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September 28, 2013
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Festival for the Lake this weekend
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Car hop good for community
thom@denpubs.com LAKE GEORGE Ñ An ambitious three-day event to be held this weekend in Lake George Village features a street festival, a craft fair, casino games, a childrenÕ s carnival, plenty of family activities and a lineup of talented musical entertainment. Called Ò Festival for the Lake,Ó the event will be held from Friday Sept. 27 through Sunday Sept. 29, and several downtown blocks will be cordoned off for the crowd that is expected to attend. Billed as Lake George’s largest festival, the event goes much further than merely providing a memorable weekend. It will be raising thousands of dollars to help bankroll an effort to curb invasive species that are threatening Lake George. All festival vendors will be donating a portion of their proceeds toward the effort, Mayor Robert Blais said Friday. Ò Attending this festival is a way for families to have a lot of fun while having a good feeling about protecting the CONTINUED ON PAGE 5
Index
PAGE 2 LAKE GEORGE
Marriott plans under scrutiny PAGE 4
During the first mass launch of the 2013 Adirondack Balloon Festival, a balloon pilot blasts a propane flame into his balloon envelope to inflate it, while a crowd surrounds his craft to watch the process. Photo by Thom Randall
Balloon Fest’s kickoff largest ever By Thom Randall thom@denpubs.com GLENS FALLS Ñ Amidst pilots getting their hot air balloons ready for fl ight, Mark Donahue leaned on his truck which bore an Adirondack Balloon Festival logo. A middle-aged man with tears in his
eyes walked up to Donahue, shook his hand, said “Thank you, thank you so much,Ó and then disappeared in the crowd. Donahue, Adirondack Balloon Festival president, looked slightly bewildered. “The joy of this festival is just amazing,” he said, recalling how a half-hour earlier,
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PUBLISHER’S COLUMN
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HISTORY COLUMN
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THURMAN
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LAKE GEORGE Ñ A new Price Chopper supermarket and a shopping plaza near Northway Exit 23 just south of Warrensburg are expected to be a reality by early next summer, according to a Price Chopper
CONTINUED ON PAGE 15
Thurman man takes county post PAGE 18
executive and area offi cials. A groundbreaking ceremony for the Price Chopper store is tentatively scheduled for 11 a.m. Wednesday Oct. 16 at the site of the plaza, located between Bakers Crossing Road and Prosser Road. The complex is about 150 feet off Rte. 9, across from Warrensburg McDonald’s restaurant. Mona Golub, Vice President of Golub Corp. —
Price ChopperÕ s parent company Ñ said the public was invited to witness the ceremony. The plaza includes a 2,200-square-feet freestanding building that is to house a TrustCo bank branch and a 4,000 square-feet building that is to host a retail store, according to approved plans on fi le at the Lake CONTINUED ON PAGE 17
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moments after heÕ d formally opened the event Thursday Sept. 19, a four-year-old child asked him to dance, and he did. Donahue gazed over the crowd at Crandall Park. People were packed around two dozen balloonists, either infl ating their balloons, or prepping their rigging.
Price Chopper likely a reality by summer
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September 28, 2013
Warrensburg Car Hop builds sense of community By Thom Randall
thom@denpubs.com
Impressive vintage cars, 1950s classic diner food served curbside and lots of socializing were featured Sept. 12 at the Warrensburg Car Hop, held uptown on Main St. to both boost commerce and strengthen a sense of community locally. Photo provided
the classic diner food. Chelsey Witz, Samantha Shave, Megon Webb, and Warrensburg Town Board member Linda Marcella all delivered the orders curbside, and the four donated their tips
to the Alliance. Luck-E-Star also donated $1 per check to the business-boosting group. “The Car Hop had a really good feeling — and the car people loved it,” Marcella said.
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WARRENSBURG — Vintage fast food served outdoors, classic cars, and plenty of socializing were featured Thursday Sept. 12 as about 100 area citizens and local business representatives participated in the Warrensburg Car Hop event. Many visited the gathering on upper Main St. to inspect the vintage cars, while others browsed the lineup of displays hosted by local business representatives. Centered in the parking lot of Luck-E-Star, the event included food served at picnic tables by volunteer waitresses. WCKM radio personality Lee Pecue interviewed many of the people attending, boosting spirits with his cheery demeanor. The event was hosted as a fundraiser by the Greater Warrensburg Business Alliance. Ò It was a blast,Ó Alliance co-chair said afterwards. “We had a fantastic time — it was a huge success.” Four waitresses served food at the dinersÕ tables, delivering upbeat conversation as well as
“The Alliance is working to build up a sense of community, and thatÕ s what was happening,Ó she said. The event hosted a surprise visit by a cast of mock bootleggers and Ò federal agentsÓ in antique cars and 1920s garb, staging an apprehension of Prohibition-era crooks, as a prelude to the Rum-Runners’ Weekend held Sept. 13 through 15 in nearby Chestertown. The agents searched the crowd, nabbed Wes Butler Sr. of Brant Lake, dragging him away to the crowd’s delight. The Rum-Runners’ Weekend was an event sponsored by the Tri-Lakes Business Alliance of northern Warren County. Hill said her Warrensburg-based organization was planning to adopt the Car Hop as an annual event. Also, there is a spinoff in now being pursued by local residents Mike Lawler and Frank Bennett — a weekly Car Hop moving from one Warrensburg business to another, likely to be held on Tuesdays or Wednesdays, she said. Ò Everyone looked like they were having a good time,” she said.
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September 28, 2013
By Lynn Smith
744-3532 - mrs.butterfly-10@hotmail.com Warrensburg area residents are encouraged to submit their doll houses or Ò room boxesÓ for consideration for the upcoming holiday exhibit at the Warrensburgh Historical Museum The juried exhibit will run from December 7 through January 15. Due to varied doll house sizes and museum space considerations at the museum, the number accepted will be limited. Submission applications must be received by Nov. 1. Such forms may be obtained at the Museum or at the Warrensburg Town Hall, or by phoning the exhibit’s curator, Delbert Chambers, at 623-3514. At least one good photograph of the doll house or room box should be included with the form. Forms and photos may be sent to the Society, P. O. Box 441, Warrensburg, NY 12885, delivered to the Museum (see below) or submitted online to delbert33me@yahoo.com. Acceptance will be based on age, uniqueness, quality, furnishings, whether it is hand-made or factory produced, and its historic importance. The Museum will arrange for pick-up and return of the selected items, if desired. All entries will be returned following the close of the show on Jan. 15. For details, call Chambers at 6233514 or museum director Steve Parisi, at 623-2207.
Graveyard Walks, Dinner with Dead set
The Warrensburgh Historical Society is holding its 13th annual series of Graveyard Walks and Dinner With the Dead featuring actors and history enthusiasts portraying noted townspeople from past eras who are buried in the 160-year-old Warrensburg
Bank to thank citizens
LAKE GEORGE Ñ Glens Falls National Bank’s Lake George office will host a Community Appreciation Day on Thursday, Sept. 26, featuring free food, document shredding and prizes. The event from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at 2252 State Route 9 will include a cookout with hot dogs, hamburgers, popcorn and desserts, as well as free document shredding courtesy of Adirondack Mobile Shredding. There will also be contests with prizes. In addition, representatives of the Adirondack Mountain Club will host games and an informational display, and the Lake George Association will be collecting donations to fight invasive species. The group is assisting in hosting “Festival For The Lake,” an event this weekend that is a fundraiser to protect Lake George’s health.
Cemetery. To be portrayed are people from before Warrensburg became a town to a time when a Warrensburg aviator became world famous. All to be brought to life by local amateur actors are: a member of family who came here before William Bond who was supposedly the first settler, a woman who hosted the first town meeting, a woman who left a great gift to Warrensburg, a man who left town at an early age but left a legacy that stands today, and a man who helped found the Presbyterian Church. The two walks will be conducted at Warrensburg Cemetery — the first will be held Friday, Oct. 18 followed by a gourmet dessert buffet at the Cornerstone Victorian Bed & Breakfast, 3921 Main St. The price of this event is $13. The second walk will be held Friday, Oct. 25 and it includes homemade desserts at the Warrensburg Senior Center. The price for this event is $8 per person. Both walks begin at 7 p.m. sharp. Tickets for either walk are available starting Oct. 1 from Marilyn Hayes at 623-3436. These walks are popular and space is limited. On Sunday, Oct. 27, a full course “Dinner with the Dead” will be served at Lizzie Keays Restaurant, 89 River St. in Warrensburg. The price, including tax and tip is $35. Dinner choices are Prime Rib, Seafood Sampler or Grilled Chicken Parmesan. Space is limited. For tickets, contact Sandi Parisi at 623-2207. Cash or Checks payable to Warrensburgh Historical Society must be received by Wednesday, Oct. 23. The Graveyard Walks and Dinner have been sponsored by the Warrensburgh Historical Society since 2001, with sold-out audiences every year. The public is encouraged to make their reservations early, as space is limited.
34th annual World’s Largest Garage Sale
Plans are moving forward for the WorldÕ s Largest Garage Sale, to take place the weekend of Oct. 5 and 6. People throughout town are getting household goods ready for their private sales, and vendors are still signing up. This
Meal at P’ville church
POTTERSVILLE — Homemade soups, sandwiches and desserts are to be offered at a community meal planned for 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday Oct. 5 at the Pottersville United Methodist Church. The charge for adults is $6, and for children, $3. The meals at the church routinely offer both good food and enjoyable fellowship. For details, call 4943594 or 494-2840.
4-H programs start soon
WARRENSBURG — Oct. 1 is the beginning of the new 4-H year, and new members and volunteers are urged to participate, 4-H coordinator Martina Noone of the Cornell Cooperative Extension of Warren County said. Ò We have many new and fun programs and events planned Ñ this is the year that you will want to get in-
volved,” she said. Area youth will be able to learn about many different new topics and engage in fun learning activities that will help them to develop skills helpful for a lifetime, she said. 4-H programs give youth an opportunity to make friends and engage in activities across the state, she added. People can be a Warren County 4-Her by starting their own club, joining a local club, or being an independent, Noone said. Ò We are always looking for caring adult volunteers who want to help enrich the lives of a young people by starting their own 4-H club,Ó she said, noting that Cooperative Extension personnel provide training and assistance. “The best part of all is you can tailor the program to your interests and time schedule,” she continued. Contact Noone at 623-3291.
Authors to sign books at great sale
Two authors from Saranac Lake who have published books on meeting challenges in their lives will be meeting readers and signing their books during the WorldÕ s Largest Garage Sale weekend. Michael Northrup and Yvona Fast will have a table set up for this purpose at 118 Jenni Jill Drive Saturday Oct. 5 and Sunday Oct. 6. Northrop acquired a Traumatic Brain Injury at age 10 which compromised his short-term memory. Then at age 30, a cerebral aneurysm almost took his life. He has published two books, one on how the health care system needs to better support people with disabilities, and the other focusing on how he endured and overcame his medical challenges. Northrup is the partner of Cheryl Nissen, formerly of Warrensburg. Author Yvona Fast, who also has dealt with physiological challenges, will be offering two books, one is a career guide for individuals with Asperger Syndrome or non-verbal learning disabilities, and the second is a guide of how to create nutritious meals using seasonal, local produce. For details, contact the authors at: yvonawrite@yahoo.com or: advocate317@gmail.com
Sacred Heart craft fair approaching
On Saturday Oct. 12 during Columbus Day weekend, Sacred Heart Church in Lake George will hold its annual Craft Fair from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Dozens of vendors are expected to participate in the sale in the yard of the church, located at 50 Mohican St. In addition to a wide array of crafts, the sale is to feature freshpicked apples, home-baked pies, potted chrysanthemums, and a raffle. State legislators Assemblyman Dan Stec and Senator Betty Little are hosting a forum on Lyme Disease from 10 a.m. to noon Oct. 4 at Crandall Library, and the public is urged to participate. Stec and Little are to be joined by U.S. Rep. Bill Owens and Assemblyman Tony Jordan in the event, which is to examine the latest treatment regimens as well as new information about Lyme Disease and other tick-borne afflictions. A scientist from Trudeau Institute who has conducted research into tick-borne diseases and Dr. Ronald Stram of Delmar, experienced in treating Lyme, are among the experts on the panel, Little aide Dan Mac Entee said. “This is likely to be cutting edge presentation,” he said. The forum is to be held in the library’s community room.
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event, which has earned a spot in Guinness Book of Records, is likely to be a as large as ever in 2013, its 34th annual edition. Vendor spaces are still available. For details, call the Warrensburg Chamber of Commerce, the event’s sponsor, at 623-2161. Teenagers are invited to apply with the chamber to either work for a food vendor for pay, or as a volunteer to help usher vendors to their spaces on Friday. Work can be as short in duration as a few hours. Those interested are asked to contact Nancy or Lynn at 623-2161.
Politicians hold forum on Lyme Disease
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LAKE GEORGE Ñ After architectural drawings of the proposed six-story Marriott hotel were criticized Wednesday, Sept. 18 by the village planning board, the developers of the enterprise vowed to initiate changes to make the hotel more visually appealing. Developer Dave Kenny announced this summer his intention to build a hotel in downtown Lake George with 120 guest rooms and extensive banquet and conference facilities. Wednesday was a workshop meeting of the board to take a first look at a tentative initial proposal. The hotel plans also must go before the Adirondack Park Agency. After other planning board members spent about 30 minutes Wednesday asking developer Dave Kenny about traffic patterns, parking and where a dumpster might be located, Patricia Dow raised the issue of aesthetics. She criticized the long, flat, blank walls and virtually uninterrupted roofline — and how they would not conform to the villageÕ s new architectural standards adopted this spring. These regulations prohibit the dull, boxy look and call for the use of dormers, parapets, stepped roofs, cornices, plus wall offsets and recesses, which were absent or minimal in the drawings presented Wednesday. “This is really just a large flat surface — I don’t see it has visual interest, and itÕ s important to the community to make it look attractive,” Dow said. “Make more of an Adirondack statement and make it a credit to the community, Marriott and you.” When Kenny debated her points, she produced depictions of the Lake Placid Marriott, which includes multiple planes, recesses, colors, materials, staggered rooflines and other architectural elements. Dow said that after the Fort William Henry Hotel was built several years ago, sheÕ d heard complaints about its boxy, unimaginative architecture Ñ although it was supposed to have many of the design features of the historic hotel that once stood there. “This is a large mass of a building — it’s sort of like a dormitory,” she said of the hotel proposal. After Dow broke the ice on the subject, other planning board members echoed her point. Ò I agree with everything she said,Ó fellow Planning Board member Dean Howland said, suggesting “bumping out” rooms to provide visual interest. He said that it was important for this hotel, the villageÕ s first large one, to set a precedent with appealing architecture. Planning Board Chairman Robert Mastrantoni added his thoughts. “We’re looking for a design with a more Adirondack feel,Ó he told Kenny, noting that
The first rendition of the proposed six-story Lake George Marriott hotel was panned Wednesday, Sept. 18. Photo by Thom Randall
more exposed beams, stonework, varied building materials, contrasting colors and staggered multiple rooflines would create appeal. “It could be more visually intriguing and break up what would otherwise be a huge mass.” Howland added another comment. “The design could be more articulated,” he said. Chuck Luke said the north and south ends of the building were blank and dull. “This reminds me of someone building a four-bedroom colonial and they ran out of money,Ó he said, examining a depiction of the hotel’s southern end. Dow said she objected to the primarily white exterior, saying it was too stark. She noted that it would be visually prominent not only from downtown, but from the lake — a point that Kenny contested.
