Two days, too much
Student honored
Forty-eight hours after the Summer Solstice and there’s a ton of stuff to do.
Vergennes Union H.S. teen recognized for land stewardship.
newmarketpress@denpubs.com MONTPELIER — On June 15, the Vermont Department of Labor announced that the seasonally adjusted statewide unemployment rate for May 2012 was 4.6 percent. The state data for May show no change from the April statewide unemployment rate. National unemployment is on the rise, now at 8.2 percent, while Vermont unemployment remains flat. Vermont has the fourth lowest unemployment rate in the U.S. “The May jobs numbers confirmed the volatility seen in April’s data which was related to seasonal fluctuations,” according to Department of Labor Commissioner Annie Noonan in a news report. According to Noonan, the seasonally adjusted Vermont data show the Vermont total labor force decreased by 800. May posted the third straight month of declines to the state’s total labor force. Noonan confirmed that the seasonally adjusted data for May reports an increase of 3,300 jobs over the April data. State government added jobs during the period while leisure and hospitality, which includes professional as well as low-wage cleaning and room service positions, had the largest movement with a reported job increase of 5.5 percent. Manufacturing reported some job gains, too. But the state continues to lag in the construction sector which not keep up with past hiring trends (minus 500 jobs).
P.O. BOX 338 ELIZABETHTOWN, NY 12932 POSTAL PATRON
Serving Addison and Chittenden Counties
June 30, 2012
By Lou Varricchio
ECRWSS PRESORTED STANDARD U.S. POSTAGE PAID NEW MARKET PRESS/ DENTON PUBLICATIONS
See page 11
See page 4
Construction sector down 500 jobs in Vermont
FREE
Take one
Divers recover body of 53-year-old swimmer By Lou Varricchio newmarketss@denudes.coma MIDDLEBURY — The body of Yaird Mousse of Middlebury, who drowned June 21 shortly before 7:27 p.m., was recovered from the bottom of a submerged channel in Otter Creek. The site of death is below Middlebury Falls, in Frog Hollow, in downtown Middlebury. The body was located by Vermont State Police divers at 10 a.m. June 22. Mousse was described by several sources, including police and friends, as being either 53, 54, or 55 years of age. Mousse, a resident of Middlebury, was reported missing at 7:27 p.m. June 21 by three companions. The companions were also eyewitnesses and said the man was swimming in the center of Otter Creek; he went underwater and never resurfaced, they said. Middlebury Police Chief Tom Hanley said the center of Otter Creek, below the falls, contains a current of approximately 2 miles per hour. Hanley said the VASS divers found the victim exactly where they had believed him to be located. See DROWNING, page 7
Vermont State Police dive and surface teams searched for the body of drowning victim Yaird Mousse in the Otter Creek near Frog Hollow in Middlebury June 22. Photo by Lou Varricchio
Starksboro farm offers cornucopia of Vt. food products From News & Staff Reports newmarketpress@denpubs.com Starksboro — With all the gloomy news about the future of dairy farming and other traditional agriculture mainstays in Vermont, news about the Rockville Market Farm in Starks-
boro is worth shouting about. This noteworthy farm is a full-service operation that has grown by leaps and bounds over the years. The farm boasts seasonal vegetables, pig-producing fresh pork, and eggs. The operation is known in New England for its farm innovations and business acumen.
The farm appears online as documented by award-winning Vermont photographer Natalie Stultz (see attached image). Her website is a showcase of Vermont farm pictures. Stultz has helped Rockville upgrade the farm's website, too. Rockville products are available at the Burlington Farmers Market as
well as through several area retail outlets but mostly the operators like to sell to their CSA. The public is invited to visit the farm for the July 13 fresh farm dinner. Attendees are asked to bring a lawn chair. Admission is $10 for adults and $5 for youth.
Residents find ways to cool off when it's hot, hot, hot By Lou Varricchio
newmarketpress@denpubs.com
Bathers cool off at the Dog Team Falls in New Haven June 21. Photo by Lou Varricchio
MIDDLEBURY — A near-record heat wave gripped Vermont June 2021 to mark the opening hours of the summer of 2012. Temperatures reached the mid 90s in Addison and Rutland counties. Combined with the heat index, indicating high humidity, made the skin temperature feel like 99 degrees during the peak of the heat wave. Local residents sought immediate relief from the heat by either plunging into area ponds, swimming holes, and backyard pools, or by running through cooling fountains of water
created by lawn sprinklers. "I absolutely love the waterfall," said heat-wave bather Patti SmithLambert, 20, a student at Community College of Vermont in Middlebury. She spent the afternoon of June 21 swimming below Dog Team Falls located along Dog Team Road in New Haven. "It's the best way to stay cool. It's a very laid-back party atmosphere." Smith-Lambert said a Vermont State Police trooper intervened in a parking lot altercation at the falls Wednesday, but didn't hassle bathers. Cooler, more seasonal day-time temperatures, in the low to mid 80s, returned during the weekend.
2 - The Eagle
June 30, 2012
www.addison-eagle.com
POCOCK ROCKS
Douglas Orchards Route 74, 1 Mile West of Shoreham
Pick Your Own
Strawberries Call Ahead For Picking Hours & Conditions
35329
(802) 897-5043 • Shoreham, VT
The Eagle’s TRIVIA Question Of The Week! • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Ques. 1
Which Of The 48 Contiguous States Is The Farthest North?
Ques. 2
In The Apollo Manned Space Program, What Did The Initials LM Represent?
•••Answers Appear On The Puzzle Page •••
29216
Be Sure To Say You Saw Their Ad In The Eagle! Thanks!
OVERSTOCK S OC E SALE
P
T MARK AN S N’ S EAST. STEPHE CHURCH ET
Middlebury and Other Addison County Locations.
Weds. June 27 to Weds. July 4
SALE BY OWNER • Please Call 802-363-3341
29037
Photo provided Greenhouse Number
10” Petunia Hanging Baskets 19 & 13 6” Hosta Fiber Pot Sales Area 4” Perennials (Flat of 15) 12 Apple Trees, Plums, Pears 14 Ornamental Deciduous Trees 14 1 Gal. Assorted Shrubs Lathe House 20% Off All Evergreens Lathe House Impatiens 4 Pak 1 3” Fuschia 5 6” Grape Vines 14 6 Pak Zinnia, Cosmos, Sales Area Morning Glory
SATURDAY , JULY 7TH ON THE MIDDLEBURY GREEN 9:00 AM - 3:00 PM
All proceeds benefit human service and relief organizations.
Price
Vergennes Lions Club Charity Auction
$7.99 $3.49 $13.00 $20.99 $20.99 $5.59 $1.79 $.79 $8.99 $1.59
We have a good selection of plants in our sales are if you want to avoid the warm greenhouses!
First Season Greenhouses
Wednesday, July 11th, 6:30pm at the Vergennes Union Middle School Gym Antiques, gift certificates, household furniture, firewood, fuel, oil, vacation stays, 2-day passes to Grace Potter and the Nocturnals’ Sept. 14-15 Grand North Fest in Burlington, and MUCH more. For questions or to donate, contact Barry Aldinger at 877-3725 or Debbie Brace at 324-1758.
2153 Button Bay Road Open 7 Days a Week 9 - 5 35606
T REASURES O LD & N EW V INTAGE C LOTHING & J EWELRY G ARDEN G REENERY S ILENT A UCTION C HICKEN , H OT D OGS , S ALAD & B AKED P IES R AFFLE FOR A H OOKED R UG
The Town of Bristol celebrated Pocock Rocks with a variety of downtown events including live music, beer and wine tents, food and crafts. Pictured is the band Mango Jam, a Pocock Rocks regular. The annual event’s moniker is actually Bristol’s original town name—Pocock.
Near Vergennes. No credit cards. Supervised children only. 35617
No large appliances or used electronics.
G E R E S TA U R D I R B AN THE T Open 7 Days a Week! Join us for dinner, lunch, or breakfast... walk or drive over the New Bridge! Open Monday - Thursday 6:30AM - 8:30PM Friday - Saturday - Sunday 6:30AM - 9:00PM Jct. of Rts. 17 & 125 West Addison, VT • Next to the Champlain Bridge 35615
2046 N. Main St. Londonderry, VT 05148
824-3677 10am-5pm M-T-Th-F; 8am-1pm Sat.; Closed Wed.
2479 Rte. 7 Ferrisburgh, VT
870-3220
5598 Rte. 7 228 Northside Drive North Clarendon, VT 05759 Bennington, VT 05201
753-7393
www.thestovedepot.com
747-9950
10:00am - 5pm M-Sat. 35616
35609
Auctioneer Lion - Tom Broughton
June 30, 2012
The Eagle - 3
www.addison-eagle.com
General store owners celebrate rocky year
Screen Topsoil Stone • Road Gravel Sand • Mulch You Pick Up or We Deliver
By Lou Varricchio
newmarketpress@denpubs.com
Crown Point (518) 546-3000
BROWN’S TREE & CRANE SERVICE Serving Vermont and New York for 35 Years
• Cut • Removal of Dangerous Trees, Trees Trimmed • Stump Grinding • Crane Service • Trusses and Post • Beams Set Reasonable Rates Our Service Available Year-Round 24 Hour Emergency Service Call for FREEr Estimates fo e. Tree Servic
Kevin and Debby Neubert are owners of the Belmont General Store in Mt. Holly, Vt.
and arrows of outrageous fortune thrown their way. The Neuberts look back on one of the most challenging years in Vermont and they are grateful for the unquestioning support of the Mount Holly community. “In a year when general stores in the state are closing their doors due to economic issues, the Town of Mount Holly and the Village of Belmont have em-
braced its general store. They have supported the transition of ownership with open arms, too,” said Kevin. “We were able to survive Tropical Storm Irene, poor fall foliage, and a bad winter.” The Neuberts certainly didn’t go it alone. The rest of Mt. Holly experienced the same man-made and natural disasters of 2011.
Vergennes man to receive small business award By Lou Varricchio
newmarketpress@denpubs.c om VERGENNES — A Vergennes businessman will join 10 other Vermonters at an upcoming small business awards event to accept a statewide honor. Vermont’s 2012 Small Business Person of the Year Chach Curtis, CEO of Draker Labs, and Champion Award recipients will receive local honors at a gala event sponsored by the U.S.
Ticonderoga (518) 585-9424
24618
Adirondack Sand & Gravel
Small Business Administration and a local business magazine. Additional award recipients will include: Small Business Exporter, Joel Melnick, president of Nathaniel Group, Inc., Vergennes; Vermont Microenterprise, Andrew Boutin, General Manager of Pellergy, LLC, Montpelier; Family-Owned Small Business, James Mount and Karen Mount, Owners of Westaff, Burlington;
Financial Services Champion, Vermont Economic Development Authority, Montpelier; Community/Rural Lender of the Year, Passumpsic Savings Bank, St. Johnsbury; Special Award for Disaster Assistance, Linda Rossi, Associate State Director of the Vermont Small Business Development Center, Randolph Center; Women in Business Champion, Sarah Spencer, Founder/President of Got
Clicks? Richmond; Volunteer Perseverance Award, Laura Sibilia, East Dover; Business Perseverance Award, William Mattewson, Owner of Heatech, Inc., White River Junction, and Home-Based Business Champion of the Year, Simeon Geigel of Champlain Valley Office of Economic Opportunity, Micro Business Development Program, Burlington. The event will be held in Shelburne this week.
453-3351 - Office 475-2185 - Home 363-5619 - Cell
22332
DOCKS & BOAT HOISTS • Manufactured Dock Systems • Metal Frame Docks • Floating Docks • Custom Docks • Boat Houses • Seawalls
HOISTS FOR JET SKIS TO YACHTS • FLOATING • STATIONARY
Harbor Masters 963 Rt. 9N Ticonderoga, NY
(518)585-9159 79595
10% OFF ENTIRE MENU! (Food only) With this coupon. Good for entire table. Valid Sunday-Friday. Not valid on Saturdays or major holidays and may not be combined with other discounts or gift certificates.
Exp. 7/14/12
WOW! Great Price!
Serving
very
dinner e
nches night. Lu
Fri., Sat.
& Sun.
