Live Music
• Extended
menu
Since 1832
PO Box 338 Elizabethtown NY 12932 Postal Patron
104719
Happy Hour 7 days a week from 3-5pm
ashes
ECRWSS PRESORTED STANDARD U.S. POSTAGE PAID DENTON PUBLICATIONS/ NEW MARKET PRESS
ASHESPUB.COM|85 HUDSON STREET WARRENSBURG, NY|518-504-4355 MYCAPT U PHOTO RE GALLER IES
Published By Denton Publications Inc.
DIRECTLY MAILED TO OVER
63,000
Purchase photos from all the game action. Go to: suncmty.news/2t9dVat
HOMES EVERY WEEK! Adirondack Journal / News Enterprise
March 10, 2018
suncommunitynews.com
• EDITION •
Johnsburg SUGAR HOUSE BUSINESS receives clarity ALL STARTED WITH A on broadband TASTE OF MAPLE SYRUP projects Sugar bush being developed with future in mind
Final round of grants will mop up gaps in region, though some details remain elusive By Pete DeMola EDITOR
» Syrup Cont. on pg. 7 /
f
~
~~~
--
--
-..,.~
---
Winter Feldt, 6, helps her father Kevin add sap she and her mother Heidi (right) just collected from a tree outside the sugar house. It takes about 40 gallons of sap to produce one gallon of maple syrup. Photo by Christopher South
It’s about ‘thyme’ for another Easter Egg Hunt Local nursery, greenhouse sponsors children’s program
Easter,” she said. “I shop year round and look for sales.” The egg hunt keeps growing over the years, but there is no way she would consider stopping. In fact, the family is inextricably linked to the annual event. In 2011, the third year of the event, Colletti’s son Mark was going to be the Easter Bunny, but he passed away the day before at the age of 24. The town thought the Easter Egg Hunt would be canceled, but Colletti said she went over to the school grounds and set up the event, then turned it over to volunteers from the town. “They wanted to cancel it, but I knew there were a lot of kids looking forward to it. I knew my son was looking forward to it,” she said. The Easter Egg Hunt has always been, with no age limits for the children who participate. However, she has learned how to set up the event for the different aged children.
By Christopher South STA FF W RITER
Always Here to Keep You Warm FUEL OIL | KEROSENE DIESEL | GASOLINE
95 River
Street
~
CAR CARE
11.99 20Refilb.ll Propane York State $ 11.00 New Inspection $
A Full Service Repair Facility
518-494-5000
102452
F
I
623-5588 3943 Main Street Warrensburg, NY 12885
+ tax
(Must present coupon)
623-1100
3775 Main St. • Warrensburg, NY
-•- Warrensburg
Propane & Tobacco ON SALE
Rt. 9 Chestertown, NY
" '" ''v.lotusautoxpt>rts.c•om
“Quality Service at a Fair Price Since 1982”
24-Hour Towing & Recovery 3979 Main Street Warrensburg, NY
623-3039
HEATING OILj
OTUS
4IIEJ &3~
HEALTHCARE STAFFING
#2·KERO·DSL• PROPANE
BREAKFAST • LUN~
- All Day Breakfast - Daily Specials -
COD• BUDGET • QTYDiscount Installations& 24 Hour Service
102445
6254 State Route 9 Chestertown, NY • (518) 494-8581
LetusQuote your Furnace -Boiler• HWH orAirConditioner
Get the care you deserve in the comfort of your own home. PRIVATEIN HOME CARE AT ITS FINEST.
Reopening March 29th!
QUAUTV
STREET REl"AIRS
WARRENSBURG., & l'" RIENDLV
SERVICE
AT
NV A FAIR
PRICE
TOP QUALITY REPAIRS & SERVICE
• Collision Repairs • Truck Accessories 518-623-0093 lotushealthcarestaffing.com• Auto Detailing • Insurance Claim Assistance 104722
STORAGE & RENTALS LLC CALL FOR OUR REASONABLE RATES
518-623-1500
3975 MAIN STREET WARRENSBURG, NY
102455
104720
104726
GRISTMILLNY .COM 100RIVERSTREET WARRENSBURG , NY 518-623-8005
MAIN
102470
})~
e_~
7:00 A.M. - 3:00 P.M.
~5:&8 Warrenstiurg,
t\ ~---'-"
OPEN
Mountain a uto X peRts LOYALTY PROGRAMStorage STOP IN FORDETAILS
102453
24 HOUR SERVICE AUTOMATIC DELIVERY SENIOR DISCOUNTS HEAP VENDOR BUDGET PROGRAMS Rt. 9 | Chestertown, NY 494-4999 | 800-242-0617
WARRENSBURG TIRE HOUSE
Red
{i. otus
104721
Family Fuel
Co. Inc.
102456
Buckman’s
» Easter egg Cont. on pg. 2
102454
Kids will be sure to see the Easter Bunny at the 9th annual Easter Egg Hunt at the Minerva Central School on Saturday, March 31 starting at noon. The event is sponsored by the It’s About Thyme Farm, which provides all the baskets, prizes and other goodies. Photo provided
OLMSTEDVILLE | What started as a way of making children happy has turned into a labor of love for Olmstedville residents Diane and Steve Colletti. The Collettis, who operate the It’s About Thyme Farm, are now in their ninth year of sponsoring an Easter Egg Hunt for kids in the Minerva area, which this year will be held on Saturday, March 31 at noon behind the Minerva Central School. Putting together the annual Easter Egg Hunt is a task that takes Diane much of the year to accomplish. “I start shopping the day after Easter for the following
102457
NORTH CREEK | The Town of Johnsburg contains 944 locations that will be addressed as part of the final phase of grant funding in the state’s universal broadband initiative. The main provider tapped to provide the service is Slic Network Solutions, which was awarded funding to bring fiber optic service to 908 addresses in the community. » Broadband Cont. on pg. 3
2 • March 10, 2018 | The AJ/NE Sun
www.suncommunitynews.com
» Easter egg Cont. from pg. 1
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
“We put bigger items in the middle and the big kids run to the middle, which leaves the smaller kids at the edges,” Colletti said.
Kids line up around the backyard fi eld at the Minerva Central School ahead of the annual Easter Egg Hunt sponsored by the It’s About Thyme Farm. The Colletti Family, which owns the nursery and greenhouse, provides all the items for the event, including 150 baskets and 5,000 Easter eggs. Photo provided
• Foundations • · New Construction .,_. Remo'dels : • Porches • Decks • Siding ·• Roofing . • ~ .re.-~·• • Electrical 8 Plumbing
~
;
-
The Its About Thyme Farm buys everything given away at the Easter Egg Hunt, including 150 Easter baskets, bicycles, teen baskets containing tablets, and adult baskets and flowers. “There will be over 5,000 eggs for the kids,” Colletti said. As of March 1, Colletti had put together 100 of the 150 baskets, making them all herself. Colletti always makes extra baskets and goodie bags because she doesn’t want to see any kids crying because they didn’t win something. “I always have extra hidden to make sure every kid smiles,” she said. Colletti said her family always sponsors local families at Christmas and deliver gifts to homes on Christmas Eve. “Everyone deserves to be happy, especially children,” she said. Colletti said she does have some history of helping others in the community, starting with her grandmother, who opened up a shop called “Middletown Helps Their Own” in an old train station in Middletown, N.J. Her grandmother would take in used clothing, wash and fold them, and then open each weekend for people to come take what they wanted. She believes she inherited her desire to help people from her grandmother. “It’s a great feeling to be able to do something for somebody,” she said. The farm is located at 32 Smith Rd., Olmstedville. Phone or fax (518) 251-3207. ■
The Johnsburg Central School Teachers Association hosted a social Feb. 16 in honor of students in grades 7-12 who made the honor roll both first and second quarters this year. North Creek’s Stewart’s Shop donated the ice cream and toppings.
·•o
Photo provided
102462
6th Annual
ST. PATRICK’S DAY PARADE SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2018
deli & cafe • books & gifts • craft beer
The Town of Chester will once again be turning green as the Tri Lakes Business Alliance of Chestertown, NY, plans its fifth annual St. Patrick's Day Parade for Saturday, March 17, 2018, with step off at 1 p.m. The parade will be held on Main Street beginning at the South end of Chestertown on Route 9. The Galway Gaelic Pipe & Drums of Glens Falls, NY, will be featured and the Grand Marshall, John Nick, who will be joined by his wife, JoAnne. We will have an MC and Grand Marshall as well as local dignitaries from the towns of Chester and Horicon along with area businesses. Area volunteer fire departments, EMS units will be included. Activities for local children will include a bouncy house, face painting and food/popcorn booths.
A True Adirondack Country Store
THE
"' 7'} ROADS C><
www.CrossroadsOutdoors.com
Exit Chestertown, Exliit 25 25 •° Ohesitert own1 NY NY 518.494.3821 518049403§2]1 Gift Certificates Available!
Anyone wishing to participate should contact Ed Jay at 518-926-9670 or Barbara Thomas at 518-251-5692.
hunting & fishing • clothing & footwear
104735
Hensler Printing
NORTH WARREN CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
*
A Name You Can Trust
Quality Printing
3 Dynamite Hill Road Chestertown, NY 12817
PUMP INSTALLATION & SERVICE PLUMBING & ELECTRICAL WATER FILTERS • WATER TANKS
~a family tradition~
John W. Smith • Chestertown
388 Starbuck Hill Rd., Chestertown, NY 12817
518-494-3011 Fax: 494-7785
518-222-7451
106222
106231
www.northwarren.com 518-494-2722 • info@northwarren.com
wilderwaterworks@gmail.com
106218
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
The AJ/NE Sun | March 10, 2018 • 3
» Broadband Cont. from pg. 1 The state will subsidize the Nicholville-based provider for the majority of project costs, about $3.2 million of the $4 million effort. Hughes Network Systems is poised to offer satellite service to the remaining 36 homes located in neighborhoods that did not see any providers bid for those U.S. Census blocks. The grant funds allotted to Johnsburg constitute some 40 percent of the total locations in Warren County, which will benefit from $6.2 million in state grant funding as part of the $43.6 million Capital Region funding package announced in January by Gov. Andrew Cuomo. The first two rounds of the program saw the state Broadband Program Office (BPO) address 1,971 unserved areas in the community by awarding grants to Frontier Communications. Work on those efforts is underway, said company representatives last week. An additional 12 locations have been served by Spectrum. Additional top beneficiaries in Warren County include Thurman, where 755 locations will be addressed by $2.6 million in total state and private investment; Stony Creek, home to 273 locations and a $934,000 funding injection, and Warrensburg, which will see 106 locations benefit from $285,000 in total funding. Further details on which provider will serve which community are currently unavailable. Grants were awarded through a reverse auction of U.S. Census blocks. A preliminary review of the data reveals Slic and Hughes were the only providers who were awarded bids countywide, but additional units may be mopped up by Charter’s expansion efforts, an effort running concurrently with the New NY Broadband Program.
COVERAGE MAPS FORTHCOMING
Details emerged at a forum sponsored by The Town of Johnsburg Community Development Corporation at the at Tannery Pond Community Center in North Creek last Monday. Empire State Development Executive Vice President of Innovation and Broadband Jeffrey Nordhaus briefed attendees by phone. The state agency, which oversees the BPO, is in the process of building an online search function. “We’re going to be working on a tool where you can just enter your address and it’s going to pop up any providers in your area, and if there any grants underway,” Nordhaus said. “We’ve been working on that for a few months.” Slic is planning on building a similar search tool, and noted their exact footprint in the community remains undetermined. “I just don’t have those exact locations from the state yet, so I can’t show you that info in any detail tonight,” Slic Vice President of Technical Operations Kevin Lynch told attendees. David Wolff, broadband committee chair of AdkAction, a non-profit serving as a conduit between the BPO and local communities, moderated the discussion between stakeholders and providers. Wolff told the packed auditorium he will make the precise neighborhood breakdowns available once that information has been finalized, including slides detailing service areas by neighborhood. Independent work is also underway to produce Google Earth Maps to present the U.S. Census Blocks by provider across the towns and counties in the North Country, he said.
SLIC OFFERS DETAILS
The packages currently being installed in Schroon Lake will offer speeds of 50 and 100 mbps, but not television service, Lynch said. While progress had been delayed in that community and other locales across the North Country — the provider struggled with locking in private investment as well as reimbursement issues — those problems have since been corrected and Slic envisions no roadblocks moving forward. “We’ll be running approximately 130 miles of fiber throughout Warren County,” Lynch said. Slic’s entry to the market may put them in direct competition with Frontier, and the two will likely compete aggressively for customers. While grant funds can only be awarded to U.S. Census Blocks labeled as un- or underserved by broadband under the program’s requirements, the true borders appear to be somewhat murky: If Frontier’s DSL or phone service is less than 100 mbps, locations in their coverage area may have been awarded to Slic. “There will be a lot of census blocks that are Frontier territory that Slic will be building fiber into,” Lynch said. “And vice versa,” added Jan VanDeCarr, Frontier’s manager of government affairs, who also attended the meeting.
SPECTRUM INVOLVEMENT
Charter (doing business as Spectrum) may also be poised to cover some locations in the community as part of their merger agreement with Time Warner Cable, which required the new entity to extend its network to 145,000 new customers in underserved areas statewide. That covers the areas left out of the auction process. “The vast majority of these are areas committed to by Charter Communications,” a BPO spokesman told The Sun. “If not awarded in our program, and unserved, these are likely Charter commitment areas.” Spectrum has declined to provide exact details, citing the proprietary nature of their coverage maps. But in their progress report
to the state Public Service Commission (PSC) last December, the provider reported connecting more than 42,000 locations. The provider, who did not attend the meeting, has also applied to the PSC to take over Gore Mountain Cable/Hamilton County Cable Television, said Wolff, who estimated the approval process to take anywhere between 2 to 4 months. Approval would allow Spectrum to bring in their fiber from their operations in nearby Schroon Lake. “The first time people would see anything from Spectrum would be this time next year,” Wolff said. Johnsburg, he said, has emerged as an overall winner in the broadband program. “You’ve got Frontier, you’ve got Slic and you’ve got Spectrum,” Wolff said. “And when all is said and done, roughly 36 homes will be offered Hughes because the first three would not be getting to those. But I think that’s a hell of a positive story compared to where you were a couple of years ago.”
FRONTIER ADDRESSES SPEEDS
Frontier has been the subject of customer complaints in the central and northern Adirondacks, with subscribers citing slow service paired with escalating prices. Several attendees attempted to raise the issue at the forum. » Broadband Cont. on pg. 5
HAVE AN IDEA FORAN
Call today: 888-501-0236
INVENTION? DAVISON
Davison can help with: • Licensing Services • Providing USPTO forms • Design and Prototyping
540097
Slic has been the beneficiary of several state grants that have wired communities across the region, including Bellmont, Dannemora and Long Lake.
Assemblyman Dan Stec (R-Queensbury) listens as an audience member addresses telecommunications providers on Monday, Feb. 26 at the Tannery Pond Community Center in North Creek. Photo by Pete DeMola
Schroon Lake Self Storage
RENT AT FRIEDMAN REALTY-MAIN ST. SCHROON VILLAGE
518-532-7933 Route 9, South of Schroon Village
MONTHLY RENTAL RATES
JOHNSBURG YOUTH
5 X 10 - $40.00 / 10 X 10 - $60.00 / 10 X 15 - $80.00 / 10 X 20 - $95.00
LAST MONTH FREE WITH 1 YEAR PREPAID RENTAL 104190
Kathy’s Income Tax Service (518) 696-4563
Foreclosure: 3BR Home w/2-Car Detached Garage on 1.5± Acre
AUCTION
Wednesday, March 28 @ 11AM 765 Smead Road, Salisbury VT
Professionally Preparing Income Tax Returns Since 1993
Will hold their first meeting ADVERTISING INSERTION Thursday, March 15th at ORDER Thomas Hirchak Company 6:00pm at FROM: the Tannery Terra KeenePond Community Center, North Creek Phone: 800-634-7653 advertising2@thcauction.com
OPEN TO PUBLIC
OPEN HOUSE: Friday, March 9, 1-3PM
TO: Cyndi Armell
Those interested in becoming PHONE: 802-388-6397 a coach orCOMPANY: board Addison member Eagle 1C=1.5; 2C=3.25; 3C=5; 4C=6.625; please attend.
Kathleen A. Garrow, E.A.
Enrolled to Practice before the Internal Revenue Service
Fixer upper: 3BR, 2BA double wide home on a slab. 1.5 acre private, level, owned land. 2-car detached garage. Nice neighborhood. Close to Lake Dunmore. Thomas Hirchak Co. • THCAuction.com • 800-634-7653
106888
760241
104 Warrensburg Road, Stony Creek, NY 12878 Garrow1@frontiernet.net www.kathysincometaxservice.com
SOFTBALL/BASEBALL PROGRAM EMAILED ADVERTISEMENT
FAX TO: 802-388-6399 For more information call Rob Wing @ (518) 251-3674 TODAY’S DATE: 2/28/18 JI
"T 220041
NAME OF FILE: Moulton_TheEagle2 DATE(S) TO RUN: 3/07/18 SIZE OF AD: 2x3
4 • March 10, 2018 | The AJ/NE Sun
www.suncommunitynews.com
Thoughts from Behind the Pressline
Positioning for the future
Another interesting article was released recently by the Gateway Journalism Review detailing the current state of the once proud Columbia, By Dan Alexander (Missouri) Daily Tribune. • PUBLISHER • “The Tribune’s ‘Tragedy’” by Terry Ganey can be found at gatewayjr.org/2018/02/21/the-tribunes-tragedy/. Eighteen months after the purchase of family-owned newspaper by private equity firm Gatehouse Media, Ganey reports how the staff has been slashed, readers are frustrated, and circulation has plunged. In a city of more than 100,000, the paper is now left with only one full-time reporter. Home of the nation’s oldest journalism school, the new owner has stripped as much as they can out of the expense side of the paper in order maximize profits for shareholders. It’s just one more example of how private equity companies have been acquiring newspapers across the country and systematically squeezing the life out of them to produce windfall profits, so long as the paper remains, reports the American Prospect. The cost to democracy is incalculable. Robust civic life and a strong local economy depend on a good local newspaper with a vested interest in the community. Far too many believe this is a story about the decline of the newspaper industry. In reality, it’s a story about greed’s triumph over the stewardship of providing a valuable service where local ownership has deep roots. No for-profit companies can exist without operational profits, but a balance between necessary services and reasonable profits can be obtained when the value is both provided by the newspaper and recognized by the community. Locally, we continue to reinvest in The SUN and in the region. Over the last few months, we’ve completely updated our accounting, design, pagination, editorial, payroll and ad tracking software to give our staff the best, most up-to-date tools. We’ve improved the internal network our team uses to communicate securely between office locations and invested in a new customer relation tool for our sales team to assist them in working with local advertising accounts. In the next few weeks, we will be adding four more print units to our offset press line to enhance the process color capacity of the paper, improve quality and at the same time, reduce newsprint waste with greater efficiencies for the staff. Despite our small family operation, our focus has always been to invest in the future while improving the product and workload for our dedicated staff of local employees. We know of no other way to ensure our long-term survival while meeting the everchanging informational needs of the communities we proudly call home. We continue to believe a reinvestment in the company is an investment in the North Country. ■
Write to us
Sun Community News welcomes letters to the editor, preferably on topics of local interest. Letters should not exceed 300 words, and must be signed and include a telephone number for verification. Letters must be sourced in an effort to ensure claims are factual. Please keep it civil. Letters containing insults and name-calling will be rejected. Candidate endorsement and thank you notices are not accepted unless run as paid advertising. All letters run as space permits. For thank you notices, contact shannonc@suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
Opinion
suncommunitynews.com/opinions
From the Editorial Board
Community broadband forum should be emulated statewide The state is nearing the end zone on their project to provide statewide universal broadband access. After years of waiting for service, the Town of Johnsburg Community Development Corporation took the initiative to host a forum last week to glean details about the program. The community-sponsored event at Tannery Pond featured a broad coalition of stakeholders, including elected state and local officials, local residents, internet service providers and the state architects of the program. It was successful, and it appeared residents walked away with a better understanding of what has shaped up to be a critical initiative here in the Adirondack Park to make our communities sustainable. The Town of Johnsburg Community Development Corporation should be commended for being assertive in pushing for concrete answers.
