The Eagle 09-26-09

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The Shoreham Inn has now opened three new loft-style suites.

New Rotary Club member helps raise funds for those in need in Honduras.

Serving Addison and Chittenden Counties

September 26, 2009

MIDDLEBURY—The Porter Hospital Cardiology practice significantly expanded, both in terms of clinical hours and specific outpatient services, with the arrival of Dr. Sanjay Bose this month. “We are extremely excited to welcome Dr. Bose to our community, as well as gratified by the opportunity to offer a full-time/fullservice Cardiology Program for our local patients and in support of the work of our Dr. Sanjay Bose primary care physicians,” said Porter cardiologist Dr. Andrea Fossati. “Dr. Bose will be seeing patients here in our Porter campus office 4 days each week, and also will be working 1 day each week at Fletcher Allen in the Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory with our patients.” According to Fossati, Bose will bring to Porter Hospital new expertise and the ability to perform both non-invasive and invasive cardiology services that our current Porter Cardiology practice does not offer. “This will

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Sanders, Leahy vote to support ACORN William Sorrel received “F” by ACORN From New Market Press Staff & News Reports Despite years of warning signs about voter fraud, embezzlement and other potentially criminal behavior by and within ACORN—the Association for Community Organizing and Reform Now—only a handful of state attorneys general apparently didn’t need to be embarrassed by recent al-

ternative media reporting and videos before taking some action against the liberal ACORN organization. Most state attorneys general have sat by idly, perhaps for political reasons with a trail quite probably leading to Washington some say, while ACORN has been busy racking up unchecked legal offenses. “State attorneys general long ago should have investigated ACORN, and enforced

various state laws against it,” said Mark Fitzgibbons, president of Corporate and Legal Affairs of American Target Advertising. Fitzgibbons is a vocal opponent of ACORN. “State attorneys general claim to have

See ACORN, page 13 YOUNG VANDALS—At least five vehicles in South Burlington were damaged Sept. 18 when unidentified juveniles threw rocks at passing traffic on I-89 northbound, near milemarker 86. Vehicles received dented hoods, panels, and a smashed windshield. A large rock traveled through a windshield between the operator and passenger; it was found in the rear seat. Luckily, no one was injured. The juveniles fled on bicycles to a nearby housing development in South Burlington. Anyone with information is encouraged to call the Vermont State Police at 878-7111.

See BOSE, page 13

Mother, children injured in Route 22A crash ORWELL — On Sept. 18, at approximately 9:27 p.m., the Vermont State Police, New Haven Barracks, responded to a reported two vehicle crash on Vermont Route 22A in the town of Orwell. Upon arrival, Troopers observed members from the Middlebury Rescue Squad, Orwell Volunteer Fire Department along with other agencies. Fire and Rescue personnel on scene were treating Heather Carpentier, age 24, of Orwell, the operator of the at-fault vehicle along with her two young children—Matthew Carpentier, age 1, Maxwell Carpentier, age 4. Preliminary investigation indicated Carpentier was traveling south on Route 22A with both her young children as passengers. Carpentier was following another vehicle when she then collided with the other vehicle involved. Both vehicles travelled off the roadway ultimately catching on fire. Alcohol consumption and speed are considered to be contributing factors in this crash. Anyone with information regarding this crash is urged to contact the Vermont State Police, Trooper Szarejko at 388-4919.

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Mixed grades: Vermont ranks 49th in annual pay WASHINGTON, D.C.—Vermont got some good financial news and some bad financial news this week. While Green Mountain State residents are significantly better prepared to face the 2009 national recession— the worst since the Great Depression—they rank 49 in the nation’s average annual pay category. The mixed news was revealed in a report released Monday by the Corporation for Enterprise Development (CFED), a national economic nonprofit that receives some federal taxpayer funds for its activities.

Among the good news for Vermont: The state earned an “A” on CFED’s 2009-2010 Assets and Opportunity Scorecard. CFED’s Assets & Opportunity Scorecard measures the financial security of families in the United States by looking beyond just income to the whole picture of building ownership and protecting against financial setbacks. The Scorecard ranks the 50 states and the District of Columbia on 58 performance measures in the areas of financial assets and income, businesses and jobs, housing and homeownership, health care and

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education. The state earned top 10 rankings in 20 different economic indicators, including firstplace rankings in areas including minority business ownership, Head Start coverage, and four-year college degree attainment by race. However, it was found that Vermont needs to improve significantly in several critical areas: the state ranks 49 in average annual pay, 48 in both average college debt and four-year college degree attainment by

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Grocers elect Nutter The Vermont Grocers' Association has elected Darcy Nutter of Price Chopper Supermarkets as its new chairwoman. Darcy is a zone manager for the family owned chain with responsibility for their southern Vermont stores as well as their New Hampshire markets and some of their New York locations. Also elected were Todd Keyworth of Harborside Market as vice chairman and Dwight LaFountain of Jiffy Mart as Nutter secretary-treasurer. Nutter has been a member of the VGA board of directors since 2003 and has served on various committees including the association’s government affairs committee, convention committee and executive committee. She co-chaired the 2007 convention. The most rewarding part of the zone manager position to her is the human connection with people, and making a difference in their professional lives. Nutter was the first woman selected for this position at Price Chopper, and strives to set a strong and proud example of what women have to offer in the business world. Nutter has been married for 33 years to husband David and they have four children; Amy, Bradley, Sabrina, and Carly. In addition, the following people were elected or re-elected to serve on the organization’s board of directors: Patrick Crowl of the Woodstock Farmers Market, Kathy Miller of the Elmore Store, Pat Breen of Grand Union Markets, Clem Nilan of City Market, Burlington, Kim Crosby of Vermont Roots, Rutland, Mike Baker of Baker Distributing, Colchester, and Doug Tschorn of the Wayside Country Store in West Arlington. Bill MacDonald of the Waits River General Store was also recognized at the ceremony for his service as VGA chairman the past two years. MacDonald will continue to serve on the organization's board as past chair. The Vermont Grocers' Association is a statewide organization representing approximately 700 stores and 245 suppliers to the industry.

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Retired K-9s get local support Lacey’s Fund helps police dogs SHELBURNE—Vermontbased Good Dog! Cookies company recently held a raffle to benefit retired police dogs through Lacey’s Fund. The fund was established by Kirk and Loretta Walters of Shelburne in honor of their dog Lacey, with the goal of helping to provide K-9 handlers who are members of the Vermont Police Canine Association with the resources needed to allow their retired canine partners to live out the remainder of their days in good health. Good Dog! Cookies owner Cris Phelps-Brown said, “We have always made a monthly donation to a Vermont animal rescue organization, but had decided we could have a greater impact by focusing on one organization year-round. We learned about Lacey’s Fund from the K-9 handlers at this year ’s Petapalooza and were amazed that the state or local police agencies don’t provide medical care for their police dogs after retirement. The dogs work hard in a stressful job and can be injured or develop serious medical conditions. Once

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they retire, their handler becomes personally responsible for their care, which can be very expensive.” Tickets for the raffle prize—a basket of dog cook-

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The Vermont State Police issued an APB last week in search of Frederick A. Gilbert, age 81, of Orwell. Gilbert's family had notified state police last evening that Frederick Gilbert was missing. Gilbert was last seen at his home in Orwell on Sept. 14, at about 6 a.m., at which time Gilbert left for Rocky Hill, Conn. The public and members the news media got involved in the search for Gilbert. Gilbert was intending to visit with family and friends in Rocky Hill, but family members thought he had never arrived at his destination. He was later located alive and well in Rocky Hill. Gilbert was reported to be driving his own vehicle when he was last seen, his vehicle being a black 1997 Chrysler LHS bearing Vermont registration EBW693. Gilbert noted that he would be driving to Connecticut via U.S. Route 7 and U.S. Route 44. Gilbert was noted to have hearing and vision impairments as well as periodic bouts of dizziness.

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ies and dog toys—were sold at Friday Night Live and the Saturday farmers’ market last month. The raffle netted $83 for Lacey’s Fund, and Cathy Zier of Conyers, Ga.

won the basket. For more information about Lacey’s Fund and the Vermont Police Canine Association, log onto www.vtpca.com.

“Missing” man found in Connecticut

The Eagle’s TRIVIA Question Of The Week! ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

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Rutland Alderman David Allaire draws the winning entry for the Good Dog! Cookies raffle at the Rutland Farmers Market Aug. 29. Good Dog! Cookie owner Cris Phelps-Brown holds the basket.

Orwell senior is ok in Rocky Hill, Conn.

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SATURDAY September 26, 2009

Frederick Gilbert: Found alive and well.

WHAT’SHAPPENING Let us know what’s going on in your community! Call 388-6397 or fax 388-6399 or e-mail lou.varrichio@myfairpoint.net Music Night at

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SATURDAY September 26, 2009

THE EAGLE - 3

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Pictured above is last week’s ribbon-cutting ceremony at Shoreham Inn. Included in the photo are Jeremiah Parker, Jeremiah Parker Restoration; Dominic Francis, owner; Molly Francis, owner; Paul Vaczy, Jeremiah Parker Restoration; and Andy Mayer, president, Addison County Chamber of Commerce. Also pictured: one of the inn’s new suites. SHOREHAM—The Addison County Chamber of Commerce is pleased to announce that its member, the Shoreham Inn, has opened three new loft-style suites, one of which is fully ADA compliant. Owned by Dominic and Molly Francis, all ten rooms in the Inn have been updated and improved since they purchased the property in 2003. Originally the Shoreham Inn had nine rooms in the main house and a small cottage in back. The Francises have overseen upgrades to the Inn so that all rooms are now equipped with ensuite bathrooms. The addition of several bathrooms reduced the number

of guest rooms in the main house to seven. Working with Jeremiah Parker Restoration, the Francises devised a plan to remove the existing cottage and rebuild an old sheep barn that had been dismantled in nearby Salisbury. The barn was reconstructed behind the Inn to house three loft-style suites, bringing the total number of guest accommodations back to ten. All of the new suites are two floors with separate living room and bedroom spaces. Each room features a small kitchenette and an outside patio. One of the units is constructed with the

Mail scam in New Haven Vermont State Police are currently investigating a mail scam. The mailed letter indicates the recipient has won $49,000 in U.S. Funds. Enclosed in the letter is a check for $2,875. The letter further advises to contact them for authorization and activation of the check provided. Upon calling the fake company the caller is provided information as to where they should wire tax and processing fees in the amount of $2,700. The check provided in the letter turns out to be bad, the victim has wired $2,700, and they never receive $49,000. Vermont State Police are warning citizens of the community to beware of this mail scam. The documents and check appear to be real but they are fake. The scam has also been reported to United States Postal Service Inspectors.

bedroom downstairs, as well as many other details, so that it is fully ADA compliant. Rates start at $195 for the new suites. In addition to offering lodging, the Shoreham Inn also features a pub which serves local food, beer and wine in a style the Francises call contemporary comfort food. The Shoreham Inn is located at 51 Inn Rd. in the Town of Shoreham. The front desk telephone number is 897-5081. The Shoreham Inn serves dinner Thursday through Monday, 5-9 p.m. (Sundays, 5- 8 p.m.). The inn is closed on Tuesday and Wednesday.

FEEDBACK Which columns do you like to read? Have a suggestion for a new article or column?

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Couponing's Best-Kept Secrets, Maximize the Match: BOGO Plus Two

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ast week I introduced you to some of the fun ways shoppers can make "Buy one, get one free" (BOGO) sales even more rewarding. Anytime we can buy one item and get another free, we're essentially buying two at half price each. So how do we make a half-off sale even better? With coupons, of course! Here's the third "best-kept secret" of couponBy Jill Cataldo ing: Secret #3: Use Two Coupons During a BOGO Sale At most stores, you can use one coupon per purchase. Even though you're buying one item and getting another "free," it's not truly free. You still have to go through the act of "purchasing" it at the register (the store won't allow you to just pick up the "free" jar and take it home, will they?) If you live in an area that collects sales tax on groceries, you must still pay sales tax on the "free" item. So, it's best to think of BOGO sales as buying two for the price of one. As long as you're buying two items, even if one is full-price and one is free, you can use a coupon on each item you're buying. You're buying two items, so you can use two coupons. Here's an example illustrating why this is a great idea. My grocery store has organic pasta sauces on sale for $3, "Buy one, get one free." And even though the register rings them up as $3 for the first jar and $0 for the second, it is still possible for me to present a coupon on each jar for additional savings. For this sale, I have two $1 coupons for the pasta sauce. Using one coupon for each jar I purchase brings my cost down to just $1 for two jars, or 50 cents each! That's a great price for any pasta sauce, especially organic. Now, many grocery stores handle BOGO sales differently. With a sale like the one I outlined above, most stores' registers will ring the sale as one $3 jar and one $0 jar. Other grocery stores may approach the same BOGO sale by ringing up each item at $1.50 each. Either way, you can still use a coupon on each item and get each jar of pasta sauce for 50 cents. Are you ready for a bonus tip? If your store "splits" BOGO prices into half for each item, you only have to buy one of the items to get it for that price! So, if you only had one pasta sauce coupon, you could buy just one jar, get it for the $1.50 price, use a $1 coupon on it, and still take it home for 50 cents. To determine which way your store handles BOGO sales, look at your receipt the next time you buy items promoted in a BOGO sale. If the register rings one at full price and one at zero, you must buy two to receive the price. If it rings each one at half of full price, you will be able to buy just one of the items involved in the sale and receive it for half the price without buying the second item.

Coupon Queen

© CTW Features Jill Cataldo, a coupon-workshop instructor, writer and mother of three, never passes up a good deal. Learn more about couponing at her Web site, www.super-couponing.com. E-mail your couponing coups and questions to jill@ctwfeatures.com.

Au revoir, Aubuchon

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ews that a venerable New England hardware store chain closed its downtown Rutland location brings to mind, once again, the just-about-insoluble commercial core problem of mid-size cities: most Americans won’t spend money where they can’t (easily) park. In large cities the apartment-dwelling natives are used to shopping without POVs (privately-owned vehicles) and in small towns beyond New England, there’s usually enough parking around the courthouse square near enough to the facing rows of stores to work reasonably well—but in midsized communities such as Rutland City, it’s impossible to comply with the mandatory math of contemporary urban planning: a square foot of parking for a square foot of retail, without challenging some aspect of the typical 19th century grid-square streets-and-buildings layout. Rutland’s venerable Aubuchon store set-up had, maybe, 3,000 square feet of retail floor space; by the normal rule of commercial site planning, it would need the equivalent of, maybe, ten customer parking spaces (2,000 SF) loading dock and staff parking, (500 SF) and a share of related vehicle lanes (maybe another 500 SF or so). The hardware store’s 40-foot frontage on West Street offered just two parking spaces. Just north along Route 7, the Town of Brandon solved part of its math problem by permitting the demolition of a bunch of historic buildings in order to pave way for a couple of parking and service lots (only as big as the in-town supermarket and drug store they serve). In Middlebury, officials paved part of the Otter Creek flood plain to service the Main Street stores an uphill, block-length distant. In St. Albans, planners decided not to decide—the town has done nothing; not surprisingly, the town still has a “parking problem”. On a larger scale and 3,000 miles away, Los Angeles, Calif., demolished nearly half of its downtown commercial square footage—it’s now the lowest-density major city in the U.S. except for Youngstown and Detroit, for different sets of reasons. The City of Angels has nearly reasonable parking availability. In the case of Johnson City, Tenn., there’s enough downtown vacancies that the streetside parking works fairly well for the remaining goods and services vendors: a Darwinian solution, you might say. Rutland City, conversely, went the other way with no demolition, instead adding a multi-deck downtown parking structure (sadly, now demolished). I haven’t the column-inches to review the parking deck’s historically unsuccessful user reception, but it was placed well over a block-length from Aubuchon’s and all the other storefronts sharing the few parking spaces along West Street. Although some customers might walk more than an equivalent block-length from the edge of a huge parking lot to the mall stores it serves, in the typical shopping layout, they balk at the same level of exercise when needed to patronize stores in a downtown location. And Montpelier went still another way—with urban-

Out of the shadows

W

hile it’s uncertain if NASA’s bold plan to return humans to the Moon by 2020 will go down in flames (thanks to the nation’s deficit spending on less inspiring things), the space agency continues to take baby steps back to Luna. Extended to its greatest potential, NASA’s Constellation project could potentially jump start America’s lagging technological and industrial might; it would involve the labor of hundreds of thousands of men and women—from college researchers and engineers to office staffers and construction workers—all with a magnificent government-industrial-educational team that’s grander than Project Apollo. And what’s better than a bailout? How about a new world to explore and develop with new technologies not yet imagined. As part of NASA’s first baby steps on the long and uncertain path—a path that leads from cradle Earth, back to the Moon, on to Mars, and beyond—the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, or LRO, has just started mapping the near and farsides of the Moon from an orbit only 31 miles high. LRO has already collected hundreds of detailed images that now make up the first detailed atlas of the Moon’s south pole. So what’s so important about creating an atlas of the lunar south pole? Well, just like the Moon’s north pole, the south pole is a place that more than likely contains vast deposits of ice left over from the Moon’s primordial watery past. These water ice deposits are buried deep below the lunar regolith (soil) within perpetually shadowed craters. Last week, scientists released LRO’s preliminary stream of images and data. The result shows a healthy spacecraft with a lot of work to do. And if all things go well, LRO will continue its vital lunar mission through 2010. Craig Tooley, NASA’s LRO project manager, said the Moon’s south polar craters are bitterly cold. The bottoms of these remote craters appear to hold immense deposits of “fossil” water ice, hydrogen, and helium-3 the result of ancient outgassing, cometary impacts, and solar wind deposits. “The deposits may have accumulated in these cold-trap regions over billions of years,” Tooley said last week. “If enough of these resources exist to make mining practical, future long-term human missions to the moon potentially could save the considerable expense of hauling water from Earth.” In 1998, NASA’s Lunar Prospector spacecraft confirmed significant amounts of hydrogen at the south pole; the gas deposits are the tell-tale sign of water-ice. LRO’s Diviner instrument has shown that inside the shadowed polar craters, the mercury plunges to minus 400

SATURDAY September 26, 2009 perimeter free parking spaces for POVs and free shuttle bus service to and from downtown. That’s a total of four parking-solution options: the Brandon/L.A. downtown demo solution, the St. Albans do-nothing solution, the Rutland downtown parking structure solution, and the Montpelier perimeter-parking-and-shuttle solution. Of the four, I’d opine, Montpelier ’s solution is the most logical; it is most city friendly and very user friendly. Downtown demolition equates to “destroy-the-village-tosave-it”, a notion tried 40 years ago; doing nothing keeps the old buildings, but loses the living; a downtown parking structure exacerbates the urban-center traffic it’s supposed to correct. Getting people out of POVs and away from downtown offers, at least, a chance of a pedestrian friendly urban center where business can be transacted, particularly when the tote-bags aren’t too heavy. As for Rutland’s closes downtown Aubuchon store, and similar extinct downtown enterprises which have fled to more efficient surroundings with less density and more parking, I’d guess that their management folks aren’t swayed by the currently trendy keep-it-downtown (KID) ideology. We admire the photographs of an earlier time—that of our grandparents—and choose to forget that they, or our parents, fled such surroundings as soon as they could. We wax nostalgic over walk-up apartments, streetcars named Desire, brickpaved streets, and frilly Victorian storefronts, which we personally want no part of. We consciously choose not to put our money where our admiration is because contemporary Americans don’t want to live or shop in such difficult to navigate surroundings. In Burlington, the KID ideology trumped operational logic and led to the expansion of a logistically impossible regional hospital complex standing on an already congested site; this forced an even more impossible site plan with a $300 million price tag. It compares poorly indeed to the operational efficiency of a modern Dartmouth-Hitchcock in exurban surroundings (the two-generation-earlier Middlebury example of a much smaller Porter Hospital complex similarly situated), and the mid-20th century Rutland Regional Medical Center hospital decision to abandon downtown for a large site nearby. As for the Rutland Aubuchon’s au revoir: it seems pretty clear to me that the store’s long tenure downtown would best be followed by planning for an equal tenure on a site where customers can easily carry their purchases to their POVs parked out front. Columnist Martin Harris is a retired Vermont architect living in Tennessee. degrees Fahrenheit (33 Kelvin)—a perfect, billionyear-old ice box environment for the storage of primeval water and hydrogen. LRO’s camera is dedicated to imaging these permanently shadowed regions while the craft’s Lyman Alpha Mapping Project instrument (LAMP for short), is sniffing for surface ice, even frost. LAMP is so sensitive that it uses starlight and the glow of interplanetary hydrogen emission, to image the perpetually dark polar craters. A 2008 surprise discovery of water residue inside Apollo 17 lunar volcanic glasses hints of a time, in the remote past, when our Moon possessed as much water as the Caribbean Sea. What’s in the Sky: Looking east, along the edge of Leo, the planets Mercury, Venus and Saturn will line up along the ecliptic Sept. 26. You can see the trio just before sunrise (see sky map). Lou Varricchio, M.Sc., is a NASA JPL Solar System Ambassador in Vermont. He was a NASA senior science writer at the space agency’s Ames Research Center in California.