25508
MT. HOLLY — It all sounds idyllic: buy an historic Vermont general store out in the country, meet new friends, and keep warm next to a potbelly stove during the winter months. It’s the stuff our collective “Mayberry RFD” dreams are made of, right? Sure, except for the part about hard work, balancing a business budget, surviving a nasty summer flood, and not relying on local skiers without much of a winter to speak of. Kevin and Debby Neubert, the new owners of the Belmont General Store, are living the “Mayberry RFD” lifestyle others only imagine in day dreams. The couple isn’t looking back on their lives BGS—that is, Before the General Store. And they certainly wouldn’t trade their lives with anyone else. They say operating a country store is indeed romantic, but it’s also a lot tougher than it looks to the casual observer. “After a challenging first fall and winter, we are celebrating our first year as new owners,” said Debby. “On June 13, we began the day with a cakecutting ceremony in the store.” Cheerful customers and several VIPs were on hand to toast the couple and add their neighborly support. Jim Harrison, president of the Vermont Grocers Association and Vermont State Rep. Dennis Devereux were in attendance. Celebrating their business anniversary, the Neuberts are thankful for a good first year despite all the slings
Make reservations when possible so we can better serve you 800-367-7166 • 802-388-7166 one block off Rte 7 in Historic Middlebury
GARAGE SALE! GARAGE SALE!
GARAGE SALE!! One Person’s Trash Is Another Person’s Treasure
3 WEEKS FOR $15 (ONLY $5 PER WEEK)
4 LINES ADD ANOTHER ZONE FOR ONLY
$9.00 DEADLINE IS FRIDAY AT 5PM. This special rate is for non-commercial ads only. Sorry, business ads are excluded from this offer.
HURRY!, THIS OFFER IS VALID 04/28/12 - 07/28/12
Call -4237 9 8 9 0 0 1-8 more informatioenr for d ov ce an a or to pla phone. the
Your Name: Your Mailing Address:
Your Daytime Phone: Your E-mail Address: PAYMENT INFO:
CASH
CHECK
CREDIT CARD
Please note: your ad will not run until payment has been received.
Name on Card: Card Type: Card Number:
Write Your Message In The Boxes Below: Exp. Date:
CID#:
ALL ADS WILL APPEAR ON OUR CLASSIFIED NETWORK SITE AT NO ADDITIONAL COST.
TheClassifiedSuperstore.com The Classified Superstore is a product of Denton Publications, Spotlight Newspapers, Eagle Newspapers and New Market Press.
26310
Make Check Payable to Denton Publications SEND TO: PO Box 338, Elizabethtown, NY 12932 35472
4 - The Eagle
June 30, 2012
www.addison-eagle.com
Opinion
A COMMUNITY SERVICE: This community newspaper and its delivery are made possible by the advertisers you’ll find on the pages inside. Our twenty plus employees and this publishing company would not exist without their generous support of our efforts to gather and distribute your community news and events. Please thank them by supporting them and buying locally. And finally, thanks to you, our loyal readers, for your support and encouragement over the past 17 years from all of us here at The Addison Eagle & Green Mountain Outlook.
From the Editor
Happy Trails to you
O
rganizers of the blue-blazed North Country Trail—a magnificent national scenic trail, which traverses east to west and ends in the high prairie of central North Dakota, near the Missouri River—are seeking a Vermont connection. We like the plan and think it’s well worth getting behind the effort. The dream of this 4,600-mile-long northern hiking trail began in the mid 1960s. And in 1971, a combined federalstate task force was assembled to study the feasibility of the North Country Trail. David Schonck, Bob Martin and Tom Gilbert of Michigan spearheaded the concept. Gilbert became the first (and current) superintendent of the North Country National Scenic Trail for the National Park Service and he deserves a lion share of the credit. Finally, after many years of planning, Congress passed legislation authorizing the North Country National Scenic Trail on March 5, 1980. The North Country Trail is often compared to the Appalachian Trail, but truth be told, this northern-tier trail began on paper long before the National Trails System Act of 1968, which established the Appalachian and Pacific Crest National Scenic Trails as the nation’s first hiking trails. Building a hiking trail on this scale takes time, human labor and lots of money. Various sections of the North Country Trail have already been completed, notably in the Great Lakes region, but much more needs to done in Ohio, Pennsylvania and New York. This greatest of national hiking trails starts officially at the stone walls of the old British fort at Crown Point, N.Y. Ironically, the original plan included Vermont at that start, but it fell by the way side only until recently. Of course, you’d be hard pressed to find the actual North Country Trail in Crown Point; it’s not there—yet. Unfortunately, as you move west of Crown Point State Park in the Empire State, the North Country Trail is still in the planning stages.
A considerable amount of volunteer trail work needs to be done in New York, so completion of the footpath is years away. But that’s no reason to lose steam over the New York section or its proposed Vermont connection. In the past few years, some trail officials and hiking advocates have returned to the notion of extending the North Country Trail into Vermont via Addison County. The county would be the gateway for the trail to link it with the Long Trail and Appalachian Trail. Making Vermont part of the North Country Trail is an exciting plan; if the trail eventually enters Addison County, it would be a fine asset for the local economy garnering national attention along the way, too. And towns along the path would become destinations for future hikers looking for lodging and trail supplies. This so-called Vermont connection includes the new Lake Champlain Bridge’s pedestrian walkway plus 10 miles or more of private land in Addison County; this includes land owned by the Middlebury Land Trust. The trail would also include a section of the Trail Around Middlebury, or TAM, completed in 1999. Other side trails in the Green Mountain Forest would become part of the North Country Trail, too, as it makes its way to join the Long Trail along the crest of the Green Mountain ridge. Two years ago, the Middlebury Area Land Trust agreed with the National Park Service to study the idea. As far as we know, it’s still being studied. Congress will also have to ok the plan, at some future date. It’s hard to be optimistic about the fate of a new national hiking trail, especially in these austere times with a Greek-like financial crisis looming on our collective horizon. But if the Vermont section of the North Country Trail gets the nod from the boys and girls in the U.S. House, it will be a jewel in the crown for local communities and the entire Green Mountain State. And that means happy trails to you and me. Lou Varricchio
Visit us today at
www.addison-eagle.com PUBLISHER GENERAL MANAGER MANAGING EDITOR OFFICE MANAGER PRODUCTION DESIGN
Edward Coats Mark Brady Lou Varricchio Ruth Bullock Denton Publications Production Team EDITORIAL WRITERS Martin Harris John McClaughry Lou Varricchio TELEMARKETING Shelley Roscoe ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES David Allaire • Tom Bahre Sarah Lepore • Heidi Littlefield
CONTRIBUTORS Angela DeBlasio • Rusty DeWees • Alice Dubenetsky Catherine Oliverio • Beth Schaeffer
New Market Press, Inc., 16 Creek Rd., Suite 5A, Middlebury, Vermont 05753 Phone: 802-388-6397 • Fax: 802-388-6399 • theeagle@addison-eagle.com Members of: CPNE (Community Papers of New England) IFPA (Independent Free Papers of America) • AFCP (Association of Free Community Papers) One of Vermont’s Most Read Weekly Newspapers Winner of FCPNE and AFCP News Graphic Design Awards ©2012. New Market Press, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in whole or part without written permission of the publisher. Editorial comments, news, press releases, letters to the editor and items of interest are welcome. Please include: name, address and phone number for verification. Subscriptions: All New Market Press publications are available for a subscription $47 per year; $24 six months. First Class Subscription: $150/year. Subscriptions may also be purchased at our web site www.newmarketpressvt.com New Market Press, Inc. and its advertisers are not liable for typographical errors, misprints or other misinformation made in a good faith effort to produce an accurate weekly newspaper. The opinions expressed by the editorial page editor and guest columnists are not necessarily those of New Market Press, and New Market Press cannot be held liable for the facts or opinions stated therein.
20941
20940
Two days, too much
W
e’ve had a season’s worth of sunny days with highs of 90, lows of 70.
We’ve pedaled miles and miles and miles on dry roads and mountain trails. We’ve tanned our skin to a late summer hue. We’ve lost pounds and reached our goal weight. We’ve grilled and dined al fresco a dozen and a half times. We’ve dropped by and walked through half a dozen outdoor fairs and festivals. We’ve gotten gardens, sashes, and plantings, in, on and primped, to full summer song. We’ve dipped in tepid rivers, streams, pools and lakes too many times to count. We’ve marveled, studying starlit skies, night after night. We’ve clipped and filed our toenails for proper summer presentation, thrice. We’ve washed the swimsuit already what, four times. We’ve exhausted two tubes of SPF 45. We’ve in shorts and tank top, while in the grocery mart parking lot, stared at the sun and conjured a dozen epic summer sneezes.
We’ve grilled and eaten half dozen bundles of asparagus and 4 large loads of fresh cut fruit. We’ve played footsie on the deck almost too many times to count. We’ve mowed and mowed and mowed and already the grass has slowed. We’ve worn out our second summer haircut and have scheduled a third. We’ve enjoyed a dozen servings of rhubarb pie, crumble, ade, and compote. We’ve not missed a complete and redundant cycle of television news.. We’ve eclipsed last summer’s personal record number of creemies licked to null. And summer is only two days old. Rusty DeWees tours Vermont and Northern New York with his act “The Logger.” His column appears weekly.
Dance party a great culmination of winter To the editor: Recently, members, friends and supporters of the ARC-Rutland Area welcomed in the end of winter by attending a great dance party sponsored by the Sunshine Fund of Fair Haven and Castleton and the Bomoseen Grange... Transportation was arranged for those that needed a ride from Rutland by ARC’s Elderly and Disabled transportation grant... Thanks must go to the members of the Bomoseen Grange for hall donation and to the Sunshine Fund for D..J and sodas. We offer special thanks to Betty Dimick, Lori Mason, Bob Mason, Alex Mason, Dale Dimick, Debbie Wortman, and Dolores Smiel for their time to set up, work the kitchen, serve the food and organize. Lisa S. Lynch, ARC-Rutland Area
SCOTUS decision fallout may get ugly To the editor: A leading leftist political group, Health Care for America Now, is mapping out a full bore media campaign to either celebrate or denounce the coming U.S. Supreme Court decision in the ObamaCare case, expected sometime in June. In the event – more likely than not, in my opinion - that the Court gives ObamaCare a serious hit, this campaign will ignore the constitutional basis of the decision and instead attack justices, Republicans, Tea Parties, free market think tanks, insurance companies (who supported ObamaCare), and a long list of villains who are not supportive of government run health care. In some states... this could get ugly. John McClaughry Ethan Allen Institute Montpelier
June 30, 2012
www.addison-eagle.com
The Eagle - 5
Three burgs celebrate three birthdays of 250 years Ferrisburgh, Hinesburg, Monkton celebrate 250th anniversaries
By Lou Varricchio
newmarketpress@denpubs.com HINESBURG — The weekend of June 2324 was filled with a trio of historic community celebrations marking the 250th anniversaries of incorporation for Ferrisburgh, Hinesburg and Monkton. The three towns—two in Addison County
and one in Chittenden County—began as frontier villages in the British colony of New Hampshire in 1762; they celebrated their 250th birthdays in 2012 as prosperous towns in Vermont, the fourteenth state carved out of the old New Hampshire Grants. Ferrisburgh’s celebration was concentrated at the Ferrisburgh Central School June 24. It included farm tractors, live music, local farm produce, children’s activities, historic demonstrations, energy awareness displays—something unheard of in 1762—and other special moments to mark the 250th anniversary event.
Hinesburg’s 250th anniversary included the unveiling of a commemorative 1762-2012 stone marker. Jean Miner, Hinesburg Historical Society president, revealed the marker and welcomed visitors at the special event which was located on the lawn next to town hall. Rev. David Cray, SSE, of St. Jude’s Church gave the invocation and closing remarks were made by Rev. Ann Brigham of the United Church. The original 1762 proclamation by British Royal Gov. Benning Wentworth of New Hampshire was also read. Live music was
played by the Hinesburg band. In Monkton, the Monton Museum and Historical Society provided residents with a 5K run, and a festive morning parade which was followed by a tree planting, time capsule burial at Morse Park, and raising of the town’s first official flag. Residents moved across the field to the Monkton Central School for the Russell Library Strawberry festival, concert and book sale. Monkton Boy Scouts took a leadership role in planning local events which included fun and games and other activities.
Art Blair of Crankey Yankee Twyne, based in Burlington, provided 19th century rope-making demonstration at Ferrisburgh’s 250th birthday bash.
Ferrisburgh musicians provided 250th anniversary visitors with a variety of live music, including some with an Hawaiian flair.
Photo by Lou Varricchio
Photo by Lou Varricchio
Jean Miner, president of the Hinesburg Historical Society, introduced “Royal Gov. Benning Wentworth”, played by a local actor, at Hinesburg’s 250th anniversary event.
Hinesburg musicians played a variety of classical and popular music for attendees at the town’s historic 250th anniversary event.
Photo by Lou Varricchio
Photo by Lou Varricchio
A large ball of finger twine, prepared by Monkton students to mark the town’s 250th birthday celebration, was on display at the Monkton Central School.
Commemorative T-shirts, made available by the Monkton Museum and Historical Society to mark Monkton’s 250th anniversary, were one of the popular items available for visitors.