And the stakeholders should also be credited, including Adk Action, the event’s moderator, and Frontier Communications, who put their best foot forward after taking some lumps by our Editorial Board. Frontier, a chief beneficiary of grant funds during the multi-year project, didn’t have to put themselves out there, but they did — even if they weren’t exactly enthused about facing down an agitated public. But warts and all, these are the types of community events that propel issues forward and generates good, solid results for state taxpayers. And let’s face it: The real world is a messy, turbulent place, and despite the state’s effort to always put a positive spin on everything, conflict cannot always be avoided. This effort produced real results. The Town of Johnsburg became the first locality in the entire state to learn of specific details regarding the broadband program, including which providers will
Letters
Apprenticeship programs in decline?
To the Editor: I watched on television the other night as a representative from Germany touted their apprenticeship program. I wondered then, because I have read so, have the United States’ industrial companies abandoned the value of these programs? In 1969, I started a five year on-the-job apprenticeship program backed by New York state under the employ of Capitol Refrigeration, and the training has served me well since. I was employed by Grand Union until they went out of business and have been self-employed since. There are many satisfied customers, never having taken advantage of any. There are many training programs today, but they only seem to teach the basics and maybe one specialty, but do not allow the tech to troubleshoot with any commonsense outside the given parameters. It may not be countrywide, but from what I’ve seen in our little neck of the woods, it’s going to be a problem in the future. From what I’ve read and heard, it’s any mechanical, manual, get-your-hands-dirty job that’s in the same boat. (Thanks, computers.) (Not all.) The way the government throws money at this and that, how about throwing a little to the industries to start a few apprenticeships? It may be happening, but it appears awfully slow. I probably can’t tell you the binary app of the 16th faction, but I can more than likely tell you what’s wrong with your ACR. Jim Bass, Ausable Forks ■
Don’t take Democratic talking points on guns for gospel
To the Editor: I commend Raynard Corrow for standing up for common sense and what is leading to the spike in violence that we see today. He used the Spokane County Sheriff ’s words to make
Submit letters by email to feedback@suncommunitynews.com Letters can also be sent to our offices: 14 Hand Avenue: P.O. Box 338. Elizabethtown, NY 12932 Letters and guest commentaries do not reflect the editorial opinion of the newspaper and its owners. We’re always looking for guest columnists to offer extended commentaries. Contact pete@suncommunitynews.com to learn more. Endorsement letters for announced political candidates are not accepted and are considered paid endorsements. The paid endorsement notice can be purchased in three sizes — a quick 50 words or less for $15; a 51-175 word endorsement for $ 50 or a 176-300 word endorsement for $75.
A paid advertisement will be based on standard advertising rates taking into consideration size and frequency according to the current rate card at the open advertising rate. For rates, call Ashley at (518) 873-6368 x105 or email ashley@suncommunitynews.com Calendar of event entries are reserved for local charitable organizations, and events are restricted to name, time, place, price and contact information. For-profit organization events will be run with a paid advertisement. Bulletin board For-profit for 4 lines (75¢ additional lines) 1 week $9 , 3 weeks $15, 52 weeks $20/month. Not-for-profit for 4 lines (.50¢ additorial lines) 1 week $5, 3 weeks $10, 52 weeks $15/month. Advertising policies: Sun Community News & Printing, publishd by Denton Publications, Inc. disclaims all legal responsibility for errors
serve their community (Slic, Frontier, Spectrum, Hughes) and when they will receive the service (by the end of next year). These are, after all, the main details residents want to know, not necessarily the dollar amount of grant funding. Government officials and community organizations elsewhere across the state should consider hosting similar community forums — including the legislatures in Essex, Clinton, Franklin, Hamilton and Warren counties. We support the state’s broadband program, if not for which, many of our rural communities would be stuck in the Stone Age. But after having been in the trenches for three years, and hearing the constant questions from local officials and residents, it appears there has been some breakdown in the communication process when it comes to obtaining useful information. Perhaps these community forums will help smooth out those wrinkles. ■
his case that guns are not the problem. He could have also used the words that President Donald Trump used when he asked why we have a rating system for movies but not for video games. This is what some of the school shooters have been said to have used to get in the mindset of shooting up schools. As far as the letter from Nancy Lindquist of Lewis, claiming to be a mental health professional, she in my estimation should be able to see that these shooters get their ideas and training to carry out these attacks from somewhere and not out of a cloud. Also she apparently does not know anything about the guns used, i.e. the AR-15. The domestic version is not the same as the military version, also the parts to make it the same are not available for domestic use. I would caution anybody to take the Democratic talking point for gospel and to self-check all information you see and hear from the media. I found one video about a house of delegates rep talking to the house about gun legislation. It’s Delegate Nicholas J. Freitas addressing the several days of talks held by the Democrats. It is on Facebook and I found it by mistake so I can’t give you a link. Pat Farrell, Brant Lake ■
Olympian won medal with partner — not solo
To the Editor: I was pleased to see that Kim Dedam mentioned Jessica Diggins and the first cross-country gold medal ever won by an American in the now 94 years since the first Winter Olympics in 1924. However, I want to note that Diggins won that medal with her partner, Kikkan Randall, in the two-person Team Sprint event. Thus Randall also took gold, not silver, as stated in Dedam’s article. Tony Goodwin, Keene ■
or omissions or typographic errors. All reasonable care is taken to prevent such errors. We will gladly correct any errors if notification is received within 48 hours of any such error. We are not responsible for photos, which will only be returned if you enclose a self-addressed envelope. Subscription rates: Local Zone $29.00 annual subscription mailed to zip codes beginning in 128 or 129. Annual Standard Mail delivery $47 annual mailed outside the 128 or 129 Local Zone. First Class Mail Subscription (sent in sealed envelope) $50 for 3 months/$85 for 6 months/$150 for an annual. $47 Annual, First Class Mail (sent in sealed envelope) $50 for 3 months / $85 for 6 months / $150 for an annual. Address corrections: Send address changes in care of this paper to P.O. Box 338, Elizabethtown, New York 12932.
» Letters Cont. on pg. 5
THESUN COMMUN
I TY
NEWS
&
P ~INT
ING
This free community newspaper exists to serve the informational needs of the community and to stimulate a robust local economy. No press release, brief or calendar item can be guaranteed for placement in the paper nor run in multiple weeks unless it is a paid announcement. All free placement is on a space-available basis.
Publisher .......................................................Daniel E. Alexander Associate Publisher........................................................Ed Coats Operations Manager ...........................................William Coats General Manager Central ..............Daniel E. Alexander Jr. Managing Editor ...................................................... Pete DeMola General Manager North............................Ashley Alexander General Manager South ............................Scarlette Merfled
www.suncommunitynews.com Facebook: @suncommunitynews Twitter: @suncmtynews
©Copyright: This publication and its entire contents are copyrighted by Denton Publications, Inc. Reproduction in whole or part is prohibited without written consent. All rights reserved.
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
» Broaband Cont. from pg. 3 “What are we doing if we’re paying for something we’re not getting?” asked an audience member. Frontier was offered $9.7 million in state subsidies as part of Phase 3, and their service will adhere to BPO program guidelines and meet target speeds, said VanDeCarr. The governor said 99.9 percent of the state will have access to speeds of 100 mbps or greater upon the program’s completion. And the most rural areas will receive 25 mbps, or some .01 percent. Frontier pledged to meet those benchmarks. “The program requires 100 mbps service, or 25 mbps in the remote areas,” VanDeCarr said. “We did not ask for a waiver for the 100 mbps requirement. That’s what we’re going to be offering.” He continued: “When these products are operational, you will have access to that product.” VanDeCarr declined to engage audience members publicly, arguing the forum was not the proper channel to do so. But, he said, “Our products state in our literature what you ‘may’ get. So it’s speeds ‘as fast as.’ You may not get 6 mbps every moment of the day.” Nate Barber, an engineering manager for Frontier, said the company is capable of transferring up to 100 mbps or more. “It’s not a guarantee that 24 hours per day, 7 days per week, every minute you’re going to get 100 mbps,” Barber said. Frontier Communications Director of Operations in New York Claudia Mahoney encouraged attendees to contact their call center at 1-800-921-8101 with any complaints, as well as phone her directly.
EYE ON SATELLITE
Much of that final .01 percent — the state’s most thorniest and untamed areas — will receive satellite service. Hughes Network Systems received $15.4 million in state grants to provide service to 75,638 locations statewide — or about half of the remaining addresses — joining some $13.6
million in private and federal commitments. The state BPO has not yet disseminated precise locations, but a preliminary review of U.S. Census data revealed wide stretches of the Capital Region and North Country will be covered by the Maryland-based provider, including vast tracts of Clinton, Essex and Franklin counties, as well as the overwhelming majority of Hamilton County, where Long Lake, Wells and Indian Lake are among the biggest remaining unserved areas. The provider received a combined $4.9 million in state funding for projects across the two regions, covering some 16 upstate counties. As part of the deal, the state will subsidize satellite installation fees, Nordhaus said, driving costs down to a flat $49 fee. Hughes touts their Gen5 service, launched last March through a new satellite, as technology that provides the opportunity to steam video, which was difficult under previous generations of the hardware. “Nobody has used this before, so it’s different than the one you’re familiar with,” Nordhaus said. “It was launched last year. It’s a super high-speed satellite capable of doing 25 mbps.” Hughes did not respond to a phone call or email for this story, and the scope of their involvement statewide remains unclear. Providers are required under the program guidelines to set a monthly price ceiling of $60. Hughes will meet that, Nordhaus said. But the satellite service is data-capped, a measure necessary for the technology to properly function. “There’s a data cap during the day, and there’s a greatly expanded one at night,” Nordhaus said. “If you hit your data cap, they don’t actually shut you down — they just slow you down. So it’s unlimited, so in a sense, you have an unlimited data cap.” Speeds during the cap will be throttled at between 1 to 3 mbps, according to the provider’s website. While this will still allow for streaming video, the playback may be interrupted by buffer times. “You can purchase extra data, called Data Tokens, to bring your speed back up to 25
» Letters Cont. from pg. 4
If broadband unavailable, consider using an aircard
To the Editor: There is an alternative solution for individuals seeking broadband internet access: it’s the aircard, also called a “wireless broadband modem.” The aircard is small, about the size of a thumb drive, which plugs into a USB port. It’s a cell phone that only transmits data. You must have access to a cell tower. This is a separate device from your cellphone. Check with your carrier to determine if it will give you special rates. Otherwise, look for the best deal with other carriers. There are two main carrier frequencies: AT&T and Verizon. Aircards will work on one or the other of these frequency sets unless you purchase an “unlocked” aircard which will work on both. The other carriers use one or the other of these frequency sets: T-Mobile to AT&T; Sprint to Verizon. Aircards start at around $20. An advantage is that it can travel with you on vacation or business. It is safer than wi-fi. Some aircards have the software resident on the device. This allows you to pass the aircard to someone else to use on a temporary basis, like a guest. Some models can be used as a “hotspot,” further allowing internet access sharing. Aircards operate at 3G and 4G LTE speeds. Speed is dependent on signal strength. Maximum speeds in 4G LTE are about 9 mbps. If you have marginal cellphone signals (one or two bars), you might wish to purchase a signal booster. This is an AC/DC powered relay amplifier system, consisting of two transceivers and the amplifier. One transceiver is mounted as high as possible outside of the building or RV. The other is placed in the structure pointing toward the computer use area. Boosters come in AT&T or Verizon frequencies, or both. Signal boosters will boost the signal of your cellphone, too. Mobile boosters are available for your vehicle. You own an aircard, but must pay a usage fee, and may have data limits. You own the booster system. There is no usage fee. However, there is a required registration as a radio broadcasting device. Registration is free, completed on-line, and almost instantaneous. Gordon E. Howard, Keeseville ■
The AJ/NE Sun | March 10, 2018 • 5
mbps,” according to the website. Slic’s standard packages will cost $49 per month, Lynch said, which is below the state minimum. While the rate is allowed to go up based on the Consumer Price Index, Lynch estimated the rate would effectively stay flat for the foreseeable future. “This is a price sensitive product,” Lynch said. “If we were to increase the rates, we would lose our customer base and it would destroy our model.” Reps from Microsoft and Rainmaker Network Services — the architects behind Thurman’s white space project — also briefed the crowd in North Creek on their efforts to provide rural areas with broadband access. Verizon representatives reportedly attended, but did not address the crowd or advertise their presence. Nordhaus said the BPO wants to hear about any problems stemming from the installations and service, whether slower-thanadvertised speeds or otherwise. “If there are issues, if you’re not getting what you’ve been promised, we’re here to help clear that up,” he said. The governor has also said issues can also be reported to the PSC.
DEADLINE LOOMING
The BPO has set the end of the year as the final deadline statewide, but stakeholders appear to be planning for some wiggle room. “A few pieces will be done this year, and the third piece will be done starting this year and running into next year,” Nordhaus said. Robert Puckett, president of the state Telecommunications Association, said providers can seek waivers giving them another year, but it’s unclear how many have sought those extensions. Frontier’s areas will be completed by the end of 2018, said Wolff, the forum moderator. Slic aims to finish their mapping efforts by late-spring, begin “make-ready” work in the summer, and start construction in the fall, efforts that are expected to continue into next spring. “Our goal from an economic standpoint and otherwise will be to start hooking up customers in late-spring and early-summer in 2019,” Lynch said. “We’re expecting to get everyone
Bust myths on gun violence
To the Editor: Deadly viruses can kill. If delivered to others, it can kill others. If spread to large populations, it can kill massively. Likewise, a deadly firearm can kill. If targeted at others, it can kill others; if modified to target many others, it can kill massively. Of course, this fact would hold true for any nation. But the United States has more killings and more homicides — one being 51 times more likely to get killed here, than United Kingdom citizens are there. Our “gun virus” has spread far and wide. Many guns with myriad contacts equals many deaths — we have more guns than people. Many guns ending up in incompetent hands accounts for more than half of our 30,000 deaths per year — documented as “undetermined intention.” Solution: Tough one! Fewer guns? Vengeance killings define the rest, and are decidedly not random, but are directed at known targets by specific persons. Be advised, research says only 4 percent are due to “mental illness” — sickness alone is seldom badness. My own observation is that these killers are angry persons with grievances, and egos that can’t handle insult. Persons of failing self-control and with a lost-reverence for the value of life, with easy access to killing machines! Like it or not, ours is a society that glorifies war and shockand-awe force. Our culture readily feeds pridefulness and often discourages humility. Fixing that will take time. But in the interim, we should keep killing machines out of angry hands! Also note: Armed civilians have rarely deterred gun massacres — zero in 111 events. And FBI analysis shows that unarmed citizens are 20 times more likely to end an active shooting, excluding armed guards. Bust the myths! Ron LaDue, Brant Lake ■
Declining to vote is irresponsible
To the Editor: To vote or not to vote… is that really a question? Voting is a privilege in this country that far too many of us take for granted. We are blessed with so many opportunities to effect change at so many levels of our government: school, village, town, state, national. Sometimes we forget, sometimes it’s inconvenient, some-
connected by the end of 2019, and likely sooner.” For a 230 mile project, installation will likely be a 4 to 6 month process, he said. Slic is also in the process of building out networks in Minerva. While past projects have been delayed by the “make-ready” stage — or the process of preparing utility poles to host new equipment — Adirondack Park Agency Special Assistant for Economic Affairs Dan Kelleher said the agency only gets involved when projects will impact wetlands or when poles need to be replaced. “Most broadband projects don’t actually require a permit from the agency,” Kelleher said. Stakeholders and local officials have long said broadband is critical to the economic survival of the Adirondack Park. Kelleher cited the economic impacts after a grassroots community effort to provide broadband led to Keene being connected about a decade ago. Three years after Keene Valley Video and Internet offered broadband service to the mountainous community, 45 percent of residents were using the service to augment or earn 100 percent of income, Kelleher said. And 45 percent of seasonal homeowners were staying an average of two weeks longer. Local officials hoped broadband would similarly reignite northern Warren County and the central Adirondacks, which has long bled young people and is fast-becoming one of the oldest regions in the U.S. “Obviously we don’t have adequate coverage in this area,” said Johnsburg Supervisor Andrea Hogan. “We’re all feeling the pain.” Hogan cycled through correspondence from local residents who are leaving the area due to the lack of service, including students unable to pursue higher education via online degree programs and people who work from home. The supervisor spoke of a dear friend in the “final days” of her life. “Her grown children would very much like to be here with her,” Hogan said. “But they have responsibilities, and they can’t spend the time that they want because they can’t connect from her house.” ■
times it may seem pointless. Sometimes some of us are simply too lazy to bother. But not voting is also a vote. Those who recognize this may call it a “protest vote,” as if someone somewhere cares. When challenged, some will use the cliche excuse that no candidate meets their high standards, as if someone somewhere cares. When challenged, some will invoke another time-worn excuse that the system is rigged, as if someone somewhere cares. But in reality, all a non-vote does is leave the responsibility for outcomes to those who do make the effort to vote. To not vote in this country is irresponsible. Too many people around the world would — and do — die for the opportunity to vote. Too many people in this country suffer needlessly because too many of us don’t bother to vote. Too much of our tax money in this country is wasted because too many of us don’t bother to vote. I don’t have patience to listen to complaints from people who haven’t bothered to vote. And I certainly don’t lend any credibility to complaints from political candidates who have never bothered to vote themselves, who have never bothered to do the one concrete thing that actually helps determine the priorities and actions at any level of government. Shouting is bluster. Voting is action. To vote is the most basic responsibility — and hard-won privilege — that we have to actually create change. John O’Neill, Saranac Lake
Looking forward to broadband alternatives
To the Editor: Spectrum here is slow and trippy. It comes and goes during routine browsing. I get the basic internet service but it is $59.95 each month and not really capable of streaming. There is no alternative except an ugly dish on the front of the house. Verizon has some sort of peace treaty with Spectrum where they don’t take each other’s territories. I have twice gotten Verizon service, in theory, but they bailed before installation and referred me to Spectrum. We have the added disadvantage, in Saranac Lake, of having terrible PBS antenna service. Essentially, we get nothing over the antenna but PBS and a channel which apparently shows Tarzan movies back to back. Philip Williams, Saranac Lake ■
6 • March 10, 2018 | The AJ/NE Sun
www.suncommunitynews.com
Bulletin Board
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
Contact Shannon Christian at (518) 873-6368 ext. 201 or email shannonc@ suncommunitynews.com to place a listing.