SATURDAY September 26, 2009

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THE EAGLE - 5

Vergennes preschool Feitelberg helps raise funds for Honduras to hold fundraiser Seeks four local sponsors The Evergreen Preschool in Vergennes will hold a special funraising event Oct 18. The event will feature an entertaining performance by No Strings Marionette Company. Evergreen is actively seeking four sponsors to share the spotlight and contribute between $50 and $150. Sponsors will receive free publicity on posters, program, and in the local news. Sponsors will also recive prime seats and two free adult tickets to the show. To get involved, send your name and contact information via e-mail to jessakarki@yahoo.com or call 877-6835.

“Share the Harvest” helps low-income Vermonters Oct. 1 event to raise funds RICHMOND—On Oct. 1, over 80 restaurants and food stores statewide will help ‘Share the Harvest’ with low income Vermonters. Participating locations will donate up to 15 percent of the day’s sales to the Northeast Organic Farming Association of Vermont’s (NOFA Vermont) Farm Share program. The funds will help low income Vermonters purchase fresh food from their local farmers. In 2009, the Vermont Farm Share Program supported over 1,400 individuals statewide. Fifty Vermont farms provided shares for the program. “Fresh food is often a major expense for people, whether it’s grown here in Vermont, or out in California,” said Dave Zuckerman of Full Moon Farm, a CSA in Hinesburg which grows food for 19 Farm Share participants. “This program is a great way to get local organic food into more people’s hands while also supporting local farmers.” The following are Share the Harvest participating restaurants within the Eagle’s circulation area (visit www.nofavt.org for a complete list): Almost Home, Bristol, Bobcat Café & Brewery, Bristol, Mountain Greens Market, Bristol, Healthy Living Café, S. Burlington, Lake View House, S. Burlington, Pauline’s Café, S. Burlington, Pizza on Earth Charlotte, Good Times Café, Hinesburg, the Waybury Inn E Middlebury, American Flatbread at the Marbleworks, Middlebury, Fire & Ice Restaurant, Middlebury, Green Peppers, Middlebury, Middlebury Natural Foods Co-op, Middlebury, Bridge Street Café & Grill, Richmond, Toscano Café Bistro, Richmond, Inn at Shelburne Farms, Shelburne, Sauce Shelburne, and Red Mill Restaurant, Vergennes.

Chittenden South expands staff By Frederick Pockette SHELBURNE—In order to better serve the needs of Chittenden South Supervisory Union, CY (Connecting Youth) is expanding and reorganizing its staff for 2009-10. CY Coordinator of 15 years, Dayna Scott, will be shifting into the role of grants administrator. CY has also hired a new programs coorConnie Beal dinator, Connie Beal, to handle operational work of the coalition. Jan Bedard will remain with CY, serving as assistant programs coordinator. The change will effectively increase staffing capacity and improve CY’s ability to promote a safe, healthy community. All other program staff (Student Assistance Program Counselors, Mentoring Coordinators, Peer Prevention Educator) will stay the same. For details, please visit www.seewhy.info. CY named Connie Beal as the new CY Programs Coordinator. Originally from Maine, Beal holds a B.A. degree in psychology from Colby College and recently received a masters in public administration from the University of Vermont. For the last two years, she served as the Center for Substance Abuse Prevention (CSAP) Fellow for the Vermont Department of Health and is currently pursuing her prevention specialist certification. Beal currently resides in Burlington and can be reached at CY at 383-1244, or cbeal@cssu.org. Connecting Youth serves young people in Charlotte, Hinesburg, Shelburne, St. George, and Williston.

CHARLOTTE—CharlotteShelburne Rotary welcomed Sam Feitelberg of Shelburne as a new member at a recent meeting of the club. Ric Flood officiated at the ceremony and Linda Gilbert and Colleen Haag were his Rotary sponsors. Feitelberg is well-known in Shelburne because of his generous and energetic work with Rotary’s Hands to Honduras program, recruiting physiotherapists, raising funds for the P.T. Center in Tela, training people to work there and leading the therapy team. Sam graduated from Cornell and Columbia and taught at Columbia Presbyterian. He established schools for physio-therapists at Columbia and the SUNY’s Downstate Medical Center, and then in 1970 came to UVM where he established the P.T. Department, served as department chair, and was also associate dean and director of the Health Service Division in the School of Allied Health Sciences. In addition to running the academic programs, he di-

Charlotte-Shelburne Rotary welcomed Sam Feitelberg of Shelburne as a new member at a recent meeting of the club. Ric Flood, right, officiated at the induction ceremony, and Linda Gilbert and Colleen Haag were his sponsors. rected P.T. and occupational therapy services at Fletcher Allen Medical Center in Burlington.

After retiring from UVM he spent 10 years at Clarkson University where he designed and built a fully integrated

P.T. degree, research and clinical program. He and his wife Gail have been married for 55 years.

Author rediscovers Bristol’s past in new book Event at Brown Dog Books & Gifts HINESBURG—Since 1762, Bristol has prospered alongside the New Haven River. Its mighty waters powered mills and hardworking farmers, entrepreneurs and shopkeepers fueled the local economy. Local author Kerry K. Skiffington describes Bristol’s history through brief essays highlighting its most remarkable people and moments, from the rise of Outlook Club and the Bristol Town Band to the many floods and fires that have challenged but never broken the town. Skiffington has uncovered forgotten figures, such as Dr. Francis Briggs, known as much for his music as for his ministrations, and Vermont State Rep. Florence Cragen, one of many Vermont women to serve in the legislature dur-

ing World War II. Carefully researched and enlivened by interviews with longtime residents, “Bristol, Vermont: Historically Speaking”, captures the essence of the town’s enduring charm. A Bristol resident for 20 years, Kerry Skiffington has written dozens of articles in local publications over the last 20 years. She is a member and former trustee of the League of Vermont Writers and has helped plan events and written copy for the Bristol Downtown Community Partnership. Kerry currently runs a therapy practice in Burlington and previously worked as an editor for Kids Vermont, a family newspaper. She holds B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. degress. Skiffington will sign books Friday, Sept. 25, 7 p.m., at Brown Dog Books & Gifts in the Firehouse Plaza (with Estey

Kerri K. Skiffington Hardware) in Hinesburg. The event is free. For details, call 482-5189.

PR SUMMIT—The Vermont Public Relations Group is a Google Group for Vermont public relations professionals. The group meets on a semi-regular basis at member businesses and recently gathered in Charlotte. Pictured at a member’s Charlotte farmhouse are PR pros from Kelliher Samets Volk, Killoran Communications, Smuggler’s Notch, National Life Group, Vermont Ski Areas Association, Filkorn Public Relations, Sona Iyengar Communications, writer Leslie Kilgore, and Rachel Carter PR.


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Open Letter to Sens. Sanders & Leahy

Tea Party To the editor: My husband and I just got back from Washington, D.C., and our patriotism has been renewed. Have you heard about the Tea Parties and the Sept. 12 Project? They are about meeting with folks from around the country who feel the way you feel. If you feel we’re paying too much taxes, that there is too much spending, and that politicians are out of touch with what we want, you are not alone. The media reported it was tens of thousands who gathered in Washington. We were there—it was at least a half a million people strong. I want to keep the republic we have, not change to a democracy. I hope I can make a difference as well as all the people who joined the Tea Parties around the country. Join us! If we stand together we can keep capitalism and our way of life. Capitalism is freedom. Socialism is big government controlling your life, and your freedoms lost. I know we all cannot agree on everything going on in the political arena but most people do not want socialism or big government in their own backyards. Once you let that happen your freedoms are gone. Socialism makes for lazy people always wanting hand-outs with no initiative or pride left in their beings. This isn't aDemocrat or Republican thing, it's an American thing. In 2010, we must vote our conscious and not party lines. Vote for the person you trust, someone who votes the way you would, not for someone who promises you the Moon. Vote for someone who will support term limits. Joan King Orwell

To the editor: I am absolutely horrified that you, my U.S. senators, are among the seven members of Congress that did not vote to cut off funds for the corrupt organization ACORN. This is nothing short of an organized crime ring that has been operating with public funds for years. I understand President Obama has deep ties to these thugs, and also to SEUI. Are you afraid or are you complicit? People are waking up to the stunning level of corruption in Washington. What do you have to say? I want an answer that I will share with my entire email chain. Thank you. Alice Dubenetsky Starksboro

Vermont housing gone wild To the editor: (Here’s another example of Vermont’s growing feral housing problem:) A house here in Chester, Vt., was listed with a real estate agent. The owner was in Florida looking for a job. A group of people moved into his house, the neighbors spoke with the real estate agent and in checkeing the place, contacted the owner. The owner does not have the money to remove the people so they are now living in the house. The owner now is going to have to let it the property go back to the mortgage company. I cannot believe this can happen and having read your recent editorial about Vermont’s growing abandoned houses, I was impressed with the information that you published. It can happen and in these times, anyone could loose a house—and while the owner is legally evicting the people, the property could be destroyed. After reading your editorial, want to alert the readers. The local people on this country road witnessed this, contacted the police, the town manager, and the selectboard. We were worried that this could happen to any of us. Nancy Churchill Chester

SATURDAY September 26, 2009

Culture of Corruption To the editor: After years of hearing about the Republican Party’s “Culture of Corruption” from the Democrat Party, we now have one of the most corrupt White Houses and Congresses in recent memory—and it’s all Democratic. From deep associations with ACORN, the allegedly criminal group that has tampered with U.S. elections, census, and tax laws—most recently, helping two undercover journalists set up a brothel in order to smuggle-in underage, illegal immigrant prostitutes—to black racists (Van Jones) and race-baters (Nancy Pelosi), the Obama administration and the Congressional majority is a mere 8 months in standing and already the corruption cesspool is brimming over. Leftists may smear good people like us as “racists” (rooting out true racism has now been compromised thanks to the cynical shenanigans of hit-and-run leftists), but sooner or later they will be forced to face the truth; the anti-Obama people you malign as “racists” are, in fact, simple God-fearing Americans—from many ethnic and racial backgrounds—who are alarmed about our nation’s dangerous turn in direction, under what author Jack London called the “iron heel” of socialism. Also, shame on Vermont’s two U.S. senators who continue to support ACORN after recent revelations. ACORN has spent thousands of dollars (much of it from We the People) to support the campaigns of Leahy and Sanders in Vermont. But let’s not forget Leahy and Sanders on election day— let’s vote them out of office, forever! Dean & Marge Anthony Brandon Editor’s reply: Both letter writers express anger over last week’s Senate vote over the ACORN debate. U.S. Sens. Leahy and Sanders have done many good things for Vermont, so it is difficult to fathom why they voted against the Senate’s move to stop federal funding of the controversial organization. No matter—regarding ACORN, this newspaper has refused to publish the organization’s local news releases and calendar of events items since 2008 when we were alerted about its questionable activities. ACORN’s alleged criminal activity has been widely rumored since 2007, although nothing has been done to officially look into it at a high level until this month. ACORN has been active in Vermont politics at a grassroots level for some time.That’s why this newspaper has encouraged the Vermont Attorney General to investigate ACORN’s “community organizing” work here. Unfortunately, ACORN has been closely linked to the majority political party in Vermont (and elsewhere). Still, we hope all involved will set aside partisanship and do the right thing when it comes to rooting out criminal behavior, election tampering, and corruption.The ACORN scandal appears to be the tip of a very big, and very dirty iceberg.

Vt. Yankee says “no to carbon”

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6 - THE EAGLE

In conjunction with the release of the results of the September carbon-credit auction of the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, Brad Ferland, president of the Vermont Energy Partnership, issued the following statement last week: “The State of Vermont’s $471,319 share of the quarterly RGGI auction will help Vermonters save money and further reduce the state’s already low carbon footprint by reinvestment in energy efficiency programs.Vermont is fortunate that both of our major power generators, Hydro-Québec and Vermont Yankee, are classified by RGGI as zero-carbon emitters. Therefore our utilities need not buy carbon credits and pass along the cost to ratepayers.” The Vermont Energy Partnership is a diverse group of more than 90 business, labor, and community leaders committed to finding clean, affordable and reliable electricity solutions for Vermont. The partnership’s mission is to educate policy makers, the media, businesses, and the general public about optimal solutions to preserve and expand Vermont’s electricity network.


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SATURDAY September 26, 2009

THE EAGLE - 7

My SWNK lifestyle

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Must be the answer to our wonderment is something Obama is trying to get to the bottom of with his new plan. I wish him and his the best. But really, does anyone know anything about anything of anything to do with the new health care package Barry is promoting with all his heart? I don’t think so. I certainly haven’t read it. I did read in a respected daily paper that if the new health care plan goes through, someone like me who wishes to stay uninsured will be fined between $750 and $950 a year. Don’t know if that’s true, but if it is, I’ll happily pay it and still be way ahead regarding dollars and cents. I stay healthy, I can’t lose. How will you and yours and others be affected if the new plan goes through? I can’t tell you. I can barely keep up with how it’ll all affect me, which is my primary concern, and for which, I apologize. Bottom line on health care in general; Keep yourself as healthy as you’re able, and hope if anything unexpected comes along that cost money to fix, you’ll get half-off.

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$500 a month health insurance payment is six grand a year, or $60,000 spent over ten years. Ten years brings me to age 58. Factor my charmed family genetics in with a non-risky lifestyle, and I’m willing to bet by age 58 if I pay cash for all my health care needs, I’ll spend many, many, tens of thousands less then $60,000. That’s why I don’t have health insurance. Stupid? Maybe, but I’ll take the gamble, partly because it’s a challenge, and mostly because I’m SWNK, single with no kids. Had a small Chicklet-size cist removed from the upper part of my right trapezious muscle. I’d noticed it a small bit less than a year ago and bet it was a harmless mass that could stay put through the end of my days. The surgeon at Fletcher Allen backed up my diagnosis, but did also agree that having the cist removed was the best case. The surgeon’s opinion (Consult) cost $90. The surgery cost $1,260, But, I’m uninsured, if you’ll remember, so I was charged only $620 for the surgery. Stunned to hear I’d be getting half-off my all-off cist removal, I asked the billing gal if I had a $200,000 open heart surgery, would I be charged only $100,000? She said she didn’t have that information, but she said, “You certainly could make payments on the cist removal.” Oh boy, more payments. Just what our hopeful economy needs, someone making payments on removal of small spongy masses that don’t really need removal. I was going to sprinkle cat-nip on my stitches, call to my cat, and let her go to town, but I decided to stop in at the local clinic and have them remove the four short runs of thread, for which I was charged, $65. The cist removal, start to finish, cost me $775, or about a month and a half’s health care payment total for a single dude like myself. Since I have started going without health care insurance, I’m about $29,250 to the good. Back to my half-off deal. What’s up with that? Going in I expected to pay between a grand and a grand and a half, so I’m thrilled with the total tag of $775. Thrilled with the care too. The surgeon and her two person staff were fantastic. All three were chicks! I received a survey from the hospital in the mail today and they can expect a glowing report from me. Course, I loved being worked on by doctors and dentists and nurses. I look at it like it’s the closest I’ll come to being fed grapes, even if it hurts a little to chew em. But still I wonder if I had insurance, where the other half of the removal cost would have gone, the $640 I didn’t have to pay? You wonder?

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Rusty DeWees tours Vermont and Northern New York with his act “The Logger.” His column appears weekly. He can be reached at rustyd@pshift.com. Listen for The Logger, Rusty DeWees, Thursdays at 7:40 on the Big Station, 98.9 WOKO or visit his website at www.thelogger.com

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The Green Monster one who showed up on the scene twenty minutes before quitting time. In the business world the last hired is the first fired, not first in line By Rev. Krista Beth Atwood for a bonus! So it’s no wonder that the hard working laborers want to know what the heck is going on. Yet, as the landowner describes it, he had done nothing wrong. In fact, he paid them exactly what they had agreed upon at the beginning of the day. After pointing this out he asks, “Am I not allowed to do what I choose with what belongs to me? Or are you envious because I am generous?” With that question, he sends them on their way. As far as I can tell we have a God who doesn’t play by our rules. As Jesus tells us, God is like a father who waits for a lost son or a king who invites people from the street to a banquet or a landowner who pays all the same no matter how late they arrived. Are you envious because I am generous? That’s a good question. It’s a question that probably sent the laborers home scratching their heads, their wages heavy in their pockets. If we spend too much time stewing over the grace others have received, we miss that gift for ourselves. The good news is this: Grace doesn’t come in sizes. Some of us don’t get small while others get extra- large. Grace only comes in one size: Just enough. Thanks be to God.

A Christian Life

Rev. Krista Beth Atwood is the pastor of Faith United Methodist Church in South Burlington. Her column, the Christian Life, appears occasionally in New Market Press newspapers.

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efore anyone gets too excited about my headline, let me make one thing clear: Despite the title, this article has nothing to do with Fenway Park or the Boston Red Sox. I’m sorry to disappoint you, but I want to talk about the other Green Monster—the one that’s much more insidious. There are countless things that can cause the Green Monster to make an appearance. And it is usually accompanied by the loudly proclaimed justification: “It’s not fair!” Of course I’m talking about jealousy. Now, I’m not a jealous person. I’m sure none of you are either. But one can’t help questioning the fairness of things every once in a while. How fair is it that my car broke down last weekend? How fair is it I can’t afford the latest iPhone? It’s hard not to feel jealous when it seems others are getting along without a care in the world— making it on their looks or luck—when we’re just barely scraping by. It’s just not fair. It seems that Jesus knows a little something about the green monster, too, second hand, at least. His disciples, wanting assurances that they would have the fancy places in heaven, ask what rewards they will receive for their faithfulness. In response, Jesus tells a story about a landowner and the laborers in his vineyard. The landowner, seemingly desperate to get his harvest in, goes out several times during the day to hire new workers. When pay-time comes, it is soon discovered that those hired at five o’clock in the afternoon are paid just as much as those who had been working since the crack of dawn. The green monster rears its ugly head as the laborers exclaim, “'These last worked only one hour, and you have made them equal to us who have borne the burden of the day!” You can almost hear them grumbling among themselves: “Is this any way to run a farm? It’s not fair!” And it’s not fair, is it? At least by the standards of the world. It’s not fair that someone who broke his back from sun-up till sun-down gets paid the same as some-


8 - THE EAGLE

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SATURDAY September 26, 2009

GUESTVIEWPOINT Health-care doublespeak

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atients First, a Project of Americans for Prosperity, commented on President Obama’s health care speech last week stating that President Obama changed nothing about his plan. His speech did not move Congress any closer to reforms that would put patients first. Instead, he vowed to call out people he deems as misrepresenting his plan. The American people have called out the president and congressional leaders for trying to force their version of health care reform on a public that doesn't want it. That's what the overwhelming response was at those town hall meetings and rallies over the last two months. Accusing his critics of scare tactics, he told the American people that if we don't get behind his plan, which he calls doing nothing, “more will die as a result.” He finally acknowledged the need for medical liability lawsuit reform, but instead of vowing to push for it in health care legislation, he said he would put Kathleen Sebelius, Secretary of Health and Human Services, in charge of that. Interesting choice, since Sebelius used to be a lobbyist for trial lawyers. Americans are tired of hearing doublespeak from the president. In the same speech, he declared he doesn't want to defer reform one more year, or one more election, or one more term.’ But that was right after telling us his plan for the federally regulated health insurance exchange ‘will take effect in four years. Last night’s speech rehashed the same plan - including a public, government-controlled health insurance plan; a new federal definition of acceptable health insurance; an individual mandate that everyone purchase that insurance or face a tax; and an employer mandate increasing the burden on the engine of jobs. The president mocked the concerns of Americans who don't want to see these job-killing, tax-raising policies enacted. The president said his ‘door is always open’ to discuss alternatives to his plan. So far, however, we have seen little consideration given to the types of reforms we support - such as buying health insurance across state lines, tax credits for Americans of all incomes, and real tort reform. These are real reforms that would work for real people. Unfortunately, last week’s speech promised more things Washington can't deliver with its current proposals—promising everyone can keep their current health plan and that reform as Obama imagines it would not add to the deficit. If the president and Congress continue on the course they have charted, these promises will be broken in short order. Patients First has spent $1.9 million on T.V. ad buys in opposition to a government takeover of health care and is conducting the “Hands Off My Health Care” Bus Tour to educate citizens in 13 states. More than 210,000 Americans have signed the Patients First “Hands Off My Health Care” petition to Congress. To view the petition, get the bus tour schedule and more, please visit www.JoinPatientsFirst.com. Patients First, A Project of Americans for Prosperity, is focused on real health care reform—reform that puts patients first. Patients First believes that Americans want and need more health insurance options—not just a costly, governmentdefined plan paid for by American taxpayers. Patients First is a project of Americans for Prosperity® (AFP), a 501(c)(4) non-profit organization recognized by the IRS. For more information on Patients First, go to www.JoinPatientsFirst.com Amy Menefee Editor’s Note: The views expressed by our Guest Viewpoint writers are not necessarily those of New Market Press staff members.