Photo by Lou Varricchio
Photo by Lou Varricchio
6 - The Eagle
(Classifieds, Legals & Display) VERMONT ZONE Green Mountain Outlook The Eagle Friday, June 29th at 9AM NORTHERN ZONE The Burgh North Countryman Valley News Friday, June 29th at 3PM SOUTHERN ZONE Times of Ti Adirondack Journal News Enterprise Friday, June 29th at 3PM
Offices will be closed on Wednesday, July 4, 2012
By Meghan Tisinger
MONTPELIER — As Vermont's state legislative election filling deadline looms on June 14, election experts are hoping for a more competitive race than in previous years. Vermont, similar to many other states, has seen a lack of contested races, allowing mostly Democrat incumbents to sail through the primary and general election, often times without Republican or other opponents. “In every community across this country, voters are given the opportunity to exercise their right to vote. However, when no one steps up to run for these state legislative seats, the same person is able to fill these positions,” said Tyler King, editor of Ballotpedia's State Legislative Competitiveness Index. Ballotpedia, an online almanac about state politics, has once again launched their state legislative competitive index, which analyzes which states have
the most competitive and least competitive electoral environments in 2012. The index looks at three factors: is the incumbent running for reelection in a district; if so, does he or she draw a primary challenge; and are there two major party candidates in the general election. The comprehensive 2012 state legislative competitive index will be released following the completion of the primaries in all 43 states with 2012 state legislative elections. It will examine all 5,984 state legislative seats that are up for election on Nov. 6. In addition, Vermont's 2012 report will be released following the close of the filing deadline and the initial release of a candidate list. In 2010, Vermont ranked 35th in the country for most competitive elections according to the state's electoral competitiveness metric. For open seats, 22 (12.2 percent) of the 180 incumbents did not run for reelection in Vermont.
Additionally, 68 (37.8 percent) did not face another major party candidate in the general election. Nationally, incumbents ran for reelection in 4,985 of the 6,125 (81.4 percent) seats up for the 2010 election. Vermont was also ranked 40th in the nation in 2010 for incumbents who faced a primary challenge with 147 (93 percent) of incumbents who ran for reelection not facing a primary challenger. Nationally, 3,852 of the 4,985 (77.3 percent) incumbents faced no challenger in the primary. “Ballotpedia believes that democracy improves when multiple voices are heard and challenge the status quo. As such, we urge the people of Vermont to hold their elected official accountable by challenging them in the election. It isn’t too late for more concerned citizens to throw their name in the hat and make a difference in Vermont,” said King.
Panton resident finds house broken into By Louis Varricchio
PANTON — Vermont State Police are investigating the report of a burglary at the family residence of Alexander Smith of Panton, located off of Lake Street. At the time of the call it was reported that a rear door window had been broken and the residence had been entered. The victim was unable to report at the time of the call if anything had been stolen. Anyone with information is encouraged to contact Vermont State Police Senior Trooper Andrew Leise at 1-802-388-4919. Information can also be submitted anonymously online at www.vtips.info or text "CRIMES" (274637) for keyword VTIPS
Police arrest woman after noise complaint STARKSBORO — Vermont State Police troopers responded to a report of a noise complaint at the Lazy Brook Trailer Park in Starksboro June 18. Troopers arrested Louella Clark, 66, of Starksboro for disorderly conduct and domestic assault. Clark was taken into custody and appeared in Addison District Court. Officers of the Hinesburg and Bristol Police Departments assisted the state police.
Police said Mass. man drunk in Shoreham SHOREHAM — On June 19, at approximately 8:28 p.m., Vermont State Police received a report of a single car motor vehicle crash on Route 22A near the Halfway House Restaurant in Shoreham. Police said driver Jeffrey L. Hannigan, 33, of Massachusetts was drunk. Hannigan was later taken into custody without incident for suspicion of DUI and transported to the New Haven State Police Barracks for processing. Hannigan's blood alcohol concentration was found to be more than three times the legal limit. He was later released on a citation to appear in Addison Superior Court on July 2 to answer to the charge of DUI first offense.
Solar program set
33456
Early Advertising Deadline for 4th of July, 2012
Vermont top-heavy with incumbents
21523
ATTENTION!
26658
June 30, 2012
www.addison-eagle.com
MIDDLEBURY — As part of its Energy Education Program Series, the Acorn Renewable Energy Co-op will be presenting a free program on designing and building (or renovating), a home to be energy efficient using solar technology at 7 p.m., on Wednesday, June 27, at the Ilsley Public Library Community Room. This informative program will be presented by Steven Spatz, the owner of Redbarn Design and Build, LLC of Shrewsbury. The program will cover the important considerations in building a low-embodied energy structure that requires minimal heating input. Redbarn was founded in 2002 as a general construction and remodeling firm, and has evolved to specialize in the design and construction of superinsulated, passive, low heatload homes.
June 30, 2012
The Eagle - 7
www.addison-eagle.com
Drowning from page 1 “It was an apparent accident,” Hanley said. “But we are investigating the incident.” Hanley also said he did not know if an intoxicant was being used by the swimmer. Hanley said his department, along with Vermont State Police teams and the Middlebury Fire Department, were involved in the search and recovery of the victim. Michelle Moss of Vergennes, a friend of Mousse, was at the emergency command post on Mill Street. When first asked by news reporters about her relationship with the victim, Moss said that she would not identify the man until his family was located. "He was my best friend," Moss said. "It's a big loss. He had a son and a daughter and he was divorced. No matter, he really cared about people; he was special. It's such a shame. I was shocked because he was such a good swimmer. I often swam with him." Moss said that she and Mousse first met at work in Middlebury about a year ago.
Middlebury Police Chief Tom Hanley at a news conference held near the scene of a drowning June 22. Photo by Lou Varricchio
Vermont State Police dive and surface teams searched for the body of drowning victim Yaird Mousse in the Otter Creek near Frog Hollow in Middlebury June 22.
Michelle Moss, a resident of Vergennes, was a friend of the victim who drowned in the Otter Creek on the evening of June 21. Here she is being interviewed by news reporters in Frog Hollow in Middlebury June 22.
Photo by Lou Varricchio
Photo by Lou Varricchio
Eagle
35656
Eye On Business
BEAT THE HEAT WITH OUR AC SERVICE STARTING AT
Bristol Tours is a family operated business owned and operated by Mark and Susan Bolles since 2010. Together they have over 40 years of experience in the industry.
$99.99
The Randolph couple have chartered Bristol Tours all along the eastern sea board, with frequent charters to Washington DC, New York City, Boston and Montreal.
Thank you to our local military currently serving in Afghanistan...”
Their fleet of coaches offer exceptional safety and comfort. Rain or shine, Bristol tours is a committed and hard-working team that is always available to charter you to your special event, maybe a Red Sox game or a casino adventure!
SAVE
$10.00 PER HOUR ON LABOR (normally $65)
Tsgt. Steven P. Heffernan
35613
40 Hazel Drive Bristol, VT 05443 Open M-F • 8AM-5PM
Stop by and see our new mechanic Matt! 35659
802-453-5300
8 - The Eagle
June 30, 2012
www.addison-eagle.com
Shelburne woman fights unionization of child-care providers By Victor Skinner
vskinner21@gmail.com SHELBURNE — Elsa Bosma wasn’t sure what to think when American Federation of Teachers representatives showed up at her home child-care business espousing the benefits of unionization. The teachers union encouraged her to sign a card, supposedly to get more information about health insurance and other benefits that would be available if child care workers became unionized. Bosma signed the card, like many other child care providers across the Green Mountain State. They didn’t realize it was a union scheme to gather signatures in support of the AFT as the sole bargaining agent for the state's child-care providers. The AFT has pursued similar unionization efforts with child care providers in Michigan, Minnesota, and other states as a way to boost its declining membership and dues revenue. "We were told it was for more information, but we heard subsequently these cards were used to show support for unionization," Bosma said. "We asked to get our cards back and the AFT said we would have to come and look though the hundreds or thousands of cards they collected and find them ourselves." Perhaps union officials should have given her a more satisfactory response. They had
no way of knowing they were firing up a woman who would play a huge role in defeating their attempt to unionize child care providers in Vermont. During Vermont’s 2010 legislative session, a bill to authorize a unionization vote for the state’s child care providers passed the House, but didn't become law. If a unionization vote succeed, every child care worker in the state would have been forced into the AFT, and forced into paying hundreds per year in dues. For Bosma, that was a troubling proposition. She researched the AFT’s proposal. There was no health insurance or other benefits to be gained. All the union seemed to provide were vague references to "a stronger voice" for child care workers in state politics. And that privilege likely would cost between $500 and $700 in dues per year. "I think there is an ulterior motive. I think they are trying to increase their membership, and it’s a financial gain," she said. "If they really are about us – and there are so many of us that don’t want this – they would make it voluntary." Bosma reached out to her colleagues across Vermont. She gathered e-mail addresses from the state’s child care provider website and sent a message out to about 1,000 peers, expressing her concerns about the AFT. With the AFT as the exclusive representative for child-care providers, independent
small business owners like Bosma would lose their individual voice on topics like professional development, grievances, and state subsidy negotiations, she explained. Many child care providers would end up making less money if they joined the AFT because of the dues, she said. "I just got an overwhelming response from people who said ‘I feel the same way, what can we do?’" Bosma said. "I saw the need for someone to speak up. I kind of became the spokesperson for our group." Last fall, Bosma formed "No Childcare Union in Vermont" and began to rally her supporters against the AFT, which she describes in a recent Vermont editorial as "a Goliath with unlimited money and an army of lobbyists." "So I went to work polling and forming an email list of those against the union, generated an online petition, started a Facebook page and created a website," Bosma wrote. "I created and ordered buttons, manned a table at the Early Childhood Days at the Legislature, and co-organized multiple community forums with local senators." During Vermont’s 2011 legislative session, the bill to authorize a union vote for childcare providers "was one of the hottest debated bills," Bosma said. No Childcare Union in Vermont contacted senators and lobbied against the legislation. Bosma also encouraged individual child care providers and parents to speak out, and their voices were heard, she said.
"Last year it made it through the House, but that was before we knew about it," Bosma said. "The AFT and a number of senators tried to attach it to multiple bills" this year in the state Senate, without success. "They decided not to vote on it," Bosma said. Bosma is not taking her victory for granted. No Childcare Union in Vermont is gearing up for the next legislative session, when Bosma expects the AFT will continue to push its agenda. "I anticipate they are going to be back with guns blazing, and so are we," Bosma said #The political success of No Childcare Union in Vermont attracted the attention of child-care providers in other states also fighting the AFT, and a broader movement to halt unnecessary unionization may be blossoming, Bosma said. "Through Facebook, they’ve reached out to me – providers in Michigan and Minnesota – and we’ve kind of joined forces behind the scenes," she said. Bosma said the experience has taught her some valuable lessons about the true priorities of teachers unions, and how motivated citizens can counter their massive lobbying budgets with their own voices in the political process. "I hope I empowered other providers to reach out and use their voice. I think a lot of people gained a lot of confidence by speaking out," she said.
OTION AUTOM
%TTP] JSV
SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY FOR FREE! Start Your Social Security Disability Application In Under 60 Seconds CALL NOW!
1-888-574-1193
With one quick phone call, you can find out if you qualify for disability benefits, and we can help you file your claim faster! We’ll guide you through a very complicated process – at no charge to you! You pay nothing if you don’t receive disability benefits! NO FEES UNTIL YOU WIN YOUR DISABILITY CASE! ACT NOW! 1-888-574-1193 Disability Group, Inc. is a private law firm. Its principal office is in Los Angeles, California, 6033 Century Blvd. Managing partner, Ronald Miller, Esq. is admitted only in California and Michigan. The hiring of a lawyer is an important decision that should not be based solely upon advertisements. No representation is made that the quality of the legal services to be performed is greater than the quality of legal services performed by other lawyers. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Additional fees may apply.