Traffic congestion also an issue
Questions were also raised about potentially troublesome traffic prompted by the development. Planning Board member Chuck Luke expressed concern about traffic snarls on Canada St. as well as on Ottawa St. where the school busses converge at the nearby high school both mornings and mid-afternoon. Board members suggested prohibiting right-hand turns onto Ottawa St. from the hotel’s rear driveway either during particular weekday hours, or banning them altogether, depending on the findings of a traffic study. Concerns were also raised about a driveway, proposed as a one-way hotel parking lot exit onto Canada St.
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Kenny said that the hotel would not be generating that much traffic, and that most of it would access the property via Amherst St. Questions were also raised about where trucks delivering supplies and banquet staging equipment would park and unload. Kenny said such traffic would be minimal Ñ and he would be willing to ask suppliers to service the hotel using 20-foot city vans rather than 18-wheelers. Several planning board members also questioned whether there was enough parking Ñ for hotel guests, banquet attendees and hotel employees. Kenny responded that most of the banquets would be held on shoulder seasons rather than mid-summer. He assured the board that the 132 spaces behind the hotel would be ample. Additional parking would also be available at his motel across the street, noted a board member. Others observed that the plan didnÕ t include a 10-foot setback after the fourth story as the village code requires. Kenny’s attorney Jonathan Lapper responded that the 21-foot total setback at the second and third stories would likely fulfill that requirement. Village code enforcement officer Doug Frost said the municipality would be seeking a legal opinion on this issue. No objections were heard about the plans for four boutique-type stores fronting on Canada St., the elegant lobby with a bistro and a grand staircase leading up to the second-floor banquet facilities, or the proposed first-story posh steakhouse.
September 28, 2013
Rehearsals begin for Christmas cantata
CHESTERTOWN — Rehearsals for the annual Christmas Cantata which is performed in Bolton and Chester will begin Wednesday Oct. 2 at 7 p.m. in the Community United Methodist Church of Chestertown Ñ one of the two concert sites; the other is in Bolton’s St. Sacrement Episcopal Church. Lenore Simpson is directing the choir and Robert Flachbarth is accompanying on keyboards. All are invited to join the ecumenical choir rehearsals to prepare for the presentations Dec. 8 and Dec. 9 of the cantata: “What Sweeter Music — A Festival of Carols” by Mark Hayes.
Festival for the Lake from page 1
lake,” Blais said. The street barricades go up at 9 a.m. Friday Sept. 27, and the festival opens that day at 4 p.m. when Rich Ortiz begins a performance of his soulful music in the Shepard Park amphitheater. His music is followed at 6 p.m. by the popular Stony Creek Band. Their concert is capped off with fireworks at about 9:15 p.m. Saturday in Shepard Park, featured are the Out of Control Rhythm & Blues Band, the Bluz House Rockers and the Big Block Blues Band, the Mississippi Hot Dogs and Soul Session. At Blais Park off Beach Road, featured during the weekend will be The Beatles tribute band “Across the Pond,” as well as the talented Jonathan Newell Band, Headwall, and the T-N-T Band. Events on Saturday include a Pedi-Cab race at 2 p.m., and a bicycle tour. The latter is sponsored by the Warren County Safe & Quality Bicycling Organization, and registration is at 9 a.m. Saturday in the West Brook parking lot. A 5-kilometer footrace by flashlight is set to begin at 7:30 p.m.. Large tents downtown on Canada St. will host brewfests, featuring not only craft beers by Adirondack Pub & Brewery of Lake George, but wines from Adirondack Winery & Tasting Room. For children, special attractions will include pony rides, a childrenÕ s zoo, amusement rides, bounce houses and walk-through balloons. Beach road will be barricaded for many of these activities. Hours of the festival are 4 p.m. to 10 p.m. on Friday, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. on Saturday, and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday. Admission which includes one initial beverage is $10 for adults. Children under 16 are admitted free. Corporate sponsors of the event include Ben & Jerry’s Ice Cream, Pepsi-Cola, Lake George Shoreline Cruises, Lake George Mirror, Lake George Steamboat Co., Adirondack Pedal Cab Co., Adirondack Winery, Adirondack Brewery, the Lake George Guide and TrustCo Bank. Organizations backing the festival are the town and village of Lake George, Warren County, The Fund for Lake George, and the Lake George Association. For further details, call 668-5771.
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Blanked in 2013’s Game 2, Burghers eye rebound victory at home By Thom Randall
thom@denpubs.com CAMBRIDGE — Cambridge High School quarterback Ethan English completed 10 of 12 passes for 166 yards and his teammates racked up 210 yards on the turf Ñ scoring all of their touchdowns in the first half — to accomplish a 36-0 shutout victory over Warrensburg on Sept. 14. Burgher coach Mike Leonbruno said his players were lacking focus in the game. “We weren’t ready to play off the bus,” he said. “Our guys were like deer in the headlights for the first half — It wasn’t good.” The Burghers are having trouble maintaining a minimum roster — but so are about five other class D competitors in the Section, Leonbruno continued. The coach said he expects his team to rebound from the loss and play a competitive game Saturday Sept. 21. Salem, the Burghers’ opponent this Saturday, forfeited its first game this year due to insufficient players. But last Saturday, their experienced, powerful offense defeated Hoosic Valley 27-12. The Burghers will have to devise ways to contain running back Isaac Isom who ran for 217 yards and scored all four touch-
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downs in that game. Salem held Hoosic Valley to a mere 6 yards rushing for the contest. Leonbruno said that in front of a home crowd Saturday Sept. 21 against Salem, the Burghers might step up and give the Generals a tough fight. After cutting several players for disciplinary reasons just days before the season opened and losing others to attrition, Leonbruno said itÕ s been a struggle shifting the players around to make the team competitive. “We’re now trying to find the right guys for the right spots,” he said. Warrensburg gridiron fans are hoping their team pulls out the upset stunner they did last year against Salem, when the Burghers engineered a 78-yard ram-it-up-the-middle drive over 14 plays, scoring a touchdown with only 25 seconds left on the game clock. A Burgher running back then ran a two-point conversion to secure the win by one point in front of a screaming crowd. From that 2012 team, quarterback Marcus Perrone is back, and so is standout ground-gainer Malachi Prosser. So if the rest of the team rallies around these two, they could pull off another exciting victory. Leonbruno said he was looking forward to the game against Salem.
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September 28, 2013
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Opinion Adirondack Journal Editorial
Vote ‘yes’ on Prop 5
T
here are few major employers in the Adirondack Park, and we must do everything we can to support them. One of those is NYCO Minerals, which employs 105 North Country residents at their operation in the towns of Willsboro and Lewis. Over the past two years, both houses of the New York State Legislature passed bills supporting a constitutional amendment approving a land swap between the state and the mining company that would grant access to more veins of Wollastonite, a mineral used in paint, plastics used in the automobile industry, brake pads and linings, ceramics, construction materials and more. This swap would allow NYCO to remain viable in Essex County for 10 more years. Currently, the only two Wollastonite mines in the country are located in the North Country, with one site in Lewis and one in Gouverneur. Now it’s up to voters to seal the deal. The final step in the process to transfer the 200 acres known as Lot 8 to NYCO in exchange for 1,500 acres of company-owned property and a promise to return the 200 acres back to the state as reclaimed property is a statewide referendum which will be on the Nov. 5 general election ballot. We urge voters to approve this exchange and vote “yes” on Proposition 5. This appears to be a win-win situation for NYCO and New York state, plus a win for environmentalists. The state will add 1,500 acres to its Forest Preserve, property that NYCO owns but only touched to take core drilling samples which came back with no traces of the mineral they sought. In addition, the 200 acres that are being loaned to NYCO will be returned as reclaimed property, making 1,700 acres of Forever Wild land returned to the Adirondack Park. It will be good for local municipalities as the 200 acres, currently assessed at $120,000, will now be assessed at near $1 million based on the
value of the mineral deposits NYCO is seeking to extract. It will also be good for the North Country because it will keep good jobs here. Some say NYCO can just mine up north and be content, but that would still mean the loss of 100-plus jobs from the North Country economy, jobs that are desperately needed. The proposal has plenty of backing from nearly all sides of the issue. The measure is being supported by United Steelworkers, AFLCIO, Adirondack Association of Towns and Villages, local and state politicians and Gov. Andrew Cuomo. It has also received the blessing of the Elizabethtown-based Adirondack Council, a leader when it comes to watching out for the environmental interests of the Adirondack Park. Council officials said the additional 1,500 acres of Forest Preserve comprises better habitat for fish and wildlife, 3 miles of streams and has considerably more ecological value than the 200 acres which would be temporarily given up. Executive Director William Janeway further added that Ò the proposed land swap now exceeds our standard for supporting constitutional amendments involving the Forever Wild clause.” In addition to the economic benefit, this land swap will be a win for the Adirondack Park, which will receive 1,500 acres of Forever Wild lands contributing to the beauty and serenity of the region we all call home. And we get our 200 acres back from NYCO once they are done mining. The land will be filled back in and reclaimed through seeding. There truly appears to be no losers in this proposed deal. On Nov. 5, as you are deciding who your local elected leaders will be, please take a moment to look at the state propositions and vote in favor of the constitutional land swap between the state and NYCO. Ñ Denton Publications Editorial Board
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Viewpoint
Unique Navy Yard perspective
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other mental-health problems. ast week I found myLike so many of the probself near the site of the lems facing us these days, we nationÕ s most recent seem incapable of doing anymass shooting at the Navy thing more than standing on Yard in Washington, D.C. I one side of the political aisle was there attending a comor the other. These mass shootmunity newspaper association ings and the illegal use of guns meeting, but found a local peracross the nation are not easily spective on the shooting that I resolved and we make them far would like to share with you more difficult to address when this week. Dan Alexander we energize the issue with The Washington Post colThoughts from politics. umnist Robert McCartney had Behind the Pressline Society as a whole needs to the opportunity to sit in on a do more then wait for a politipress conference with Dr. Janis cal resolution. As Dr. Olowski Orlowski, the senior administrator for the districtÕ s largest trauma center expressed, Ò bad behavior with guns wasnÕ t after this most recent shooting. Orlowski just forbidden by your parents, but it was spoke up at the end of a news conference forbidden by society.” Unfortunately our collective common where she was briefing the media on treatment of people wounded in the Navy Yard sense is nearly non-existent when it comes shooting, which left 13 dead, including the to this issue. On one hand, we glorify gun gunman. In unplanned comments, she used violence in video games, on the Internet, plain, direct language expressing her frus- in music lyrics and television shows while tration having seen first hand the destruc- suspending elementary school children for tion in both Chicago and now in the nationÕ s pointing a finger at someone or drawing a capital. Orlowski’s news conference came a picture of a gun. Like so many of these issues, we appear few hours after she gave notice that she will resign from her positions as chief medical of- capable enough to recognize the critical efficer and chief operating officer at Medstar fect these issues cause within society, but we apparently lack sufficient backbone and Washington Hospital Center. Ò I canÕ t tell you the number of times IÕ ve common sense to work across political and walked into the emergency room and seen personal perspectives to seek solutions that principally a dead young man lying on the address the specific causes. Instead of taking cart. We are violent, we are aggressive, and steps to keep guns out of the hands of those we kill our own. That’s what I see,” she said. among us with aggression or mental health issues, we seek to place more regulation on She went on to say, the Ò senseless traumaÓ is “something evil in our society.” She urged lawful gun owners. We allow commercials on TV glorifythe public to: “Put my trauma center out of business. . . . I would like to not be an expert ing the most recent release of violent video games like Grand Theft Auto V, whose sales on gunshots.” Dr. Orlowski went on to stress that while on the new release have surpassed more than she would support stricter gun laws, legisla- one billion. As a society we lack the self contion, she believes, is not the only answer to trol to differentiate between good clean fun and commercial profiteering. end this all too often reoccurring event. As a responsible society we must either Ò I donÕ t believe that if you have gun control, then the world is good. I believe it’s a seek common ground to address these concerns or be prepared to relive these shooting combination of how we view guns, how events over and over again until we come to theyÕ re available in our society, what we do grips with what we already know needs to be with mental health, what we do with those people who find themselves on the fringes of done. We must seek self imposed controls on society,” Orlowski said. To rely only on the our appetite for consuming these potential triggers and we must better control those not government, she said, Ò is in some ways a cop capable of possessing lethal weapons. out.” Orlowski said it is critical for society as Dan Alexander is publisher and CEO of Dena whole to identify and treat people sufferton Publications. He may be reached at dan@ ing from aggression, post-traumatic stress or denpubs.com.
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To the Adirondack Journal: The Adirondack Tri-County Nursing & Rehabilitation Center, known by us older folks as The Nursing Home in North Crick, is truly a home away from home! No matter your age; if you become disabled from an accident or have a serious illness you could always find a friendly and caring home in North Creek where
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BOLTON LANDING — Brandon Philip Dague and Sabrina Rose Streightif have announced their engagement. Brandon is the son of Alfred and Wanda Dague of Bolton Landing. He is currently a resident of Kittanning Pa. and works as a 911 dispatcher for Armstrong County. Brandon is also a volunteer firefighter and emergency medical technician. Sabrina is the daughter of Todd and Susanna Streightif of Kittanning, Pa. She is attending graduate school at Indiana University of Pennsylvania, and she is pursuing her Masters degree in Clinical Mental Health Counseling. The couple is planning their wedding for fall 2015.