REACH EVERY HOUSEHOLD IN YOUR COMMUNITY LOOKING FOR YOUR ACTIVITIES & SERVICES
BINGO
CLASSES & WORKSHOPS
CLASSES & WORKSHOPS
COMMUNITY OUTREACH
COMMUNITY OUTREACH
PUBLIC MEETINGS
PORT HENRY Port Henry Knights of Columbus, bingo, 7 p.m. Every Monday
JOHNSBURG - The Town of Johnsburg Library will host a series of needle felting programs with Kate Hartley March 11, 18, April 8, 15, 22. Please call the library at 518-251-4343 to register. This project is free and made possible with funds from the Decentralization Program, a regrant program of the NY State Council on the Arts
LAKE LUZERNE – Sunday March 18 Live Edge Bowl with John Kingsley. #1150-0318. 1 Day. 9am-4pm. For your safety: no loose-fitting clothes, hair tied back, comfortable shoes and no jewelry. If sensitive to wood dust registration for turning classes is not recommended. Adirondack Folk School 51 Main St. For pricing & more info call 518-696-2400 or www.adirondackfolkschool.org.
PORT HENRY - Grief Support Group First Thursday of Each Month Port Henry, St Patrick's Parrish Center 11:00-12:00pm For more information. Marie Marvull 518-743-1672 MMarvullo@hphpc.org
TICONDEROGA - Nar-Anon Family Group A support group for family and friends of addicts. Location: Office of the Prevention Team 173 Lord Howe St., Ticonderoga, N.Y.Mondays at 6PM (excluding Holidays). For more info go to naranon.org
INDIAN LAKE - American Legion Post 1392 in Indian Lake would like to announce that as of October 2017 until April of 2018 the regular meeting times have been changed to 4 PM every first Wednesday of the month instead of 7 PM.
SCHROON LAKE - The Schroon Lake Central School is offering pickleball in the gym on Thursdays, March, 8, 15, and 22. No competition, just fun. Equipment may be borrowed. This is offered through the school's Continuing Education Program.
DINNERS & SUCH
CHILDREN'S PROGRAMS SCHROON LAKE – Spring Story Time at the Schroon Lake Public Library Thursdays, March 1st – March 29th at 10:30 a.m. Join us for stories, playtime, music, crafts & fun. No registration necessary. STONY CREEK - The Stony Creek Library 37 Harrisburg Road, 2nd Saturday Story Time Sat. March 10th at 11:00 AM stories, craft and a snack. Ages 2-6 please call library 518 696-5911 to let us know your are coming and/or questions. CLASSES & WORKSHOPS GLENS FALLS – Introduction to Cold Process Soap Making with Roberta Devers-Scott. #12710316. 1/2 day. 6pm-9pm at 18 Curran St. For pricing & more info call 518-696-2400 or www.adirondackfolkschool.org. GLENS FALLS – Saturday March 10th Traditional Table Runner with Janet Flinchbaugh. #1215-0310. 1 Day. 9am-4pm. For pricing & more info call 518-696-2400 or www.adirondackfolkschool.org. GLENS FALLS – Stained Glass for begginers with Guy Savio.March 7th & 14th at 21 Cooper St. 5pm8pm For pricing and more info call 518-696-2400 or www.adirondackfolkschool.org. GLENS FALLS – Stained Glass for begginers with Guy Savio. March 3rd, 10th & 17th at 21 Cooper St. 10am-1pm. For pricing and more info call 518-696-2400 or www.adirondackfolkschool.org.
LAKE LUZERNE – Saturday March 10th Build a Rustic Birdhouse with Don Polunci. #1148-0310. 1/2 Day. 9am-12pm. Adirondack Folk School 51 Main St. For pricing & more info call 518-696-2400 or www.adirondackfolkschool.org. LAKE LUZERNE – Saturday March 10th Mountain Gathering Basket with Barbara Boughton. #12740310 at Adirondack Folk School 51 Main St. .Must be 12 years or older. For pricing & more info call 518-696-2400 or www.adirondackfolkschool.org. LAKE LUZERNE – Saturday March 17TH Introduction to Traditional Cooking with Roberta DeversScott. #1288-0317. 1 day. 9am4pm. Adirondack Folk School 51 Main St. For pricing & more info call 518-696-2400 or www.adirondackfolkschool.org. LAKE LUZERNE – Sunday March 11th Beginning Bluegrass Banjo with Mac Petrequin. #1149-0311. 1/2 Day. 1pm-4pm. Adirondack Folk School 51 Main St. For pricing & more info call 518-696-2400 or www.adirondackfolkschool.org. LAKE LUZERNE – Sunday March 18th Basic Cold Process Soap Making with Chrissey Eberhardt. #1164-0318. 1/2 Day. 1pm4:30pm. For pricing & more info call 518-696-2400 or www.adirondackfolkschool.org.
COMMUNITY OUTREACH ELIZABETHTOWN - The diabetes support group meets the 3rd Tuesday of each month at Elizabethtown Community Hospital, in the boardroom,4:30 PM - 6:00 PM. The meeting is open to anyone those with diabetes, their caregivers, family members and friends. ESSEX - The Essex Yoga Club meets every Monday at 5:30 pm at St. Johns Church. Free, open to all. LAKE GEORGE - Grief and Loss Support Group Wednesdays , 3:00 pm. Explore the root of your grieving & learn to process it in a healthy, healing way. Randi Klemish, a retired mental health thrapist leads this healing group All are welcome. Group meets every Wednesday, From 3-5 pm at St. James Episcopal church in Lake George Village. MINERVA - Family Fun Night Friday, March 9th 4:30-7:00 pm At Minerva Central School. Please contact Lynn Green with any questions at greenl@minervasd.org or 518-251-2000. MORIAH – Free Adult Swim Program January 31st – March 21st. Wednesdays at the Moriah High School 4:00 pm – 5:00 pm Exercise-based. 5:00 pm-6:00pm Open Swim.
SCHROON LAKE - The Schroon Lake Central School is presenting, "Education and Life in China", by Stephen Gratto, Superintendent, on Wednesday, March 14 from 6:30 to 7:30 PM in the auditorium. Enjoy an informal conversation with Mr. Gratto about his experience visiting schools in China and how it impacted his view of education in America. This is offered through the school's Continuing Education Program. SCHROON LAKE - The Schroon Lake Central School is offering free classes for adults in juggling with Stephen Gratto, Superintendent, and comedy-variety entertainer. It will be held on Wednesdays, March 7 and 21 from 6:00 - 7:00 PM in the cafeteria. Try unicycling, rope walking, devil sticks, and diabolos. This is offered through the school's Continuing Education Program. STONY CREEK - Stony Creek Library 37 Harrisburg Road Third Thursday Evening Movie Thursday March 15th at 6:00 PM "The Wrecking Crew" Documentary, PG, 102 Min. call library 518 6965911 to let us know you are coming or for more info.
MINERVA - Saint Patrick's Day Dinner Friday, March 16th 4:307:00 pm At Minerva Central School Please contact Lynn Green with any questions at greenl@minervasd.org or 518-251-2000. PORT HENRY Port Henry Knights of Columbus St. Patrick's Corned Beef & Cabbage Dinner Wednesday March 14th at 4:00 pm until ?? Take-Outs Available. TICONDEROGA – The Ticonderoga Elks Lodge #1494 at 5 Tower Ave. will host a “Cooked to Order” Breakfast on Sunday March 11th, 8-11 AM. Eggs, Omelets, French Toast, Pancakes, Waffles, Sausage Gravy on Biscuits, Bacon, Ham, Sausage, Hash and Toast. Coffee and Juice also. This is a Lodge Fundraiser. Bring your Family and Friends. TICONDEROGA – Ticonderoga Knights of Columbus will be having a Perch Fry on March 9th 5pm – 7pm or until gone. (Donations $11) TICONDEROGA – Ticonderoga Knights of Columbus will be having Corned Beef Sandwiches March 15th, 11:30am until all gone. (Donation $10) Take-Outs Available. 518-585-6520. Irish music all afternoon. PUBLIC MEETINGS CROWN POINT - Crown Point Board of Education Tuesday, March 20, 2018 6:00 p.m. Budget Workshop to be followed by Regular Monthly Board Meeting 7:00 p.m. District Library.
SCHROON LAKE - The Schroon Lake Public Library Book Discussion Group is a book lovers club for culture, conversation, and growth, and this months book is Kitchens of the Great Midwest by J. Ryan Stradal. The group will meet at 1 p.m. on Tuesday, March 20 in the library Community Room. All are invited. Call the Schroon Lake Public Library to reserve a copy of this months book. For further information, contact the library at 518-532-7737, ext. 13. SCHROON LAKE - The Southern Adirondack Softball Umpires and Westport Chapter Baseball Umpires will be holding their 2018 meetings on February 27, March 6, 13, 20, and 27th at 6pm in the Library at Schroon Lake Central School. All members past, present and new are encouraged to attend SENIORS TICONDEROGA – ACAP Meal Site at Ticonderoga Armory lunches for Seniors Mon-Fri at Noon. 3/12 -Spaghetti/meat sauce, 3/13Roast pork/gr, sweet potato, 3/14Ham dinner- Irish Movie, 3/15- 5 pm Corn Beef Irish Dinner, 3/16Chicken ‘n Biscuits. Seniors over 60 years cost $3.50, Under 60 cost $6.00. Call 518-585-7682 for information. TICONDEROGA – ACAP Meal Site at Ticonderoga Armory St. Patrick's Day Dinner March 15th at 5 pm. Corn Beef Dinner, Beverage/Dessert. Irish music and a wee bit o' blarney! Call 518-5857682 for information.
Check out suncommunitynews.com/events for more events like these.
Calendar of Events - Not all listings that appear in print will appear on our website -
NOW - MAR. 21
Moriah » Free Adult Swim
Program held at Moriah High School; Wednesdays at the 4:00 pm - 5:00 pm Exercise-based. 5:00 pm-6:00pm Open Swim.
MAR. 10
Bakers Mills » Benefit Turkey
Dinner held at Bakers Mills Firehouse; 5:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. Turkey dinner with all the fixins’ to benefit Gary Wolfe. Adults $12, Kids 6-10 $5, Under 5 Free. Call for details 518-251-2624.
MAR. 10
Athol » Thurman Maple Sugar
Party held at Thurman Town Hall; 4:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. Tradition will resound with live music by the Warren County Ramblers as guests fill plates at the annual Thurman Maple Sugar Party, a meal crowned with dessert of old fashioned maple jackwax (also known as “sugar on snow”). Residents of Thurman for 59 years have gathered this way during sugaring season to raise money for the American Cancer Society. A perfect ending
MAR. 10-11
Thurman Maple Days held in & around the town of Thurman
to Thurman Maple Days tours that day, the dinner begins at 4 p.m. and runs till all are served. $10 adults, $5 for kids. Info: 518-623-3072, or 518-623-4050 (during the event). www.thurmanmaplesugarparty. com, PersisGranger@aol.com
MAR. 10
Schroon Lake » Winter Movie
Madness held at Schroon Lake Public Library; The Library will offer 2 showings of new release DVD Movies at 12:30 My Little Pony the Movie - the ponies use the magic of friendship to save their homeland & at 7:00 pm for the Adults & Teens Goodbye Christopher Robin inspired by the true story of A.A. Milne. Free.
MAR. 10 - MAR. 11
Chestertown » North Warren
Central School’s production of Mary Poppins Jr held at North Warren Central School auditorium; March 10th at 7:00p.m. & March 11th at 2:00 p.m. You will not be “expialidisappointed!” Mary Poppins Jr. presents, in just under two hours, the whimsical, wellknown tale of a mysterious nanny who turns the lives of an ordinary London family upside down. The play is presented absolutely free of charge, although donations to North Warren’s Performing Arts Club will be accepted (and greatly appreciated).
MAR. 10 -MAR. 11
Thurman » Thurman Maple Days
held in & around Town; 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Thurman maple producers - four of them the largest in Warren County--will open their sugar houses to show how this ageold art is practiced with the help of technological advancements. To get the full schedule of events go to www.thurmanmapledays.com. Details: Randy Galusha, 518-6234744 or toadhillmaple@gmail.com
MAR. 11
Ticonderoga » Cooked to Order
Breakfast held at Elks Lodge #1494; 8:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. Eggs, Omelets, French Toast, Pancakes, Waffles, Sausage Gravy on biscuits, Bacon, Ham, Sausage, Hash & Toast, Coffee & Juice also. This a Lodge Fundraiser. Bring your Family & Friends.
MAR. 15
Ticonderoga » Lasagna Dinner
held at Squadron 224, Sons of American Legion; 11:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m. Squadron 224, the Sons of American Legion will serving 3 meat, 4 cheese Lasagna, fresh baked roll/butter & dessert, Donation $14, Eat in or take out available, local delivery, Please call ahead 518-585-6220 or 1-781733-3882. Additional individual Lasagnas available for freezing; For Veggie Lasagna Meals order by March 14th at 7:00 pm.
MAR. 17
Schroon Lake » Winter Movie
Madness held at Schroon Lake Public Library; The Library will offer 2 showings of new release DVD Movies at 12:30 Lost & Found
To list your event call (518) 873-6368 ext. 201 or email calendar@suncommunitynews.com. Please submit events at least two weeks prior to the event day. Some print fees may apply.
- a magical tale about friendship and loneliness. A short film,only 24 minutes & at 7:00 pm for the Adults & Teens Victoria & Abdul - extraordinary true story of an unexpected friendship in Queen Victoria’s rule. Free.
MAR. 17
Chestertown » Corned Beef and
Cabbage Dinner held at Community Methodist Church; Adults $10.00, Children under 5 $5.00. Details: 518-494-3374
MAR. 17 - MAR. 18 Thurman » Thurman Maple
Days held in & around town; 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Thurman maple producers - four of them the largest in Warren County--will open their sugar houses to show how this ageold art is practiced with the help of technological advancements. To get the full schedule of events go to www.thurmanmapledays.com. Details: Randy Galusha, 518-6234744 toadhillmaple@gmail.com
MAR. 24
Schroon Lake » Winter Movie
Madness held at Schroon lake Public Library; The Library will offer 2 showings of new release DVD Movies at 12:30 Ferdinand- the bull rallies a misfit team and goes on the ultimate adventure & at 7:00 pm for the Adults & Teens The Secret Scripture - an Irish film starring Vanessa Redgrave. Free.
MAR. 24
Mineville » Annual Chicken BBQ
& Basket Raffles held at VFW Post 5802; 1:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m. This is a benefit for the Veterans of Foreign Wars, 1/2 chicken, Baked Potato, Baked Beans, Cole Slaw, Rolls & Dessert, $8 in advance, $10 at
the door. For more info Jill Gray Shpur, 518-942-5250 or by email rshpur2003@yahoo.com
MAR. 29
Glens Falls » Tours for Tots held at The Hyde Collection; 10:30 a.m.- 11:30 a.m. Children ages 5 and younger learn about a work in the Museum, then spend time in the Art Studio making their own creations.
MAR. 31
Schroon Lake » Winter Movie
Madness held at Schroon Lake Public Library; The Library will offer 2 showings of new release DVD Movies at 12:30 Wonder - an inspiring and heartwarming story. A must see for Tweens!!! & at 7:00 pm for the Adults & Teens Wonder - an inspiring and heartwarming story. A MUST SEE. Free.
MAR. 31
Bolton Landing » Maple Sugaring held at Up Yonda Farm; 1:00 p.m. 2:00 p.m. Join us for Maple Sugar Basics and enjoy the process that yields sweet rewards! We’ll tap, collect, and boil the sap of sugar maples on the property. We’ll cover all the steps to get from sap to syrup. $4 per person, member no charge. Details: 518-644-9767.