7I ,EFPE )WTEzSP
34415
29143
FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC CAR & TRUCK REPAIR DARRIN HEATH 482-2080
Main Street, Hinesburg, VT 482-2030
39150
21869
June 30, 2012
The Eagle - 9
www.addison-eagle.com
Cramer Is NESCAC’s Woman of the Year nominee From College News Reports
newmarketpress@denpubs.com MIDDLEBURY — Margo Cramer (Seattle, Wash.), a 2012 graduate of Middlebury College and a former member of the Panthers’ cross country and track and field squads, has been nominated for the 2012 NCAA Woman of the Year Award by the New England Small College Athletic Conference. The NCAA Woman of the Year Award honors graduating student-athletes who have distinguished themselves throughout their collegiate careers in the areas of academic achievement, athletics excellence, service and leadership. The award has been given annually since 1991. Cramer proved to be an all-around champion for the Panthers, as she excelled in the classroom, as a competitor, and in the local community. Finishing her tenure at Middlebury this past May, Cramer graduated magna cum laude with a degree in women’s and gender studies (3.70 GPA). Among her many academic accomplishments, Cramer was recognized six times as Academic All-NESCAC, was distinguished as a Middlebury College Scholar on four occasions, and twice earned All-Academic honors from the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA). Cramer received Middlebury’s Hazeltine-Klevenow Memorial trophy, given for excellence in academics and athletics, and was named as an NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship winner, one of only 174 of to receive the $7,500 award. As a member of the Panthers’ cross coun-
try team, Cramer helped her squad to three conference titles and two national championships (2008, 2010) over her four seasons. Although Middlebury finished as the runner-up at both the NESCAC and NCAA meets this past fall, the two-year captain recorded some of the best performances of her career with a fourth-place showing at the league meet and a fifth-place finish at the national championship race, earning AllNESCAC and All-America honors for the first time. Following the season, Cramer came away with her team’s Dorcas den Hartog Award as the most valuable runner. Cramer ’s success was not limited to the cross country trails of New England. During the winter months, she joined up with the Panthers’ indoor track and field team, primarily competing in the mid-distance events along with the distance medley relay squad. The two-time indoor All-American made an appearance at each of the last three national track and field meets, most recently finishing fourth in the mile and helping the Middlebury distance medley team repeat as NCAA champions this past March. Cramer ’s indoor career featured six New England Regional titles, three of which came during her final campaign. Her strong performances earned her New England Indoor Athlete of the Year honors from the USTFCCCA. After the winter indoor season would wrap up, Cramer returned outside for the remainder of the semester as part of Middlebury’s outdoor track and field team. Over the course of her career, Cramer came away as All-NESCAC 10 times and won six individual conference crowns, culminating with
MIKE’S
her second title in both the 1,500-meter run and 3,000-meter steeplechase this past April at Bates. Her time of 10:28.66 in the steeplechase established a new NESCAC meet record. The Panthers’ captain went on to add her second USTFCCCA New England Athlete of the Year honor before reaching the NCAA championships in May, at which she became a two-time All-American with her second consecutive runner-up performance in the 1,500-meter along with a fifth place showing in the 800-meter. Cramer left Middlebury with 10 indoor and outdoor program records and earned the A. Bayard Russ ‘66 Memorial Athletic Award, given by the college for performance, aggressiveness, leadership, tremendous desire, and team spirit in two intercollegiate sports. While her efforts in the classroom and on the race course were impressive, Cramer ’s work in the local community displayed some of her greatest commitment. Cramer was an advocate on the Middlebury campus and surrounding town for awareness regarding sexual assault and gender violence. A member of Middlebury’s sexual assault oversight committee, she helped organize a campuswide awareness event. In addition, she worked closely with the administration and the athletic department to fundraise and promote a lecture by well-known gender violence speaker Jackson Katz. Cramer also served as a Chellis House Monitor, Middlebury’s women’s resource center, with pri-
mary responsibilities including event staffing and promotion, and lent her time to Planned Parenthood for the Great Northwest. She was on the front lines of the college’s cleanup effort in the local community after Hurricane Irene hit Vermont in August of 2011, and she managed to find time to mentor a sixth-grade student every Wednesday during the school year.
Births A boy born May 27, Levi Miller, to Tarah (Schmidt) and Nathan Miller, of Georgia. A boy born June 3, Aybel Alan Anderson, to Katie and Lee Anderson Jr, of East Middlebury. A girl born June 5, Heaven Alexas Audy, to Joshua Audy and Caroline (Leonard), of Addison. A boy born June 5, Elijah Isaac Renninger, to David Renninger and Lori (Gevry), of Benson A boy born June 6, Ezra Knight Roesch, to Carl Roesch and Caetlin Harwood, of Addison. A boy born June 6, Sawyer Thomas Graham, to Krista (Brown) and David Graham of Hubberton. If you have questions, or to submit birth announcements, please call 3886397 or email at theeagle@addison-eagle.com.
AUTO and TOWING
19A Elm Street, Middlebury • Est. 1986
Complete Auto Repair, Tune Ups, Shocks, Struts, and Quality Used Cars ven New Harage Self-Sto nting Now Re
IF WE CAN’T FIX IT, IT AIN’T BROKE!
Tune up no Summer drw for and vacatioiving ns!
35610
35662
Two Locations Middlebury New Haven 388-4138 453-5563 Is your check engine light on?
P
802.453.6600
c.
Campbell, & In ge i a
Insurance & Financial Services 35 West St., Bristol, VT Home & Auto Insurance Call Bill or Andrea
Call John
35652
Business Insurance
6
This inspection sticker will expire by the last day of June. Call for an appointment!
COUNTY TIRE CENTER 388-7620 M-F 8-5, SAT. 8-NOON • WWW.COUNTYTIRECENTER.COM
35614
35657
33 SEYMOUR STREET • MIDDLEBURY
10 - The Eagle
June 30, 2012
www.addison-eagle.com
Green Mountain Club elects Jean Haigh as new president MONTPELIER — Officials of the Green Mountain Club announced the election of its forty first President Jean Haigh of Craftsbury June 12. Haigh is the first Northeast Kingdom Section member to serve as volunteer president
of the 102-year-old, 10,000-member founders and maintainers of the Long Trail. Haigh is the leader behind much of the club’s work in the Kingdom, especially on the former Champion Lands, and helped guide the club in accepting additional management responsibilities on the Appalachian Trail in Vermont. Rutland and Addison counties boast the most GMC chapters.
On the go?
So are we! m.addison-eagle.com
addison-eagle.com —It’s where the locals go!
By Lou Varricchio
newmarketpress@denpubs.com MONTPELIER — U.S. Rep. Peter Welch (D), Vermont's lone congressman, wants an end to what he calls "rip-off debit and prepaid card fees" being charged by "big banks" to some college students in order to access their federal student loans. According to a report released last week by the U.S. Public Interest Research Group (U.S. PIRG) Education Fund, banks and financial firms have struck deals with colleges and universities throughout the country, allowing them to link checking accounts to student IDs. This gives the banks control or influence over federal financial aid disbursements to over nine million students. Traditionally, students would receive their aid by check, without being charged any fees to access their student aid. Now, student aid is increasingly being dispersed via these campus card programs, which many students are enrolled in by default. These programs end up charging students fees on their student aid, including per-swipe fees of $0.50, inactivity fees of $10 or more after 6 months and overdraft fees of up to $38. In a letter to 15 major financial institutions, Welch, along with fellow liberal Democrats Assistant U.S. Senate Majority Leader Dick Durbin (Illinois) and Sen. Jack Reed (Rhode Island), pointed out that the campus card fees often cut into students’ taxpayer-subsidized federal student financial aid. Welch, Durbin and Reed are demanding an end to the fees and are calling for the public release of secret debit or prepaid card contracts between banks and institutions of higher education.
26153
Bookmark us now.
Welch calls for end to large fees on student debit, prepaid cards
Send your news to lou@addison- eagle.com. North Country Telephone Exchange Directory (518) 236.............Altona/Mooers 251.................North Creek 293.......................Saranac 297...............Rouses Point 298...................Champlain 327.................Paul Smiths 352..............Blue Mt. Lake 358...............Ft. Covington 359................Tupper Lake 483........................Malone 492.................Dannemora 493.................West Chazy 494................Chestertown 497.................Chateaugay 499.....................Whitehall 523..................Lake Placid 529...........................Moria 532..............Schroon Lake 543..........................Hague 546.......Port Henry/Moriah 547........................Putnam 561-566...........Plattsburgh 576....Keene/Keene Valley 581,583,584,587 ..............Saratoga Springs 582....................Newcomb 585................Ticonderoga 594..........Ellenburg Depot 597.................Crown Point 623...............Warrensburg 624...................Long Lake 638............Argyle/Hartford 639.......................Fort Ann 642......................Granville 643.............................Peru 644............Bolton Landing 647.............Ausable Forks 648..................Indian Lake 654.........................Corinth 668...............Lake George 695... .............Schuylerville 735.............Lyon Mountain 746,747..........Fort Edward / Hudson Falls 743,744,745,748,761,792, 793,796,798. . . .Glens Falls 834....................Keeseville 846..........................Chazy 856.............Dickerson Ctr. 873....Elizabethtown/Lewis 891..............Saranac Lake 942......................Mineville 946..................Wilmington 962......................Westport 963...........Willsboro/Essex
VERMONT (802)
33475
247.......................Brandon 372....................Grand Isle 388...................Middlebury 425......................Charlotte 434....................Richmond 438...............West Rutland 453.......Bristol/New Haven 462......................Cornwall 475.........................Panton 482....................Hinesburg 545...................Weybridge 655......................Winooski 658....................Burlington 758........................Bridport 759.......................Addison 654,655,656,657,658,660, 860,862,863,864,865,951, 985....................Burlington 877...................Vergennes 769,871,872,878,879 ..................Essex Junction 893...........................Milton 897....................Shoreham 899......................Underhill 948..........................Orwell 888....................Shelburne
20956
June 30, 2012
The Eagle - 11
www.addison-eagle.com
Route 7 South • Middlebury 388-3139 21878
Peter Smith, an Addison student, has been honored by the Vermont Land Trust for his exceptional commitment to land stewardship in agriculture. The award was presented by the Vermont Land Trust. Photo by Lou Varricchio
Addison teen recognized for land stewardship VUHS student will attend Vermont Tech
By Lou Varricchio
newmarketpress@denpubs.com ADDISON — Many of today’s teens get a bad rap from adults. Most of the news about them focuses on the negative—alcohol and drug abuse, teen pregnancy, and the like. Most of us may wonder if all teens are really so troubled, but in the case of 18-year-old Peter Smith, a senior enrolled at Vergennes Union High School, the news is good and reveals a thoughtful, self-motivated teen—a young man who cares about the environment, family farming, and what kind of future the Baby Boomers are passing are leaving behind. Smith isn’t too different from other teens who are quietly growing up and preparing for future leadership roles in society. Smith, a resident of Addison, has been interested in a career in agricul-
ture ever since he began working on the family farm. A hunter, Smith also cares about conservation. Last week, the teen was honored by the Vermont Land Trust for his “exceptional commitment to land stewardship in agriculture.” Smith was beaming when he was personally handed the award certificate and $250 by land trust executive Alex Wylie at the family farm. According to Wylie, Smith is among a dozen teens from around Vermont to be recognized by the land trust. “He received a $250 award that is not restricted and may be used towards education, equipment or materials,” Wylie said. “He works on his family's dairy farm and has extensive experience tilling the land, spreading manure, planting and harvesting. He and his family also have a maple sugaring operation that Peter hopes to expand in the future.” As Wylie’s VUHS classmates tell it, the teen is a hard-working student. They said he is an outstanding member
of the Future Farmers of America and he likes to compete in challenging events that let him showcase his passion for, and hands-on knowledge of, farming. One example of Wylie’s recent success with his involvement with the FFA’s Vermont Dairy Foods Competition program. He took a lead part in the program by competing alone and as member of the VUHS FFA student team. “Peter is honest, reliable, practical and a good critical thinker,” according to agriculture instructor Bill Van De Weert, who nominated him for the award. “He is especially good at analyzing ideas and considering whether they will help improve his family's dairy operation, which he is eager to do.” According to Smith, he will attend Vermont Tech this autumn. “After completing the college's dairy management program, I’ll be working at my family farm,” he said.
33451
APPLIANCE REPAIR
Place an ad for your business in the Eagle’s Service Guide. Call (802) 388-6397 for information & rates.
802-877-6767
GLASS
LAND SURVEYING
SEPTIC SERVICE
COMPLETE CHIMNEY CARE
Chris Mulliss
Glass • Screens • Windshields
FLOOR & UPHOLSTERY CLEANING
DESABRAIS GLASS
• Boundary Retracement • S ubdivisions • F EMA Flood Certifications • T opographic Site Surveys • Construction Layout
CLARK SEPTIC SERVICE
Brian Dwyer 1-800-682-1643 388-4077 Member of VT, NYS & National Chimney Sweep Guilds
35128
21877
FLOOR CLEANING
Stripping Waxing • Buffing Carpet Cleaning & Water Removal cmulliss@gmart.net 1900 Jersey St. South Addison,VT Phone or Fax: 802-759-2706 Cell: 802-349-6050
Boardman Street, Middlebury, VT
388-9049 Auto • Home Commercial
35476
Kittredge Land Surveying, PLLC 28 Thomas Circle, Vergennes O-870-7028 • C-989-1625 kittredgelandsurveying@ gmail.com 35219
of experience in appliance repair”
www.3rdgenappliancerepair.com
CHIMNEY SWEEP
Cleaning • Repairs Stainless Steel Lining Video Camera Inspection
Tim Marcotte “From a family with over 60 years
WINDOWS/SIDING
Marcel Brunet & Sons,I nc.
