Aj 05 03 2014

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Look Inside: Editorial For sale: Act III Page 6

May 3, 2014

A Denton Publication

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‘NO TAGS’ SISTERS

Boat washing program set for debut

This Week WARRENSBURG

By Keith Lobdell keith@denpubs.com

LAKE GEORGE Ñ Those wanting to learn more about the new boat washing program on Lake George can visit a new website created through the Lake George Park Commission. The website (lgboatinspections.com) is one of a variety of topics discussed during the commissionÕ s April 18 meeting at the Lake George Town Hall. Ò It is a site that is solely dedicated as an outreach piece to give people the information that they need,Ó Commission Executive Director David Wick said. Ò Emily DeBolt from the Lake George Association and the GovernorÕ s Office helped create the site. It will be constantly updated as things come up and people will be able to get their boat stickers from the site.Ó As far as the physical implementation of the six inspection sites, Wick said all sites were being prepared for May. Ò All of the sites will be up and running for the start of the season,Ó he said. Along with preparing the sites is staffing. Wick told members of the Commission they had interviewed between 80 and 100 people for the position in their first week of finding. CONTINUED ON PAGE 9

Earth Day gift to library PAGE 2 BOLTON

Youth win battle of the books PAGE 5 QUEENSBURY

Hannah and Natalie Armstrong of Chestertown will be hosting a “No Tags” fundraiser at the Wevertown Bible Church this Saturday, See more on this story, page 4. Photo provided

PAGE 8

Envirothon draws Warren County schools together

Index EDITORIAL

By Mauranda Stahl-Sorensen

6

LETTERS

mauranda@denpubs.com

7

NO. WARREN VIP

11

CALENDAR

13

BRIEFS

14

CLASSIFIEDS

Senator visits ACC

16-18

WARRENSBURG Ñ The 21st annual Warren County Enviorthon took place April 23 at the Warrensburg Fish Hatchery. High school students from Johnsburg, North Warren, Warrensburg, Glens Falls, Lake George and Hadley-Lake Luzerene participated in five environmental science-based

stations. They included aquatics, soil classification, forestry, local agriculture and wildlife. Representing each school were three teams composing of five members each. Teams spent a designated amount of time at each activity with environmental and conservation experts from the Department of Environmental Conservation, Lake George Association, Cornell Cooperative Extension and Warresburg Fish Hatchery. Ò ItÕ s a great opportunity for these kids to network with

these professionals,Ó said Dean Moore, event coordinator. Ò They can ask questions and get contacts to help out in the future.Ó Ethan Frasier, a senior from North Warren, cited the Envirothon as a contributor to his love for science. Ò I was accepted to Paul SmithsÕ and I want to be a DEC officer locally or travel, I haven’t decided yet,” Frasier said. CONTINUED ON PAGE 3

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May 3, 2014

Writing workshop scheduled

Derek and Dale Graven, 6 and 10, of North Caldwell stand ready to water a young American elm tree newly planted in front of Richards Library in celebration of Earth Day and Arbor Day. Their mother Maggie shovels fertilizer while Larry Collier holds the tree steady. The 12-foot disease-resistant elm came from the Elm Research Institute in Keene, N.H., and was donated by Warrensburgh Beautification, Inc. and the Warrensburgh Historical Society. It is part of Beautification’s goal of enhancing the appearance of the town and part of the Society’s historic preservation effort. Elm trees were once a major presence in the town’s landscape. Photo provided/Barbara Whitford

WARRENSBURG Ñ Mary Sanders Shartle will teach a four-session memoir/fiction writing course at Willows Bistro in Warrensburg, noon to 2 p.m. Thursdays from April 24 through May 15. This course is organized by Fiction Among Friends in cooperation with the bistro. Hartle calls her workshop Ò Life LinesÓ and says the sessions are very relaxed, informal and supportive. They will entail free-writing from prompts and writing Ò homeworkÓ (voluntary), with opportunities to read work to the class. Cost of the four-week course is $148, which includes lunches. Size is limited to ten. Shartle is a poet, fiction, and essay writer. Her novel about a woman living alone in the Adirondacks: The Truth and Legend of Lily Martindale, is available from SUNY Press in April 2014. She was awarded a 2007 individual artistÕ s grant from the New York State Council of the Arts, a state agency, to complete the book. In January, 2014 she was a finalist in the Tupelo Press Open Prose competition. The story, Ò The Spider WebÓ appeared in their on-line Quarterly. She is a member of Ò The Three PoetsÓ with colleagues Marilyn McCabe and Elaine Handley, who thrice won the

Adirondack Center for Writing Literary Award for best book of poetry for their chapbooks Notes from the FiretowerÐ Three Poets on the Adirondacks (2005) and Glacial Erratica: Three Poets on the Adirondacks, Part 2 (2006); and Winterberry, Pine: Three Poets on North Country Winter (2010). Their full length book, Tear of the Clouds, was released by Ra Press in 2011. Shartle teaches numerous writing workshops for adults, children and teens. She regularly hosts book discussion groups for Road Scholars (Elder Hostel) at Great Camp Sagamore. She was an editorial committee member and contributor to The Galway Story Quilt: Poems of a Place by the People Who Live Here, published in 2007 which won the Joseph Shubert Award for Library Excellence, New York StateÕ s most prestigious library award. Shartle was the director of the Saratoga Poetry Zone in Saratoga Springs, New York from 2004 until 2007, hosting poets such as Brigit Pegeen Kelly, Dan Hoffman and Rachel Hadas. She currently sits on the board of the Adirondack Center for Writing. To inquire or register, contact Fiction Among Friends organizer, Persis Granger, PersisGranger@ aol.com or 352-463-3089 or 352-949-1706.

Curtis Lumber set for fifth PetAPalooza

North Country Singers to host spring concert

Sailing classes offered through Lake Chingachgook

Curtis Lumber will host their fifth annual pet adoption day Saturday, June 14, across select retail stores located throughout New York state and Vermont. The event is called Ò Curtis Lumber PetAPalooza.Ó Each store will host multiple pet adoptions/rescue groups. Many adoption rates will also be lowered for the day! Hundreds of animals from over 80 (to date) shelters and rescue groups will be available for adoption including cats, dogs, rabbits, birds and horses. There will also be pet service providers in attendance such as local veterinarians, groomers, pet sitters and trainers offering valuable discounts off their services. Other events include dog house and 50/50 raffles, food, live radio broadcasts and more. Last yearÕ s event resulted in over 400 animals finding new forever homes. Curtis LumberÕ s President and Owner Jay Curtis and wife Kendra, along with the Curtis family of 600 plus employees are very excited to host this annual event. For a list of locations, participating shelters and rescue groups attending visit clpetapalooza or facebook. com/clpetapalooza.

NORTH CREEK Ñ The North Country Singers under the direction of Denise Conti will present a British Invasion of North Creek Spring Concert at Tannery Pond Community Center in North Creek Sunday, May 18, 2 p.m. Their repertoire will include songs by Purcell, Elgar, Britten, Gilbert and Sullivan, Vaughan Williams, Rutter and the Beatles with solos by James Conway, Larry Vanderburgh, Rob Smith, Susan Ringler, Dan Studnicky, Paul Little, Mindy Piper, Will Blackhurst, Andie Waldron, Mandy Savarie and Kent Gregson. Besides Linda Little and Don Preuninger on piano, the 45-voice choir will also be accompanied by the NCS House Band with Jon DeLappa on trumpet, Corey Cerullo on trombone, Frank Conti on tenor sax, Mark Caruso on guitar, Ed Beecher on bass and Rich Delsignore on drums. The Queensbury Middle School Select Choir, under the direction of Laura Lee Conti and accompanied by Melody Byrnes on piano, will also be featured in this concert. Their repertoire will include jazz, African, musical and popular songs, with Abby Delio as the featured soloist on AdeleÕ s popular song, Ò Turning Tables.Ó Refreshments will be served at intermission. Donations are greatly appreciated to help defray costs for this concert.

LAKE GEORGE Ñ Experience the joy of sailing on beautiful Lake George with YMCA Camp ChingachgookÕ s Ò Learn to SailÓ program. This three-day course, taught by instructors from the campÕ s Y-Knot Sailing program, is a perfect introduction for those looking to learn how to sail for the first time and for those who want to brush up on their sailing skills. Participants will learn sailing terms, how to rig a sail boat, basic sailing knots, how to judge the wind, the rules of the Ò roadÓ , and all of the basics of sailing safety. Instruction will be in the classroom and on the water, utilizing ChingachgookÕ s 24 foot Rainbow sloops Ð stable, safe and roomy boats built for teaching. All participants will also receive the Ò Introduction to Sailing,Ó guide and other instructional materials. The course consists of three consecutive Sunday afternoon sessions (1 to 5 p.m. each day) on May 4, 11 and 18, and costs $75 per person, with limited spaces still available. For more information on Learn to Sail or Y-Knot visityknotsailing.org or contact Spencer Raggio at sraggio@gmail. com or 899-9137.


May 3, 2014

www.adirondackjournal.com

Town Talk

Need high school diploma

By Lynn Smith

744-3532 - mrs.butterfly-10@hotmail.com

Warrensburg Chamber of Commerce The Warrensburg Chamber of Commerce has chosen its 2014 citizen of the year, Ruth Fruda. The Business of the year chosen is Luck E Star Diner. A dinner will be held May 27 at CroninÕ s Golf Club. Cocktails

and hors dÕ oeuvres will be served 6 p.m.; cash bar, dinner 7 p.m. Menu includes choice of New York Strip steak, half barbecue chicken, or stuffed sole with potato, salad, dessert and coffee or tea. Cost is $25 per person. Contact the chamber office 623-2161 for reservations by May 16.

Classes and home study for adults 21 and older at First United Methodist Church 3890 Main St Warrensburg, beginning May 5, 5 to 8 p.m., every other Monday. TASC is the new GED. The $65 charge goes toward cost of books. Attendees can attend one class for free to see if they qualify for free classes. Contact BOCES 745-3560 for information.

The Warren County Envirothon was held April 23 at the Warren County Fish Hatchery Photo by Mauranda Stahl-Sorensen

Envirothon

Continued from page 1 Senior Whitney Markwica attended the Envirothon all four years of her high school experience. In 2013, Markwica went on with her team to the New York State Envirothon headed by teacher John Burns. Ò Our presentation was on rotational grazing,Ó said Markwica. Ò The EnvirothonÕ s bring science to real life for students.Ó At the events denouement, students took a short test to check their knowledge on the in-

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formation of the days activities. The top three teams were Lake George Team I with a total of 356 points, North Warren Team I with a total of 370 points and Glens Falls team I with a total of 391 points. Taking home the 2014 title for Lake George were seniors Noah Duell, Drew Cuprood and Nate Plocharczyz along with juniors Mayr Sawyer and Jackie Hogan. Pattye Nicolls, Glens Falls earth science and astronomy teacher will be their coach as the team moves on to represent Warren County at the New York State Envirothon slated for May 21 and 22 at SUNY Morrisonville.

Adirondack Journal - 3

Bill Owens talks foreign trade By Thom Randall

thom@denpubs.com GLENS FALLS Ñ After talking recently with a local businessman who is successfully marketing American-made products overseas, U.S. Rep. Bill Owens has pledged to sponsor a workshop where area entrepreneurs can learn how to develop foreign trade. Scott Schwartz, president of Hill Electric Supply Co. took time out of his workday April 23 to describe to Owens how his company has developed a business marketing not only electrical components and fixtures but a wide range of other products to clients in foreign countries. Hill Electric is known in Glens Falls as an electrical fixture and component supply source for electricians and contractors, but through its overseas trade via the internet, Hill Electric sells a wide variety of goods Ñ from specialized industrial electrical components to toilets, turnstile parts, weed-whackers and tires. Schwartz told Owens during a tour of his business on Broad St. that his enterprise, founded in 1948, launched a mail-order trade in the 1970s. Then in 1997, the firm started marketing its thousands of products over the Internet. About two years later, overseas contractors began seeking the products in their inventory. Hill ElectricÕ s business expanded further, when they were recognized as a trusted source providing timely service, Schwartz said. Increasingly, foreign firms asked for a wide variety of goods other than electric supplies, and Hill Electric employees began marketing goods manufactured or sold by other enterprises, said Lori Milford, Director of International Sales at Hill Electric. She and Schwartz noted that many businesses shy away from exporting because processing overseas orders can involve substantial paperwork and understanding of customs laws and procedures. Schwartz said that attentive customer service including fast, efficient response, quick shipping is what has built his overseas trade to about $2 million annually, with shipments to 50 countries in the last three years. A lot of the goods ordered get shipped to

Canada, Asia, Africa and Europe, Schwartz said. Recently, Hill Electric has shipped a large amount of supplies to a construction company building a sewage treatment plant for a hospital in Bermuda, he added. Ò Companies my size may not realize where their exporting opportunities are,Ó he said. Schwartz said that he is interested in becoming more familiar with all the products manufactured in the Glens Falls region so he can have them readily available to ship to his foreign customers. Owens responded that he would explore establishing a database or directory of goods made in upstate New York for the use of Schwartz and other area exporters. Also, Owens said heÕ d be setting up a Ò roundtableÓ seminar within several months for businesses seeking to pursue or expand their foreign trade. Schwartz offered to instruct at the event, presenting tips on successful overseas trade for small businesses. Owens said he might be inviting representatives of freight companies and customs brokers to offer their tips as well. Ò I see this roundtable as an informal gettogether of people interested Ñ or should be interested Ñ in exporting,Ó he said. ABOVE: Hill Electric Supply Co. President Scott Schwartz (left) pauses during a tour of his firm’s Glens Falls warehouse to discuss his success in exporting overseas with U.S. Rep. Bill Owens (right). Owens said he intends to hold a roundtable workshop on exporting to boost revenue for small businesses in the region. Participating in the tour and discussion was Lori Milford (rear), Hill Electric’s Director of International Sales. Photo by Thom Randall


4 - Adirondack Journal

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May 3, 2014

Young sisters seek to help globally and locally with ‘No Tags’ keith@denpubs.com CHESTERTOWN Ñ Hannah and Natalie Armstrong want to help those in need not just in the Adirondacks, but around the world. To do so, the sisters, aged 7 and 6, respectively, will be hosting a No Tags Sale at the Calvary Bible Church in Wevertown on Saturday, May 3, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Ò We have raised money from our chickens when we sell the eggs to donate to SamaritanÕ s Purse,Ó Hannah said. Ò It reminds us of the story of the Good Samaritan in the Bible. We wanted to do something to raise more money so we thought of the sale.Ó Half of the funds raised will go to the SamaritanÕ s Purse International Relief fund, while the rest will go to the Adirondack Community Outreach CenterÕ s Neighbors Helping Neigh-

Natalie and Hannah Armstrong with siblings Nathan and Abby and some of the chickens they raise.

bors program. Ò Our neighbors can also use our help,Ó Natalie said. Ò We want to help give what we have to help others.Ó The fundraiser will feature many items made locally by the sisters or local church members and family. Ò I canÕ t believe that everyone is taking this so seriously and helping us out with donations,Ó Hannah said. Ò I have never done something like this before.Ó Ò Hannah has been asking to do something like this for a while, and Natalie has been helping her out the whole time,Ó said Danielle Armstrong, the girlsÕ mother. Ò They have a variety of items from stuff that they have created to an artist from church who has donated paintings, wooden pens, handmade items and baked goods.Ó Danielle said that the sisters have also re-

Natalie and Hannah Armstrong show some of the homemade crafts that will be part of the No Tags Sale.

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ceived checks in the mail of flat donations to go toward their causes. Ò They also have a matching donation of up to $500,Ó she said. All of the items for sale at the May 3 event will have no price tags on them, allowing people to pay, or donate, whatever they feel the pieces are worth. Ò We want to see how the Lord will bless us in our sale,Ó Hannah said. Danielle said she and her husband, Jed, have made it a point to talk with their children (Hannah and Natalie along with 3 year-old twins Abby and Nathan) about serving others. Ò We want to encourage our kids to be very mindful of the people around them,Ó she said. Ò How better then to start when they are young.Ó For more information on Hannah and Natalie ArmstrongÕ s No Tags Sale, or to donate items to the cause, call the duo at 494-0897.

OR IMMEDIATE RELEASE FFOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE ! Timberhaven Log Homes Celebrates 1-Year Anniversary ! Timberhaven Log Homes Celebrates 1-Year Anniversary Lewisburg, PA: On April 16, 2014 Timberhaven Log Homes will observe its 1-Year Anniversary. In celebration of the milestone, the destined industry leader will release a new website:

www.loghomedesigncenter.com. The Ò design centerÓ was created introduce homeAnniversary. Lewisburg, PA: On April 16, 2014 Timberhaven Log Homes will toobserve its log 1-Year enthusiasts to hundreds of plan ideas. There are over 300 designs on the site and nearly 20 In celebration the milestone, the search destined will release new website: interactive of plans. Customers can theindustry plans, seeleader what features appeala to them, and then work with their local sales representative to implement modifications these already www.loghomedesigncenter.com. The Ò design centerÓ was created totointroduce log established home designs or customize their own dream log home. enthusiasts to hundreds of plan ideas. There are over 300 designs on the site and nearly 20 ! interactive plans. Customers can search plans, see year whatthefeatures appeal to them, and then In addition to the newest website launch,the over the past company has also • Developed and acquired the necessary equipment to produce a unique laminated product work with their local sales representative to implement modifications to these already established line which has resulted in 65% of the companyÕ s sales designs or own dream logprofessional home. sales network in the country • customize Establishedtheir the largest and most

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• Educated hundreds of log home enthusiasts via events at the corporate facilities, face-toface meetings at our independent locations, and online In addition to the newest website launch, over the past year the company has also • Launched the main company site www.timberhavenloghomes.com • Developed andUSacquired the necessary equipment unique their laminated product • Across the and internationally, assisted dozens to of produce buyers in arealizing log home line dream which has resulted in 65% of the companyÕ s sales

!

•! Established the largest and most professional sales network in the country Jim Gilbert, an experienced log home contractor from Bloomsburg, PA says, Ò I have been •building Educated hundreds of log for home enthusiasts via builder events for at the corporate facilities, log homes exclusively 18 years. Being the several different log homeface-tocompanies, there are certain aspects of building Timberhaven face meetings at our independent locations, and onlineLog Homes that sets the company from others. I enjoy their attention to detail, quality of material and most of all for •apart Launched the mainlog company sitealso www.timberhavenloghomes.com supplying a Ô completeÕ home. I am excited about the fact that they manufacture their •veryAcross own laminate I like working with Timberhaven Homes in and believe they the US logs. and internationally, assisted dozensLog of buyers realizing theirarelogthehome future to finest quality log home.Ó dream ! Timberhaven Log Homes provides quality, affordable kiln-dried log homes and cabins. The

companyan is experienced known for taking and energy to make sure that PA every attention to detail Jim Gilbert, log great hometime contractor from Bloomsburg, says, Ò I have been has been met to provide the best value there is in log home living. TimberhavenÕ s highly trained building log homes exclusively for 18 years. Being the builder for several different log home and skilled professionals, log home manufacturing process and kiln-dried solid/laminate logs are second to noneare in the log home industry. To learnTimberhaven more visit www.timberhavenloghomes.com or companies, there certain aspects of building Log Homes that sets the company your local authorized representative, Lewis, High Peaks Homes, apartcontact from others. I enjoy theirsales attention to detail,Mike quality of material andLog most of all52forFox Run, Chestertown, NY 12817, 518-494-7265, www.highpeaksloghomescom supplying a Ô completeÕ log home. I am also excited about the fact that they manufacture their very own laminate logs. I like working with Timberhaven Log Homes and believe they are the Your Dream É Our Passion future to finest quality log home.Ó

!