Meet the Beatles — in Brandon BRANDON—Stephen Sutton, CEO of Brandon Music, announces the first live music concert at Vermont’s Classical Music Haven. Being held on Saturday, Oct. 3, at 7 p.m. in the Harmony English Tea Room, the concert is the perfect “harmony” of classical music and British heritage, both staples of Brandon Music. Brandon Music is the North American headquarters of Sutton’s British classical music record company, Divine Art Recordings Group. British musician Mark Harding and his trio, well known in Vermont, present a chamber music tribute to The Beatles. Arranged for a trio of flute, violin, classical guitar, and occasionally a double bass; the Mark Harding Trio personifies the popular comparison of The Beatles to great classical composers with a melodic interpretation of a distinct classical flavor. The Brandon Music performance will feature Harding on guitar, Mandy Kent on flute, and Francois Secordel on violin. Tickets are $15 per person and can be purchased by calling Brandon Music at 465-4071. Major credit/debit cards accepted. Harmony English Tea Room refreshments and beverages will be available for sale.

IntheMilitary

Middlebury soldier receives new rank, responsibilities Maj. Gen. Joseph J. Taluto, the Adjutant General for the State of New York, announces the promotion of members of the New York Army National Guard in recognition of their capabilities for additional responsibility and leadership. Timothy Hanley of Middlebury, serving with Company B, 2108th Infantry, was promoted to the rank of staff sergeant. Army National Guard promotions are based on overall performance, attitude, leadership ability, and development potential. These promotions additionally recognize the best qualified Soldiers and attract and retain the highest caliber Citizen Soldiers for a career in the New York Army National Guard.

F or Calendar Listings— Please e-mai l to: newmark etpr ess@denpubs.com, min imum 2 weeks prior to ev ent. E-mai l only. only. No f ax ed, handwri t ten, or USPS-mai led l istings ac cepted. F or questions, cal l Lesl ie S cribner at 802-388-6397. 802-388-6397.

Thursday, September 24 BRISTOL BRISTOL —The One-World Library Project will host Nepal, “Living and Breathing” in Boudha, Kathmandu. This free talk by artist and Bristol resident Pamela Smith will take place at the Lawrence Memorial Library at 7 p.m. f For more information about the One-World Library Project please call 453-4147 or go to www.oneworldlibraryproject.org. CORNWALL CORNWALL — A Concert by Maiden Vermont, Vermont's premiere women's barbershop chorus at 7 p.m. at the Cornwall School. Occasion: Thank You concert from Maiden Vermont for Cornwall School. Admission: One can of food per person. Info: Lindi Bortney, Director, 388-1012. DORSET — Rutland Area Visiting Nurse Association & Hospice is offering Blood Pressure and Foot Care clinic at the Dorset Nursing Association at 9 a.m. There is a suggested donation of $2 for blood pressure screenings and $5 for foot care. For more information, please call 775-0568. VERGENNES — Harvest Days Luncheon at 12:00 p.m. Join friends at the Vergennes Eagles and enjoy the cooler days and a wonderful meal of Roasted Turkey, Stuffing, Mashed Potatoes with Gravy, Squash, Cranberry Sauce and Fruit Pie. Please bring your own place setting. Suggested donation of $3. Reservations are required. Sponsored by the Champlain Valley Agency on Aging. Transportation from ACTR 388-1946. Call Tracey at 1-800-642-5119 x615 to reserve.

Friday, September 25 NORTH NORTH CLARENDON — Rutland Area Visiting Nurse Association & Hospice is offering Blood Pressure and Foot Care clinic at the Community Center at 12:30 p.m. There is a suggested donation of $2 for blood pressure screenings and $5 for foot care. For more information, please call 775-0568.

Saturday, September 26 BRISTOL BRISTOL — Bristol Harvest Festival from 10a.m.-4p.m. on the Town Green. 90 plus crafters/vendors, horse-drawn wagon rides, bandstand music, farmer's market, children's venue with pony rides, Taste of Bristol, pie contest and more, 388-7951. www.bristolharvestfest.com. MIDDLEBUR Y— The Middlebury Farmer's Market is open every Saturday MIDDLEBURY— and Wednesday from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. outdoors at the MarbleWorks by the Falls. Fresh local produce, meats, cheese and eggs, baked goods, wine, flowers, plants, and crafts. EBT and debits cards welcome. Wednesday is Senior Citizen Day at the market with 10% off at participating vendors. For more information contact coordinator Pam Taylor, 388-0178. VERGENNES — Annual Free Family Fall Festival, 11 a.m. -3 p.m., on the Vergennes Green. This community event will include games, prizes, entertainment, flea market, lunch, clowns, balloons, crafts, storytelling, facepainting, circus hair, bounce tents, Dance Revolution, Guitar Hero and more. This is a totally free event for the whole family. Sponsored by Assembly of God Christian Center. 877-3903. MIDDLEBUR Y — Rummage Sale by the Catholic Daughters of St. Mary's MIDDLEBURY Church, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. There will be household items, craft supplies, holiday items, linens, kitchenware, toys, and much more. Clothing will be $3 per bag. MIDDLEBUR Y — Town Hall Theater's annual extravaganza of antiques, MIDDLEBURY collectibles and upscale treasures will be open to the public from 9 a.m.-2 p.m. For information contact Barbara Blodgett, 388-8268.

Sunday, September 27 VERGENNES — Dorchester Lodge F&AM is holding it's last Sunday of the month breakfast at its lodge on School Street, 7:30-10 A.M. All you can eat, pancakes, french toast, bacon, sausage, home fries, scrambled eggs, juice and coffee. BRISTOL BRISTOL — Better L8 Than Never Car Show - hosted by Snake Mountain Cruisers at Mount Abe Union High School athletic field. Free Sponsored by the Five Town Business Council (a division of the Addison County Chamber of Commerce) and the Bristol Recreation Department. www.bristolharvestfest.com. For information call 388-7951. RUTLAND — Discover the depths of God's love. Revival Services with Rev. Charles and Lisa LaCombe, speakers, singers, songwriters. Sunday at 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m., Monday, Sept. 28, Tuesday, Sept. 29 and Wednesday, Sept. 30 at 7 p.m. Rutland Church of the Nazarene, 144 Woodstock Ave. 483-9594.

Monday, September 28 SOUTH BURLINGT ON — "Music with Mia" weekly musical story time at BURLINGTON University Mall. Kids can enjoy music, stories, and sing-a-longs with local singer/song-writer Mia Adams. Located in the J.C. Penney Court every Monday at 10:30 a.m. Free. Mondays, Sept. 7 - Nov.r 23. For more information, please call 863-1066 x11. FAIR HAVEN HAVEN — The Rutland Area Visiting Nurse Association & Hospice and Dorset Nursing, with support from the Coalition for Adult Immunization in the Rutland Region, are hosting a seasonal flu and pneumonia vaccination clinic. For more information, please call the Flu Hotline at the Rutland Area Visiting Nurse Association & Hospice at 770-1574 or visit www.ravnah.org. St. Mary’s School 9:30-11:30 a.m. IRA — The Rutland Area Visiting Nurse Association & Hospice and Dorset Nursing, with support from the Coalition for Adult Immunization in the Rutland Region, are hosting a seasonal flu and pneumonia vaccination clinic. For more information, please call the Flu Hotline at the Rutland Area Visiting Nurse Association & Hospice at 770-1574 or visit www.ravnah.org. Ira Town Hall, 1:303:30 p.m.

Tuesday, September 29 NEW HAVEN HAVEN — Monthly Sacred Healing,Sacred Sound Circle in the Lightheart Sanctuary.at 6:30 p.m. Meditate,chant,journey,drum,pray,tone with crystal singing bowls,share as we raise the vibes. Call Maureen Short at 453-4433 or e-mail Maureen@gmavt.net. RUTLAND — “Know What To Do About The Flu” forum. State officials and public health experts will be on hand to discuss prepartions the state is makingincluding plans for offering H1N1 vaccine to those groups most at risk or serious illness- as well as the actions communities and individuals can take to cope with flu. Rutland Holiday Inn 7- 9 p.m. For more information visit: HealthVermont.gov or call 211

Wednesday, September 30 MIDDLEBUR Y — The Middlebury Farmer's Market is open every Saturday MIDDLEBURY and Wednesday from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. outdoors at the MarbleWorks by the Falls. Fresh local produce, meats, cheese and eggs, baked goods, wine, flowers, plants, and crafts. EBT and debits cards welcome. Wednesday is Senior

Citizen Day at the market with 10% off at participating vendors. For more information contact coordinator Pam Taylor, 388-0178. RUTLAND — Rutland Area Visiting Nurse Association & Hospice is offering Blood Pressure and Foot Care clinic at the Godnick Adult Center at 12:30 p.m.There is a suggested donation of $2. for blood pressure screenings and $5 for foot care. For more information, please call 775-0568. MIDDLEBUR Y — Dartmouth College economist and professor of family MIDDLEBURY medicine Jonathan Skinner will deliver a lecture titled “What You Need to Know about Health Care Reform.” The event is free and open to the public. Middlebury College Twilight Auditorium 4:30 p.m. 443-3198 or 443-5024.

Thursday, October 1 MIDDLEBUR Y —Twist O' Wool Guild Meeting in 7-9 p.m, at the American MIDDLEBURY Legion on Wilson Way. There will be a meeting, spin-in, and a sharing of projects. This is a good opportunity for those of you who are interested in spinning to come and learn. 453-5960. RUTLAND — The Rutland Area Visiting Nurse Association & Hospice and Dorset Nursing, with support from the Coalition for Adult Immunization in the Rutland Region, are hosting a seasonal flu and pneumonia vaccination clinic. For more information, please call the Flu Hotline at the Rutland Area Visiting Nurse Association & Hospice at 770-1574 or visit www.ravnah.org. Rutland Holiday Inn 9 a.m.-noon.

Friday, October 2 BURLINGTON URLINGTON — First Friday Art Walk is back after it’s September break. Burlington’s art venues stay open late to welcome walkers and share our incredible art scene. For more information call 264-4839 or send e-mail to info@artmapburlington.com. RICHMOND — Susan Reit de Salas and Mary Ann Samuels on stage, 56 p.m. at the Richmond Farmers’ Market on Volunteers Green. CHITTENDEN — First Friday Open Mic Night. Local musicians and poets invited to perform. Desserts/coffee available. Portion of free-will donation benefits Chittenden Volunteer Fire Dept. Public invited to listen and sing along, 7.-9 p.m., Church of the Wildwood, Holden Road. For a spot call 483-2234 or e-mail dmartin@sover.net

Saturday, October 3 MIDDLEBUR Y — The Middlebury Farmer's Market is open every Saturday MIDDLEBURY and Wednesday, 9 a.m.-12:30 p.m. outdoors at the MarbleWorks by the Falls. Fresh local produce, meats, cheese and eggs, baked goods, wine, flowers, plants, and crafts. EBT and debits cards welcome.Wednesday is Senior Citizen Day at the market with 10% off at

participating vendors. For more information contact coordinator Pam Taylor, 388-0178.

Monday, October 5 SOUTH BURLINGT ON — "Music with Mia" weekly musical story time at BURLINGTON University Mall. Kids can enjoy music, stories, and sing-a-longs with local singer/song-writer Mia Adams. Located in the J.C. Penney Court every Monday at 10:30 a.m. Free. Mondays, Sept. 7 - Nov. 23. For more information, call 863-1066 x11.

Wednesday, October 7 MIDDLEBUR Y — The Middlebury Farmer's Market is open every Saturday MIDDLEBURY and Wednesday, 9 a.m.-12:30 p.m. outdoors at the MarbleWorks by the Falls. Fresh local produce, meats, cheese and eggs, baked goods, wine, flowers, plants, and crafts. EBT and debits cards welcome.Wednesday is Senior Citizen Day at the market with 10% off at participating vendors. For more information contact coordinator Pam Taylor, 388-0178. RUTLAND — The Vermont Rental Property Owners Association will hold its monthly meeting in the conference room of the Godnick Adult Center, 1 Deer St. at 7 p.m. The public is invited. Info: 775-4351.

Friday , October 9 LINCOLN —United Church of Lincoln Ladies Aid-Industriannual fall rummage sale. Burnham Hall, 8 a.m.-7 p.m.

Saturday, October 10 MIDDLEBUR Y — The Middlebury Farmer's Market is open every Saturday, MIDDLEBURY 9 a.m.-12:30 p.m. outdoors at the MarbleWorks by the Falls. Fresh local produce, meats, cheese and eggs, baked goods, wine, flowers, plants, and crafts. EBT and debits cards welcome. For more information contact coordinator Pam Taylor, 388-0178. POULTNEY POULTNEY —Annual Poultney Townwide Yardsale.Vendor spaces are going fast - Don't delay and Sign up soon for your Main Street space, by Janice B. Edwards. The registration site is the Poultney Chamber of Commerce office at The Stonebridge building at 66 Beaman St. Stop in Monday - Friday, 2-4 p.m., and talk with Nina or call the Chamber office at 287-2010.

Monday, October 12 SOUTH BURLINGT ON — "Music with Mia" weekly musical story time at BURLINGTON University Mall. Kids can enjoy music, stories, and sing-a-longs with local singer/song-writer Mia Adams. Located in the J.C. Penney Court every Monday at 10:30 a.m. Free. Mondays, Sept. 7 - Nov. 23. For more information, please call 863-1066 x11.

Wednesday, October 14 SOUTH STARKSBOR O —Route 17 on Jerusalem Road, 7 p.m., at the STARKSBORO Jerusalem Schoolhouse Lecture Series and the Starksboro Historical Society hosts Mike Winslow author of “Lake Champlain, A Natural History”. All are welcome.

Saturday, October 17 BETHEL — The fall meeting of the Green Mountain Quilters Guild will be held at Whitcomb High School at 10 a.m. This meeting is our annual Workshop Event. Traditonal business meeting and Show and Tell will be part of the meeting. Info: Shirley Fuller 872-9973. MIDDLEBUR Y — The Middlebury Farmer's Market is open every Saturday MIDDLEBURY from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. outdoors at the MarbleWorks by the Falls. Fresh local produce, meats, cheese and eggs, baked goods, wine, flowers, plants, and crafts. EBT and debits cards welcome. For more information contact coordinator Pam Taylor, 388-0178. VERGENNES — John Sebastian of The Lovin' Spoonful fame at the Vergennes Opera House at 8:00 p.m. John Sebastian's influence on American music over the last forty years is not limited to the hugely successful band, The Lovin' Spoonful that he founded and fronted in the 1960's. With numerous solo hits, Broadway musicals, TV theme songs and musical instruction manuals to his credit, Sebastian is a true fixture in the music that is uniquely American. 2009 marks the 40th Anniversary of John's memorable appearance at the Woodstock Music and Arts Festival. Buy tickets online through the Flynn Regional Box Office or call the Vergennes Opera House at 802-877-6737.


www.Addison-eagle.com

SATURDAY September 26, 2009

THE EAGLE - 9

Douglas tries to avoid state layoffs The Douglas administration announced that it would seek two furlough days and five unpaid holidays as a means to find $7.4 million in labor savings as directed by the Vermont Legislature’s Joint Fiscal Committee. This proposal is an effort to reach a compromise on labor savings and avoid reductions in force at this time. To find middle ground, the offer today does not include a FY 2010 pay reduction —as did prior administration offers—and relies on furlough days and unpaid holidays, which are temporary savings that complicate budget problems in coming fiscal years. However, the offer does require the Vermont State Employees Association (VSEA) to agree to find long-term savings, which are essential to bend the curve on labor costs and fill a more than $200 million budget gap for FY 2011 & FY 2012. “This proposal is a big step for the Administration in our efforts to reach a compromise that prevents the need to make reductions in the state workforce at this time,” said Secretary of Administration Neale Lunderville. “It is now up to VSEA to decide if they are willing to compromise with us and work to find long-term sustainable labor savings over the next two years.” In the midst of the worst recession since the Great Depression, state employees have enjoyed on average a 7.0 percent pay increase at a time when state revenues are declining and thousands of private sector employees have been laid-off or had their wages cut. Many elected officials and Administration appointees have already seen a 5 percent pay cut as well as a salary freeze since July 1, 2008. “This level of growth we have seen in labor costs is simply unrealistic and unsustainable,” Lunderville said. “Our fiscal challenges demand difficult choices, not more quick fixes. The administration is willing to make a short-term deal only if we have a commitment for real and long-term savings next year. This compromise offer is fair in the shortrun and responsible for the long-run. It acknowledges the challenges ahead while avoiding layoffs in the near-term.” The details of the offer: •Applying two furlough days in FY 10: $1.9 million •Accepting five unpaid holidays in FY10: $3.7 million •Using projected surplus in state medical plan: $1.7 million •Eliminating tuition reimbursement: $0.1 million Total: $7.4 million (all $GF) Also, the administration will not seek additional layoffs if November consensus revenue forecast declines not more than $14 million. The administration retains rights to reduce workforce under normal stipulated conditions.

Sheldon Museum celebrates 125 years

Both parties will agree to sustainable labor cost savings as part of their FY 2011 & FY 2012 agreements to produce $16.1 million and $21.9 million in savings, respectively.

Discussions between the administration and the VSEA are expected to continue throughout the next few weeks.

Ask Dr. Curtis Gross Chiropractor Q: Can adjustments help me sleep better? A: I have had few, if any; patients come in specifically for help with sleeping. However, many new patients experience a clear improvement in their ability to get a better night sleep. This probably occurs for a couple of different reasons. First of all, when your back (and/or neck) hurt, it is often difficult to find a comfortable position to sleep in. When you begin to feel better, you are more likely to be able to find a comfortable sleeping position. This translates to better quality and quantity of sleep. In addition, when your body feels better, your mind tends to relax as well. Your feeling of well being is improving and this allows you to sleep better. There is a certain peace of mind that comes over you when you know you are improving and regaining your health. The fear of what might happen if your condition doesn’t improve or get worse is commonly on your mind when you are suffering with pain. When the bulk of that particular source of stress is relieved, you may find yourself sleeping like a baby.

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Julie Peddie and Barbara Blodgett with a few of the Sheldon’s Museum’s 125th anniversary raffle prizes. MIDDLEBURY—Julie Peddie and Barbara Blodgett displayed three of the 15 generous prizes for Middlebury’s Henry Sheldon Museum's 125th anniversary celebration raffle recently. Winners will be drawn on Oct. 1 at a reception in the Sheldon Museum’s gardens. Prizes include a weekend in New York with theater tickets and dinner; a Joe Bolger framed landscape oil painting; three months of Middlebury Fitness and four hours of personal training with Jerri Benjamin; a limited edition Danforth Pewter oil lamp; two days of golf for four at Ralph Myhre Golf Course and at Crown Point in Springfield; a Middlebury cultural package; Sheldon Slate garden bench; $250 savings bond; wooden mudroom rack; landscape consultation with Loan Lynch and gift certificate; watercolor painting of your home by Gayl Braisted; Norton Gallery King Charles spaniel wood sculpture; Vermont food sampler in a handmade basket; and tickets to New Year ’s Eve at the Town Hall Theater along with a Beau Ties bow tie and cummerbund set. To purchase a ticket, call the Sheldon at 388-2117.

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10 - THE EAGLE

SATURDAY September 26, 2009

Douglas visits France Who’s the best bagger in Vermont? Gov. Jim Douglas and Vermont Agriculture Secretary Roger Allbee visited France as guests of the French government and at the request of the French Embassy. The purpose of the visit was to investigate potential markets, export/import opportunities and resource exchange for Vermont agricultural producers. Building on a long history of shared agricultural practices and methodology, this study tour facilitated an exchange of ideas and systems that can mutually benefit both countries. “France has a system in place based on geographic indicators supporting its agriculture industry and that fosters economic development. Vermont is in a unique position to move forward with a similar model,” said Douglas. “Through this system of terrior or taste of place, France has been able to better isolate themselves from commodity pricing in food production–similar to what many Vermont producers are trying to accomplish here.” In the past few years, there has been great consumer demand for and support of the Buy Local initiative in Vermont. A taste of place or geographical indicator within the state’s food systems is a logical next step. “As people become more concerned about knowing where their food comes from and how it is grown, this model could have significant and positive economic impacts for Vermont producers,” Douglas said. “We need to continue to do everything we can to support Vermont agriculture, and that includes exploring new opportunities and learning from successes elsewhere,” he added. Vermont and France have many similar characteristics agriculturally. Vermont is now known for its artisanal cheeses, many of them national and international award winners. Cheesemaking is a value-added, growth industry for the state. Many of Vermont’s artisanal cheesemakers owe their growth to France where they have studied the French model and brought those skills back home. And perhaps the best example of Vermont’s unique position to capitalize on the geographical indicator model is maple syrup. When people think about Vermont they think of maple. Not only are maple products value-added for producers, but they draws tourists from all over the world–further benefiting the Vermont economy. The study trip involved meetings and exchanges with top level French agricultural officials including Bruno Le Maire, minister of agriculture and Michel Mercier, minister of rural development.