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there are nurses, aides and medical helpers on duty around the clock. Your loved ones will not only be lovingly cared for but, you will meet and make new friends. Also, residents here can join in physical therapy to overcome their disabilities with some helpful and knowledgeable staff in this department. There are also daily activities planned for the patients: exercise classes, and games such as Bingo, Dominos, Whamo and Pokeno which keep residents busy passing time enjoy-
Dague and Streightif to wed
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6 - Adirondack Journal
ably. There is also a daily walk for patients who are gaining their strength. The nursing home has a day care service for patients and elderly folks who are bused in and return home after a fun day of activity, crafts and meeting new friends. At least twice a month there are musical groups and entertainers who come in and perform; and each month there is a birthday party for residents born in that month. Church services are held each Sunday afternoon by local ministers from nearby churches, and masses are held on Mondays. There is a big kitchen with many workers who prepare three meals a day for the 80 or so residents and the workers who care for them. There is also dental care and foot care services, with physicians and dentists who visit occasionally. Also, there’s a beauty shop and a gift shop. Many events are planned to keep the patients happy and entertained Ñ or they can visit friends in other rooms. Days are long and some cannot move around as they would like, so itÕ s always good to see them smile when family members visit. Hal Payne, the man who keeps everything going and is the overseer, seems to be well liked by residents and the helpers. If you have questions about putting your loved one in the home you can call Hal at 251-4712 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Hello to all my friends, Evie Russell Thurman/North Creek, former correspondent, Adirondack Journal
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September 28, 2013
Turning Back the Pages By Jean Hadden •100 years ago - Sept. 1913• Water gushes during drought
When Joe Gabel, the baker, was going to his work in Warrensburgh at 5 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 18, 1913 and was passing Music Hall block (corner of Main and Adirondack Avenue), he heard the sound of running water. This was so unusual at that present time that he moved to investigate. Peering into the window of Manzer & Hill’s barber shop he saw the precious fluid streaming from the ceiling in considerable volume. As quickly as possible, he legged it to the residence of H.H. Hill on King St. and brought him to the scene. The source of the flood was traced to Dr. W.F. Wilkinson’s dental office on the second floor of the building over the barber shop and WheelerÕ s News Room and procuring a ladder, Hod Hill gained access to the room through a window and found the water running in a stream from a faucet. A considerable quantity of goods, mostly candy, cigars and sweaters were damaged by the water to the extent of about $75. The damage sustained by Hill and Manzer is probably about $20. During the present shortage of water to the village system there are several hours during the day, most of the time, where there is not sufficient pressure to force the water to second floor rooms. Tuesday was one of these days and there being no water, Dr. Wilkinson did not notice that the faucet was open and left it that way when he departed the office for the day. For some reason he left the stopper in the waste pipe of the lavatory. The water came on during the night after 10 oÕ clock and ran steadily until it was discovered by Gabel.
Newcomb hotel consumed in fire
The Wayside Inn, a large three-story hotel at Newcomb, owned and conducted by John Anderson Jr., the Adirondack Lumber King, was destroyed by fire at an early hour the morn-
ing of Sept. 11, 1913, with practically all of its contents. The ice house and cooler, laundry and wood house adjoining were also burned. The property was valued at $40,000 and was insured for $18,000. The fire broke out about 4 o’clock starting from a defective chimney in the kitchen. It was discovered by one of the help who smelled smoke and following the scent found the flames eating into the wall around the chimney. The people in the house were hurriedly awakened and were forced to flee from the burning structure in their night clothes. The village has no fire protection and it was impossible to combat the flames which spread with such rapidity that the building was soon reduced to ashes. The hotel would accommodate 100 guests and was kept open year-round. It was purchased about 25 years ago and has since been greatly enlarged and improved. The building was a wooden structure heated by wood stoves. Mr. Anderson says that he will rebuild.
Con artists at work
John Thompson and Paul Resiner, members of the Ò Mysterious MamieÓ gang, who exhibited their wonderful freak of nature show at the recent Warren County Fair in Warrensburgh and skipped out of town after two days leaving unpaid their board bill with Mrs. Grant Turner, were brought back from Fort Plain, Sept. 12, 1913 by Deputy Sheriffs Philip Connell and Lewis Mosher of Glens Falls, and lodged in the county jail. The next day they were arraigned before Justice Hodgson, convicted of the charge and fined $25 each. They had no money but promised to pay the amount as soon as they could scrape it together. Upon this condition the justice suspended sentence and turned them loose to prey upon the gullible public and accumulate the coin. The men are also suspected of appropriating $35 which Mrs. Turner missed about the time
Athol-Thurman By Kathy Templeton
623-2967 - feidenk33@yahoo.com
Gore to host Harvest Fest
There is so much to do during the fall season here in the Adirondacks, and why let the tourists be the only ones to enjoy the beauty that surrounds us? People travel hundreds of miles to come here and enjoy our own paradise. Gore Mountain Ski Center at 793 Peaceful Valley Road in North Creek, will be hosting their Harvest Fest from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 12 and Sunday, Oct. 13. There is so much to see and do at this event — you can take a gondola or helicopter ride and enjoy the scenic view of the fall foliage or rent a bike and go for a downhill ride. Children will enjoy going for a pony ride, petting the animals, playing on inflatables or trying their skills out at rock climbing. This event is free, so check it out.
Fall Farm Tour approaching
Another great event is the Thurman Fall Farm Tour, and we have just learned that Andy Leblanc will be at Nettle Meadow Farms with a cider press. So grab some apples and watch them be turned into cider. Please gas up your vehicle before you head out, as there are no gas stations in Thurman. There will be a pancake breakfast from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Valley Road Maple Farm. At Toad Hill Maple Farm, located off High Street, Randy and Jill Galusha will be hosting the Thurman Fire Dept. serving up their chicken barbecue dinner from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. The Thurman Quilt Show, routinely a part of the Thurman Fall Farm Tour, is now seeking quilts from the past to be shown at the event from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. If you have an old quilt you would like displayed, contact Avis at 623-9921.
Events & activities in the region
High Peaks Hospice & Palliative Care, which serves the needs of patients and families faced with end-of-life care throughout the Adirondack region, will be holding a Harvest Cruise and Silent Auction Saturday, Oct. 5 to ‘Celebrate Life!’ aboard the Lac du Saint Sacrement. To find out more contact Sunday Conine at 743-1672. The Thurman Quilting Group holds their meetings every Monday from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. at the Thurman Town Hall. Coffee, Tea and light refreshments are served. For details, contact Myra at 623-2633. The county-sponsored senior bus service to Glens Falls will run Friday, Sept. 27 and is free to seniors age 60 and over. This service will take people to just about any location in Glens Falls, whether itÕ s grocery shopping, getting your hair done or a doctor’s appointment. Those who wish to go, call Laura by Wednesday, Sept. 25 at 623-9281. Thurman Connections Snowmobile Club holds its meetings on the last Friday of the month at the clubhouse on Bear Pond Road. The next meeting will be held Sept. 27 at 7 p.m. For details, contact Doug Needham at 623-9234. Norma Galusha wishes to remind folks the Sugar Loaf Seniors group holds their meetings once a month at the Town Hall
Adirondack Journal - 7
they left her house. This charge they strenuously denied and there was no proof to sustain it. Mrs. Turner has gained some experience which may be useful to her in future dealings with strangers.
Man fined for children’s truancy
Justice George Hodgson, on Sept. 25, 1913, fined Truman Reynolds $15 for violation of the compulsory education law in failing to send his children to school. This was the second offense, Reynolds having been fined $5 on the same charge last year. The fine was than remitted but this time Reynolds will have to pay. His punishment will extend over a period of 15 weeks as in deference to his limited means. Justice Hodgson agreed to let him settle in installments of $1 each week.
Hudson River dam progresses
A mammoth dam is being built across the Hudson River at the point known as the Feeder Dam near Glens Falls. The work was begun last fall, but the contractors, the Flood & Van Wirt Co. of Hudson Falls, were greatly hindered by high water during the winter and spring. They are now making rapid progress. The dam is being built entirely of concrete.
Real estate to boost commerce
One of the most important real estate transactions of the year was completed in Sept. 29, 1913 when officials of the McMullen & Leavens Shirt Co. and Edward McSweeney, proprietor of the McSweeney House reached an agreement to exchange properties on diagonally opposite corners of Lawrence and Cooper streets, Glens Falls. The McSweeney house will be moved from its present site to the opposite corner within a short time not far from the D.& H. station, which will give McMullen & Leavens a frontage of 250 feet on both Lawrence and Cooper streets, the large factory of this company forming an L shape.
Gala wedding
Miss Maude R. Pereau, daughter of Louis D. Pereau of North Creek, was married to Paul Akey of Newcomb, Sept. 17, 1913 by the Rev. George Lize, in Glens Falls. The bride wore a tailored gown of navy blue serge with a white beaver hat trimmed with
on the third Wednesday at 5 p.m. The John Thurman Historical Society will be hosting a free pot luck dinner Tuesday Oct. 1 for all area veterans from Saratoga to Pottersville and their family members. The event is to be held at the Thurman Town Hall starting at 5:30 p.m. Retired, active and family members of deceased are invited. Donations of a covered-dish entrée are now being sought. Dishes of food may be dropped at the town hall on Tuesday, Oct. 1 no later than 5 p.m.
PTSA news
The Warrensburg PTSA is currently holding their annual membership drive. Adult membership is $7 and a child membership is $4. You don’t have to be a parent, teacher or student to join, though. Grandparents, guardians and aunts and uncles of students are welcome to join and attend monthly meetings which occur on the second Tuesday of the month at 8:15 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. at the elementary school. Box Tops, Labels for Education and Campbell’s Soup labels are wonderful ways to help our school. Carefully clip them out and drop them off at the Thurman Town Hall, the Elementary school lobby, Richards Library or Direct Deposit recycling center on Main Street, Warrensburg. Ripped or torn labels are not accepted for redemption. There is now another way to help our school: register your Tops Market membership card and when you shop they will contribute 1 percent of your purchase back to our school. Register your Rewards card online and select Ò Warrensburg Central School.”
Over the fence
Thurman Emergency Medical Services President Jean Coulard announced at the recent Town Board meeting that they now have three Emergency Medical Technicians newly qualified in Basic Life Support. The town transfer station hours will remain the same throughout the fall season: Wednesday from noon to 3 p.m. Plus Saturday and Sunday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. You can purchase the re-
Chester to hold companion Garage Sale
CHESTERTOWN — People searching for bargains on collectibles and household goods Ñ or just seeking the experience of strolling about a charming country town, will find satisfaction in the second annual town of Chester community garage sale, set for Saturday Oct. 5 and Sunday Oct. 6. The event is being held on the same weekend as the WorldÕ s Largest Garage Sale in neighboring Warrensburg, which is expected to draw 40,000 or more people to the hamlet just 12 miles south. In Chestertown — where traffic and crowds will be more reasonable Ñ vendors will line up along Main St. and on the lawn of the Chester Municipal Center to sell their wares, as well as at private residences throughout town. The
ostrich plumes and carried a bouquet of white roses. The couple will reside at 97 Ridge St., Glens Falls.
News roundabout
Hunting season opens Oct. 1, 1913. Chestnut trees in the town of Caldwell and at French Mountain are reported to be heavily loaded with nuts and a big crop will be ready for the harvest as soon as Jack Frost further cracks open the burrs. Sunday night was the coldest night of the season here. The mercury registered 32 degrees the morning of Sept. 15, 1913 and we had a general freeze-up, the earth completely covered with frost. Everything in gardens was killed what the drought left. There seems little use of saying anything about the weather. As Mark Twain once said, “Nothing is ever done about it.” A very small vote was polled at the Warrensburgh primaries on Tuesday, Sept. 16, 1913 - a total of only 46 votes in both districts, a third of which were cast by the ballot clerks. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Morse of Minerva are the parents of a baby boy. William H. Tennyson of Chestertown has purchased from J.E. Johnson of Warrensburgh a fine Guernsey heifer by Florodora King and Ballett Glenda Gretta. (Note: Jacob E. Johnson owned Meadow Brook Stock Farm in Thurman, a farm that had been in his family since 1792, where he raised the finest of Guernsey and Jersey cattle. When his father, Sanford W. Johnson died in 1890, he left his son one-fourth interest in the lumber manufacturing firm of A.C. Emerson & Co..) Frank G. Stone has sold his drug store and ice cream parlor in Lewisville (River St.) to Truman Barber who took possession Sept. 17, 1913. (Note: This building is still standing in the parking lot of the Gristmill Restaurant.) The Empire Shirt Co. (now the Lizzie Keays restaurant building) wants 25 operators on men’s shirts. Good wages and steady employment. Also 15 young girls to learn to make ladies’ silk gloves. Satisfactory arrangements will be made while learning. Readers are welcome to contact Adirondack Journal correspondent Jean Hadden at jhadden1@nycap. rr.com or 623-2210.
quired trash bags either at the Town Hall or the transfer station. Those having a difficult time getting their trash to the transfer station can contact Jim Desourdy at 623-4254 and he will transport trash for $5 per week, or pickup as needed — Desourdy only charges for the week he picks up. He routinely picks up every Saturday starting at 9 a.m. Gail Needham has informed us that there are currently six boxes for Operation Christmas Child to be filled at the town hall, along with pamphlets and labels to designate the age group and gender of the child to receive it. Gail has asked that if you can purchase a shoebox-size rectangular plastic container at the local dollar store, this would be helpful due to the fact that there is a limited supply of the regularly used boxes. These containers serve a double purpose as after the goodies are removed, families overseas use these containers to store rice and other dry goods. Additionally, she reminds readers that other thoughtful items to add to these boxes may be a washcloth, towel, and bar of soap, toothpaste, toothbrush, hairbrush and deodorant. Filled boxes may be dropped off at the Thurman Town Hall during regular business hours.
Thurman’s local store reopens
Athol Hardware and Variety has re-opened their doors after a brief hiatus, and their hours are Tuesday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.; Saturday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.; and Sunday, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Cathy and Joe are selling variety, hardware, collectible and thrift items at this time. They have also added a small grocery line which they intend to expand as vendors become available. To reach them by phone, call 623-3080.
On a personal note
Celebrating anniversaries this week are Loren and Joyce Eddy on Sept. 28, plus David and Kaye Newkirk on Oct. 2. Celebrating birthdays this week are Marion Gill on Sept. 28; Jim Simkins on Sept. 29; Randy Baker on Sept. 30; Chad Rounds on Oct. 1; Riley Fisk on Oct. 2; also Stacy Beldon, Doreen Chadwell, Fred Witz and Adam Robinson on Oct. 3.
North Warren Chamber of Commerce is organizing the sale in conjunction with the Tri-Lakes Business Alliance, and the Chamber is designating spots for sellers. Call 494-2722 for more details.
Sign up soon for LGHS alumni reunion
LAKE GEORGE Ñ Plans are now being finalized for the annual Lake George High School Alumni Reunion Banquet, and reservations are now being accepted. The reunion, set for Sunday, Oct. 13 at The Georgian Resort, features a theme of The theme of “Blue Hawaii 63” — referring to the title of the prom of the Class of 1963 which will be celebrating their 50th reunion at the banquet. The event features a lakeside reception at 5:30 p.m., followed by a buffet dinner at 7 p.m., with awards and a
scholarship benefit silent auction afterwards. Musical entertainment is to be provided by Bobby Dick & Susie Q. Pam Parrott is chairing the reunion banquet, and Garry and Peg Duell of South Carolina are helping coordinate the weekend for their Class of 1953. Weekend events include a school tour, boat rides and picnics at various venues that will doubtlessly prompt reminiscing among alumni. The alumni association strives to stay in touch with Lake George High School graduates and classmates, according to group representative Tom Roach. He noted that the associationÕ s fundraisers bankroll ten $1,000 annual scholarships at the school for second-year college students. To attend the banquet or sign up for the alumni newsletter, call 668-9579 or 696-7184.