55781

Timberhaven Log Homes provides quality, affordable kiln-dried log homes and cabins. The company is known for taking great time and energy to make sure that every attention to detail has been met to provide the best value there is in log home living. TimberhavenÕ s highly trained and skilled professionals, log home manufacturing process and kiln-dried solid/laminate logs are second to none in the log home industry. To learn more visit www.timberhavenloghomes.com or contact your local authorized sales representative, Mike Lewis, High Peaks Log Homes, 52 Fox Run, Chestertown, NY 12817, 518-494-7265, www.highpeaksloghomescom

Your Dream É Our Passion

45649

By Keith Lobdell


www.adirondackjournal.com

May 3, 2014

Adirondack Journal - 5

Bolton youth win regional ‘Battle of the Books’ at SUNY ADK

BOLTON LANDING — Bolton Central School’s fourth grade team earned the first place spot for their grade level after their first-time competing in the regional “Battle of the Books.” Nearly 300 students convened for the reading competition March 10 at SUNY Adirondack where Bolton’s team beat Queensbury’s team 96 to 77 in the semifinal game. A total of 34 teams from 11 school districts representing third through sixth grades took part in the event, which is organized by five-county BOCES Library System. BoltonÕ s team was comprised of: Kiki Dobert, Skyler Scott, Isaac Beuerman, Isaac Herrick and Andrew Johnson. Bolton Central Library Media Specialist Denise Jorgensen said she was proud of the students. Ò They worked really hard and were well prepared. This was a great experience for them and I canÕ t wait to participate again next year.Ó Bolton students competed against their counterparts from Cambridge, Hartford, Hudson Falls, Lake George, Queensbury, Schuylerville, South Glens Falls, and St. MaryÕ s-St. Alphonsus. Jorgensen explained that the students competing had read 10 books selected for each grade level by local librarians in five months before coming together to challenge each other for the most correct answers to context questions. The students prepared their own questions and quizzed each other.

RIGHT: Bolton’s trophy-winning reading comprehension team celebrates their victory in a regional competition. Team members include (left to right): coach Denise Jorgensen, Skyler Scott, Isaac Beuerman, Isaac Herrick, Andrew Johnson and Kiki Dobert. Courtesy photo

Bolton

Spring in Bolton

ing will be held on Wednesday, May 21, 6 p.m. at Ice is officialthe Bolton Town ly out and the Hall to discuss Spring banners these species and ww3354@yahoo.com are up. Thanks to potential treatBolton Landing ment options for Business Asso2014. For more ciation the street information or is lined with colorful flowered banners. Soon questions, feel free to contact Jodi Connally at they will be busy planting flowers throughout 644-2444 or email Townclerk@town.bolton.ny.us the town and making preparations for the Fourth of July celebration with fireworks, entertainment Womens weekend in Bolton and music in Rogers Park. Those interested in beThe town is getting ready to welcome 125 coming a member can call McDonald Real Estate to 150 women the weekend of May 9. These Professionals at 644-2015. women will be treated to motivational talks, fashion demos, fitness classes, a hike with Library plant sale Lake George Land Conservancy, spa treatThe Bolton Free Library will be holding a plant ments, discounts on meals and shopping, sale on Saturday, May 24, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m on the fashion show and luncheon. Games are played lawn. If you have some bulbs or cuttings to doand prizes are awarded. This event will be celnate you can drop them off at the library on Fri. ebrating itÕ s fifth year and will be featuring May 23. If you would like to volunteer an hour guest speakers, The Beekman Boys, who own or two of your time please contact Megan at the a goat farm in Sharon Springs after leaving the Library 644-2233. corporate life in New York City. They are authors and stars of their own reality TV show, Terrestrial invasisve plant task The Fabulous Beekman Boys, on the Cooking force Channel; and most recently made a comeback Japanese Knotweed (Invasive Bamboo), Gifrom being underdogs on the Amazing Race to ant Reed (Phragmites), Wild Parsnip, and Purple winning the grand prize. After their talk they Loosestrife are a few of the terrestrial invasive will do a book signing. The shops will be rollplants affecting New York State and the Adironing out the red carpet with refreshments and dacks. The Town of Bolton has budgeted money to specials, participating restaurants will have address these invasives. Local citizens are invited special three course menu offerings for $20.14. to join a task force committee to give guidance Visit girlfriendsgetawaybolton.com or call to the treatment of these non-native pest species Bolton Landing Chamber of Commerce 644within the Town of Bolton. An organizing meet3831 for more information.

By Wauneata Waller

Have a story to share? Let us know keith@denpubs.com mauranda@denpubs.com

Pirate Blue Team with the Honorable Mention Certificates. Pictured from left to right are Jacqueline O’Donnell, Jessica Fahey, Maria Holder, Jennifer Crowe and Ashley Duvalle.

O’Donnell earns merit

BOLTON Ñ Bolton resident and Seton Hall University student Jacqueline OÕ Donnell achieved honorable mention in the Public Relations Student Society of America (PRSSA) 2014 Bateman Competition, which was announced Tuesday, April 15. The PRSSA Bateman Competition is a national contest for public relations students requiring participants to research, plan, execute and evaluate a fully integrated marketing communications plan for an assigned client. The competition began in November when the client was announced and students are given the month of February to complete all programming. The final campaign was due at the end of March. Only students who show a deep understanding of strategic public relations are chosen to be on the Bateman teams. O’Donnell was one of five members of the Pirate Blue team, one of two teams representing Seton Hall University, where she studies public relations. The 2014 competition client was Popmoney, a service provided by Fiserv, which is a digital person-to-person payment service. The Pirate Blue team executed a campaign establishing a campus representative program for Popmoney and utilized social media to reach the target demographic of college-aged students. Becoming the first campus representatives for Popmoney, the Pirate Blue team partnered with Dunkin’ Donuts, six on-campus clubs and organizations, and engaged 120 students who took the Ò Pledge to Pop.Ó OÕ DonnellÕ s team further branded Popmoney, created a hashtag (#PledgeToPop), and introduced it as an alternative solution to a generation who decreasingly carries cash.

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Adirondack Journal Editorial

Y

For Sale: Act III

ou may have seen yellow signs dotting the landscape. Those are auction notices for the abandoned houses and empty lots seized by Essex County for failure to pay taxes. By the time you read this, the county will have had a tax auction on April 30, the first since 2008, in an attempt to put these properties back into private hands. Officials are optimistic that the 130-some-odd properties and parcels will be placed back on the tax rolls, thus generating much-needed income for cash-strapped municipalities and relieving towns of the liabilities and stigmas that are associated with these painful reminders of rural blight. We hope the properties sell, preferably to young people, business owners and other forward-looking folks who will be net assets to these communities, from Moriah to Wilmington. The county is ailing on just about every metric Ñ its problems are well-documented and we neednÕ t revisit them here Ñ and most of these towns desperately need the income to sustain even the most basic services. But while weÕ d love to join in on the optimism, weÕ re alarmed at what we perceive to be a lack of contingency planning for what happens if these parcels, which range from the downright dreadful to the merely rustic on the march towards rehabilitation, fail to find buyers. Local officials just don’t have a Plan B. Moreover, they assume that in the event these properties are sold and placed back on the tax rolls, which are already stagnant as a result of the state-mandated cap, then weÕ ll all live happily ever after and we can turn our attention to other things. We donÕ t feel that way. In the event that the bottom drops out of this auction, and we have good reason to be feeling pessimistic after the steady drumbeat of rotten news all winter, itÕ s worth exploring additional options to ensure public discussion continues after the auctioneerÕ s gavel rises and falls. Look outward. Know what an EB-5 is? We do. ItÕ s a federal immigration program that fast tracks the visa process for foreign investors in regional centers that are designated by the feds as areas to promote rural economic growth. Among other criteria, applicants must pledge to invest at least $1 million in something called Òt argeted employment areas.” Those are defined as rural areas experiencing unemployment of at least 150 percent of the national average rate, among other factors. Guess what the North Country has?

May 3, 2014

Clean air, open land and a targeted employment area. Guess what Mainland China doesnÕ t have? None of the above. Eighty percent of these EB-5 visas are awarded to Chinese nationals seeking investment opportunities in more favorable climes. This might be worth exploring for something as large as, say, the former Frontier Town lot in North Hudson thatÕ s been moldering into the ground for the better part of two decades, the neglect of which is a slap in the face to American ingenuity. Build on trends. The farm-to-fork movement that emphasizes regionally-grown products to promote health and sustainability is a growing trend that reflects America’s desire for food products that arenÕ t manufactured in industrial complexes off the New Jersey Turnpike. Essex County is in a prime position to take advantage of this new phase in public consciousness with pockets of rich farmland and access to shipping routes that can zip fresh products, from veggies to syrup to microbrews, to eager regional buyers. A dependence on tourism shouldnÕ t be the regionÕ s permanent Hail Mary pass when it comes to economic development and it might not be a bad idea to look past the short term gain of putting some of these mid-sized houses back on the tax rolls Ñ or selling off empty parcels for residential development Ñ in favor of a longer agricultural game with these trends in mind. Repurpose. We havenÕ t studied the dynamics of each structure in the auction and are unfamiliar with the status of each building. For those that are sturdy and sound and not teeming with nefarious Mad Max-type characters that would necessitate hitting the auto-destruct button, the county would do well to immediately put some of them to use, if not only temporarily and in trial programs. Zoning is a crapshoot in the North Country and it doesnÕ t seem entirely unfeasible that with the right amount of tax breaks, grant searching and community incentives, some of these properties Ñ or even empty parcels Ñ can be repurposed for short-term uses that can benefit the community, from teen recreational centers to wi-fi hotspots for seasonal residents, as officials map out a long-term roadmap for the future. If Act I for these structures was their birth, and Act II was their prolonged period of decline and neglect, we hope that Act III will be by characterized by lawmakers working together, political differences aside, to ensure each vacant lot and empty structure wonÕ t equate to missed possibilities, but rather untapped opportunities. Ñ D enton Publications Editorial Board

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Viewpoint

The dreaded error in print

M

istakes are a part of We wouldnÕ t have it any other life. They happen, way. Our editorial staff and all sometimes right in the members of our team take front of our eyes. Other times, great pride in the work that words cross your lips before they perform. When an error your ears have a chance to play occurs, itÕ s not just shrugged them back for your brain to filoff. Efforts are made to correct ter the impact they might have the process that facilitated the on others. Other times, they are mistake. just part of being human. Tired, IÕ ve been involved with not paying attention, focused print publications for nearly Dan Alexander on something else or perhaps 40 years. This involvement has Thoughts from just ignorance, they do happen, included daily newspapers, inBehind the Pressline not intentionally, but nonethecluding Sunday papers, weekly less they do occur. None of us newspapers, shopping guides, are perfect, not even the two former popes magazines, newsletters and flyers. I’ve witwho were declared saints last week by the nessed some excellent newspaper editors Catholic Church. make some pretty dumb mistakes not just in Errors and mistakes come in many forms. articles but also in front page headlines. Last weekÕ s editorial on fracking contained a ItÕ s easy to wish they never happened and number of typos. The most glaring was the while we certainly donÕ t condone errors, we use of the word Ò antidotesÓ instead of Ò anecrecognize that despite our best efforts, they doteÓ and Ò antidotallyÓ instead of Ô Ò anecdotdo and will occur regardless of how many ally.Ó WeÕ ve heard from a number of readers proofreaders check over the copy. Sooner or regarding the misuse of the words and we aplater, something slips past and once itÕ s in preciate the fact that our readers have called print the only recourse is to take ownership us on the carpet over it. of it and seek solutions to avoid a similar reErrors such as these occur when there is a occurrence in the future. rush to complete a task on deadline and inMy own writing can be atrocious. A perfect sufficient time and staff to perform the proper command of the English language is certainly proofing procedures to ensure accuracy. not my strong suit and something I will likely It should not have happened, but the fact struggle with my entire life. My high school remains that it did. The end result was a English teacher warned me not spend so strong opinion piece on fracking was diminmuch time on sports and more time cracking ished due to grammatical errors and incorrect the books. usage of words. Those errors became a disMistakes are a part of life. We learn from traction overshadowing the message. them, we grow from them and we do our best I wish we had a larger budget for staffing, to never be defeated by an honest mistake. but with no paid circulation revenue coming We will address the causes behind these erin, most free papers opt to run press releases rors and do our best to improve the process or canned copy. We believe in providing lothat allowed these errors to get into print, cally written, community news and opinions. diluting the effectiveness of the desired mesWe spend a significant portion of the revenue sage. we collect from selling advertising to round To err is human, to forgive is divine. We out our publications with local news that ask your forgiveness and we will do our very might not be available from any other source. best to make certain such mistakes do not reMany times, our staff is stretched thin coveroccur in future editions of your community ing events, working on tight deadlines and newspaper. We also encourage you to keep proofing each other’s copy just before the paus on our toes and let us know when we fall per is placed on the press. short of your expectations. We know our readers appreciate the news Dan Alexander is publisher and CEO of Denton Pubwe generate and we also know they expect us to maintain high standards, free or not. lications. He may be reached at dan@denpubs.com.


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May 3, 2014

Adirondack Journal - 7

Turning Back the Pages By Jean Hadden

One Hundred Years Ago – May, 1914 Lamp explosion causes fire

Amos AustinÕ s tenant house on Oak Street, Warrensburgh, occupied by Miss K. Lillian Ross and her mother, Mrs. Mary Ross was destroyed by fire around midnight, Tuesday night, May 12, 1914 together with all of its contents. The building was valued at about $1,700 and was insured for $1,000. Miss Ross had $1,000 insurance for her household goods. Miss Ross had been preparing to move the next day before the fire into Mrs. Minnie Jarvis’ house downtown and most of her furniture was ready to be loaded. Her mother had gone away to remain until moving was completed and she was to spend the night alone in the house. About 10 oÕ clock she went downtown to make some arrangements in the other house and left a kerosene lamp burning, expecting to return in a short time. It is believed that the lamp exploded while she was away and set fire to the house. Two young men returning from a party discovered the fire. The flames had then gained such headway that the building was doomed to destruction, also its contents, as it was unsafe to enter the structure. The young men awoke the neighborhood with their lusty shouts and an alarm was also sounded by the bell of the Methodist Church. The nearest fire hydrant was near the post office and a garden hose was all that was available for use in protecting adjoining buildings, the nearest to which are the barns of K.V. and Bertrum E. Whittemore. That those were saved was due entirely to the valiant efforts of a number of men to whom the WhittemoreÕ s are very grateful.

River teaches man a lesson

A spirit of daring and a pair of hip rubber boots nearly caused the death by drowning of Peter Dacy on Monday, May 11, 1914 at Starbuckville. Mr. Dacy, who is a machinist in the plant of the Schroon River Pulp and Paper Company, at Burnhamville, went up the river to place brackets on the dam at that point. In performing the task the usual procedure is to go out in a boat held by a rope from the shore. Pete thought he could wade out on the dam and do it. When he got there the swift water carried him over the apron and his boots filled with water and so impeded his movements that it was with the greatest difficulty that he kicked himself out from under the waterfall to a point where Frank Smith, of Riverbank and Patrick McCarthy, of Horicon, could reach him in a boat, which they ran through one of the sluiceways. Mr. Dacy was nearly exhausted when rescued

from his perilous plight and probably educated to such an extent that it will deter him from future stunts with the resistless force of swift raging spring freshets of Schroon River water.

Steamboat man nearly drowns

Captain Harvey Crandall, of Lake George, a veteran steamboat man, who is said to be near the age of 91, while fishing from a roundbottom boat near the Fort William Henry Hotel dock Thursday afternoon, leaned too far to one side to bait his hook and in an instant was in the water clinging to an overturned boat which was sinking rapidly under his weight, and crying lustily for help. Arthur Finkle, a Lake George youth, standing with a companion on the D.& H. steamboat wharf and watching the Mohican round the bend at Assembly Point, heard the old manÕ s cries and without an instantÕ s hesitation, besides to remove his coat and shoes, plunged into the lake and swam to the rescue. Being an expert swimmer he covered the distance quickly and after five minutes hard work, succeeded in completing his brave act by getting the old man to shore, undoubtedly saving him from a cold watery grave. Captain Crandall was the owner and captain of the first steam yacht placed on Lake George, the Julia, which was brought to the lake from New York about 40 years ago, one of the three steamers on the lake, the others being the Minnehaha (Laughing Water), a side wheeler and the Ganouskie, a propeller. There are now more than 700 boats on the lake. (Note Ð Old newspaper articles contradict themselves on the history of the first steamboats on Lake George. I believe that the first steam “boat” on Lake George was built in 1813 and was named the Ò James Caldwell,Ó which plied the waters of Lake George, commanded by Captain Winans, from 1816 to 1820. After that was Ò MountaineerÓ , built in 1824, the Ò William CaldwellÓ came along in 1833. The steam Ò yachtÓ Julia, according to photographer Seneca Ray Stoddard, commanded by Captain Moses Finkle, was not put into the water until 1874 and was held at the Lake House subject for charter. Next week I will tell you about how poor Captain Crandall endeavored to save face after his embarrassing dunking in Lake George.)

Sagamore insurance paid

Through the agency of Charles W. Cool, of Glens Falls, the insurance on the fire loss sustained by the burning of the Sagamore Hotel, at Bolton Landing, was adjusted and paid May 13, 1914 to the owners of the property, who were represented by John Boulton Simpson and T. Edward Krumbholz, both of New York.

The loss was paid in the full amount of the insurance carried, which was $159,000. (Note Ð The story of this horrific fire, on April 14, 1914, that destroyed the palatial 350 room Sagamore Hotel on Lake George, was told in this column on April 5, 2014 in the Adirondack Journal.)

Little dog mourned

H.C. Ingraham, of Landon Hill, Pottersville, with the help of three men, drove four head of young cattle to his Igerna pasture, Saturday, May 9, 1914. He greatly missed the help of his faithful old dog Fido who was killed last fall as he and Fido had always driven them alone for many years.

A good Thurman man dies

William Hack, 74, a highly respected citizen of Thurman, died there at his home on Sunday morning, April 26, 1914 after an illness of eleven weeks. He had lived in Thurman for some 40 years. Mr. Hack was a good man, a man of unquestioned integrity and uprightness in his business relation and unassuming and devout in his religious life after he was united many years ago with the Thurman Baptist Church where he was an honored deacon. He was twice married, his first wife being Miss Elizabeth Hall and they had two daughters. About fifteen years ago his wife died and he later married Mrs. Marie Germain of Thurman who survives him. His sister is Mrs. James Bennett.

