-rush of danger. It was summarized on the museum wall in the following way: “90%boredom and 10% terror”! I was also able to stroll through a reconstructed street of an historic Great Lakes port, step into the engine room of a Great Lakes ship from the early 1900s, see the inner workings of a torpedo, scan the harbour through a telescope, view a collection of remarkable fish carvings, and check out the Suspect Species Investigation Lab (where invasive species impacted the ecosystems of the Great Lakes). Furthermore, in the museum’s Model Ship Gallery, I was able to see several scale models of former Great Lakes sailing ships and freighters. I also learned about Lake Michigan car ferries that were used to transport passengers and railroad cars between ports – even through the storms of winter! I also saw a diorama featuring the Edmund Fitzgerald, lying within the depths of Lake Superior (and this reminded me of a previous visit of mine to Michigan’s Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum, where I heard a recording of our very own EXPERIENCE THE ROAD TO Gordon Lightfoot singing “The EXCELLENCE Wreck of the Edmund FitzgerPumpkinferno - Upper Canada Village ...................................... Saturday, October 28 ald”). Other fascinating parts of Royal Winter Fair......................................................................Saturday, November 11 this Wisconsin museum included its Vaughan Mills Shopping with Samko & Miko Toy & IKEA....Saturday, November 18 Wisconsin-Built Boat Gallery and Branson - Christmas Shows............................................................... November 18-25 its Underwater Treasures; the latter Shopping Watertown................................................................Saturday, November 25 section featured artifacts from shipUpper Canada Village - Alight at Night.....................................Saturday, December 9 wrecks found along the proposed Canada Blooms & National Home Show...................................Friday, March 9, 2018 Wisconsin-Lake Michigan NationPennsylvania Amish Country & Strasburg Railway...........................April 9-12, 2018 al Marine Sanctuary. Music Cities Spectacular - Nashville, Memphis & Branson ......April 22-May 1, 2018 As I explored this very informaCanadian Tulip Festival.............................................................Tuesday, May 15, 2018 St. Jacobs..................................................................................Saturday, May 26, 2018 tive maritime museum, I was struck “Come From Away”.........................Wednesday, April 18, May 30 & August 15, 2018 by the number of hands-on opporCape Cod Adventure ...........................................................................June 10-14, 2018 tunities that were provided – and Newfoundland Spectacular .................................................................July 12-30, 2018 I found that many of these would appeal to younger family members, Call us for your group transportation needs. We offer the most modern and diversified fleet in the area and along the 401 corridor. Our goal is to offer too. For example, in the Children’s SUPERIOR SERVICE at an OPTIMAL PRICE! Waterways Room, youngsters were 613-966-7000 or Toll Free 1-800-267-2183 able to launch boats onto a miniawww.franklintours.com ture Lake Superior, sail through the TICO Reg1156996 locks at Sault Ste. Marie, and then

BY JOHN M. SMITH

On my most recent visit to Wisconsin, I found a unique and very worthwhile destination for an exploration of the Great Lakes maritime history. After all, the Wisconsin Maritime Museum, located along the shoreline of Lake Michigan, at Manitowoc, is the largest maritime museum in the Midwest, and it’s a Smithsonian Affiliate. It’s also home to the USS Cobia, the best preserved WWII submarine in the entire nation. While in the museum itself, I was able to partake in a “Submarine Simulation Experience”, and this gave me a better understanding of what it would feel like to submerge. Also, an actual WWII battle from the USS Cobia’s War Patrol log was recreated. This made me think about how claustrophobic and trapped the crew must have felt as they worked and travelled beneath the water’s surface, never certain that they would ever reemerge to safety. I learned that all the crew

Boarding the restored WWII submarine. John M.Smith/Metroland

continue on, via Lake Michigan, to this particular destination. Also, in the Little Lakefarer’s Room, children could look through a periscope, read books about the Great Lakes, and play maritime games. When I was about to leave the museum itself, I picked up a card of a particular crew member of the USS Cobia (conveniently on display) – so that I could learn about his duties on board the submarine. After all, I was about to tour the actual submarine, so having this information would help me to better understand what the role of that individual was on this wartime vessel. As educational as I’d found the museum that I’ve been describing, the tour of the submarine itself was even more fascinating. I descended the stairs and entered inside the submarine, and I soon discovered that this was not a job or accommodations that I would enjoy at all! The halls were narrow, so I felt cramped; the doorways were very tiny and, therefore, difficult for a tall person to maneuver through. It was hard to imagine this small space being occupied by 80

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Call 1-844-466-2269 for possible delays or cancellations B6 Section B - Thursday, October 19, 2017

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crew members and officers! I was told that the average temperature down here would be about 90F/32C, so it was not a particularly comfortable work environment. I saw the officers’ barracks, the office area, the control room, and the dining room. I then discovered that there were only 4 bathrooms, and these were worked by a series of rather complicated levers. There were also a few showers – but not enough for daily showers for all! Indeed, I was certainly relieved when we got back out of there! The joy of fresh air and dry land! As I returned to the museum, I was told that some adventurers even pay extra to spend the night inside that submarine. I was glad that I’d experienced the submarine tour, but that was enough sub life for me! The Wisconsin Maritime Museum at Manitowoc was definitely worth checking out – and I’m pleased that I visited. For More Information: www.wisconsinmaritime.org .

Formerly

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METROLAND MEDIA AUCTIONS

QUALITY COLLECTORS ESTATE AUCTION UNRESERVED - NO BUYERS PREMIUM Sunday October 29 2017 at The Smiths Falls Civitan Hall 12468 Hwy 15, Smiths Falls Doors open 9am - Auction starts 10 am 1500 + die cast cars, tractors, trucks & NASCAR 1:18 & 1:24 plus mini advertising cars and trucks, example Canadian tire, Shell, John Deere, Texico etc. Hot wheels, Matchbox, corgi, Massive selection of collector bells, cast iron bells, showcases, Gas pumps, Fire Hydrants, Fire escape ladder, Gurney cast wood heater, Advertising signs, cast iron wheels & decorative cast & implements, 1958 Mercury pickup doors, grill, bumper & more vehicle parts and pieces. Antique tools, wooden pulleys. See website for 800 + pictures and expect surprises day of Auction. This is an Estate of one mans collection. Cash. Debit. Visa. MasterCard. American Express. No reserves. No buyers premium. All sales subject to HST. Now accepting quality Antiques, Vintage, and Collectible items for upcoming fall & winter auctions. Call or text Dan 613-285-4224. Prefer cash & pick up on the spot ? We do that too.