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8 - Adirondack Journal
Thursday-Saturday, Sept. 26-28:
LAKE GEORGE — Comedy: Moonlight and Magnolias, daily at Lake George Dinner Theatre, Holiday Inn Resort, 2223 Canada St. Legendary producer David O. Selznick has shut down production of his new epic film Gone With the Wind and fired director George Cukor because he’s unhappy with the first weeks of shooting. Mature audience. Dinner, 6:30 p.m., show 8 p.m.; matinee luncheon 11:30 a.m., show 1 p.m. $. Details: 668-5762 ext. 411 or: www.lakegeorgedinnertheatre.com.
Friday, Sept. 27:
WARRENSBURG — Riverfront Farmers’ Market, 3 p.m.- 6 p.m. at Warrensburgh Mills Park, 173 River St. Locally grown produce, maple syrup, flowers, herbs, wine, baked goods, cheese, organic meats, poultry, plants, crafts, specialty goods, more. Free. This trend-setting market was one of the first in the region. Details: 466-5497. CHESTERTOWN — Story Hour & Sing-a-long with Wendy, 10:30 a.m. at Chester Municipal Center, 6307 Main St. Stories, songs and fun! Free. Details: 494-5384.
Friday-Saturday, Sept. 27-28:
LAKE GEORGE — Ragnar Relay of the Adirondacks, an overnight 196-mile relay race from Saratoga Spa State Park along Hudson River to Lake George, then to Lake Placid, spans two days. Free to watch. Details: (877) 837-3529 or: www.ragnarrelay.com
Friday-Sunday, Sept. 27-29:
LAKE GEORGE — Festival of the Lake, daily downtown in the village. Street fair includes arts & crafts, live music by six bands in Shepard Park. Strolling entertainers, carnival rides, pony rides, petting zoo, boat show. Fireworks at 8 p.m. Saturday, weather permitting. Fri., 5 p.m.- 9 p.m.; Sat., 10 a.m.- 10 p.m.; Sun., 10 a.m.- 5 p.m. To benefit efforts to fight invasive species in the lake. Details: 668-5771.
Saturday, Sept. 28:
LAKE GEORGE — ‘Flashlight 5k’ nighttime footrace, 7:30 p.m. off Beach Rd. Family fun. Wear headlamps, lights, reflective vest, colors or costumes. Easy course. In conjunction with Festival for the Lake. $. Details, register: www.adkracemgmt. com. GLENS FALLS — Plein Air on-location painting with artist Tom Ryan, 9 a.m.- noon in City Park, Maple St. Demonstrations, instructions for beginners to experienced. $. Details: 798-1144 ext. 2 or: www.larac.org. QUEENSBURY — Poetry reading celebrating the international 100,000 Poets for Change Day, 4 p.m.- 6 p.m. in SUNY Adirondack’s Dearlove Hall, 640 Bay Rd. Local observance of worldwide celebration of music, art, poetry, performance art for social justice, peace & sustainable living. Features student
poets and published poets from the region Including Paul Pines, Barbara Louise Ungar, Nancy White, Stuart Bartow, Rob Faivre, Kathleen McCoy, others. Free. Details: 743-2200 ext. 2618 or: www.sunyacc.edu. LAKE LUZERNE — Camp Challenge Bicycle Ride & Run, 7 a.m. at Double H Hole-in-the-Woods Ranch, 97 Hidden Valley Rd. Fundraiser for the charity ranch. $. Register, details: 6965921 ext. 239 or: www.doublehranch.org/team-hole-in-wall. html. ADIRONDACK, NY — Community garage sale, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. at Old Union Church/Horicon Historical Museum Annex, 21 Church St. Treasures, homewares, bargains, collectibles. Supports Horicon Historical Society’s efforts to restore the historic church. Free. Details: 494-7286. LAKE GEORGE — Festival of the Lake Bicycle Tour, 9 a.m. departure from West Brook Rd. & Beach Rd. Two guided intermediate rides - 25 mile around Lake Luzerne or the 40-mile Stony Creek Loop along the Hudson River. All ages. Details: 796-2397 or: www.bikewarrenco.org. NORTH CREEK — Gore Mountain Leaf Cruncher footrace - The toughest 5k in the North Country, 1 p.m. at Gore Mountain Ski Center, 793 Peaceful Valley Rd. Challenging 5k trail run. $. Register, details: 251-2411 or: www.goremountain. com. BOLTON LANDING — Guided Autumn Hike with a Naturalist, 1 p.m.- 2 p.m. at Up Yonda Environmental Farm, 5239 Lake Shore Dr. $. Details: 644-9767 or: www.upyondafarm.com. GLENS FALLS — Movie: “Aladdin,” 8 p.m. in Charles Wood Theater, 207 Glen St. $. Details: 874-0800 or: www.woodtheater.org. GLENS FALLS — Glens Falls Cemetery Tour, 10 a.m.- 1 p.m. in cemetery, 38 Ogden St. Local historic characters come to life thanks to actors of Glens Falls Community Theatre. Golf carts available to those with physical challenges. $; under 12 free. Reservations, details: 793-2826 or: www.chapmanmuseum.org.
Saturday-Sunday, Sept. 28-29:
LAKE LUZERNE — Resident Artist Claudia Wheeler, 11 a.m.5 p.m. daily at Harmon House, 37 Main St. Watch Wheeler at work. Free. Details: 696-3500.
Sunday, Sept. 29:
GLENS FALLS — Taste of the North Country Food Festival, 11 a.m.- 3 p.m. in City Park, Maple & Ridge Sts. Sample foods from the region’s leading restaurants. Music and children’s activities. Rain or Shine. Arrive early for best selections. $. Details: 744-7470 or: www.glensfallstaste.com. NORTH CREEK — Nordic Ski Tune Up, Roller Ski & Family Paintball Biathlon events at North Creek Ski Bowl & riverside park. 6k or 10k roller ski races begin at 9 a.m.; paintball event at Ski Bowl. US Nordic Paralympian Goose Perez & Physical
Vendors Needed! Taste of Home Cooking School will be holding a cooking school November 2nd at the Crete Civic Center. We have limited booth space available for the show. Booths open 3 hours before show time and you can show and or sell your goods or products to over 1,500 eager shoppers. Contact us to see how you can get in on the many different opportunities for this show that was SOLD OUT last year!
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Therapist James Wallace give presentations at ski bow after roller ski race. $. Details: 396-9967 or: www.capitalregionnordicalliance.org. NORTH CREEK — Concert: Stefon Harris Quartet, 5 p.m. in Tannery Pond Community Center, 228 Main St. Acclaimed vibraphone artist & group plays Latin Jazz among various idioms. $. Details: 681-1715 or: www.upperhudsonmusicalarts. org. QUEENSBURY — “Pumpkin Run Family Fun Day” 5k footrace/walk at Queensbury High School fields, 429 Aviation Rd. Fundraiser aids Glens Falls Medical Mission. Registration, 7-8:15 a.m.; 5k race, 9 a.m.; Kids 1k run, 10 a.m. $. Registration, details: 683-1526 or: www.gfmmf.org. GLENS FALLS — Movie: “James & the Giant Peach,” 2 p.m. in Charles Wood Theater, 207 Glen St. $. Details: 874-0800 or: www.woodtheater.org. GLENS FALLS — Classical concert: Manchester Chamber Orchestra with internationally acclaimed pianist Adam Neiman, 2 p.m. at The Hyde Collection, 161 Warren St. $. Details: 792-2383 or: www.deblasiis-chamber-music.org. GLENS FALLS — Concert: “Brass & Organ Spectacular,” 4 p.m. at First Presbyterian Church, 400 Glen St. Features Bryan Kirk, Organist and Redline Brass Quintet. Music of Bach, Gabrieli, Karg-Elert, Strauss. $/donation. Details: 793-2521 or: www. fpcgf.org.
Monday, Sept. 30:
QUEENSBURY — Reading of poetry by Lois Marie Harrod, 12:40 p.m. in SUNY Adirondack‘s Dearlove Hall, 640 Bay Rd. Free. Details: 743-2200 ext. 2601 or: www.sunyacc.edu/writersproject. GLENS FALLS — Exhibit opening, artwork of Linda Buerkley & Joanna Albertson, Second Floor Gallery at City Hall, 412 Ridge St. Show of mixed media runs through Nov. 1. Free. Details: 321-4923 or: www.northcountryartscenter.org.
Tuesday, Oct. 1:
GLENS FALLS — Film: “Hava Nagila,” 2:30 p.m. & 6:309 p.m. in Crandall Library, 251 Glen St. Humorous documentary narrated by Rusty Schwimmer. Free. Details: 792-6508 ext. 3 or: www.crandalllibrary.org.
Tuesday-Saturday, Oct. 1-5:
LAKE GEORGE — Comedy: Moonlight and Magnolias, daily at Lake George Dinner Theatre, Holiday Inn Resort, 2223 Canada St. Legendary producer David O. Selznick has shut down production of his new epic film Gone With the Wind and fired director George Cukor because he’s unhappy with the first weeks of shooting. Mature audience. Dinner, 6:30 p.m., show 8 p.m.; matinee luncheon 11:30 a.m., show 1 p.m. $. Details: 668-5762 ext. 411 or: www.lakegeorgedinnertheatre.com.
Wednesday, Oct. 2:
CHESTERTOWN — Chestertown Farmers’ Market, 10 a.m.2 p.m. at Chester Municipal Center, Main St. Local produce, gourmet foods, crafts, maple syrup, flowers, herbs, wine, baked goods, organic meats, poultry, plants, specialty goods, rustic home furnishings, more. Live music by Brian McElhiney. Details: www.chestertownfarmersmarket.com. GLENS FALLS — Open house, 7- 10 p.m. at Upstate Model Railroaders, 190 Glen St. Learn about model railroads. Various layouts, train memorabilia. Free. Details: www.upstatemodelrailroaders.com.
September 28, 2013
Garden club meeting
CHESTERTOWN — The October meeting of the Adirondack Mountain Garden Club will be held on Tuesday, Oct. 1 at 10 a.m. at the North Warren Emergency Building. This month’s program is the CD presentation: “The Complete Gardener, Great Gardening Tips and Planning & Maintenance.” Local gardeners are invited to attend.
Bullhouse entertainment
CHESTERTOWN — Live entertainment has been scheduled for 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Wednesdays this fall at The Bullhouse Restaurant in downtown Chestertown. On the second and the fourth Wednesdays of the month, the jazz group Ò Al Tolomeo & Friends will be performing. Other local musicians will be entertaining Bullhouse patrons on the alternate Wednesdays. The Bullhouse is located at 6369 state Route 9.
Program on L. George history
GLENS FALLS Ð Andy Flynn, author of the six-volume Ò Adirondack AtticÓ book series, will speak at 7 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 2 on artifacts found throughout the Adirondack/North Country region during a presentation titled Ò Lake George in the Adirondack Attic.” This special Warren County Bicentennial presentation will be held in the community room of the Crandall Public Library, 251 Glen St.. In the book series, Flynn tells stories about artifacts at the Adirondack Museum in Blue Mountain Lake. These artifacts come from throughout the Adirondacks and elsewhere in the North Country. During his Oct. 2 presentation, he will focus on artifacts from the Lake George region. The lecture includes a reading of stories, and Flynn will be available to sign copies of his various books. Flynn is a writer, publisher and editor living in Saranac Lake. Flynn is employed as the assistant managing editor at Denton Publications in Elizabethtown, and he also serves as editor of the North Creek News Enterprise. His Ò Adirondack AtticÓ radio program runs monthly on NCPR.
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September 28, 2013
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Five smart growth projects eyed in Adirondacks By Andy Flynn
andy@denpubs.com ELIZABETHTOWN — Five Adirondack hamlets were chosen to adopt smart growth concepts as part of the state-funded Hamlets 3 project, and residents are invited to explore these community development ideas and offer their suggestions during a set of workshops Sept. 26-28. Three hamlets are in Hamilton County — Indian Lake, Blue Mountain Lake and Long Lake. One is from Fulton County — Caroga Lake. And one — Au Sable Forks — straddles two counties, Clinton and Essex. The workshops will be led by Roger Trancik, of Urban Design Consultants in Ithaca. He is a professor emeritus of landscape architecture and city and regional planning at Cornell University and the developer of the Hamlets 3 project. “The whole idea is to plant these ideas,” Trancik said. “We’ve had workshops previous to identify the sites, and now weÕ re coming back with design proposals that we want the community to evaluate.” During the workshops Ñ designed for interested citizens, planning boards, and public officials — Trancik will have a worksheet and breakout groups where people can sketch out their own ideas based on some of the concepts, and evaluate alternatives. The workshop dates are listed below. •Caroga, 10 a.m. - 1 p.m., Thursday, Sept. 26, Caroga Town Hall •Au Sable Forks, 6:30-8:30 p.m., Thursday, Sept. 26, Jay Town Offices •Indian Lake, 10 a.m. - 1 p.m., Friday, Sept. 27, Indian Lake Town Hall •Blue Mountain Lake, 3-6 p.m., Friday, Sept. 27, Adirondack Museum •Long Lake, 9 a.m. - noon, Saturday, Sept. 28, Long Lake Central School This is the second phase of the Hamlets 3 project: selecting five hamlets in the Adirondack Park to conduct a series of workshops to try to generate some projects based on the model of smart growth principles outlined in the Hamlets 3 book published in December 2010. The book, “Hamlets 3: Planning for Smart Growth and Expansion of Hamlets in the Adirondack Park,Ó written by Trancik, was the first phase of the project. It built upon two studies from the 1980s: Hamlets of the Adirondacks 1 and 2. Ò In other words, weÕ re trying to put the book into action,Ó Trancik said. “The upcoming workshops are the final series of workshops in those hamlets.” With the help of community leaders, Trancik has identified specific sites in each of the five hamlets to develop a project based on the principles and the planning model they developed in the first phase. Ò Each hamlet has a very different set of problems and conditions, and we’re trying to illustrate that,” Trancik said. “You know these principles can apply in a lot of different contexts given the regulatory environment in the Adirondack Park. There are a lot of possibilities for sound, sustainable economic investment and good planning and design that can help these communities in the future.” The overall goal of the second phase is to “revitalize and empower Adirondack hamlets through direct training and example.”
Caroga Lake
In Caroga Lake, an illustration of the Hamlets 3 proposal show a view of central green space toward the historic carousel, lakefront and reused dance hall. A proposed hotel is to the right of the carousel.