S AT U R DAY
17 MAR.
BENEFIT BREAKFAST FOR KORINNA CONLEY DUPREY held at
Westport Federate Church, 6486 Main St, Westport. Saturday: 8:00 am - 11:00 am Requested donation $7 adults, $3 children 3-12, children under 3 free. 060183
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
» Syrup Cont. from pg. 1 By Christopher South STA FF W RITER
CHESTERTOWN | When Kevin Feldt was a boy, he was able to take part in making maple syrup over an outdoor fire, the taste of which he has never forgotten. “There was nothing like it,” he said. Now he is hoping to pass along an appreciation he learned from making maple syrup as a child to his own daughter, Winter, who at the age of 6, is already helping at their M.C.R. Maple sugarhouse. “That’s what all this is for, to pass along to her,” Feldt said. Feldt and his wife, Heidi, are corrections
The AJ/NE Sun | March 10, 2018 • 7
officers at the Washington Correctional Facility near Comstock. The couple met as coworkers, married, and made their home at their Mountain Creek Ranch on Perry Road, Chestertown, from which M.C.R. Maple takes its name. The Feldts started raising chickens, rabbits, and pigs, but decided to tap into the local sugar bush - the stand of maple trees from which sap is harvested. The original sugar house was located across the street from their farm, Heidi said. Last year, after gleaning information from online maple syrup chat sites, they started tapping the maple trees and collected enough sap to make 25 gallons of syrup. “The typical ratio is 40 gallons of sap to render one gallon of syrup, but it’s based on the sugar content. Our first boil took 50 to Kevin (left) and Heidi Feldt check the wood-fired evaporator which condenses the sap into syrup, producing the maple flavor not present in the sap. Photo by Christopher South
Kevin Feldt holds bottles containing grades of maple syrup, against which every batch is checked. Grades include ‘golden delicate,’ which he said is good for pancake syrup, to ‘amber rich’ and ‘dark robust,’ which some like to use in cooking. The delicate or amber are also used in candy-making. Photo by Christopher South
Heidi Feldt (right) and her daughter, Winter, collect some sap from a maple tree located near their new sugar house, M.C.R. Maple in Chestertown. The Feldts use the traditional method of tapping the trees and hanging buckets to collect the sap. Photo by Christopher South
60 gallons to make one gallon of syrup. The ratio is all over the place,” Feldt said. Feldt said they started out using a flat pan provided by a neighbor, and it took them 8 to 10 hours to produce a gallon of syrup. The Feldts since invested $7,000 in a woodfired Dominion & Grimm evaporator, which has sped up production. “We can now get one gallon of syrup in a over an hour,” Feldt said. This year they hope to be able to produce 100 gallons of the sweet stuff.. M.C.R. Maple is a growing business, with just under 400 taps set in trees that are part of the sugar bush. With that many taps, M.C.R. Maple can collect several hundred gallons of sap in a day. “The other day it took four hours to collect 250 gallons,” Feldt said. “On a banner day, you could get 300 to 400 gallons.” The Feldts use the bucket and gravity system, whereby the sap runs through the tap into a bucket. They are aware of larger sugar house
MAPLE OPEN HOUSE WEEKENDS
operations, one having 13,000 taps and a vacuum line system for drawing the sap out of the tree. The Feldts go out and collect the sap, which is then placed in a drop tank, before being pumped up to a holding tank. A gravity feed system supplies the sap to the evaporator. Feldt said the fire under the evaporator pans has to be re-stoked every seven minutes to keep the heat level where it should be, while monitoring the product to ensure there is enough liquid. “We don’t want the pans to burn,” he said. Feldt plans to retire in 2021, when he will devote all his time to the maple syrup operation, which can only run about five to six weeks while the trees are producing sap. They hope to develop the business to include educational tours, as well as selling vegetables, pork, poultry, and eggs from the Mountain Creek Ranch. M.C.R Maple is located at 208 Perry Rd. (off Igerna Road), North Creek (for GPS purposes). Call them at (518) 494-7497. ■
___.,,..,..,_. ~~
PLEDAYS Cherishingourheritage,onesweetdropat a time
March 17 & 18 • March 24 & 25 10 AM-4 PM
MARCH 10• 11,17•18&24•25,10A.M.•4P.M. Seif-guide tonine unique farms forfreetours, talks &tastes 1/2 hr.from LakeGeorge Village Maps:ThurmanMapleDays.com
OLDFASHIONED MAPLESUGARPARTYMAR.10 4-9 or 'til all are served.JackWaxfor dessert. Adults,uo; Kids,ss, Under5, free
WarrenCountyRamblersperform.Gift basketraffles. ThurmanTownHall,Athol. ( BenefitsAmericanCancerSociety _/
,,,,
I
1.VALLEY RD.MAPLE 190Valley, Pancakes 9-1 ,
~ ill
~
7(u, .'{;•fAJt
·1( •·-,
Cj_fen, -lr4je
Sweet Maple Dreams!
2.
.
\.
I
MARTIN'SLUMBER ~
280 Valley, Artisans
-~
I
3.NETTLE MEADOW 484 5.Johnsburg,Cheese 4.ADKGOLDMAPLE
s
74BearPondRd.,"Tapper" 5.TOADHILLMAPLE
137Chas.Olds,wagonrides 6. PERULLAMAFARM 661 High, Llama-speak
...-1
7. BLACKBERRY HILL 15Mud, Cert. Organic 8.WINDYRIDGE MAPLE 52ElmerWood,Kettleboil Made possible
.,I
by Warren Co
Find a sugarhouse: www.upperhudsonmaple.com 104701
9. HIDDEN HOLLOW MAPLE T O . 'k'II . 312 D1pp1 1 -3generations I ccupancy axes
104734
8 • March 10, 2018 | The AJ/NE Sun
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
St. Patrick’s Day IRISH ROAD BOWLING
SATURDAY, MARCH 17TH 10AM - 4PM 117 PELON ROAD • INDIAN LAKE, NY Teams of four take turns throwing their bowl (yes that is the proper spelling - it is a small iron ball) down a country road, competing to get to the finish line with the least amount of throws to win the Road Bowling Champion Title.
Entry fee is $5 per person and pre-registration is required.
FOR MORE INFORMATION OR TO DOWNLOAD A REGISTRATION FORM VISIT WWW.INDIAN-LAKE.COM OR CALL 518-648-5828
open 7 days a week year-round 6453 nys route 30 indian lake, ny 12842 518-648-5341 220021
“A Little Bit of Everything” at
LEROY’S
Auto Sales & Service Quality Late Model Pre-Owned Vehicles Servicing the community for 53 years
Monday - Friday 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. • Saturday 8 a.m. to noon
Larry – Sales • Tim – Service
518-359-9031
M-F 8-5 SAT 8-12
144 Main Street • Tupper Lake, NY
DALE ROBERTS, OWNER 220016
Indian Lake Restaurant & Tavern
Downtown YOUR ONE-STOP SHOP FOR ALL YOUR WINTER NEEDS!
HILLBILLY SOUND MACHINE 9:00PM to Midnight
Monday-Saturday: 8-5 Sunday: Closed
220018
220017
518-648-5212 • Check our website: www.pinescs.com
Located at the Intersection of Route 28 & 30 • 648-5115
220019
Dinner Specials All Weekend Long! Serving Traditional Irish Fare
WE DELIVER!
220015
Saturday, March 17th Irish Road Bowling
Saturday, March 17th
25% OFF ALL WINTER & 2ND FLOOR ITEMS!
www.leroysautosales.com
St. Patrick’s Weekend Celebration Indian Lake
13th Annual St. Paddy’s Day Party!
MARCH INVENTORY BLOWOUT SALE!
STARTRIGHT. STARTHERE.~
BODY WORK, ALIGNMENTS & MORE
6275 RT 30 INDIAN LAKE
220040
Father Philip Allen 518-648-5422
7i«e7/dae®
WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL!
St. Mary’s/ St. Paul’s Parish Indian Lake St. Joseph’s Church Olmstedville
For more information and to register for events, call The Town Clerks Office: 518-648-5211
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
Sports
The AJ/NE Sun | March 10, 2018 • 9
suncommunitynews.com/sports
Lake Placid boys win third straight Nordic title
Anne Rose-McCandish (LPCS) 32nd; Lily Flanigan (LPCS) 35th; Evelyn Eller (SLCS) 41st; Helena Dramm (SLCS) 45th. Boys 7.5K individual: Scott Schulz (LPCS) 1st; Kai Frantz (LPCS) 6th); Mike Skutt (LPCS) 9th; Paul Lindsay (LGHS) 12th; Jacob Alberga (SLCS) 13th; Lachlain Cheney-Setmour (SLCS) 18th; Adrian Hayden (SLCS) 26th; Nick Ketlling (SLCS) 32nd; Colter Cheney-Syemour 37th; Taylor Samburger (SLCS) 40th. Girls skate relay: LPCS (Sarah Rose-McCandish, Annie Rose-McCandish, Lily Flanigan) 10th; Section VII (Sylvie Linck, Evelyn Ellter, Helena Limlaw) 16th Boys skate relay: Lake Placid (Kai Frantz, Mike Skutt, Scotty Schulz) 1st; Section VII-A (Lauachlain CheneySeymour, Jacob Alberga, Nick Kelting) 4th. ■
By Keith lobdell SPORTS EDITOR
NORTH CREEK | For the third straight year, the Lake Placid Blue Bombers are the kings of the Nordic skiing world that is the New York State Public High School Athletic Association. The Blue Bombers repeated as Nordic champions by taking the top spot in the three-man classic relay, while Scotty Schulz repeated as the individual state champion. Schulz also was the top combined skier in the state. “It was a super good race,” Schulz said. “The snow was really soft, but I was able to take what the course was giving. It was a lot of fun to go out on this not in my senior year.” Schulz also ran the anchor leg of the three-man relay, pulling the team from third to first and helping capture the state title. “As soon as I saw the good leg Mikey (Skutt) had and I saw he was close enough and I knew I had to go,” Schulz said. Skutt said he only said one thing to the anchor leg when they touched for the final leg of the race. “I just said go Scott,” said the first year racer Skutt. “I knew he had it. We were a little bit behind so I pushed it as hard as I could to make up some time.” Kai Frantz, who ran the opening leg, said he felt confident that as long as he and Skutt kept the team close, Schulz would close the race out. “It’s like you know you are going to win and he gives us that extra wind behind our backs,” he said. Frantz also scored a sixth place finish in the individual race, saying he was pleased about his time in his second year at states. “Last year I did not have a good result but this year I got sixth which was a good result, especially for a sophomore,” he said. For Section II, Seamus Tomb of Johnsburg was the anchor leg of the Section II-A team which finished second overall, with Tomb running an impressive leg despite being under the weather. “I felt really bad yesterday but today was a shorter race so it didn’t affect my lungs as much,” said Tomb. “My two teammates put me in a great position and I was able to finish the job. I knew we were not catching Schulz, though. He’s one of the best in the world.” Tomb said he enjoyed the chance to race with other skiers
NEED HELP WITH YOUR ADVERTISING? Contact:
Kai Frantz, Scott Schulz and Mike Skutt stand atop the podium after winning the NYSPHSAA Nordic skiing title at Gore Mountain Feb. 27. Photo by Keith Lobdell from around the section. “It’s good to have these combined section teams because it’s one of the great things about Nordic to be able to ski with your friends from throughout the section,” he said. In the girls events, Saranac Lake’s Sylvie Linck placed 11th, the highest placing member of the Section VII contingent. “The skis were super-fast and it was a lot of fun,” Linck said. “I was hoping to be the top of the Section VII runner. I wanted to be just as good or better then my predicted time and standings.” The following are how local athletes finished at the NYSPHSAA Nordic Championships: Girls 7.5K individual: Sylvie Linck (SLCS) 11th; Sarah RoseMcCandish (LPCS) 24th; Ava Anderson (Johnsburg) 31st;
Stephenson
104733
RABIES CLINICS 2018 Essex County
FREE for all pet dogs, cats & ferrets $5 Donation appreciated All Clinics 6-7 PM MARCH
---
COMMUNITY
NEWS
&
--
PRINTING
Published by Denton Publications Inc
104695
As we prepare for another expansion of our commercial web printing department, we are looking for web press trainees and experienced web pressmen to assist in our growing shop. Embracing new technology and new methods along with high-quality process color reproduction will be required. Health insurance, paid days off, matching retirement program and life insurance.
Send resume to: Bill Coats Sun Community News & Printing P.O. Box 338 Elizabethtown, NY 12932
or E-mail to:
Chesterfield Highway Garage
bill@suncommunitynews.com
Ticonderoga Highway Garage Moriah Highway Garage
This is an opportunity to work for a 70-year old independently owned company with an excellent business and fi nancial reputation. Our only limits are the extent of the vision of our staff. Quit the rat race and start having fun again with a company that is as concerned about your growth as it is about its own. If you believe you have the qualifications necessary to fi ll one of these positions, please submit your resume including compensation requirements.
APRIL 17
www.suncommunitynews.com
Looking for a new career with strong mechanical skills?
Speculator 548-7521
Stephensonlumber.com
---
beth@suncommunitynews.com
WEB PRESSMAN/ PRODUCTION TRAINEE
Lumber Company, Inc.
13 20 27
(518) 330-1626 Ph.: (518) 580-9526 Cell:
HIRING
We have all of your plumbing needs!
Indian Lake 648-5050
MARKETING SPECIALIST
WEARE
GOT PLUMBING PROJECTS?
Chestertown 494-2471
Beth Wells
Crown Point Highway Garage
Save time! Pre-register for a clinic by visiting: www.co.essex.ny.us/Health and clicking on the~
•••••icon -
IC
Full schedule coming soon!
~ HEALTH ~ DEPARTMENT ~
Public Health Unit
518.873.3500
132 Water Street | Elizabethtown, NY 12932 www.co.essex.ny.us/Health www.facebook.com/EssexCountyPublicHealth 550511
14 Hand Avenue, Elizabethtown, New York 12932 540092
10 • March 10, 2018 | The AJ/NE Sun
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
Stefanik criticizes tariffs, touts record in tele-town hall WASHINGTON, D.C. | As threats of a trade war loom on the horizon, Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-Willsboro) has sharply criticized the president’s proposed tariffs on imported steel and aluminum. “I have concerns that this tariff will increase costs on consumers and that it possibly invites retaliation from other countries, which will hurt our ability to export,” Stefanik said in a telephone town hall on Tuesday night. Stefanik hopped on the call hours after President Trump’s top economic advisor, Gary Cohn, announced his resignation as a result of the proposed penalties. The lawmaker expressed concerns over the ramifications on her border-hugging district, including increased prices for businesses — including Alcoa in Massena, the recipient of numerous state subsidies — which would then be passed onto consumers. In a worst case scenario, businesses may flee the district while other countries may implement their own harmful tariffs, she said. The European Union (EU) on Wednesday proposed their own set of tariffs, while Britain and Canada have also expressed concerns. “It’s obvious China is dumping steel, and we need to work with allies in the EU to have a much more targeted approach to make sure our ability to export continues to grow and we’re addressing the problem, Stefanik said, “and not penalizing counties that we partner with like Canada.”
WIDE VARIETY OF TOPICS
Stefanik also pledged to bolster technical job training programs, tackle the opiate crisis, combat veteran homelessness and chip away at student debt in the hour-long telephone conference on Tuesday, the lawmaker’s preferred setting over public town hall meetings. The sophomore lawmaker also broke with the president on arming teachers — “I don’t support the mandatory arming of teachers,”
regulated use of chemicals that pollute not only our lands, but our drinking water, which is something that’s important to every family in this district,” Stefanik said. “I think it’s important that scientists are able to have an objective assessment within with the EPA and within our objective agencies.”
RUSSIA INVESTIGATION
she said — but left the door open to supporting armed resource officers at North Country public schools. “I think having an armed school resources officer is important, and that’s something hopefully school districts will look at,” Stefanik said. She supports proposed legislation by state Sen. Patty Ritchie that would require the state Department of Education to improve mental health resources in schools, as a well as bill that would allow teachers to be equipped with personal security alarms. Stefanik also pledged to push back against the White House’s proposed budget cuts to the EPA, including repeated attempts to strip federal grant funding from a Ray Brook-based laboratory that monitors acid rain. But when discussing funding for the EPA, it’s important to balance safeguarding the concerns of environmentalists with those of farmers, who often argue the agency can be overreaching. “I don’t want to see and revert back to un-
The lawmaker, who serves on the House Intelligence Committee, also offered an update into the committee’s ongoing investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 election. Stefanik recounted her line of questioning to former FBI Director James Comey last March. In the exchange, the lawmaker sought to discern why he hadn’t shared information sooner with congressional leadership when he first became aware that there were active Russian measures to compromise the U.S., including hacks of the Democratic National Committee or potential counterintelligence investigations opened up on Trump campaign surrogates. Ensuring the U.S. is properly safeguarded against possible hacks is a key priority moving forward, Stefanik said, citing a fact-finding trip to Eastern Europe last month. “We need to be investing in cybersecurity, which we’re working hard on on the House Armed Services Committee and the house Intelligence Committee,” Stefanik said. “We also need to push back on Russian’s overuse of information warfare.”
PREFERRED SETTING
The lawmaker has held 14 telephone town halls since taking office in 2015. Each follows a familiar pattern: She takes a question, answers it, cites meetings with local stakeholders and pivots to legislation she has sponsored or has succeeded n passing the GOP-controlled House before eventually making its way to the White House. And she remains sunny and indefatigable — perhaps even preternaturally so — throughout.
While the phone conferences are a preferred method of communication with constituents over town halls, the lawmaker noted she’s regularly out on the road meeting with community stakeholders. “Since I was sworn into office, I’ve made over 690 constituent outreach visits across the district,” she said. This past week, she met with a group in Canton, stopped by the South High Marathon Dance in Glens Falls, attended a political event in Herkimer County and met with local lawmakers from Essex and Saratoga counties in Washington, D.C. Despite criticisms and allegations from a vocal contingent on social media, calls are not pre-screened beforehand. But moderators first ask callers what the subject of their question is before they are on the call, a measure necessary to cover a wide array of topics, according to her office. “Constituents are free to ask about anything once they are on the line,” said Tom Flanagin, a spokesman. “Some callers support her position and some don’t.” Exact numbers aren’t in for the most recent session, but the calls typically see up to 10,000 constituents listening in. And in contrast to the often dark and cloistered recesses of social media, people seemed generally pleased, many of them repeat customers and appreciative of the opportunity to chat with the lawmaker. “This is the second time I’ve had the good fortune to speak with you,” said a man who identified himself as Charles. “As a veteran, again I would like to thank you for your support of all of us veterans. You not only talk the talk, but you walk the walk. There are some politicians who say they’re for veterans, but their voting record doesn’t indicate that.” — To read this story in its entirety, visit suncommunitynews.com.
REALLY BIG SALE! ALL ON SALE! FREE DELIVERY & SETUP
FREE DELIVERY “Your Hometown Furniture Store, Where Quality Has Cost Less Since 1901” GLENS FALLS
ivingston~ Quality Manor :]Frv1:rrrm:Jwme Furniture & Mattress Q~tg ~wr & ~tr!:!rrw&
Corner of Dix Ave. & Quaker Rd.