Windows & Siding
Vergennes, Vt.
Complete Septic System Maintenance & Repair Systems Installed Prompt Service
Siding • Additions Roofs • Garages Replacement Windows Decks • Free Estimates!
Serving Addison County & Beyond!
Owned and Operated by Richard Brunet Since 1981
388-0202 453-3108
29141
35086
SERVICE GUIDE
Third Generation Appliance Repair
800-439-2644
877-2640
29039
12 - The Eagle
June 30, 2012
www.addison-eagle.com
Thefts reported on Lake Street ADDISON — The Vermont State Police in New Haven are investigating the theft of a battery charger from a workshop owned by former Vermont State Sen. Tom Bahre of Castleton on Lake Street in Addison. The theft occurred sometime within the last two to three weeks. Contact the State Police at 388-4919 or submit anonymously online at www.vtips.info or text "CRIMES" (274637) to keyword:VTIPS for information on this crime.
• MEMORIALS STARTING AT $126 • OTHER MONUMENTS UP TO 40% OFF RETAIL PRICE
Quality & Service for Generations Come visit our carving studio Bus. Route 4 & Pleasant St., W. Rutland, VT 05777
802-438-2945
35205
Champlain Valley Flyers plan Giant R.C. model air show From News Reports
newmarketpress@denpubs.com ADDISON — The Champlain Valley Flyers, a club for R/C model airplane enthusiasts, invites the public to attend its Second Annual “Valley of the Giants” air show at Westport, N.Y. airfield June 29 through July 1. The air show will feature large-scale radio-controlled aircraft flown by pilots skilled in extreme aerobatics as well as realistic scale flight. Wingspans of some brightly-colored aircraft exceed nine feet, and multiple planes often fill the sky to the delight of spectators. The Westport airfield is located on Route 9N two miles south of Westport, N.Y.
Activities will run from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. Friday, Saturday and Sunday weather permitting. Admission to the event is $3 per car.
For more information about the Valley of the Giants air show, or the Champlain Valley Flyers, contact club secretary Shelly Becker at 802-758-2578.
Religious Services ADDISON ADDISON COMMUNITY BAPTIST CHURCH Addison Four Corners, Rts. 22A & 17. Sunday Worship at 10:30am, Adult Sunday School at 9:30am; Bible Study at 2pm on Thursdays. Call Pastor Steve @ 759-2326 for more information. WEST ADDISON UNITED METHODIST CHURCH - Sunday, 9am HAVURAH, THE JEWISH CONGREGATION OF ADDISON COUNTY - Havurah House, 56 North Pleasant St. A connection to Judaism and Jewish life for all who are interested. Independent and unaffiliated. High Holy Day services are held jointly with Middlebury College Hillel. Weekly Hebrew School from September to May. Information: 388-8946 or www.addisoncountyhavurah.org BRANDON BRANDON BAPTIST CHURCH - Corner of Rt. 7 & Rt. 73W (Champlain St.) Brandon, VT • 802-247-6770. Sunday Services: 10a. Adult Bible Study, Sunday School ages 5 & up, Nursery provided ages 4 & under. Worship Service 11am * Lords supper observed on the 1st Sunday of each month. *Pot luck luncheon 3rd Sunday of each month. Wednesdays 6:30pm, Adult prayer & Bible study, Youth groups for ages 5 & up LIFEBRIDGE CHRISTIAN CHURCH - is meeting temporarily, 6pm, Saturdays at the Leicester Church of the Nazarene located at 39 Windy Knoll Ln. Call 247-LIFE (5433) for more details or for information about other groups and meetings. BRIDPORT BRIDPORT CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH - Middle Rd., Bridport, VT. Pastor Tim Franklin, 758-2227. Sunday worship services at 10:30am. Sunday School 9:30am for children ages 3 and up. HOPE COMMUNITY FELLOWSHIP - Meets at Bridport Community Hall. Bridport, VT • 759-2922 • Rev. Kauffman. Sunday 9am, 10:30am, evening bible study. ST. BERNADETTE/ST. GENEVIEVE - Combined parish, Saturday mass 7:30pm Nov.1-April 30 (See Shoreham) BRISTOL BRISTOL CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP - The River, 400 Rocky Dale Rd., Bristol. Sunday Worship 9:00am. 453-2660, 453-4573, 453-2614 BRISTOL FEDERATED CHURCH - Sunday service at 10:15am FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF BRISTOL - Service Sunday, 10am ST. AMBROSE ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH Saturday service 6:30pm, & Sunday 8am BRISTOL SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH 839 Rockydale Rd. - Saturday Services: Bible Studies for all ages-9:30am to 10:30 am, Song Service, Worship Service at 11am. Prayer Meeting Thursday 6:30pm. 453-4712 THE GATHERING - Non-denominational worship, second & fourth Saturday of the month, 7pm Sip-N-Suds, 3 Main St. • 453-2565, 453-3633 CORNWALL FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH OF CORNWALL - Sunday worship 9:30am EAST MIDDLEBURY/RIPTON UNITED METHODIST CHURCH - Sunday worship, 9am VALLEY BIBLE CHURCH - Rev. Ed Wheeler, services on Sundays: Sunday School for all ages at 9:30am, morning worship at 10:45am (nursery provided), and 6:30pm on Wednesdays; Youth Group and AWANA meet on Thursday evenings at 6:30pm ESSEX CHRISTIAN & MISSIONARY ALLIANCE ESSEX
ALLIANCE CHURCH - 36 Old Stage Rd., Essex • 878-8213 ESSEX JUNCTION CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH - 61 Main St., Essex Junction - 878-8341 FERRISBURGH/NORTH FERRISB. FERRISBURGH METHODIST CHURCH - Sunday worship 9:30am NORTH FERRISBURGH UNITED METHODIST CHURCH - 227 Old Hollow Rd., North Ferrisburgh, VT 802425-2770. Rev. Kim Hornug-Marcy. Sunday worship 10am, Sunday School 10am, Nursery Available. www.nfumchurch.org CROSSROADS CHAPEL - 41 Middlebrook Rd., Ferrisburgh, VT 05456. (802) 425-3625. Pastor: Rev. Charles Paolantonio. Services: Sunday 10am. FERRISBURGH CENTER COMMUNITY METHODIST CHURCH - Rt 7, Ferrisburgh - next to the Town Offices / Grange Hall. New Pastors Rev. John & Patrice Goodwin. Worship time is now 10:45am. HINESBURG LIGHTHOUSE BAPTIST CHURCH - 90 Mechanicsville Rd., Hinesburg. Sunday Service at 10:30am. Pastor Hart, info: 482-2588. ST. JUDE THE APOSTLE - 10759 Route 116 Hinesburg. Masses: Sat. 4:30pm; Sun. 9:30am UNITED CHURCH OF HINESBURG - 10580 Rte. 116, Sunday Worship & Sunday School 10am. Pastor Michele Rogers Brigham - 482-3352. LINCOLN UNITED CHURCH OF LINCOLN - Sunday worship service 9:45, Church school 11:15am, united Student Ministries for grades 7-12, 6:30pm Sunday evenings. 453-4280 MIDDLEBURY CHAMPLAIN VALLEY UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST SOCIETY - Sunday service & church school, Sunday 10am CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY - Middlebury. Middlebury Community House, Main and Seymour Sts, Sunday Service and Church School-10am; Wednesday-7:30pm. THE CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH OF MIDDLEBURY (UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST) Sunday 10am worship service THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTERDAY SAINTS - Sunday Sacrament 10am-11:15am EASTERN ORTHODOX CHRISTIAN WORSHIP Service in Middlebury area: call 758-2722 or 453-5334. HAVURAH, THE JEWISH CONGREGATION OF ADDISON COUNTY - Saturday morning Shabbat services, 388-8946 MEMORIAL BAPTIST CHURCH - 97 South Pleasant St., Middlebury. Sunday morning worship & church school 10am, Wednesday evening Bible Study, 6:30pm. 388-7472. MIDDLEBURY FRIENDS MEETING - (Quakers), Sunday worship & first day school 10am (meets at Havurah House) SAINT MARY’S ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH Saturday, 5:15pm, Sunday 8am, 10am ST. STEPHEN’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH - (On the green in Middlebury). Reverend Terence P. Gleeson, Rector. Sunday Eucharist 8 & 10:30am Child care & Sunday school available at 10:30am service. Wednesday at 12:05pm Holy Eucharist in the chapel. www.ststephensmidd.org or call 388-7200. UNITED METHODIST CHURCH - 10am Grades K-5: Activities, Grades. 6-8 & 9-12: Church School Classes, Refreshments & fellowship time: 10:45am-11am. Sunday morning worship service 11am. Nursery provided both at 10am & 11am.
MONKTON MONKTON FRIENDS UNITED METHODIST CHURCH - Sunday service & Sunday school, 8:45am NEW HAVEN ADDISON COUNTY CHURCH OF CHRIST - 145 Campground Rd., 453-5704. Worship: Sunday 9 & 11:20am; Bible classes: Sunday 10:30am, Tuesday 7pm. Watch Bible Forum on MCTV-15 (Middlebury) or NEAT-16 (Bristol) NEW HAVEN CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Church services 10am on Sunday. All are welcome. NEW HAVEN UNITED REFORMED CHURCH Sunday services, 10am & 7pm ORWELL FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH - Sunday worship service, 10:00am. Contact: Rev. Esty, 948-2900 SAINT PAUL’S ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH Sunday services 10:30am Mass, 468-5706 RICHMOND RICHMOND CONGREGATIONAL UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST - 20 Church St., Richmond • 4342053. Rev. Len Rowell. Sunday Worship with Sunday School, 10am; Adult Study Class, Sunday 8:30am RIPTON UNITED METHODIST CHURCH - 388-2510 SALISBURY SALISBURY CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH (UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST) - Sun. worship svc., 10am SHELBURNE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF SHELBURNE - 127 Webster Road, Shelburne • 985-2848 TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH - 2166 Shelburne Rd., Shelburne. 985-2269 Sunday Services: 8am & 10am. Bible Study 9:00am • Sunday School: 9:50am. The Reverend Craig Smith ALL SOULS INTERFAITH GATHERING - Rev. Mary Abele, Pastor. Evensong Service and Spiritual Education for Children Sun. at 5pm. 371 Bostwick Farm Rd., Shelburne. 985-3819 SHELBURNE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH - 30 Church St., Shelburne • 985-3981 • Rev. Gregory A. Smith, Pastor, 8:00am - Holy Communion Service • 9:30am - Family Worship Service with Sunday School SHOREHAM ST. GENEVIEVE/ST. BERNADETTE - Combined parish, Saturday mass 7:30pm, May 1-Oct. 31. (See Bridport) SHOREHAM FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCHUCC - Sunday worship and Sunday school 10am. Pastor Gary O’Gorman. 897-2687 STARKSBORO THE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF STARKSBORO - 2806 Route 16, Starksboro. Sunday worship 11am. Chat, Chew & Renew, a pre-worship fellowship and discussion time 10am-10:45am. Sunday mornings in the Fellowship Hall on the accessible first level. All are welcome. First Baptist is an American Baptist church yoked with The Community Church of Huntington for support of its pastor, The Rev. Larry Detweiler revdets@gmail.com; 802.453.5577. SOUTH BURLINGTON NEW COVENANT BAPTIST CHURCH SBC - 1451 Williston Rd., South Burlington. 863-4305 VICTORY CENTER - Holiday Inn, Williston Road, South Burlington • 658-1019 BURLINGTON UNITED PENTECOSTAL CHURCH - Pastor Paul Lyon • 860-5828. Sundays: 10am & 6pm. Wednesdays: 7pm. at 294 North Winooski Avenue.