CLS7783281_1019

DAN PETERS AUCTION Home Office (613) 284-8281 Dan Peters Cell: (613) 285-4224 email: info@danpetersauction.com Website: www.danpetersauyction.com

Visit us online www.InsideBelleville.com

AUCTION SALE ESTATE OF PETER AND GEORGIA BEARE PLUS INCLUSIONS 170 ELMWOOD DRIVE, BELLEVILLE, ONT. WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 25TH AT 10:00 AM 2 miles EAST of Belleville on Old Highway 2 and turn NORTH onto Elmwood Drive for ½ mile. VEHICLES – selling approx. 12 noon -vintage 1950 MGTD 2 door roadster with 4 speed, restored – certified, excellent condition-2465 miles; vintage 1965 MGB 2 door roadster with 4 speed , restored – excellent – 16000 miles- certified; 2007 VW 4 door city Golf with automatic transmission , 140,000kms- good running condition- sells as is; ARTWORK – selling approx. 12:30 artworks including signed pieces by AJ Casson, AY Jackson, Franz Johnston, Manly MacDonald, William Sawyer, Frank Panabaker, Edward Patry, Henri Masson, JL Shadbolt, M Kallmeyer, BW Leader, Alan Collier, RW Burton, Homer Watson, watercolours, prints and sketches; ANTIQUE FURNITURE including pine corner cupboards with open front, pine corner cupboard with upper glass doors, pine 9 ft harvest style table, pine step back cupboard with upper glass doors, flat to the wall pantry cupboard, pine chimney cupboard, pine pail benches, pine tables, sideboards, chest of drawers with birds eye maple, walnut washstand, oak cheval mirror, formal hall table with inlay, miniature furniture, walnut dresser mirror, wall mirrors, centre pedestal side table, walnut roll top desk, formal mahogany arm chairs, single drawer side tables, mission style wardrobe, cherry wardrobe, hanging glass front cupboard, walnut ladies writing table, claw foot games table, comb back arm chair, drop leaf table, desk top oak file box, travelling document boxes, Seth Thomas wall clock, IBM time clock, wool area carpet, COLLECTIBLES – SELL AT 10:00 AM Cranberry glass, Frost and Clear Westward Ho glassware, collection of Bennington sponge ware, collection of treenware including butter prints, ladles; clay pipes, garage collectibles- tins, signage; Gingerbread clocks, illuminated globe,WATCHES Patek Philippe Perpetual Calendar Moonphase Automatic Watch with box,Omega Speedmaster Broad Arrow GMT Chronograph Automatic,Masonic 1923 Elgin Gold pocket watch, Antique .800 Silver REMONTOIR Swiss Watch, WW2 Bugarian Watch Compass; Scientific pieces including Torsion balance weigh scales, metallurgical microscope, Short and Mason Humidity gauge, nautical compasses, compass binnacle, sextant, Walkers“Excelsiorâ€?nautical measure, ships wheel;COINAGE several Canadian coins including 1921 50 cent; gold coins and pieces; American Morgan dollars, Canadian spelter figurine, volt meters; ship port hole, gun sighting telescope; vintage aircraft propeller, Blauplunkt “Florenzâ€? radio, German made wall clock, Russian military belt, Russian flag, tin toys, apple basket, atlas’, paper collectibles, miners lamp, rail lamps, oil lamps, flo blue, banjo, guitar, violin, fine jewelry, numerous other articles. VIEWING 8 AM – SALE TIME – DAY OF SALE. NO BUYERS PREMIUM ALL SALES FINAL SAME DAY REMOVAL REQUIRED TERMS- CASH OR CHEQUE OWNER & AUCTIONEER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENT OR INJURY DAY OF SALE SULLIVAN AUCTIONEERS 3ODLQĂ€HOG www.sullivanauctions.com

AUCTION SALE ESTATE OF SYLVAIN CANFYN 809 RICHMOND STREET, R.R.#7 BRIGHTON, ONT. SATURDAY OCTOBER 28TH AT 10:30 AM Exit NORTH off 401 Highway at Brighton ( Interchange 509) onto Highway 30 for 1 mile and turn WEST onto County Road 21 for 1/4 mile and turn NORTH onto Richmond Street for 2 miles. TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT. Massey Ferguson 165 diesel tractor; Massey Ferguson 85 diesel tractor ; International 806 diesel tractor; Delhi Holland transplanter, Massey Ferguson 33 seed drill, 21 ft single axle dual wheel wagon, Delhi 3 point hitch 6 ft double auger snow blower, Balthes Harvestor hi – boy, 3 point hitch 6 ft root actor, vegetable trailer, canvas conveyor; VEHICLES 1999 GMC Silverado pick up truck – running; 1973 Dodge “Titanoâ€? 24 ft motor home, 1993 Buick Park Lane 4 door sedan, 1988 Mazda 4 door sedan, 1960’s single axle dump truck, YARD EQUIPMENT AND RECREATION. John Deere LA 155 riding lawn mower – like new; John Deere 116 riding lawn mower, John Deere 57 riding lawn mower, John Deere garden tiller, manual pallet truck, Sunray 18 ft fibreglass bow rider pleasure boat with 60 hp Johnson outboard and trailer; 12 ft aluminum fishing boat, Evinrude 6 hp outboard motor, vintage Rupp 440 snowmobile, Craftsman 10’radial arm saw, Campbell Hausfield portable air compressor, Lincoln 225 electric welder, blacksmith forge and blower, power tools, scrap metal, numerous other articles. TERMS- CASH OR CHEQUE OWNER & AUCTIONEER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENT OR INJURY DAY OF SALE SULLIVAN AUCTIONEERS 3ODLQĂ€HOG www.sullivanauctions.com

ESTATE AUCTION SALE OF JIM CHIDDLE, NAPANEE, ONT. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28/17 10:00 A.M. ON SITE DIRECTIONS. From Hwy 401 at Napanee take Hwy. # 41 north to Goodyear Road. Turn east and follow to sale site at 205 Goodyear Road. Massey Ferguson 250 2wd diesel tractor with cab & MF 232 loader, set of pallet forks, 3 PTH 6 ft. scraper blade, loader mount snow plow, 3 PTH levelling blade, Laser 3PTH 4 ft. roto tiller, riding mower, PowerFist sand blasting unit, cyclone spreader, manual tire changer, water tank on trailer, single axle utility trailer, 12 ton hydraulic press, pallet cart, 3 PTH hydraulic wood splitter, feed cart, Craftsman 18 H.P. garden tractor with snow blower, Ariens mower deck, Delta ´ Âľ Ă RRU PRGHO GULOO SUHVV HQJLQH MDFN WRQ HQJLQH cherry picker, Lincoln 225 arc welder, Lincoln SP-170 welder on cart, acetylene tanks, cart & torches, new 16.5 + 3 HQJLQH DLU FRPSUHVVRU PLFUR Ă€FKH XQLWV ZLWK FDUGV PRVWO\ PDULQH DIĂ€OLDWHG PDULQH PDQXDOV ODUJH TW\ RI new marine parts, Milwawkee chop saw, Dewalt sawzall, Snap On porta-power, Snap On reamers, 2 tool cabinets, 2 bolt cabinets with contents, 2 steel welding tables, hand SRZHU WRROV ODUJH TW\ RI KDUGZDUH ´&Âľ FODPSV D QXPEHU of cabinets, oils & lubricants, chains, wood stove, Berkel meat saw, wood stove, big “Oâ€? pipe, battery chargers, FKDLQ VDZV Ă RRU MDFN MDFN VWDQGV ERWWOH MDFNV ODUJH TW\ RI ZUHQFKHV VRFNHWV VFUHZGULYHUV KDPPHUV HWF TW\ RI HTXLSPHQW SDUWV IW DOXPLQXP ODGGHU VWHHO GRRU IUDPH TW\ RI OXPEHU VWHHO VWRUDJH FDELQHWV SLOH RI VFUDS PHWDO numerous other pieces associated with a mechanical repair shop. See my web site for detailed list & photos. AUCTIONEER: DOUG JARRELL ZZZ GRXJMDUUHOODXFWLRQV FRP

AUCTION SALE WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25/17 AT 5:00 P.M. DOUG JARRELL SALES ARENA, BELLEVILLE 5RXQG NLWFKHQ WDEOH OHDI FKDLUV FKHVWHUÀHOG FKDLU double sofa bed, electric lift chair, Lazy boy recliner, coffee & end tables, double bed/ box spring & pillow top mattress, dressers/mirrors & chests of drawers, cedar chest, blanket rack, glass & china, prints & frames, lamps, linens & bedding, collectibles, old records, CDs, K’Archer power washer, garden & small shop tools & numerous other pieces. See my web site for detailed list & photos. AUCTIONEER: DOUG JARRELL 613-969-1033 www.dougjarrellauctions.com