Warrensburgh news

The cold and rainy weather recently has us all hopefully thinking of the old saying that Ò A cold, wet May fills the barn with hay.” Grass has never looked better to farmers at his season than it does at present. The Warren House hotel is looking to hire a hostler (a stable groom). Miss Lizzie Dow, of Athol, is employed as waitress at the Grand Army House in Warrensburgh. Miss Vina Combs recently underwent an operation for appendicitis at the Glens Falls Hospital. Mrs. Delbert E. Pasco has been dangerously ill with pleuro-pneumonia and is in critical condition. Miss Susie Woodward, daughter of Fred H. Woodward, formerly of Warrensburgh, has been seriously ill with scarlet fever at her home in Dolgeville. She attended the funeral of her uncle, undertaker Joseph Woodward who died in Warrensburgh about two weeks ago. Mrs. Philip Rice is advertising for a lost package containing five pairs of child’s bloomers and a silver thimble. Mrs. C.B. Bennett has a ten room house for sale on Library Street in the Woolen Mill dis-

trict. Price reasonable Ð terms cash. Easue Baker moved his family from Warrensburgh on to the James Kenyon farm in North Thurman. Harry Wells is rebuilding his planning mill building on River Street, which collapsed and fell into the Schroon River under the great weight of snow on the roof this past winter. George R. Haskell and Fred W. Hall, of the Haskell & Hall Company, Inc., went to Albany Thursday, May 7, 1914 and brought home an Overland automobile truck which the company purchased for hauling heavy goods. (Note Ð The story of this new department store was told in this column in the Jan. 11, 2014 Adirondack Journal.)

Latest news roundabout

Oakman Helms, of Long Lake, has sold his launch, The Comet, to Howard Hamner and bought a new auto from Harry Stone. Eugene Murphy, of Chester, has been confined to the house for several days having cut his leg with an ax while trimming limbs from a tall tree near his home. John H. Arehart, of West Stony Creek, gave a maple sugar party at the Lake House on April 29, 1914 in Harrisburgh. A sugar party at L.T. EldridgeÕ s lower store in Wevertown on Saturday evening netted $15 for church expenses. Wesley Morehouse, of Sodom, has potatoes up already and will have some new potatoes by the Fourth of July. Arthur Russell, of Long Lake, rode his bicycle to North Thurman recently and visited his relatives there for a few days before riding back home the way he came. A quiet home wedding was solemnized at the home of Samuel Turner in North Creek, Thursday, April 23, 1914 when the youngest daughter, Cora was united in marriage with George Martin of Albany. David Sawyer moved his family on Thursday, April 23, 1914 from Bakers Mills to the farm he recently purchased from Warren Wescott, which is generally known as the Uncle Thomas Somerville Farm near Johnsburgh. Kenwell & Brown, of North Creek, have exchanged a new Buick roadster with Isaac Kenwell, of Indian Lake, for a second hand 5-passenger Jackson. Abram Ross, of Johnsburgh, has put a new roof on his house. Miss Jessie Lackey and some of her friends enjoyed a ride to Hoopers Mines, Friday, May 8, 1914 in her brotherÕ s new auto. Duell and Culver have begun work on the new schoolhouse in Adirondack. Readers are welcome to contact Adirondack Journal correspondent Jean Hadden at jhadden1@nycap.rr.com or 623-2210.

Letters to the Editor

Just a cycle To the Adirondack Journal: ÒT he farther backward you can look, the farther forward you are likely to seeÓ Ð Winston Churchill, Nobel Laureate in Literature (history). The story of climate change is one of continual cyclical change. Multi-decade cycles occur within millennial-scale cycles, which are super-imposed on 100,000-year cycles. For example, temperatures warmed from the mid-1800s to 1880, cooled for 30 years, warmed from1910 to 1940, ran cooler for 35 years, warmer for 20 years, then cooler for the last 17 years. These multi-decade oscillations are part of the Modern Warming Period and correlate with solar activity, not CO2; the cooler periods confound climate alarmistsÕ computer models, occurring despite rising CO2. Looking back in time from the Modern Warming Period, millennial-scale warm/cool cycles were: Little Ice Age, Medieval Optimum, Dark Ages cooling, Roman Warm Period, Grecian Cool Period, Minoan Optimum, etc. Google them. The warm periods were warmer than today; weÕ re still a few degrees Fahrenheit below the 4,000-year average. The Little Ice Age was defined by four especially cold multi-decade periods during which sun spots were infrequent Ð there were almost no sun spots during the 70-year Maunder Minimum (16451715) and very few during the Dalton Minimum (1790-1820). Sun spots have been counted ever since 1610-1612 when Fabricius, Galileo, and Harriot began observing them. Isotopes also reveal that solar activity correlated with millennial-scale cycles. During the Medieval Optimum 1,000 years ago, mountain glaciers in Europe retreated up-valley; Vikings settled and farmed in Greenland - the ice had receded far more than today Ð but they abandoned the colony after several centuries due to the onset of the Little Ice Age in the 14th century; and mountain glaciers advanced again down their valleys, burying settlements, farms, and mines that had to be abandoned. Ice fairs were held regularly on the Thames in winter during the Dalton Minimum. WeÕ ve been emerging naturally from the Little Ice Age for 200 years. ClimateReality programs omit discussion of multi-decade and millennial-scale cycles, which would defeat GoreÕ s purpose of persuading people that CO2 affects the climate and is causing catastrophic warming. ClimateReality programs especially donÕ t mention the 1940-1977 cooling period or the current 17year cooling period. Both have occurred despite increasing at-

mospheric CO2. Evidence is lacking that our contemporary climate change is other than a continuation of normal multi-decade and millennial-scale cycles. GoreÕ s programs assert CO2Õ s effect not by evidence, but by innuendo, implication, and scare-mongering - psychologically effective, but scientifically meritless. Paul Gilchrist Diamond Point

Disappointed with cartoon To the Adirondack Journal: I was very disappointed with your cartoon (April 12 issue) suggesting that while Big Corporation execs disregard their employees in the interest of profits and huge salaries and benefits for themselves, the Ò bad guysÓ are public employees. There is a serious disconnect here & media such as this contributes greatly to unfair & inappropriate animosities toward public employees. With the exception of politicians, public employees earn a fraction of what someone with the same education would earn in private business. It is their pension that helps balance this out. Regarding our federal elected officials, serving one term in Congress gets them a lifetime pension. Corporate execs, who continue to take in their multimillion dollar salaries plus untold benefits, seem to have little if any, concern for employees who have often dedicated their lives to the company. Have we already forgotten the recent recession when home owners lost their homes, employees lost their jobs & pensions, while bank and corporate execs kept their outrageous salaries, bonuses, multiple homes and more? How about a cartoon, or article showing where the true blame lies? Judy Beers Lake George

Fracking can help To the Adirondack Journal: The paperÕ s opposition to fracking, like its support of Greenism generally, is ignorant and destructive of the wellbeing of citizens of the North Country. Fracking, like every other form of resource development today, is managed in such a way as to minimize environmental damage and maximize benefits.

Greens, overwhelmingly upper middle class, are opposed to development, but most of the North CountryÕ s residents want to see prosperity return to the area, and fracking is a great way to do it, as Texas and North Dakota show. Remember climate scientist Richard LindzenÕ s declaration: It would appear that the privileged members of the global society regard as dogma that the rest of humanity is a blight on the planet, and all efforts should be devoted to preventing their economic improvement and development. Jigs (John) Gardner, Westport

Auxillary hosts fundraiser To the Adirondack Journal: The auxiliary is dedicated to supporting the nursing home and rehab center and its residents. During 2013 the Adirondack Tri-County Nursing & Rehabilitation Center Auxiliary made the following donations to the home: $255 for chairs to Activities and Day Care, $200 for Elvis impersonator during Nursing Home Week, $200 for a grill, $209 to Infection Control, $4,999 for a refrigerator and audio equipment, $87 for miscellaneous items and 3 ongoing projects: $2,436 for Companion Radio, $788 for DSL computer service, and $987 to pay for the bingo tickets that residents win and can spend in the HomeÕ s gift shop. The donations total $10,238. The funds for these donations are raised through various events throughout the year. The next event to be held is the Tricky Tray on Friday, May 2, at the Nursing & Rehab Center, 112 Ski Bowl Road, North Creek. Tricky Tray is a table auction with many baskets and items available. There are also drawings held. It is a fun filled evening. Ticket sales start at 6 p.m. and the drawings start at 7 p.m. Members of the auxiliary also volunteer at the Center helping the residents shop on shopping days, working in the gift shop, helping with church services, feeding, etc. In order to continue to be effective the auxiliary needs lots of active members. If you are interested in making a difference to the residents of the Center, please consider joining the auxiliary. Please call Nancy Shaw at 251-3069 or Deana Wood at 251-5271. Please join the auxiliary on May 2 for Tricky Tray night. Deana Wood Vice-President Adirondack Tri-County Nursing & Rehabilitation Center Auxiliary


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May 3, 2014

Area leaders ask Sen. Gillibrand for help in boosting economic growth initiatives By Thom Randall

thom@denpubs.com QUEENSBURY Ñ Infrastructure development and small-business marketing in the southern Adirondack region were the primary topics as area business and community leaders shared their ideas on how to boost local prosperity with U.S. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand in a roundtable discussion held Wednesday April 16 at SUNY Adirondack. Warrensburg Supervisor Kevin Geraghty Ñ who serves as chairman of the Warren County Board of Supervisors Ñ said that expansion and upgrades of municipal infrastructure, including road repair and reconstruction, were a primary concern to municipalities regionally. Queensbury Supervisor John Strough made a similar point, noting that expansion of water and sewer systems were vital to attracting industries and creating jobs. Ò Our greatest need is to expand infrastructure to allow greater business, commercial and industrial growth,Ó Strough said. Observing that a recent federal study concluded that Warren County needed $100 million in wastewater system upgrades, Gillibrand noted sheÕ s co-sponsoring a bill that would expedite the movement of federal money to states to bankroll low-interest loans on municipal infrastructure construction. Warren County EDC President Ed Bartholomew also noted the infrastructure needs of the region, noting not only aging water and wastewater systems, but the need for broadband access in Northern and central Warren County as well as Washington County. Bartholomew also asked Gillibrand for her support in transferring the General Electric manufacturing plant property in Fort Edward, totalling 38 acres, to a third party soon after the company vacates it, so it can be redeveloped quicker. General Electric officials have announced their intent to shut down their Fort Edward manufacturing plant early next year, causing the loss of 200 local jobs. Both Bartholomew and Adirondack Regional Chamber of Commerce president Peter Aust asked Gillibrand for her help in bringing a new hockey team to Glens Falls. This is the Adirondack PhantomsÕ last season as the pri-

During an area economic development roundtable discussion held April 16 at SUNY Adirondack, Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (center) tells area political and business leaders how small businesses in the region can seek financing help from the federal Export-Import Bank to aid them expand their sales to foreign countries. Participating in the roundtable event were SUNY Adirondack President Kristine Duffy (left) and EDC Warren County President Ed Bartholomew (right) mary tenant in the Glens Falls Civic Center. The Phantoms, an AHL team, are relocating to Allentown, Pa. Ò The Glens Falls Civic Center plays an important role in the cultural, entertainment and sports activities of our citizens,Ó Aust said. Gillibrand responded that she was well aware of the civic centerÕ s local prominence, as she had as a teenager attended her first rock concert there, witnessing The Clash perform. She responded that she would support efforts to attract a new ice hockey team. Gillibrand noted that local businesses could be helped out by taking advantage of programs of the federal Export-Import Bank, which offers small businesses pre-payment of the cost of producing goods scheduled for international sale, provides loan guarantees for business expansion, and can grant loans to international customers of U.S. small businesses so they can pay for shipments of goods produced here in the U.S. She said she had explained such opportunities at a roundtable event in Plattsburgh, and was willing to present one in the Glens Falls area.

Howard Nelson of Hudson Headwaters Health Network to Gillibrand he appreciated her support in obtaining a $5 million federal grant for the construction of the new Warrensburg Health Center, the hub of the network of health clinics. He noted that when Gillibrand was a congresswoman before she was elected to the U.S. Senate, Hudson Headwaters had 12 health centers and a staff of 475 Ñ and that now HHHN has 16 health centers employing 650 people. Geraghty said that Warrensburg had been Ò very fortunateÓ not only in hosting HHHNÕ s new federally-funded health center, but also in receiving federal money through the Safe Routes to School program that was paying for new sidewalks in Warrensburg. Gillibrand responded that local municipalities that research grant opportunities and pursue them are more likely to obtain money they need for infrastructure. Ò The more shots on goal, the more you score,Ó she said. Laura Oswald, Director of Economic Development for Washington County, noted that several communities in the county had been

battered in recent years by storms that created so much damage they were crippling local economies. Oswald noted that six businesses in Salem had closed down recently, primarily due to the damage caused to local infrastructure. She asked Gillibrand to expand the eligibility guidelines to obtain federal tax credits for preserving or rehabilitating historic structures Ñ allowing for clusters of historic properties to make a single application. Gillibrand responded that she would work on the issue. Mitch Amado, Chief Financial Officer of Glens Falls Hospital, told Gillibrand that his institution, the regionÕ s largest private employer, was enduring economic stresses. He said the hospital has lost 2,500 admissions over the past two years. The hospital’s financial troubles started in 2012, when it spent $12 million more than its revenue. Ò Changes in health care are coming fast and furious, and weÕ re struggling with the situation,Ó he said, noting that the prevailing new emphasis on disease prevention and primary care were reducing the hospitalÕ s patient population dramatically. Ò WeÕ re looking for transition funding to help close the gap.Ó He also asked for Gillibrand to look into helping line up educational grants to help train people in the area to become Physician Assistants and Nurse Practicioners, whoÕ d be focused on community-based preventive care. SUNY Adirondack President Kristine Duffy outlined the new initiatives being pursued by the community college, including increasing the collegeÕ s programs in technology, health care, advanced manufacturing and science, as well as seeking grant funding to expand academic facilities. The college has recently applied for a $20 million state grant to pay for about twothirds of the cost of a new 70,000-square-foot building to host the new programs. Gillibrand said she supported the collegeÕ s new initiatives. Ò WeÕ ll work hard to accomplish all your goals,Ó she said to Duffy. After the meeting, Bartholomew said the meeting was a productive extension of existing political dialogue. Ò Kirsten Gillibrand and her staff members are in constant communication with various municipal officials in the region,” he said.


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May 3, 2014

Adirondack Journal - 9

Ball Gowns for breast cancer Innaugrual ‘Mom Prom’ planned for May 3 By Mauranda Stahl-Sorensen mauranda@denpubs.com

LAKE GEORGE — The first annual Mom Prom will be held Saturday, May 3, 7 to 11 p.m., at the Towers Hall of the Fort William Henry Hotel And Conference Center. Mom Prom was first established in Canton, Mich., by Besty Crapps as a fundraising measure for a local homeless shelter. Mom PromsÕ aim is for ladies 21 and older to dust off the prom or wedding dresses that are languishing in the back of closets and under beds, and zip them back on for charitable causes. Gretchen Lovering attended the Saratoga Mom Prom in 2013, and now with the support of friends and family is coordinating the Lake George event to support CindyÕ s Comfort Care Camp and the Uniquely You Salon And Boutique. CindyÕ s Comfort Care Camp is a free weekend overnight camp for kids 6-17 years of age, whose lives have been directly effected by a parent with terminal illness. It hosts both a suffering and loss camp, where campers are matched with a ÒB ig BuddyÓ to provide them an array of

Boat washing

Continued from page 1

Madday earns president’s list

FARMINGDALE Ñ John Maday of Chestertown was among more than 750 students included on the PresidentÕ s List for Fall 2013. Full-time students at Farmingdale State College who obtain a grade point average of 3.75 or better are recognized through inclusion on the PresidentÕ s List. The transcript of each student who earns this distinction carries this indicator of high academic achievement. in Ticonderoga, Roger Õ s Rock Public campground and Boatlaunch in Hague, Norowal Marina in Bolton Landing, DunhamÕ s Bay Dock and Launch in Queensbury and the Lake George Inspection Station in Lake George. A sixth site, located at the Huletts Landing Marina, will be privately contracted. The other five sites will be staffed through Heber Staffing and the Commission. Along with the washing sites, Wick said the Commission has sent out 86 private

Many people browsing at a recent Caldwell Lake George library book sale. Event is held on the second Friday of each month from 2 to 4:30 p.m. Photo provided

launch agreements along with agreements with local marinas. Ò We have about 20 of the private launch agreements back so far,Ó Wick said. Ò We have the other 66-plus to get back by May 15. Everyone so far has been very receptive.Ó One issue brought up was how the new boat washing policies and station would mesh with the several fishing tournaments that would be taking place on the lake in the summer when fishermen arrive as early as 4 a.m. to put their boats in the water.

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Ò Two weeks ago we put it out that we were going to be looking for people to work at five of the sites,Ó Wick said. Ò In the last week, we have been interviewing in 10-minute intervals and have seen a lot of quality candidates.Ó The five sites the Commission will staff are located at Mossy Point Public Boat Launch

survivorship services including grief counseling, healing therapies and physical fitness outlets. Uniquely You Salon And Boutique is part of the C.R. Wood Cancer Center at GlenÕ s Falls Hospital. The salon is able to provide abetment in the selection of wigs, hair styling, turban wrapping and treatments to those progressing through cancer treatments. ÒB reast cancer has directly affected so many lives, these two charities helped out in a personal way,Ó said Lovering. ÒO ne hundred percent of our proceeds after expenses will be going to charity. This is something I hope can go on for years.Ó For more information or to purchase tickets for this event, visit lakegeorgemomprom.com or contact Gretchen Lovering by telephone 7926217.

623-3723

45806

• Mowing • Spring Clean-ups • Mulch • Retaining Walls • Trees, Shrubs & New Lawns Installed

Ò We have tried to make it clear to the tournament directors to have their fishermen show up early and we will start as early as 3 a.m. for tournament days,Ó Wick said. Ò I think that we are doing everything that we can to make the systems work for both sides, but it is going to be a work in progress. They know what the rules are and we are going to be as possible. We want to make it work.Ó The next Lake George Park Commission meeting will be held Friday, May 30, 2 p.m. at the Bolton Town Hall.