SUDBURY SUDBURY CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH - Sunday worship service and Sunday school, 10:30am SOVEREIGN REDEEMER ASSEMBLY - Sunday worship 10am VERGENNES/PANTON ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHRISTIAN CENTER - 1759 U.S. Route 7, Vergennes, VT • 802-877-3903 • Sunday school 9am, Sunday worship #1 10am, Sunday worship #2 6pm, Youth, adult gathering 6pm CHAMPLAIN VALLEY CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH - Sunday worship svcs. 10am & 7pm CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH OF VERGENNES (UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST) - Sunday, 9:30am NEW WINE COVENANT (CHURCH OF GOD IN CHRIST) - Sunday worship 10am PANTON COMMUNITY BAPTIST CHURCH - Sunday school from 9:30am-10:15am Pre-K to adult, Sunday worship service 10:30am ST. PAUL’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH - Main and Park Streets, Vergennes. Rector: The Rev. Alan Kittelson. Sunday Services 8am and 10am; childcare provided at 10am. All are welcome. For information call 758-2211. ST. PETER’S ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH Saturday 4:30pm, Sunday 10:30am VERGENNES UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 10:30am VICTORY BAPTIST CHURCH - 862 US Rt. 7, SUNDAY: 9:45am Bible Hour For All Ages Including 5 Adult Classes; 11:00am Worship Including Primary Church Ages 3 to 5 & Junior Church 1st - 4th Graders; 6pm Evening Service Worship For All Ages. WEDNESDAY 6:30pm Adult Prayer & Bible Study; AWANA Children’s Clubs (3yrs to 6th grade); JAM Junior High Group (7th & 8th grade); Youth Group (9th - 12 grade). Nursery is provided for children up to 3 years old. Classes are provided for children age 3 and up. 802-877-3393 WEYBRIDGE WEYBRIDGE CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH - The Rev. Len Rowell, interim minister. Sunday Worship at 10:00 a.m. 545-2579. WHITING WHITING COMMUNITY CHURCH - Sunday school 9:45am, Sunday Service 11am & 7pm WILLISTON CHRIST MEMORIAL CHURCH - 1033 Essex Road, Williston. 878-7107. St. Minister Wes Pastor. Services: 8:30am and 10:30am TRINITY BAPTIST CHURCH - 19 Mountain View Rd., Williston. 878-8118 CHRIST MEMORIAL CHURCH - 1033 Essex Rd., Williston 878-7107 CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE - 30 Morgan Parkway Williston, VT 05495 • 802-878-8591 bwnazarene@juno.com CAVALRY CHAPEL - 300 Cornerstone, Williston. 872-5799 MARANATHA CHRISTIAN CHURCH - 1037 S. Brownell Rd., Williston. 862-2108 IMMACULATE HEART OF MARY - Route 2, Williston878-4513 SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH - Route 2A, Williston 878-2285 WILLSTON FEDERATED CHURCH - 44 North Willston Rd., Williston. 878-5792 2-29-2012 • 20886
Special Thanks To These Fine Local Businesses For Supporting The Religious Services Page Broughton’s
S SANDERSON FUNERAL SERVICE
Hardware
ROSIE’S Restaurant & Coffee Shop
117 South Main Street Middlebury, VT0 5753
Wa l t e r D u c h a r m e Owner/FuneralD irector Clyde A. Walton FuneralD irector
“Join us after church for lunch!”
Phone: 802-388-2311 Fax: 802-388-1033 Email: sandersonf@comcast.com 20887
‘Big Country’ Store Rt. 22A, Bridport
758-2477
20890
886 Route 7 South • Middlebury, Vt Open 7 Days A Week 6am-9pm (10pm Fri. & Sat.)
802-388-7052
20891
289 Randbury Rd., Rutland, VT
(802) 775-2357 2242 Vt Route 7 South, Middlebury, VT
(802) 388-7212 www.suburbanenergy.com
20889
June 30, 2012
The Eagle - 13
www.addison-eagle.com
Thursday, June 28 BRANDON — Swing Noire performs a free outdoor concert on the Brandon Green, 6:30 p.m., bring a lawn chair and enjoy entertainment by local musicians, rain location as needed. Call 247-6401 for details. MIDDLEBURY — Pops concert and fireworks performed by the Georgia Brass Band followed by fabulous fireworks. On grounds behind the Mahaney Center for the Arts at Middlebury College (rain site: Kenyon Arena). The grounds open at 5:30 p.m.; Concert begins at 7:30 p.m. Call 388-2117. MIDDLEBURY — Summer Salsa Series with D.J. Hector at Two Brothers Tavern, downtown by the traffic rotary, 10 p.m. Free. Friday, June 29 HINESBURG — Join friends and neighbors for a salad supper at the United Church of Hinesburg, Osborne Parish House, on Route 116 in Hinesburg, 5–7 p.m. Adults: $9, children 12 and under $5. Live Jazz and silent auction. BRANDON — At 7 p.m., Brandon Music will present Annemieke Spoelstra, piano and Jeremiah McLane, accordion. Dutch classical piano virtuoso Annemieke Spoel-
stra and master accordionist from Vermont Jeremiah McLane make unique arrangements based on traditional folk melodies. Tickets $15. For directions, call 465-4071 MIDDLEBURY — Flash Back Friday with D.J. Mixwell at Two Brothers Tavern, downtown by the traffic rotary, 10 p.m. Free. Saturday, June 30 BRANDON — No Strings Marionette Company performs “The Hobbit”, Brandon Town Hall, 1 Conant Sq./Route 7, 6:30 – 8:30 p.m., $6 Adults; $4 age 12 and under, all ages, 802-247-5420. HUNTINGTON — Enjoy a Bird Monitoring Walk, 7:30-9 a.m. Join experienced birders on the monthly bird monitoring walk on the Museum's property. Please bring binoculars. Optional: pre-register by calling 4342167. Free (donations welcome). Best for adults and older children with some birding experience MIDDLEBURY — The Ryan Hanson Band (Rock) at Two Brothers Tavern, 10 p.m. $3. EAST MIDDLEBURY — Bake and tag sale at Middlebury Beef Supply, 9 a.m.-2 p.m. to benefit the Salisbury Feral Cat Assistance Program.
Vermont Egg Farms receives $7,000 penalty for discharge of wastewater From News & Staff Reports newmarketpress@denpubs.com WAITSFIELD — The Department of Environmental Conservation’s Compliance and Enforcement Division today announced that it has formally settled environmental violations involving Dorchester Farm Properties, Inc. (Vermont Egg Farms). Vermont Egg Farms owns property in Highgate where it operates an egg production facility. The settlement includes a $7,000.00 penalty. From August 2010 through March 2011, the company discharged process wastewater from its egg washing operation to an unpermitted underground injection well sys-
tem on the property. The company self-reported the violation in April 2011 after it discovered its on-site personnel were using the unpermitted disposal system. The company had been transferring the wastewater to a neighboring farm for use, but began utilizing the system after the pump that transferred the wastewater from a holding tank failed. No discharge to surface waters occurred during use of the system. The company replaced the pump in March 2011, ceased use of the disposal system, and subsequently discontinued egg washing at the facility. It is investigating the use of the existing disposal system for a small amount of wastewater generated from
washing processing floors, with use of the neighboring farm as an alternate disposal method. The matter came to light as a result of the company self-reporting the violation. After the Agency completed its investigation, Vermont Egg Farms was notified of the violations and agreed to settle the matter. The settlement was reduced to an Assurance of Discontinuance, and adopted as an order by the Environmental Court. Vermont Egg Farms has agreed to pay a $7,000 penalty and either apply for a new permit to use the existing system, abandon it and utilize an alternative disposal method, or apply for and construct a new disposal system.
PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE
NOVELTIES By Joel D. Lafargue ACROSS 1 Pay to see cards 5 He played Senator Vinick on “The West Wing” 9 “Ma! (He’s Making Eyes __)”: 1921 song 13 Urge forward 18 B&O part 19 Mistake 21 Marina feature 22 Mazda two-seater 23 Not a waste of time carving? 26 Anti-apartheid author Alan 27 Art in a park 28 Noticed 29 Union chapter 31 “Star Trek” spinoff, briefly 32 Alway 33 Jupiter, to Saturn 34 Tendency toward disorder 36 Tinker Bell’s blabbing? 42 Screenplays 45 “Not __ eye in ...” 46 Busy IRS mo. 47 __ Team 50 Frome of fiction 51 Farm spread 52 Type of daisy 54 Be of use 57 Name whose Japanese symbols mean “ocean child” 58 Foul-smelling 60 Municipal mascot? 64 Revival prefix 65 Political theorist Hannah 67 First skipper? 68 Run-down urban dwelling 70 Not quite closed
72 75 76 80
82 86 87 91 92 94 95 97 98 100 103 104 105 108 111 114 115 116 118 119 121 125 127 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137
Blade Sushi bar soup Amount so far Whom Cordelia called “As mad as the vex’d sea” “Maybe later” It has a Bklyn. campus Pane in an infested attic? 27-day pope of 1605 __’acte Range rover Blue shoe material of song Limo passenger, often Place and Kett Flight units Moo goo __ pan “Smooth Operator” singer Eponymous microbiologist Louis Lollipop for a dog? Most cherished “Norma __” Previously “Color me surprised” Airbus A380, vis-à-vis most other planes Bond foe Clumsy mistakes Breakfast cereal prefix Butterfly? Franny’s title brother, in a Salinger novella Support girder Yes-Bob link Italian peak Pre-deal round Silent yeses Comes out with Retinal cells
DOWN 1 Intimidates 2 “There’ll be __ time ...” 3 Old Sicilian coin
Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit, 1 to 9
4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 20 24 25 30 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 43 44 48 49 52 53 55 56 59 61 62 63 66 69 71 73 74 76
Hard-to-win game Like net income __-di-dah Club charges Angels’ div. On-target Best-seller list datum Juicy gourd Raises Plead with “O patria __”: “Aida” aria Duke’s Droid? Thames school Kent’s Smallville sweetie It’s periodically rung out “The Kingfish” Long of early 20th-century politics __ tube Circle piece Sympathetic sorrow Farmer Al __: Paul Terry toon Like __ in the headlights Boiling In __: miffed Check for fit Burn the surface of Hoodwinked Schnozzola Prefix with fauna Quarterback Hasselbeck Pin money source Furry sci-fi creature Gossip page pair Colleague of Trotsky __ the finish Turkic flatbread Hot dog topping Do some cobbling on Cheerios Dust speck Band with the 2010 album “Infestation” Wetland St. Louis’s __ Bridge Catch some z’s
77 Utah’s __ Mountains 78 Where smoking remnants are stored? 79 P.O. deliveries 81 Coloring cosmetic 83 Evans’s news partner 84 Nitrous __ 85 Drop remover 88 China’s Sun __-sen 89 Forks in the road 90 Have on
93 96 99 101 102 104 106 107 109 110 112
Assess Neutralizes, as a bomb Shipping routes Hidden Rude looks Moped’s cousin Rhody the Ram’s sch. Brightly colored perch Court activity Fruit with a wrinkly rind __-Croatian
113 116 117 120 122 123 124 126 128 129
Traction aid Mideast strip Tar Heel State university Another, in Ávila Bart and Lisa’s bus driver Await judgment Ladies in Mex. Half a bray PT separators Enchanted
Trivia Answers! •••••••• From Page 2 ••••••••
ANs. 1 MINNESOTA ANs. 2 LUNAR MODULE 29218
SOLUTIONS TO LAST WEEK ’ S PUZZLES !
(Answers Next Week)
June 30, 2012
www.addison-eagle.com
Help Wanted Appliances pp
For Sale Legals General Financial Services Garage g Sales
Equipment q p
Real Estate Automotive Apartments p For Rent Wanted
theclassifiedsuperstore.com
Free
On the go?
So are we!
Scan this QR-Code from your mobile device, and search our classifieds from anywhere.
20916
14 - The Eagle
Sell it local or sell it regionally! Call 1-802-388-6397 today! or visit our self-service site at www.theclassifiedsuperstore.com APPLIANCE BLOWN HEAD GASKET? ANY VEH icle repair yourself. State of the art 2-Component chemical process. Specializing in Cadillac Northstar Overheating. 100% guaranteed. 1866-780-9041 www.RXHP.com
AUTOMOTIVE SHOP EARLY,SHOP LATE! Early or Late Find it or sell it in the Classifieds. Log on anytime! theclassifiedsuperstore.com
HOME IMPROVEMENT HAS YOUR BUILDING SHIFTED Contact Woodford Bros. Inc. for straightening, leveling and foundation repairs at 1-800-OLD-BARN / www.woodfordbros.com QUALITY, DURABLE AND AFFORDABLE COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS. Free on-site consultation. Call CB Structures 1-800-9400192 or www.cbstructuresinc.com REPLACEMENT WINDOWS $179 Installed. Double Hung Tilt-ins, Lifetime Warranty,Energy Star tax credit available. Call Now! 1-866272-7533www.usacustomwindow s.com TOTAL WOOD HEAT Safe, clean, efficient, and comfortable OUTDOOR WOOD FURNACE from Central Boiler Vermont Heating Alternatives 802-343-7900
INSURANCE PERMANENT LIFE INSURANCE Qualify to age 86. Fast. Easy. Few Questions. No Exam! 1-800-9383439, x24; 1-516-938-3439, x24
VACATION PROPERTY WARM WEATHER IS YEAR ROUND In Aruba. The water is safe, and the dining is fantastic. Walk out to the beach. 3Bedroom weeks available in 2012. Sleeps 8. $3500. Email: carolaction@aol.com for more information.