AUCTION SALE DAVE & PAULA GRAY 1 MARY AVE. WELLINGTON, ONT FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27TH at 11am 1/2 mile WEST of Wellington LCBO on Highway 33 YARD EQUIPMENT & TOOLS: John Deere 277 riding lawn mower, Agri-Fab trail type fertilizer spreader, 48� grass sweeper, lawn roller, yard aerator, power lawn mower, Skil Saw 10� table saw, Rigid mitre saw & stand, King scroll saw, bench-top drill press, power tools, floor jack, hand tools, Fibre step ladder, aluminum extension ladder, builders hardware, work bench. COLLECTIBLES: garage tins & gas cans, Canadian Tire die cast toys, miniature irons, glasswares, porcelain dolls, china. ANTIQUE FURNITURE: oak dining table with 4 chairs & sideboard, antique walnut bedroom furniture including; 4 poster bed, dresser, vanity & chest of drawers, ornate oak sideboard, antique cradle, Masonic lodge chair, Lyre pedestal marble top table, walnut sofa table, oak display cabinets, mahogany arm chairs, Empire style sofa, Victorian wicker pram, vintage kitchen chrome table & chairs, wicker fernery, Rattan love seat & chairs, 2pc chesterfield suite, antique hanging lamps, hump back trunk, prints & pictures, numerous other articles. TERMS- CASH OR CHEQUE OWNER & AUCTIONEER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENT OR INJURY DAY OF SALE SULLIVAN AUCTIONEERS 3ODLQÀHOG www.sullivanauctions.com

AUCTION SALE SNYDER AUCTION 17203 HIGHWAY 62, R.R.#1 ELDORADO, ONT. “BANNOCKBURNâ€? MONDAY OCTOBER 23RD AT 11:00 AM 8 miles NORTH of Madoc on Highway 62 to Hamlet of Bannockburn VEHICLE AND MOTORCYCLE 2004 Lincoln Town Car 4 door sedan- 96,000 kms- running condition- sells as is; 2004 Suzuki DR 200 Enduro motorcycle 32,000 kms- good running condition – sells as is; ANTIQUE AND COLLECTIBLES oak glass front china cabinet, oak slope front drop front desk, English oak drop front desk, walnut claw foot games table, oak cased Bell style mantle clock with inlay, walnut corner curio, flamed mahogany finish armoire, ladies walnut writing desk, oak hall seat, mahogany nest of tables, Malcolm mahogany finish bedroom suite, mothers helper cupboard, centre pedestal side table, hand crafted multi drawer jewel cabinet, vintage telephone, toys, tins, weigh scales, paintings, prints, sketches, YARD EQUIPMENT AND TOOLS Craftsman 17.5 hp riding lawn mower, Craftsman 12 hp snow blower, Cyclo Action gas powered limb chipper, Craftsman 10â€?table saw, Craftsman band saw, Craftsman radial arm saw, power tools, hand tools, bench grinder, hardware, garden tools, exercise equipment, numerous other articles. TERMS- CASH OR CHEQUE OWNER & AUCTIONEER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENT OR INJURY DAY OF SALE SULLIVAN AUCTIONEERS 3ODLQĂ€HOG www.sullivanauctions.com Section B - Thursday, October 19, 2017 B7


“Our Town” a delightfully different type of theatre BY JACK EVANS

Imagine a small town about the size of Stirling and transplant it to rural New Hampshire. It would not be much different, especially in the early years of the 20th century. The Belleviille Theatre Guild’s current offering, “Our Town,” a Pulitzer prize winning full-length play by Thornton Wilder could ring true to any of the small towns across the Quinte area. Wilder’s goal was not to focus on geography, but on life – ordinary life as lived by ordinary citizens in an ordinary community. This writer contends that for a show that has such a large cast and finding an ensemble that captures every nuance of the many characters and their interaction is a rare feat. Most of the credit can go to director Ian Feltham, who obviously knew exactly what he was looking for and managed to raid the guild’s immense talent stable to find it. From child actors to love-struck teenagers to doting parents to senior citizens, every line and role rings true. Audiences might be surprised at the lack of props and sets, but that is precisely what Wilder envisioned and this cast delivers it. Holding it all together is veteran actor Bill Petch who is the stage manager of a theatre, acting as ringmaster, introducing the town and its denizens and locations and directing them when to come on and go off. Young boys deliver newspapers; the editor of the local weekly seeks story ideas; a hard-working doctor delivers babies and heals sick bodies; a

“Our Town” scene – left to right, young lovers George Gibbs, played by Josh Lambert and Emily Webb, played by Skylar Pierson, flirt across their neighbouring windows while their respective mothers, Jana Busse, left and Kayla Alexandropoulos are below. Dianna Purchase as Mrs.Soames is in the middle. Submitted photo by Greg Pinchin

wise police officer keeps his eye on the young people without punishment; knowing mothers coach their daughters in life’s mysteries. At the end, there is a graveyard where most

of the characters, young and old, sit stolidly, wondering whether anyone living really understands the magical beauty of life, to which the Stage Manager replies, “Hardly anyone.

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Maybe a few poets and artists.” The graveyard scene does not imply tragedy, only reality. There are also a few good chuckles along the way. The setting faithfully created on stage is the years spanning 1901 at the outset to 1913 at the end. The cast was so polished that in recognition of their collective effort, the names of the key characters at least, should be named: Gerry Fraiberg as Dr. Gibbs; Jana Busse as Mrs. Gibbs; Peter Wood as newspaper editor Wally Webb and Kayla Alexandropoulos as Mrs. Webb; playing the Dr. Gibbs children are wannabe farmer George, by Josh Lambert and younger sister Rebecca by Tayva Mestre ; Skylar Pierson is the Webb daughter, and her brother is Kael Mestre; Mo Leslie plays both the dry professor for a history lesson and the alcoholic church musician; Enno Busse plays the kind-hearted police officer. Dianna Purchase plays the neighbourhood busybody with something to say for every occasion. Several characters play more than one role. But all play it to the heart from the milkman with his imaginary horse to the undertaker and audience participants. Sound effects are marvellous, from an early morning rooster crowing, to a train whistle to the milkman’s horse and bottle clanging. This may not be theatre that you are used to, but audiences are responding warmly. The show continues through Oct.28. For tickets or information, call the Box Office, (613) 967-1442. The box office opens at 3 p.m. week days.

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B8 Section B - Thursday, October 19, 2017


Take it Outside

Backyard fire all good if you plan properly

By Carson Arthur At this time of the year, one of the most popular additions to the backyard is the outdoor fire pit with seating around it.

Having an area for entertaining that is separate to the patio table has been featured in magazines, websites and all types of social media. Even the designs that I’ve been doing for homes in downtown areas seem to always include high-end wood or gas burning fixtures. Also consider that many homeowners aren’t quite ready to give up on outdoor entertaining. By adding a beautiful heat source, being outside by the fire in October is not such a bad idea! So it makes perfect sense to highlight some of the things you may not have thought about when setting up your own backyard hearth. Before you go any further in exploring if an outdoor fireplace is right for you, check your municipal bylaws. Some areas ban outdoor burning altogether. Others allow outdoor fireplaces, but regulate the smoke to ensure that your neighbours are not disturbed. Some municipalities require

that grills be in place so that these fire pits fall under barbeque laws. Just because a store in your area sells you a fireplace doesn’t mean that you can actually use it. Make sure to go online to check the bylaws for your area or stop in at the municipal offices to ask.