Indian Lake
In Indian Lake, the Hamlets 3 proposal includes extending the ‘T’ intersection of State Routes 28 and 30 into a crossroads and channeling growth northward toward Adirondack Lake. “This design creates an attractive greenway or boulevard leading to new housing development and a new Adirondack Lake public beach,” states the proposal. “This design opens future opportunities for more growth along the new corridor while still concentrating the highest density at the hamlet core.” The main goal in Indian Lake is to create an improvement dis-
Computer-generated animation of the Jennings Pond Park in Long Lake trict in the hamlet center. Ò Indian Lake has this problem of vacancies at the intersection,” Trancik said. “So we’re trying to show, by redoing the infrastructure and extending the infrastructure in a way that could generate new development sites for residential, how that, along with commercial revitalization, in these vacant buildings.”
Blue Mountain Lake
In Blue Mountain Lake, Hamlets 3 proposes building a new hotel on Adirondack Museum property, across the highway from the museum. Ò WeÕ ve got a couple alternatives for this new sort of cultural/ recreational hotel development,” Trancik said, adding that the museum includes a lot of property beyond the museum campus. Ò So weÕ re showing how trail systems can be connected to wilderness lakes, and they want to put a boat livery on Middle Pond. There are a lot of different ideas that fall under this.” The hotel concept is not a museum project, according to Adirondack Museum spokesman Todd Happer. However, the museum could provide assistance in making land available and designing uniquely Adirondack features, such as exhibits and programs for hotel guests that interpret the region’s history.
Long Lake
In Long Lake, the Hamlets 3 proposal shows a rendering depicting the proposed Jennings Pond Park. The plan proposes a nodal system of traditional Adirondack-style gazebo-decks at the water’s edge linked by a nature trail. The nodes provide resting areas, fishing spots, educational plaques and small boat docking. Ò WeÕ ve developed a scheme for increasing the variety and level of activities in the open spaces,” Trancik said. “It’s a circular trail system, what we’re proposing, and small boat access.”
Au Sable Forks
“Au Sable Forks has got a very special problem,” Trancik said. Ò Hurricane Irene wiped out a huge part of that hamlet, so weÕ re showing how they can expand very close to the hamlet, still within walking distance or a short drive, on to higher ground.” The project in Au Sable Forks will show a new residential cluster or what they call a Ò pocket neighborhoodÓ development above the flood plain. The Rolling Hill Mill Road site offers a variety of housing types enabling diverse income levels and multi-generational living arrangements, according to the plan. Ò With ample common space, a site for a community garden, and some housing units in clusters or ‘pocket neighborhoods,’ the site arrangement engenders an open sense of community
Computer-generated animation of the Indian Lake intersection
while preserving privacy,” the plan states. “The site also features walking trails connecting with nature as well as other areas of the hamlet.”
Needs, benefits
Ò WhatÕ s happened in these hamlets is theyÕ ve all gone through this transformation from an extraction resource-based industry that has provided economic life for these places Ñ paper industry, timber, metals, tanneries and so on Ñ to a seasonal economy, from a year-round to a seasonal economy,” Trancik said. “Many of these (hamlets) are trying to extend the season so thereÕ s more economic activity for a longer period of time.” Developing smart growth around existing hamlet centers has two major benefits: 1. It enables the community to integrate land suitable for development into the fabric of the existing hamlet. 2. It complements the protection of open space by discouraging visually unappealing and inefficient sprawl and strip development. Ò Hamlet communities should both meet basic resident needs and provide a focal point for culture, recreation, public amenities and businesses providing goods, services and employment,Ó states the project literature. “Hamlets 3 provides a process to revitalize hamlets through inward growth into under-utilized sites and responsible outward expansion.” Smart growth principles include: form and place; boundaries; walkability and human-scale; access to nature; compact centers; energy and sustainability; jobs and housing; travel choices; visual quality; resource preservation; and collective decision-making. Trancik and Urban Design Consultants studied more than 125 Adirondack hamlets in the 1980s, which produced two widely circulated, award-winning publications. Hamlets 1 described the Adirondack ParkÕ s centers of population, services, and commerce, as well as their needs for revitalization and investment. Hamlets 2 outlined strategies for hamlet revitalization using examples of successful projects within the Adirondacks. Hamlets 3 received funds from the Smart Growth Initiative of the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation. Results from these workshops are expected to be available online. Later in November, representatives from the hamlets will be invited to an implementation symposium at the Adirondack Park Agency offices in Ray Brook to exchange ideas and support for moving forward. For more information about Hamlet 3, visit online at www. apa.ny.gov/Documents/Reports/Hamlets/index.html.
Computer-generated animation of the proposed Blue Mt. Lake hotel near the Adirondack Museum
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September 28, 2013
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Oct. 4th - Pep Rally Football Game vs. Warrensburg
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Balloon Festival from page 1
“This is phenomenal — this is the biggest crowd I’ve ever seen for the festival on a Thursday night,Ó he said, estimating a gathering of 7,500 for the opening night of the balloon festival that continued through Sunday Sept. 22. Donahue gestured toward the gridlock on Glen St. “This is just insane — I heard that it’s a 45-minute drive from downtown to here,Ó he said. “But there are smiles everywhere.”
Ohioan says festival is the best
Joyce Willis, 73, of New Franklin, Ohio walked up to Donahue and grinned, proving his point. “I wanted to come to upstate New York and see THE balloon festival and here I am,” she said gripping his hand. She had traveled to Glens Falls on a tour bus with other Ohioans, tourists up to the age of 93. Ò People are so kind here,Ó she told Donahue, noting that not long before, she had walked past a local man who spontaneously stood up and offered her his chair for balloon-watching. Donahue smiled as Willis told her story. Nearby, Mike Adolfi watched a balloon pilot give his craft a shot of propane flame, and it drifted upward. From Queensbury, he’s one of the few local residents who hasnÕ t regularly attended the area’s premier festival. This year is the first he’s experienced in 25 years. Adolphi explained his job has kept him busy, but now he’s retired. “This is unbelievable,” he said. “This is great for the community — especially the kids.” His wife Linda watched the balloon rise. “They do it right, letting people get up close — and planning a lot of activities.”
Spectators appreciate the fest
Photo by Thom Randall
looking up at giant balloons rising as massive flames were shot into other balloon envelopes to get them to inflate. Ò I look forward to fall for apple picking, pumpkin-flavored coffee, and most of all the balloon festival,” she said. Not far away, Jill Guillet of Glens Falls — along with her husband Paul and her 9-year-old daughter Sylvia Ñ was watching balloon crews prepare for flight. Ò I grew up going to this balloon festival, she said. “For me, this is the annual kickoff for fall.” Guillet’s employer, Northern G.I. Endoscopy, sponsors a balloon. Last year, Sylvia took a short flight. “My ride was really cool,” she said. “It was fun.” Laurel Johnson carried her five-year-old granddaughter Riley on her shoulders. The youngster smiled and clapped as one balloon after another took off. Ò I brought all three of my kids to the festival — and now it’s another generation,” she said. Lisa Coutu of Queensbury danced in place to the music of the Stony Creek Band performing on the park stage. “This is the best,” Coutu said. “Everybody’s
happy, and it’s a great family event,” she said. “There’s nothing to not like about it.”
Communities embrace balloons
Balloonist Joe Schwerman of Queensbury watched other pilots get their craft ready for flight. Ò Look at this crowd Ñ look at all these people having a helluva good time,” he said. Schwerman added that people in the Glens Falls region really embrace the festival. Weeks before it occurs, they hang up hot-air balloon flags and “spinners” and wear their balloon festival T-shirts. Ò ItÕ s really fabulous how people really get into this festival; how they look forward to it,Ó he said. He listened to the crowd cheer as a crew in a basket soared upward. Ò For balloon pilots, itÕ s all about pleasing the crowd,” he said.
Challenge of bad weather
That’s exactly what the balloonists did for the remainder of the weekend, after the festival moved Friday to the Floyd Bennett Memorial Airport in Queensbury. For those remaining three days, windy and rainy conditions conspired to keep most of the
Media coverage like never before
One highlight of the 2013 festival was the participation of a QVC cable channel personality Nancy Hornback, who flew out of Crandall Park Friday morning, and later live spots were broadcast from the festival and interspersed in the popular shopping channelÕ s regular programming. Lake Luzerne Supervisor Gene Merlino, head of Warren County’s Tourism Committee told other county leaders Friday that the county was getting outstanding publicity, with QVC reached 93 million viewers in the U.S. and 250 million worldwide Ñ as well as the hundreds of thousands of viewers of central New York television channels. “The media coverage has been outstanding,” he said, noting that the entire festival budget is $160,000, primarily donations. “We get ten times that back into our economy.” Sunday evening, Joan Grishkot, wife of the balloon festivalÕ s founder, the late Walter Grishkot, said Walt would have been walking a foot off the ground had he seen Thursday’s record festival crowd in Crandall Park. Ò We needed a corkscrew to get through here, there were so many people,” she said. “And through the whole weekend, itÕ s been like one big happy family reunion.”
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John Blair of Bridgeton N.J. straightened out his balloon’s rigging prior to inflating it. HeÕ s been a featured balloon pilot at the Adirondack Balloon Festival for more than 20 years.”This festival is the only big one I attend — it’s my favorite,” he said. “It’s the spirit, the crowd, the way pilots are treated, and itÕ s always been safe.” Jennifer Hartung of Hudson Falls held her 10-month old son Oliver, who was wide-eyed as he was
A crowd of about 7,500 people, believed to be the Adirondack Balloon Festival’s largest ever for their Thursday evening kickoff event, gathered in Glens Falls’ Crandall Park Sept. 19 to watch about two dozen balloons soar into the sky. Balloonists and out-of-towners praised not only the acclaimed festival, but the local citizenry’s spirit and character.
balloons grounded over many of the scheduled mass launches. But many pilots inflated balloons but kept them tethered for safety, and several others allowed children inside several deflated balloons. Several also enlisted the help of dozens of children to load and unload their huge balloon fabric in and out of trailers. Saturday mid-evening, when balloons were grounded. They set up a “candlestick glow showÓ in which 22 pilots lined up their baskets and fired their propane torches in succession. Mark said that the poor weather was a disappointment, but the spirit of the pilots kept attendees happy. Ò Pilots went out of their way to put on a show, and it saved the weekend,” he said. “It’s been one of those years that you get lemons, so you make lemonade.” The festival attendees put the high winds to good use — by flying kites. They also scampered up a climbing wall and youngsters played in bounce houses while the adults browsed through the wares of craft vendors.
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Price Chopper from page 1
some prices have already decreased at downtown WarrensburgÕ s Tops Market, the closest supermarket to the new plaza site. Barry Feinman of Vanguard-Fine — the developer of the plaza said Monday the project was progressing well. Ò We thank the towns of Warrensburg and Lake George for being so cooperative and moving this project in a positive direction,” he said. “We look forward to bring new services to the area communities.”
ELEANOR PIZEN LANE JAN 05, 1932 - SEP 21, 2013 HALFMOON. Eleanor Pizen Ellie was a proud Mother, Lane, 81, died Saturday and loved tending to her premorning, Sept. 21, at Glens cious grandchildren. Many Falls Hospital, after an exgood times were spent by the tended illness. Born in Troy, pool in Halfmoon and the January 5, 1932, river in Potdaughter of the tersville. late Michael and Survivors inAnna Pizen, Ellie clude her husand her husband band of 58 years, lived 42 years at Harold E. Lane, their Route 236 her three chiladdress in Halfdren and their moon, before spouses: Mike moving to Potand Betsy Lane tersville, Warren of Clifton Park, County in 2002. Lisa and Jim Ellie retired in Ross of Gan1993 after working 43 years sevoort and Dave and Trish as clerk for CP Rail Systems, Lane of Maryland, her six B&M Railroad and D&H grandchildren: Austin Lane, Railroad in the Mechanicville Jonathan Ross, Brooke and yard . She had briefly Lindsey Lane, Justin and Elle worked for the Korell Dress Ross. Also survived by her Co. She and her husband faithful sister Helen Blowers worked hard to build by of Mechanicville, along with hand their home in Halfnieces and nephews and moon and their summer their families. home in Pottersville. Calling hours were held at A longtime member of the the DeVito-Salvadore FunerShenendehowa United al Home, 39 So. Main ST., Methodist Church , Ellie Mechanicville on Thursday loved celebrating Christmas, from 4-7 PM. Burial at the not only in December, but alSaratoga National Cemetery so in July. She enjoyed decoon Friday at 10:30 AM. rating her home, and lived In lieu of flowers, rememthe Christmas spirit. She also brances may be made to loved cooking/baking for Hudson Headwaters Health her family. She was active Foundation, 9 Carey Road, with home bureau and spent Queensbury, NY 12804, in time doing crafts and socialmemory of Eleanor P. Lane. izing with people who would Visit www.devitobecome lifelong friends. Ellie salvadorefh.com to leave also collected dolls, Precious condolences and for direcMoments and Norman Rocktions. well figurines.
GENEVIEVE AGNES (CATLIN) YAW SEP 06, 1930 - SEP 17, 2013 Ticonderoga. Genevieve company of the many friends Agnes (Catlin) Yaw, 83, of she would meet at the variTiconderoga, passed away on ous local restaurants. Tuesday, September 17, 2013 Agnes and her family took at Heritage Commons Resimany trips together when dential Healththeir children care of Ticonwere younger. deroga. She also traveled Born September to Florida many 6, 1930, in Ticonwinters with her deroga, she was husband. the third daughIn addition to ter of the late her parents, she Stephen and was pre-deGenevieve (Bingceased by one ham) Catlin. sister, Thelma Agnes was a lifeGreer. long resident of Survivors inTiconderoga and a graduate clude her husband, Rolland of Ticonderoga High School. H. Yaw; two children, R. She married Rolland H. Yaw Stephen Yaw and his wife, on May 2, 1953, and they reSusan of Ticonderoga and cently celebrated their 60th Maureen A. Stormer of wedding anniversary. Ticonderoga; two sisters, She was employed by the Mary O'Connor and Shirley New York Telephone ComCunningham, both of Ticonpany in Ticonderoga, retiring deroga; seven grandchildren, after 32 years of service, Nate Yaw, Adam Yaw, Rewhere she worked in the trafbecca Norton, Amanda Yaw, fic department of the compaAlex Yaw, Richard Stormer ny as Telephone Operator III, and Kyle Stormer; 10 and Service Assistant, and great-grandchildren, and trained many girls to become many nieces and nephews. operators. Calling hours for relatives Mrs. Yaw was a communiand friends were held Friday, cant of St. Mary's Catholic September 20, 2013 from 6 Church of Ticonderoga. She 8 p.m. at the Wilcox & Regan was a member of the D.A.R., Funeral Home, 11 Algonkin the Telephone Pioneers of St., Ticonderoga. America, a past member of A Mass of Christian Burial the Catholic Daughters of was celebrated on Saturday, America, Court St. Mary's, September 21, 2013 at 1:30 and a past charter member of p.m. at St. Mary's Catholic the B.P.W. (Business and ProChurch of Ticonderoga. The fessional Women). Rev. Kevin D. McEwan, PasShe enjoyed downhill skiing tor, officiated. with her family, golfing, The Rite of Committal folbowling in leagues in Ticonlowed at the family plot of St. deroga, and her weekly card Mary's Parish Cemetery of games with her sister, Shirley Ticonderoga. and niece, Mary CunningDonations in Agnes' memory ham. She also enjoyed fremay be made to St. Mary's quently going out to dinner School, 64 Amherst Avenue, with her husband and the Ticonderoga, NY 12883.