518-793-2888
Mon.-Fri. 9-7 • Sat. 10-5 • Sun. 11-4
Free Delivery & Set-Up *(within 50 miles)
Full Service Department • 6 MONTHS SAME AS CASH • NO INTEREST for credit qualified Some items not exactly as shown • **See Store for Details
www.livingstonsfurn.com
104732
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
The AJ/NE Sun | March 10, 2018 • 11
Mentoring program helps kids feel connected
The Warrensburg Elementary School is the first school in the region to participate in the New York State Mentoring Program, which began under Gov. Mario Cuomo, and is chaired by his widow, Matilda Cuomo. Volunteers spend one hour per week at the school interacting with a students, starting in third grade, in an effort to help boost attendance and grades, and promote good social skills. Photo provided
R E AC H PE O PLE I N YO U R CO M M U N IT Y LO O K I N G F O R YO U R B U S I N E S S O R S E RV I C E
Service Guide
Place an ad for your business in The Sun’s Service Guide. Call (518) 585-9173 info1&- rates. Viele's 1x2 64773 for - Page Composite
BEST CUSTOMER ADVERTISE SERVICE HERE FOR Appliance Repair & Parts
*13 Week Commitment Required
86 DIX AVENUE GLENS FALLS, NY
518-761-2427 Factory Authorized All Brands
CHIMNEY SWEEP
COMPLETE CHIMNEY CARE Cleaning • Repairs Stainless Steel Lining Video Camera Inspection
EXCAVATION/PAVING
PC Problem Solving
Candido HANDYMAN & CONSTRUCTION
CONSTRUCTION, LLC
Serving All of Your Computing Needs
Brian Dwyer
1-800-682-1643 388-4077
518-251-9957
Member of VT, NYS & National Chimney Sweep Guilds
099711
FABRICS & NOTIONS
kenwhitney@frontier.com 104142
NOW OFFERING INTERIOR PAINTING Intersection of Route 28 & 30
Indian Lake, NY 12842
107182
(518) 648-5717
STORAGE
Please note: Not all photos may be available. ©2016 Sun Community News & Printing. All rights reserved. Any illegal copying, downloading or reproduction of images without purchasing is prohibited.
96047
"f'"'"'f""""1~ "';._
10x10 • 10x15 • 10x20
Richʼs Small Engine Repair
- CESSPOOLS & SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED & INSTALLED - ELECTRIC ROOTER SERVICE -DELIVERY OF GRAVEL • STONE • TOPSOIL-ALL TYPE BACKHOE WORKPORTABLE RESTROOM
FAST SERVICE (518)
(518)
585-2845 597-3634
SPRING TUNE-UP SPECIALS SALES & SERVICE We Service All Brands Interstate Battery Sales Over 20 Years Experience
Authorized Dealer & Service Center For ATV, UTV & Snowmobile Parts and Accessories
Open 7 Days a Week 8am-5pm
22 Old River Road, North Creek, NY (518) 251-5774 250163
YOURAD
SINCE Chestertown
494-7044 Member of BBB & NYSSA
Want to Advertise with us? 102463
Ji':
SMALL ENGINE REPAIR
THIS COULD'VE BEEN
250151
www.BoltonLandingStorage.com FAST SERVICE IN BUSINESS ' - - ____ :__'__'}___-:____:_ "", ';~
mycapture.suncommunitynews.com
Foundations • Site Clearing Grading Roads Septic & Drainage Systems Blacktop New & Repairs Driveways • Parking Areas Private Roads • Stone Topsoil • Fill • Mulch
EXTRA ROOM STORAGE
NY Route 9, 518-644- 7666Crown Point, NY
Did we capture someone you know? Take a look-see at
EXCAVATION • PAVING 518-623-9456
STORAGE
Bolton Landing Storage
(518) 597Bolton Landing,
and make for great gifts or keepsakes.
Free Estimates
(518) 223-2404
GERAW’S OK SEPTIC SERVICE
VINYL•CARPET•HARDWOOD TILE • LAMINATE HARDWOOD FLOOR SANDING AND CUSTOM SHOWERS
3 Hudson River Rd. at the Hudson River Bridge Newcomb, NY
Dependable • Quality Fair & Honest SENIOR & VET DISCOUNTS
SEPTIC
We have all your flooring needs.
518-582-2260
INTERIOR/EXTERIOR EXPERT PAINTER & FLOORING
FLOOR CARE
Floor Care
www.auntpollysmaterialgirls.com
Father & Son Team All Types of Work
J. DAVIS
Geraw's Septic 1x2 78092 - Page 1 - Composite
Dave Ameden
Aunt Polly’s Material Girls
GOOD/'YEAR
518-623-5588
CONSTRUCTION & HANDYMAN
Self Storage 578 County Route 11 5x5 to 10x25 Vineyard Road
Digital download, prints, canvas prints and other products are all available…
M-F 8-5 SAT 8-12
DALE ROBERTS, OWNER
• Computer Diagnostics • Brakes • Tires • Shocks • Batteries • Exhaust Work • Tune-ups • Cooling System Maintenance • Transmission Maintenance • Lube, Oil & Filters • New York State Inspections • Offering A Complete Line of Tires • 24 Hour Towing
COMPUTERS
Over 30 Years’ Experience
through February
A new, convenient way to buy and print the photos from our photographers, including pics that didn’t make it to print!
6275 RT 30 INDIAN LAKE
PC Problems 1x2 78096 - Page 1 - Composite
on Fabrics
From Sun Community News & Printing.
Automotive Service, Inc.
102465
Contact
518-585-9173
AUTO REPAIR 3943 Main Street, Warrensburg, NY 12885
106730
ONLY $20*
$1.00 Off
MyCapture
AUTO REPAIR
102464
APPLIANCE REPAIR
104292
WARRENSBURG | Warrensburg Elementary School is the first school in the North Country to participate in the New York State Mentoring Program chaired by Matilda Cuomo, widow of the late Gov. Mario Cuomo. According to Brad DiPietro, the Eastern New York district director, there are about 100 schools in the state participating in the program, of which 30 schools are in the eastern district. The district rubs from Utica north to the Canadian border and south to Westchester. There are about 300 mentors in the eastern district, and between six and eight visit the Warrensburg Elementary School each day. “They are a really great group of mentors...great people. Three of them are from the (state Department of Environmental Conservation),” DiPietro said. “The rest were identified from the community, and they were asked if they could volunteer for the mentoring program.” There are currently about 15 volunteers participating in the program in Warrensburg. All mentors are fingerprinted and attend a two-hour training session. The program seeks volunteers who can take an hour during the school day and spend time with students. The mentors are matched one-to-one with students for different activities intended to engage the students socially, emotional, and educationally, and to build a relationship with an adult role model. “Part of it is to teach good social habits, such as to shake hands, to say please and thank you, to teach sportsmanship...a lot of it is being role model and demonstrating appropriate behaviors,” DiPietro said. The program starts in third grade, and mentors will stay with “mentees” up to three years. DiPietro said they generally use the word “mentee” because not all the kids in the program are students. Some are linked to the program via the foster care program, and some by the juvenile offender system, with the latter generally being older teens. Principal Amy Langworthy said one of the goals of the program is to have a mentor remain with a student for several years. “The original thought was to start in fifth grade, but Warrensburg only goes to sixth grade,” Langworthy said. DiPietro said the school identifies the grade level for beginning the program, but the program likes to have mentors stay with mentees as long as possible.
105543
STA FF W RITER
104293
By Christopher South
“At Warrensburg they will stay with a mentee as long as they are a student in the school building,” DiPietro said. Students may be referred to the mentoring program for any number of reasons: from being new to the area, to having English as their second language, to kids who are academi-
104144
Volunteers act as role models for youth at Warrensburg School
cally or behaviorally challenged. Goals of the program include improving attendance, raising grades, and having fewer disciplinary actions. “They are kids who just need some special attention,” DiPietro said. “Our kids fall through the cracks because they area not doing poorly enough to get attention. Some just need a good influence around them.” Warrensburg’s the only school where a faculty member doesn’t run the sessions. Laura Magley, a school district employee, is the Warrensburg site coordinator. One of the mentors volunteers to run the program each day. Magley coordinates a hands-on activity each day, such as arts crafts or a board game, so interaction not forced and is more than just conversation with a mentor. “Our kids really look forward to it,” Langworthy said. Bernadette Speach, a lifelong educator and former Tannery Pond Community Center director, also looks forward to visiting Warrensburg Elementary once a week for the program. “I love the program. I think it is a wonderful opportunity for the students for the schools to provide this program. It’s been to be a time of play and to communicate freely,” Speach said. “It’s about relationship with mentors and mentees. It’s a program for them to express themselves, and for mentors to be a teacher but also to be a friend.” ■
Contact
518-585-9173
ads@suncommunitynews.com
12 • March 10, 2018 | The AJ/NE Sun
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
Turning back the pages
One hundred years ago: March 1918 CHILDREN MUST ATTEND SCHOOL The Board of Education of Warrensburgh Union Free School District No. 1, at a meeting held Jan. 9, 1918, decided to enforce with greater firmness the compulsory education law. There are only two legal excuses for the absence from school of a pupil under 16 years of age; illness and impassable roads. In the boundaries of the district it is seldom that the latter excuse can be honestly given. For the first offense a parent who causes or permits a child to remain out of school without a legal excuse is liable to a fine of $5. The second offense brings a heavier fine. There has grown up here a laxness regarding the absence of pupils from school which, it has been decided must be stopped. Excuses will hereafter be insisted upon in cases of any pupils absent. Parents should take warning from this notice and be careful that they do not lay themselves liable to prosecution for violation of the law with this heavy fine. The truant officer has been instructed to perform his duties without fear of violence to himself. (Update: In those early days, after the turn of the century, this was a hot topic among rural farmers who were forced by law to send their children to rural schools against their will. In those times there was no birth control, thus a typical farm family usually contained numerous children. Many families and local factory workers suffered dire poverty and a farmer desperately needed a child with a strong back to stay at home or on the farm and help his family struggle to keep the wolf from the door and provide bread on the table. Most hard rock farmers could see absolutely no possible reason to have a child waste valuable days in a school room to obtain the reading and writing skills which their parents usually did not personally possess, when in later life the child would have absolutely no
need or use for such “tomfoolery.” It was believed it to be the duty of a student to be better used at home milking cows and laboring in the corn fields when possibly his father, mother and sisters worked in the local dress factory, woolen mill or tannery. Reading about the early life of Abraham Lincoln reflects on this common situation. A $5 fine for truancy in those days was a great hardship. Those children could only look forward to a life that was a copy of the existence that they and their neighbors had grown up with and that which they had always seen at home. There were many early one-room school houses scattered around this village and area but many of the teachers themselves had no more than an 8th grade education. The prestigious Warrensburgh Academy was built in 1854 on land donated on Elm Street, across the street from today’s Richards Library by Linus D. Barnes, but there was a heavy tuition fee involved for a boy to attend school there. I never read of a female enrolled at the academy. We take education pretty much for granted in these modern times but few of the pupils that attend school today have knowledge or appreciate just how lucky they are because it was definitely not always that way.)
Fifty-five years ago – March, 1963 MOTHER NATURE COMES IN LIKE A LION An ice jam piled up at the Glen Bridge on the Hudson River and then gradually filtered south toward Albany and on to the Atlantic Ocean. Warm weather has spurred a rapid thaw of the 90 inches of snow which fell here during the past winter. It was just 50 years ago, March 30, 1913 that the Woolen Mill bridge, on Milton Avenue, was threatened with destruction by the swollen Schroon River when heavy rains fell almost without ceasing for four days and nights. The Hudson River reached the crest of the flood which was the highest mark known since the big freshet of 1869, when all the river men say the water
//~ !~\\CHURCH
was at least two feet higher at that time. NEWS AROUND LAKE GEORGE Wade F. Earl is running for the office of mayor against Robert Caldwell, 65, of Lake George. (Update: Mayor Caldwell won the election, 158 to 119 votes. He served as a village official for many years and for more than 40 years he was cashier and chief clerk of the D&H railroad station.) Gladys Vernum, town clerk of Lake George, enjoyed hiking Tuesday afternoon, March 12, 1963, from her home at North Caldwell to Lake George Village, about a distance of six miles in an hour and 40 minutes, walking in the warm spring like weather. She returned home by bus. WHITFORD HONORED BY GRAND UNION George A. Whitford, 18 Hudson St., Warrensburg manager of the local Grand Union store, was guest of honor given by the company on Thursday, March 14, 1963, at the Circle Inn, Latham, in honor of his 25th anniversary with the Grand Union (now Tops grocery store.) Whitford was presented with a personal gift and a diamond service pin. (Update: George Whitford was a lovely man. Today, his daughter, Barbara Whitford, has for many years worked in the office of the Richards Library.) SWEET AND SOUR NOTES Willie Ordway, an enthusiastic 21 year old collagen, rolled a perfect 300 game at the Gore Mountain Lanes on Friday night, March 1, 1963, while open bowling. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Murray will operate the Jack Murray Dude Ranch at The Glen this year. They plan to make extensive repairs. (Update: Bruce Irwin, of Thurman, has been seeking information about Camp Somerville and the Wagon Wheel, located on the Glen Creek area in connection with the Jack Murray Dude Ranch.) —Readers are welcome to contact Adirondack Journal/ Sun correspondent Jean Hadden at jhadden1@nycap. rr.com or 612-2210. ■
SERVICES
Lighthouse BaptistChurch- Meetsat Rt.9 (nextto The WellsHouseHotel).SundaySchool9:45a.m.,Worship Service 10:50a.m.,EveningService6 p.m.,Mid-Week Wednesday Service 7 p.m. CHURCHLISTINGS- Weprovidethischurchdirectoryasa courtesyto ourreadersandvisitorsto ourarea.Any changesoradditionscanbemadeby calling873-6368. PottersvilleUnitedMethodistChurch- Worship8:15 BOLTON Townsend, Service 10:00a.m.Phone518-494-33 74(office) PrayerMeeting 7pm.Rev. Edward A Thompson, Pastor 28N,Newcomb. (SeeAdirondack Mission, formoreinfo.) a.m.PastorArnoldStevens, 251-33 71. BlessedSacramentCatholicChurch- Goodman Av- FaithBibleChurch - Sunday school(allages)- 9 a.m.,Sun- Independent Baptist Church of IndianLake- 6110NYS St.Therese's CatholicChurch- 18AdamsLane.Satur- SonRiseLutheran Church- Worship schedule at SonRise SundaySchool9:15a.m.;Worship Service11 dayserviceat 7pm.Sundayserviceat 9am.Rev.PeterBerg- isonSundayat 9:30a.m.Services areheldat ChristEpiscopal enue.Sunday Mass9 &10:30a.m.,VigalMass5:30p.m.Satur- dayworship10a.m.,Wednesday PrayerMeeting7p.m.Call Rte30.Sunday: day,RosaryandNovena9 a.m.Tuesday; Communion Service forinformation 518-494-7183 a.m.;Wedoesday: PrayerMeetiog 7 p.m.518-648-5744. Pastor Pastor.518-582-3671. www.sttheresenewcomb.com Church, Route9,Pottersville. Forinformation pleasecall7729 a.m.Thursdayand Saturday; Eucharistic Adoration9:30 www.faithbiblechurchny.com SethFinch.All arewelcome. 321-8692 or email:barefootrevl@gmail.com. PastorBruceE. a.m.-10:30 a.m.firstSaturday ofthemonth.ParishLifeDirec- St. IsaacJoguesRomanCatholicChurch- Riverside LAKEGEORGE NORTHCREEK Rudolf torDeaconJosephT.Tyrrell. 518-644-3861, emailBlessedSac-Dr.&ChurchSt.;Sat.Vigilat4p.m.;Sunday Massat 9:30a.m. BayRoadPresbyterian Church-1167 BayRoad(nearin- Seventh DayAdventistChurch-BirdPondRd.,NorthCreek. STONYCREEK rament@nycap.rr.com, websiteBlessedSacramentBolton.org. PastorRev.JohnO'Kane, Office 518-824-1176. tersection ofBay&Rt.149). Worship Service - 10:00 a.m.(Praise Sabbath School 9:45a.m.;ChurchService 11:30a.Jn. Knowlhurst BaptistChurch _Sunday School10a.m.;WorThrough Colombus DayWeekend. DIAMONDPOINT SongsandHymnsandNursery). Coffee House- 11:00am.All SodomCommunity Church- 59CrossRd.,NorthCreek. shipService11a.m.;Fellowship Dinner12:30p.m.;Afternoon BoltonCommunity Church - 5HoriconAve.,Bolton Land- Jesusis LardFellowship - JoinusonFriday nightsat 6:30 arewelcome.518-793-8541, www.bayroadchurch.org. PastorRev.RonaldN.Allen. Phone:518-251-2079; Cell:518- Praisel:30p.m.;Wedoesday PrayerMeeting 7 p.m.PastorRex ing,NY,12814.m 518-644-9103, Email:BoltonCC@gmail. pm fora specialbarngathering timeof worship, sharingthe CaldwellPresbyterian Church- 71Montcalm St.,Lake 791-0069. Fullam. 518_696_2552_ Episcopal Church - Sundays 9a.m.Ridge Stony Creek CommunityChurch_ 687 Harrisburg com,Website: www.BoltonCC.org. SundaySchool:All ages, Word,andfellowship ...Located in thebeautiful rusticAdiron- George 12845. 