If however you’re like me and love the smell of burning wood, the sound of crackling logs and can spend hours watching flames and coals, then there is nothing like an outdoor wood-burning fireplace. That said, burning wood always comes with lots of risks and rewards. Live fires are unpredictable and as a result, can be dangerous if not handled properly. While the

size of the fire is smaller than a burn-pile, local fire permits may also be applied to your home if you are planning a wood-burning fire pit. When it comes to fire safety, make sure that you allow for at least 6ft. of space between the edge of the fireplace and the chairs. This may seem like a lot given that most people like to sit closer to the fire than 6’. The reality is that sparks can easily fly from natural burning fires and people may need to move backwards in a hurry. If you don’t have sufficient clearance, choosing a natural gas or propane option would be a safer solution. If you do go with wood burning, then make sure you have either a source of water or a fire extinguisher nearby. Also consider where the best spot is for you fire pit and what surface it is going on. The best surface solution is always stone. Whether its manmade pavers, natural flag-

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stone or even gravel, stone is perfect for dispersing heat or flying sparks. I have created fireplaces on wood decks but I always make sure that the area under and around the fire pit is either gravel or concrete to help diffuse the heat and to prevent any sparks from landing on wood. When it comes to locations, wood-burning fire pits need to be away from the house. Smoke always seems to get into open windows or patio doors. Also choose a spot that is away from large trees or anything that is burnable. Even patio umbrellas can be a hazard if they are to close to the fire and the wind direction changes. Having an outdoor fireplace can be an amazing way to spend a summer night or even host an après ski party. Just make sure you do a little research first, you don’t want to spend money on a feature that you can’t actually use.

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Middleton murder accused deported from Bermuda Bermuda - One of two men jailed and later cleared in a case of judicial procedure gone horribly wrong in the 1996 death of Belleville teen Rebecca Middleton in Bermuda has been deported from the island nation to his native Jamaica. Bermuda’s The Royal Gazette reported Kirk Mundy was transported from federal prison in Bermuda to Jamaica by private jet on Oct. 4. Becky Middleton was visiting a friend she knew from Belleville when the friend and her father, Rick Meens, lived in Belleville. The two girls were out for an evening and met Mundy and later co-accused Justis Smith. Evidence said the pair accepted rides from the men on scooters, but got separated. Becky, who was 17 at the time, was later brutally raped and murdered and her body was found by the roadside at remote Ferry Reach, near the island’s airport, in the early hours of July 3, 1996. According to reports in the Royal Gazette, Mun-

dy was sentenced to five years behind bars in 1996 after he pleaded guilty to a charge of being an accessory to the murder of Middleton. His co-accused, Smith, was cleared after then Justice Vincent Meerabux threw out the case against him. A later bid to try both Mundy and Smith for the murder, after new forensic evidence was uncovered, failed because Britain’s Privy council, in 1998, ruled that the case could not go ahead as it would be seen as re-trying the case on the same facts as the earlier acquittals. The Privy Council also ruled that Meerabux’s decision on Smith could not be overturned. The handling of the case, particularly the failure to reopen proceedings against the two suspects, caused outrage in Bermuda and overseas. Human rights lawyer Cherie Booth, the wife of former British prime minister Tony Blair, called the case “a terrible, terrible story — one that no family

Kirk Mundy is seen being escorted to court in this undated photo. Bermuda Royal Gazette Photo

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B10 Section B - Thursday, October 19, 2017

murder of Rebecca Middleton. “Nor, of course, does it bring Becky back or erase the international shock that for many is not forgotten.” Mundy had been held in prison for the past two decades on a slew of other charges, including robbery and later possession of marijuana found in his cell in prison. Authorities in Bermuda had been working for years to deport him to his native Jamaica, reports said.

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Packed lineup at Old Church Theatre

Monday October 23 brings Roxanne de Bastion to the stage at Old Church Theatre on Bonisteel Road, Quinte West. Submitted photo.

Quinte West - The Old Church Theatre is bringing a jam-packed line up of entertainment this week. Part 2 of the One Act play festival, ‘Sharpen the Acts,’ begins with three new plays on Thursday October 19 and Friday October 20 with both shows at 7:30 p.m. and a matinee on Sunday October 22 at 2p.m. Part 1 was held this past summer to sellout audiences at each performance. Improv musical trio, the Three Martinis appear Saturday October 21 at 7:30 p.m. Dan Fewings and Rob Phillips have been ‘making it up on the spot’ as the Three Martinis for more than three years now and kept their audiences laughing and always coming back for more. Phillips, a wellknown jazz pianist and former Second City music director, tickles the keys with amazing musicality and creativity. Fewings on the other hand seems to channel the likes of Jackie Gleason, John Candy with a side of Groucho Marx. The Third Martini is always a surprise – a bass player, a guitarist or a drummer completes this improvisational, music comedy trio. This time it’s part of the Old Church family, Howard Baer on the upright bass. The Martinis handcraft their songs specific to each audience. They cajole the audience into writing titles for songs never before written and then before your eyes, with no tricks or mirrors they write those songs, music and all. It’s truly a must see performance. Monday October 23 brings Roxanne de Bastion. Roxanne reminds us that great lyrics do have a place in pop music. With a nod to 1960s psychedelia, Roxanne delivers thoughtful social and personal commentary soaked in piano & cello arrangements. Born in Berlin to a musical, bilingual family, she started composing and performing at the age of 15. Soon after, Roxanne moved to London equipped with her guitar, her songs and a one-way ticket. Glastonbury’s legendary acoustic stage, a showcase at Folk Alliance in the USA, opening for Hayes Carll, Martha Wainwright, Ricky Ross and Thea Gilmore as well as touring in her own right across Europe only ac-

count for a handful of events that filled by Roxanne’s diary over the past twelve months. Her debut album and follow-up EP garnered support from BBC6, Xfm, The Sunday Times, R2 Magazine to name a few. The Old Church Theatre is at 940 Bonisteel Road in Quinte West and advance tickets can be purchased at www.olchurch.ca of by calling Lesley Bonisteel at 613-848-1411.

Section B - Thursday, October 19, 2017 B11


Campbellford residents react to Mayor Hector Macmillan’s death BY SUE DICKENS

Campbellford — Speaking to people on the streets of Campbellford a couple of days following news of the death of Trent Hills’ Mayor Hector Macmillan, the comments were universally of one mind - Hec will be missed. Frank Vaughan, past president of the Campbellford Farmer’s Market: “For my part Hector was always good to me. As long as I was involved in the farmer’s market he was good to the farmer’s market. I found him to be somebody you could be direct with. You could argue with him and he could still respect you at the end of the day. Whether or not you love him or hate him a man who can get a plurality of the vote for 20 odd years ... that’s remarkable.” Ron (and wife Sylvia) Rundle: “He put up a good fight. He’s been there a long time as mayor. He’s going to be missed.” Ken Dehne owner of Ken’s Stereo and TV “He’s a good friend. Probably the best mayor we’ve ever had. In terms of a legacy he’s done so much for this community. He cared about everybody in this community ... not even himself, it was never about himself.” Getting emotional Dehne added, “I visited him about 10 days ago so I knew he wasn’t doing well,” adding, “Sandy (wife) is a very good friend of mine, her parents took me in as a kid” Tom and Rose-Marie Kerr of Kerr’s Corner Books: “Hector and I sparred a lot over the years. We didn’t always see eye to eye but I genuinely believe that Hector was for the town,” said Tom Kerr.

Rose-Marie Kerr added, “We really really wish the family the very deepest of condolences and hope that they find their way to some peace. They have been through a lot. He will be a mayor that served a number of terms well supported by the constituents and he will never be forgotten.” Brenda Tucker, manager of Gunn Johnston Card and Gifts: “I feel Hector was a role model to so many other people that have his disease. He fought it and he did a great job and he tried to help other people. The impact to our community is so strong. Yes it is important to his family but for the people in the community so many people looked up to Hector and are going to miss him.”