10 - Adirondack Journal

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May 3, 2014


May 3, 2014

Paul Matson: North Warren Chamber VIP By Keith Lobdell

keith@denpubs.com CHESTERTOWN Ñ For the past 12 years, Paul Matson has been running Garnet Signs in Chestertown, helping make local businesses more visible. Matson has also been helping local non-profits and municipalities, as well, creating signs and banners for events and public buildings at minimal charge. For that, Matson has been named as the North Warren Chamber of Commerce VIP for 2014. Ò I try to give people good deals when it comes to community groups,Ó Matson said. Ò Stuff like that is important. We have to support the people who do so much for our community and put in a lot of volunteer time, which is basically another job for them. I want to make sure that I help out these local groups and organizations.Ó Matson said he sees the work people in the community do to help Ò spruce up,Ó the town and region, and he wanted to use his talents to help in that process. Ò A lot of people do a lot more than I do,Ó he said. Ò Humbled does not seem to be the right word, but I am very appreciative of this award. I canÕ t take full responsibility because I have others who work here with me and I think highly of everyone in this town.Ó Matson has spent 24 years in the sign business, starting Garnet Signs 12 years ago after tiring of traveling downstate. Ò I like living in rural areas,Ó he said. Ò My brother and I had a sign shop in Waterford and for 12 years I would commute there and one day I just said I was tired of that.Ó Since, he as been applying his trade throughout the North Warren region. Ò If it has letters on it, we do it,Ó he said about his business. Matson will be honored during the May 7 celebration dinner at JimboÕ s Club at the Point in Brant Lake beginning 6 p.m.

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Adirondack Journal - 11

Chestertown Gallery: North Warren Chamber Small Business of the Year By Keith Lobdell

keith@denpubs.com CHESTERTOWN Ñ Since 2009, the Art in Chestertown Gallery has brought local artists together to celebrate their works. The gallery has been awarded with the 2014 North Warren Chamber of CommerceÕ s Small Business of the Year and will be honored during the May 7 celebration dinner at JimboÕ s Club at the Point in Brant Lake beginning 6 p.m. Ò I was very surprised and delighted by the award,Ó said Fred Holman, President of the North Country Arts Center and gallery manager. “I think that it shows what the role of a non-profit can be in the North Country. Holman said the Art in Chestertown Gallery was started as a way to promote local artists and bring them back into the community. Ò The arts association began in Warrensburg in the 1970Õ s and eventually we moved to Glens Falls,Ó Holman said. Ò We were looking for a way to get back into the North Country and the

idea was to have a show in one of the storefronts.Ó The first show started with 25 artists and ran for six weeks. Ò By the end, we had 42 artists in and they didnÕ t want us to stop,Ó Holman said. Ò The community didnÕ t want us to stop. We ended with three shows that year and we are now to the point where we have seven shows a year.Ó The season starts with a student art show, which will host an opening reception May 2 from 6 to 8 p.m. Hours for the gallery are from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekends until June 14, when hours will be from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursdays through Sundays. For more information on the Arts in Chestertown Gallery, visit northcountryartscenter.org, or email northcountryartscenter@ gmail.com.

North Warren Chamber event set CHESTERTOWN Ñ The North Warren Chamber has announced the winners of its two coveted awards. Paul Matson of Garnet Signs is VIP Person of the Year and the Art in Chestertown Gallery has been named Small Business of the Year. Matson has tirelessly devoted his artistic skills to creating signs and banners for events and public buildings at minimal charge. His artwork can be seen throughout town and helps visitors as well as residents identify landmarks and activities. His latest creation is a rendition of Dynamite HillÕ s mascot, Ò Sparky the Snowman,Ó which will soon be installed at the bottom of the road leading to the TownÕ s recreation ski and bike area. The Art in Chestertown Gallery provides a venue for artists to display their works and attracts visitors to the area. As part of the North Country Arts Center based in Glens Falls, the gallery is an outlet of creativity. Scheduled classes, plein air paint-outs and gallery openings draw those looking for artistic expression to the area. A dinner in honor of the winners is scheduled for May 7 at JimboÕ s Club at the Point in Brant Lake, beginning 6 p.m. The cost is $29 and there is a choice of fish, chicken or steak. Hors d’oeuvres, a plated salad and dessert tray are included. Please call JimboÕ s at 494-3213 between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. to reserve your spot.


12 - Adirondack Journal

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May 3, 2014

New garden center & market to open in Brant Lake By Thom Randall

thom@denpubs.com HORICON Ñ A long-awaited enterprise thatÕ s likely to become a main venue in town Ñ not only for vital supplies, but for socializing Ñ is opening to the public this week. The Lazy Moose Garden Market at 6499 State Rte. 8 west of the Brant Lake hamlet, opens Thursday May 8. The business Ñ which combines a garden center, a hardware outlet and a general store Ñ is housed in spacious buildings where Brant Lake Supply once stood. Visitors to the market will find The main greenhouse at The Lazy Moose Garden Market in Horicon several greenhouses full of both just west of Brant Lake features a wide array of colorful perennials and perennials and annuals, plenty of annuals, as well as hanging baskets and potted plants. The Lazy Moose, hanging baskets of flowers and which includes hardware and groceries in its inventory, is opening to Courtesy photo potted plants Ñ and gardening the public Thursday May 8. supplies including soil suppleLazy MooseÕ s greenhouse manager Leslie Leomments, fertilizers and peat moss, bulk topsoil and bruno will routinely be on hand to offer helpful other landscaping supplies. gardening advice. The store also features garden art, including inPaul Schuerlein noted that since the beloved triguing antiques and furnishings fashioned into DabyÕ s General Store in Brant Lake burned down planters. in 2006, thereÕ s been a void in the local business The general store includes hardware, tools, and social scene Ñ particularly after several other plumbing supplies, gifts including home decor local enterprises closed afterwards. items and outdoor deck furnishings. Ò WeÕ re happy to be a cornerstone of new comBut thatÕ s not all. The store includes an array mercial activity in town,Ó he said, observing that of groceries, gourmet items, and gluten-free food. another startup enterprise and several business In the spirit of the rural general store of bygone expansions were underway locally. Ò Brant Lake is days, the store will also soon feature a cafe serv- due for a revitalization.Ó ing breakfast and lunch items including sandKelli Dougan said that Roger and Jane Daby, wiches, wraps, burgers, soups, salads, bagels and proprietors of the legendary DabyÕ s General croissants, either for dining on-site in the intimate Store, are to be on hand for Lazy MooseÕ s openbistro or for take-out. Pies and breads, baked on ing day. the premises are to be featured along with gourÒ We want to carry on DabyÕ s tradition of a wellmet coffee Ñ will also be served as soon as the stocked, friendly country store,Ó Dougan said. cafe’s new kitchen receives certification, which is Ò WeÕ re looking to bring business back to Brant expected in several weeks. Lake to benefit everyone in the community.” Construction of the facilities at The Lazy Moose The Lazy Moose can be reached at 494-4039. has been ongoing for about a year. Without a Initial hours of operation are 6:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. doubt, its expansive Ñ thereÕ s about 6,000 feet Monday through Saturday, and 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. under roof. on Sunday, Paul Scheurlein said, as he offered his Owners Teri and Paul Schuerlein and sister thoughts about the enterprise. Kelli Dougan have spent thousands of hours in Ò Hopefully, we will do the community justice,Ó making the new store a reality. Dougan noted that he said.

Quality Manor Furniture & Mattress

46865


May 3, 2014

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Adirondack Journal - 13

Stony Creek By Sandy Farrell 696-5009 • sdfarrell@frontiernet.net

Dirty Dozen Garden Club to Begin Friday, May 2:

QUEENSBURY — Warren County Health Services blood pressure clinic, Warrensburg Meal Site, 11:13 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. 761-6580.

Saturday, May 3:

QUEENSBURY — The Community Exchange Foundation, a Glens Falls-based 501(c)(3) organization, presents the 2014 Spring/Summer Kids’ Exchange Consignment Event, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Adirondack Sports Complex (The Dome) in Queensbury. Admission is free. Purchases are cash only. A half-price sale will run from 1 to 3 p.m. when most items are marked down by 50 percent. Bring donations to the Dome on Thursday, May 1 or Friday, May 2. LAKE GEORGE — Running through June 6, the Lake George Arts Project’s Courthouse Gallery will present Open Sea Dark Land, a solo exhibition of recent work by Gabe Brown. The opening reception takes place from 4 – 6 p.m. This event is free and open to the public. STONY CREEK — The award-winning garden club will begin meeting May 3 and Saturdays following at 10 a.m. at the Stony Creek Free Library. For more information, call 696-5911. LAKE GEORGE — The Lake George Music Festival will host its annual Spring Fundraising Dinner, 6 p.m. at the Dunham’s Bay Resort on Lake George. A $35 admission includes a full sit down dinner, beer/wine, dessert and live entertainment by local musician Danny Lombardo. For more information please call 791-5089 or visit them online at lakegeorgemusicfestival.com. HORICON — Training for lake stewards from ESSLA, Schroon Lake, Paradox, Loon Lake, Brant Lake and Lake Luzerne will be conducted by Paul Smith’s at the Horicon Community Center on, 9 a.m. until noon.

Monday, May 5:

BOLTON — Bolton Seniors Business Meeting 10:15 a.m., Senior Center on Cross Street. Val & Walter Worobey will give a presentation on their trip to Belarus. Lunch to follow at the meal site. Please call 644-2368 to reserve a meal.

Wednesday, May 7:

QUEENSBURY — SUNY Adirondack will host an adult learners open house from 6 to 7:30 p.m. in the SUNY Adirondack Student Center for adult learners or those adults contemplating a return to college studies to complete a degree. Prospective students and their families are welcome to attend. The formal presentation will begin promptly at 6:15 p.m.

Thursday, May 8:

QUEENSBURY — Bob Schulz, founder of “We The People” will be unveiling his “plan” for creating a citizen coalition/network in every election district, town, village and city across the state Thursday, May 8 from 6 to 9 p.m. at the Warrensburg Town Hall. Sponsored by the Adirondack Cooperative Economy. CHESTERTOWN — Rev. Paul Winkelman, former pastor of Johnsburg and Pottersville United Methodist Churches, will present a slide show and speak of his trip to the Holy Land in Israel/Palestine in January of 2014. 7 p.m.

CHESTERTOWN — The first meeting of the Friends of Horicon Free Public Library for the year 2014 will be held in the Horicon Town Hall, 4 p.m. They will introduce new board members.

Saturday, May 10:

LAKE GEORGE — Anthony DeFranco, PE, CNLP of DeFranco Landscaping, Inc. will be discussing “Rain Gardens”, 1 p.m. at the Fund for Lake George’s Stewardship with Style: A Lakescape Event. The event will be held at Shepard’s Park in Lake George from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m. CHESTERTOWN — The annual Stepping Stones workshop, 1 p.m. at the pavilion. Pre-registration for this program is needed. If you have a child that is between the ages of 1 and 4 that wants to make a hand and footprint stone, call Barb Blum at 494-3357 or Sal at 260-0043.

Monday, May 12:

STONY CREEK — Ellie Benoit will be teaching a workshop for anyone interested in learning to crochet a tote from common plastic shopping bags, 6:30 p.m., Stony Creek Library. Cost of the two classes is $5. HORICON — 7 p.m., at the Horicon Community Center, there will be a program by the North Warren Central School’s high school students in the MOAS Program. These students are learning leadership and other democratic values.

Tuesday, May 13:

BOLTON — Bolton Seniors Racino carpool 9 a.m. Call Pat M. for more information at 644-9359. CHESTERTOWN — The Town of Chester Library and Chester/Horicon Youth Commission present Science Series Program “Minerals,” with Lynette Delczeg, 3:15 p.m. Free admission. for information call 494-5384.

Wednesday, May 14:

BOLTON — Bolton Seniors Bingo 10:15 a.m., Senior Center. Bring a small prize, ex. candy, an old paperback etc. Pizza to follow for lunch. LAKE GEORGE — The Caldwell-Lake George Library is sponsoring “Common Threads: Adirondack Quilts Tell Their Stories,” by Hallie E. Bond, 7 p.m. Seating is limited, please call for reservations at 668-2528.

Thursday, May 15:

LAKE GEORGE — Caldwell Presbyterian Church, 71 Montcalm Street, Lake George, will be holding it’s annual Spring Rummage and Bake Sale, 3 to 7 p.m. Contact the church office at 668-2613.

Friday, May 16:

LAKE GEORGE — Caldwell Presbyterian Church, 71 Montcalm Street, Lake George, will be holding it’s annual Spring Rummage and Bake Sale, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Contact the church office at 668-2613.

The award-winning garden club will begin meeting May 3 and Saturdays following at 10 a.m. at the Stony Creek Free Library. All children are welcome to participate for free to learn gardening fundamentals such as soil testing, planting, composting, hot and cold cropping and more. For more information, call 696-5911.

Crafty Creekers Monday Night Schedule

•Come for Cardmaking on Monday, May 5 at 7 p.m. again with Tara Fisher. Please bring $5 for supplies to make two cards. More materials available to buy at the class if desired. •The beginner sewing class taught by Pat Carbery was well attended! Pat will be teaching a follow-up sewing class on May 19 at6pm when we will learn to make a pillowcase, which we will then be donating to children with cancer. Again, no cost to attend. Call the library at 696-5911 for more details and supplies list. •Are shopping bags clogging up your pantry? Ellie Benoit will be teaching a workshop for anyone interested in learning to crochet a tote from common plastic shopping bags. This two-session workshop will be held on Monday, May 12 and Monday, May 26 at 6:30 p.m. at the library. Cost of the two classes is $5 and participants should bring good scissors, shopping bags, and a crochet hook size G or larger. Extra bags and hooks will also be available for those who donÕ t have them. •On May 26, Ellie will demonstrate and assist the class in crafting a fabric liner for the totes. All are encouraged to bring sewing machines and thread. Fabric will be provided and there will be extra machines available. Participants are welcome to bring favorite fabrics of their own or to share. There is an example of a finished tote on the Stony Creek Free Library Facebook page. To sign up, call or leave a message at 696-5911. To learn to crochet, visit the Crafty Creekers on Monday nights at 7:00 p.m. at the library. The Crafty Creekers normal Monday night meetings are free and held at 7 p.m. at the Stony Creek Free Library. The group is open to anyone wanting to learn to knit or crochet, practice other crafts, or work on holiday projects. Snacks are welcome and hot tea and coffee are always available. For more information, please call the Stony Creek Free Library at 696-5911 or see the Stony Creek Free Library Facebook page for updates on this and other library activities.

Beginners Watercolor Class

Artist Tom Ryan will teach a one day watercolor class at the Stony Creek Town Hall on Saturday, May 17 from 10 to 4:30 p.m. If you have ever wanted to experience the fun of watercolor but havenÕ t had the confidence to start, this workshop is for you. It is designed for beginners or those who have been away from painting far too long.


14 - Adirondack Journal

Benefit dinner planned

WARRENSBURG Ñ A spaghetti dinner is planned May 24, 4 to 7 p.m to benefit the New York Kidney Transplant fund. A silent auction will be held at the Masonic Lodge, 3893 Main Street. Proceeds will go to HelpHOPELive to assist with the upcoming kidney transplant exprenses for Roger Niles. Tickets may be purchased prior to the event by contacting Bud York 222-2322 or by email budyork1@yahoo.com. An amount of $10 for adults, kids 4-11 $5 has been set. Children 3 and under eat for free.

Garage sales to start

LAKE GEORGE Ñ The fifth annual Season Opener Adirondack Garage Sale will be held Saturday, May 3, through Sunday, May 4, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. each day. The Lake George Community Garage Sale is a combination of both local business and privately owned properties all throughout Lake George, listed on an event map, for your convenience while shopping. Event maps will be available at Shady Business (275 Canada St), Fort William Henry Hotel (48 Canada St) And Lake George Chamber Of Commerce (2176 State Route 9). For any further questions on the garage sale please contact, Carollee Labruzzo at 668-2038, 588-4840 or sunshop1@nycap. rr.com.

Horicon Library friends to meet

CHESTERTOWN — The first meeting of the Friends of Horicon Free Public Library for the year 2014 will be held in the Horicon Town Hall Thursday, May 8, 4 p.m. They will introduce new board members. The annual Stepping Stones workshop will be held at Saturday, May 10, 1 p.m. at the pavilion. Pre-registration for this program is needed. If you have a child that is between the ages of 1 and 4 that wants to make a hand and footprint stone, call Barb Blum at 494-3357 or Sal at 260-0043.

Fishing tournament to be held

CHESTERTOWN Ñ The Town of Chester Library and Chester/Horicon Youth Commission present Science Series Program Ò Minerals,Ó with Lynette Delczeg Thursday, May 15, 3:15 p.m. Free admission. for information call 494-5384

Fishing tournament coming

BRANT LAKE Ñ Barney Barnhart Fishing Derby held at the Brant Lake Mill Pond, hosted by the Chestertown Conservation Club, will be held May 17, 8 a.m to 1 p.m. Registration is at 8 a.m at the Brant Lake Firehouse, Free for children 15 and under, with lunch included. If you have any questions you can call Mike Packer at 4943943.

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News in brief Kids’ exchange at Dome

QUEENSBURY Ñ The Community Exchange Foundation, a Glens Falls-based 501(c)(3) organization, presents the 2014 Spring/Summer KidsÕ Exchange Consignment Event on Saturday, May 3, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., at the Adirondack Sports Complex (The Dome) in Queensbury. Admission is free. Purchases are cash only. A half-price sale will run from 1 to 3 p.m. when most items are marked down by 50 percent. The KidsÕ Exchange features thousands of like-new and gently-used childrenÕ s items for sale to the public. The sale offers top-quality childrenÕ s clothing sizes newborn-14/16, toys, outdoor play equipment, bikes, baby gear and strollers, gaming and tech gear, books, furniture, sports gear and room dŽ cor. The KidsÕ Exchange also welcomes donations of gently-used childrenÕ s items. All contributions are tax-deductible. Bring donations to the Dome on Thursday, May 1 or Friday, May 2. Proceeds from the spring event will benefit the Community Exchange Foundation and local organizations. Past beneficiaries have included the Snuggery at Glens Falls Hospital, Crandall Public Library and the Town of QueensburyÕ s Q-Club Summer Youth Program. Unsold items are donated to the BabyÕ s Place/ North Country Ministry in Warrensburg. For all sale information, visit exchange-foundation.org.

Store to fundraise for 4-H

QUEENSBURY Ñ The Tractor Supply Company (TSC) in Queensbury will again participate in a national campaign to help raise monies for local 4-H programs and the National 4-H organization. Each TSC store raises funds by asking for a single dollar donation at each transaction starting April 23 through May 4. The proceeds are divided between National and New York State 4-H programs. Warren County 4-H receives approximately 66 percent of the funds. Last year, the Queensbury Store raised over $1,000 for Warren County 4-H. For information about this fundraising effort, how to join 4-H, or how you can become a 4-H volunteer, please call John Bowe, Martina Yngente Noone, Abby Foster, or Michele Baker at 6233291 or 668-4881.

Brown’s works to be shown

LAKE GEORGE Ñ Opening May 3 and running through June 6, the Lake George Arts ProjectÕ s Courthouse Gallery will present Ò Open Sea Dark Land,Ó a solo exhibition of recent work by Gabe Brown. The opening reception takes place on Saturday, May 3, from 4 to 6 p.m. This event is free and open to the public.