GARAGE SALE/ BARN SALE ATTN:GARAGE SALE ENTHUSIASTS! Buying or selling second-hand treasures?The NYS Department of State's Division of Consumer Protection, in conjunction with the Free Community Papers of New York, recommends checking the following websites to help assure that the item has not been recalled or the subject of a safety warning: http:/www.recalls.gov and the Consumer Product Safety Commission at www.cpsc.gov. For other important recall and product safety information visit the Division of Consumer Protection at www.dos.ny.gov WADHAMS! QUALITY Barn Sale. Multi-family. 2295 County Route 10. Saturday, June 30, 9:00 AM - 3:00 PM, Sunday, July 1, 9:00 AM - 12:00 PM Rain or Shine. Everything from wacky to practical and a CANOE. Jotul wood stove, wine chiller, antiques, building supplies, kids stuff, and more. No Early Birds!
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
HELP WANTED LOCAL
SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. You WIN or Pay Us Nothing. Contact Disability Group, Inc. Today! BBB Accredited. Call For Your FREE Book & Consultation.1-888-587-9203
CAREER TRAINING AVIATION MAINTENANCE TRAINING Financial Aid if qualified. Job Placement Assistance. Call National Aviation Academy Today! FAA Approved. CLASSES STARTING SOON! 1-800-2923228 or NAA.ed 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. 1-800-3210298.
HELP WANTED
COMBINATION P&D Combination P&D Drivers - Full-Time: Excellent Wages, Benefits, Pension! Home nightly! Safe Equipment! Bellows Falls VT location. CDL-A w/Combo and Hazmat, 1yr T/T exp, 21yoa req. EOE-M/F/D/V Apply online atwww.yrcw.com/ careers
ADOPTIONS LOOKING TO EXPAND OUR FAMILY through adoption. If you are pregnant and considering adoption, call 1-866-918-4482. www.lindaanddave.com
**2012 POSTAL JOBS!** $14 TO $59 hour + Full Federal Benefits. No Experience Required. NOW HIRING! Green Card OK. 1-866593-2664, Ext 107.
PREGNANT? CONSIDERING PREGNANT? CONSIDERING ADOPTION? Talk with caring adoption expert. You choose from families nationwide. LIVING EXPENSES PAID. Call 24/7 Abby's One True Gift Adoptions 866-4136296
AIRLINES ARE HIRING -TRAIN FOR hands on Aviation Career. FAA approved program.Financial aid if qualified - Job placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance 1-877-202-0386.
PREGNANT? CONSIDERING ADOPTION? You choose family. LIVING EXPENSES PAID. Abby's One True Gift Adoptions. 1-866459-3369
AIRLINES ARE HIRING -TRAIN FOR hands on Aviation Career. FAA approved program.Financial aid if qualified - Job placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance 1-877-202-0386. ACTORS/MOVIE EXTRAS needed immediately! $150-$300/day depending on job. No experience, all looks needed. 1800-561-1762 Ext A-104 CDL DRIVER - PREMIER TRUCKing co. seeking experienced driver for local P&D position at remote Plattsburg, NY service center. Requires class A CDL with Hazmat and Tanker (or willingness to obtain these endorsements) and at least 1 yr of exp. Excellent benefits with low cost to employee. www.aduiepyle.com 1-800-9012204, x6138 DRIVERS: DEDICATED Runs with Consistent Freight, Top Pay, Weekly Home-Time & More! Werner Enterprises: 1-800-3972645 HELP WANTED!! EARN EXTRA income mailing our brochures from home! FREE Supplies!Genuine Opportunity! Start Immediately! www.theworkhub.net HIRING: WORKERS Needed to Assemble Products at Home. No selling, $500 weekly potential. Info. 1985-646-1700 DEPT. CAD-4085 MYSTERY SHOPPERS Needed Earn up to $150 per day Undercover Shoppers Needed to Judge Retail & Dining Establishments Experience Not Required Call Now 888-380-3513 OVER 18? Can't miss limited opportunity to travel with successful young business group. Paid training. Transportation/Lodging. Unlimited income potential. 877646.5050 WANTED: SALES REPRESENTATIVE, to sell collection agency services. Well qualified leads. Car required. Dixon Commercial Investigators - Irene 1-800-388-0641 ext. 4053
Advertise Classifieds! Have we got a WHEEL DEAL for you! 1-800-989-4237.
FREE DESIGNER NURSING COVERS made by moms. Six styles, great gift! Use code'freexyz' www.Modest-Mom.com
PREGNANT? CONSIDERING ADOPTION? You choose from families nationwide. LIVING EXPENSES PAID. Abby's One True Gift Adoptions. 866-413-6292, 24/7 Void/Illinois
ANNOUNCEMENTS ADULT HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA AT HOME. 4-6 weeks. No age limit. Accredited,state listed. FREE CLASS RING. Free Brochure. 1305-940-4214 AT&T U-VERSE JUST $29.99/MO! Bundle Internet+Phone+TV & SAVE. Up to $300BACK! (Select plans). Limited Time CALL 1-800283-6371 DISH NETWORK STARTING AT $19.99/month PLUS 30 Premium Movie Channels. Free for 3 Months! SAVE! Ask About SAME DAY Installation! CALL 1-888-8238160 DIVORCE $450* NO FAULT OR Regular Divorce. Covers Children, Property, etc. Only One Signature Required! *Excludes govt. fees. Locally Owned!1-800-522-6000 Ext. 100. Baylor & Associates, Inc. Est. 1977 FEELING OLDER? Men lose the ability to produce testosterone as they age. Call 1-866-686-3254 for a FREE trial of Progene-All Natural Testosterone Supplement PSYCHIC SOURCE: FIND OUT WHAT LIES AHEAD with a psychic reading! New members buy a 5minute reading for $5 and get 5 additional minutes absolutely FREE. Call Now1-888-803-1930. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Entertainment only. 18 and over.
RUSSETT/FARRITOR ENGAGEMENT/WEDDING Barbara Ann and Francis Joseph Russett of Baldwinsville, NY, are pleased to announce the engagement of their daughter, Karen Marie, to Bret William Farritor, son of CJ and Robert Burrows of Indio, CA and Jean and John McKinley of Vista, CA. The couple was engaged in Niagara Falls, Ontario in April. Karen is a graduate of C.W. Baker High School, Onondaga County Community College and holds undergraduate and graduate degrees from Columbia College. She is employed with Onondaga County Child Protective Services. Bret is a magna cum laude graduate of both Palomar College and California State University, San Bernardino College of Social and Behavioral Sciences and attended Western State University College of Law. He is a former San Diego Transit Officer and a retired United States Army noncommissioned officer. The couple will wed in December, 2012. Attendants will be, maid of honor, Karissa Marie, daughter of the bride and best man, Jesse David, son of the bride.
ELECTRONICS AT&T U-VERSE for just $29.99/mo! SAVE when you bundle Internet+Phone+TV and get up to $300 BACK! (select plans). Limited Time Call NOW! 877-276-3538 AT&T U-VERSE just $29.99/mo! Bundle Internet+Phone+TV & SAVE. Get up to $300 BACK! (Select plans). Limited Time CALL 800-418-8969 & Check Availability in your Area! BUNDLE & SAVE on your CABLE, INTERNET PHONE, AND MORE. High Speed Internet starting at less than $20/ mo. CALL NOW! 800-291-4159
FINANCIAL SERVICES DEBT FREE IN I MONTH. LITTLE Known Government Debt Relief Program Guaranteed to Erase Debt. www.GovRelief.com $$$ ACCESS LAWSUIT CASH NOW!!! Injury Lawsuit Dragging? $500-$500,000++ within 48 /hrs? 1-800-568-8321 www.lawcapital.com CREDIT CARD DEBT? LEGALLY HAVE IT REMOVED! Minimum $7,000 in debt to qualify. Utilize Consumer Protection Attorneys. Call now! 1-888 -237-0388
FOR SALE KOI FOR SALE-BEAUTIFUL STANdard Butterfly Koi. All Varieties. Quantity Discounts. Pond Supplies. 1-516-809-6771
1972 GRAN TORINO runs, needs work, $4000 or best reasonable offer; 7140 Hesston Chopper, hay & corn head, $1,575; Chevy Van 30 Travelmaster camper $2800. 518-962-4394 CLARINET, VIOLIN, FLUTE, TRUMPET, Amplifier, Fender Guitar $75 each. Upright Bass, Cello, Saxophone, French Horn, Drums $189 each. Others 4-sale 1-516377-7907 MEMORY FOAM THERAPEUTIC NASA MATTRESSES T-$299 F-$349 Q-$399 K-$499 ADJUSTABLES - $799 FREE DELIVERY LIFETIME WARRANTY 90 NIGHT TRIAL 1-800-ATSLEEP1800-287-5337 WWW.MATTRESSDR.COM
FURNITURE HOUSEHOLD MOVING SALE Large Sectional Leather couch $400, Iron Bed w/iron bed stands, 2 small antique desk & 2 large refinished cabinets, etc. Please call 802-377-9614 Evenings.
GENERAL AIRLINE CAREERS begin here - Become an Aviation Maintenance Tech. FAA approved training. Financial aid if qualified Housing available. Job placement assistance. Call AIM (888)6861704 AIRLINE CAREERS begin here Become an Aviation Maintenance Tech. FAA approved training. Financial aid if qualified - Housing available. Job placement assistance. Call AIM (866)453-6204 ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from Home. *Medical, *Business, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Call 800-510-0784 www.CenturaOnline.com ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from Home. *Medical, *Business, *Criminal Justice, *Hospitality. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. Call 800-494-3586 www.CenturaOnline.com CA$H PAID-UP TO $27/BOX for unexpired, sealed DIABETIC TEST STRIPS! 1 DAY PAYMENT & PREPAID shipping. SE HABLA ESPANOL. Emma 1888-776-7771. www.Cash4DiabeticSupplies.com
GENERAL CANADA DRUG CENTER. Safe and affordable medications. Save up to 90% on your medication needs. Call 1-888-734-1530 ($25.00 off your first prescription and free shipping.) DIVORCE $350* Covers Child Support, Custody, and Visitation, Property, Debts, Name Change... Only One Signature Required! *Excludes govt. fees! 1-800-522-6000 Extn. 800, BAYLOR & ASSOCIATES 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 -877-737-9447
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 CASH FOR CARS, Any Make or Model! Free Towing. Sell it TODAY. Instant offer: 1-800-8645784 FEELING OLDER? In men, testosterone declines as they age. Call 1866-455-0652 for a FREE trial of Progene- Natural Testosterone Supplement HELP! I’VE FALLEN & I Can’t GetUP! You or a loved one live alone? Get Immediate Help in an Emergency! Call LifeAlert Now-FREE Info!Call-800-916-2138 HOT-TUB/SPA... DELUXE 2012 Model Neckjets, Therapyseat, Never Used, Warranty, Can Deliver. Worth $5950. Sell $1950. (800) 960-7727 HYPNOTIZE YOURSELF With Professional Results! Save Thousands! Satisfaction GUARANTEED! Complete Package Including RUSH Delivery And FREE MYSTERY GIFT $10! Neuman, PO Box 1157 - Dept H, Saint George, UT 84771, 435-673-0420 LIMITED TIME! Bundle DIRECTV® service & High-Speed Internet and Save! Call DirectStarTV - Authorized DIRECTV Dealer: 1-888-6626598. Ask about current offers MEDICAL CAREERS begin here - Online training for Allied Health and Medical Management. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV certified. Call 800 -510-0784 www.CenturaOnline.com 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 REACH OVER 20 million homes nationwide with one easy buy! Only $2,395 per week for a 25 word classified! For more information go to www.naninetwork.com REVERSE MORTGAGES -NO mortgage payments FOREVER! Seniors 62+! Government insured. No credit/income requirements. Free 28 pg. catalog. 1-888-660 3033 All Island Mortgage SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. WIN or Pay Nothing! Start Your Application In Under 60 Seconds. Contact Disability Group, Inc. Licensed Attorneys & BBB Accredited. Call 1-888-606-4790 TAKE VIAGRA/ CIALIS? Save $500.00! Get 40 100mg/ 20mg Pills, for only-$99! +4Bonus Pills FREE! #1 Male Enhancement. 1-800-213-6202 TAKE VIAGRA/ CIALIS? Save $500.00! Get 40 100mg/ 20mg Pills, for only-$99! +4Bonus Pills FREE! #1 Male Enhancement. 1-800-213-6202 WORK ON JET ENGINES - Train for hands on Aviation Maintenance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified - Job placement assistance. Call AIM (866) 854-6156.