Commenting on those who had disagreements with the mayor, he added, “That’s politics, you can’t escape that. We went to school together from kindergarten up through the grades so I know him on a personal level. I think he would have been elected again if he ran for mayor. There’s no question. He will be missed.”

Martha Murphy, executive director, Campbellford/Seymour Community Foundation: “One of our fondest memories was the collaboration with the municipality, led by the mayor, to build three playgrounds in Campbellford, Hastings and Warkworth on the same day, with over 300 volunteers. With grandson in tow, HecTom Sharpe of Sharpe’s Food Market: tor was so very proud of the members of our “We feel sad ... he has grandchildren and he community, who came together on that rainy day did Relay for Life. He’s done a very good job to build three unique playgrounds. We wrapped as mayor. Most people I know speak fondly of up the day with a Hector-style barbecue at the him.” Warkworth Legion to celebrate, it was a very spe-

cial day.” Donna Bennett, co-founder and marketing director Westben: “I am very sorry to hear of Hector's passing. We grew up in Campbellford together and I always felt that Hector believed in the possibilities and potential for Trent Hills. Hector worked hard for what he thought would benefit the community and he did so with great passion. I am grateful for the support that Hector gave to create the Clock Tower Cultural Centre to develop a hub of arts in the centre of Campbellford. “

Cathy Beamish, president Rotary Club of Campbellford: “On behalf of the Rotary Club of Campbellford I would like to send our condolences to Sandy and family. Hector will be missed for his passion and dedication to the community of Trent Hills.”

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Those on social assistance will see 2% raise in pay BY JACK EVANS

Recipients of social assistance in Ontario can look forward to a modest raise this month. New payment rates and other benefit increases announced earlier by the province are supposed to phase in during October. This year’s increase will be two per cent, which will apply to temporary care assistance, adults living with parents, dependents with dependents rates, advanced age allowance , remote communities allowance, personal needs allowance, special boarder allowance and guide dog benefits. \ The raise for a single person on Ontario Works should translate into $14 a month, said Erin Rivers, director for Hastings County. She also noted that as of Jan. 1 2018, the local portion for welfare will be completely covered by the province. Other improvements Rivers report-

ed include increases to asset limits so people can retain more of their savings or liquid assets starting Jan.1. Limits will go from $2,500 for single persons to $10,000 and to $15,000 for couples plus $500 for each subsequent family member. Cash gifts exemptions will go to $10,000 from $6,000. Rivers said her department’s staff “will continue to monitor” these developments and report back to the committee as required.

The regional Community and Family Services Department is now placing new signs designed by staff members. Department director Erin Rivers is shown here with committee chair, Coun. Garnet Thompson of Belleville assists her is displaying the sign sample to the committee. Jack Evans/Metroland

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After a brief illness, and with Dennis, all of her children, grandchildren and their spouses by her side, Barbara passed away on October 12, 2017 in Belleville. Barbara was the beloved wife of Dennis for over 56 years. She will be greatly missed by her children, Marian (Gary), Kathleen (Dennis), and David (Wendy) and her 7 grandchildren. Barbara was involved in Pickering minor hockey, softball and ringette, ladies slowpitch, and other groups. In Quinte West, she devoted time to Friends of the Trail, senior programs in Batawa and enjoyed golfing at Oak Hill. A Celebration of Life will be held Saturday, October 21, from 1-5pm at the FRANKFORD FUNERAL CHAPEL (613-398-6400), 40 North Trent Street, Frankford. If desired, donations may be made to the Heart and Stroke Foundation. Online Condolences at www.rushnellfamilyservices.com

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B14 Section B - Thursday, October 19, 2017

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AUTUMN GOSPEL SING OCT 21. 6:30 PM Chapel of The Good Shepherd 513 Ashley St. Foxboro Lunch to follow SPRING BROOK UNITED CHURCH Annual Anniversary Supper coming up on Saturday, October 21st, 2017. Continuous settings beginning at 4:00 pm. Turkey, stuffing, all the fixings and homemade pies. Tickets available at the door Adults $12.50 Children $5.00 Preschoolers Free

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ROBINSON: Wanda “Jean� Passed away peacefully, at her residence in Madoc, on Friday, October 13, 2017. Jean Robinson, of Eldorado, in her 84th year. Wife of the late William “Bill� Robinson. Mother of David, Charles (Bonnie), Cyndy (Dan Winterburn) and John (Bev). Grandmother of Sarah, Ben, Jon, Andy, Johnathan, David and Steve. Great grandmother of Keith, Sapphire, Serenity, Austin, Ella, Lily, Autumn, Sophia and Solana. Jean will be missed by her family and friends. Cremation has taken place. The family will receive friends at Madoc Methodist Church on Saturday, October 21 from 1-2 p.m. with a celebration of life service at 2:00 p.m. Light luncheon following. Private family interment at O’Hara Cemetery. Honouring Mom’s wishes, in lieu of flowers, donations to the Canadian Cancer Society or Heart of Hastings Hospice would be appreciated. Arrangements, McConnell Funeral Home, Madoc. www.mcconnellfuneralhome.ca

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FITNESS & HEALTH GET FIT FOR FALL Zumba Fitness 1 hour classes. Mondays 5:30 pm Brighton Masonic Hall, Wednesdays 6 pm at ENSS single gym. Call Cynthia 613-847-1183.

FOR SALE CL472835

ANNOUNCEMENT

Call for more information Your local DEALER

WANTED

WOOD HEAT SOLUTIONS www.chesher.ca

FRANKFORD, ON 613.398.1611 BANCROFT, ON 613.332.1613

WANTED - WANTED (Unwanted or scrap) Cars and trucks running or not. $ Cash paid $ Fast Pick Up 613-847-9467

DEATH NOTICE

DEATH NOTICE

IN MEMORIAM

IN MEMORIAM

In Memoriam DOUGLAS G MILLER Jan 27, 1930-Oct 17, 2016

In Loving Memory Diane Kuipers Our loving wife and mother was called home by her Heavenly Father on Sunday, October 8th, 2017 in her 79th year after enduring many health challenges. We are thankful that she is now in the presence of her faithful Lord and Savior. Beloved wife of Henry Kuipers for 57 beautiful years. Loving Mom of Len (Cathy), John (Maryann), Jacqueline (Harry) Vink, Lou (Sherry), Larry (Julianne) and Joe (Jessie). Dear Oma of Kaitlyn (Karel), Tyley (Mike), Jordan, Justin (Christine), Melissa (Noah), Kayla (Justin), Ben (Ashley), Sara, Tim (Torie), Jessica, Lucas, Matt, Brittany (Justin), Jake (JoAnna), Josh, Cecilia, Grace, Samuel, and Gabriel. Precious Great Oma of James, Arie, Isaac, Thomas, Jack, Olivia, Mikaela, Hayden, Tyson, Emma, Max, Jane, Caleb, Ava, Tripp, Brooks and Elena. Cherished sister of Luke (Alberta) Veltman, Albert (Lori) Veltman, Lubbie (late Alard), Lambert (Alice) Veltman; sister-in-law of Tim (Dorothy) Kuipers and Alice Kuipers Suurdt. Predeceased by her parents John & Lubbie Veltman; her sisters Fay & her husband Evert Fledderus, Annie Postma, Ria & her surviving husband Bill (Karen) Winklehorst; her brother-in-laws John & his wife Elsie Kuipers, Bill & his wife Marion Kuipers. Diny will be truly missed by nieces, nephews, extended family and many friends. A special thank you to all the staff at Crown Ridge Nursing Home and VON Adult Day Program for all their genuine compassionate care and support. Family and friends are invited to the Ebenezer Christian Reformed Church, 18 Fourth Avenue, Trenton on Thursday, October 12th, 2017 from 2-4 PM & 7-9PM. Funeral Service will take place at the church on Friday, October 13th, 2017 at 11 AM. Interment at Carrying Place Annex Cemetery. Reception to follow back at the church. As expressions of sympathy, donations to the Ebenezer Christian Reformed Church - Friendship Group would be appreciated by the family. Online condolences at www.weaverfuneralhomes.com

NEW & USED APPLIANCES USED REFRIGERATORS Stoves, washers, dryers, freezers, 3 months old & up. Sold with written guarantee. Fridges $100. and up.