Benoit to lead workshops

LAKE LUZERNE Ñ The Adirondack Folk School is seeking donations of hand-made soup bowls from area potters that will be sold as part of its fifth annual Bountiful Bowl Benefit. AFS will be accepting donations of bowls from June 1 through Aug. 22. This benefit is scheduled for Sunday, Aug. 31, noon to 3 p.m. at the Folk School located in Lake Luzerne. A portion of the proceeds from the event will be shared with the Maxfield Community Food Pantry. For more information about donating bowls or the event, please call the Folk School at 696-2400.

STONY CREEK Ñ Ellie Benoit will be teaching a workshop for anyone interested in learning to crochet a tote from common plastic shopping bags.This two-session workshop will be held on Monday, May 12, and Monday, May 26, at 6:30 p.m. at the Stony Creek Library. Cost of the two classes is $5 and participants should bring good scissors, shopping bags, and a crochet hook size G or larger. Extra bags and hooks will also be available for those who donÕ t have them. On May 26, Benoit will demonstrate and assist the class in crafting a fabric liner for the totes. All are encouraged to bring sewing machines and thread. Fabric will be provided and there will be extra machines available. Participants are welcome to bring favorite fabrics of their own or to share. There is an example of a finished tote on the Stony Creek Free Library Facebook page. To sign up, call or leave a message at 696-5911. To learn to crochet, visit the Crafty Creekers on Monday nights at 7 p.m. at the library.

MOAS program to be discussed

Garden club meeting in Stony Creek

Potters sought

HORICON Ñ May 12 at 7 p.m., at the Horicon Community Center, there will be a program by the North Warren Central SchoolÕ s high school students in the MOAS Program. These students are learning leadership and other democratic values. This is a college level program through SUNY Plattsburgh. Come and support these students. It is a joint program sponsored by the Horicon Historical Society and the Town of Chester Historical Society.

Rain garden workshop set

LAKE GEORGE Ñ Anthony DeFranco, PE, CNLP of DeFranco Landscaping, Inc. will be discussing Ò Rain GardensÓ May 10 at 1 p.m. at the Fund for Lake GeorgeÕ s Stewardship with Style: A Lakescape Event. The event will be held at ShepardÕ s Park in Lake George from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m. Other invited speakers include Brendan Quirion and Ed Kanze. The program focuses on practical easy-to-implement strategies for minimizing storm water runoff and pollutants from entering bodies of water, such as Lake George. DeFranco will provide examples of how green infrastructure and low-impact design can reduce the impacts to Lake George on existing dwellings or even new construction sites.

Seedlings still available

WARRENSBURG Ñ The Warren County Soil & Water Conservation District still has seedlings remaining from its tree and shrub sale. Cuurently available are: 10 American Larch, 25 Sugar Maple, 20 Arrowwood, eight Crabapple; 25 Pears and 60 Blueberries. Call 623-3119 for information.

Steward training programs planned

HORICON Ñ Training for lake stewards from ESSLA, Schroon Lake, Paradox, Loon Lake, Brant Lake and Lake Luzerne will be conducted by Paul SmithÕ s at the Horicon Community Center on Saturday, May 3, 9 a.m. until noon. Thanks to a grant from Warren County, ESSLA was able to hire four lake stewards for the summer so the Horicon Boat Launch will be covered seven days a week.

STONY CREEK Ñ The award-winning garden club will begin meeting May 3 and Saturdays following at 10 a.m. at the Stony Creek Free Library. All children are welcome to participate in learning gardening fundamentals such as soil testing, planting, composting, hot and cold cropping and more. For more information, call 696-5911.

Former WWE Superstar at Whitehall

WHITEHALL Ñ The Whitehall Athletic Club at 62 Poultney Street (former armory) will host WOH Wrestling Friday, May 2, 7 p.m. The event will feature former WWE Superstar Matt Hardy along with other WOH wrestlers. Tickets start at $15. For more information, call 260-8759.

Church to host rummage sale

LAKE GEORGE Ñ Caldwell Presbyterian Church, 71 Montcalm Street, Lake George, will be holding itÕ s annual Spring Rummage and Bake Sale May 15 from 3 to 7 p.m., May 16 from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., and May 17 from 9 to 11 a.m. Always a great variety of menÕ s, womenÕ s and childrenÕ s clothing and accessories, household items, books, toys, seasonal dŽ cor and furniture. For more information please contact the church office at 668-2613.

Schulz to speak

QUEENSBURY Ñ Bob Schulz, founder of Ò We The PeopleÓ will be unveiling his Ò planÓ for creating a citizen coalition/ network in every election district, town, village and city across the state Thursday, May 8 from 6 to 9 p.m. at the Warrensburg Town Hall. Sponsored by the Adirondack Cooperative Economy.

Casino trip planned

BRANT LAKE Ñ The Horicon Ladies Auxiliary is sponsoring a day trip July 22 to Akwesasne Mohawk Casino in Hogansburg. The non-refundable price of $45 per person provides $25 in slot play and a $10 food coupon. The bus leaves Brant Lake at 8 a.m. and arrives at the casino late morning, leaving Akwesasne at 6 p.m. For information and to register call Barbara Blum 494-3347.

May 3, 2014

Summer program registration set

QUEENSBURY Ñ Registration is now under way for SUNY AdirondackÕ s popular Summer Enrichment Program, to be held Monday, July 7, through Thursday, July 24. Daily registration will take place from 8 a.m. to 3:45 p.m. Monday through Friday in the Continuing Education Office in Washington Hall through Friday, June 13. Registrations received after this date are subject to availability. Summer Enrichment Program courses and activities will be offered at SUNY AdirondackÕ s main campus in Queensbury and at the collegeÕ s Wilton Center for children who have completed grades three through nine. Registrations will be handled on a first-come, first-served basis. Additional information can be obtained by visiting the CollegeÕ s web site at sunyacc.edu/ContinuingEd or calling the Office of Continuing Education at 743-2238.

Invasive species workshop set

LAKE GEORGE Ñ Japanese Knotweed (Invasive Bamboo), Giant Reed (Phragmites), Wild Parsnip, and Purple Loosestrife are a few of the terrestrial invasive plants affecting New York State and the Adirondacks. The Town of Bolton has budgeted money to address these invasives. Local citizens are invited to join a task force committee to give guidance to the treatment of these non-native pest species within the Town of Bolton. An organizing meeting will be held on Weds, May 21 at 6 p.m. at the Bolton Town Hall to discuss these species and potential treatment options for 2014. For more information or questions, feel free to contact Jodi Connally at 644-2444 or email Townclerk@ town.bolton.ny.us

Ryan to teach art class

STONY CREEK Ñ Artist Tom Ryan will teach a one day watercolor class at the Stony Creek Town Hall on Saturday, May 17, 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. If you have ever wanted to experience the fun of watercolor but haven’t had the confidence to start, this workshop is for you. It is designed for beginners or those who have been away from painting far too long. Attendees should bring in several photographs of a subject(s) that interest them. Instructor photographs will also be available to participants. This class is recommended for ages 13 and up. Cost is $15 per student. Supplies are included. Please bring a lunch for the 30 minute break. Call the Stony Creek Library to reserve a spot at 696-5911.

Dinner to raise funds for Music Festival

LAKE GEORGE Ñ The Lake George Music Festival will host its annual Spring Fundraising Dinner Saturday, May 3, 6 p.m. at the DunhamÕ s Bay Resort on Lake George. A $35 admission includes a full sit down dinner, beer/wine, dessert and live entertainment by local musician Danny Lombardo. The evening will also include a silent auction, raffles, and prize giveaways. RSVP is encouraged although door tickets will be available. The proceeds of this eventÕ s ticket sales and silent auction will benefit the music festivalÕ s 2014 activities including an 8-day classical music festival in August and roster of 70 talented young musicians. For more information please call 791-5089 or visit them online at lakegeorgemusicfestival.com.

Quilting workshop at library

LAKE GEORGE Ñ The Caldwell-Lake George Library is sponsoring Ò Common Threads: Adirondack Quilts Tell Their Stories,Ó by Hallie E. Bond Wednesday, May 14, 7 p.m. Hallie is interested in seeing examples of quilts or quilt squares that were made before 1970. If you have a quilt you would like to show her, please come at 6 p.m. Seating is limited, please call for reservations at 668-2528. The program is sponsored by the New York Council for the Humanities, Speakers in the Humanities program.

Adult learners open house planned

QUEENSBURY Ñ SUNY Adirondack will host an adult learners open house on Wednesday, May 7, from 6 to 7:30 p.m. in the SUNY Adirondack Student Center for adult learners or those adults contemplating a return to college studies to complete a degree. Prospective students and their families are welcome to attend. The formal presentation will begin promptly at 6:15 p.m. Those interested in employment training or re-training, starting college or returning to finish a degree are encouraged to attend. Students can learn about current programs, full- or part-time study, continuing education, workforce development, application procedures, financial aid, Wilton Center programs, and the collegeÕ s fully accredited Child Care Center. For more information or to RSVP, call SUNY AdirondackÕ s Office of Admissions at 743-2264.

Winkleman to speak

CHESTERTOWN Ñ Rev. Paul Winkelman, former pastor of Johnsburg and Pottersville United Methodist Churches, will present a slide show and speak of his trip to the Holy Land in Israel/Palestine in January of 2014. The presentation is scheduled to be held at the Community United Methodist Church in Chestertown Thursday, May 8, 7 p.m. Pastor Paul is completing the requirements in May for his Masters in Divinity Degree and visited the Holy Sites and many of the places that Jesus walked, taught and performed miracles as part of his education. A free will offering will be taken to benefit the Community Share Center sponsored by the Community United Methodist Church.


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May 3, 2014 The tradition of Mother’s Day

Athol-Thurman

Mother Õ s Day is celebrated yearly as a way to honor mothers and motherhood, maternal bonds, and the influence of mothers in society. It is celebrated on various days in many parts of the world, most commonly in spring. The celebration of Mother Õ s Day began in the United States in the early 20th century. This year Mother Õ s Day is celebrated on May 11; make sure to mark your calendars to remind yourself to get your mother something special.

call Lila at 623-2692.

Activities and events in the hills

Rabies Clinic scheduled

The county sponsored senior bus service to Glens Falls will make their trips twice a month on the second and fourth Friday. The next scheduled trip will occur on May 9. The service will pick you up at your home; to arrange pickup simply contact Laura by May 7 with directions to your home and she will make sure you are picked up. You can reach Laura at 623-9281. Thurman Quilting Group holds their meetings at the Thurman Town hall every Monday. This weekÕ s session occurs May 5 from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Light refreshments of tea or coffee are offered. For more information, contact Myra at 623-2633. Thurman town board meeting is to be held on May 13 at 6:30 p.m. A School Budget Presentation will be held at the Thurman town hall on Monday, May 5 at 7 p.m. Lila Wood would like to inform readers that she has a gently used watch for a blind person. The watch has an alarm that goes off every hour on the hour and the alarm may be silenced during sleeping hours. All paper work has been retained and anyone interested in obtaining this watch should

By Kathy Templeton

623-2967 - feidenk33@yahoo.com

Warren County Public Health will be holding a Rabies Clinic on Saturday, May 10 from 10 a.m. to Noon at the Warren County DPW located at 4055 Main Street, Warrensburg. Pets must be 3 months of age to receive their first immunization, which will afford them protection for one year. The next shot, a booster, will afford protection for 3 years and is required one year after the first shot was given. From then on every three years a booster should be given to protect your pet. Both initial and booster shots will be given at all clinics scheduled by Warren County Public Health. A $10.00 donation is requested for each pet. No one is turned away due to financial hardship. Please bring dogs on leashes and cats or ferrets in carriers. For further information contact Warren County Public Health at 761-6580.

Over the fence

It has been brought to my attention that there have been some complications regarding the basic STAR applications; some property owners have been denied the exemption. I am told that most applicants should have been contacted via the United States Post Office. If you are curious as to whether

Adirondack Journal - 15 your property have been secured for the exemption you may stop into the town hall from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. on Tuesday and Thursday and 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. on Wednesdays to ask one of the assessors, or phone them at 623-4593. The Gleaning food distribution sessions are held the first Monday of every month Ñ and the next such event is May 5 at 1 p.m. Be sure to bring your reusable cloth bags or plastic shopping bags to bring your goods home. Thurman townwide garage sale is just around the corner, so now is the time to clean out your garage or attic and see what you have to sell. This year Õ s event will be held on May 16 -18.

Whitespace workshop planned

Thurman town Supervisor announced on April 23 two newly scheduled workshops to address questions from residents regarding the Whitespace internet project. The first of these workshops was held on April 30 and the second to be held on May 6 at 6 p.m. at the Thurman town hall. For further information about these meeting you may contact the Supervisor at 623-9649. Information regarding the April 30 meeting was unavailable at the time of publication. Celebrating birthdays this week are Myrna Balden, Katie Bederian and Nancy Kindred on May 3, Jack Moulton, Pete Dingman, Dusty Haskell, Pam Siletti, Bill Hill, Sr., Jay Putnam and Ryan Howe on May 4, Michael Springer and Logger Allen on May 5, Cassius Mosher and Linda Gatewood on May 6, Jimmy Murphy and Dante Siletti on May 7, Joshua Wilde and Johnathan Dimick on May 8, Cody Wood, Darin Baker, Jacob Wilde and Mabel Elizabeth Hall on May 9.

Glens Falls Hospital announces new board members GLENS FALLS Ñ Three new members and a new leadership team were recently appointed to the Glens Falls Hospital Foundation Board of Trustees. Donna Farrar, Debra Meier, and Leslie Roods have joined the Board. H. John Schutze, DDS, has been named Board Chair, and joins Foundation officers Carl Cedrone (Vice Chair), Kevin OÕ Brien (Secretary), and Kathie Duncan (Immediate Past Chair) on the executive committee. FarrarÕ s career as a CPA spans 38 years, having served clients in the Southern Adirondack region in the areas of auditing, accounting, taxation, estate planning, management advisory services

and fraud prevention and detection services. She is currently employed by Whittemore, Dowen & Ricciardelli, LLP of Queensbury and Saratoga Springs. She has previously served on the Crandall Public Library Board as both a member and President. She is an active member of the Glens Falls Rotary Club, and is a Trustee of the Charlton School for Girls. Meier joined Glens Falls National Bank in 2012 as Vice President and Head of Human Resources, and was quickly promoted to Senior Vice President of Human Resources. She has more than 25 years of human resources and management experience in Queensbury and Albany, including previous management roles at Tribune Media Services and Blue

Growing young again

I

nstead of wasting time waiting for the ponds to open up; I decided to travel home to Elizabethtown for the weekend to visit a few of the old fishing holes from my younger

days. Although I tend to spend a majority of my time fishing the ponds; I’ve always been a river walker. I enjoy the flows more than flat waters, as the scent of a stream is ever changing and it is addictive. On the ponds, you can pretty much see it all from one location. The waters are flat or choppy, or somewhere in between; but there is no much variation. Sure, there are fluctuations in foliage, down trees, steep banks and other natural factors that give different ponds their character; but for the most part, a pond is a pond, what you see is what you get. But on the river, and especially on the small streams, the scene is always in motion, ever flowing, and wandering along. There is life everywhere, in the trees on the riverbanks, in the air, and under the river rocks where the crayfish hide. And it seems you

Shield NENY. She is the immediate Past President of the Charles R. Wood Theater Board of Directors and serves on the Tri-County United Way Investment Board. She is also involved with the WAIT (Welcoming Adolescents in Transition) House fundraising events, Chapman Historical Museum Wine and Chocolate event and the Adirondack Regional Chamber of Commerce Bicentennial Committee. She previously served on the Adirondack Regional Chamber of Commerce Board of Directors, Double H Hole in the Woods Advisory Board, The WAIT House Board of Directors, and committees at the Glens Falls Country Club. Roods, an ex-officio member as President of the Glens Falls Hospital Guild, joined the Guild in

can never capture it all, just a glimpse and itÕ s gone. In the dark, hemlock forested reaches of the rivers, the waters take on an ominous odor that scents the air, and the land. It is a primordial scent that always transports me back to my younger days. The waters, darkened by the shade, provide safe safe sanitary for the trout, even in mid stream. Their quick darting movements are difficult to decipher, unless a shaft of sun captures their shadow. Often they would hide, invisible among the long logs, the tangled roots and the rubble of the riverbank. I tried to entice them to venture forth and sip a dry fly from the surface, but the brookies were skittish, and the waters were cold. These waters were the playgrounds of my youth, they were the only waters within walking or biking distance of town. So too, were the surrounding hills, Little Buck, Wood Hill, Raven, and Cobble Hill. IÕ ve climbed them all numerous times, and I still canÕ t get enough. And as I stared at them from the valley floor, I couldn’t resist the urge to visit them again. Since the trout werenÕ t cooperating; I decided to take some time away from the grind in order to tackle a few of the smaller hills, and to let the trout settle a bit. I had come home to chase some trout, and in the process, to recover some of the excitement of of my youth. I climbed the

The tiny village of Elizabethtown always appears much larger when viewed from above. Photo by Joe Hackett

2007 after moving to the community from Jacksonville, Florida. She also serves as chair for Guild special events, including the Parade of Baskets, Tree of Lights, and vendor sales. She is also involved with the Warm the Children program and the American Cancer Society as a Patient Resource Navigator. Prior to volunteering, Leslie worked as a business markets underwriter and loss control counselor. Dr. Schutze joined the Glens Falls Hospital Board of Trustees in 2009. Shortly after joining the Foundation Board, his passion and dedication became evident, and he was elected to the Executive Board in 2010. He will serve as the Chair of the Foundation Trustees for a two-year term.

hills again, and I looked down on my old small town. I hiked the ridges, and visited our old campsites. I climbed the cliffs and discovered a few more mountaintop antennas. (ItÕ s always surprising to see just how far some folks will go to get television reception, not to mention the cost of stringing half a mile of antenna wire up the side of a cliff.) Elizabethtown has remained pretty much the same as it was in my youth, just like many of the small, non-touristy Adirondack towns. It really hasnÕ t changed much over the years. There are a few more buildings, fewer families, and a surprising number of new homes situated on the hillsides surrounding the Pleasant Valley. The mountains havenÕ t moved much. Giant of the Valley still looms to the south west, and Hurricane still sports itÕ s Fire tower, as proud as ever. I walk the sidewalks and still know most of the folks I meet; even though IÕ ve been gone and many years removed. One evening, I ran into a former classmate at the local Grand Union. We hadnÕ t seen each other for many years, and he reminded me this year would be our 40th class reunion. Ò Forty years?Ó , I asked incredulously. Ò Are you sure?Ó I started running the numbers through my mind, and sure enough, he was right! Ò Damn,Ó I mumbled under my breath, Ò So many trout, and so little time left.Ó I thought about his remark as I waked back to the house. It was a very difficult pill to swallow. Ò Another place, another town,Ó I muttered to no one in particular. Ò NowÕ s not the time to dwell on such matters. There are still trout to be found, and plenty of ground I need to pound. I need not worry about it at all right now.Ó The following morning I caught my first brook trout of the new season. It fell for a dry fly that I had skittered under an overhanging stream bank, in my old back yard. I was not surprised in the least. The little brook has always produced trout, even though it winds itÕ s way right through the middle of town. It is rarely fished, and often overlooked by anglers seeking bigger waters and larger fish I was just as excited at the age of 58, as I was at the age of 8 and an hour later I still had a silly smirk on my face. Any fish taken on the fly is a trophy, and if you want more, sometimes it pays to wish for a little less. And while I may never be able to truly go home again, it sure is nice to shed the restrictions of age, and walk in the footprints of my youth every once in a while. Next year, IÕ ll be back. Though IÕ ll be another year older, IÕ ll fish as if I’m still nine years old and I’ll drift a fly right by that overhung bank again! I can wait. Joe Hackett is a guide and sportsman residing in Ray Brook. Contact him at brookside18@adelphia.net.