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JOYCE W. "NANA" STEELE AUG 26, 1947 - SEP 19, 2013 Joyce W. Steele, 66, of Orlansisters, Janet Erikson (Joyce's do, FL passed away on twin) and Barbara Whitford; September 19, 2013 after a grandchildren, Jacob, Branlong courageous fight with don, Elijah, Trennie and Josicolon cancer. Joyce was born ah. A Celebration of Life seron August 26, vice will be 2 1947 in Glens pm, Friday, Falls, NY to the September 27, late George 2013 at St. Luke's Arthur and United Doris (Phillips) Methodist Whitford. Joyce Church, 4851 S. was the owner of Apopka Joyce Steele & Vineland Rd., Assoc.. Her Orlando, FL grandchildren 32819. In lieu of were the center flowers, memoriof her universe. al donations may Nana loved attending their be made to Sand Lake Cancer little league games. Her othCenter, Orlando. A Graveer loves were England, roses, side Service in Warrensburg, hearts, Old English sheep NY will be scheduled at a latdogs (George), Autumn, holier date. Condolences may be days, gardening and flowers. offered at www.woodlawnfu She was a member of St. neralhomegotha.com. ArLuke's United Methodist rangements entrusted to Church. Survivors include Woodlawn Memorial Park & her sons, Timothy (Jane) Funeral Home, 400 WoodSteele, Joshua (Vanessa) lawn Cemetery Road, Gotha, Steele; daughters, Beth and FL 34734. 407-293-1361. Heather Steele; husband, Lee;
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VERNAL F. BEZIO MAY 08, 1934 - SEP 19, 2013 County Highway DepartDresden: Vernal F. Bezio, 79, ment and retired in 1996. of B Lane, passed away unexHe is predeceased by his pectedly at his home on brother Ronnie Bezio, his sisThursday, September 19, ters Radean Jenks and Doris 2013. Trainor. He was born on May 8, 1934 Survivors include his brothin Ticonderoga. He was a er, John Bezio, his long time U.S. Army veteran of the Kocompanion, Alice Battease; rean Conflict, a life member sons, Mickey Bezio and his of the Defiance Hook and wife, Dawn, Rick Bezio and Ladder Company #1 of his wife, Lori, Kevin Battease Ticonderoga, a long time and his companion, Gail member of the Ticonderoga Moore; daughter, Laurie Elks Lodge #1494, the North Cahill and her husband, JaWashington County Fish & son ; grandchildren, Trapper Game Club, the National RiGranger, Alicia Granger, fle Association and the Tiffany Bezio, Mickey Bezio, Ticonderoga Emergency Brandon Bezio, Kerry Cahill, Squad. Thomas Cahill and several His hobbies enjoyed many nieces, nephews and great years of skydiving, fishing, nieces and nephews. hunting and motorcycle ridThere will be no calling ing. He also enjoyed going hours or funeral services. out to local diners. Family and friends are invitIn his younger years, he was ed for a time of fellowship Golden Globe boxer out of and refreshments on Sunday, Burlington, Vermont and September 22, 2013 at 2:00PM liked his "buggy". at the home of Alice Battease He first was employed by Inon B Lane in Dresden. ternational Paper in TiconArrangements are under the deroga, then drove truck for direction of the Jillson FunerFay Spring Fuel Company al Home, Inc., 46 Williams and then in 1979 started Street, Whitehall, New York. working for the Washington
near Bakers Crossing Road. Basic site preparation including initial grading for the plaza has been accomplished. Golub said a schematic of the Price Chopper supermarket and its extensive amenities would be unveiled at the groundbreaking ceremony. Local officials have said the consumer will benefit from the competition provided by the major chain driving down local grocery prices. Some local shoppers surveyed this week said
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RAOULENE MARY GASTONGUAY MAR 24, 1927 - SEP 18, 2013 Ticonderoga. Raoulene Mary Raoulene is survived by her Gastonguay, 86, of Ticondear friend, Evelyn Cramderoga, passed away on mond and her family of Wednesday, September 18, Ticonderoga. She is also sur2013, at Heritage Commons vived by many nieces and Residential nephews. Healthcare of Calling hours for Ticonderoga. relatives and Born in Newark, friends were New Jersey, held Sunday, March 24, 1927, September 22, she was the 2013 from 2 - 4 daughter of the p.m. at the late Raoul WilWilcox & Regan ford and FloFuneral Home, rence Margaret 11 Algonkin St., (Dillon) GasTiconderoga. tonguay. A Mass of ChrisRaoulene was employed by tian Burial was celebrated on A.T. & T. Communications in Monday, September 23, 2013 Plattsburgh and Glens Falls at 10:30 a.m. at St. Mary's for 30 years prior to her reCatholic Church of Ticontirement in 1985. deroga. The Rev. Kevin D. She has been a resident of McEwan, Pastor, officiated. Ticonderoga since October of The Rite of Committal fol1985 and was a communicant lowed at the family plot of of St. Mary's Catholic Church the Norton Cemetery of of Ticonderoga. Keene, NY. She was a member of the Donations in Raoulene's Telephone Pioneers of Amermemory may be made to St. ica and the American Legion Mary's School, 64 Amherst Post #224 Ladies Auxiliary of Avenue, Ticonderoga, NY Ticonderoga. 12883.
Photo by Thom Randall
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Plans approved by the Lake George Planning Board depict a 30,000-square-foot Price Chopper Supermarket to be built just south of Warrensburg off Rte. 9 near the intersection of Prosser Road — across from McDonald’s Restaurant. The supermarket will likely be complete by early next summer, a Price Chopper executive predicted this week.
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George town offices. The plans also call for another 10,600 store Ñ adjacent to the supermarket Ñ which could be built later on, according to Keith Oborne, town of Lake George Director of Planning. “This will move rapidly,” he said, noting that town and state Dept. of Transportation approvals have been granted, and only a few formal permits are pending. The supermarket, at 30,500 square feet, is to be about half the size of the major supermarkets in Glens Falls. The eagerly-awaited project was stalled for months while project officials negotiated relocation of the McDonald’s parking lot exit about 30 feet north to create a symmetrical four-way intersection at Prosser Road. This redesigned Rte. 9 intersection recently was reconstructed to include sidewalks and new curbs. It is scheduled to have a traffic signal installed within several months. The new intersection features a central left turn lane routing northbound Rte. 9 traffic onto Prosser Road. Also, delays included negotiating relocation of high-voltage electric transmission lines running across Prosser Road. They are to be moved 250 feet or so to the southeast so they’ll span Baker’s Crossing instead of directly over the shopping center. Warrensburg Town Supervisor Kevin Geraghty said the town has negotiated a contract for sewer and water service for the plaza, and that it was obtained at a rate favorable to the existing property owners in the Warrensburg Water District. Designs for the plazaÕ s signage have also been approved by the Lake George Park Commission after some revisions, Oborne said. A traffic study submitted last year estimates that as many as 420 vehicles per hour would visit the plaza. The site is on a steep grade, and the parking lot cuts fairly deep into a slope. The bank office is to sit at the north end of the development by Prosser Road, and the grocery store and the attached larger retail space is to be at the southern end of the plot
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18 - Adirondack Journal
September 28, 2013
Chester awarded funding for biofuel heating plans By Thom Randall
thom@denpubs.com CHESTERTOWN — The town of Chester has received recognition and been rewarded as theyÕ ve taken yet another step towards sustainability. The town government was awarded $207,000 this week in federal funding toward their effort to convert to biofuel heating of their expansive municipal center. The funding announcement occurred a matter of days after a videographer and crew visited town to document the townÕ s solar power installation for public television. Thursday Sept. 19, U.S. senators Charles Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand as well as Congressman Bill Owens (D-Plattsburgh) announced that the town of Chester was awarded a $187,000 grant and a $20,000 loan through the U.S. Department of AgricultureÕ s Rural Development program to install a new pellet boiler to heat the town municipal center. While the federal legislators touted how the project would boost efficiency and help keep senior citizens warm at the local community mealsite, Supervisor Fred Monroe said Friday that
relying on wood pellets for heat would cut heating costs while enabling the town to convert to a renewable, plentiful resource that boosts the rural economy. “The beauty of this pellet-fuel boiler installation is that we over time create jobs locally and donÕ t send money over to the Middle East,” he said. A new pellet-fuel boiler could be installed and be ready for the 2014-15 heating season, he said. This new equipment would replace an aging fuel-oil boiler, and would be backed up with another existing oil-fired boiler that’s relatively new. A consulting engineer for the town has estimated that the town can save $18,000 to $19,000 per year of about $40,000 the town annually spends for heating fuel, Monroe said. The installation is expected to save local taxpayers as much as $190,000 over the boiler’s expected life. Payments on the $187,000 loan are about $16,000 per year over 15 years, Monroe said. He noted that savings during the life of the loan — which carries 3.5 percent interest — would be about $3,000 per year, and once the equipment is paid off, savings would jump to the full $19,000 or so. He added that the savings might increase over time as oil prices rise.
Thurman man new county code administrator By Thom Randall
thom@denpubs.com QUEENSBURY — Thurman resident Charles Wallace has been promoted to the post of Warren County Administrator of Fire Prevention and Building Code Enforcement, following the retirement of Karen Putney, who held the position for many years. She recently retired after a total of 30 years as a county employee. Wallace, 41, was appointed to the post by the county board of supervisors at their monthly meeting held Sept. 20. He has served as a county code enforcement officer for more than seven years. A 1987 Warrensburg Central School graduate, Wallace grew up in Thurman, and he learned the construction trade through BOCES courses. Wallace then worked in both commercial and residential construction. Wallace continues
to live in Thurman with his wife Michele and son Rex. Putney has been credited with reorganizing the department, boosting fire inspections, obtaining better compliance and virtually eliminating the delays in building inspections and permit approvals that had occurred after personnel cutbacks were inflicted in her department after the deep recession.
Putney said Wallace was well-prepared for the post, which pays $59,500 per year. Ò ItÕ s one of the toughest jobs in the county,” she said. “But since he’s worked for years in the department, he knows what he’s getting into.” Wallace said he wanted to keep up the Putney’s momentum. “The position presents some challenges, but I know the policies and procedures, so IÕ m looking forward to the work ahead,” he said. Customer service is the most important issue.” Board of Supervisors Chairman Kevin Geraghty of Warrensburg said Wallace was the right individual for the post. Ò Charlie is a long-time county employee as well as a past fire chief for Thurman,” he said. “He has a good knowledge of building and fire codes, and heÕ s been a solid employee in a tough job.”
Carmen’s
Warren
22 Main St., Warrensburg, NY 623-4221 & 668-2080 42351
CRONIN’S GOLF RESORT Golf Course Rd., Warrensburg, NY • 623-GOLF
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Payback on the equipment investment could happen sooner, if the town receives an additional state grant that it has applied for, he said. The sprawling, two-story Chester Municipal Center houses various town departments, the local library, a public auditorium, the town youth program and several business enterprises as well as the town-sponsored senior mealsite. Because the wood-pellet boiler works most efficiently when it’s working at full capacity, the backup oil burner would be fired up during the warmer months. Monroe said the new biomass boiler Ñ which could burn wood chips as well as wood pellets Ñ was a natural choice for the Adirondacks, which has millions of tons of wood, not valuable as lumber, that now rots Ñ and emits carbon dioxide in doing so — rather than being harvested to provide heat. “Biofuel heating utilizes a renewable resource that’s a plentiful, inexpensive resource,” he said. “Now, there’s a tremendous amount of low-grade wood that’s left on the forest floor.” While thereÕ s no pellet manufacturing operation now located in the area, Monroe said that if enough area municipalities and industries converted to biomass, a substantial number of goodpaying local jobs would be created. Malone Middle school converted in 2011 to wood-pellet heating, and the school district taxpayers are saving between $8,000 and $11,000 per year. Due to a generous state grant, payback on their equipment occurred in just 18 months. The wood-fired boiler that Chester is installing, unlike many woodstoves, burns with remarkably low emissions because the intense heat in the firebox results in total combustion. Steam, not smoke, constitutes the primary emission. The boiler installation also needs no stoking — it feeds itself with an automated auger. Maintenance is minimal, Monroe said, noting that an ash receptacle needs to be emptied about once per week. Monroe said he first heard about how practical biomass heating was through a presentation about two years ago for the Adirondack Park Local Government Review Board, of which he is Executive Director. Subsequently, Monroe and Chester town board members visited the Wild Center in Tupper Lake and the North Country School near Keene to see their wood-fired boiler installations. U.S. Rep. Bill Owens said in his press release that biofuel installations made sense in the Adirondacks and surrounding rural areas. Ò We have an abundant and renewable supply of locally-produced fuel for pellet boilers in upstate New York, so in addition to lower energy bills, this upgrade and others like it make sense environmentally,” he said. Monroe said the town leaders appreciated the funding. Ò I think itÕ s wonderful that the federal government recognizes that wood heat saves fuel costs and helps create local jobs.”
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September 28, 2013
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HELP WANTED LOCAL CUTTER & SKIDDER OPERATORS. Fort Ann area. Call 518-494 -4743.