NEW APPLIANCES At the lowest prices in the area. Trade-ins accepted on new appliances. Big selection to choose from.

We’re missing you a little more Each time we hear your name, We’ve cried so many tears Yet our heart’s broken just the same, We miss our times together Things in common we could share, %XW QRWKLQJ ¿OOV WKH HPSWLQHVV Now you’re no longer here, :HœYH KDG VR PDQ\ SUHFLRXV memories To last our whole life through, Each one of them reminders Of how much we’re missing you. Douglas, Dad and Papa Love you forever and always your family.

PAYS CASH $$$ For good used appliances in working order or not, but no junk, please. VISA & MASTERCARD accepted. We have our own financing also. Shop at our competitors and then come see for yourself, quality at low prices. Open evenings 7 days a week. WE DELIVER.

CL447164 CL642293

POOLS, SPAS, HOT TUBS

We Sell Gas Refrigerators!

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

Book your ad 613-966-2034


WANTED Buyers of Standing Timber -hard maple, soft maple, red and white oak, etc. Work is done through good forestry practices with professional foresters and certified tree markers on staff. 705-957-7087. Buying Comic Books. Old comic books in the house? Turn them into cash today. My hobby, your gain. kentscomics@yahoo.ca 613-539-9617.

VEHICLES EXTRA VEHICLE in your driveway? Get some extra CA$H and post it in the classifieds! Call 1-888-657-6193 to place your ad!

FARM Hay for Sale, 4x4, hardcore round bales. Mixed grasses and clover. Suitable for beef cattle. Stored inside. Madoc 613-473-5244.

WANTED Records, stereo equipment, music related accessories. Call 613-921-1290 Wanted: Standing timber, mature hard/softwood. Also wanted, natural stone, cubicle or flat, any size. 613-968-5182.

FARM

NOTICES

MEDICAL CONDITION?

Get up to $50,000 from the Government of Canada. Do you or someone you know Have any of these Conditions? ADHD, Anxiety, Arthritis, Asthma, Cancer, COPD, Depression, Diabetes, Difficulty Walking, Fibromyalgia, Irritable Bowels, Overweight, Trouble Dressing...and Hundreds more. ALL Ages & Medical Conditions Qualify. CALL ONTARIO BENEFITS 1-(800)-211-3550

Call to book your ad today! 613-966-2034 or 888-657-6193 Deadline is Mondays at 3 pm FARM

FARM

HONEY FOR SALE Twin Sisters Hive & Honey Products

COME VISIT THE BEES! 231 Frankford-Stirling Rd, Stirling (Highway 33) NEW CROP & RAW HONEY NOW AVAILABLE! We sell bulk honey in your containers, prepackaged liquid and creamed honey, wedding favours, buckwheat honey, beeswax skin creams & lip balms, candles, pollen, maple syrup, honey butter, gifts and more. Open Saturdays only, 10 am-4pm.

Call 613-827-7277 HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

PART TIME DRIVERS 1 – 2 days a week or month! Your choice! Excellent position for retiree or additional income! Positions available for G license or F licenses. Must be friendly and customer orientated with a clean drivers abstract. Please forward resumes to 96 South John St., Belleville Ontario K8N 3E6 or email ontariocoachway@bellnet.ca

FOR RENT SHARED ACCOMMODATIONS BRIGHTON 312 Raglan St. Private home, furnished bedroom, use of home, TV, cable, telephone, heat, hydro, parking and water included. NO PETS. $500.00 monthly. Phone Tom or Mary 613-475-3841 or Charlie 613-475-1439

HELP WANTED

FOR RENT APARTMENT EMPTY? Don’t lose your precious income! Book your apartment ad here. Call 1-888-657-6193 to place your ad!

STORAGE RENT OUT your extra space for extra cash! Call 1-888-657-6193 to place your ad!

HELP WANTED

Seasonal Full Time Farm Labourer Plant, cultivate, irrigate, harvest, grade, pack crops. No exp. or education required. $11.60/hr required now to Nov 15, 2017 Scarlett Acres Ltd. 11687 County Road 2 Colborne, Ontario K0K 1S0 Please apply within or email kaf@eagle.ca

Marmora Legion Branch #237

CONTRACT JANITORIAL SERVICES Details of contract can be picked up at Branch 237 Marmora or online at www.rcl237.ca MON-FRI 1:00PM- 5:00PM Lowest tender not necessarily accepted. Sealed tenders must be received by OCT 31, 2017 at 5 pm. They can be dropped off at the Legion Royal Canadian Legion Br. 237 6 N. Hastings Ave. Marmora Ontario

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

LOOKING FOR WORK? Immediate Hiring Do Not Miss!

KINGSTON Job Fair: Fri. October 20th, 2017 1pm - 3pm Ambassador Hotel

1550 Princess St., Kingston K7M 9E3 Questions 1.877.628.0740

JOIN OUR GROWING TEAM! AS A CERTIFIED DENTAL ASSISTANT

Our team at Belleville Dental Care is looking for a full time Dental Assistant. If you would like to become a part of our growing team please email smile@bellevilledental.ca to apply! Thank you for your interest, we look forward to hearing from you!

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

BGL Contractors Corp

BGL Contractors Corp is a general contracting firm with head office in Waterloo. We are looking to hire for the following positions at our Trenton location: - Millwright/Installers Welder/Pipe Fitters - Metal Fabricators -Skilled Labourer We offer competitive wages and benefits. If interested please forward resumes to careers@bglcc.ca or fax to 519-725-5002.

BUSINESS SERVICES Ken Chard Construction. Renovations, decks, siding, sidewalks, fences, ceramic, windows, painting etc. Free estimates. Call: 613-398-7439.

HELP WANTED

People? Driving? Freedom? We need Coachmen/Women who are 25+ and want flexible part-time work that’s available when they are. If you; Have a clean drivers abstract Can get a Criminal Background Check (Vulnerable Sector) Have access to a vehicle Have a Smartphone Live in the community Then we want to talk to you. Call us @ 613-902-0101 or email a resume to Belleville@driverseatinc.com We want to hear from you! HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

PERSONAL SUPPORT WORKERS– Part Time/Casual Candidates are invited to apply for Part Time/Casual Personal Support Worker positions to our 69 bed long-term care facility, Extendicare Cobourg. Under the direction of the Registered Staff, the PSW provides direct personal and nursing care to residents so as to fulfil the physical, intellectual, emotional, social and spiritual needs of residents in accordance to home policies, procedure and work routines. Qualifications: Must have completed a PSW Program that meets the appropriate standards with completed PSW Certificate. Interested applicants may forward their resume in confidence to the attention of:

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

Manager of Marina and Waterfront Facilities (10 month Contract) Corporate and Financial Services The City of Quinte West invites applications for the position of Manager of Marina and Waterfront Facilities of the Corporate and Financial Services Department. Purpose & Scope of Position: The Manager of Marina and Waterfront Facilities is responsible for the supervision, management, operation and administration of the Marina and Fuelling Station. The Manager is also responsible for ensuring services are provided in an efficient, effective, polite, safe and friendly manner. Directs the day-to-day operation of locations and staff. The Manager also acts as an ambassador in promoting the Marinas and City. Sensitive and confidential information shall be treated with due regard in the best interests of the Municipality and its personnel. Remuneration: The compensation for this non-union position is $4,080.00 biweekly during the regular boating season and $28 per hour during the off season. Qualified applicants are invited to visit the City of Quinte West website at www.quintewest.ca and complete the application form and email it along with a resume clearly marked: “Marina Manager of Marina and Waterfront Facilities” in the subject line by 4:30 p.m. on Friday October 27, 2017 to: hr@quintewest.ca We thank all applicants for their interest and advise that only those candidates selected for an interview will be contacted. Personal information is collected under the authority of the Municipal Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act and is used to determine eligibility for potential employment. In accordance with the Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act, the City of Quinte West is pleased to accommodate individual needs of applicants with disabilities within the recruitment process. Please call 613-392-2841 (4515) or email the above if you require an accommodation to ensure your participation in the recruitment and selection process.

Shauna Mullins, Director of Care 130 Densmore Road, Cobourg, Ontario K9A 5W2 smullins@extendicare.com

THE CORPORATION OF THE COUNTY OF PRINCE EDWARD JOB OPPORTUNITIES The County of Prince Edward is an island community on the shores of Lake Ontario with a proud United Empire Loyalist heritage. Boasting beautiful beaches and a unique rural landscape, the County offers serene country living. Our strong agricultural roots, thriving tourism attractions, renowned regional cuisine, and growing wine industry combine to offer a unique and unmatched quality of life. Our Human Resources Department is currently accepting applications for the following vacancies; • Full-Time Registered Nurse – HJ McFarland Memorial Home • Part-Time Registered Practical Nurse – HJ McFarland Memorial Home • Part-Time Landfill Attendant • Part-Time Custodian For further details on these positions, please visit our website at www.thecounty.ca. If you are interested in any of the above opportunities, please follow the application process outlined in the postings and apply prior to the deadline indicated. We thank all candidates for their interest, however, only those selected for an interview will be contacted. We are an equal opportunity employer and support applicants with disabilities. Accommodations are available upon request throughout the recruitment process. The personal information being collected will be used in accordance with The Municipal Act and The Municipal Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act and shall only be used in the selection of a suitable candidate.

Section B - Thursday, October 19, 2017 B15


TENDERS

TENDERS

TENDERS

TENDERS

TENDERS

MUNICIPALITY OF BRIGHTON

The Municipality of Brighton is issuing the following proposal: REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL PW 2017-12 ROAD NEEDS STUDY Tender packages will be available for pickup as of 2:00 p.m. Thursday, October 12, 2017. Documents are available at the Public Works and Development office (67 Sharp Rd.). All tenders must be submitted using the required forms in a sealed envelope, clearly marked with the quote/proposal number and the proponent’s information by the date and time specified below: 2:00 P.M. MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2017 Lucas Kelly Manager of Capital Infrastructure 67 Sharp Road Brighton, Ontario, K0K 1H0 lkelly@brighton.ca – 613-475-1162 Ex. 109

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

BUSINESS SERVICES

BUSINESS SERVICES

Church Administrator/Assistant to the Minister - Part Time

Public Works & Development 67 Sharp Road, Brighton, ON K0K 1H0 Tel: 613-475-1162 Fax: 613-475-2599

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

We Grow JOBSÂŽ Executive Director Trenval Business Development Corporation is a federally-funded organization whose mission is to support small business in Quinte West, Belleville, Stirling/Rawdon, Tyendinaga and Deseronto. Through its delivery of business information, counselling and lending services, it engages aspiring entrepreneurs and small business owners in their attempts to start and to grow their business, creating jobs in the process. Reporting to a volunteer Board of Directors, the Executive Director takes a leadership role in overseeing all aspects of the operations, providing day-to-day direction to salaried and contracted staff, assuring the effective delivery of its core programs, as well as other related provincially and municipally-funded contracted services, which currently includes the Small Business Centre operations as well as the federal Eastern Ontario Development Program. The successful applicant will possess the following qualifications: t 1PTU TFDPOEBSZ EFHSFF EJQMPNB JO B CVTJOFTT SFMBUFE Ă˝ FME PG TUVEZ TUSPOH LOPXMFEHF PG BDDPVOUJOH BOE Ă˝ OBODJBM NBOBHFNFOU JT EFTJSBCMF t 1SPWFO SFDPSE PG QSPHSFTTJWF NBOBHFNFOU FYQFSJFODF JO FJUIFS PS CPUI B QSJWBUF BOE QVCMJD TFDUPS FOWJSPONFOU t 1SPĂ˝ DJFOU WFSCBM BOE XSJUUFO DPNNVOJDBUJPO TLJMMT t " HPPE LOPXMFEHF PG UIF 5SFOWBM DPNNVOJUZ JUT TPDJP FDPOPNJD DIBMMFOHFT BOE opportunities t 'BNJMJBSJUZ XJUI UIF $PNNVOJUZ 'VUVSFT 1SPHSBN Compensation will be commensurate with skills and experience. "QQMJDBUJPOT NVTU CF SFDFJWFE CZ QN PO 'SJEBZ 0DUPCFS BOE EJSFDUFE UP Trenval Business Development Corporation "UUFOUJPO $IBJSNBO PG UIF #PBSE # 8BMMCSJEHF -PZBMJTU 3E 10 #PY #FMMFWJMMF 0/ , / # By email: info@trenval.on.ca 'BY Only candidates selected for an interview will be contacted.

Trinity St Andrews United Church is an active and affirming congregation in Brighton ON. We are seeking a Church Administrator / Assistant to the Minister to provide support to the minister and manage the administrative duties related to the effective functioning of church activities and the building facility. The successful candidate will have strong office management and organizational skills and excellent verbal and written communication skills. You must have an ability to utilize a variety of computer programs (i.e.: MS Office) and the ability to address minor IT issues (maintaining office equipment, addressing connection issues etc.). You will maintain a professional and pleasant work environment ensuring a high level of organizational effectiveness and customer service support. Experience managing in a busy office environment, supervisory experience, financial reporting, facility management and an ability to work independently are key requirements. Please apply by October 30 2017 attention of Ministry and Personnel Committee, Trinity St Andrews United Church at info@trinitystandrews.ca. Subject line “Church Administrator posting� CAREER OPPORTUNITY

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

Help keep your community clean.

KITCHENS PLUS

Please recycle this newspaper.

Complete Kitchen & Bath Renovations Visit us: www.kitchensplusquinte.com

Contact Steve Csanyi t LJUDIFOTQMVT!MJWF DPN

Economical Solutions for Your Renovation Investment CAREER OPPORTUNITY

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

Make a Difference in Federal Elections

Be a Returning Officer Your opportunity to serve democracy in Northumberland– Peterborough South The work of a returning officer is challenging and rewarding. If you’re a leader with management experience and knowledge of your community, this may be the job for you. As a returning officer, you will plan and manage federal elections in your riding during a ten-year appointment. You will represent Elections Canada and be on the front line for electors and candidates. The hours of work vary between elections, but increase signiďŹ cantly in the year leading up to an election. To qualify as a returning officer, you must be a Canadian citizen, at least 18 years old, and live in the federal riding where you’re applying to work. To ďŹ nd out more about the role of a returning officer and how to apply, go to elections.ca and click on Employment or call 1-800-463-6868. The online application will be available from October 20 to November 10, 2017.