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Northlands internship in D.C. VERGENNES—As part of Job Corps Day: 45 Years of Building Lives and Launching Careers, student Joseph Hoopaugh will travel to the Nation’s Capitol to represent Job Corps on Capitol Hill. Joseph is one of 60 Job Corps students chosen to shadow their member of

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Congress as part of the Job Corps 45th Anniversary Celebration last week. Jospeh Hoopaugh, who specializes in Health Occupations will participate in a one-day internship with U.S. Rep.Peter Welch (DVermont) learning how a congressional office works, from constituent services to legislative policy. The director of Northlands, Tony Staynings, was excited about this once in a lifetime opportunity. “Job Corps never ceases to

provide young people with an outlet or inspiration to better their lives. We are very proud to send Joe to D.C. so he can learn from one of the nation’s leaders,” he said. Joseph Hoopaugh, originally from Burlington, came to Job Corps earlier this year with an interest in getting himself onto a career track. During the interview process for this internship, Joe impressed the staff with his professionalism, enthusiasm and eagerness to rep-

resent Job Corps and understand how the legislative process works. “Someday I would like to work in public service and I have never been to D.C., so this is the chance of a lifetime.” said Hoopaugh. “Job Corps gives me so much hope for my future. I have recently passed my State LNA exam, and with Job Corps I am going to advanced training in my trade. After that, it’s college time.”

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Dawn Tye of Hannaford Supermarket bested other competitors to become the 2009 Vermont “Best Bagger.” The competition took place Sept. 12 during the Vermont Food Industry’s annual convention and expo at the Champlain Valley Exposition. Tye, an employee of Hannaford’s for the past 9 years, won the competition from a field of contestants from supermarkets around the state. Hannford’s Stuart Bird said, “We are very proud of her performance at the competition and look forward to her participation at the nationals.” Her next competition will be in Las Vegas, representing Vermont at the national contest this winter, which is held in conjunction with the annual meeting of the National Grocers Association. Second place honors went to Robyn Spittle of Shaw’s, third went to Melissa Strickland of Price Chopper and fourth to Marcia Piper of Mac’s.

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Taste of Home Cooking School will be holding a cooking school November 7th at the Champlain Valley Exposition. We have limited booth space available for the show. Booths open 21⁄2 hours before show time and you can show and or sell your goods or products to over 1,000 eager shoppers. Contact us to see how you can get in on the many different opportunities for this show that promises to be Sold Out.

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SATURDAY September 26, 2009

THE EAGLE - 11

Tigers claw from behind to nip Cougars, 13-7 By Frederick Pockette The Middlebury Tigers overcame a late 7-0 deficit to defeat the Mount Mansfield Cougars 13-7 in high school football action last Saturday in South Burlington. The Cougars took an early 7-0 lead when quarterback T.J. Wesson connected with Jamie Wright for a 35-yard touchdown strike with 3:19 left in the first quarter. Despite the fine running of Ian Shaw (22 carries for 151 yards)the Cougars wouldn’t cross the goal line the rest of the day, and that opened the door for the Tigers, who went through it. With 11:40 left to play in the game Brenden Burrell threw a 16-yard touchdown pass to Jerry Hoffman. Hoffman then turned around and threw a touchdown pass of his own, connecting with Ryan Foley from 31-yards out with 5:20 left, securing a 13-7 win for the visiting Tigers. Middlebury improved to 2-1 with the win, while the Cougars fell to 1-2 on the year. Another Addison County team, the Champlain Valley Union Redhawks, also enjoyed the sweet taste of victory last Saturday. CVU scored touchdowns on two blocked punts and a 69-yatd touchdown run from quarterback Konnor Fleming to roll past BFA-Fairfax 42-6 in Hinesburg, improving to 3-0 on the young season. Defensive lineman Cameron Fitzgerald scored a touchdown by returning a blocked punt by Crawford Morris 31 CVU’s second blocked punt came in the third quarter, Ian Solomon registered the block and defensive end Matt Long recovered it and ran it into the end zone. CVU also got three more touchdown runs to sea the rout. Alex Zullo ran it in from 53 yards out, J.P. Benoit from 21 yards and Eric Palmer chipped in with a five yard TD run. BFA-Fairfax fell to 1-2 with the six point loss. The Mount Abraham Eagles weren’t so fortunate, falling to 0-3 after being shutout 46-0 by the Bellows Falls Terriers last Saturday at home. Tim Muzzey rushed for 145 yards, including touchdown jaunts of 7 and 51 yards to lead Bellows Falls past Mount Abraham. Ryan Hayward chipped in with an 11-yard TD run and

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quarterback Ben Hewitt scampered for a 19-yard score to give the visiting Terriers a commanding 28-0 halftime lead, and they never looked back. In the second half Corey Sprague and Bruce Wells added short touchdown runs, while Cooper Long ended the days scoring with a 17 yard run. Things didn’t fare an better who dropped their second in a row last Friday night after winning their opener. In East Montpelier, Dacota Carrier and Elias LaCount scored two touchdowns apiece to lead te Union-32 Rebels to a 40-18 win over the visiting Otters. LaCount led all rushers with 198 yards. Jesse Burke returned a interception and Logan Farrell scored on a quarterback sneak to round out the Raiders scoring. Union-32 remained perfect at 3-0 with the win.

Pinkham Lifts Otters Over Wasps in OT In Brandon, Kristy Pinkham scored with 5:52 left in overtime to lift Otter Valley to a 1-0 victory over the Woodstock wasps in high school field hockey action last Friday. The game winner came on a perfectly executed corner play. Shayna McDonough entered the ball and Emily Waldrip made the stop to set Pinkham up for the game winning shot Woodstock goalie Grace Amato had six saves while the Otters Chelsea Robbins stopped seven shots to preserve the win and earn the shutout. Otter Valley improved to 4-1-1 with the exciting win.

Last Saturday Hartford, Conn., Robyn Williams and Christy Bradley.scored to lead Trinity College past Middlebury in college field hockey action. It was the first time in ten years that Trinity defeated the Panthers. Middlebury’s goalie Medeline Brooks turned in an impressive performance making 11 saves. Trinity’s Gina DiNallo made 8 saves to preserve the win and earn the shutout. Trinity improved 4-0 with the win while Middlebury fell to 1-2 overall, and they remain winless at 0-2 in the NESCAC.

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dison County Rivals, the Mount Abraham Eagles in girl‘s high school soccer action.. Kim Pratt contributed an assist to the win while Commodore goalie Christina Stinchfield needed to make just three saves to preserve the shutout. Vergennes improved to 3-11 with the win. Eagle goalie Shanna Gebo made two saves for Mount Abraham, who fell to 1-4 on the year. But in boys action on the same day and also in Vergennes the results were flopped around. Grayson Webb scored in the 63rd minute to lead the visiting Mount Abraham Eagles to a 1-0 win over the hometown Commodores. Sam Low earned the save for the Eagles with a pair of saves, while Kam Brooks kept the Commodores in the game with an impressive 11 save performance Vergennes remained winless at 0-4 following the shutout, while the Eagles improved to 4-1 with the win.

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12 - THE EAGLE

SATURDAY September 26, 2009

4-H shooters hit the target By Lani Duke & Lisa J. Muzzey Sixty-six young people and their families, representing eight 4-H clubs from around the state, spent a summer weekend at the Vermont 4-H Shooting Sports Jamboree in Pawlet. Of the young participants, 12 were from Bennington County; 21 from Caledonia; 10 from Chittenden; 16 from Rutland; and seven from Windham. In all, about 150 people camped together for the annual contest, which also celebrated 4-H Volunteer Clarence Decker's 50th year as a Vermont 4-H volunteer. He is one of the founding members of Oxbow Mountain 4-H Shooting Sports Club in Pawlet. The weekend also celebrated 25 years of 4H shooting sports in the state. The top four winners in the Novice Hunting contest were Nigel Waring, Green Mountain 4-H Shooting Sports Club, Lyndonville; Elizabeth Leslie, Caledonia 4-H Sharpshooters Club, St. Johnsbury/Lyndonville; Mark Hayden, Pownal Valley Sharpshooters 4-H Club, Pownal; and Evan DeMuynck, Mt. Mansfield Pioneers 4-H Club, Jericho. Junior winners were Sean Tillotson, Joshua Sanders, and Zachary Terhune, first, second, and fourth, of Caledonia 4-H Sharpshooters; and Ben Decker, Green Mountain 4-H Shooting Sports, third. Senior winners were John Turner and Patrick Wilson, first and second, of Oxbow Mountain 4-H Shooting Sports Club, Pawlet; Jonathan Sanders, third, Caledonia 4-H Sharpshooters; and Medrick Petty IV, fourth, Oxbow Mountain 4-H Shooting Sports. The top Shotgun winner in the Novice division was Mark Hayden of the Pownal Valley 4-H Sharpshooters, followed by Cameron Merrill of the Oxbow Mountain club; Nigel War-

ing, Green Mountain; and Elizabeth Leslie. Junior winners were Ben Decker, first; Joshua Sanders, second; Brad Hollister, Pownal Valley, third; and Dani Cochran, Green Mountain, fourth. In the Senior category, Medrick Petty IV of Oxbow Mountain received the top score, followed by Adam Martin, Mt. Mansfield Pioneers and Jay Wilson, Oxbow Mountain. Four members—John Turner, Patrick Wilson, and Thomas Wilson, of Oxbow Mountain, and Taylor Waring of Caledonia 4-H Sharpshooters—tied for honorable mention. Nigel Waring received the highest Novice score in the Pistol competition, followed by Evan DeMuynck, Cameron Merrill and Parker Blomberg, both of Oxbow Mountain 4-H Shooting Sports. Mt. Mansfield Pioneers member Austin Tremblay garnered the highest score in the Junior division, followed by Tyler Dixon of the Green Mountain club, Joshua Sanders, and Zachary Terhune. Caledonia 4-H Sharpshooters members Joy Sanders, Jauquin Currier Cubero, and Aaron Terhune received first, third, and fourth places in the Senior division while Harrison Myers of the Pownal Valley club won the second place slot. When the young people picked up their rifles, the top Novice scores were won by Mark Hayden, Nigel Waring, Parker Bloomberg, and Evan DeMuynck. Bridget Decker of the Oxbow Mountain club was the top point winner in the Junior division, followed by Sean Tillotson, John Schatz of the Pownal Valley club, and Austin Tremblay. Tops in the Senior division was Naomi Trudeau of the Caledonia 4-H Sharpshooters, with Jonathan Sanders, Patrick Wilson, and Joaquin Currier Cubero in second, third and fourth places. In the Seneca contest, Nigel Waring gained the highest point total, succeeded by Mark Hayden, Cameron Merrill, and Evan DeMuynck. Junior division winners were Justin Martin of Mt. Mansfield Pioneers, Ben Decker, Matthew Hayden of the Pownal Valley club, and Bennett Cochran of the Green Mountain club. When the Senior division competed, Naomi Trudeau received the top score, with Aaron Terhune, Joaquin Currier Cubero, and Patrick Wilson in second through fourth positions. Archery competition rounded out the weekend activities. Nigel Waring was the high point winner in the Novice division, followed by Mark Hayden, Cameron Merrill, Elizabeth Leslie, and Evan DeMuynck. The top Junior archer was Joshua Sanders, with Brad Hollister, Sean Tillotson, and Zachary Terhune in succession. The Senior winners were Jonathan Sanders, Joy Sanders, John Turner, and Patrick Wilson, respectively. When all the points were in, Nigel Waring received the high point total Overall in the Novice division, followed by Mark Hayden, Cameron Merrill, and Evan DeMuynck. Overall Junior winner was Joshua Sanders, with Sean Tillotson, Ben Decker, and Brad Hollister in succeeding order. The top Senior was Patrick Wilson, followed by Joaquin Currier Cubero, Joy Sanders, and Naomi Trudeau.

x à t à á X NEW PRICE ! ESSEX: Neat & Clean 2 bedroom, 3 bath condo- Ready to move in! Eat-in kitchen, dining and living rooms, large family room in lower level. Private deck with wooded area nearby and one car garage NEW PRICE! $210,000.

Greentree Real Estate

Emerson String Quartet returns for free concert Quartet is renown in classical circles

Emerson String Quartet MIDDLEBURY—Considered by numerous critics to be America’s finest quartet, the Emerson String Quartet will return to Middlebury College on Friday, Oct. 2, at 8 p.m. for a free performance in Mead Chapel. This is the ensemble’s 31st Middlebury program, and its selections will include New Englander Charles Ives’s first quartet as well as quartets by Beethoven and Mendelssohn. The concert is made possible with generous support from the Institute for Clinical Science and Art, established by the late Dr. F. William Sunderman of Philadelphia. Mead Chapel is located on Hepburn Road off College Street (Route 125). Acclaimed for its insightful performances, dynamic artistry and technical mastery, the quartet has amassed an impressive list of achievements: a brilliant series of recordings exclusively documented by Deutsche Grammophon since 1987; eight Grammy Awards including two for “Best Classical Album,” an unprecedented honor for a chamber music group; three Gramophone Magazine Awards, and performances of the complete cycles of Beethoven, Bartók and Shostakovich quartets in major concert halls throughout the world. The group has close ties to Middlebury College. In 1995, Middlebury awarded each member an honorary doctoral degree. In 1992, they helped inaugurate the Center for the Arts Concert Hall at its gala opening. And their first campus concert was also in Mead in 1981. The Emerson String Quartet has been featured in The New York Times Magazine, USA Today, Elle, Bon Appétit, Gramophone, The Strad and Strings. Television appearances include PBS’s “NewsHour with Jim Lehrer,” WNET’s “City Arts,” and A&E’s “Biography of Beethoven” and “Breakfast with the Arts.” The Emerson String Quartet concert is free, and no tickets or reservations are necessary. The doors will open at 7:30 p.m. Mead Chapel is located on Hepburn Road off College Street (Route 125). For more information, contact the Middlebury College Box Office at 443-6433 or www.middlebury.edu/arts.

21156

‘This Week’s Real Estate Opportunities In The Region’

Monkton • 453-5232

FERRISBURG - Wonderful 4 BR farmhouse on 8 aces with large barn & a lovely Grn Mtn View. The classic 3 season porch makes the house look large yet it is nicely sized at 2399 sq.ft. New Price $319,900. Call January Stearns Lang McLaughry Spera Middlebury • 385-1109

LAND FOR SALE

LIKENESS ONLY HINESBURG: To Be Built Cape style home near village & CVU. First floor master bedroom, ample kitchen, energy efficient heating system & full front porch. Municipal utilities! 2nd floor is unfinished & rough plumbed. Other design possibilities avail., call us for details! $272,000.

Greentree Real Estate Monkton • 453-5232

Monkton: Five acre building lot with easterly views-Ready for your new home! State permits and septic plans included. Old road already present-would make an easy driveway. NEW PRICE $75,000

Greentree Real Estate Monkton • 453-5232

MIDDLEBURY: SELLERS WILL CONTRIBUTE $2,000 TOWARD CLOSING COSTS W/AN ACCEPTABLE OFFER! You will be pleasantly surprised when you walk in the door! Open living area w/LR addition w/vaulted ceiling & skylight on the back, 3 BR, 1.5 baths, some finished space in lower level, great back yard, 1-car garage and 2 storage sheds. Walk to all Middlebury has to offer. GREAT TIME TO BUY! $229,000. Call Donna LaBerge

Lang McLaughry Spera Middlebury 385-1115

BRISTOL - Motivated Seller! Really lovely 4 BR log cabin on 5 acres. Very pretty wood detailed interior and open floor plan Located just off Rte. 116 on Birch Ledge Rd. & close to the Middlebury town line. New Price $265,000. Call January Stearns Lang McLaughry Spera Middlebury • 385-1109

BRIDPORT - Classic 3 BR cape on 10 acres conveniently located off 22A on Market Rd. Land is half open yard/meadow and half woods w/timber value & maple taps. Deck, 2 car garage & nice gardening soils. New Price $259,500. Call January Stearns Lang McLaughry Spera Middlebury • 385-1109

IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO PLACE A LISTING ON THIS PAGE CALL THE EAGLE AT 388-6397


www.Addison-eagle.com

SATURDAY September 26, 2009

Bose From page 1 be tremendously convenient for our local patients,” Fossati said. Bose, a resident of Shelburne, has completed Interventional Cardiology Fellowships at New York Methodist Hospital. He completed his General Cardiology Fellowship training from Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center and Norwalk Hospital in Connecticut . In addition to his board certification in general cardiology and nuclear cardiology, Bose is board eligible in interventional cardiology. For Bose’s arrival at Porter in mid-September, the hospital completed a renovation project to expand and improve its Cardiology Services and ancillary testing. Information about these new services and appointments can be made by calling Porter Cardiology at 382-3443.

Pay From page 1 gender, 51 in women- owned business value, and 43 in minority-owned business value. By not addressing these low rankings, Vermont’s economic security may be at risk in future years, according to the Scorecard. The Scorecard notes that Vermont’s policymakers must create opportunities to support the financial well-being of their constituents. To remove barriers to saving for very low-income households, the organization suggested that Vermont should eliminate asset limits in its Temporary Assistance for Needy Families and Medicaid programs, as it has for its Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program. Vermont, it said, should also make postsecondary education more affordable and encourage students to save by matching deposits in 529 college savings accounts. The Scorecard found Vermont lacked in investing in entrepreneurs by expanding its microloan program so that funds can also be used to deliver essential technical assistance and training to microentrepreneurs, especially for women and minorities. Top performers on the 2009-2010 Scorecard—those states that earned an overall “A” in performance measures—include Hawaii, Iowa, Kansas, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Hampshire, Vermont, Washington and Wyoming.

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 11 am *Lords supper observed on the 1st Sunday of each month. *Pot luck luncheon 3rd Sunday of each month. Wednesdays 6:30 pm, Adult prayer & Bible study, Youth groups for ages 5 & up

From page 1 unique regulatory and enforcement authority over nonprofit organizations. Along with other state charitable oversight officials that require nonprofits to file information purportedly to prevent violations of law, state attorneys general have unique access to information that could have been used to take action against ACORN. Were they asleep, derelict in their duty, or worse?” A question was posed by Fitzgibbons in a recent news release about ACORN’s alleged offenses: “...Was failure to act the result of direct and indirect political support of politicians by ACORN, its direct affiliates, and its indirect affiliates such as the Service Employees International Union?” The ACORN Financial Justice Center graded state attorneys general in 2008 on their work in the home foreclosure crisis, which some believe ACORN-supported policies helped create. Basing its grades on factors, including endorsing U.S. Sen. Chris Dodd and other federal Democrat legislation—and using taxpayer funds to train pro bono lawyers—ACORN gave grades of A+ only to Democratic attorneys general; no Republicans appear on the ACORN list. The list of ACORN's A+ attorneys general by state: Richard Blumenthal (Connecticut), Martha Coakely (Massachusetts), Andrew Cuomo (New York), Lisa Madigan (Illinois), Tom Miller (Iowa), and Lori Swanson (Minnesota). Vermont Attorney General Sorrel, a Democrat, received a grade of F on ACORN’s list. “Perhaps its time to investigate and review why so many state attorneys general failed to act, or act sooner, against ACORN. Attorneys general should begin by disclosing contributions received from, state taxpayer funding for, and attorneys' general ties, meetings and financial affiliations with, ACORN and its vast network,” said Fitzgibbons Only a handful of Democrats and one independent sided with ACORN on the Senate vote defunding the controversial organization: Illinois Sen. Roland Burris, Pennsylvania Sen. Bob Casey, Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin, New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, Vermont Sens. Patrick Leahy and Bernie Sanders, and Rhode Island Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse. As a private attorney in 1995, President Obama, a Democrat, represented ACORN in a voter-registration lawsuit in Illinois. Editor ’s Note: Several readers vent about U.S. Senators Leahy’s and Sanders’ support of controversial ACORN. See this week’s Letters to the Editor.

ST. JUDE THE APOSTLE - 10759 Route 116 Hinesburg. Masses: Sat. 4:30; Sun. 9:30

SHOREHAM FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH-UCC - Sunday worship and church school 10am. 897-2687

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

STARKSBORO THE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF STARKSBORO - Located at 2806 VT Route 116, 05487. Sunday worship service 11:00am. All are welcome. Through the winter months we are using the large room located on the ground floor for meeting. Use the door at the back of the church to enter the building, then walk through the kitchen to the meeting room. For details on Monday evening study topics email bodets@gmavt.net or call pastor, Rev. Larry Detweiler at 453-5577.