518-668-2613. Sunday Service at 10a.m.Rev.Ali St.Christopher's 9:30a.m.Coffee Fellowship Time,10:00a.m.,Sunday Morning <lacks on 264DiamondPointRelbetween Warrensburg and Trowbridge.FoodPantryDistribution2ndand4thFridayofthe Street,NorthCreek.(seeAdirondackMission,formoreinfo) Website: www.caldwellpres.org. St.JamesCatholicChurch - MainSt.,NorthCreek, Satur- Road,st0ny Creek.Sunday morningserviceat lO:OO AM, WorshipService,10:30a.m.Junior/Children's Church,11:00 LakeGeorge, 1milerightoffexit23on87N.Call518-623-9712month- Hours10-12. 518-696-3004FirstUnitedMethodistChurch- 78 Montcalm Street, dayVigilat 5:30p.m.,SundayMassat 8 a.m.PastorRev.John nurseryisprovided. Past0r: TonyLomenzo. a.m.Wednesday Evening BibleStudy, 6:00p.m.Weinviteyou formoreinformation.Pastor Brendan:JesusisLordFamilyCamptonycreekchurch.net. to checkoutourwebsite fornewministries thatarelaunching ground@verizon.net Text:518-792-6240.All arewelcome! LakeGeorge, N.Y.12845, Sunday Worship Service: 10:00a.m. O'Kane. 518-824-1176. www.S weekly/monthly. Cont.act: PastorScotty Matthews. GLENSFALLS Rev.NellieHitz.518-223-0461. UnitedMethodistChurch- SundayService10a.m.to be THURMAN EmmanuelUnited MethodistChurch- 19 Stewart FirstPresbyterian Church ofGlensFalls- 400GlenStreet GraceCommunion International -Worship Services ev- heldat St.JamesCatholic Church,MainStreet,NorthCreek. Christ CommunityChurch- Athol:Sundayservices11 Ave., BoltonLanding, NY,12814, 518-644-9532, invitesyouto atthecornerofNotreDame, GlensFalls.Sunday service isat 10 erySaturday at 11:30a.m.atSacredHeartChurch, 56Mohican PastorTerryMosholder. Call518-742-6707. a.m.and7 p.m.;Sundayschool9:45a.m.;Wednesday Bible studyandprayermeeting7p.m.Rev.William G.Lucia, pastor. joinus in ourSundayWorship Serviceat 9 a.m.,withPastor a.m.,withSundayschoolforchildrenand youth;childcareduring St, LakeGeorge, NY12845.Pastoralteamleader:MaryWil- NORTHRIVER DeborahWaldron. Pleasealsojoinus for ChristianFellow- theworship service.Coffee hourfollows service.TheRev.John Iiams. Toconfirmservices pleasecall:Maryat518-696-5788 or UnitedMethodistChurch- Serviceandchurchschoolat KenyontownUnitedMethodistChurch- Sundayserof MusicandOrganist 518-696-5666 orDavidLafforthun at518-882-9145. 10a.m.Forinformation call518-251-4071. vices11a.m.,BibleStudyWed.nightat 7p.m. shipandrefreshments aftertheservice. Barclay, pastor;K.BryanKirkDirector Episcopal Church ofSaintSacrament, BoltonLanding Church hasseveral youthprograms andchoirsforallagesfromK SacredHeartRomanCatholic Church - 50Mohican St, OLMSTEDVILLE Thurman Baptist Church - Sunday school9:45a.m.;worship concerts. Building isaccessible and LakeGeorge, NY518-668-2046. Sat.VigilMassat5:30p.m.,Sun. St,Joseph's CatholicChurch- Weekend Masses: School hour11a.rn.;Afternoon Service 1p.m.;Wedoesday prayer service Saturday 5 p.m.MassandSunday10a.m.Mass. Wearea warm throughadultandoccasional andfriendly congregation.All arewelcome. (518)644-%13. weareawelcoming congregation withstrongmusicandworship, Massat 10a.m.DailyMass: Monday &Wednesday 8:30a.m.Fri- YearSunday11a.m.;SummerSaturday 7 p.m. Rev.PhilipT. 6:30p.m.Rev.Nathan Herrmann, pastor. SolidRockAssembly of God- 12Church HillRd,Bolton mission andoutreach programs. 518.793.2521. www.fpcgf.org dayRosary only8:30a.m.Fr.Joseph Busch, Pastor. Allen,Pastor.518-648-5422. WARRENSBURG Landing, NY.SundayMornings: AdultBibleStudy@ 10am, UnitarianUniversalist Congregation of GlensFalls- St.JamesEpiscopal Church - 172Ottawa St.Lake George. QUEENSBURY ChristianWorshipCenter,Inc._Cornerof ElmSt.& Sunday service10a.m. SundayServicesSamand 10am.AllAgesSundaySchool, Churchof Christ- Welcomes youfor Sundayservices: PineTreeLane,Warrensburg. Service at 10:00a.m.onSunday. AdultWorship Service andNEWLY REVISED Children's Pro- 21WeeksRd.,offRt 9 in Queensbury. service. (handicapped accessible, welcoming 9:00-9:45. Children's Chapel10:00.MorningPrayer- Week- Adult&children's Bibleclassat 10am.followed bya coffee& Forfurtherinformation518-696-5468. Rev.Gerald(Jerry) grams@11am, Thursday Evenings@6:30pm:"Bolton Landing Coffeehr.follows PrayerShawlMinistry''meetsin our downstairs fellowship congregation) 518-793-1468. Website:www.glensfallsuu.com. days8:30am. TheRev.JeanDeVaty. 518-668-2001. tea.Worship beginsat 11am.Biblestudy, Wednesday at7pm. Ellis. hall;KNIT- CROCHET - QUILT AllAreWelcome. Formore HAGUE LAKELUZERNE 357AviationRel518-792-6725. www.queensburychurchof-, h • Ch h da ch I hi St. IsaacJoguesRomanCatholicChurch- Graphite Hadley-Lu:z:erne WesleyanChurch- 445Route9N, christ.com, uengelios3@gmail.com. Fait Baptist urc - Sun Ys 00 9:45a.m.;preac ·ng information, checkus out onlineat solidrockassembly.org. Forprayeror to talkwithPastorBillHarrington, call(518) MountainRd.SundayMassat 9 a.m.thruLaborDay.Pastor LakeLuzerne,NY. Sunday morningworship10a.m.,Tuesday Churchof Our Ladyof theAnnunciation - 448Avia- servicesI0:45 a.m.and 6 p.m.;Wednesday prayerservice7 240-6324. Rev.JohnO'Kane PrayerGroup6:30p.m. tionRd,Queensbury, NY12804. 518.793.9677. Saturday Vigil p.m.Rev.LeeB.Call623-4o71. t BaptiS t Church-3s5oMainSt,Worship BRANTLAKE HULETTS LANDING LONGLAKE isat4:00pm;Sunday Massis8:00amand11:30am.Weekday FirS Service10=45 rnid-week.7 p.m.Pastor AdirondackMissionof the Episcopal Church- Call MountainGroveMemorialChurch - JoinusforSunday St.Henry'sCatholicChurch- MainStreet,Rt30. Masses areat 7:30am;Mon.- Wed.andFirstFriday, allother a.m.;Sundayschool9:3o;Thursday 518-623-9373 494-3314 forservicetimesandinformation. ContactPersons: Worship Services at 10a.m.Allarewelcome. Rev.GeraldVan Saturday serviceat4pm.Sundayserviceat 11am. Fridayis Liturgyof theWordwithdistribution of commu- AaronSpoonhour TheRev.JohnCairns(518-636-8072) or TheRev.NancyGoff Heestof SilverBaySummersandChaplainEmeritus, Hope Rev.PeterBerg- Pastor. 518-624-2541. www.sthenryll.com nion.www.olaqueensbury.org FirstPresbyterian Church - 2 Stewart FarrarAve., Worship (518-932-9286) Website: www.theadirondackmission.orgCollege, Holland, MIwillpreachfromthe9thChapterofJobn LongLakeWesleyanChurch- 11AMSundayWorship, St. Joseph'sChurch- 1616RidgeRoad,Queensbury, 10a.m.withcoffee hourfollowing. Formoredetails,call 518-623HoriconBaptistChurch- SundaySchool9:45a.m.,Sun- onForgiveness andHealing. ThestonechurchislocatedonRt. 10AMSundaySchool,6 PMSundayeveningBiblestudy, NY12804. SummerScheduleSundayWorship 9 a.m.,Chil- 2723. dayWorship11 a.m.,SundayEvening6 a.m.,Wednesday 6Aabout150yardsfromCountyRt.6.CallRev.Helenmarie Wednesday 6 PMprayerservice. dren'sChurch,Sunday9 a.m.. PandaMania Vacation Bible FirstUnitedMethodistChurchof WarrensburgPrayer&BibleStudy7p.m.518-494-2584. 518-499-1238 formoreinformation. LongLakeCalvaryUnitedMethodistChurch- 10 Schoo~ August8 - 12,9 a.m.- 12p.m.Nowregistering. Offer SundaySchool- 10a.m.;WorshipService- 11 a.m.Pastor St. Paul'sEpiscopal Church- Sunday8 a.m.NYSRte8, JOHNSBURG AMSundayworshipservices. youthprogramforteens,adultbiblestudy,children's Sunday Stephen Andrews; 518-623-9334. schoo~scholarship program.Rev.LaMontRobinson. 792- FreeMethodistChurch- 250RiverSt.,Warrensburg, NY. BrantLake.(seeAdirondack Mission, for moreinfo)www. RWJJohnsburgUnitedMethodistChurch- Pastor MINERVA Sunday Worship Service10:45a.m.;KidsKlubduringservice theadirondackmission.org ArnoldStevens- 518-251-3371.1798 SouthJohnsburg Rd., Minerva BaptistChurch- Joinus for SundayWorship 1902.Website:http://www.harrisena.org/ CHESTERTOWN Johnsburg. Sunday Worship Service10a.m. at 10:00a.m.CornersofA.P.MorseHighway andRoute28N, POTTERSVILLE (ages3-12);LifeTree CafeThursday 7 p.m.,GriefShare SaturChurchof the GoodShepherdEpiscopal Church- INDIAN LAKE Minerva.Rev.E. PaulMiller,518-648-0315. Fundamental, ChristAnglican/Episcopal Church-SundayEucharist day10a.m.,AdultBibleStudySaturday1 p.m.AllarewelNoregularSundayservicein the wintermonths.USRte9, FirstBaptistChurchof IndianLake- 18SabaelRoad. evangelical, Biblepreaching. 12p.m. Luncheon followsservice. Wednesday 5pmSupper come,comeasyouare.SeniorPastor_Rev.NancyM.Barrow, &BibleStudy.FatherThomasP.Pettigrew. Forinformation Associate Pastor_PastorJoelCochran Chestertown.(seeAdirondackMission,formoreinfo) Sunday: SundaySchool9:15a.m.;Worship Service10:30a.m.; NEWCOMB CommunityUnited MethodistChurch- Kimberly TeenGroup6p.m.Monday: Awana Youth6:00p.m.Wednesday:St.Barbara's Episcopal Church - Sundays at 11a.m.Route call(518)494-3440. KingdomHallof Jehovah's Witnesses _SundayPub-
-
---------------------------------------------------------------------
BROUGHT TO YOU BY•••
BREAKFAST•
LUNCH '
6254 State Rt. 9 Chestertown, NY 12817 518-494-8581 Open Daily at 7am
105933
1'11
Rt.9-GlensFallsRd., LakeGeorge,NY 668-5736
,.
Buckman's Family Fuel~
Our Business Is Customer Satisfaction
FuelOil-Kero-Diesel-Gasoline Sales-Service-I nstaIIation Rt9,Chestertown, NY• 494-4999
50 Gallons FREE 57557
for NEW HeatingCustomers. "' 518-793-2862 • 1-800-PROPANE
i
~ ~INSURANCE
ASWsidiaryo!GleosfallsNalionalBankandTruslComl)aly
57552
Warrensburg Car Care Service Center
ktPSTATE
~~ AGENCY LC
"' "' :;;
Riverside Drive•Chestertown, NY•494-2417
MCDONALD'S OFWARRENSBURG Warrensburg,NY• 518-623-3323 57556
Suburban Propane®
1., 3984 MainSI.,Warrensburg, NY• 518-623-2232 www.rebeccasfloristandcountrystore.com OPEN DAILY 9-5
Carmen's 11 • i•i;11 •1 WarrenO · ii'"iM'iM 22 Main St, Warrensburg, NY 623-4221 & 668-2080 57555
24 HOUR TOWING
3975 Main St., Warrensburg, NY 12885 518-623-3039 57554
~
~Fe/e's Automotive
7:::::
Service, Inc.
“A Full Service Facilty” • 24-Hr Towing
3943 Main Street, Warrensburg, NY 518-623-5588 105932
- lie Talk10:00a.m.and Watchtower 10:35a.m.BibleStudy, Theocratic MinistrySchoolandKingdom Ministrystartingat 7:00p.m.Tuesday. 518-623-4601. St.Cecilia'sRomanCatholicChurch-Eucharist at 4:30 p.m.onSaturday, 10a.m.onSunday. Sacrament ofReconciliation4 p.m.Saturday. BibleStudy, Saturday at 3:30p.m.&Sundayat 10:15a.m.ParishLifeDirector SisterLindaHoganCSJ & Sacramental Minister FatherPaulCox.518-623-3021. TheChurchof TheHoly Cross- SundayEucharist 8& 10a.m.;coffeehourfollowseachservice; Wednesday 7 p.m. Healing Mass;Thursday 7 a.m.Mass;TheReverend Thomas J. Pettigrew. 518-623-3066. Thurman• Kenyontown UnitedMethodistChurchWorship serviceseveryweek11a.m. WarrensburgAssemblyof God - Sundayschool9:45 a.m.;morning worship11a.m.;Thursday youthmeeting 7p.!Il.; evening service6p.m.;Wedoesday prayer6 p.m.;Biblestudy7 p.m.Dr.RonaldParisi.518-623-2282. WEVERTOWN CalvaryBibleChurch- SundaySchool 9:30a.m.;Worship Service10:30a.m.PastorJonathan Rayder. 2530Rte.28.Office 518-251-3304,Home 518-251-2323. 2-3-18 • 57549
Classifieds www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
REACH EVERY HOUSEHOLD IN YOUR COMMUNIT Y AND SELL
NYSCAN
AIRLINE CAREERS Start Here Get trained as FAA certified Aviation Technician. Financial aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. Call AIM for free information 866-296-7094 Call Empire Today to schedule a FREE in-home estimate on Carpeting & Flooring. Call Today! 1-800496-3180 CHEMUNG COUNTY Tax Foreclosed Real Estate Auction: 100+ Lots. Wednesday, March 28, 2018. Registration: 7:00AM - Auction Start: 9:00AM. Holiday Inn ElmiraRiverview, 760 E. Water Street, Elmira, NY 14901 Pre-Auction Bidder Seminar: Thursday, March 15, 2018, at 6:00PM. For complete information, visit www.auctionsinternational.com or call 800-5361401, Ext. 110 Dealing with water damage requires immediate action. Local professionals that respond immediately. Nationwide and 24/7. No Mold Calls 1-800-760-1845 DISH Network Satellite TV Over 190 Channels now ONLY $59.99/mo! 2 year price guarantee, FREE Installation, FREE Streaming. More of what you want! Save HUNDREDS over Cable and DIRECTV. Add Internet as low as $14.95/mo! 1-800-9430838 DIVORCE $349 - Uncontested divorce papers prepared. Only one signature required. Poor person Application included if applicable. Separation agreements. Custody and support petitions. - 518-2740380 Do you have chronic knee or back pain? If you have insurance, you may qualify for the perfect brace at little to no cost. Get yours today! 1-800-510-3338 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! FARM ESTATE SELL-OFF! 28 ac $46,900 Stream, pond, stonewalls, great hunting! Near major upstate NY lakes! 888-479-3394 NewYorkLandandLakes.com Help your local economy and save money with Solar Power! Solar Power has a strong Return on Investment, Free Maintenance, Free Quote. Simple Reliable Energy with No Out of Pocket Costs. Call now! 800-678-0569 KILL BED BUGS! Buy Harris Bed Bug Killers/ KIT, Complete Treatment System Available: Hardware Stores. The Home Depot: homedepot.com KILL ROACHES- GUARANTEED! Buy Harris Roach Tablets. Odorless, Effective, Long Lasting Available: Hardware Stores, The Home Depot, homedepot.com LENDER ORDERED SALE! 20 ac $39,900 Pond, stream, woods, wildlife. 6 miles from Cooperstown, NY! Twn rd, utils. Terms avail. 888-644-0366 NewYorkLandandLakes.com Lung Cancer? And Age 60+? You And Your Family May Be Entitled To Significant Cash Award. Call 866-951-9073 for Information. No Risk. No Money Out Of Pocket. Medicare doesn't cover all of your medical expenses. A Medicare Supplemental Plan can help cover costs that Medicare does not. Get a free quote today by calling now. Hours: 24/7. 1-800-730-9940 OXYGEN - Anytime. Anywhere. No tanks to refill. No deliveries. Only 2.8 pounds! FAA approved! FREE info kit: Call 1-855-730-7811 SAWMILLS from only $4397.00MAKE & SAVE MONEY with your own bandmill- Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship! FREE Info/DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com 1-800-567-0404 Ext.300N AUCTIONS Nicholas Auctions Whitehall, NY Estates Settled Antiques Bought & Sold 518-499-0303 www.nicholasauctions.com HELP WANTED LOCAL
HELP WANTED LOCAL
HELP WANTED LOCAL
FAMILIES FIRST, a small, unique, not for profit agency, that works primarily 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 Health Home Care Manager position to work throughout Essex County, NY. 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 Bachelors Degree, with two years of relevant experience (Masters Degree preferred). Applicant must have excellent organizational, communication and time management skills. Candidate must be a self-starter and have excellent 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 873-9544 for further information. Deadline for applications, 3.19.2018. You may also apply on the Agency website. (www.familiesfirstessex.org)
REGISTERED PROFESSIONAL NURSE POSITION FT opportunity available in Warren County Health Services Division of Home Care Primary Assignment: Certified Home Health Agency. Base Salary: $46,318/ potential for additional salary depending upon level of experience. Full County benefit pkg. County Vehicle assigned to make home visits. Min qual: Current NYS RN Lic; valid NYS drivers lic. For further information please contact Patricia Auer @761-6580 or e-mail resume to auerp@warrencountyny.gov Warren County is an EOE/AA Employer
FishingForA GoodDeal? CatchTheGreatest Bargains InThe Classifieds
1-518-873-6368 Ext.201
THE TICONDEROGA HISTORICAL SOCIETY invites applications for a Visitor Services Coordinator. This position is a part-time (avg. 24/hours week) position assisting with docent and administrative responsibilities. The ideal candidate will have a bachelors degree from an accredited institution; Proficiency with Past Perfect museum software, QuickBooks and Microsoft Office applications as well as Excellent communication skills, both verbal and written; A courteous, professional manner and the ability to interact comfortably with the public; Ability to research and respond to inquiries regarding history and genealogy. Salary commensurate with experience. Deadline for applications is March 30, 2018. E-mail cover letter, resume and three professional references to: tihistory@bridgepoint1.com
Contact Shannon Christian at (518) 873-6368 ext. 201 or email shannonc@suncommunitynews.com to place a classified. UNDER $1,000 HORSES FOR SALE Buckskin mare, reg Beautiful 9yr. horse Pretty 8yr. daistered Quarterrk brown mare, YOUR halter traSTUFF ined. $500ea.QUICK OBO Call 518-846-7751 CADNET
A PLACE FOR MOM. The nation's largest senior living referral service. Contact our trusted, local experts today! Our service is FREE/no obligation. CALL 1-844722-7993 Become a published author! Publications sold at all major secular & specialty Christian bookstores. CALL Christian Faith Publishing for your FREE author submission kit. 1-855-548-5979
ADVERTISE to 10 Million Homes across the USA! Place your ad in over 140 community newspapers, with circulation totaling over 10 million homes. Contact Independent Free Papers of America IFPA at danielleburnett-ifpa@live.com or visit our website cadnetads.com for more information Call Empire Today® to schedule a FREE in-home estimate on Carpeting & Flooring. Call Today! 1800-508-2824
KE DURASOL AWNINGS
COMMERCIAL
--INSTALL
CADNET 25 TRUCK DRIVER TRAINEES NEEDED! Earn $1000 per week! Paid CDL Training! Stevens Transport covers all costs! 1-877-2091309 drive4stevens.com
Elk Lake Lodge is now hiring for:
HELP WANTED LANDSCAPE LAWN CARE position available Warrensburg Area 518 623 3723.