L OANS A VAILABLE NO CREDIT? BAD CREDIT? BANKRUPTCY?
Hometown Chevrolet
152 Broadway Whitehall, NY •
(518) 499-2886 • Ask for Joe
36766
26695
MA$$IVE CA$H FLOW Returning Calls, No Selling, Tax Free. For proof leave message.Training/Support daily. 1-641-715-3900 Ext. 59543#
MEDICAL CAREERS BEGIN HERE Train ONLINE for Allied Health and Medical Management. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified.SCHEV certified. Call 1800-494-2785 www.CenturaOnline.com
June 30, 2012 HEALTH
MUSIC
LAND
AFFORDABLE DENTAL PLANS from $9.95/month. Save 15%50%. Not insurance! Call Toll Free 1-866-213-5387. www.connectionbenefitgroup.com
**OLD GUITARS WANTED!** Fender, Gibson, Martin,Gretsch, Prairie State, Euphonon, Larson, D'Angelico, Stromberg, Rickenbacker, and Mosrite. Gibson Mandolins/Banjos. 1930's thru 1970's TOP CASH PAID! 1-800-401-0440
5 ACRES ON WEST BASS POND $19,900. 8 Acres Waterfront home, $99,000. Financing. www.LandFirstNY.com 1-888-683 -2626
OXYGEN DEPENDENT CLIENTS WELCOME Susan Kuhne, NYS Licensed Massage Therapist Accepting new clients. Complex Medical Histories, Oxygen/ Portable Vent Dependent clients are welcome. Pinnacle Place Professional Bldg. Suite 110 Albany, NY 12203 518-248-2914 $70 STOP PAYING for Overpriced Medications! Fill your prescription at our Canadian Pharmacy & you'll SAVE up to 90%! CALL NOW 800-315-8208 for $10 off+FREE Shipping TAKE VIAGRA 100MG and CIALIS 20mg! 40 Pills +4FREE for only $99. #1 Male Enhancement. Discreet Shipping. Save $500! Buy The Blue Pill! 1888-796-8870 TAKE VIAGRA /CIALIS?40 100MG/ 20mg Pills + 4 Free. Only $99! Save $500.00. Call 1-888-7968878
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS CLARINET/FLUTE/ VIOLIN/TRUMPET/Trombone/Amplifier/ Fender Guitar, $69 each. Cello/Upright Bass/Saxophone/ French Horn/ Drums, $185 ea. Tuba/Baritone Horn/Hammond Organ, Others 4 sale.1-516-377-7907
WANTED TO BUY CA$H PAID- up to $26/Box for unexpired, sealed DIABETIC TEST STRIPS. Hablamos Espanol. 1-800 -371-1136 BUYING EVERYTHING! Furs, Coins, Gold, Antiques, Watches, Silver, Art, Diamonds."The Jewelers Jeweler Jack" 1-917-696-2024 By Appointment. Lic-Bonded. MINERALS WANTS to purchase minerals and other oil and gas interests. Send details to P.O. Box 13557 Denver, Co. 80201 WANTED ALL MOTORCYCLES, & Memorabilia pre 1980, $Top CASH$ PAID! Running or not. 1315-569-8094
WEIGHTLOSS MEDICATIONS Phentermine, Phendimetrazine, etc. Office visit, one-month supply for $80! 1-631-462-6161; 1-516754-6001; www.MDthin.com
WANTS TO purchase minerals and other oil & gas interests. Send details P.O. Box 13557, Denver, Co 80201
WERE YOU IMPLANTED WITH A ST. JUDE RIATA DEFIBRILLATOR LEAD WIRE between June 2001 and December 2010? Have you had this lead replaced, capped ordid you receive shocks from the lead? You may be entitled to compensation. Contact Attorney Charles Johnson 1-800-535-5727
DOGS
LAWN & GARDEN 4 NICE ALUMINUM Lawn Chairs (White) w/padded cushions, $5 each. Center Rutland 802-775-0280 CASE SC Farm Tractor $500 Firm. (518) 547-8730. PRIVACY HEDGE CEDAR TREE $7.50 Windbreaks, installation and other species available. Mail order. Delivery. We serve ME, NH, CT, MA NJ, NY, VT. discounttreefarm.com, 1-800-8898238
F1B GOLDENDOODLE puppies black, chocolate. Vet checked, 1st shots. Ready to go. (518)6430320 or cjeiwray@juno.com
HORSES STRAIN FAMILY HORSE FARM 50 horses, we take trade-ins, 3-week exchange guarantee. Supplying horses to the East Coast. www.strainfamilyhorsefarm.com, 860-653-3275. Check us out on Facebook.
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY MIDDLEBURY SPACE for rent, Wolcott Plaza, 2100 sq. ft. Rt. 7 South Middlebury, VT. 802-388-7514
ABANDONED FARM! 25 ACRES/ Stream/$49,900. Marketable hardwoods, nice stream,across from State Land! 2 &1/2 hrs NY City! Call NOW! 1-888-701-1864 www.NewYorkLandandLakes.com COOPERSTOWN RIVERFRONT! 7 acres - $69,900! 400 ft sandy shoreline, 4 milesfrom Village! Field, woods. Priced WAY below market! Call NOW! 1-888-7758114 www.newyorklandandlakes.com LENDER SAYS SELL! 5 TO 40 acre Tracts! All Upstate NY Holdings! Prices from $19,900 or $282/month! Waterfront, Views, Streams! Hunt, Build, Invest! Call 1-888-701-1864 for free info packet! NY LAND & CABIN BARGAIN SALE Classic Adirondack Camp 5 acres - $29,995. Cozy Cabin - Base Camp 5 acres $19,995. Near 1000's of acres of Stateland, lakes, & rivers. Access to snowmobile & ATV trails. Our best deal ever! Call 1-800-2297843. See pics at www.landandcamps.com
SINGLE-FAMILY HOME OWNER WILL FINANCE. Bank or Seller won't finance? We Help! No qualifying. No credit! Low Down. Call Today! 1-800-5632734. kanthony@cigrealty.com
AUTO DONATION A-1 DONATE YOUR CAR! Breast Cancer Research Foundation! Most highly rated breast cancer charity in America! Tax Deductible/Fast Free Pick Up. 1-800-771-9551 www.carsforbreastcancer.org
DONATE YOUR CAR to CANCER FUND of AMERICA to help SUPPORT CANCER PATIENTS. Tax Deductible. Next Day Towing. Receive Vacation Voucher. Call 7 Days 1-800-835-9372 DONATE YOUR CAR Fast Free Pickup. Running or Not. Live Operators - 7 Days! Help yourself and the Cancer Fund of America. Call Now 888-317-7257
AUTO WANTED CASH FOR CARS AND TRUCKS. Get A Top Dollar INSTANT Offer! Running or Not! 1-888-416-2208 (888) 416-2208 CASH FOR CARS: Any Make, Model or Year. We Pay MORE! Running or Not, Sell your Car or Truck TODAY. Free Towing! Instant Offer: 1-800-871-0654 TOP CASH FOR CARS, Any Car/ Truck, Running or Not. Call for INSTANT offer: 1-800-454-6951
BOATS 1974 STARCRAFT ALUMINUM 15 Foot BOAT. 1984 Evinrude 28 H.P. Motor Boat, Motor and Trailer, $750.00. Call 315-492-4655 and Leave Message. (315) 4924655
1995 CHEVY CAPRICE CLASSIC gently driven, professionally maintained. View at Waybridge Garage. 802-388-7652 ask for Jim. 2007 DODGE Grand Caravan, Wheelchair accessible by VMI, driver transfers to drivers seat, tie downs for two wheelchairs in back, tie downs for one wheelchair in front passenger position available when passenger seat is removed, automatic everything, air, air bags all around including sides, enhanced stereo, Ultimate Red Crystal in color, no scratches/dents or other damage, has always been kept in an attached garage, seats have always been covered, never been smoked in, 5,040 miles, VIN 2D8GP44LX7R256881, original price $52,000, asking $30,000 or make an offer, call Jerry in Tupper Lake at 518-359-8538
2007 FORD Mustang Coupe, never seen Winter, 6000 + miles, show room condition, premium stereo, CD, $15,000 FIRM. 802-236-0539 Call: (802) 236-0539
FARM EQUIPMENT
BLUE NOSE SAILBOAT 1979, 23.5, McVay w/4 HP motor. 1 owner. Lovingly maintained. Ready to sail. Mooring available on Skaneateles Lake. $6,800.00 bearcreek6448@verizon.net
CARS 2007 PORSCHE BOXSTER Burgundy/Beige Excellent condition. 5,6000 Miles, 6 cylinder, 5 speed automatic w/ Tiptronic Transmission, loaded w/many options, in show room condition. 315-447-0888 $35,500 OBO.
1964 FORD 4000 4 cyl., gas, Industrial loader & industrial Front End, 12 spd., German Transmission, Pie Weights, $4650.00. 518-962-2376 Evenings.
MOTORCYCLES
URAL SIDECAR Motorcycle Durable, versatile, fun vehicle, with classic retro styling. Reliable 650 cc horizontal two-cylinder engine and shaft drive. 1999 model with just 3100 miles; excellent condition. Priced for quick sale. $2,500 518-494-5871 WANTED JAPANESE MOTORCYCLE KAWASAKI 19671980 Z1-900, KZ900, KZ1000, ZIR, KZ1000MKII, W1-650, H1500, H2-750, S1-250, S2-350, S3400 Suzuki GS400, GT380, CB750 CASH PAID. FREE NATIONAL PICKUP. 1-800-772-1142, 1-310721-0726 usa@classicrunners.com
TRUCKS 1999 FORD F250 XLT SUPERCAB SUPER DUTY Green/Gray 137,000 kms, Good condition. 7.3L Turbo Diesel V-8, Tow package, Low profile tool box, $12,500 cjv1922@gmail.com
Fishing for a good deal? Catch the greatest bargains in the Classifieds 1-800-989-4237
CARS/TRUCKS WANTED! Top $$$$$ PAID! Running or Not, All Years, Makes, Models. Free Towing! We're Local! 7 Days/ Week. Call Toll Free: 1-888-4162330 DONATE A CAR - HELP CHILDREN FIGHTING DIABETES. Fast, Free Towing. Call 7 days/week. Non runners OK. Tax Deductible. Call Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation 1-800-5780408
26070
OVER 30 MILLION WOMEN SUFFER FROM HAIR LOSS! Do you? If so, we have asolution! CALL KERANIQUE TO FIND OUT MORE 1-877-218-1590
The Eagle - 15
www.addison-eagle.com
20998
16 - The Eagle
June 30, 2012
www.addison-eagle.com
NOW UNTIL MONDAY, JULY 2ND 2011 Silverado Crew Cab 4x4 ONLY 1 LEFT!!! LAST CHANCE!
2012 S Silverado
JUST ANN OUNCED... AN ADDIT IONAL $50 0 BONUS CA SH ON ALL CRUZE , ALL SILVE RADO & ALL TRA VERSE!
2012 Cruzee L S GET
2.9%
GET A
FREE GM
FOR 60 MOS.
BEDLINER!
VALUE $359
.
MSRP $35,020 Denecker Discount -2,025 GM Rebate -5,000 Trade-in Rebate -1,000
FINAL PRICE
$26,995
2012 Traverse L S
MSRP GM Rebate
$29,194 -2,000
FINAL PRICE
$27,194 Plus Tax, Title & Reg.
Starting As Low As.... GM Rebate
$22,635 -2,000
FINAL PRICE
$20,635
2012 Eq Equinox L S
STARTING AS LOW AS
$17,259 2012 Malibu L S
STARTING AS LOW AS
$23,531
Starting As Low As.... GM Rebate
Plus Tax, Title & Reg.
FINAL PRICE $21,994 -3,000
$18,994 Plus Tax, Title & Reg.
THINK BASEBALL, HOT DOGS, APPLE PIE & CHEVROLET! ry Pre-Owned Vehicle Will Be Every New Car, Every New Truck, Eve Move!! Sale-A-Bration Priced And Priced To olet, Then You Have If You Have Not Visited Denecker Chevr NOT GOTTEN YOUR BEST DEAL ! We Take Anything In Trade... Really! GM Certified Used Vehicles In Stock
BALLOON S, HOT DOG S& SODA EV ERY SATURDA Y!!
ble Many New Vehicles Have 0% APR Availa Long As You Own/Lease Free Vermont State Inspection For As Your Vehicle! vice Is All Free! Full Tank Of Fuel And Your First Ser
www.deneckerchevrolet.com Sales and Showroom: 157 Monkton Road • Ferrisburgh • VT 05456 Service and Parts: 14 North Main Street • Vergennes • VT 05491
800-675-2436
35658