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16 - Adirondack Journal

May 3, 2014 HELP WANTED LOCAL Adirondack Tri-County Nursing & Rehabilitation Center North Creek, NY Charge Nurse RN (GN) or LPN (GPN) 3p-11p / 7p-7a Per-Diem (all shifts) CNAs Full & Part Time 3p-11p / 7p-7a Per-Diem (all shifts)

CARS

SUV

AUTO'S WANTED

2004 Chevy Impala, 85K miles, $4390. Call 518-494-5289 Leave Message.

1995 Ford Explorer, 4x4, needs minimum work. For sale or trade. Call 518-796-1865 or 518-5329538 2003 Ford Explorer, tan, 127K miles, loaded, power everything, A/C, remote start, new battery, alt & belts, $4500. 518-668-2970

TOP CASH FOR CARS, Any Car/Truck, Running or Not. Call for INSTANT offer: 1-800-454-6951

CASH FOR CARS and TRUCKS. Get A Top Dollar INSTANT Offer! Running or Not! 1-888-416-2208 Donate your car to Wheels For Wishes, benefiting Make-A-Wish. We offer free towing and your donation is 100% tax deductible. Call 518-650-1110 Today! GET CASH TODAY for any car/truck. I will buy your car today. Any Condition. Call 1-800-8645796 or www.carbuyguy.com TRUCKS 1999 Ford F250 w/Fisher Minute Mount plow, 95K orig miles. Asking $5500 OBO, Truck only $3500, Plow only $2500. Blue Mt. Lake. Lenny 518-352-7006 or buemtrest200@gmail.com

BOATS 16' Alcort Sunbird with trailer, sails and outboard motor, $1400. 518-585-9809. 1988 Bayliner 21', V8, open bow, great shape, cover incl, many extras, $3250 firm. 518-942-7725 2005 WHITEHALL SPIRIT rowing/sailboat. Classic boat, rare find. Must sell! Asking $4500 OBO. 845-868-7711 AUTO'S WANTED CASH FOR CARS: Any Make, Model or Year. We Pay MORE! Running or Not, Sell your Car or Truck TODAY. Free Towing! Instant Offer: 1-800-871-0654 DONATE A CAR - HELP CHILDREN FIGHTING DIABETES. Fast, Free Towing. Call 7 days/week. Nonrunners OK. Tax Deductible. Call Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation 1-800-578-0408

RECREATIONAL VEHICLES 14' Adirondack Guide Boat complete w/trailer, oars, cover & cherry caned seats. Never been used. $5500 firm. 518-642-957 1968 Launch Dyer 20' Glamor Girl, Atomic 4 inboard engine, 30HP, very good cond. Safe, reliable, spacious, ideal camp boat. Reasonable offers considered. Located in Essex, NY. 802-503-5452 1979 Southwind Motorhome, 27', sleeps 6, self contained generator, micro oven, everything works. Firm $3500. 518-494-3215 20' SeaRay Bowrider, blue, 1979, V8 M/C, 5.7L Mercruiser, galvanized trailer, mooring cover, $2798. Sue 973-715-1201 2008 Keystone Cougar Xlite Travel Trailer, 26', 1 slide, sleeps 6-8, bunks, polar package, TV, many extras, one owner, mint condition, $15,000. 518-494-7796

26 FT BAYLINER, 1992 Mercruiser I/O, trailer, bridge enclosure, power tilt/trim VHF, AM/FM, spare propeller, 2 down riggers, head, frig, extras. Sleeps six. $8500. Bridport, VT, Lake Champlain (802) 758-2758 MOTORCYCLES 2004 Harley Davidson Touring Electra Glide Ultra Classic, 13,000 miles, must see, $13,000. 518547-8446 WANTED: ALL MOTORCYCLES BEFORE 1980! Running or not. $$TopCash$ Paid! 1-315-5698094. FARM EQUIPMENT 2012 Kubota VX25 LDR Tractor. Asking price $15,000. 518-6234152. HEAVY EQUIPMENT 1978 John Deere 302A Wheel Loader Backhoe, excellent condition, must see, $10,000. 518-5478446.

(2) TRAILERS (OPEN) - both excellent condition; 2010 Triton 20' Aluminum - max wgt. 7500 lbs. Asking $4900 and 1989 Bison 31' overal Gooseneck, Asking $2900. 518-546-3568. Century 6� Fiberglass Truck Cap, 3 sliidng windows w/screens. Also bedliner, fits Toyota. Exc cond. $1100 value, asking $500. 518546-7913 Studded Snow Tires (2), Firestone Winterforce, 217/70R14, mounted & balanced on Ford Aerostar Rims, $60 each. 518585-5267 or 410-833-4686 AUCTIONS AUCTION LEWIS COUNTY REAL PROPERTY TAX FORECLOSURES. 70 Properties May 21 @ 11AM. Elk's Lodge #1605 Lowville, NY. (800) 243-0061. HAR Inc. & AAR Inc. FREE brochure: www.NYSAuctions.com Buy or sell at AARauctions.com. Contents of homes, businesses, vehicles and real estate. Bid NOW! AARauctions.com Lights, Camera, Auction. No longer the best kept secret. LIVE AUCTION - State of VT SURPLUS Saturday, May 10th - 1744 US Rt. 302, Berlin, VT Cars- Trucks- Equipment CALL: 1800-536-1401 Visit our web site for LOTS of ONLINE AUCTIONS! www.auctionsInternational.com

HELP WANTED FOURNIER LANDSCAPING IS HIRING Hiring for all positions! Please send your resume to lisa@fournierlandscaping.com or call 802-425-5296 HELP WANTED Earn Extra income Assembling CD cases From Home. Call our Live Operators Now! No experience Necessary 1-800-4057619 Ext 2605 www.easyworkgreatpay.com HELP WANTED!!! $575/ weekly**Mailing Brochures/ Assembling! Products At Home Online DATA ENTRY Positions Available.! www.GenuineIncomeSource.com RETAIL MERCHANDISER AMERICAN GREETINGS is looking for Retail Greeting Card Merchandisers in Schroon Lake, NY. As a member of our team, you will ensure the greeting card department is merchandised and maintained to provide customers the best selection of cards and product to celebrate life's events. Join the American Greetings family today by applying online at: WorkatAG.com or call 1.888.323.4192 HELP WANTED LOCAL

Dietary-Dish Room 11a-7p incl weekends Apply M-F, 8am-5pm or call: (518) 251-2447 of fax: (518) 251-5543 or email: debbiep@adirondacknursing.com518-251-2447 CHEESE PLANT AND AGING CAVER WORKER. Artisan cheese company in Thurman has an immediate opening for a cheese plant and aging cave worker. Food Service experience is a plus. Must be detail oriented, meticulous about cleanliness, and very fast paced. Weekend and evening shifts are a must. Job tasks include hand packing soft cheeses, wrapping and boxing aged cheeses, and some dish washing. Bending and lifting are required for this job. Position is full time and year round. Training is $10/hour and will increase based on abilities. Call 623-3372 or email cheese@nettlemeadow.com for more information. DRIVERS: DEDICATED. REGIONAL. HOME WEEKLY/BI-WEEKLY GUARANTEED Start up to $.44 cpm. Great Benefits + Bonuses 90% No Touch Freight/70% Drop & Hook. 877-704-3773

COMMUNITY SALE Fort Ann Village Wide Sale, May 3rd & 4th. Vendors Wanted, $20 for the weekend. 518-639-8634 after 5pm. HELP WANTED $1000 WEEKLY PAID IN ADVANCE!!! MAILING BROCHURES or TYPING ADS for our company. FREE Supplies! PT/FT. No Experience Needed! www.HelpMailingBrochures.com AIRLINE CAREERS begin here Get FAA approved Aviation Maintenance Technician training. Financial aid for qualified students Housing available. Job placement assistance. Call AIM 866-296-7093 Discount Auto Insurance - Instant Quote - Save up to 70% in 5 Minutes - All Credit Types. Call 888296-3040 now. DRIVERS: Great Pay, Hometime! No-Forced Dispatch! New Singles from Plattsburgh to surrounding states. CDL-B w/Passport Apply: TruckMovers.com 1-855-204-3216

Need A Dependable Car? Check Out The Classifieds. Call 1-518-873-6368 Ext. 201

54339

2008 Chevy Impala, mocha metallic, 58K miles, great gas mileage, like new inside & out, $10,800. 518-668-2884 CARS/TRUCKS WANTED! Top $$$$$ PAID! Running or Not, All Years, Makes, Models. Free Towing! We're Local! 7 Days/Week. Call Toll Free: 1-888-416-2330

ACCESSORIES

WE HAVE ONGOING AND PERIODIC NEED for a variety of entry level administrative/clerical positions. All positions require computer skills, general office skills, attention to detail, and ability to work as part of a team. Apply to northlandshumanresources@jobcorps.gov. Equal Opportunity Employer Female/Minority/Disabled/Veteran. Estate Grounds Work on Lake George, experience necessary, excellent pay, work until December, 9am-3pm M-F. Call 518-222-9802. Carpenter & Equipment Operator and a CDL Driver needed. Minimum 10 years experience, pay based on experience, fulltime, year-round work. Fax resume to 518-494-3617 CARPENTERS HELPER, must have own transportation & basic tools. Pay based on experience. Call 518932-5604 Leave message.

HELP WANTED

The Town of Minerva is accepting applications for a part time Transfer Station Attendant, part time Parks Laborer & Night Watchman. Please submit applications to Town Hall, PO Box 937, Minerva, NY 12851 by Mday 19, 2014.


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May 3, 2014 HELP WANTED LOCAL

HELP WANTED LOCAL

INDEPENDENT LIVING ADVISOR: Counsels and guides students in assigned dorms on attitude, behavior, and interpersonal relations with others. Provides students with training in independent living and leadership skills. Equal Opportunity Employer Female/Minority/Disabled/Veteran. Apply to northlandshumanresources@jobcorps.gov HELP WANTED: Looking for Handy Man for Spring Clean up, (mowing, raking leaves etc.) Must have own mower and equipment. Please leave name & number 518-597-3204 Crown Point, NY Jr. High Math and Science Teacher and Upper Elementary Teacher needed for Fall 2014 school year. Send resume to St. Marys School, 64 Amherst Ave., Ticonderoga, NY 12883. Call 518-585-7433.

Recruiting for: RN CASE MANAGERS RN ASSESSMENT NURSES PHYSICAL THERAPISTS OCCUPATIONAL THERAPISTS SPEECH LANGUAGE PATHOLOGISTS MEDICAL SOCIAL WORKERS HOME HEALTH AIDES

Lawn Maintenance Workers. Must be dependable, clean drivers license, F/T available. 518-4942321 MARINE SERVICE WRITER for marina located in Brant Lake. Duties include providing estimates for repairs, communicating with customers, working with Service Techs, assisting with ordering parts and scheduling work, run daily meetings with Service Techs, set-up and maintain work schedule. Pay based on level of experience. Mail resumt to P.O. Box 375, Brant Lake, NY 12815.

Positions in Essex, Clinton, Warren, Franklin, Washington, Oswego, Onondaga & Cayuga Counties Full-time/Part-time/Per-Diem Flex Schedule (day/eve/wkend) Why Work for Us? A leader in Home HealthCare for 30+ years Competitive Pay/Benefits Continuing Education & Training State-of-the-art Technology Local people taking care of local patients

Riverside Truss now hiring. Inquire to: troblee@riversidetruss.com or 494-2412. Seeking Summer Help Watching Newborn. Need Help 5/27-8/3/14, 2-4 days per week, 815a-530p, at house on Street Road, Ticonderoga. Son will be 2 months old on 5/26. Transportation available if needed. Call 518-354-7155. Stephenson Lumber has openings in its Speculator and IL Divisions. Apply to: John Morgan at 4942471 or slcchester@stephensonlumber.com. Go to www.stephensonlumber.com for an application.

Apply online: www.hcrhealth.com/ EOE/AAP

Need A Dependable Car? Check Out The Classifieds. Call 1-518-873-6368 Ext. 201

HELP WANTED LOCAL

HELP WANTED LOCAL

Families First, a small, unique, not for profit agency, that works with children (who have emotional and/or behavioral challenges with a mental health diagnosis) and their families, seeks a creative individual wanted for a full time Case Management position in Essex County. A flexible and strengths based perspective towards families is essential for a good fit with this dynamic, supportive agency. Minimum education and experience qualifications for this position include: a Masters Degree in one of the following fields: audiology, child and family studies, communication disorders, community mental health, counseling, education, nursing, occupational therapy, physical therapy, psychology, recreation, recreational therapy, rehabilitation, social work, sociology, speech and language pathology, human services, human development, criminal justice or other related degrees, or a NYS Teacher's certificate, with two years of experience providing direct services, or providing linkage to services, for people with one or more of the following primary diagnoses: mental illness, mental retardation, alcoholism, chemical dependency or substance abuse OR a Bachelors Degree in the above approved human service fields, with four years of experience as described above. Applicant must have excellent organizational, communication and time management skills. Candidate must be a self starter and have supervisory, leadership, documentation and computer skills. Ability to work in a team setting is a must. Benefits include an excellent time off package, assistance with health insurance, a flexible spending account and a retirement plan. Salary commensurate with experience and comparable for this area. If interested please send a resume to JoAnne Caswell, Families First, P.O. Box 565, Elizabethtown, NY 12932, or call 8739544 for further information. Deadline for applications, 5/19/2014.

SILVER BAY YMCA

Stephenson Lumber – P/T Office Position. Apply to: Debbie Stephenson, dstephenson@lincolnlogs.com, 518-824-2102. Go to www.stephensonlumber.com for an application. Ticonderoga-1 BR, 2nd floor apt, full bath, carpet, off-street parking. Utilities not incl. Available now. $475mo.No dogs. Sec/Ref. req.Carol 518-796-8024

Food Service Employees Needed. Cooks, Dishwashers, Dining Room, Catering Staff. Hardworking, customer service, positive attitude a must. Varied shifts. Contact bfish@silverbay.org. Housekeeper Needed, 11pm to 7am. Duties include cleaning public spaces, servicing rooms & laundry. All applicants must be self-motivated, team player, have a valid drivers license. Experience preferred but will train. Contact twinchell@silveray.org. The Ticonderoga Festival Guild is seeking an Executive Director to provide program and administrative support to its Board of Directors. Applicant will work from home office, must be organized, computer literate, have competency in MS Office Products and financial products such as Quickbooks. This position is part time. Send resume to: Beth Hanley, Ti Festival Guild, P.O. Box 125, Ticonderoga, NY 12883 THE TOWN OF SCHROON is accepting applications for summer Lifeguard positions at the Town Beach . For more information or to apply, call 532-7737 x10 or get an application at the Town Hall Monday - Friday 8 4 p.m. WANTED SPANISH TUTOR, Must be fluent. Inquires e-mail NeilVan@aol.com

We are gearing up for another excellent summer and are looking for Experienced Assistant Manager, Waitstaff, Cooks and Expediter that can handle 250-350 dinners per night. Download an application at www.sentinelgrille.com and drop it off for an interview.

Year Round Positions

Adirondack Journal - 17 HELP WANTED LOCAL

CAREER TRAINING

The Dock Doctors is a diversified waterfront construction and manufacturing company offering products and services for both residential and commercial waterfront projects throughout the entire Northeast. We have immediate openings for the following positions: Waterfront Crew Leader: Position requires good mechanical aptitude along with experience in the construction trades. Also must have the ability to lead two people. CDL license and boat operation experience beneficial but not essential. This position includes servicing of dock systems, learning the various aspects of waterfront work within our service region on diverse job sites that are often physically demanding. We are seeking organized, self-motivated individuals with a clean driving record. Competitive pay based on background and experience along with great benefits which include medical, dental, vision, paid vacation, 401K plan, LT & ST disability and life insurance. CDL Delivery Driver/Shop Assembler- seasonal with the potential for year-round work. This is a combined position, not two separate positions. Valid CDL Class A license is required for deliveries during our peak season. Position requires good mechanical aptitude and attention to detail for performing final assembly of docks and boatlifts in a production shop environment as well as working in our warehouse staging and loading orders. Both positions offer pay based on level of experience. Stop by our location on Route 7 in Ferrisburgh, VT for an application or email us your resume at info@thedockdoctors.com or call 800-870-6756 to have an application sent to you.

Top Pay * Benefits Four Day Week

Wanted

Experienced Lead Carpenters

Eric & Eric, Inc. email: walt@ericeric.com or apply on our website @ ericeric.com Let’s Go Garage & Yard Sale-ing Thru The Classified Superstore

1-518-873-6368 Ext. 201

Find A Buyer For Your No-longer Needed Items With A Low-Cost Classified. To Place An Ad, Call

518-873-6368

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AUTO REPAIR Automotive Service, Inc.