Elections Canada is an independent body set up by Parliament to conduct federal elections, by-elections and referendums.

PLEASE NOTE: BOOKING DEADLINE FOR ADS IS MONDAYS AT 3 P.M. Ads can be placed by calling 613-966-2034 ext. 560 or 1-888-657-6193 B16 Section B - Thursday, October 19, 2017


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EXTEND YOUR REACH - ADVERTISE PROVINCIALLY OR ACROSS THE COUNTRY! For more information visit www.ocna.org/network-advertising-program

EMPLOYMENT OPPS.

PERSONALS

NOW HIRING

TIRED OF MEETING person after person who isn't right for you? MISTY RIVER INTRODUCTIONS gives you ALL the information, PLUS a photo of your prospective matches. FREE CONSULTATION CALL 613-2573531, www.mistyriverintros.com.

Class 1 Log Hauler Feller Buncher Operator Processor Operators Grapple Skidder Operators Dozer Operators

FOR SALE SAWMILLS from only $4,397 MAKE MONEY & SAVE MONEY with your own bandmill - Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. FREE Info & DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com/400OT 1-800-567-0404 Ext:400OT.

STEEL BUILDINGS STEEL BUILDING SALE ..."BLOWOUT SALE!" 20X23$5,998. 25X27 $6,839. 30X33 $8,984. One End Wall Included. Bonus Drill/Impact Driver Combo Kit Included. Check Out www.pioneersteel.ca for more prices. Pioneer Steel 1-855-212-7036

DRIVERS WANTED

FINANCIAL SERVICES

$$ CONSOLIDATE YOUR DEBT $$

ADVERTISING LOWER YOUR MONTHLY PAYMENTS AND

info@lydellgroup.ca Phone: 780-542-6019 Fax 780-542-6739 Drayton Valley, Alberta MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION! Indemand career! Employers have work-at-home positions available. Get online training you need from an employer-trusted program. Visit: CareerStep.ca/MT or 1-855-768-3362 to start training for your work-at-home career today!

MORTGAGES

CONSOLIDATE YOUR DEBT NOW!!!

REACH MILLIONS OF CUSTOMERS IN ONTARIO WITH ONE EASY CALL! Your Classified Ad or Display Ad would appear in weekly newspapers each week across Ontario in urban, suburban and rural areas. For more information Call Today 647-350-2558, Email: kmagill@rogers.com

1st, 2nd, 3rd MORTGAGES Debt Consolidation Refinancing, Renovations Tax Arrears, No CMHC Fees $50K YOU PAY: $208.33 / MONTH (OAC)

PROFESSIONAL TRUCK DRIVERS Drive for Excellence JOIN OUR TEAM! Haul Fuel, Propane or Heavy Fuel Oil throughout Central and Southern Ontario. Class AZ driver’s license with 2 years driving experience required. Westcan offers competitive total compensation including company paid benefits, & bonus opportunities and RRSP matching program.

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All applicants require a clean abstract and will adhere to a criminal record search, pre-access medical and drug screen.

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No Income, Bad Credit Power of Sale Stopped!!!

www.mortgageontario.com

COMING EVENTS

(Licence # 10969)

GET UP TO $50,000 from the Government of Canada. Do you or someone you know Have any of these Conditions? ADHD, Anxiety, Arthritis, Asthma, Cancer, COPD, Depression, Diabetes, Difficulty Walking, Fibromyalgia, Irritable Bowels, Overweight, Trouble Dressing...and Hundreds more. ALL Ages & Medical Conditions Qualify. CALL ONTARIO BENEFITS 1-(800)-211-3550

1st & 2nd MORTGAGES from 2.25% 5 year VRM and 2.84% 5 year FIXED. All Credit Types Considered. Let us help you SAVE thousands on the right mortgage! Purchasing, Re-financing, Debt Consolidation, Construction, Home Renovations...CALL 1-800225-1777, www.homeguardfunding.ca (LIC #10409).

Under the Join Our Team link

TAP INTO HOME EQUITY! With home values skyrocketing, take advantage and pay down other high interest debt. HOME EQUITY LOANS FOR ANY PURPOSE!! Bank turn downs, Tax or Mortgage arrears, Self Employed, Bad Credit, Bankruptcy. Creative Mortgage Specialists! No proof of income 1st, 2nd, and 3rd’s Up to 85% Borrow: $50,000 $100,000

Pay Monthly: $237.11 $474.21

LARGER AMOUNTS AND COMMERCIAL FUNDS AVAILABLE !!Decrease monthly payments up to 75%!! Based on 3% APR. OAC 1-888-307-7799

WANTED WA N T E D : O L D T U B E A U D I O EQUIPMENT. 40 years or older. Amplifiers, Stereo, Recording and Theatre Sound Equipment. Hammond Organs, any condition. CALL Toll-Free 1-800-947-0393 / 519-8532157.

ONTARIO-WIDE FINANCIAL 1801347inc FSCO Licence #12456 www.ontario-widefinancial.com !! LET US HELP !!

Section B - Thursday, October 19, 2017 B17


New Driverseat franchise hopes to get you home safe F LY E R S

COUPONS

SHOPPING LISTS

SHOP SMART Save more on your weekly shopping.

Donna Nelham and Paul Tremlett are the owners of a new Driverseat franchise, serving the Belleville, Trenton and Prince Edward County regions. Stephen Petrick/Metroland

BY STEPHEN PETRICK

Belleville – The transportation industry is changing – and a new Quinte-area business is steering it along. Owners of a new Driverseat franchise for the region held a business launch event outside the Belleville Chamber log cabin on Moira Street on Thursday, Oct. 12. The business helps customers get themselves and their vehicles home safely. The local franchise is owned by husband-wife duo Donna Nelham and Paul Tremlett. The couple also opened a Driverseat franchise for the Kingston area days earlier. They hope the business will contribute to a reduction of impaired driving instances. “We didn’t want to do just anything,” said Nelham. “We wanted to do something with heart; something with a social purpose.” Customers can call 613-900-5890 to access the service or visit driverseatinc.com and download the app. The service has a flat rate minimum charge of $15 and an algorithm factoring in the time and distance of the trip deter-

mines the overall rate. The business works by hiring coachmen or coachwomen to arrive at the location of the customer and drive them and their vehicle home. Those coachmen and women have “chasers” who help them move around from job to job. Nelham likes the social angle of the business. She hopes people who are enjoying a night out and feel too tipsy to drive home themselves will call the service. But the she stressed Driverseat can be used for a variety of other services. People can call if they need help getting kids to school, if they need help getting people home from business functions or even if they need transportation support for a fun event, like a wedding or wine tour. She acknowledged that now is an interesting time for the transportation industry as new services, such as Uber, are changing the way people think about getting out and about, especially after hours. She believes Driverseat, is a successful business that’s well equipped to embrace that change. “It’s about giving people different options,” she said.

Police seek boat, trailer taken in Tweed TAYLOR BERTELINK

DOWNLOAD THE FREE Save.ca MOBILE APP

B18 Section B - Thursday, October 19, 2017

The investigation of a stolen boat and trailer from a residence on McClellan Street in the Village of Tweed has Central Hastings O.P.P. seeking more information. Sometime between September 23 and October 14, 2017, suspects removed a 2001 Mariah 256 Shabah boat with “Tag

Heuer Racing” on the sides of the boat in blue and green lettering. The boat at the time was covered in white shrink wrap. Also stolen was a 2001 Prestige blue 27” trailer. Anyone with information is asked to call Central Hastings O.P.P. at 613-4734234 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-2228477.


Section B - Thursday, October 19, 2017 B19


4

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B20 Section B - Thursday, October 19, 2017


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