BUY-SELL-TRADE With The Classified Superstore 1-518-873-6368 Ext. 201
GORE MOUNTAIN Ski Area Winter Employment Job Fair Saturday October 19th 9am-Noon in Main Lodge For more information please call (518) 251-2411 or visit our website www.goremountain.com ANTICIPATED PART Time Special Education Teacher NYS Special Education Certification, and prefer Reading Certification also. 11:30am to 3pm, Monday to Friday, with no benefits 10 month employee (school days) Pay per contract Anticipated Part Time Office Clerk To help effectively serve parents, staff, guests, community and most importantly students. Knowledge of general office procedures Computer skills a must Pre-employment drug screening NYS Education Department Background Clearance Approximately 1:00pm to 4pm, Monday to Friday, with no benefits 10 month employee (school days) $11.85/ hour Please send a resume and letter of interest to the school district. For the office position, please contact the school for an application. Application submission deadline 10/1/13 Newcomb Central School, PO Box 418, Newcomb, NY 12852. 518-582-3341 TEACHER AIDE Position: Minerva Central School has an immediate opening for a full-time teacher aide to provide services in a self-contained special education setting. Experience with special education students preferred. For application information contact Timothy Farrell, Superintendent Minerva Central School PO Box 39 Olmstedville NY 12857, (518) 251-2000. THE CLINTON, ESSEX, WARREN, WASHINGTON BOCES Is Currently Accepting Applications For The Following Anticipated Position: Library Media Specialist Full Time/10 Month School Year Itinerant/Crown Point Central/ Keene Central/ElizabethtownLewis Central Qualifications: NYS Certification as a School Media Specialist (Library) Salary: Per Contract or BOE Policy Anticipated Start Date: ASAP Reply by: October 2, 2013 by Close of Business Day (4:00 p.m.) Send Application (obtained from Human Resources Office or From Website: CVES.Org), Resume, Copy of Certification, Letter of Intent, and 3 Letters of Recommendation, to: Rachel Rissetto, Human Resource Director CVES P.O. Box 455 518 Rugar Street Plattsburgh, NY 12901 (518) 536-7316 Email: boyea_kim@cves.org BOCES is an EO/AAE TRAVEL, TRANSPORTATION and Tourism - School Bus Driver We are a School Transportation Service contracted by local school districts. We are hiring drivers who have a clean NYS license. No experience is required. Must enjoy children and be able to work without supervision. Good job for retirees. Contact Durrin Student Transporters at 518-5872745 or www.durrin.com.
SCHROON LAKE 2 bedrooms,includes lawn mowing, garbage and snow removal. Call 518-532-9538 or 518-796-1865.
ADOPTIONS
VACATION PROPERTY
ADOPT - The stork didn't call. We hope you will. Loving family of 3 looking to adopt another little miracle. Contact Robin and Neil: 866303-0668, www.rnladopt.info
OCEAN CITY, MARYLAND. Best selection of affordable rentals. Full/ partial weeks. Call for FREE brochure. Open daily. Holiday Real Estate. 1-800-638-2102. Online reservations: www.holidayoc.com Juggling Your Budget? Advertise Small, Get Big Results! Call 1-518-873-6368 Ext. 201
ADOPT CARING, nurturing home for your newborn baby. Beautiful life, much love, secure future. Expenses paid. Legal, confidential. Devoted married couple, Walt/Gina. Call 1-800-315-6957.
Need A Dependable Car? Check Out The Classifieds. Call 1-518-873-6368 Ext. 201
www.adirondackjournal.com
ADOPTION: CHILDLESS, loving couple pray to adopt. Stay at home mom, successful dad, great dogs & devoted grandparents. Legally allowed expenses paid. Bill & Debbie 800-311-6090
*REDUCE YOUR CABLE BILL!* 4Room All-Digital Satellite system installed FREE!!! Programming starting at $19.99/mo. FREE HD/ DVR Upgrade new callers, 1-866939-8199
MOTORIZED TRAVEL Chair new batteries, excellent condition. 518222-1338. $1,200
PREGNANT? CONSIDERING ADOPTION? Talk with caring adoption expert. Choose from families Nationwide. LIVING EXPENSES PAID. Call 24/7 Abby's One True Gift Adoptions 866-413-6296 Void In Illinois/New Mexico/Indiana
BUNDLE & SAVE on your CABLE, INTERNET PHONE, AND MORE. High Speed Internet starting at less than $20/mo. CALL NOW! 800-291-4159
ANNOUNCEMENTS CANADA DRUG CENTER is your choice for safe and affordable medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy will provide you with savings of up to 75 percent on all your medication needs. Call today 1-800-413-1940 for $10.00 off your first prescription and free shipping. DIRECTV - OVER 140 CHANNELS ONLY $29.99 a month. CALL NOW! Triple savings!$636.00 in Savings, Free upgrade to Genie & 2013 NFL Sunday ticket free!! Start saving today! 1-800-782-3956 DISH TV RETAILER. Starting at $19.99/month (for 12 mos.) & High Speed internet starting at $14.95/month (where available). SAVE! Ask About SAME DAY Installation! CALL 1-800-8264464 HIGHSPEED INTERNET EVERYWHERE BY SATELLITE! Speeds up to 12mbps! (200x faster than dial-up.) Starting at $49.95/mo. CALL NOW & GO FAST! 1-888-927-0861 NYS UNCONTESTED DIVORCE. Papers Professionally Prepared. Just Sign & File! No Court/Attorney, 7 days. Guaranteed! 1-855977-9700 SAFE STEP WALK-IN TUB. Alert for Seniors. Bathroom falls can be fatal. Approved byArthritis Foundation. Therapeutic Jets. Less Than 4 Inch Step-In. Wide Door. Anti-SlipFloors. American Made. Installation Included. Call 1-888720-2773 for $750 Off.
APPLIANCES ELECTRIC STOVE Black and white electric great condition asking $200 obo. Located in Port Henry. Call 578-2501 for more info.
AUCTION
FINANCIAL SERVICES $$$ ACCESS LAWSUIT CASH NOW!!! Injury Lawsuit Dragging? $500-$500,000++ within 48 /hrs? 1-800-568-8321 www.lawcapital.com DIVORCE $450* NO FAULT or Regular Divorce. Covers children, property, etc. Only One Signature Required! *Excludes govt. fees. 1-800-522-6000 Ext. 100. Baylor &Associates, Inc. Est. 1977
FOR SALE 2006 BLIZZARD utility trailer, 4'x8', excellent condition, hardly used. $800.518-251-2511 CAST IRON RADIATOR 38"H x 30"L x 9"D, $99. 518-788-7685. CLARINET, VIOLIN, FLUTE, TRUMPET, Amplifier, Fender Guitar $75 each. Upright Bass, Cello, Saxophone, French Horn, Drums $189 each. Others 4-sale 1-516377-7907 CONSEW INDUSTRIAL SEWING MACHINE, $600. 518-648-6482. DEVILBISS/EX-CELL PRESSURE Washer, 3.75 HP Briggs & Stratton engine, has owner's manual, used once, $250. 518-494-2270 DEWALT ROTARY Laser DW077 $1,200 new, asking $700. 518-585 -2779. FOR SALE DeWalt Overhead Sw $150, Large Parrot Cage $100, 2 Anderson Sliding Glass Doors No Track $100, 8mm Movie Camera $100, Cherry Wood Entertainment Center $500, Dining Room Table Round w/glass top & six chairs $500. 518-251-9881 KURBY CENTRIA Vacuum Cleaner with shampoo kit. 518-623-5444. $600
TOOLS TOOLS TOOLS Stihl Chain Saw * Table Saw * Drill Pres * Radial Arm Saw * Bench Grinder * Belt Sander * Recipro Saw * Jig Saw Many, Many Others! All priced at 1/2 or less then store prices. Charles 518-623-2197
DISH TV Retailer-SAVE! Starting $19.99/month (for 12 months.) FREE Premium Movie Channels. FREE Equipment, Installation & Activation. CALL, COMPARE LOCAL DEALS! 1-800-309-1452
TRAILER TIRE Dico-ST, (Sport Trax), F78-14 on Rim. Never used $85. 518-251-2511 WELL PUMP Gould, 1 HP, 4 months old, $500.00. 518-5760012 WONDERFUL WATER Trampoline, called Aquajump or RAVE, 15' across top, perfect condition. $1000 OBO. 518-547-8469.
FURNITURE BUNK BEDS black metal w/2 bunk bed mattresses $270. Bunk bed only $170 OBO. 518-668-3367 DESK/TABLE, STYLISH, 24x56x29high, separate plate glass top, 4 drawers, all hardwood, light brown finish, excellent. $50. 802-863-0126 TABLE 4’ wide & 3' high, excellent condition $25; Utility cart 32" wide x 4' long $30. 518-744-5087
GENERAL #1 TRUSTED SELLER! Viagra and Cialis Only $99.00! 100 mg and 20 mg, 40 +4 free. Most trusted, discreet and Save $500 NOW! 1-800213-6202
CHIMNEY SWEEP
518-623-5588 20493
PAVING/EXCAVATING
COMPLETE CHIMNEY CARE Cleaning • Repairs Stainless Steel Lining Video Camera Inspection
MEET SINGLES right now! No paid operators, just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call now 1-888909-9905 ROTARY INTERNATIONAL - Rotary builds peace and international understanding through education. Find information or locate your local club at www.rotary.org. Brought to you by your free community paper and PaperChain. THE OCEAN CORP. 10840 Rockley Road, Houston, Texas 77099. Train for a New Career. *Underwater Welder. Commercial Diver. *NDT/Weld Inspector. Job Placement Assistance. Financial Aid available for those who qualify. 1 -800-321-0298.
Brian Dwyer
Member of NYS & National Chimney Sweep Guilds 49454
Plumbing/ElEctrical
“Hey You... Pump Man”
• Pump Installation & Service • Plumbing & Electrical • Water Filters • Water Tanks • Winterization Available John W. Smith • Chestertown
518-222-7451
55185
26986
Email: jwsmith82@nycap.rr.com
$$$ VIAGRA/CIALIS. 40 100mg/20MG Pills + 4 FREE only $99. Save $500! 1-888-7968878
WANTED TO BUY BUYING EVERYTHING! FURS, Coins, Gold, Antiques, Watches, Silver, Art, Diamonds."The Jewelers Jeweler Jack" 1-917-696-2024 By Appointment. Lic-Bonded.
BUY VIAGRA from the UK! FDA Approved, 40 pills $169.00 Shipped! Save $500 Now! 1-800375-3305.
CASH FOR Coins! Buying ALL Gold & Silver. Also Stamps & Paper Money, Entire Collections, Estates. Travel to your home. Call Marc in NY 1-800-959-3419
SENIOR LIFE INSURANCE. Immediate, Lifetime Coverage, Qualify to age 86. Fast and easy. NO MEDICAL EXAM! Call if you've been turned down before. 1-888809-4996
CASH PAID- up to $28/Box for unexpired, sealed DIABETIC TEST STRIPS. 1-DAY PAYMENT. 1-800371-1136
VIAGRA 100MG or CIALIS 20mg Generic 40 tabs $80. Discreet, Fast Shipping. 1-888-836-0780 or MetroMeds.NET
LAWN & GARDEN DR POWER Road Grader 48", list price $1200, will sell for $700 OBO. 518-668-5126. KUBOTA LA3400HST-F Tractor with Blizzard B74 model snow blower on rear and full loader package model LA463 on front. Diesel fuel, only 95 hours use, excellent condition, $18,750. 518494-2270.
LOOKING FOR 30-30 Rifle in good condition, lever action. Please call 518-593-0655. SCRAP METAL & SCRAP CARS We Will Pick Up All Call Jerry at 518-586-6943 WANTED ALL MOTORCYCLES, before 1980, Running or not. $Top CASH$ PAID! 1-315-5698094 WANTED: PRE-1975 Superhero Comic Books, sports, non sports cards, toys, original art & celebrity memorabilia especially 1960's. Collector/Investor, paying cash. Call Mike: (800) 273-0312, mikecarbo@gmail.com WANTS TO PURCHASE minerals and other oil & gas interests. Send details P.O. Box 13557, Denver, Co 80201
LOST & FOUND FOUND: 1 Water Ski in Heart Bay on Lake George, on or about 08/ 05/13. Call 518-585-6837.
MUSIC
WANTS TO purchase minerals Wants to purchase minerals and other oil and gas interests. Send details to P.O. Box 13557 Denver, Co. 80201
CATS
TOP CASH PAID FOR OLD GUITARS! 1920's thru 1980's. Gibson, Martin, Fender, Gretsch, Epiphone, Guild, Mosrite, Rickenbacker, Prairie State, D'Angelico, Stromberg, and Gibson Mandolins/Banjos. 1-800-401-0440
CAT FREE one year old female cat needs a home. Torty coloring, spayed and all shots. 518 668 2404.
Juggling Your Budget? Advertise Small, Get Big Results! Call 1-518-873-6368 Ext. 201
FREE KITTENS - 6 adorable lap kittens looking for purrfect homes, 7 weeks, little trained, very sociable. 518-494-5315
NEW WAVE PEOPLE, Inc. has immediate needs for Healthcare Professionals in yourarea. We are seeking Nurses, CNA's, Psychiatrists, etc. Must have NYS Certifications. To apply send resume to ar@nwpusa.com or contact us at (732) 786-9070
EXCAVATING-PAVING
46211
LANDSCAPING
Firewood
NORTHSCAPE INDUSTRIES
DAVIS
CONSTRUCTION, LLC *SEPTIC & DRAINAGE SYSTEMS *SITE DEVELOPMENT *PRIVATE ROADS *PARKING AREAS
Commercial & Residential
1-800-682-1643 597-3640
#1 SELLER! of Viagra and Cialis Only $99.00! 100 mg and 20 mg 40 +4 free. Most trusted, discreet and Save $500 NOW! 1-888-7968870
HEALTH
623-9456
Landscape Contractors
• • • •
Mobile Firewood Processor. Will cut & split firewood at your location. Free Estimates. For details call Mike Hayes, Sr.
Serving the local areas since 1970
518-361-6071
ROOFING
SEPTIC
and Steeple Jack Service
24 Hour Emergency Service 20492
MEET SINGLES NOW! No paid operators, just people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages, connect live. FREE trial. Call 1-877-737-9447
Expert Roofing
Fuel oil • K-1 Kerosene Diesel • Automatic Delivery Heating Equipment • Sales Installation • Cleaning • Repairs
Main St., Warrensburg
HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA FROM HOME. 6-8 weeks ACCREDITED. Get a diploma. Get a job. 1-800264-8330 www.diplomafromhome.com
*SNOWPLOWING *SAND & SALT
HOMETOWN OIL
623-3613
DIRECTV, INTERNET, & Phone From $69.99/mo + Free 3 Months: HBO® Starz® SHOWTIME® CINEMAX®+ FREE GENIE 4 Room Upgrade + NFL SUNDAY TICKET! Limited offer. Call Now 888-2485961 DISH TV only $19.99/mo! TV Simply Costs Less with DISH! Free Premium Channels*! High Speed Internet from $19.99! Call 1-888803-5770
AUTO REPAIR
• Computer Diagnostics • Brakes • Tires • Shocks • Batteries • Exhaust Work • Tune-ups • Cooling System Maintenance • Transmission Maintenance • Lube, Oil & Filters • New York State Inspections • Offering A Complete Line of Tires • 24 Hour Towing
CUT YOUR STUDENT LOAN payments in HALF or more Even if Late or in Default. Get Relief FAST Much LOWER payments. Call Student Hotline 888-224-9359
SUN TEC Skylite new 2'x 4' to fit 24" rafter space. New costs $408 + tax, sell $250 OBO. 518-668-3367.