MIDDLEBURY CHAMPLAIN VALLEY UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST SOCIETY Sunday service & church school, Sunday 10:00am CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY - Middlebury. Middlebury Community House, Main and Seymour Sts, Sunday Service and Church School-10:00am; Wednesday-7:30pm. THE CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH OF MIDDLEBURY (UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST) - Sunday 10am worship service THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS Sunday Sacrament 10-11:15am 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

LIFEBRIDGE CHRISTIAN CHURCH, 141 Mulcahy Drive, 247-LIFE (5433), Sunday worship 9:00 & 10:45am, www.lifebridgevt.com, LifeGroups meet weekly (call for times & locations)

MEMORIAL BAPTIST CHURCH - 97 South Pleasant St., Middlebury. Sunday morning worship & church school 10am, Wednesday evening Bible Study, 6:30pm. 388-7472.

BRIDPORT BRIDPORT CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH - Middle Rd., Bridport, VT. Pastor Tim Franklin, 758-2227. Sunday worship services at 8:30am and 10:15am with nursery care provided. Children’s ministries include Sprouts for children age 3-Kindergarten and WOW for grades 1-6, during the 10:15am service.

SAINT MARY’S ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH - Saturday, 5:15pm, Sunday 8, 10am

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 5:15pm, & Sunday 9am BRISTOL SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH - 839 Rockydale Rd. - Saturday Services: Bible Studies for all ages 9:30 to 10:30 am, Song Service, Worship Service at 11am. Prayer Meeting Thursday 6:30pm. 453-4712

ACORN

THE EAGLE - 13

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

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: 1:30 P.M. at the Nazarene Church on 2A in Williston. Wednesdays: 7:00 P.M. at 90 Shunpike, S. Burlington 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 - Sunday school 9:45am, Sunday worship service 8:30am, 10:45am and 6:00pm

MIDDLEBURY FRIENDS MEETING - (Quakers), Sunday worship & first day school 10am (meets at Havurah House)

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 10:30 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: 10:45-11am. Sunday morning worship service 11am. Nursery provided both at 10 & 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, 10:45am SAINT PAUL’S ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH - Sunday mass 11am, 468-5706 RICHMOND RICHMOND CONGREGATIONAL UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST - 20 Church St., Richmond • 434-2053. Rev. Len Rowell. Sunday Worship with Sunday School, 10AM; Adult Study Class, Sunday 8:30AM RIPTON UNITED METHODIST CHURCH, 388-2510

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 9:30-10:15 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 8 and 10am; childcare provided at 10am. All are welcome. For information call 758-2211. ST. PETER’S ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH - Saturday 5pm, Sunday 8:30, 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; 11:00 Worship Including Primary Church Ages 3 to 5 & Junior Church 1st - 4th Graders; 6:00pm Evening Service Worship For All Ages. WEDNESDAY 5:45pm-6:15pm Dinner ($2 per person or $10 per family); 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 - Worship and Sunday School 10:00am. Daniel Wright, Pastor. 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

ESSEX CHRISTIAN & MISSIONARY ALLIANCE ESSEX ALLIANCE CHURCH - 36 Old Stage Rd., Essex • 878-8213

SALISBURY SALISBURY CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH (UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST) - Sun. worship svc., 10am

ESSEX JUNCTION CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH - 61 Main St., Essex Junction 878-8341

SHELBURNE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF SHELBURNE - 127 Webster Road, Shelburne • 985-2848

FERRISBURGH/NORTH FERRISB. FERRISBURGH METHODIST CHURCH, Sunday worship 9:30am

TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH - 2166 Shelburne Rd., Shelburne. 985-2269 Sunday Services: 8 & 10AM. Bible Study 9:00AM • Sunday School: 9:50AM. The Reverend Craig Smith

CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE - 30 Morgan Parkway Williston, VT 05495 • 802-878-8591 bwnazarene@juno.com

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

MARANATHA CHRISTIAN CHURCH - 1037 S. Brownell Rd., Williston. 862-2108

NORTH FERRISBURGH UNITED METHODIST CHURCH, 227 Old Hollow Rd., North Ferrisburgh, VT 802-425-2770. Rev. Kim Hornug-Marcy. Sunday worship 10am, Sunday School 10a.m., Nursery Available. http://www.gbgm-umc.org/ nferrisburgumc/ CROSSROADS CHAPEL, 41 Middlebrook Rd., Ferrisburgh, VT 05456. (802) 425-3625. Pastor: Rev. Charles Paolantonio. Services: Sunday 10am. HINESBURG LIGHTHOUSE BAPTIST CHURCH - 90 Mechanicsville Rd., Hinesburg. Sunday Service at 10:30am. Pastor Hart, info: 482-2588.

TRINITY BAPTIST CHURCH - 19 Mountain View Rd., Williston. 878-8118 CHRIST MEMORIAL CHURCH - 1033 Essex Rd., Williston 878-7107

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)

CAVALRY CHAPEL - 300 Cornerstone, Williston. 872-5799

IMMACULATE HEART OF MARY - Route 2, Williston 878-4513 SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH - Route 2A, Williston 878-2285 WILLSTON FEDERATED CHURCH - 44 North Willston Rd., Williston. 878-5792 9-12-09 • 27982

Special Thanks To These Fine Local Businesses For Supporting The Religious Services Page

Broughton’s

Hardware ‘Big Country’ Store Rt. 22A, Bridport

758-2477

27983

“Join us after church for lunch!”

ROSIE’S Restaurant & Coffee Shop

886 Route 7 South • Middlebury, Vt Open 7 Days A Week 6am-9pm (10pm Fri. & Sat.)

802-388-7052

27985

289 Randbury Rd., Rutland, VT

(802) 775-2357 2242 Vt Route 7 South, Middlebury, VT

(802) 388-7212 www.suburbanenergy.com

27984

South Chapel

Readers Poll

261 Shelburne Road Burlington,VT 802-862-0991

Should Vermont's Attorney General Office investigate ACORN's activities in the Green Mt. State?

North Chapel

12 Berard Dr., South Burlington, VT • (802) 862-9754 www.suburbanenergy.com 27980

934 North Avenue Burlington,VT 802-862-1138

Mountain View Chapel Yes

68 Pinecrest Drive Essex Junction,VT 802-879-9477

No

Cast your vote and comment online today at... www.addison-eagle.com

Fax 802-861-2109

www.readyfuneral.com

21948


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14 - THE EAGLE

SATURDAY September 26, 2009

PUZZLE PAGE SIGNS OF BURNOUT By Bonnie L. Gentry and Victor Fleming

ACROSS 1 Deferred payment at the bar 8 Flies over Africa? 15 Alternatives to Twinkies 20 “Cool!” 21 Upgrades the factory 22 Pocatello’s state 23 Dramatic device about which Hamlet says “The play’s the thing ...” 25 Work of fiction 26 Type sizes 27 Made, as a basket 28 Soak (up) 29 Star responsible for eclipsing Venus? 30 North Carolina university 31 Pick 33 Pandora’s boxful 35 Missile’s path 36 Site of an impromptu nap 37 Kindness simile 40 “... so long __ both shall live?” 41 Extends across 42 Line of bushes 43 Regal initials 44 Ed who wrote “87th Precinct” novels 47 Loving: Prefix 49 Territory that became two states

52 Highest class 53 Rare key in which a section of Chopin’s “Polonaise-Fantaisie” is written 57 Grammar school basics, briefly 58 Kelly’s co-host 59 H-bomb trial, e.g. 60 Back of the neck 61 Lunar Asian holiday 62 Broadway auntie 63 Concerning 64 Enjoy a hot tub 66 Big name in nonstick cookware 67 It starts with enero 68 Sch. near the Rio Grande 69 Peru’s __ Picchu 70 Unrefined oil 71 Suffix with real 72 World Series of Poker Main Event game 75 Gets licked 76 Put down 78 Prefix meaning “spiral” 79 Fizzles (out) 80 Sign of burnout hidden in eight puzzle answers 81 “__ fired!” 83 Vaughan of jazz 85 Siberian metropolis 87 California’s first lady 90 Letters before a trade name 93 “Well, __-di-dah”

94 95 96 97 99 102 103 104 105 108 109

110 111 112 113 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15

“The Mod Squad” role Ready to be driven “Buenos __” Dangerous compound in Agent Orange General Arnold of WWII PC key below Shift Frenzied Vertical Open one’s law office, say Chorus platform Instrument shaker at the end of a minstrel troupe Made of clay Bridge bid, briefly Black Sea port dweller Unemotional DOWN Spoke like Don Corleone Not long, timewise Recent rightist Nile dam site Hauls to the shop “Who __ to argue?” ___ a rock and a hard place Hot-dish holder Iroquois Confederacy member In-flight approx. Throw easily Trendy London area Marrying on the sly Cincinnati-to-Nashville dir. Jazzman known as

“Fatha” 16 Febreze target 17 Easily become angered 18 Short story writer known for irony 19 Comforting words 24 Green targets 29 Conniving 31 Ballet bird 32 Rock concert memento 34 1862 Bull Run victor 37 Undercover agents 38 Lend a hand 39 Blue Moon of ’60s-’70s baseball 40 Subject of Indiana Jones’s quest 41 “Gymnopédies” com-

43 44 45 46

47 48 49 50 51 53 54 55 56 63 64 65 66 68 69 70 73 74

poser Fabled napper Disney’s Ariel, e.g. Make pure 2000 Martin Lawrence/Nia Long comedy Fen-__: withdrawn dietdrug combo Dost possess Jerk One staying afloat in place Lacking guile Building addition First instruction Words before black or red Book after Micah “... two fives for __?” Island east of Java Elec. letters Marriage promise Bonneville Flats state Harass Fair, in forecasts Feng __ Wife of Zeus

77 79 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 94 96 98 100 101

103 105 106 107

Alas. native Scrub up, say PBS chef Martin Fruit tree grouping Libya’s Gulf of __ Torn off forcibly Veteran Submit with a stamp Hr. part Queen of Troy Gymnast Mary Lou of Olympics fame Lake fisherman’s boat Receiver of property, in law Climb Book, in Bologna Beatrice’s admirer Mutant superhero group of comics Kitty starter Annual major golf tournaments played in August, familiarly Bog-like Med. care group Mantric sounds Guffaw syllable

S OLUTIONS TO LAST WEEK ’ S C ROSSWORD PUZZLE

Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit, 1 to 9.

Trivia Answers! •••••••• From Page 2 ••••••••

ANs. 1

U.S. AMATEUR

ANs. 2 MAINE 37434


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SATURDAY September 26, 2009

THE EAGLE - 15

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RK IN NEW YO READERSVERMONT &

1-800-989-4ADS ADOPTION *ADOPT: ACTIVE, Friendly, young couple looking to provide endless love, safety and a secure future for your precious newborn. Expenses paid. 1-800-631-6710, Donna and Erik. FACED WITH an unplanned pregnancy? Loving couples await. Receive information/pictures; you choose. Open or closed adoption. Assistance available. Call compassionate counselor. 1-866-236-7638; 24/7 PREGNANT? CONSIDERING ADOPTION? You choose from families nationwide. LIVING EXPENSES PAID. Call 24/7 Abby’s One True Gift Adoptions. 866-413-6292.

ANTIQUES ANTIQUE HOOSIER cabinet, excellent condition, pay only $375. 518-623-3669 ANTIQUES WANTED, but not limited to: Pottery, paper, holiday, furniture & primitives. I like the unique. Call Mitchell Antiques 802885-5068.

APPAREL & ACCESSORIES

WHIRLPOOL UPRIGHT freezer. 5’Hx30”W. 4 yrs. old. $250. 802-463-9134.

CLEANING TIME available. Let me help clean house or office. Reasonable rates & references. Call Linda at 802-376-8755. FREE REMOVAL Of Junk Cars & Scrap Metal Call Chester Rowe at 802-875-3788. HOME OWNER ‘S HELPER Carpentry - Painting - Wallpapering Decks - Sheds - Factory Fireplace Units Floating Boat Decks Call Harry 1-800-675-8815 HOUSE CLEANING. Quality cleaning for your vacation home needs. 802-885-2651. UNLIMITED INTRENATIONAL CALLS: Just $1.00/day. Call 100+ Countries Worldwide from ANY cell phones. FREE day. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Payless Mobile Inc., 845-309-4396. Sales Reps Wanted.

COMPUTERS

FOR “DRESS-UP” Princess snow white dress size 4/5. Disney store Like new $20 802-475-2417

BRAND NEW LAPTOPS & DESKTOPS Bad Credit. No Credit. No Problem! Small weekly payments - Order today and get FREE Nintendo WII game system! Call now 800838-8209

PITTSBURGH STEALERS Winter Jacket, mens medium, reversible, never been worn $75 OBO. 802-388-7035 SEARS CAR top cargo carrier, like new $75 OBO 802-773-6517 WEDDING GOWN size 8, long sleeves, $100, great condition. 802-775-4926

APPLIANCES BIG WORKING color Zenith TV 25”diagonal needs converter box. $50 518 359 2728 (518) 359-2728 FREEZER 15.2 cu.ft. GE,upright $50 (518) 359-3422 GAS STOVE - Hardwick apartment size propane, 20”x24”. Great for camp. $60. 518766-2219 GE GLASS top electric stove. Exc. cond., bisque, changed appl. colors. must see. $345 (518) 561-8858 JENNAIRE FOUR BURNER ELECTRIC COOKTOP STOVE WITH ADDITIONAL JENNAIRE OPTION. FREE (518) 562-2371 MAYTAG ELECTRIC dryer, excellent shape, runs fine $100. 802-773-8782 STOVE, ELECTRIC, works, manual included, switched to gas, $35. 518-547-9499 USED DRYER, White, Good condition $99.00, Leave message, 518-563-9746 USED ESTATE Whirlpool Washer White, clean, works well, $150.00. Call 518-4933663 anytime. WASHERS & DRYERS Most makes & models, many to choose from. 6 mo. warranty. Free delivery & set-up. Call anytime. 802-376-5339 or 802-245-3154. WHIRLPOOL HEAVY duty L.P.G. dryer, good running condition, Asking $100 OBO. 518-643-0269

BLISS FARM SINCE 1940 TOP QUALITY HAY & SHAVINGS @$4.75/BAG 1” & 2” CUT SQUARE BALES BAGGED SHAVINGS ACCEPTING VISA & MASTERCARD PICK-UP OR DELIVERY AVAILABLE 802-875-2031

ALL CASH Vending! Do you earn $800/day? Local Vending routes. 25 machines + candy. $9,995. 1-800-807-6485. (Void/SD,CT,MD)

BASKETBALL SNEAKER Men’s Reebok White Size 7 Brand New $45 (518) 566-7609

FUR COAT, full length, Small-medium, Dark Brown $250. 802-773-9512

FARM PRODUCTS

BUSINESS SERVICES

ROUND BALES of dry hay in barn. Not wrapped. 1st cut $35, 2nd cut $50. Delivery extra. Jim Tucker 802-885-4669.

FINANCIAL SERVICES $35 CREDIT REPAIR. Legal and affordable credit repair. Pay-as-you-go. Bankruptcies, repos, collections, late payments, we can help. Free Credit Score. www.CreditRepair35.com, 1-888-554-6622. $NEED CASH FAST$. www.TOPPLUSCASH.COM $500, $1000, $1500 direct to your account. No Credit History Required. Get CASH. Complete Details. www.TOPPLUSCASH.com BURIED IN CREDIT CARD DEBT? We can get you out of debt in months instead of years. America’s only truly attorney driven program. Free, no obligation consultation. 877-469-1433 CREDIT PROBLEMS!! We legally remove bad credit to help raise credit scores. Member Better Business Bureau. 1-888-6871300.

BRAND NEW Laptops & Desktops Bad Credit, No Credit No Problem Small Weekly Payments Order & get FREE Nintendo WII system! 1-800-804-5010

LAWSUIT LOANS? Cash before your case settles. Auto, workers comp. All cases accepted. Fast approval. $500 to $50,000 866-709-1100 www.glofin.com

BRAND NEW Laptops & Desktops Bad Credit, No Credit No Problem Small Weekly Payments Order & get FREE Nintendo WII system! 1-800-804-7273

MONEY PROBLEMS? Consolidate bills! Reduce debt by 60%. All credit accepted. No application fees. 1-800-764-5603

BRAND NEW Laptops & Desktops. Bad credit, No credit - No problem. Small weekly payments - Order & get FREE Nintendo WII system! 1-800-816-6967

WANT TO PURCHASE Minerals and other oil/gas interests. Send details to: P.O. Box 13557, Denver, CO 80201

FIREWOOD

BRAND NEW Laptops & Desktops. Bad credit, No credit - No problem. Small weekly payments - Order & get FREE Nintendo WII system! 1-800-932-3598

AMP TIMBER HARVESTING, INC. SEASONED & DRY FIREWOOD CUT - SPLIT - DELIVERED PRICING VARIES BY LOCATION 802-874-7260 EVENINGS 802-254-0680

GET A NEW COMPUTER Brand Name laptops & Desktops BAD or No Credit No Problem Smallest weekly payments avail. It’ s Yours NOW 1-800-932-3721

FOR SALE: RCA 47” Big Screen TV; Box style approx. 6 years old works great $200 obo please call for further information (518) 335-9103 MICRO GEM HD digital to Analog receiver never used, old TV quit, $45. 518-563-3845

FARM LIVESTOCK BEEFALO. QUALITY Federally inspected meat available, 30% less cholesterol. Grass fed, raised naturally. $5.95/lb. Tracer Brook Farm in Cavendish. 802-7382442. QUALITY 1ST HAY Delivered Nearby Allan Churchill 802-886-8477

FOR SALE (2) 4X7 wood garage doors w/ windows. $150. 802-885-8259. 1/2 bag cement mixer. Like new - used once. Easily removed. Tilts 2 ways, electric drive. $250/firm. 802-885-2094. 1/2 price insulation, 4x8 sheets, high R, up to 4” thick, Blue Dow, 1/2” insul board. 518-5973876 or Cell 518-812-4815 1500 WATT Zone heater, 120V 60HZ, thermostat control, used one month $200. 518493-2229 1980 NEW Yorker Boiler, Model WC-130. Save on heating costs w/this add-on wood/coal boiler. $800/OBO. 802-885-4947. 2 17” wheels for 2004 Cadillac CTS $300; Hardwood Staircase, includes stairs, spindles, railings, paneling, door $800; Siegler oil stove $125; Alaska Stoker Coal stove, burns Rice coal $750. 518-585-6276 2 FIFTH wheels, up to 15000 lb. capacity. $50 and $100. PU box liner, good condition. Fits 8 ft box. $100. (518) 563-4738 3 HP Sea King $75.00. Call Mike 518-8345130 30 GALLON aquarium/terrarium tank new perfect condition $55 (518)585-7484 4 ANTIQUE cast iron bath tubs- ex. condition $499.00 takes all. 518-359-8084 4 WHITE Pine 2” Rough cut boards, 12 & 14ft. long, 12 to 16” wide, clear $100. 518562-2187 Plattsburgh, NY 70,000 BTU cozy propane room heater, works excellent, $250.00 OBO. 518-4942677 ALUMINUM STORM Windows, various sizes. Excellent condition. $20. (518) 5859153 ANTIQUE RED one horse sleigh $450 OBO. Call anytime 518-963-4577 BEIGE MERIAN Standard Toilet, like new, glass shower doors, all hardware, $55.00 802-434-2729. BOYS BIKE 15” wheel, $15. 518-543-8850 CLEANING OUT sewing room, excellent quality upholstery and general fabrics, under $5. 518-493-5341

FIREWOOD CUT, split & delivered, $195 a cord green, $275 a cord dry. VT Certified wood dealer. Call Dave 802-349-5085

CLOROX MOP & Pads for $12.00. 518-5616758 Clothes Dryer Maytag electric, $200 OBO; Clothes washer Maytag, needs water pump $100. 518-834-1166

FIREWOOD CUT, split & delivered. Please call 802-885-9382 and leave a message.

DARTON COMPOUND BOW READY TO SHOOT . NEW FIBEROPTIC SIGHTS AND STRING . $125.00 (518) 563-8090

ELECTRONICS FAX MACHINE / HP 1040 $25. 518-6478416

16897

SEMI-SEASONED firewood. $195/cord. Delivered. $250/cord dried. Also buy timber in log lots. GMF Services, LLC. 603-4778270 or 802-591-1137.

FIREWOOD FOR sale. $150/cord. Will deliver, Grafton, Chester, Rockingham. 802-8691277. FIREWOOD FOR Sale. Full measured cord. Delivered 15 miles from Rockingham. $180. 802-463-9683 GREEN FIREWOOD for sale. Cut, split & delivered. $175/cord 2 cord loads. 802-2639673. PREMIUM HARDWOOD Pellets, less than 1% ash, delivery in Rutland, VT $10 per ton THIS WEEK ONLY! $284 per ton. 518-6429155 WOODSTOVE VERMONT Casting Vigilant 8” -flue good condition asking $250 518-8919021

DISH NETWORK. $19.99/mo, Why Pay More For TV? 100+ Channels. FREE 4Room Install. FREE HD-DVR. Plus $600 Sign-up BONUS. Call Now! 1-888-430-9664 DRAFTING TABLE includes machine $250.00. 518-963-7144

drafting

ELECTRIC FENCE, flexible netting,134’X20”, keep small critters out or chickens in. $80. (518) 543-6281 ELECTRIC SCOOTER (Sunshine), new condition, needs battery. $100. 518-523-1720 HIGH COST of Cable Got You Down? GET DISH w/FREE FREE installation! Over 50 Free HD Channels! Lowest Prices! Call 800240-8112.