CADNET
®
DIVISION
TECHNICIAN--
KE Durasol Awnings, Inc. in Middlebury is seeking flexible, motivated individuals to become part of our manufacturing team as installation technicians. Qualified candidates must have a valid driver's license, be familiar with power hand tools, able to travel out of state overnight, willing to work overtime, comfortable at heights and on ladders and have an aptitude for layout work. Ability to lift I 00lbs on a routine basis is required. Experience in building construction is a plus. KE Durasol offers wages commensurate with experience and generous benefits.
Kitchen • Waitstaff • Housekeeping • Maintenance • Front Desk
Please apply in person or send your resume to:
Most positions are seasonal (May-Oct.) full time positions with meals included. Please call 518-532-7616 or email diane@elklakelodge.com for more information or to apply.
KE Durasol Awnings 38 Pond Lane, Suite B Middlebury, VT 05753
Elk Lake Lodge, P.O. Box 59, N. Hudson, NY
250155
An equal opportunity
,,,
Walmart ~.,. Save money. Live bett er.
SUPERCENTER IS NOW HIRING FOR THE FOLLOWING POSITIONS IN TICONDEROGA, NY:
• Deli Sales Associate • Cashiers • People Greeter
WE ARE
HIRING Looking for a new career opportunity with strong organizational and writing skills?
HIRING SOON FOR:
• Garden Center Associates Weekends & Evening Shifts Needed.
Apply online at www.walmart.com/careers EOE
employer.
ASSISTANT EDITOR
250175
Sun Community News and Printing is looking to enhance their community publications. We are locally owned, managed, and committed to the continued development of our organization, staff, and the communities we serve. No corporate edicts from private equity owners, hiring freezes, furloughs or decisions made from outside our local management team. We are looking for a new Assistant Editor to help supervise and assist us building this communityoriented, weekly regional newspaper group. Responsibilities include staff coordination of workflow, and maintaining editorial excellence in the papers. Applicants must have strong communication, organizational and writing skills, be versed in AP Style, social Media page design, and layout, digital photography as well as Apple MacIntosh Computer Systems. Generous wage, health insurance, paid time off, matching retirement program and life insurance.
ADIRONDACK EXPERIENCE" ThtMustumonBlurMountoin Lok•
Send resume to: Pete DeMola Sun Community News & Printing P.O. Box 338 Elizabethtown, NY 12932
SeasonalStaffJobFair Saturday,March10 11am-4pm ADKXVisitorCenter
or E-mail to:
Bringyour resume,onsite interviewswillbe conducted! We are hiringfor the followingseasonalpositions:
pete@suncommunitynews.com
Cafe Manager, Cafe Assistants,Education& InterpretationInterns, VisitorInformationAssistants,MembershipRepresentativesand Retail SalesAssociates.
Foran applicationvistwww.theADKX.org/employment
This is an opportunity to work for a 70-year-old independently owned, local company with an excellent business and financial reputation. Our only limits are the extent of the vision of our staff. If you believe you have the qualifications necessary to fill this position, please submit your resume including compensation requirements.
Unableto attend? Applicationscan be submitted to hrdept(@theADKX .org
220032
AUTO TECHNICIAN NEEDED TICONDEROGA CALL 518-585-6325
HELP WANTED LOCAL
The AJ/NE Sun | March 10, 2018 • 13
THESUN COM
EOE
WUN
ITY
NEWS
(I
PR
14 Hand Avenue, Elizabethtown, New York 12932
IN T ING
060177
14 • March 10, 2018 | The AJ/NE Sun CADNET
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES
APARTMENT RENTALS
NANI
CARS/TRUCKS WANTED!!! All Makes/Models 2000-2016! Any Condition. Running or Not. Top We're $$$ Paid! Free Towing! Nationwide! Call Now: 1-888-9851806
Fort Ann Antiques Always Buying 518-499-2915 Route 4, Whitehall, NY www.fortannantiques.com
Over $10K in debt? Be debt free in 24-48 months. Pay nothing to enroll. Call National Debt Relief at 866-243-0510.
Cross Country Moving, Long distance Moving Company, out of state move $799 Long Distance Movers. Get Free quote on your Long distance move 1-800-5112181
FARM PRODUCTS
SMALL UPSTAIRS 2 BDRM APARTMENT, located exit 26 in Pottersville, NY. Heat & elec incl, no pets, suitable for 2, $650/mo. + security. 518-494-4727. Ticonderoga - Mt Vista Apts – 3 bdrm available; $651 rent + utilities. Appliances, trash, snow included. NO smokers. Rental assistance may be avail; must meet eligibility requirements. 518-5844543 NYS TDD Relay Service 1800-421-1220 Handicap Accessible Equal Housing Opportunity
DISH TV $59.99 For 190 Channels $14.95 High Speed Internet. Free Installation, Smart HD DVR Included, Free Voice Remote. Some restrictions apply. Call 1-855-8379146 Earthlink High Speed Internet. As Low As $14.95/month (for the first 3 months.) Reliable High Speed Fiber Optic Technology. Stream Videos, Music and More! Call Earthlink Today 1-855-520-7938
MOBILE HOME RENTALS
518-643-9942 BEFORE 7PM
Multiple 2 Bedroom Mobile Homes in Schroon Lake. Includes snow plowing, dumpster and lawn mowing. No pets. Call 518-5329538 or 518-796-1865.
The nation's largest senior living referral service. A PLACE FOR MOM. Contact our trusted, local experts today! Our service is FREE. No obligation. CALL 855-741-7459
FIREWOOD
NANI
Dependable Year Round Firewood Sales. Seasoned or green. Warren & Essex County HEAP Vendor. Other services available. Call today! 518-494-4077 Rocky Ridge Boat Storeage, LLC.
AIRLINES ARE HIRING - Get FAA approved hands on Aviation training. Financial aid for qualified students - Career placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance 888-686-1704 CARS/TRUCKS WANTED!!! All Make/Models 2000-2015! Any Condition. Running or Not. Competitive Offer! Free Towing! Were Nationwide! Call Now: 1-888-4162330. CASH FOR CARS: We Buy Any Condition Vehicle, 2000 and Newer. Nations Top Car Buyer! Free Towing From Anywhere! Call Now: 1-800-864-5960. DENTAL INSURANCE. Call Physicians Mutual Insurance Company for details. NOT just a discount plan, REAL coverage for 350 procedures. 888-623-3036 or http://www.dental50plus.com/58 Ad# 6118 DISH TV $59.99 For 190 Channels + $14.95 High Speed Internet. Free Installation, Smart HD DVR Included, Free Voice Remote. Some restrictions apply 1-800718-1593 Donate Your Car to Veterans Today! Help and Support our Veterans. Fast - FREE pick up. 100% tax deductible. Call 1-800-245-0398 HERO MILES - to find out more about how you can help our service members, veterans and their families in their time of need, visit the Fisher House website at www.fisherhouse.org INVENTORS - FREE INFORMATION PACKAGE Have your product idea developed affordably by the Research & Development pros and presented to manufacturers. Call 1-888-501-0236 for a Free Idea Starter Guide. Submit your idea for a free consultation. LIVING WITH KNEE OR BACK PAIN? Medicare recipients that suffer with pain may qualify for a low or no cost knee or back brace. Call 844-308-4307 Make a Connection. Real People, Flirty Chat. Meet singles right now! Call LiveLinks. Try it FREE. Call NOW: Call 1-877-737-9447 18+ NEW AUTHORS WANTED! Page Publishing will help you self-publish your own book. FREE author submission kit! Limited offer! Why wait? Call now: 866-951-7214
TRUCK DRIVER TRAINEES NEEDED NOW! Earn $1000 per week! Paid CDL Training! STEVENS COVERS ALL TRANSPORT COSTS! 1-877-209-1309 drive4stevens.com
FIREWOOD FOR SALE: Dried 8 months mixed hardwood, cut 16” long & split. Delivered to Chestertown $300 a full cord, Face Cord $115. Extra Delivery Charge beyond Chestertown. 518-494-2321.
GENERIC VIAGRA and CIALIS! 100 Pills $99.00 FREE Shipping! 100% guaranteed. 24/7 CALL NOW! 888889-5515 GOT AN OLDER CAR, VAN OR SUV? Do the humane thing. Donate it to the Humane Society. Call 1-855-558-3509
Seasoned Firewood $70 face cord, you pick up, delivery extra. 518-494-4788.
HughesNet Satellite Internet ? 25mbps for just $49.99/mo! Get More Data FREE Off-Peak Data. No phone line required! FAST download speeds. WiFi built in! FREE Standard Installation! Call 1855-440-4911
2-PIECE AMPLIFIER, Peavey power head, 5 amp, 400 watts; Krate speaker box, has 6 speakers, both in good condition, $75. For more info 518-585-9856, Leave name & phone number if no answer.
FOR SALE
KILL BED BUGS! Harris Bed Bug Killers/KIT. Available: Hardware Stores, The Home Depot, homedepot.com
WANTED TO BUY VT. COLLECTOR WILL PAY CASH for old wood bird carvings, goose, duck and shorebird decoys. 802238-1465. WANTS TO PURCHASE minerals and other oil & gas interests. Send details P.O. Box 13557, Denver, Co 80201
KILL ROACHES-GUARANTEED! Buy Harris Roach Tablets. Available: Hardware Stores, The Home Depot, homedepot.com Lung Cancer? And Age 60+? You And Your Family May Be Entitled To Significant Cash Award. Call 866-428-1639 for Information. No Risk. No Money Out Of Pocket.
APARTMENT RENTALS FOR RENT – Streetroad, Ticonderoga – 2 bdrm upstairs apartment, stove & refrigerator included, washer & dryer hook-up, $600 per month plus utilities. References & security required, no pets, no smoking. Call 518-585-7794.
Make a Connection. Real People, Flirty Chat. Meet singles right now! Call LiveLinks. Try it FREE. Call NOW: 1-888-909-9905 18+. Spectrum Triple Play! TV, Internet & Voice for $29.99 ea. 60 MB per second speed No contract or commitment. More Channels. Faster Internet. Unlimited Voice. Call 1-855-652-9304
PEACEFUL VALLEY TOWNHOUSES now accepting applications, included in the rent is heat, water, trash and snow removal. Pet friendly, w/d hookups. Income limits do apply, please call 518-798-3900 or apply on line at crmrentalmgmt.com. Equal Housing Opportunity.
Stop OVERPAYING for your prescriptions! SAVE! Call our licensed Canadian and International pharcompare prices and get macy, $25.00 OFF your first prescription! CALL 1-855-541-5141 Promo Code CDC201725
PORT HENRY 1 bedroom Apt. Available Immediately. $650/mo., Garbage removal, heat and hot water included. Call 518-546-7464 For more information.
Wants to purchase minerals and other oil and gas interests. Send details to P.O. Box 13557 Denver, Co. 80201
DENTAL Insurance c6 No wait for preventive care and no deductibles –
c6 Keep your own dentist! You can go to any dentist
c6 Coverage for over 350 procedures
including cleanings, exams, fillings, crowns…even dentures
CALL NOW!
1~-
you can receive
FREE Information Kit
_.
.• ,.,,10!0, .... ,io,,
,w ,tQutsttdonc..,t.ilo,.,.,c,
www.dental50plus.com/cadnet
060184
1-877-308-2834
VIAGRA and CIALIS USERS! 100 Generic Pills SPECIAL $99.00 FREE Shipping! 100% guaranteed. 24/7 CALL NOW! 888-445-5928 Hablamos Espanol Were you an INDUSTRIAL or CONSTRUCTION TRADESMAN and recently diagnosed with LUNG CANCER? You and your family may be entitled to a SIGNIFICANT CASH AWARD. Call 877-648-6308 for your risk free consultation. REAL ESTATE SALES
SOUTH FLORIDA SPECIALIST Linda Lewis Carlstrom REALTOR *, MSE Michael Saunders & Company Licensed Real Estate Broker Cell 941.586.5191 Office 941.966.8000 LindaLewisCarlstrom@michaelsaunders.com HOMES 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
A less expensive way to help get the dental care you deserve!
you could get a checkup tomorrow
c6 NO annual or lifetime cap on the cash benefits
VIAGRA 100MG and CIALIS 20mg! 80 pills for $99 & 200 for $199. 100% guaranteed. FREE Shipping! 24/7 CALL: 877-743-5419
Physicians Mutual Insurance Company
c6 If you’re over 50, you can get coverage for about you want
VIAGRA & CIALIS! 60 pills for $99. 100 pills for $150 FREE shipping. NO prescriptions needed. Money back guaranteed! 1-888278-6168
DENTAL Insurance
Physicians Mutual Insurance Company
A less expensive way to help get the dental care you deserve $1 a day*
OXYGEN - Anytime. Anywhere. No tanks to refill. No deliveries. The All-New Inogen One G4 is only 2.8 pounds! FAA approved! FREE info kit: 844-558-7482 SAVE YOUR HOME! Are you behind paying your MORTGAGE? Denied a Loan Modification? Is the bank threatening foreclosure? CALL Homeowner's Relief Line now for Help! 855-794-7358
HARDWOOD BOLTS FOR MUSHROOM CULTIVATION
DIRECTV SELECT PACKAGE! Over 150 Channels, ONLY $35/month (for 12 mos.) Order Now! Get a $200 AT&T Visa Rewards Gift Card (some restrictions apply) CALL 1855-781-1565
HOMES
*Individual plan. Product not available in MN, MT, NH, NM, RI, VT, WA. Acceptance guaranteed for one insurance policy/certificate of this type. Contact us for complete details about this insurance solicitation. This specific offer is not available in CO, NY; call 1-800-969-4781 or respond for similar offer. Certificate C250A (ID: C250E; PA: C250Q); Insurance Policy P150 (GA: P150GA; NY: P150NY; OK: P150OK; TN: P150TN) 6096E-0917 MB17-NM008Ec
1-855-860-8395
FREE Information Kit Her•'sllwinro,,,..,io,, your1<1••nttdono.nt
.. ln1urar,co
Get help paying dental bills and keep more money in your pocket This is real dental insurance — NOT just a discount plan You can get coverage before your next checkup
Don’t wait! Call now and we’ll rush you a FREE Information Kit with all the details.
1-855-860-8395 Visit us online at
www.dental50plus.com/44
Insurance Policy P150NY 6129
MB17-NM003Ec
060196
4 BEDROOM HOME for sale in Lewis, NY Master bedroom on 1st floor large fenced in back yard Priced to sell at only $79,000 (518) 873-2362 FCPNY A PLACE FOR MOM. The nation's largest senior living referral service. Contact our trusted, local experts today! Our service is FREE/no obligation. CALL 1-800-553-4101 AIRLINES ARE HIRING - Get FAA approved hands on Aviation training. Financial aid for qualified students - Career placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance 1-866-296-7094. ANTIQUE SHOW & COLLECTIBLES: Sunday, March 18, Watkins Glen, NY. Located inside the Community Center at Clute Park.9:30-3pm. Over 30 Dealers. Sponsored by WatkinsMontour Rotary Club, supporting community service programs. Refreshments available. $3 Donations, age 12 and under free. CARS/TRUCKS WANTED!!! We buy 2000-2015 Cars/Trucks, Running or Not! Nationwide Free Pickup! Call 1-888-416-2208 CUSTOM WINDOWS AND DOORS Replacement Windows - Anderson, Pella & Alside starting at $199. White Vinyl Double Hung, Professional Installation, 40 years experience, BBB A+ rating, Authorized Home Advisor Contractor. Call Rich @ 1-866-272-7533 DENTAL INSURANCE. Call Physicians Mutual Insurance Company for details. NOT just a discount plan, REAL coverage for 350 procedures. 855-434-9221 or http://www.dental50plus.com/44 DISH TV $59.99 For 190 Channels. $14.95 High Speed Internet. Free Installation. Smart HD DVR Included, Free Voice Remote. Some restrictions apply. Call 1-855-891-5734 DONATE YOUR CAR TO CHARITY. Receive maximum value of write off for your taxes.Running or not! All conditions accepted. Free pickup. Call for details. 1-855-587-1166 FARM ESTATE SELL-OFF! 28 ac $46,900 Stream, pond, stonewalls, great hunting! Near major upstate NY lakes! 888-650-8166 NewYorkLandandLakes.com FDA-Registered Hearing Aids. 100% Risk-Free! 45-Day Home Trial. Comfort Fit. Crisp Clear Sound. If you decide to keep it, PAY ONLY $299 per aid. FREE Shipping. Call Hearing Help Express 1- 844-730-5923 Got Knee Pain? Back Pain? Shoulder Pain? Get a pain-relieving brace at little or NO cost to you. Medicare Patients Call Health Hotline Now! 1- 855-439-2862 HERO MILES - to find out more about how you can help our service members, veterans and their families in their time of need, visit the Fisher House website at www.fisherhouse.org VIAGRA & CIALIS! 60 pills for $99. 100 pills for $150 FREE shipping. Money back guaranteed! Call now Save 1-800-870-8711
Saving a Life EVERY 11 MINUTES 5 Reasons AmericanStandard Walk-InTubsareYourBestChoice
O fJ
9
Backed by Americ~nStandard's. 140yearsofexperience Ultralowentryfor easy entering andexiting , Patented QuickDrain•
I
1
l!I Ill
%_Ii·11 ~mmm
060185
f
LifetimeWarranty onthebathAND installation,INCLUDING laborbacked byAmerican Standard 44 Hydrotherapy jetstor an invigorating massage , ...
Help in Shower with
DONATE YOUR CAR Ben,J;,;ng
Help On-the-Go
*Free Vehicle/Boat Pickup ANYWHERE *We Accept All Vehicles Running or Not
..
® t up! e g t ’ n a c and I I’ve fallen
1-800-641-0397
GROCERY
ffAUL~~!
ApplyOnline:
www.DriveWithGHl.com FiveYea rs recentTractor TrailerExper ienceanda cleandrivingrecord. Doub lesEndorsement Preferred . Formoreinformationor to speakto a recruiter , pleasecall:
866-411-2444
(toll-free)
We are an Equal Opportunity Employer
060188
Donation Foundation d/b/a Wheels For Wishes. To learn more about our programs or financial information, visitwww.whee/sforwishes.org.