$28/MONTH AUTO Insurance - Instant Quote - Any Credit Type Accepted - Get the Best Rates In Your Area. Call (800) 317-3873 Now
3943 Main Street, Warrensburg, NY 12885
47534
SNOWBLOWER AND Propane Fireplace Toro 16" Powerlite snow blower, barely used - $275. Propane freestanding fireplace $200. 518-636-6504
SNOW TIRES 4- Nordsman 2, 215/60/16, 3,000 miles, $300; Vermont Castings Coal/Wood Insert $500. Call 518-338-3060.
Automotive Service, Inc.
OIL/HEATING
SAVE ON CABLE TV-INTERNETDIGITAL PHONE-SATELLITE. You've got a choice!Options from ALL major service providers. Call us to learn more! Call today!1-855 -294-4039
CASH FOR CARS: All Cars/Trucks Wanted. Running or Not! Top Dollar Paid. We Come To You! Any Make/Model. Call For Instant Offer: 1-800-864-5960
Kirt A. Tavis, Contractor kirt.tavis@yahoo.com 484 Windy Hill Rd. Moriah, NY 12960
(802) Fax (518) Cell (518)
48243
PREGNANT? CONSIDERING ADOPTION? You choose from families nationwide. LIVING EXPENSES PAID. Abby's One True Gift Adoptions. 866-413-6292, 24/7 Void/Illinois/New Mexico/Indiana
LOWER THAT CABLE BILL!! Get Satellite TV today! FREE System, installation and HD/DVR upgrade. Programming starting at $19.99. Call NOW 800-725-1865
RYOBI 10" Table Saw BT 3000 with work stand & extras. Like new, used once, has owner's manual. Paid $800+/-, selling for $450. 518-494-2270.
CASH FOR CARS, Any Make or Model! Free Towing. Sell it TODAY. Instant offer: 1-800-8645784
825-6179 546-1147 570-0859
www.facebook.com/ ExpertRoofingSteepleJackServices
• • • •
668-9526
www.northscapeindustries.com
TAXIDERMY
FRASIER TAXIDERMY
GERAW’S OK SEPTIC SERVICE
- CESSPOOLS & SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED & INSTALLED - ELECTRIC ROOTER SERVICE -DELIVERY OF GRAVEL • STONE • TOPSOIL-ALL TYPE BACKHOE WORKPORTABLE RESTROOM
FAST SERVICE (518)
(518)
585-2845 597-3634 90118
Landscaping Site Work Bobcat/Bulldozer Services Excavating Services Soil Conditioning, Hydroseeding & Sod Lawn Top Soil & Mulch Roads Built & Maintained Drainage Systems Driveways Fully Insured
45449
MIRROR 39" x 33" with wooden frame, $30. 518-532-0024
518-251-3762
Specializing in Whitetails S 16 YEARES & Small Animals BUSIN S
IN
• Skull/European Mounts • Fish • Rugs • Horn Mounts • Tanning • Life Size Mounts • Mount Cleaning and Repairs • Shoulder Mounts Deer, Moose, Bear, etc.
48765
ELECTRONICS
50754
ADOPTIONS
September 28, 2013
20494
20 - Adirondack Journal
62 Hardscrabble Rd., Olmstedville, NY 12857 Email: jamiefrasier@frontiernet.net www.adirondackmountainandstream.com
www.adirondackjournal.com
September 28, 2013 DOGS
NEW MODULAR MODELS & SINGLE & DOUBLE WIDES factorydirecthomesofvt.com 600 Rt.7 Pittsford, VT 05763 1-877-999-2555 tflanders@beanshomes.com WARRENSBURG MOBILE Home for Sale - 1.3 acres, low taxes, 3 bedrooms, all appliances and some furniture. 518-623-3247
OLDE ENGLISH Bulldogge and American Bulldog Puppies, Reg, shots UTD, health guaranteed, family raised, parents on premises, www.coldspringkennel.com, limited registrations start $800. 518-597-3090.
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY PORT HENRY Duplex apartment building, completely renovated, excellent rental history, some owner finanancing available. $69,000. 518-546-8247. TICONDEROGA OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT - Off main street, tons of potential, $400/mo. 518-5856364
SINGLE-FAMILY HOME CROWN POINT - Cute, cozy, 3 bdrm/2 bath, A frame, porch, 1/2 acre, $83k. 518-351-5063, 860673-6119, 917-679-4449. LAKE GEORGE - $111,999 drastically reduced! Walk to lake, secluded, new construction, 3/4 finished, 3 bedroom, 1 1/2 bath. 201739-2395. MODULAR HOME 3 bdrm, 2 baths, on 1 acre of property, 2 car garage, 2 decks, $87,500. Port Henry, NY 518-962-4685
VACATION PROPERTY
TICONDEROGA OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT - Back side of large building, has 2 room, newly renovated, $300/mo. 518-585-6364. TICONDEROGA - PROFESSIONAL OFFICE SPACE FOR LEASE Reception plus 4, plus bathroom. Off street parking, heat included, rent negotiable. 518-338-7213.
FARM LENDER MUST SELL SHORT! HISTORIC CATSKILL MTN FARM OCT 5TH & 6TH. Over 1,000 acres being Sold Off in just 32 Parcels! 5 to 147 acre tracts at 50% Below Market Prices! 2 1/2 Hrs NY City, Gorgeous Mtn Views, Farmhouses, Springs & Ponds!Call 1-888701-1864 to register or go to www.newyorklandandlakes.com for a virtual tour NOW!
SCHROON LAKE - Leased Land with Camp in Excellent Condition, 50' lakefront, 48' wooden dock, asking $50,000. Call for details 518-495-7683. SCHROON LAKE WATERFRONT CAMP on leased Land. Screened porch, 32' aluminum dock + more. $37,900. 518-569-6907.
LAWN & GARDEN SEARS LEAF Catcher Fits 38" cut riding mower. 518-798-6261, leave message. $60
ACCESSORIES
1 ACRE OF Land at Wood Rd., West Chazy, NY, close to schools, nice location. Please call 518-4932478 for more information.
(2) TRAILERS (OPEN) - both excellent condition; 2010 Triton 20' Aluminum - max wgt. 7500 lbs. Asking $4900 and 1989 Bison 31' overal Gooseneck, Asking $2900. 518-546-3568.
BRANT LAKE 9.1 acre building lot for sale by owner. Harris Road. $65,000. (518) 494-3174. CROWN POINT - 600 + feet on Putts Creek, 2.78 acres, 20' x 32' livable building. Fix up or tear down and rebuild. $30,000 FIRM quick sale. 518-354-7167. FLORIDA - LAND IN PORT SAINT LUCIE, FL for only $14,900. Guaranteed ownerfinancing with 20% down and $179 per month. Call 1-877-983-6600 orwww.FloridaLand123.com HUNTING CAMP SALE NYS Northern Tier Hunting Adirondack Lean-to on 5 WoodedAcres: $19,995. Brand New Hunting Cabin, So. Adks, 5.1 Acres: $29,995. Rustic Cabin on 60 Acres, State Land Access: $79,995. Close Before Hunting Season - FinancingAvailable! Call C&A 1-800-2297843 www.LandandCamps.com STONEY CREEK 50 Acres secluded easy access 1100 ft. black top frontage, mountain views, Stoney Creek, NY 100K, no interest fianancing. 518-696-2829 FARMFARM666@YAHOO.COM TOWN OF Lake George 1/2 acre building lot. Village sewer, upscale neighborhood, build-out basement, mountain views. $47,000. Will hold mortgage for qualified buyer, 20% down. 518-793-3356 or 518-321-3347.
MOBILE HOME
CASH FOR CARS. Any make, model and year! Free pick-up or tow. Call us at 1-800-318-9942 and get an offer TODAY! CENTURY 6’ Fiberglass Truck Cap has 3 sliding windows w/screens. Also bedliner. Fits Toyotas. Excellent condition. $1100 value, asking $500. 518-546-7913. STUDDED SNOW Tires Two new condition studded Firestone Winterforce snow tires, 215/70R 14, mounted and balanced on Ford Aerostar rims, asking $60 each. 518-585-5267 or 410-833-4686.
AUTO DONATION DONATE YOUR CAR to Veterans Today! Help those in need! Your vehicle donation will help US Troops and support our Veterans! 100% tax deductible Fast Free pickup! 1-800-263-4713 DONATE YOUR CAR - National Veterans Services Fund. Free nextday towing. Any condition. Tax deductible. Call #1-877-348-5587.
AUTO WANTED CARS/TRUCKS WANTED! Top $$$$$ PAID! Running or Not, All Years, Makes, Models. Free Towing! We're Local! 7 Days/Week. Call Toll Free: 1-888-416-2330 CASH FOR CARS AND TRUCKS. Get A Top Dollar INSTANT Offer! Running or Not! 1-888-416-2208 (888) 416-2208 GET CASH TODAY for any car/ truck. I will buy your car today. Any Condition. Call 1-800-8645796 or www.carbuyguy.com TOP CASH FOR CARS, Any Car/ Truck, Running or Not. Call for INSTANT offer: 1-800-454-6951
BOATS FOR SALE PARK MODEL - 1986 LEDGEVIEW Camp - Hwy 149 5 Pine Breeze Trail - $49,500 Come see, it's really neat!! New In 2012: roof, siding, bedroom, deck and shed! 518-636-3429 or 352-428-8767
1968 LAUNCH Dyer 20’ Glamour Girl, Atomic 4 inboard engine, 30HP, very good condition. Safe, reliable, spacious, ideal camp boat. Reasonable offers considered. Located in Essex, NY. 802503-5452 1980 18 1/2 FT. Century Cuddy Cabin, 120 HP I/O, trailer, GPS depth finder, down rigger, plus. $2400 OBO. 518-9638220 or 518-569-0118 1992 FOUR WINNS 225 SUNDOWNER OMC outdrive. Bimini top & mooring canvas. Custom trailer, great shape, used on Lake George only. $8,000 firm. Call 518 -543-6645 before Oct. 1st, after 845-294-5736. 20’ SEA Ray Bowrider, blue, 1979, V8 M/C, 5.7L Mercruiser, galvanized trailer, mooring cover. $2,798. Sue 973-715-1201. 2005 WHITEHALL SPIRIT rowing/sailboat. Classic boat, rare find. Must sell! Asking $4500 OBO. 845-868-7711 KAYAK PERCEPTION, Model Carolina, room for gear, greatly reduced to $500 FIRM. 518-5044393
LAND
5.1 ACRES PORTAFERRY LAKE, West Shore $129,900. 6 acre waterfront property now $19,900. www.LandFirstNY.com 1-888-683 -2626
16’ MERRIMACK Souhegan Canoe. Good Condition. Pleasure to paddle, very stable. Asking $850. Call 518-624-3888.
’88 BAYLINER 22’, V8, open bow, great shape, cover included, many extras. $4,000 firm. 518-942-7725 14’ ADIRONDACK Guide Boat complete w/trailer, oars, cover & cherry caned seats. Never been used. $5500 firm. 518-642-9576.
CARS 1989 CORVETTE Convertible, red, 350 L98 V-8, automatic, 64,000 miles. Good condition, tires like new. Garaged in Long Lake. Good cruising car. Asking $10,750. Call 518-624-3888.
FARM EQUIPMENT 1995 KUBOTA 4x4 Tractor with loader, 2900 hrs, 36hp, Turf tires, good shape, $9,500 or trade for a 70's Corvette, Winchester Rifles, handguns, S & Wor Colt or a 4 wheel drive 4-wheeler or a motor home. 518-546-8257
MOTORCYCLES WANTED JAPANESE MOTORCYCLE KAWASAKI 1967-1980 Z1900, KZ900, KZ1000, ZIR, KX1000MKII, A1-250, W1-650, H1 -500, H2-750, S1-250, S2-350, S3 -400 SUZUKI GS400, GT380, GT750, Honda CB750 (1969,1970) CASH. FREE PICKUP. 1-800-7721142, 1-310-721-0726 usa@classicrunners.com
RECREATIONAL VEHICLES 1979 SOUTHWIND Motor Home 27', sleeps 6, self contained generator, air condition, micro oven, everything works. Firm $3500. 518-494-3215. 2008 KEYSTONE Cougar XLite Travel Trailer, 26', 1 slide, sleeps 6 -8, bunks, polar package, TV, many extras, one owner, mint condition. $15,000. 518-494-7796. 2013 JAYCO 33RLDS 35’, custom built, 3 slides, all leather interior, 2 flat screen TVs, built-in fireplace, every option available, mint condition, $24,500. 631-885-0198 or 516-967-5260.
SNOWMOBILES
1993 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass Supreme Convertible. Only 111k miles. Rust free FL car. All white w/red leather interior. PS, PW, PB. New AM/FM/CD/Bluetooth stereo w/rear speakers. Alloy wheels, V6, new tires. Asking $2795 OBO. 518 -361-4052.
2001 LOAD Rite Trailer, 8' x 8' with spare tire, $800. 518-6234152
2006 CHEVROLET HHR LT Sport, red, automatic, 52,000 miles, 2nd owner, excellent cond., fully inspected w/new tires & battery, CarFax report & maintenance records, $8500. 518-668-5017
SUVS
2008 CHEVROLET Impala, color mocha metallic, 58k miles, great gas mileage, like new inside & outside. $10,800. 518-668-2884 2008 PONTIAC G5 60,000 miles, PS, PB, PL, Cruise. New tires, brakes. 518-585-2131. $8,475 CARS & TRUCKS FOR SALE 1992 Chevy 1500 Stepside w/4 way plow $1650. 1998 Mercury 4 cycl, VGC $1500. 1999 Old 4 cycl, VGC $1600. 2001 Ford Taurus $1400. 2004 Ford Taurus $2000. 1998 Ford 4x4, auto w/cap $1250. Will take BO or trade on all vehicles. 518-494-4727
2005 YAMAHA Venture 600 Snowmobile, 717 miles. $5,000. 518-623-4152
2003 FORD Explorer 2003 Ford Explorer, tan, 127,000 miles, loaded, power everything, A/C, remote start, new battery, alt, belts. $4500. 518-668-2970.
TRUCKS 2004 FORD F250 Super Duty, Super Cab, V8, 6.0 diesel, 4x4, 8'box, Jericho cap, many accessories, 7' plow, 156,000 miles, in good mechanical condition. $10,500. 518232-3815.
Fishing For A Good Deal? Catch The Greatest Bargains In The Classifieds 1-518-873-6368 Ext. 201
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NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY Name: K & C Land Holding, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the New York Secretary of State (NYSOS) on July 22, 2013. Office Location: Warren County at 63 Woodchuck Hill Road, Lake George, New York 12845. The Secretary of State is designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. The NYSOS shall mail process to the LLC at63 Woodchuck Hill Road, New York 12845. Purpose: any lawful activity. AJ-8/31-10/5/2013-6TC-51022 -----------------------------
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September 28, 2013
September 28, 2013
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September 28, 2013