FLEXIBLE NETTING electric fencing 134 ft . Keeps small critters out or chickens in. $80. 518-543-6281.

WATER HOSE and Sewer Hose for motor home or camper, never used, $35.00. 518834-5068

ELECTRONIC AIR Hockey Table excellent shape (518) 562-2002

WHITE JEANS Free Arm Sewing Machine Model 1787 with instruction book. Like new. $50.00 518-298-5249

FIREWOOD $175/cord; Pellets $225/ton; Pellet Stove $1500; Dune buggies 250cc $2000.; 150cc $1500; Queen bed $50; King bed $75; Boat w/tubes $1800; Nissan pickup $2000; Kia-Rio $1000; Full size head board, rails, dresser w/mirror, 2 side tables $125; 2 glass shelved hutches w/lights $125 Call Charity or Fran 802-259-2214 FIVE BLADE Ceiling Fan with light for sale $20 Call 518-643-9391 FRIEDRICH 10,000 BTU Air Conditioners. Great Shape. Uses Standard wall outlets. $250. Keene Valley 518-576-2285 LARGE SNOW Blower $375. 518-293-8468 LEATHER LIVING ROOM SET in original plastic, never used. Original price $3,000, sacrifice $975. Call Bill 857-453-7764 LIKE NEW ventless gas fireplace, Paid $650 sell for $250. 518-534-5987 LONG LAKE 10spd., bikes, good condition $35 or make offer. 518-624-2699 MARLIN 35 caliber lever action, scope, sling, recoil pad, 2 yrs. old. $350 firm. PSE Thunderbolt compound bow, 50-60 lb. draw, 4 yrs old. $350. 802-885-3041 leave message. MEADOWBROOK CART excellent condition, draft horse size, $2,200 OBO Must Sell. 518-563-3716 leave message. MEAT BAND Saw with Stainless Steel Table with 1hp motor $475.00. 518-639-5353 MEMCO WOOD-fired boiler w/domestic hot water coil. Takes 18” wood. $750. 802-4630619. MEMORY FOAM THERAPEUTIC NASA VISCO MATTRESSES WHOLESALE! T$299 F-$349 Q-$399 K-$499 ADJUSTABLES - $799 FREE DELIVERY 25 YEAR WARRANTY 90 NIGHT TRIAL 1-800ATSLEEP 1-800-287-5337 WWW.MATTRESSDR.COM NEUTRON MOTORIZED wheelchair by Invecare. Head rest, arm rests, oxygen holder, & tray. New $5700. Asking $2500. 6515438/594-3125. PICTURE WINDOW - 8’ x 53” w/2 side slideup. Great condition. $125 OBO (518)5612125 PING-PONG table by Harvard Sports, like new, $100 firm, on Lake George. 518-6563088 STIHL ARBORIST 30cc chainsaw, model 311y. 30cc, 14”bar, micro chain. $50 518576-2258 STOP PAYING too much for TV! Get DISH w/FREE install plans, FREE HBO & Showtime & FREE DVR upgrade. Call FREE for full details. 1-877-554-2014. SUNBEAM BREADMAKER, book,like new, $18. 802-483-2618

WOOD SHELVING 1”x7” or 1”x15”x32”. 80’ steel brackets + clips. $30. 518-576-4592

FURNITURE 38” ROUND drop leaf lt. oak table, 4 chairs, excellent condition. Asking $125.00. 518503-5054 ANTIQUE LANE cedar chest. Asking $150. Call 802-299-7602. ARMOIRE CEDAR lined, 61” high x 35” wide x 22” deep, $100. 518-251-2160 BEIGE, FLORAL 6’ couch, excellent condition. $65. In Proctorsville. 802-226-7420. COMPUTER CENTER 4 1/2 ‘ long, like new, $100. 518-891-2692 DARK PINE Bedroom set - 5 pieces with hutch dresser $400.00 Call (518) 6421751 GREEN LEATHER Sofa, opens to full size bed, like new. Asking $100. 518-891-0388 MATTRESS SETS **100% New** Twin mattress and box sets starting from $89, Full sets from $135, Queen sets from $144, King Sets from $290. Underpriced Warehouse 802846-7622. MEMORY FOAM Mattress **100% New** Twin Mattress from $225, Full from $299, Queen from $339, King from $399. Underpriced Warehouse 802-846-7622. OVAL DINNING room table with six chairs and two extra leafs. Excellent condition. Color: dark oak. $425. PLATFORM BED + Plush Pillowtop Mattress Combo **100% New** Both w/10 yr. warranty. Twin Combo from $329, Full Combo from $449, Queen Combo from $499, King Combo from $649. Underpriced Warehouse 802-846-7622. QUEEN SIZE Bed, dressers, nightstand, and matching mirror. Dark wood laminated. Great shape. $400 (518) 891-5962 SOFA BED with denim cover Free. 518-4937343 TWIN SIZE frame, box spring & mattress. Exceptionally clean. $50. 802-885-2451 TWO SEATER sofa, excellent condition. Brown floral print, was $500, sell for $250. Two throw pillows. Beautiful. 802-287-2374 USED ELECTRIC Hospital Beds. Sold “As Is” in Good Condition. $200.00 per bed. Buyer Pickup Only. (518) 251-2447 WOODEN EARLY American diningroom table w/4 chairs, 2 leaves, Formica top, excellent condition. 518-846-8839

GARAGE SALES

recipe

TOYOSTOVE FUEL Lifter Pump OPT-91UL for kerosene heater, $400 new, used one season, $200. 518-963-4582 TOYOTOMI DIRECT Vent OM-22 Oil Miser Oil Heating System (Kerosene) Used Ω a Season $475.518-569-8170 TRAILERS. SALE or Rent, landscape, construction, auto, motorcycle, open/enclosed cargo, snowmobile, 4 wheeler, steel or aluminum, horse and livestock. Connecticut Trailers, Bolton, CT 877-869-4118

ESTATE SALE: Springfield, Sat-9/26, 8-4 rain/shine, 187 Fairground Hts, antiques, books, dishes, craft & sewing materials, 78-records & more. MULTI-FAMILY Yard Sale, Friday, Sept. 25 & Saturday, Sept 26, 9am to 3pm. 1 Juniper Hill Road (Pedden Acres). Bunk beds, table, chairs, baby clothes/furniture, picture frames, toys, household items, much more. Proceeds to benefit Kenyan orphans.

Heyont The Super Store offers FREE CLASSIFIED ADS in: Rutland Tribune m r Now Take the time to sell those no longer needed items! The Eagle e V Mail To: New Market Press 16 Creek Rd., Suit 5A Middlebury,VT 05953 Attn: Leslie

ON LINE: denpubs.com EMAIL: newmarketpress@denpubs.com

Rules: • • • • • • • •

Merchandise ads only Private ads only. No business ads accepted Limit one item per ad. Maximum 15 words per ad. Item price must be under $499 and clearly stated in ad. New Market Press reserves the right to reject any advertising. Ad Runs for 3 weeks Limited 1 ad per household. No Animals

Fax To: 802-388-6399

*NO ADS TAKEN BY PHONE. ALL ADS MUST CONTAIN A PHONE NUMBER & A PRICE, NO EMAIL ADDRESSES.

UNDER $ 499 FREE

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GARAGE SALES

GENERAL

FRIDAY/SATURDAY/Sunday, Sept. 25/26/27, 9am-5pm, 488 Andover Rd, Ludlow (off 100 South). Antiques, household items, woodworking tools, washer, dryer, freezer.

* REDUCE YOUR CABLE BILL! * - Get a 4room, all-digital satellite system installed for FREE and programming starting under $20. Free Digital Video Recorders to new callers. So call now, 1-800-795-3579.

SATURDAY, SEPT. 26th, 9am-2pm. Old, new & in between. 2495 Hapgood Pond Rd. in Peru, Vt.

**ALL SATELLITE Systems are not the same. HDTV programming under $10 per month and FREE HD and DVR systems for new callers. CALL NOW 1-800-799-4935 AIRLINE MECHANIC Train for high paying Aviation Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified Job placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance. 866-854-6156

WE’RE helping our family clear out a house. Weather permitting Saturday, Sept. 26th, 8am-4pm, 142 Union St., Springfield, VT. It’s definitely worth checking out. A bit of everything reasonably priced!

AIRLINE MECHANIC: Train for high paying Aviation Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified - Job placement assistance. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance. 866-453-6204. Call and place your listing at 1-800-989-4237

AIRLINES ARE HIRING Train for high paying Aviation Maintenance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified Housing available. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance (888) 686-1704 ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from Home. *Medical, *Business, *Paralegal, *Accounting, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. Call 800-510-0784 www.CenturaOnline.com ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from home. Medical, Business, Paralegal, Accounting, Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial aid if qualified. Call 800-494-3586 www.CenturaOnline.com BRAND NEW Laptops & Desktops. Bad credit, No credit - No problem. Small weekly payments - Order & get FREE Nintendo WII system! 1-800-932-4501 DISH NETWORK $19.99/mo, 100+ channels. FREE 4-room Install & FREE 2-Room DVR! Call Now! 1-800-727-0305

Addison County Solid Waste Management District

SATURDAY September 26, 2009

CHERRY BEDROOM SET. Solid wood, never used, brand new in factory boxes. English dovetail. Original cost $4500. Sell for $795. Can deliver. Call Tom 617-395-0373. DIRECTV’ S Best Package FREE 5 Months! 265+ Channels + Movies with NFL Sunday Ticket Order! FREE DVR/HD Upgrade! Other Packages from $29.99 Details Call DirectStarTV 1-800-279-5698 DO YOU SUFFER SEVERE OCD?3 WEEKS FREE INTENSIVE THERAPY CALL OR EMAIL ASAP888-772-7973 / THEOCDPROJECT@GMAIL.COM EARN COLLEGE DEGREE ONLINE *Medical, *Business, *Paralegal, *Accounting, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. Call 800-509-3308 www.CenturaOnline.com EARN UP to $30 per hour. Experience not Required. Undercover shoppers needed to judge retail and dining establishments. Call 800-742-6941 FREE DIRECTV’S BEST PACKAGE 5 months! 265+ Channels + Movies with NFL Sunday Ticket Order! No start costs. Free DVR/HD Upgrade! Other packages from $29.99. Details call DirectStarTV. 1-800-3061953 FREE DIRECTV’S BEST PACKAGE 5 months! 265+ Channels + Movies with NFL Sunday Ticket Order! No start costs. Free DVR/HD Upgrade! Other packages from $29.99. Details call DirectStarTV. 1-800-9739027

Transfer Station – Saturday Winter Hours Effective October 1, 2009 Saturday – 9:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.

FREE DIRECTV’ s Best Package 5 Months! 265+ Channels + Movies with NFL Sunday Ticket Order! FREE DVR/HD Upgrade! Other packages from $29.99 Details Call DirectStarTV 1-800-620-0058

Household Hazardous Waste Hours: Sat – 9:00 a.m. – Noon Mon – Fri hours remain the same – see website for details Questions – 802-388-2333 or www.acswmd.org 35158

Ch e ck ou t th e se

OCEAN CORP. Houston, Texas. Train for New Career. Underwater Welder, Commercial Diver, NDT/Weld Inspector. Job placement and financial aid for those who qualify, 1-800-321-0298. OLD GUITARS WANTED! Fender, Gibson, Gretsch, Martin, D’ Angelico, Stromberg, Rickenbacker, and Mosrite. Gibson Mandolins/Banjos. 1930’ s thru 1970’ s TOP CASH PAID! These brands only please. 1800-401-0440 PERSONALIZED CHILDREN’ S BOOKS. 24-page, hardcover books use your child’ s name throughout story. Dozens of books only $9.95. FREE SHIPPING! SATISFACTION GUARANTEED! Happy Kids Productions. 1800-543-7687 or happykidspersonalized.com/free

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Deadlines: Friday 4pm Zone A Rutland Tribune The Eagle

Monday 4pm Zone B Clinton County Today North Countryman Tri-Lakes Today Valley News

Monday 4pm Zone C Times of Ti Adirondack Journal News Enterprise

*Payment must be received before classified ad can be published. All business ads are excluded. Example - Rentals, Pets, Firewood, etc... Call for business rates.

What Towns Do The Zones Cover? ZONE A Covers The Towns Of... Rutland, Brandon, Center Rutland, Chittenden, Cuttingsville, Pittsford, N.clarendon, Proctor, Wallingford, West Rutland, Bristol, Huntington, Ferrisburg, Monkton, New Haven, N.ferrisburg, Starkboro, Vergennes, Bridport, Middlebury, Orwell, Salisbury, Shoreham, Charlotte, Hinesburg, Shelburne, Williston, Burlington, Richmond.

ZONE B Covers The Towns Of... Altona, Champlain, Chazy, Mooers, Mooers Forks, Rouses Point, West Chazy, Plattsburgh, Parc, Peru, Schuyler Falls, Morrisonville, Cadyville, Saranac, Dannemora, Elizabethtown, Lewis, New Russia, Westport, Willsboro, Essex, Ausable Forks, Keeseville, Port Kent, Jay, Upper Jay, Wilmington, Keene, Keene Valley, Bloomingdale, Lake Clear, Lake Placid, Raybrook, Saranac Lake, Vermontville, Tupper Lake, Piercefield, Paul Smith, Rainbow Lake, Gabriels.

ZONE C Covers The Towns Of... Hague, Huletts Landing, Paradox, Putnam Station, Severence, Silver Bay, Ticonderoga, Crown Point, Mineville, Moriah, Moriah Center, Port Henry, Schroon Lake, North Hudson, Bakers Mills, Blue Mountain Lake, Indian Lake, Johnsburg, Long Lake, Minerva, Newcomb, North Creek, North River, Olmstedville, Riparius, Sabael, Wevertown, Raquette Lake, Adirondack, Athol, Bolton Landing, Brant Lake, Chestertown, Diamond Point, Lake George, Pottersville, Stony Creek, Warrensburg.

PROMOTE YOUR product, service or business to 1.4 MILLION HOUSEHOLDS throughout New England. Reach 4 million potential readers quickly and inexpensively with great results. Use the Buy New England Classified Ad Network by calling this paper or 877-423-6399. Do they work? You are reading one of our ads now!! Visit our website to see where your ads run cpne.biz

Mail to... Classified Dept. Denton Publications • P.O. Box 338 Elizabethtown, NY 12932 You may also use these other methods to submit your ad: Fax to: 518-873-6360 eMail to: classifieds@denpubs.com Local: (518) 873-6368 x 201

READER ADVISORY: the National Trade Association we belong to has purchased the following classifieds. Determining the value of their service or product is advised by this publication. In order to avoid misunderstandings, some advertisers do not offer employment but rather supply the readers with manuals, directories and other materials designed to help their clients establish mail order selling and other businesses at home. Under NO circumstance should you send any money in advance or give the client your checking, license ID, or credit card numbers. Also beware of ads that claim to guarantee loans regardless of credit and note that if a credit repair company does business only over

HELP WANTED! CERTIFIED MECHANIC NEEDED LeRoy’s 24 Hour Towing & Repair Only Certified Mechanics Need Apply

Call (518) 546-7505

QUILTERS: MOST INCREDIBLE FABRIC STORE. Definitely worth visit, good prices, high quality, nice people. Ryco’ s, 25 Carrington Street, Lincoln, RI 800-551-8277. E-mail for newsletter pat@rycotrim.com RECEIVE $1000 in Groceries! Real relief program helping people just like you! Pay only $4.90 for your grocery voucher. Use on your favorite brands! Consumer Advocate Response introductory price. 1-800-4309507 RECEIVE $1000 IN GROCERIES! Real relief program helping people just like you! Pay only $4.90 for your grocery voucher. Use on your favorite brands! Consumer Advocate Response introductory price - 800-417-9847.

GUNS/AMMO 30-30 Model 94 Winchester $250.00. 518623-3407 MODEL 742 Remington 280 Caliber, 4 boxes ammo, excellent shape $498.00. 518-5467221 REMINGTON 1100LT 20ga with 2 barrels, never fired, $450.00. Call 802-482-3194

HORSES/ACCESS. RIDERS INT. Clothing turn-out horse blanket, 80/82, Green, used, Free, 518-351-5011 leave msg

Find what you’re looking for here!

GUARANTEED LIFETIME INCOME Working from home. Offered by a 17 year old company. Sky’ s the limit. Free training with a proven success system. 1-800-3108482 makemoney@earnware.net HONEST INCOME from home processing our mortgage assistance postcards. No advertising. Postage and materials provided. References available. No gimmicks. 877774-9295 HONEST INCOME from home processing our mortgage assistance postcards. No advertising. Postage and materials provided. References available. No gimmicks. 877774-9295.

ALL CASH VENDING! Do you earn $800 in a day? Your own Local Vending Route. 25 Machines and Candy for $9,995. 1-800-9208301 (Not valid in CT.)

HELP WANTED $$$ 21 PEOPLE Wanted $$$ Earn $1,200 $4,400 Weekly Working From Home Assembling Information Packets. No Experience Necessary! Start Immediately! FREE Information. Call 24hrs. 1-888-2982090 $$$ START NOW $$$ Earn Extra Income. Assembling CD Cases from home! No Experience Necessary. Call our Live Operators for more information! 1-800-4057619 Ext 2181 www.easywork-greatpay.com Call us at 1-800-989-4237

$$$WORK FROM HOME$$$ Earn Up To $3,800 Weekly Working from Home assembling Information packets. No Experience Necessary! Start Immediately! FREE Information. CALL 24hrs. 1-888-202-1012 $12.00 GUARANTEED for every envelope stuffed with our sales materials. FREE 24hr information. 1-877-220-4470. ** AWESOME CAREER** Government Postal Jobs! $17.80 to $59.00 hour Entry Level. No Experience Required / NOW HIRING! Green Card O.K. Call 1-800-370-0146 ext. 52 ASSEMBLE MAGNETS & CRAFTS FROM HOME! Year-round Work! Excellent Pay! No Experience! Top US Company! Glue Gun, Painting, Jewelry & More! TOLL FREE 1866-844-5091, code 5 **Not available MD**

AWESOME TRAVEL JOB! Publication Sales hiring 18 sharp, enthusiastic individuals to travel the USA. Travel, training, lodging, transportation provided. 1-800-781-1344 EARN $1100 Weekly Assembling Toys From Home. NO selling & NO recruiting needed! www.safwal.com EARN UP to $500 weekly assembling our angel pins in the comfort of your home. No experience required. Call 813-699-4038 or 813-425-4361 or visit www.angelpin.net MYSTERY SHOPPERS! Earn up to $150 daily. Get paid to shop pt/ft. Call now 800690-1272.

WANTED ****WANTED TO BUY**** Diabetic Test Strips. Cash paid up to $10/box. Call Wayne at 781-724-7941. SAXTONS RIVER AUCTION CO. Buying & Selling Estates & Single Items Probate Appraisal Service & Clean Outs 37 Westminster West Rd. Saxtons River, VT 802-869-3200 Days 802-885-3050 Nights U.S. SILVER COINS or entire collections. Call 1-877-857-7852. Littleton Coin Company, trusted since 1945. Visit us on the web at www.LittletonCoin.com/SELLYOURCOINS. Reference B8Y100 WANTED FREE Kids Beds, girls clothing size 8, shoes size 3-3 1/2, good used rugs. Call 518-534-8366. WANTED FREE Quilting material. Call 518563-6386

LAWN SWEEPER like new, 1yr. old, used 3 times, new $269 sell for $150 firm. After 8pm 518-643-2651

WANTED TO BUY

YARDMAN (MOWER) for parts, 14.5 Kohler engine, runs great, asking $200 neg., Rob 518-576-9045

MUSIC

WANTED DIABETES TEST STRIPS Any Kind/Any brand Unexpired. Pay up to $16.00 per box. Shipping Paid. Call 1-713-395-1106 or 1-713-343-3050 ext. 1. www.cash4diabetestestrips.com

HEALTH

APPROX. 200 LP albums, jazz and big band. In original jackets. $200 OBO. (518) 3592876 CLARINET, FLUTE, VIOLIN TRUMPET, Trombone, Amplifier, Fender Guitar, $69. each. Cello, Upright Bass, Saxophone, French Horn, Drums $185. each. Tuba, Baritone Horn, Hammond Organ, Others 4 sale. 1-516-377-7907. SONY CAROUSEL CD player (5 Disc tray) in ex. cond. needs system to connect to bought new $250. A steal at $30. Call 518-563-6900

PETS & SUPPLIES 27 GAL., Hexagon fish tank $100.00. 518563-3716 leave message. BEAUTIFUL FAMILY Raised AKC Chocolate, Yellow, & Black Lab puppies, 1st shots, $400. 518-529-0165 or 315-244-3855 BOSTON TERRIER puppies. Male & female available. Mostly trained. $500. Taking deposits. Ready Sept. 16th. 603-352-1082 ask for Gail. ENGLISH SPRINGER spaniel 18mth old female for sale. $100.00 call 518-546-9918 or 518-570-1022 (518) 546-9918 FREE KITTENS. 3 gray, 2 black & white, some double paws. Ready to go. Mother also needs home. Relocating. Mother is 6, timid, but great cat for an older cat. Call Pat Crawford 802-885-4610. FREE TO A good home Lab Akita mix great with kids, 5 yrs. old, 518-546-7009. JACK RUSSELL Terriers, smoothies, shots & dewormed. $350 each. 802-886-2624. LARGE PET-Mate Dog for Large Dog, New unused. $55.00 518-523-3144 STRAIN FAMILY HORSE FARM: 50 horses and ponies to sell. We buy horses, take trade-ins, 2-week exchange guarantee. Supplying horses to the East Coast. www.strainfamilyhorsefarm.com, 860-6533275

PHYSICAL FITNESS TREADMILL “WESLOW” equipment: extra wide adjustable deck, distance,time, calories,speed display, with pulse sensor. $199.99: 802-459-2987 TREADMILL ALMOST new, touch screen display, $400.00. 802-236-3263

SPORTING GOODS

38803

AWESOME CAREER OPPORTUNITY. $20/hr/ $57K/yr, Postal jobs, Pd Training, Vac. Benefits. Call M-F, 8-5CST. 888-3616551, Ext.1034

LUNE WOLF climbing sticks & extensions for a tree stand $100. 802-434-3107

WANTED: REFRIGERATOR in good condition. Cell 802-324-3076.