3943 Main Street, Warrensburg, NY 12885

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School District will be that a copy of the stateUNDER, section 3651 of held at the Warrensburg ment of expenditures for the Education Law to esJr./Sr. High School the ensuing year for Building (lobby area out- tablish a Capital Reserve school purposes (2014side the gymnasium) lo- Fund for purpose of re2015) may be obtained placing the Elementary bywww.adirondackjournal.com any resident in the cated at 103 Schroon 18 - Adirondack Journal May 3, 2014 District between April River Road, Warrens- School Roof and any other necessary facility burg, New York, on 29, 2014, and May 20, at the ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES FOR SALE GENERAL LOGGING APARTMENT RENTALS HOME RENTALS 2014, except Saturday, Tuesday, May 20, 2014, construction items Sunday or holidays, at between the hours of Elementary School; to ROTARY INTERNATIONAL RoNorth Creek Efficiency Units for Bridport VT, 4 bdrm, 3 bath, rethe Warrensburg Central 7:00 a.m. and 8:00 p.m. be initially funded by the Memory Lane Generac Automatic Service tary buildsSchool peace and international working adults, all util & cable TV stored Farm House, $1200 + utiltransfer from available, LOGGING, LANDwhich CLEARING, Business Office (E.D.S.T.) during Fort Ann Antiques Rated Transfer Switches - all understanding through include, NO security, furnished ties, Dirt Road, Care Takers Apt. unassigned fund balance between the education. the Management. polls will beHighest hours of timeForest Always Buying are new & include utility breakFind information or locate yourp.m. lolaundry room, in the amount up to$125/wk. 518-251- not included. Call Les 802-758Ratestoon all by Timber. opened vote votingDouble 9:00 a.m. and 3:00 er, load shed module & instal518-499-2915 3276 cal club(E.D.S.T.). at www.rotary.org. Ratesoronballot Low Grade and from fulation manual. machine upon Chip$800,000,4460 Route 4, Whitehall, NY Brought toNOTICE you by is youralso free given comWood. ture budgetary PORT appropriHENRY. 2BR Apartment. Crown Point – cute, cozy 3 100 AMP, RTSD100A3, $425 the following items: www.whitehallantique.com munity paper PaperChain. 518-643-9436 bdrm/2 bath, A frame, porch, ½ ations or Near transfers from Walking distance Downtown, 150 AMP, RTSY150A3, the Annual that and Petitions for nomi- (1) To Adopt LEGAL$525 NOTICE acre, $83k. 518-351-5063, 860to groceryfunds store, shopping, serother reserve 200 AMP, RTSY200A3, $625OF ANNUAL Budget: nating candidates the NOTICE TOP CASH PAID FOR OLDforGUINicholas Auctions 673-6119 or 917-679-4449 vices, $500.notPlus security deapproval 518-494-2222 Warrensburg officethru of 1980's. MemberGibson, of the To adopt the TO annual MEETING AND BUDGET WANTED BUY upon voter TARS! 1920's Whitehall, NY 802-363-3341. to exceedposite. $2,500,000, Board Gretsch, of Education must budget of the School VOTE Martin, Fender, Epiphone, Lovely Single Family Home, 3 Buying, Selling or Consign 10 Million and not to exceed a ten LARGE KEROSENE NOTICE HEATER is 15000 be filed inRickenbacker, the District ADVERTISE hereby Guild, given Mosrite, District for tothe fiscal Homes bdrm, 1 ½ bath. To trade, swap, Appraisals Done across the USA! Place your ad in (10) year period, to be BTU'S? Battery start & afuel gage,hearing Clerks office no later that public of year of 2014-2015 and Prairie State, D'Angelico, sell for equal value home in area, 518-499-0303 PORT-HENRY/WITHERBEE 1 & over 140 community newspapers, used in accordance with excellent condition,the$99.00. Doc. to authorize the requisite by qualified voters of than April Stromberg, and21, 2014 Gibson $129,000. Located in beautiful www.nicholasauctions.com 2laws bedroom apartments. $495, & with circulation totaling over 10 518-668-3330 applicable for the 5:00 p.m. Blank peti- portion thereof to be the Warrensburg Central Mandolins/Banjos. 1-800-401Edgewater, FL. 518-696-2829 $595. Heat,for Garbage Removal & million homes. Contact Indepenpurpose of paying raised by taxation on the tions are available at the District, Warren 0440 Late Model AIRCOSchool Oil Furnace, Parkingproject included, Sign up for 12 SOUTH TICONDEROGA – private ELECTRONICS dent Free Papers of America IFPA approved capital taxable property of the County, will Office of the District exc cond, asking $1800, will New nego-York,VIAGRA mo.tolease and get 1 mo. FREE! 100MG and CIALIS 20mg! country home, $900/mo plus utilidanielleburnett-ifpa@live.com or expenditures the EleDistrict. Clerk between the hours at tiate. 518-543-6362be held in the Jr./Sr. DIRECTV, Internet, & Phone From Call 518-569-9781. 40 Pills + 4 FREE for only $99. #1 ties, 2 year lease. 518-585-7907. visit our(2)website cadnetads.com mentary School. (2) Two Board of Edof 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 High School located at $69.99/mo + Free 3 Months: HBO Motorized Travel Chair, Male Enhancement, Discreet Shipfor more information. batAND the Warrensburg ucation Officer at-large p.m., Monday through 103 new Schroon River Starz SHOWTIME CINEMAX+ FREE MOBILE HOME RENTALS ping. Save $500! Buy The Blue RETIREMENT teries, exc condition, $1200. 518Education isAPARTMENTS, ALL Vacancies: except for holi- CASH Road, Warrensburg, for Coins! Buying ALLBoard Gold ofINCLUSIVE. GENIE 4 Room Upgrade + NFL Pill! Now Friday 1-800-213-6202 Meals, transportation, 222-1338 also authorized: Term of office: July 1, & Paper activities daily. Short Leases. days and on the district & New York, on May 12, Schroon Lake, 2 bdrm/2 bath, incl Silver. Also Stamps SUNDAY TICKET! Limited offer. to transfer the balance Sun Tec Skylte, new, fit 2014 through June 30, Estates. website: wcsd.org. Each 20142'x4'at to 7:00 p.m. HEALTH lawn mowing, garbage & snow reMoney, Entire Collections, Call Now 888-248-5961 & FITNESS Monthly specials! Call (877) 210(estimated at $433,000) 24” rafter space. New cost $408+ 2018. to your home. Call Marc (E.D.S.T.) for the pre- petition must be signed moval, country setting. Call for info Travel in 4130 tax, sell $250 OBO. sentation 518-668-3367 518-532-9538 or 518-796-1865 FINANCIAL SERVICES (3) 1-800-959-3419 Shall the Board of from the existing Capital at least 25 qualified of the budget. NY CANADA by DRUG CENTER is your Ticonderoga – 1 bdrm downstairs voters District, Education be authorized Reserve Fund estabFurther, NOTICE is choice here- for safe ofandtheaffordable CASH PAIDup to $25/Box for unon Warner Hill Rd. Range & Refrig DIVORCE $550* No Fault or ReguVACATION PROPERTY RENTALS FURNITURE to Lease three (3) 66- lished for the JR/SR mustOur state the residence by given that an medications. addilicensed CanadiTEST School incl, on cable avail. No pets. No lar Divorce. Covers children, propMarch Passengersealed schoolDIABETIC buses High of the candidate, and expired, tional budget presentaan mail order pharmacy will proOCEAN CITY, MARYLAND. Best STRIPS. 1-DAYPAYMENT.1-800Antique Oak Table, 4' will diameter, erty, etc. Only One Signature Reto the 518-585-6832. new for a (5) five year term at 22, 2010Smoking. residence of ofeach signtion be held in theyou with vide savings up to 75 selection of affordable rentals. Full/ 371-1136 quired! *Excludes govt. fees. 1- $70. 518-585-7196Thurman Town Hall, Fund. – large 2bdrm, comlo- on an annual cost not to ex- Capital Reserve er. all your medication Ticonderoga percent partial weeks. Call for FREE 800-522-6000 Ext. 100. Baylor & Scrap Metal & Scrap Cars. We will machines Voting will be trash removal, no cated at Athol Road, ceed $44,000. FURTHER NOTICE is pletely updated, needs. Call today 1-800-413-1940 GENERAL brochure. Open daily. Holiday Real Associates, Inc. Est. 1977 up all. Callthat Jerry utilized. pets, a must see! $725/mo. 518Athol, New York onforMay (4) RESOLVED the 518-586given that the pick $10.00hereby off your first prescripEstate. 1-800-638-2102. Online 6943 NOTICE is also given 5, 2014 at 7:00 p.m. Warrensburg Central Annual Meeting of the GET CASH NOW for your Annuity 585-6364 tion and free shipping. !!OLD GUITARS WANTED!! Gibreservations: www.holidayoc.com that absentee ballots qualified voters of the (E.D.S.T.). WANTED JAPANESE MOTORCYSchool District Board of or Structured Settlement. Top Dolson, Martin, Fender, Gretsch. TICONDEROGA MT VISTA APTS – FREE PILLS WITH EVERY ORDER! WARM WEATHER IS YEAR may be applied for at the CLE KAWASAKI 1967-1980 Z1Warrensburg Central NOTICE is also given lars Paid. Fast, No Hassle Service! Education is hereby au1930-1980. Top Dollar paid!! Call 2 bdrm, District $594 + util average $95. ROUND In Aruba. The water is ZIR, ofNothe 1-855-512-9227 School CIALIS District20mg will 40 be 900, that a copy of the VIAGRA state- 100mg, thorized:KZ900, KZ1000, office Toll Free 1-866-433-8277 smokers. Rental assitance may Pillsfor+ FREE Only $99.00 #1 safe, and the dining is fantastic. Clerk. Applications for meet eligibility reKX1000MKII, heldPills. at the Warrensburg ment of expenditures UNDER, sectionA1-250, 3651 of W1-650, GET CASH NOW for your Annuity be avail; must AIRLINE CAREERSthe begin here - yearMale Pill! Discreet Walk out to the beach. 3-Bedroom absentee quirements. ballots must be H1-500, H2-750, the Education LawS1-250, to es- S2-350, Jr./Sr. High School ensuing for Enhancement or Structured Settlement. Top Dol518-584-4543 NYS Get trained as FAAschool certified Avia- (2014Shipping. Building 1-888-797-9029 weeks available. Sleeps 8. $3500. by theRelay District received TDD GS400, GT380, tablish a SUZUKI Capital Reserve (lobby area out- S3-400 purposes lars Paid. Fast, No Hassle Service! Service 1-800-421tion Technician. Financial aid for Email: carolaction@aol.com for CB750 seven days Accessible, Equal Fund forHonda purpose of (1969,1970) re- Clerk at least side the gymnasium) lo- GT750, 2015) may be obtained 1-855-512-9227 1220 Handicap IF YOU USED THE BLOOD THINqualified students. by Jobany placement more information. CASH. 1-800-772prior to the vote Opportunity if the cated and at suffered 103 Schroon resident inNER thePRADAXA placing FREE the PICKUP. Elementary Housing interSignature Financial pays cash for assistance. Call AIMDistrict 866-453-6204 1142, ballot is to be mailed to River hemorrhaging, Road, Warrensbetween nal Aprilbleeding, School1-310-721-0726 Roof and anyusa@clasreseller, Financed (private) mortgage REAL ESTATE SALES – new luxury apartsicrunners.com the voter,Ticonderoga or on or prior burg, New orYork, 29, 2014, and May 20, hospitalization other necessary facility on AVIATION MAINTENANCE TRAINquired a loved notes on Residential/Commercial met, quiet, all appliances, no to May 20, 2014, if the except construction items at the minerals MayPradaxa 20, 2014, ING Financial Aid if2014, qualified. Job Saturday, WANTS TO PURCHASE $0 Down, Only $119/mo. NO one died Tuesday, while taking beproperties 1-855-844-8771 pets/no smoking, references rebe delivered Sunday or holidays, at October Elementary School; to ballot between 2010 the hours of and Placement Assistance. Call Nationother oil & gas interests. Send is to CREDIT CHECKS! Near El Paso, tween and the quired, 732-433-8594 personally to the voter. al Aviation Academy FAA Central the Today! Warrensburg be initially by the 7:00 may a.m. be andentitiled 8:00 p.m. details P.O.funded Box 13557, Denver, Co TX. Beautiful Views! Money Back FIREWOOD present. You to Absentee ballots must Approved. CLASSES STARTING School Business compenation. Office 80201 transfer from available, (E.D.S.T.) during Charles which Guarantee 1-866-882-5263 Ext.81 Call Attorney Dependable Year Round Firebe received by the DisSOON! 1-800-292-3228 or NAA.ebetween the hours unassigned fund balance the polls will be of time www.SunsetRanches.NET H. Johnson 1-800-535-5727 Wants to purchase minerals and wood Sales. Seasoned or green. trict Clerk not later than du in theoil amount to 9:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. opened to vote by voting other and gas up interests. Send Lake George - 2003 custom built Warren & Essex County HEAP IF YOU USED THEorBLOOD 5:00 p.m. on May 20, $800,000, and Box from13557 fu- Denver, machine ballot THINupon details to P.O. CASH FOR CARS, (E.D.S.T.). Any Make or NER PRADAXA seasonal home, 14' x 38' w/glass Vendor. Other services available. and suffered interof all per-– Pad Factory by Ticonderoga ture80201 budgetary appropri- 2014. A list the following items: NOTICE also given Co. Model! Free Towing. Sell itis TO& screened enclosed porch, exc nal bleeding, hemorrhaging, reCall today! 518-494-4077 Rocky sons to whom absentee the River. Nice 1bdrm, Upper. ations or transfers from that 1-800-864Petitions for nomi- (1) To Adopt the Annual LEGAL NOTICE DAY. Instant offer: cond. Ledgeview Camp, Highway quired hospitalization or a loved Ridge Boat Storeage, LLC. NOTICE 5784 ballots shall Inclhave heat, been hot water, garbage reCATSfunds other reserve Budget: nating candidates for the OF ANNUAL 149. Asking $65K. 518-964-1377 one died while taking Pradaxa bebe available covered parking. 1 year office of Member of the upon voter approval not issued willmoval, To adopt the annual MEETING AND BUDGET FOR SALE tween October 2010 and the FREE TO GOOD HOME, Female CASH FOR CARS: All Cars/Trucks lease & ref in the office of the Dis-required, no pets, COMMERCIAL PROPERTY Board of Education must budget of the School VOTE to exceed $2,500,000, Present, you may for be entitled to cat, spayed, all shots. Indoor cat,Clerk on TopinDolavail now, + $525 setrict each of $525/mo the filed the District NOTICE isWanted. herebyRunning given orbeNot! and not to exceed a ten District the fiscal compensation. Call Attorney 2009 FORD F-550 FOR SALE cannot be with other cats or dogs. lar Paid. We Come To You! Any 2354 Route 9N, Lake George, NY curity. five (5) days prior518-338-7213 to the Clerks office no later year of 2014-2015 and (10) year period, to be that a public hearing of Charles Johnson the 1-800-535Selling a Maroon, Ford F550 Make/Model. Instant day of the election, exto authorize requisite 518-494-5389 than AprilOffer: 21, 2014 by H. the qualified voters Call of For used in accordance with 2009 with a rack dump body, 1-800-864-5960 cept Saturday and Sunpeti- portion thereof to be applicable the Warrensburg Central 5:00 p.m. Blank 5727 laws forRENTALS the APARTMENT tarp, Side Boxes and a School XLS day, and Ticonderoga such list will– Senior Housing CASH PAIDUP TO $25/BOX for raisedTHE by taxation the purpose of paying for are available at the tions District, Warren IF YOU USED BLOOD on THINFisher Plow. 45,000 miles. County, Call $455 or $550 *FREE also be (55+). posted Rent at the unexpired, ATTENTIONcapital TEMPORARY NER PRADAXA sufferedofintertaxableand property the approved Office of TEST the District New York, sealed will DIABETIC project WORKor email if you are interested. HEATAny & HOT WATER*. Some subpolling place. qualiDAY PAYMENT & PRE-the nal ER! Crown Point Furnished hemorrhaging, reexpenditures to the Ele- HousDistrict. Clerk between hoursbleeding, be held STRIPS! in the 1Jr./Sr. lance4nier@myfairpoint.net or avail.inSmoke MLS # 201334029 fied votersidy present the free. Pet friendly. PAIDlocated shipping. Call to quired ing. Large 1 bdrm, living room, or a ofloved School. (2) Two (2) Board Ed- mentary of PRICES! 9:00 a.m. 3:00 hospitalization High School at BEST 363-2381 Newmay appliances. Enjoy the pleasure of owning a polling place object Laundry on site. 1-888-776-7771. bath &the kitchen, sleeps 2-4, private one died ucation while taking Pradaxa beAND Warrensburg Officer at-large p.m., Monday through 103 Schroon River www.Cash4DiaFHEO. Handicapped Accessible. year around family business in the beticSupplies.com the voting of the balw/ampleofparking, incl util cable, 2010 and the Board Education is & to Vacancies: holi- October Road, Warrensburg, Friday except for tween 30-35 Gallon Fish Tank w/Tetra Adirondacks close to LG Village. lot upon518-558-1007 appropriate W/D,authorized: rented weekly. 518-597present. You be entitled Termmay of office: July to 1, also days and on the district on MayAuto 12,Insurance Discount - Instant Whisper 30-60 air pump, New filterYork, 4772. grounds Ticonderoga for making compensation. – Studio Apartment, Call Ildiko McPhilmy, Purdy Realtransfer the balance 2014 through June 30, to Each 2014 7:00- Save p.m. up to website: 70% in 5wcsd.org. Minunits, nets & misc. Aquarium re- atQuote Call Attorney his/her challenge and heat. Deposit & ty, LLC., 518-253-2295 cell0 $350/mo includes (estimated 2018.Charles H. Johnson petition for - the pre- Types. utes All Credit Callmust 888-be signed Crown Pointat –$433,000) 1 bdrm, mt view, flector flourescent over head (E.D.S.T.) lap & 1-800-535-5727 the reasons therefore references required. Dudleyville from theW/D existing Capital (3) Shall the Board of heated, by at least 25 qualified sentation 287-2130 of the budget. Port Henry Duplex Apartment now hook-up, wall-to-wall stand. $100 OBO. 518-585-2257 known the Inspector 802-375-7180. Please email Reserve no Fund estab-& ref. Further, NOTICE is here- voters of the District, Building, completely renoved, exVIAGRA Education 100MG be andauthorized CIALIS carpet, pets. Sec. re- toDrive. DISH TV Retailer. Starting at Bunk Beds – black metalbyw/2 of Election before the ian@organicbodybuilding.com lished 518-546-7913. for the JR/SR Lease three (3)SPE66- quired. must state the residence given that an addicellent rental history, some owner 20mg! 40toPills + 10 FREE. $19.99/month (for 12 mos.) & bunk bed mattresses, $270 tional each. budget close of the polls. Passenger buses High School on March and $99.00 presenta- of the candidate,CIAL financing avail, $69K. 518-546100%school guaranteed. Ticonderoga – Two 2 Bdrm ApartCROWN POINT, NY LAKEFRONT Speed Internet starting at Bunk bed only $170 OBO. tion 518-will High AND FURTHER NOTICE NOTICE OF COMPLEfor a (5)24/7 five CALL year term at 22, 2010 to the new residence of each FREE sign- Shipping! be held in the 8247 NOW! ments. 1st floor $525/mo. 2nd floor, APT, 2BR/1BA, upstairs, furnished $14.95/month (where available.) 668-3367 IS HEREBY GIVEN, TION OF THE TENTAthat Thurman Town Hall, loan annual cost not to ex- Capital Reserve Fund. er. 1-888-223-8818 large 2 bdrm, $650/mo. Free launFARM (neg), road near CP. LR, About FURTHER SAME DAY InTIVE ASSESSMENT theKit,qualified cated at SAVE! Athol Ask Road, Voting quiet machines will be NOTICE is ceed $44,000. dry onvoters site. AofNo Nonsense ApartVIAGRA 100MG and CIALIS porch, wa/dr, heat/elec incl. Beaustallation! CALL Now! 1-800-615ROLL the School District shall518-586-2171 Athol, New York on May (4) RESOLVED that the utilized. hereby given that the CAST IRON Propane Heater ment Building. after FARM 20mg! Pills $99.00 FREECentral Shiptiful areas. be No 4064 SEC- SACRIFICE! 5 acres entitled NOTICE outdoor is also given the 50Warrensburg Stove, 32000 BTU, Used 5,One2014 at 7:00 p.m. Annual Meeting ofping! 4pm.to vote at (PURSUANT TO $19,900. Great views, quiet counCALL or long said term. annual vote and TION 506 & 526 OFtryTHE qualified (E.D.S.T.).MEET SINGLES NOW! No paidvoters op- of the 100% that absenteeShort ballots Schoolguaranteed. District Board of smoking/pets. Season, Excellent Condition, road, gorgeous hilltop setting! NOW! 1-866-312-6061 $775. 860-235-4504 Ticonderoga Village – Want a election. A qualified vot- REAL PROPERTY SoTAX Warrensburg NOTICE erators, is also just given people like you. Central Education is hereby au- may be applied for at the Payed $1200 Asking $750.00. Tier, NY. G'teed buildable! 5 apt in LAW)well mainwho isflr (1) a a quiet, Browse exchangeDistrict mes- will School be 100MG that a copy of thegreetings, stateoffice of the District er is oneground thorized:or CIALIS 20mg 802-377-0117 VIAGRA tracts avail UNDER $20,000! tained building? This small 1bdrm HEARING OF Terms! COM- Hurry! 1-888-701-1864 sages, connect FREEattrial. the Call Warrensburg ment of expenditures forlive.held of Clerk. Applications for citizen of the United 40 tabs +UNDER, 10 FREE!section All for 3651 $99 inideal for a(2) singlePLAINTS person, retired 1-877-737-9447 the Education Law toFast es- absentee ballots must be States ofis America, Jr./Sr. High School the ensuing year for Dewalt Rotary Laser DW077, cluding Shipping! Discreet, www.NewYorkLandandLakes.com person or even a couple. Apt feaa Capital Reserve out- tablish school purposes (2014-rightBuilding received by the District eighteen years of age or Notice is hereby given $1200 new, asking $700. 518-5851-888-836-0780 or PreMeet singles now! No(lobby paid areaShipping. fireplace, that moden LAND thekitchen Assessor(s) of (3) agas resident thelike gymnasium) lo- Fund for purpose of re- Clerk at least seven days older, andtures 2015) may be obtained 2779 miumMeds.NET operators, just real side people you. & School appliances, newthecarpet, fresh Town of Stony Creek within the Discated at 103 Schroon by any resident in the placing the Elementary prior to the vote if the Browse greetings, exchange Iron Rite Mangle Ironing MaBrant Lake 9.1 acre building lot paint, large yard area & coin opertrict for a period of thirty County of Warren have Riverlive. Road, District messages between and Aprilconnect ballot is to be mailed to School& GARDEN Roof and any Try it Warrens- LAWN chine, almost new w/direction for sale by owner, Harris Road, ated laundry. No Pets. Securitythe re- Tentative completed (30) days next preceding burg, New York, 29, 2014, and May 20, the voter, or on or prior other necessary facility on free. Call now 1-888-909-9905 booklet, $250. 518-668-4399 $63K. quired. $485/mo. utilities. 518SPRING Blowout Roll for the 518-494-3174 the annual vote and +Assessment 2014, except Saturday, Tuesday, May 20, Privacy toMORIAH May 20,1BR 2014, the (597construction items at the 2014, Hedgesaptif$495. 585-3336 or 518-586-6477. ORDER DISHatNETWORK Saleof6ft Arborvitae (cedar) Regular KILL BED BUGS! Buy HarrisSunday Bed or current year and that a Point, election. The School Crown 600' + on Putts WARRENSBURG CENholidays, is to be delivered Elementary School; to ballot betweenSatellite the hours 3584) Clean, Laundry, referTV and Internet $19.99! $59 Beautiful, Nursery Bug Killer Complete Treatment with 2.78 District may require all copy has been leftCreek, acres, 20' xDISTRICt 32' livethe Warrensburg Central Starting the voter. initially funded by the personally 7:00 at a.m. and 8:00$129 p.m.Nowbe TRAL SCHOOL ences and to security required.Pay Need A Dependable Car? Free Installation, DVR during and Grown. FREE Installation/FREE deProgram or Kit. Available: School Hard- Business Townbuilding. offering to vote the Town Clerk at able Fix up orRiver tear Road down Office Hopper Absentee ballots transfer from available, (E.D.S.T.) which 103 Schroon own utilities. Smallmust pet ok.persons No Check Out The Classifieds. Freehours Premium livery www.lowware Stores. Buy Online: homederebuild,Warrensburg, $30K FIRM, quick sale. Hall, 52 Hadley & Rd., vote and between 5the besmoking. received by the Dis- at the budget unassigned fund balance time Channels! the polls will be 518-536-1367 NY 12885 of Movie Call 1-518-873-6368 Ext. 201 costtrees.com Limited Supply! pot.com Creek, 518-354-7167 NY NOTICE - LEGAL SERelection to provide one Stoney trict Clerk not later than in the amount up to 9:00 a.m.Call and800-597-2464 3:00 p.m. opened to vote by voting $800,000, and from fu- 5:00 p.m. on May 20, form of proof of residen- 12878, where it may be machine or ballot upon VICES REQUEST FOR (E.D.S.T.). LEGALS ture budgetary appropri- 2014. A list of all per- cy pursuant to Educa- seen by any interestedth PROPOSAL NOTICE is also given the following items: person until the 4 tion Law 2018-c. Such LEGAL NOTICE sons to whom absentee Warrensburg Central that Petitions for nomi- (1) To Adopt the Annual ations or transfers from form may include a Tuesday in May. NOTICE OF ANNUAL ballots shall have been Budget: other reserve funds nating candidates for the School district, WarThe Assessors will be in drivers license, a nonMEETING AND BUDGET office of Member of the rensburg, NY is solicitTo adopt the annual upon voter approval not issued will be available VOTE Board of Education must budget of the School in the office of the Dis- driver identification card, attendance with the roll ing RFP's (Request for to exceed $2,500,000, on May 7, 14 & 21, a utility bill, or a voter NOTICE is hereby given be filed in the District District for the fiscal and not to exceed a ten Proposals) for School trict Clerk on each of the 2014 between the hours registration card. Upon that a public hearing of Clerks office no later year of 2014-2015 and (10) year period, to be District Legal Counsel. five (5) days prior to the of 4pm and 8pm, and on offer of proof of residenthe qualified voters of than April 21, 2014 by to authorize the requisite Interested parties should day of the election, exused in accordance with May 24, 2014 between the Warrensburg Central 5:00 p.m. Blank peti- portion thereof to be applicable laws for the request an RFP package cept Saturday and Sun- cy, the School District School District, Warren tions are available at the raised by taxation on the containing specifications purpose of paying for day, and such list will may also require all per- the hours of 6pm and sons offering to vote to 10pm. County, New York, will Office of the District taxable property of the and other pertinent inalso be posted at the approved capital project be held in the Jr./Sr. Clerk between the hours District. expenditures to the Ele- polling place. Any quali- provide their signature, The Board of Assess- formation. Proposals High School located at of 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 (2) Two (2) Board of Ed- mentary School. fied voter present in the printed name and ad- ment Review will meet should be submitted in on May 27, 2014 be- an envelope marked "Ledress. 103 Schroon River p.m., Monday through ucation Officer at-large AND the Warrensburg polling place may object By order of the School tween the hours of 4pm Road, Warrensburg, Friday except for holi- Vacancies: Board of Education is to the voting of the balgal Counsel" and should and 8pm at Town Hall, be in the hands of the District Clerk. New York, on May 12, lot upon appropriate days and on the district Term of office: July 1, also authorized: 52 Hadley Rd., Stony Cynthia Turcotte 2014 at 7:00 p.m. website: wcsd.org. Each 2014 through June 30, to transfer the balance grounds for making Business Administrator, Creek, NY 12878, in said 103 (E.D.S.T.) for the pre- petition must be signed 2018. (estimated at $433,000) his/her challenge and District Clerk Schroon River town, to hear and exam- Road, Warrensburg, NY AJsentation of the budget. by at least 25 qualified (3) Shall the Board of from the existing Capital the reasons therefore ine all complaints in re- not later than 2:00 PM, Further, NOTICE is here- voters of the District, Education be authorized Reserve Fund estab- known to the Inspector 4/5,4/19,5/3,5/17/2014lation to assessments, 4TC-41489 by given that an addi- must state the residence to Lease three (3) 66- lished for the JR/SR of Election before the Friday, May 30, 2014. on the application of any tional budget presenta- of the candidate, and Passenger school buses High School on March close of the polls. The Warrensburg Cenperson believing himself tral tion will be held in the AND FURTHER NOTICE residence of each sign- for a (5) five year term at 22, 2010 to the new School District Thurman Town Hall, lo- er. IS HEREBY GIVEN, that NOTICE OF COMPLE- to be aggrieved. an annual cost not to ex- Capital Reserve Fund. Board of Education recated at Athol Road, FURTHER NOTICE is ceed $44,000. Voting machines will be the qualified voters of TION OF THE TENTA- A publication containing serves the right to reject ASSESSMENT procedures for contest- or accept any or all proAthol, New York on May the School District shall TIVE (4) RESOLVED that the utilized. hereby given that the ing an assessment is posals and to make 5, 2014 at 7:00 p.m. Annual Meeting of the be entitled to vote at ROLL Warrensburg Central NOTICE is also given (E.D.S.T.). qualified voters of the School District Board of that absentee ballots said annual vote and (PURSUANT TO SEC- available at the Asses- award in the best intersor's Office. NOTICE is also given Warrensburg Central Education is hereby au- may be applied for at the est of the Warrensburg election. A qualified vot- TION 506 & 526 OF THE that a copy of the state- School District will be Central School District. office of the District er is one who is (1) a REAL PROPERTY TAX Dated this 1 day of May, thorized: LAW) 2014 ment of expenditures for held at the Warrensburg Quote form must be UNDER, section 3651 of Clerk. Applications for citizen of the United HEARING OF COMPeter J. LaGrasse the ensuing year for Jr./Sr. High School the Education Law to escompleted and signed or absentee ballots must be States of America, (2) PLAINTS ASSESSOR (CHAIRschool purposes (2014- Building (lobby area out- tablish a Capital Reserve the proposal will be rereceived by the District eighteen years of age or Notice is hereby given MAN) 2015) may be obtained side the gymnasium) lo- Fund for purpose of re- Clerk at least seven days jected. older, and (3) a resident that the Assessor(s) of Zachary Thomas by any resident in the cated at 103 Schroon By Order of the Warplacing the Elementary prior to the vote if the within the School Disthe Town of Stony Creek Brandon Thomas District between April River Road, Warrens- School Roof and any ballot is to be mailed to rensburg Central School trict for a period of thirty County of Warren have AJ-5/3/2014-1TC-45219 29, 2014, and May 20, other necessary facility burg, New York, on the voter, or on or prior (30) days next preceding District Clerk: completed the Tentative 2014, except Saturday, Tuesday, May 20, 2014, construction items at the Cynthia Turcotte to May 20, 2014, if the the annual vote and Assessment Roll for the Sunday or holidays, at between the hours of Elementary School; to ballot is to be delivered AJ-5/3/2014-1TC-45530 election. The School WARRENSBURG CENcurrent year and that a the Warrensburg Central 7:00 a.m. and 8:00 p.m. be initially funded by the personally to the voter. District may require all copy has been left with TRAL SCHOOL DISTRICt Let’s Go Garage & Yard School Business Office transfer from available, Absentee ballots must persons offering to vote (E.D.S.T.) during which Sale-ing Thru The Classified Superstore the Town Clerk at Town 103 Schroon River Road between the hours of time the polls will be unassigned fund balance be received by the Dis- at the budget vote and Hall, 52 Hadley Rd., Warrensburg, NY 12885 1-518-873-6368 Ext. 201 9:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. opened to vote by voting in the amount up to election to provide one trict Clerk not later than Creek, NY NOTICE - LEGAL SER(E.D.S.T.). machine or ballot upon $800,000, and from fu- 5:00 p.m. on May 20, form of proof of residen- Stoney 12878, where it may be VICES REQUEST FOR NOTICE is also given the following items: ture budgetary appropri- 2014. A list of all per- cy pursuant to Educaseen by any interested PROPOSAL that Petitions for nomi- (1) To Adopt the Annual sons to whom absentee ations or transfers from tion Law 2018-c. Such th Warrensburg Central nating candidates for the ballots shall have been Budget: other reserve funds form may include a person until the 4 School district, Waroffice of Member of the To adopt the annual upon voter approval not issued will be available drivers license, a non- Tuesday in May.