16902

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

CUSTOM-MADE Western boots, size 10.5D, French calfskin tops, cowhide foot. Excellent condition. $150. 518-534-4539

LAWN & GARDEN

Help Wanted

Need a job? Looking for that “right fit” for your company?

2 CANNON ELECTRIC DOWNRIGGERS, 2 BIG JON ELECTRIC DOWNRIGGERS, SHORT BOOMS, $300 PAIR. (518) 8345223 OR 518-828-4522

FORCE PROTECTION SECURITY DETAILS $73K-$220 Paid Training! Kidnapping Prevention $250-$1000/day Call 1-615-891-1163,Ext.812 www.rlcenterprises.net GOVERNMENT JOBS - $12-$48/hr Paid Training, full benefits. Call for information on current hiring positions in Homeland Security, Wildlife, Clerical and professional. 1-800320-9353 x 2100 LOCAL TYPISTS needed immediately. $400+ PT - $800+FT weekly. Flexible schedules, work from home, training provided 1800-207-6917 LOCAL TYPISTS needed immediately. $400+PT - $800+FT weekly. Flexible schedules, work from home training provided. 1800-207-6917

BUY VIAGRA, Cialis, Levitra, Propecia and other medications below wholesale prices. Call: 1-866-506-8676. Over 70% savings. www.fastmedonline.com ONLINE PHARMACY - BUY Soma, Ultram, Fioricet, Prozac, Buspar, $71.99 for 90 Qty. and $107 for 180 Qty. PRICE INCLUDES PRESCRIPTION! We will match any competitor’ s price! 1-866-632-6978, or www.trirx.info SAVE BIG MONEY IMMEDIATELY! On Doctors, Dentists, Prescriptions, Hospital Charges and other essential services. From $14.95 per month. Existing conditions accepted. 1-800-316-0702 savemoney@earnware.net VIAGRA - SAVE $500! 44 Pills $99.00. 44 Pills $99.00. That’s Right. Satisfaction or money refunded. Call 888-272-9406. VIAGRA/CIALIS SAVE $400 / 40 PILLS $99.00 FREE PRESCRIPTIONS LOWEST PRICES ORDER NOW! 877-590-6337 New Life Inc. VIAGRA/CIALIS. SAVE $400/40 pills $99.00. Free Prescriptions. Lowest prices. Order now. 877-590-6337. New Life Inc.

EDUCATION HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA! Fast Affordable & Accredited. FREE Brochure. Call Now! 1800-532-6546 x412 www.continentalacademy.com CAREER EDUCATION AVIATION MAINTENANCE/AVIONICS. Graduate in 15 Months. FAA Approved; financial aid if qualified. Job placement assistance. Call National Aviation Academy Today! 1-800-292-3228 or NAA.edu HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA FROM HOME. 68 weeks. Accredited. Payment Plan. FREE Brochure. Call Now 1-800-264-8330 www.diplomafromhome.com Benjamin Franklin High School

LEGALS The Eagle Legal deadline Friday @ 3:00pm Please Send Legals By EMAIL To: legals@denpubs.com

NOTICE OF LEGAL SALE View Date 10/13/2009 Sale Date 10/14/2009 Communication Mainstream Aerin Couste HD receivers, Dishes, PBIs, programming HD DVRs, PPC connect Easy Self Storage 46 Swift South Burlington, VT 05403 (802) 863-8300 TE-9/26-10/10/09-3TC-55537 ----------------------------------------

WORK AT HOME. Government Jobs, data entry, clerical benefits. $12-$48 hr. FT/PT. Call 1-888-293-7370.

HELP WANTED/LOCAL ASTA’S in Jamaica Kitchen & restaurant experienced help. Apply in person Tuesday’s or Thursdays or call for appointment 802-874-8000. DRIVERS: HOME Daily! Day Cab. Paid Hol/Vac! Excellent Benefits! CDL-A. 800334-1314 x1155. www.wadhams.com recruiterjim on twitter HOUSEKEEPING IMMEDIATE openings, no experience necessary, apply in person, TBird Motor Inn 4405 Shelburne Road, Shelburne, VT.


www.Addison-eagle.com

SATURDAY September 26, 2009

THE EAGLE - 17

Real Estate

Need a home? Looking for someone to fill that vacancy?

Find what you’re looking for here!

16903

APARTMENT FOR RENT BELLOWS FALLS, VT. 2 bdrm, newly remodeled. Includes heat, electric, plowing, trash, parking. $1,250/mo. Pictures & info http://www.36frontstbf.com. 802-463-1954 BELLOWS FALLS, VT. One-room efficiency, small but cute. $525/mo. includes heat, electric, garbage & snow removal. No smoking/no pets. Security & references required. 802-463-4502. BELLOWS FALLS, VT. Unfurnished, 2nd floor, 1/2 tank free oil, easy access to Rt. 12 and I-91. $600 plus util. $300 dep. Work, personal and present landlord for references. 802-463-9282, call 5-8 p.m. CHESTER, VT. Exquisite 1 bdrm, large LR, DR & plenty of closet space. Heat, HW & trash removal incl. $760/mo. 802-885-6292. CHESTER, VT. Furnished room, private bath/entrance, utilities. $135/week, one month minimum. 802-875-6978 or 802-5796978. CHESTER, VT. Just painted, 500 sq. ft. 1 bdrm, large LR, eat-in kitchen. Heat, trash included. Free storage. $690/mo. Call Neil 802-885-6292. CHESTER, VT. New 1 bdrm apts. $725/$775/mo. Includes HT/HW/parking/plowing. Deck over river. 802-869-2400. www.rootspropertymanagement. FOR RENT: Middlebury 2-3 bedroom apartment. Utilities included (not cable, Net). Spacious sunning deck. Near schools, shops, furnishings, off-street parking. 45 Court St. $1,100 month. Call 802-388-1000. LUDLOW, VT. 1 bdrm apt. $660/mo. Ref. & sec. required. Call Dan 802-885-4345. LUDLOW, VT. 2 bdrm. townhouse w/WD hook-up. New windows. No pets. 1st, last & sec. $675. Utilities not included. 802-8752915. LUDLOW, VT. 2 bedroom apt., unfurnished, washer/dryer, dishwasher. 1st/last & sec. Ref. required. $800/mo. + electric, includes heat. Call 802-228-7664. LUDLOW, VT. Pleasant Street. Upstairs, 1 bedroom, 4-room apt. Appliances, carpeting, on shuttle route. 802-228-5720. MT. HOLLY. Furnished room in quiet, country location. All included. $125/wk. Call Mark 802-259-2549. PROCTORSVILLE, VT. Studio and 1 bdrm apt. includes H/HW, trash & snow removal, laundry facility on site. Call for application. Stewart Property Management. Equal Housing Opportunity. 802-885-7885. Income limits do apply.

ROCKINGHAM, VT. New renovated 2 bdrm, heat, trash & snow removal included. No smoking/pets. $850/mo. 802-463-3018. SOUTH LONDONDERRY, VT. 2 bdrm, 2 bath, on organic farm. DW, fireplace, newly renovated/insulated. No smoking/no pets. $900 + utilities. 802-824-4658. SPRINGFIELD, VT. 1 & 2 BDRM APARTMENTS. NO SMOKING, NO PETS. NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS. CALL 802558-5731. SPRINGFIELD, VT. 1 bdrm $635, 1 bdrm $660, 3 bdrm $1,000. Furnished room w/electric & cable $425. All includes HT/HW/trash/parking. 802-885-1131. SPRINGFIELD, VT. 2bdrm apts. available. Includes HT/HW, trash & snow removal, W/D hookups. Call for application. Stewart Property Management. Equal Housing Opportunity 802-885-7885. Income limits do apply. SPRINGFIELD, VT. 3 bdrm, $775 includes H/HW, trash & snow removal, W/D hookups. Call for application, Stewart Property Management. Equal Housing Opportunity. 802-885-7885. Income limits do apply. SPRINGFIELD, VT. 3 bdrm, W/D hook-up. $975/mo. HT & HW included. 802-885-5836 SPRINGFIELD, VT. 4 bdrm, $1,050. Includes H/HW, trash & snow removal, W/D hookups. Call for application, Stewart Property Management. Equal Housing Opportunity. 802-885-7885. Income limits do apply.

SOUTH LONDONDERRY, VT. Prime 1st floor office. Heat, AC, elec. & off-street parking included. High-speed internet avail. 1/2 bath & kitchenette space. $750/mo. 802-2972007.

HOME FOR RENT ANDOVER, VT. 2BR home. Lg. kitchen, fireplace, tiled bath, granite. 2-car garage. Includes W/D, lawn care, snow removal. Also available newly built lg. 2-story barn/workshop. House $950. Barn/workshop $500. 802-591-0328. CHESTER, VT. 1 bedroom, ground level, rural setting. WD, garage. Spacious yard. $700 includes HT/electric/satellite TV. 203875-2287 after 5pm.

***FREE FORECLOSURE Listings*** OVER 400,000 properties nationwide. Low down payment. Call now 800-250-2043.

MOUNT HOLLY 3 bd, 1 bath house, includes lights. $900/mo. 1st, last, security. Some pets welcome; 4 bd house, 2-1/2 baths, lights included, some pets welcome. 1st, last security, $1200/mo. Call Charity or Fran 802-2592214.

MAINE WATERFRONT BARGAIN. 569’ Waterfront. 10+/- acres. Was $154,900. Now only $89,900. End of summer blowout. Over 569’ stream frontage in country setting. Power, good road frontage and subdividable. Best owner financing terms in town. L & S Realty, 207-781-3294.

NORTH SPRINGFIELD, VT. 1 bdrm with loft. Private, on brook. $755/mo. heat included. Pets negotiable. 1st & last required to move in. 802-376-7363.

SPRINGFIELD, VT. 2-3 bdrm ranch, garage, yard. $1,000/mo. plus utilities. Ref., sec. & dep. required. 802-885-2358.

SPRINGFIELD, VT. Immaculate 2 bdrm in quiet residential neighborhood. $875/mo. includes HT/HW/trash & snow rem. Avail Nov. 1st. Now taking applications. 802-8855550.

SPRINGFIELD, VT. Adorable 2-story house for rent. Porch with nice views. Great parking. Fresh paint and new kitchen floor. Kitchen w/small pantry, appliances. 2nd floor 1 large bedroom or 2 small. 1st, sec., ref. required. 802-869-3386 leave message.

To place your classified ad, call 1-800-989-4237 Monday-Friday 8AM-5 PM

2 BDRM ranch style expanded mobile home. Rt. 11 West Chester. Eat-in kitchen, large dining, living, entry/utility rooms. Double-sink bath. WD hookup. Abundant closet/cabinet space. Storage area and deck. Very nice condition inside and out. Large yard, quiet & sunny setting. Includes snow plowing, yard care, stove, refrigerator & satellite TV. No pets. Application, lease, 1st & sec. required. $750/mo. Call Jerry 802-875-2801.

LUDLOW VILLAGE, VT. 3 bedroom house, private, WD. References & security deposit. 860-460-4005 or 860-536-1037.

SPRINGFIELD, VT. Huge, 1 bdrm, large LR, DR, eat-in kitchen. HT/HW/trash included. $700/mo. Call Neil 802-885-6292.

SOUTH LONDONDERRY, VT. 3 office spaces. Heat, elec., offstreet parking & snow rem. included. 105/sq.ft. $100/mo., 170/sq.ft. $250/mo., 289/sq.ft. $350/mo. 802-2972007.

MOBILE HOME FOR SALE

HISTORIC BUILDINGS downtown Springfield, VT. 2, 3 bdrms, 2, 1 bdrm, 1 furnished 2 bdrm. All fully restored, new appliances. 2 business spaces also available. 550 sq. ft. & 350 sq. ft. Sec. dep., ref. & credit check req. Call John 802-875-5119.

REAL ESTATE

READING VILLAGE, VT. Private home on Rte. 106. 3 bedroom, 1.5 bath, 2-car garage, unfurnished, WD hookup. $1,200/mo. Ref., 1st, last & sec. 802-2752078

COMMERCIAL RENTAL

CHESTER, VT. 4 bdrm, bright, sunny. Good size rooms. New kitchen. Trash/snow rem. included. No smoking/no pets. $1,250/mo. 917-754-1851.

LONDONDERRY, VT. 2 bdrm, no pets/no smoking. $700/mo. 802-875-3902.

SPRINGFIELD, VT. Efficiency & 1 bdrm. apts. available. Sec. & ref. required. Call Dan 802-885-4345.

SPRINGFIELD, VT. Quiet, clean studio/1 bdr apts. Incl. heat/HW, no pets/smoking. Rent weekly or monthly. Sec./ref. required. 800283-8072.

FOR RENT Crown Point, New York 3 bedroom trailer, private back lot, $625/mo., references, deposit & last month required. 518597-3935

HOME IMPROVEMENT NEW UNUSED Anderson double casement window, brown vinyl clad wood, Rough opening 53”X72” ( #CXW 145-2) $300, 518-6449865 or 516-437-2495

MOBILE HOME FOR RENT CROWN POINT New York Mobile home out in the country, $525/mo., References, deposit & last month required. 518-597-3935 Call us at 1-800-989-4237

OWN LAND IN BEAUTIFUL ARIZONA!! NEVER BEEN EASIER! $0 down $0 interest Starting $129/month. 18 lots ONLY! PreRecorded Message (800) 631-8164 mention ad code 5063 or visit www.sunsiteslandrush.com

REAL PROPERTY FOR SALE 5.5 acres on Tarbell Hill in Cavendish. Cleared lot with septic design for 3 bdrm home and power on site. $60k. Please call 802-226-8107. GEORGIA LAND Incredible investment, 1 acre to 20 acres Starting @ $3750/acre. Washington County. Low taxes, beautiful weather. Seller financing w/easy terms from $179/mo. County approved. 706-364-4200

RENTAL WANTED 3 ADULTS with pets looking for a reasonable place to rent or rent to own. Good references. 802-738-5521.

RENTALS CHESTER, VT. 1 bdrm, bright, sunny, charming kitchen. Trash/snow rem. included. No smoking/no pets. $700/mo. 917-7541851.

TOWNSHEND, VT. Sunny, 1.5 bdrm, elec. included. $550/mo. 802-869-1960.

VACATION/ RECREATIONAL RENTALS FALL GETAWAYS: Kennebunkport, Maine. Walk to beach. Midweek 2-3 nights for 2 from $99 - $199 per package. Cottage efficiencies. Shorelands Guest Resort. www.shorelands.com, 1-800-99-BEACH HALLOWEEN MURDER MYSTERY WEEKEND!! On October 23-25, 2009. At the Georgian Resort, Lake George, NY. www.tomcrown.com, call 1-877-866-2769. ST. PETERSBURG, Florida. 1 bedroom condo near beaches, malls, golf and VA hospital. Seasonal or yearly. Reasonable. Call Don 802-259-2763. Call and place your listing at 1-800-989-4237

SERVICE GUIDE

Featuring Products by:

We offer sales and installation of:

Replacement Windows Vinyl Siding Asphalt & Metal Roofs As well as construction of

Additions & Garages

Grover Hills *3 Bdrm duplex - $675 per month

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RENTALS Port Henry

• 2BR Apt., heated, spacious, enclosed porch, hardwood floors, ample parking. Ref. req. $650/mo. • 2BR Apt., newly renovated, hardwood floors, gorgeous! $700/mo. Including heat. Ready October 1.

518-546-7557 COMPLETE CHIMNEY CARE Cleaning • Repairs Stainless Steel Lining Video Camera Inspection Brian Dwyer 1-800-682-1643 388-4077 Member of VT, NYS & National Chimney Sweep Guilds

CONCRETE

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Upgrade your windows this fall or any other building needs. Fully Insured Free Estimates Josh Watson (802) 777-9256 Randy Ouellette (802) 349-5454

P.O. Box 410, Jct. of Routes 7 & 116 East Middlebury, VT 05740 Mon. - Fri. 7:30 - 4:30

Boardman Street, Middlebury, VT

388-9049

21159

SIDING

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WINDOWS/SIDING

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FRIEND 453-2255

CONSTRUCTION BRISTOL, VT

ROOFING Specializing In Asphalt Shingles - Free Estimates - Fully Insured 37417

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General Construction • Roofs • Windows • Garages • Decks • Additions • New Homes • Vinyl Siding We Are One Of Only Two Certified Vinyl Siding Companies In The State!

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• Equipment Installation & Financing • Heating Systems • Service Contracts & 24 Hour Emergency Service

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Call Night Hawk at HIGHLANDS CLINIC OF NORTH AMERICA A: (802) 989-6924, B: 377-7045, or C: 377-9692 for an appointment. 38099

STREAMLINE ROOFING

38147

HEATING

38128

A: Pastoral Counseling (Member AARC) B: Drug & Alcohol Counseling 25 Years of Sobriety Veterans Free (PTSD) C: Dream Analysis (Member A.A.M. Ph.D.) DUI=DON’T DRIVE AGAIN

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38129

Cut heating costs!

ROOFING

Call Today For Your FREE Estimate!

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Why see an (M.A.) when you can see me?

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Call 1-800-989-4237

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38101

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Don’t throw it away those unwanted items. Promote them in the “For Sale” section in the Classifieds. You’ll turn your trash into cash!

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Email: cornerstone-llc@comcast.net www.cornerstone@servicemagic.com

Toll Free: 888-433-0962 Tel: 877-2102

When it’s time to

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WINDOW & SIDING CO., INC.

SELL/RENT YOUR TIMESHARE NOW!!! Maintenance fees too high? Need Cash? Sell your unused timeshare today. No Commissions or Broker Fees. Free Consultation www.sellatimeshare.com 1877-494-8246

Port Henry Trailer - $600 per month.

35135

CONSTRUCTION

SELL/RENT YOUR TIMESHARE NOW!! Maintenance fees too high? Need Cash? Sell your unused timeshare today. No commissions or broker fees. Free consultation. www.sellatimeshare.com, 1-888-310-0115

35172

Place an ad for your business in the Eagle’s Service Guide. Call (802) 388-6397 for information on and rates.

DISCOUNT TIMESHARES SAVE 60%-80% OFF RETAIL!! Worldwide Locations! Call for Free InfoPack. 1-800-639-5319 www.holidaygroup.com/flier

RENTALS

CHIMNEY SWEEP

The Eagle

TIMESHARES

Monkton

35200

50 Industrial Ave., Middlebury

WASTE MANAGEMENT

Marcel Brunet & Sons, Inc.

Windows & Siding

Roll Off Container Service

Please call us for your roofing, remodeling, demolition and new construction projects. Fast, friendly, reliable service and competitive rates.

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Toll Free: 888-433-0962 Phone: 877-2102 • Fax: 877-8390

Owned and Operated by Richard Brunet Since 1981

35228

Vergennes, Vt.

800-439-2644

877-2640

36944


www.Addison-eagle.com

18 - THE EAGLE

4 185-70-14 Snow Tires, Hancook, like new, 2000 miles on them, $150.00. 518-546-7434

Automotive

4 SNOW TIRES, Nordman-2, 215/70 R15 radial, unmounted, used one season. $136. (802) 425-3377

16899

AUTO ACCESSORIES

4 STUDDED Hakkapeliitta 17” snow tires. Fits 05’ Subaru Outback & newer. 1 season’s wear. New $800+, asking $400. 802-2635104.