www.adirondackjournal.com

May 3, 2014 LAND

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STONEY CREEK 50 Acres secluded easy access 1800 ft. black top frontage, mountain views, Stoney Creek, NY $89,900, no interest financing. 518-696-2829 FARMFARM666@yahoo.com

Cranberry Lake - 90 acre hunting camp, 8 cabins, well, septic, off grid, solar power generator, sand pit, ½ acre pond, wood & propane heat, 55 miles from Lake Placid, one mile off Route 3, $155K, 518359-9859 Lovely Single Family Home, 3 bdrm, 1 ½ bath. To trade, swap, sell for equal value home in area, $129,000. Located in beautiful Edgewater, FL. 518-696-2829 Out of State Real Estate Sebastian, Florida Beautiful 55+ manufactured home community. 4.4 miles to the beach, 2 miles to the riverfront district. Homes starting at $39,000. 772-581-0080, www.beach-cove.com. Out of State Real Estate Delaware's Resort Living Without Resort Pricing! Low Taxes! Gated Community, Close to Beaches, Amazing Amenities, Olympic Pool. New Homes from $80's! Brochures available 1-866-6290770 or www.coolbranch.com. Waterfront Lots- Virginia's Eastern Shore. Was 325K Now from $65,000- Community Center Pool. 1acre+ lots, Bay & Ocean Access, Great Fishing, Crabbing, Kayaking. Custom Homes. www.oldemillpointe.com 757-8240808

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CATSKILL MTN TIMBERLAND! 60 acres - $89,900. Quality timber, great hunting, secluded setting, adjoins State Land! Less than 3 hrs NYC! Town rd, survey, EZ terms! Call 1-888-775-8114 Crown Point Land – 53 Peasley Rd. Property offers 3.5 acres on Putnam Creek w/600' of road frontage, a 50' x 30' 2 story fram barn w/elec & oil heat. Zones residential. Can be converted or build new. Beautiful spot & minutes to the Northway or Ticonderoga, $65K. Purdy Realty, LLC 338-1117 Call Frank Villanova 878-4275 Cell FARM SACRIFICE! 5 acres $19,900 Great views, quiet country road, gorgeous hilltop setting! So Tier, NY. Guaranteed buildable! 5 tracts avail UNDER $20,000! Terms! Hurry!888-905-8847. Newyorklandandlakes.com FORT PLAIN, NY: *20.7 acres, fields, panoramic views 1,080 feet on quiet paved road $55,000. *3.6 acres, field, $13,000. Owner fianancing. www.helderbergrealty.com CALL, Henry Whipple: 518861-6541 HARTFORD, NY 45 acre corner parcel, Fantastic Adirondack views, Quiet area, close to Town, shopping, I-87 Thruway, can be subdivided, perc tested. Owner financing. $98000.00 (802) 989-3686. Schroon Lake – leased land w/camp in excellent cond, 50' lakefront, 48' wooden dock, asking $50K. Call for details 518-4957683 Schroon Lake Waterfront Camp on leased land. Screened porch, 32' aluminum dock + more, $37K. 518-569-6907

STONEY CREEK 50 Acres secluded easy access 1800 ft. black top frontage, mountain views, Stoney Creek, NY $89,900, no interest financing. 518-696-2829 FARMFARM666@yahoo.com Town of Lake George ½ acre building lot. Access to Village water. Ideal for build-out basement. $47,000. Will hold mortgage for qualified buyer, 20% down. 518668-0179 or 518-321-3347 MOBILE HOME

COME VISIT OUR NEW MODELS Modular, Mobile Homes & DoubleWides. No Pressure Staff. 600 RT.7 Pittsford VT 05763 factorydirecthomesofvt.com 1-877-999-2555 7 days 9-4 Park Model, 1986. Ledgeview Camp, Highway 149, 5 Pine Breeze Trail, $49,500. Come see, it's really neat! New in 2012: roof, siding, bedroom, deck & shed! 518-6363429 or 352-428-8767 Let’s Go Garage & Yard Sale-ing Thru The Classified Superstore

1-518-873-6368 Ext. 201

PROFESSIONAL SERVICES DIVORCE $349 - Uncontested divorce papers prepared. Includes poor person application/waives government fees, if approved. One signature required. Separation agreements available. Make Divorce Easy - 518-274-0380.

CLEAN UP PROFESSIONAL PRESSURE WASHING Painting & Staning, Houses, Log Cabins, Decks, Walks, Fences, etc. Schroon Lake & Surrounding areas. Free Estimates. Call Larry 518-532-0118. HOME IMPROVEMENTS

Adirondack Journal - 19 HOME IMPROVEMENTS

REAL ESTATE

RENEWABLE ENERGY. Heat your home with a Maxim Outdoor Wood Pellet Furnace by Central Boiler & gain energy independence. Boivin Farm Supply 802-475-4007

PARADOX HOME FOR SALE By Owner, Schroon Lake School District, 3 bedroom, 1 bath, fully renovated, 2 garages, shed, large fire place, $149,900. No owner terms. See forsalebyowner.com Listing ID# 23972428.

REAL ESTATE 1 ACRE OF LAND at Wood Rd., West Chazy, NY, close to schools, nice location. Please call 518-4932478 for more information.

BE ENERGY INDEPENDENT with an OUTDOOR WOOD FURNACE From Central Boiler. Heat all your buildings. 25 yr. warranty available. Vermont Heating Alternatives 802-343-7900

ADIRONDACK “BY OWNER” AdkByOwner.com 1000+ photo listings of local real estate for sale, vacation rentals & timeshares. Owners: List with us for only $299 per year. Visit on-line or call 518-891-9919

HAS YOUR BUILDING SHIFTED OR SETTLED? Contact Woodford Brothers Inc, for straightening, leveling, foundation and wood frame repairs at 1-800-OLD-BARN. www.woodfordbros.com. "Not applicable in Queens county"

BUILDING AND LOT in Moriah 1.3+ acres, paved driveway, town water and sewer. Can be used for residential and/or commercial, Asking $45,000. 518-546-3568

REPLACEMENT WINDOWS $189 INSTALLED. White double hung, tilt-in. $1500 manufacturer rebate available. Lifetime Warranty. Credit cards accepted. Call Rich @ 1-866272-7533

Lovely Single Family Home, 3 bdrm, 1 ½ bath. To trade, swap, sell for equal value home in area, $129,000. Located in beautiful Edgewater, FL. 518-696-2829

TREE SERVICES Tree Work Professional Climber w/decades of experience w/anything from difficult removals to tasteful selected pruning. Fully equpped & insured. Michael Emelianoff 518-251-3936

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ANIMAL BEADNELL RIVERSIDE FARM All Natural Beef for sale. Sold by the quarter, half, or whole. Topsoil also available. Call for details. 518-260-4048

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20 - Adirondack Journal

www.adirondackjournal.com

May 3, 2014


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