L OANS A VAILABLE NO CREDIT? BAD CREDIT? BANKRUPTCY?

FIBER GLASS Tono cover for truck bed, 6.5 ft long, taken off Toyota Tacoma, $150 O.B.O. 518-547-8464 FREE - FOUR tires with good tread left. Goodyear Wrangler SR-A, P265/60R18. LongLake 518-624-6690 (518) 624-6690 TRUCK CAP, 8 foot box, excellent condition, w/ boat rack & sliding windows, $300 OBO. 518-327-3402.

AUTO WANTED AAAA ** DONATION Donate your Car Boat or Real Estate. IRS Tax Deductible. Free Pick-up/Tow. Any Model/Condition. Help Under Privileged Children. Outreach Center. 1-800-928-7566

Hometown Chevrolet Oldsmobile 152 Broadway Whitehall, NY • (518) 499-2886 • Ask for Joe

14226

Automotive & Ti r s ’ d a h

T (802) 453-7780 • Thadeus Sorrell, Owner e

DONATE YOUR CAR. FREE TOWING. “Cars for Kids”. Any condition. Tax deductible Outreach Center. 1-800-597-9411 DONATE YOUR CAR- Help families in need! Fair Market Value Tax Deduction Possible Through Love Inc. Free towing. Non-runners OK. Call for details. 800-549-2791

SATURDAY September 26, 2009

AAAA DONATION. Donate your car, boat or real estate. IRS tax deductible. Free pick up/ Tow any model/ Condition. Help underprivileged children Outreach Center. 1-800-8836399

CANOE OLD Town 16’ Red, Discovery model 169, excellent condition, $399. Call 518-623-5063

BOATS

$500! POLICE Impounds for Sale! Cars, Trucks, SUVs’ from $500! Hondas, Chevys, Jeeps, Toyotas And More! For Listings 800489-1981

1982 WELLCRAFT 20’ Cuddy, 270HP Merc Cruiser, excellent condition, well maintained, full canvas, Bimini Top, full cover, galvanized trailer, Sacrifice @ $3500 Firm. 518-585-7630

1963 MERC. Benz 220S 4-speed auto., 83,456 orig. miles, 4-D sedan, orig. inside & out. Only rust on this car is just over & behind top of headlights. Asking $2,900. 802-4639443

1986 18’ VIP bow rider & Force 125HP outboard motor. Well maintained, ready to water ski. Trailer included. $1,200. (518) 4944398.

1985 JEEP Laredo 304 V-8 engine, 4-speed shift w/6” lift set for trail riding. $3,900. Please call office hours 212-757-9433.

1990 YAMAHA Wave Runner III Mechanic’s Special. Idles rough, needs carb work. Adirondack, $300.00 (631)-463-8843

1993 HONDA Civic, runs great, auto, approx. 200K miles,38+ mpg service up to date, BB value $1500 OBO. 518-494-3872

BOAT, CANOE & ATV Winter Storage. ATV’s & Canoe’s inside storage $50 for the Season; Boats inside storage $20 per ft., outside storage $10 a ft. Contact 518-597-4516.

1996 SUBARU Legacy, hatch, w/leather interior, many new parts, needs brake line, runs awesome, $1200 neg. NADA 2.600to 3.200. Rob 518-576-9045

KAYAK SPRAY skirt, for Kayak Cockpit measuring 21 1/2” wide X 40” long, brand new, never used, tags still on. New $50. Asking $40 Call 518-873-2424

2003 JEEP Liberty, 6 cyl., auto. 80,500 miles, silver w/black interior. New tires. $7,950. Aug. VT inspection. Call 802-3769446.

Foreign or Domestic Gas • Oil • Inspections Minor & Major Repairs Computer Diagnostic Electrical Troubleshooting

1993 NISSAN pathfinder runs great, new tires $500 or best offer call 518-321-5474 WANTED JAPANESE MOTORCYCLES KAWASAKI,1970-1980, Z1-900, KZ900, KZ1000, H2-750, H1-500, S1-250, S2-250, S2-350, S3-400. CASH PAID. 1-800-7721142. 1-310-721-0726.

FARM EQUIPMENT 2000 KIOTI LK3054 Tractor set-up for forestry work. Ex. condition w/low hours. Asking $7,900. Call Donald 802-463-4909. Leave message. 84 MASSEY MODEL 1105, 3500 hrs., runs excellent, recently serviced, 18.4 x 38 rear tires w/chains, industrial loader w/8’ bucket, yr. round cab, new paint $9000. 518-5230120 FORD MODEL 1720 Diesel Tractor. 4Wdrive, 3 point hitch, 1004 hrs, hydrostat transmission, cab heater, power steering, new battery, 7’ Fisher plow, Ford grader blade-turf tires, chains, like new. Asking $10,900/OBRO. 802-463-9443. NH 258 Rake with Dolly wheels $2850; NH 256 $1400; NH 256 $1850 with dolly wheels; JD 310 R Baler $3050; Bush Hogs $300 up. 518-639-5353.

HONDA

58 West Street, Bristol, Vermont 05443

Monday - Friday 6am-5pm

CARS FOR SALE

2006 JEEP Grand Cherokee Laredo. 42,500 miles. Silver w/gray interior. New tires, mint. Oil/filter change every 3,000 miles. $14,000/OBO. 802-297-3631.

GREAT SAVINGS WHILE THEY LAST! Hurry In While Selection Is Great!

MOTORCYCLE/ ATV

2009 HONDA CIVIC LX 4 DOOR SEDAN

2002 KAWI Drifter custom, one of a kind, 15K invested, 1500 CC, asking $8K OBO, many extras, to many to list. Call for info 518576-9045 Rob. 2003 HARLEY Davidson, Anniversary Edition low rider, 30K miles, manufacturers warranty until 2010, to many extras to list, $9000 518-623-4565

Model #FA1659EW Stock #09H1223

2005 HONDA VTX1300R, 10,000 miles, too many extras to list, excellent condition. $7,500. 802-885-3170.

38141

H & M AUTO SUPPLY

REC VEHICLES SALES/RENTALS

“EVERY DAY LOW PRICES” FOREIGN ~ DOMESTIC ~ CUSTOM MADE HYDRAULIC HOSES

1995 FLEETWOOD pop-up, reasonably good condition w/roof rack. $1,500/OBO. Trades. 802-885-3041 leave message.

• Automatic • Anti Lock Brakes • Power Windows, Locks and Mirrors

Hinesburg

Open 8-5 Monday - Saturday

26

199

36 Months/36,000 Miles

per month

1997 AMERICAN Star Fifth Wheel, 33 WRKD/Slide, tub/shower, 17’ awning, ladder, power jacks, spare tire, rear hitch, no smoke, excellent condition. $12,000 518-494-7801.

Or A.P.R. As Low As 1.9%

HONDA

38135

Route 7, Shelburne 1-802-985-8411 • 1-800-639-8033

35011

Route 116

PARTS PLUS!

$

ABOVE LEASE INCLUDES: VERMONT STATE TAXES • VERMONT STATE REGISTRATION AND FEES • GAP INSURANCE • DOCUMENTATION FEE • NO SECURITY DEPOSIT • NO DISPOSITION FEE • $2,000.00 CASH OR TRADE PLUS FIRST PAYMENT DUE AT DELIVERY. SUBJECT TO AHFC APPROVAL • OFFER ENDS WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30TH, 2009.

482-2400 482-2446

Not Just Parts,

• Cruise Control • Air Conditioning • AM/FM/CD Player Lease For Only • Much More

2001 40’ Diesel Motorhome, tag axle, 2 slides, 380hp, 23,000 miles, many extras, diesel generator. Can be seen in Elizabethtown. 518-873-9272

MILLION DOLLAR LIQUIDATION SALE! CASH • BANK CHECK • CREDIT CARD ‘03 CHEVY MALIBU

‘02 JEEP LIBERTY V-6, Auto, 128k, New Tires, Ice Cold A/C

$$

5 ,,950

5 ,,950

Voted #1

‘02 VW JETTA

$ $

4,950

‘04 CHEVY VENTURE VAN

‘06 FORD F150 X-CAB 4X2

$$

V-6, Auto, PW, PL, CD Player

8-Foot Box, 6 Cyl, Auto, CD Player, A/C, Cruise Control, PW, PL, 154k, 1Owner

‘99 LINCOLN TOWN CAR

68K, One Owner, V6, Auto, Power Pkg., Excellent Condition!

$ $

5,,950

‘97 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE LAREDO

‘97 SATURN SLZ 4 Dr., 4 Cyl., Auto, AM/FM/ Cass., Cruise Control, Delay Wipers, Excellent Shape, Like New! $ $

2,950

‘03 FORD F250 XLT SUPER DUTY 4X4 5.4L Triton V8, Auto, runs excellent, 165k, Solid truck! MSRP $12,850 Sale Price

$ $

6,950

‘05 KIA SORRENTO AWD 1-Owner, V6, Auto, Loaded, Sunroof, 6 Disc CD Changer, 100k, LikeNew Condition,

$ $

7,950

4 Cyl., 5-Speed, 4 Dr., A/C, PW, PL, Excellent Condition, 125k,

Y O NLLY ON

$ $

3,950

Executive Series, V8, LOADED!, Leather Interior, Auto, PW, PL, A/C, Cruise Control, Runs Excellent! Like New!

$ $

4,950

4x4, 6 Cyl., Auto, 129k, Completely Rust Free, Southern Vehicle, Excellent Condition.

2,950

ALL RVS MUST GO! EVERYTHING MUST GO! WOW!

‘02 SUBARU OUTBACK

$ $

134K, AWD, CD, Cassette, Automatic

$ $

4,950

One Left!

Hurry! Only 2 Left

‘94 CHEVY 3500 4X4 105K, Dually, 6.5 Turbo Diesel, Loaded, Southern Truck

$ $

Kodiak 195

Timberlodge

MSRP $24,700

Sleeps 10 w/upstairs. Loaded!! Wet bar, king bed, gorgeous! MSRP $33,445 $

Sleeps 6

SALE

$

15,450

$ $$$

‘96 DODGE RAM 3500 V PLOW

T-29-DBS

30’ Sky King

SALE 21,339

6,950

2009 Timberlodge $

Sleeps 9

17,450

MSRP $27,660

$$$ $AVE THOUSAND$ $$$

ABSOLUTELY NO ONE BEATS OUR PRICES! WE FINANCE! Open Mon. - Fri. 8 a.m. - 6 p.m., Sat. 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.

Route 4, Exit 2 • Fair Haven, VT • 802-265-9994 (Behind McDonald’s) •

Toll free

V-10 Magnum, Auto, SLT Pkg., Like-New Rubber, 1-Owner, 96k,

$ $

5,950

$$ $$

888-696-9994 • www.eddavis.biz

38167


www.Addison-eagle.com

SATURDAY September 26, 2009

SNOWMOBILE FOR SALE

TRUCK OR VAN FOR SALE

1989 SKI-Doo Safari, runs great, electric start, new battery, good condition, no papers. $475.00 OBO. 518-858-7930

94 DODGE Dakota, 4 new tires, needs trany work, $450.00 very little rust. 518-359-2814

AUTO DONATIONS DONATE YOUR CARÖTo The Cancer Fund of America. Help Those Suffering With Cancer Today. Free Towing and Tax Deductible. 1-800-835-9372 www.cfoa.org

F

THE EAGLE - 19

1988 FORD F350 crewcab, dually-platform stake body. 7.3 diesel, only 39K, standard 5speed, recently painted, like new. $4,900. 802-463-9443.

Advertise Classifieds! Have we got a WHEEL DEAL f o r y o u !

1-800-989-4237

IELD

TECH

AUTOMOTIVE

Over 30 Yrs. Experience • Complete Auto Service Winterization • Preventive Maintenance • Alignments

62 Meigs Rd., Vergennes • 802-877-9222 www.fieldautomotive.net 38140

38233

60 ETHAN ALLEN DRIVE

SOUTH BURLINGTON, VT 05403

(802) 660-0838 (888) 9 WRENCH

HONDA AND SUBARU SERVICE

34544

ON QUALITY RV’S, PREOWNED CARS & TRUCKS

BRAND NEW COACHMAN CLIPPER POP UP

‘98 COACHMAN ROYAL 34’ TRAVEL TRAILER

Sleeps 7, awning, stabilizer jacks, refrigerator, stove, heat, power roof vent, spare tire with cover, not your base pop up!

LAST ONE / SALE $

6,350!

This RV is HUGE inside! Large front kitchen and living area with a superslide, center bath with neo angle shower, rear queen walkaround bedroom with slide, ducted a/ c and heat, awning and more!

ONLY $95mo with ZERO DOWN!!

‘03 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN SPORT

4dr, loaded, pwr door, pwr seat, alloys, privacy glass, quad captains chairs, cd/cass stereo, excellent shape! Blue Book $8255.00

AUTO SOUTH Price Only

$

5,950!

Only $114mo with only $99.00 down!

This car runs and looks new! Loaded with all the buttons, leather buckets, rear spoiler, custom dual exhaust, air intake, headlights, and tailights, only 62,000 miles! $ Only

6,950!

Only $134mo with only $99.00 down!

‘02 CHEVY IMPALA LS

Only

$

5,950!

9,950!

‘02 SATURN SL2 4dr, auto, power locks, a/c, cd stereo, cruise, tilt, 82,000 miles, runs excellent! Blue Book $6400.00 AUTO SOUTH Price Only $

3,950!

Only $165mo with $999 down!

Only $99mo with only $99.00 down!

Weighs only 3,900 lbs., front queen walkaround bedroom, rear bunks, sofa, dinette, full bath, a/ c, complete & ready for camping!

MSRP $18,513 AUTO SOUTH Price $

15,486

Only $173 mo with with zero down!

BRAND NEW GULFSTREAM INNSBRUCK 29’ RV

loaded w/all the buttons, leather seats, power moonroof, rear spoiler, alloys, super sharp and runs like new with only 98,000 miles!

Blue Book $7760.00 AUTO SOUTH Price

$

NEW 2010 GULFSTREAM AMERI LITE 27’ RV

‘03 FORD MUSTANG

Blue Book $9080.00 AUTO SOUTH Price

Auto South Price

Only

1/2 ton towable, front queen walkaround bedroom, rear double bed w/bunk over top, slide out, ducted a/c, smooth fiberglass sides, complete & ready to camp!

Only $114mo with only $99.00 down!

MSRP $23,270 AUTO SOUTH Price $

16,985!

Only $189 mo with with zero down!

*With approved credit, terms may vary by vehicle. Tax, title, registration additional. See salesperson for complete details.

802-483-9934

Marty Syvertson, General Manager/Charlie Nassau, Sales Professional Rutland & Addison Counties’ Premier Full Service Gulfstream RV Dealer 34556

52157


www.Addison-eagle.com

20 - THE EAGLE

SATURDAY September 26, 2009

Supermarket program helps local schools Train not viable without taxpayer funds By Beth Schaeffer newmarketpress@denpubs.com Hannaford Supermarkets announced last week that the ninth annual Hannaford Helps Schools program is under way, giving shoppers in five states the opportunity to raise money for their favorite school. Since 2001, the program has brought in more than $5.6 million to participating schools in Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York and Vermont. Hannaford Helps Schools, open to grades K-12, allows shoppers to raise money for educational activities and equipment—such as computers, sports gear and playgrounds—by simply buying eligible products between Sept. 6 and Dec. 6. For every four products purchased, customers receive three “school dollars” that are equivalent to cash and can be turned in to the school or placed in special collection bins at any Hannaford store. In addition, Hannaford

will designate a weekly “extra credit” product. If customers buy three qualifying items and the “extra credit” option, they’ll automatically receive four “school dollars” at checkout. There is no limit to the number of products that can be purchased during each shopping trip. “With education budgets tight everywhere, Hannaford Helps Schools will provide much-needed funds that the schools choose how to use,” said Evan Harding, Hannaford marketing specialist. “And the ‘extra credit’ item is any easy way for customers to offer even more support.” Approximately 2,700 schools will participate, the same number as last year, and will receive their share of the proceeds next March. In 2008, those schools were granted more than $1.4 million, comprised of in-store collections of $1.3 million, plus $1,000 from Hannaford to the top-earning school aligned with each store. This year ’s program will

feature about 900 eligible products, including 35 Hannaford brand items and goods from partners such as Kellogg’s, Clorox, Heinz FF, Hormel, Ocean Spray, Gorton’s, Bush’s Beans, King Arthur, Bayer, McCain, New World, Simply Asian, Coke, Hershey, Nestle Beverage, Purina, Tyson, Campbell’s, Sylvania and Knouse. About 25 percent of eligible products earn at least one star under the Guiding Stars system, which helps Hannaford shoppers find the most nutritious foods in the store quickly and easily. Foods with one, two or three stars provide good, better and best nutritional value, respectively. Schools that took part in the 2008 program are automatically registered and will receive their 2009 Hannaford Helps Schools kits. To see if your school is registered, or for more information, visit www.hannaford.com/hhs.

W inter Stora ge Shrink W ra pping Decommissioning & Winterization Done by Our Factory Certified Service Department with Over 75 Years Experience

38165

802-425-2431 • pointbaymarina.com

Irish Setter Hunting Boots Many Models to Choose From

600g Thinsulate to 2,000g Thinsulate

Champlain Valley Exposition Saturday, November 7th

Shadowtrek

Doors Open at 11:00 a.m.

Show Starts at 2:00 p.m.

Our Price

135

$

Tickets Only $1300

MADE IN THE USA

Also for Ladies…

Ladyhawk Full Retail $126

steel products across Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts and Connecticut. The FRA has designated a portion of NECR – from White River Junction, Vt., to the Canadian border – as a high-speed intercity passenger rail corridor. The designation is based on the corridor ’s present utility and potential for future development. “We believe the project is an ideal candidate for the HSIPR program,” said VTrans Secretary of Transportation David Dill. “It’s a shovel-ready project in a high-growth area and meets a clear transportation need. In addition, we’re confident in our partnership with NECR, which has a strong track record of participating in several successful public-private partnerships, including the Bellows Falls Tunnel-clearance project and the Burlington Tunnel restoration.” On the upgraded portion of track, scheduled running time for the Vermonter would be reduced by about a half hour, and passengertrain track speeds in signaled territory would increase from 59 to 79 miles per hour. In addition, the upgraded track would be capable of handling 286,000-pound freight cars. Currently the track is restricted to 263,000 pounds. “The increased freight-load capacity will greatly improve NECR’s competitiveness,” said Charles Hunter, RailAmerica’s Director of State Relations – East. “The Class-One industry standard for freight-load capacity is 286,000 pounds. With these upgrades, we will now be able to transport intermodal traffic received from the Class Ones in the ‘286K’ cars generally used for trans-continental moves.”

Mark Your Calendars Now!

1401 Thompson Point Road Charlotte, VT 05445

Full Retail $158

The Vermont Agency of Transportation (VTrans) and the New England Central Railroad (NECR) are seeking $52 million in federal funds to boost the speed of Amtrak’s Vermonter intercity passenger service and increase NECR’s capacity for heavier freight carloads. If awarded the grant, NECR will contribute 10 percent of project costs. Plans for the two-year project include upgrades to heavier continuously welded rail, bridge work, new tie installation and ballast work along 191 track miles. The project would be funded through the Federal Railroad Administration’s (FRA) High-Speed Intercity Passenger Rail (HSIPR) program, part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. NECR is a “host railroad” for the Vermonter, which runs daily between St. Albans, Vt., and Washington, D.C., and operates over a 236-mile portion of NECR’s track between St. Albans and Palmer, Mass. Upgrades would be made to 191 miles of this route, from St. Albans to the Vermont/Massachusetts state line. Between 2005 and 2008, the Vermonter experienced a dramatic 44-percent increase in ridership, while achieving the second-highest ontime performance across the Amtrak system. The 236-mile portion of the Vermonter route that runs on the NECR is heavily used, with more than 77,000 passengers in 2008 alone. NECR is the main freight route through Vermont, operating 394 miles between the Vermont/Quebec borders and New London, Conn., and interchanging with four Class-One railroads. A RailAmerica property, NECR carries an average of 37,000 carloads per year, delivering heating fuel, road salt, lumber and

Our Price

109

$

Four Corners, Richmond, VT • 434 - 5299 Hours: Tue., Wed., Thurs., Fri. 10-5:30, Sat. 10-3 Debit, Check & Cash gladly accepted

38177

Tickets N Availab ow PRICE CH le At & HOM OPPER EP O Or Call RT

A portion of proceeds for this boot is donated to the Breast Cancer Research Foundation

JOHN’S SHOE SHOP NORTH

• Free Goodie Bag • Door Prizes • Display Booths • Taste of Home Cook Book • Product Samples

Brought to you by

802-3886397 Publisher of The Eagle • Rutland Tribune • The Messenger 07190


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