Get HELP fast, 24/7, anywhere with Life Alert·.
Life Alert For a FREE brochure call:
I’ve fallen and I can’t get up!
060186
* Car
HELP ®
Make-A-Wish® *Fully Tax Deductible .- ,Northeast New York WheelsForWishes.org Call: (518) 650-1110
Steadyfull-timework Excellent Pay& Bonuses Homeeverynight Medical,Dental,Life,& Retirement • SafetyandAttendance Bonuses
060187
Wheels For Wishes
GPS !
BNE A PLACE FOR MOM. The nation's largest senior living referral service. Contact our trusted, local experts today! Our service is FREE/no obligation. CALL 1-855799-4127.
al.-A TractorTrailer Drivers • • • •
Help at Home
fastwaterremovalsystem
FCPNY IF ADVERTISING IN ONE FREE PAPER IS SMART, then advertising in hundreds of them is pure genius! Do it with just one phone call! Reach nearly 3 million consumers statewide in print -plus more online -- quickly and inexpensively! Zoned ads start at $229 for a 25-word ad. Visit us at AdNetworkNY.com or call 315-437-6173 IF YOU HAD HIP OR KNEE REPLACEMENT SURGERY AND SUFFERED AN INFECTION between 2010 and the present time, you may be entitled to compensation. Call Attorney Charles H. Johnson 1-800-535-5727 LENDER ORDERED SALE! 20 ac $39,900 Pond, stream, woods, wildlife. 6 miles from Cooperstown, NY! Twn rd, utils. Terms avail. 888-701-1864 NewYorkLandandLakes.com MEET SINGLES RIGHT NOW! No paid operators, just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call now: 1-877-302-0566 MOBILEHELP, America's Premier Mobile Medical Alert System. Whether You're Home or Away. For Safety and Peace of Mind. No Long Term Contracts! Free Brochure! Call Today! 1-800-960-8653 NEW AUTHORS WANTED! Page Publishing will help you self-publish your own book. FREE author submission kit! Limited offer! Why wait? Call now: 1-877-635-3893 Over $10K in debt? Be debt free in 24-48 months. Pay a fraction of what you owe. A+ BBB rated. Call National Debt Relief 1-855-403-3654. OXYGEN - Anytime. Anywhere. No tanks to refill. No deliveries. The All-New Inogen One G4 is only 2.8 pounds! FAA approved! FREE info kit: 1-855-839-1738 RN NURSING JOBS available in your vicinity. Hospitals, psych, dtox, correction centers & more. Great Pay and Benefits. 1-866-387-8100 #202. White Glove Placement email: recruit@whiteglovecare.net DCA#1068435 Stop OVERPAYING for your prescriptions! SAVE! Call our licensed Canadian and International pharmacy, compare prices and get $25.00 OFF your first prescription! CALL 1-844-520-6712 Promo Code CDC201725 UNABLE TO WORK DUE TO INJURY OR ILLNESS? Call Bill Gordon & Assoc., Social Security Disability Attorneys! FREE Evaluation. Local Attorneys Nationwide 1-800-919-8208 [Mail: 2420 N St NW, Washington DC. Office: Broward Co. FL (TX/NM Bar.)] VACATION HOME, CAMP OR LAND FOR SALE OR RENT? Advertise with us! We connect you with nearly 3-million consumers (plus more online!) with a statewide classified ad. Advertise your property for just $489 for a 25-word ad, zoned ads start at $229. Visit AdNetworkNY.com or call 315-437-6173 WERE YOU AN INDUSTRIAL OR CONSTRUCTION TRADESMAN and recently diagnosed with LUNG CANCER? You and your family may be entitled to a SIGNIFICANT CASH AWARD. Call 1-877-689-5293 for your risk free consultation.
choose BIDS AND PROPOSALS to access the Empire State Bid System OR go directly to http://www.EmpireStatePublished by Denton Publications, Inc. www.suncommunitynews.com The AJ/NE Sun |BidSystem.com. March 10, 2018If â&#x20AC;¢you 15 choose a free subscription, please note that you must visit the site BNE BNE BNE BNE BNE HOME CARE up until the response forFOR any ASSISaddenINVENTORS-FREE INFORMATION MOBILEHELP, AMERICA'S PRESPECTRUM TRIPLE PLAY TV, InUNABLE TO WORK DUE TO INCOMCAST HI-SPEED INTERNET ARE YOUdeadline LOOKING da.YOUR All further LOVEDinformaONE AT TANCE FOR PACKAGE Have your product idea $39.99/mo. (for 12 mos.)No term ternet & Voice for $29.99/ea. 60 JURY OR ILLNESS? Call Bill GorMIER MOBILE MEDICAL ALERT tion pertaining this HOME? Melissa's developed affordably by the Reagreement. Fast Downloads! PLUS Home toHealth MB per second speed. No contract don & Assoc., Social Security DisSYSTEM. Whether you're Home or search & Development pros and can will assist. Affordable, Ask about our Triple Play (TVServices bid be available on NOTICE OF FORMATION ability Attorneys! FREE Evaluation. or commitment. We buy your exAway. For Safety and Peace of presented to manufacturers. Call Voice-Internet) for $89.99/mo. Knowledgeable & Caring Staff can isting contract up to $500.! 1-844Local Attorneys Nationwide 1-800-LIABILITY Mind. No Long Term Contracts! this site. Bids which OF LIMITED are 1-855-380-5976 for a Free Idea (lock in 2 yrs.!) Call 1-844-835age group. Trans592-9018 586-7449. Mail: 2420 N. St. NW, Free Brochure! Call Today! 1-844COMPANY (LLC) assist anynot directlyWithobtained to doeither errands, portation Starter Guide. Submit your idea for 892-1017. 5117 Washington DC. Office: Broward The name of the LLC is from sourcehome will a free consultation. Co. FL (TX/NM Bar)TDC RECRUITINGcare,&house be cleaning, refused. medicine reDEALING WITH WATER DAMAGE minders. Bids Pleasemay CallbeMelissa 802LEADERSHIP CONSULTdelivered to requires immediate action. Local STOP OVERPAYING FOR YOUR ING SERVICES, 236-2911. LLC. the undersigned at WarNOTICE Anywhere. TO BIDDERS OXYGEN-Anytime. No professionals that respond immePRESCRIPTIONS! SAVE! Call our The Articles of Organiza- ren County Human SerTHE No NORTH WARREN FORMATION NEW to refill. deliveries. Only LUNG CANCER? 60 or Older? OF If Atanks diately. Nationwide and 24/7. No the InLLC were TREE Warm Weather Is tion Year of Round vices SERVICES Building, Warren CENTRAL SCHOOL FREE DIS- licensed Canadian and InternationYORK LIMITED LIABILI2.8 pounds! FAA approved! so, you and your family may be Mold Calls. 1-800-506-3367 Aruba. The water isfiled safe, andthe theNY Secre- County Purchasing Dewith TRICT invites Sealed al pharmacy, compare prices and TY COMPANY info kit: Call 1-800-732-0442 entitled to a significant cash award. get $25.00 OFF your first prescripdining is fantastic. Walk to the tary ofout State on February partment, 3rd Climber Floor, 1.toThe name of the limit- Bids for the Gymnasium learn more. Tree Work Professional DO YOU HAVE CHRONIC KNEE OR Call 800-364-0517 ed tion! Call 1-855-548-9518, Promo beach. 3-Bedroom weeks available. 13, 2018. The purpose NOTICE OF FORMATION State Route 9, Refinishing liability company is Floor No risk. No money out of pocket. w/decades1340 of experience w/anyBACK PAIN? If you have insurCode CDC201725. Sleeps 8. Email: carolaction@aol.Lakedifficult George, New York ASSEMBLY POINT Project. OF Kenny Schon, LLC of the LLC is to engage thing from removals to ance, you may qualify for the perSAFE STEP WALK-IN TUB #1 Sellcom for more information. in any lawful act or ac- selected between pruning. the hoursFully of Sealed Bids will be reHOLDINGS, LLC (The Articles of Organization tasteful fect brace at little to no cost. Get ing Walk-in tub byinthe No.North America. tivity. The office of the 8:00 and 4:00 pm. ceived WarLLC). filed with the Secretary equipped & am insured. Michael yours today! Call 1-800-217-0504 BBB Accredited. Arthritis FoundaMEDICARE DOESN'T COVER all LLC is to be located in Bids will be received up 2. The date of filing of ren Central School Disof State of New York 518-251-3936 tion Commendation. Therapeutic STOP STRUGGLING ON SSNY THE On January 10, Warren County. Emelianoff your medical A MediThe until Tuesday, March 20, the Articles of Organiza333 Cleverdale LLC,expenses. trict, 6110 Air StateTherapy Route Jets. MicroSoothe LIFE ALERT. 24/7. One press of a STAIRS. Give your life a lift with Supplement Plan can help care is AND 2018 3:00 at tion with the Department Arts of Org. filed with 8, than Chestertown, NY 2018. Office Location: Secretary of State SHOP VAC,at4.5, newp.m. filiters, System. Less 4 Inch Step-In. button sends help FAST! Medical, now County. BUY-SELL-TRADE that of MedicareState does cover agentverywhich time they will be wasDoor. State costs of NY 12817 untilFloors. 3:15 pm lo- an ACORN STAIRLIFT! CallWarren SSNY designated as the used Wide Anti-Slip Amerlittle, Asking $60 OBO; Fire, Burglar. Even if you Sec. can't of not. $250. OFF your stairlift purfor Get a free quote today by callof the LLC upon whom publicly opened and calCall time855-400-0439 on 04/12/18,for at (SSNY) 1/24/2018. Cty: 02/12/2018. designated as With agentThe of Classifieds Mop, used very little, Bissell Steam Made. reach a phone! FREE brochure. ing NOW. Hours in ican chase and FREE DVD & brochure! against the$30 LLC All bids must be which LLC upon whom Pro- process Warren. SSNY desig.1-800-610-2650 as 3. The county 1-518-873-6368 Ext.201 OBO. read. 518-546-7978 upNew to $1500. Off.time and place the 1-844-286-0854 CALL 800-457-1917. 24/7 may be served. The ad- submitted on proper bid cess against it may be agent upon whom pro- York in which the offices Bids will be publicly which the Sec- proposalLEGALS forms. Any read aloud. are located is opened and served. SSNY shall mail dress toLEGALS cess against LEGALS LEGALSmay be of the LLC LEGALS LEGALS LEGALS LEGALS Any proposal received process to: The LLC, retary of State shall mail changes to the original served & shall mail pro- Warren County. NOTICE OF FILING OF cess to 180 N. State Rd., NOTICE OF FORMATION bid documents are after the time and date 4. The Secretary of State 3007 Lakeshore Dr, a copy of any process APPLICATION FOR AU- Briarcliff, NY 10510. grounds for immediate has been designated as above stated will be re- OF LIMITED LIABILITY Lake George, NY 12845. against the LLC is 28 THORITY OF FOREIGN General Purpose. turned to the Bidder un- COMPANY Purpose: any lawful ac- Oak Valley Way, Queens- disqualification. agent of the LLC upon LIABILITY NE-02/03-03/10/2018LIMITED (1) The name of the bury, NY 12804. tivity opened. Late proposals by mail, whom process may be COMPANY (LLC) Limited Liability Compa- NE-02/24-03/31/2018courier or in person will served, and the Secre- Each Bid must be made 6TC-175284 NE-02/24-03/31/2018The name of the Foreign be refused. 6TC-177130 Warren tary of State shall mail a upon the prepared bid- ny is Bloody Pond Mo- 6TC-176987 Limited Liability Compa- 337 Cleverdale LLC, copy of any such pro- ding sheets, in dupli- tive & Marine, LLC County will not accept Arts of Org. filed with NOTICE OF FORMATION ny is: 32 FISH POINT (2) The date of filing of NOTICE OF FORMATION any bid or proposal cate, furnished with the cess served against the Sec. of State of NY ROAD, LLC. Application which is not delivered to Contract LLC to 43 Talcott Range documents, the Articles of Organiza- OF LIMITED LIABILITY OF TODD S OLDEN (SSNY) 1/24/2018. Cty: COMPANY (LLC) The CONSTRUCTION LLC Purchasing by the time for Authority to do busiDrive, East Granby, CT and sealed within an tion with the Secretary Warren. SSNY desig. as ness in the State of New of State was February 5, name of the Limited Lia- Articles of Organization indicated on the time opaque envelope. The 06026 agent upon whom probility Company that was filed with the Secretary York was filed with the 2018. stamp in the Purchasing 5. The business purpose contract for which the of State of New York Department of State of cess against may be of the LLC is to engage Department Office. Bid is submitted and the (3) The County in New formed is : PARROTTA COUNTY ROUTE 11, SSNY On FEBUARY 5, the State of New York on served & shall mail pro- in any and all business York in which the office name of the Bidder shall The right is reserved to December 29, 2017. cess to 180 N. State Rd., activities permitted un- be indicated on such en- of the Company is locat- LLC. The Articles of Or- 2018 Office Location: reject any or all bids. ganization were filed COUNTY WARREN The jurisdiction of orga- Briarcliff, NY 10510. ed is Warren County. Julie Butler, Purchasing der the laws of the State velope. The Board of General Purpose. nization of the Foreign (4) The Secretary of with the Department of SSNY designated as Agent of New York. Education reserves the State of the State of New agent of LLC upon Limited Liability Compa- NE-02/03-03/10/2018State has been designatBORGOS & DEL SIG- right to reject any or all Warren County Human 6TC-175285 York on February 26, whom Process against it ny is: New Jersey. The ed as agent of the ComServices Building NORE, P.C. bids. may be served. SSNY Tel. (518) 761-6538 date of its organization pany upon which pro- 2018. The office of said Bid forms may be picked 4 REASONS, LLC, Arts. P.O. Box 4392 Limited Liability Compashall mail process to: is: November 9, 2017. of Org. filed with the cess may be served, and Queensbury, New York up in the North Warren NE-3/10/2018-1TCny is located in Warren The LLC, 870 ALDEN 178452 The office of said For- SSNY on 11/16/2017. Central School located at the Secretary of State 12804 County. The Secretary AVE WARRENSBURG eign Limited Liability 6110 State Route 8, shall mail a copy of any Office loc: Warren Coun- (518) 793-4900 of State has been desig- NY 12885 Company in the State of Chestertown, NY, or if process against the ty. SSNY has been des- NE-02/17-03/24/2018nated as agent of the Purpose: any lawful acNew York is located in ignated as agent upon mailing is desired, call Company served upon it 6TC-176660 Warren County. The whom process against to 72 Fourth Street, Limited Liability Compa- tivity (518) 494-3015 ext 762. ny upon whom process NE-02/10-03/17/2018Secretary of the State Glens Falls, NY 12801. With his proposal, and the LLC may be served. NOTICE OF FORMATION against said Company OF LIMITED LIABILITY attached thereto, each 6TC-176090 has been designated as SSNY shall mail process (5)The Limited Liability may be served and the NOTICE TO BIDDERS COMPANY Articles of agent of the Foreign Bidder shall furnish a Company is formed for to: The LLC, 1470 Ridge post office address withNOTICE OF FORMATION The undersigned shall Limited Liability Compa- Rd., Queensbury, NY Organization for a limit- Bidders Proof of General any lawful business purin the state to which the OF UMBRELLASBA LLC receive sealed bids for ny upon whom process pose. 12804. Reg Agent: ed liability company Liability and Workers Secretary of State shall Arts. of Org. filed with sale and delivery to the named Authier, LLC Compensation. No Bid Dennis J. Tarantino, against said Company Kacey Mann, 1470 mail a copy of any pro- Secy. of State of NY County of Warren as folmay be served and the Esq. Ridge Rd., Queensbury, were filed with the De- will be considered which cess is: PARROTTA (SSNY) on 01/31/18. Of- lows: post office address to NY 12804. Purpose: Any partment of State on is not accompanied by Kenneally & Tarantino COUNTY ROUTE 11, fice location: Warren WC 28-18- NEW TRASH January 21, 2015. The which the Secretary of Lawful Purpose. (518) 792-6516 such Proof of Insurance. LLC, c/o Michelle Parrot- County. Princ. office of & RECYCLING CONoffice of the LLC is to be State shall mail a copy BY ORDER OF THE NE-02/17-03242018NE-02/17-03/24/2018ta, 5471 S Federal Circle, LLC: 163 W. Main St., TAINERS FOR WARREN located in Warren Coun- BOARD OF EDUCATION 6TC-176649 of any process is: Mar- 6TC-176553 F102, Littleton, CO Unit TH26, Tarrytown, COUNTY DEPARTMENT ty. The Secretary of OF THE NORTH WARgaret A. Ringer, 484 NOTICE OF FORMATION NOTICE OF FORMATION 80123. NY 10591. SSNY desig- OF PUBLIC WORKS State has been designat- REN CENTRAL SCHOOL Fairfield Road, Wyckoff, OF LIMITED LIABILITY ed as agent of the LLC nated as agent of LLC You may obtain these NJ 07481. No office is DISTRICT, WARREN OF BLUE MOON PROP- NE-03/10-04/14/2018ERTIES, LLC Arts. of 6TC-178330 Specifications either onupon whom process upon whom process required to be main- COMPANY COUNTY, NEW YORK. Under Section 203 of against it may be served line or through the Puragainst it may be served. tained in the jurisdiction Margaret Hill, District Org. filed with the Sect'y NOTICE OF FORMATION of State of NY (SSNY) chasing Office. If you SSNY shall mail process and the post office ad- Clerk of its formation. The ad- the Limited Liability Primary Care of OF on 6/3/2004. Office locahave any interest in to the LLC at the addr. dress to which the Sec- NE-03/03-03/10/2018dress of the principal of- Company Law Glens Falls, PLLC of its princ. office. Pur- these Specifications onAdirondack tion, County of Warren. retary of State shall mail 2TC-177612 fice of the Foreign Limit- Name: amended to Glens Falls SSNY has been desigline, please follow the inpose: Any lawful activity. ed Liability Company is Transportation II, LLC, a copy of any process Medical PLLC. Arts. of NE-02/10-03/17/2018nated as agent of the structions to register on against it served upon 484 Fairfield Road, Articles of Organization Org. filed with Secy. of filed with the Secretary LLC upon whom pro6TC-175934 NOTICE TO BIDDERS the Empire State Bid him/her is 12 Helen Wyckoff, NJ 07481. The State of NY (SSNY) on of State of New York System website, either Drive, Queensbury, NY THE NORTH WARREN cess against it may be name and address of the 6/17/15. Office location: NOTICE TO BIDDERS (SSNY) on February 12, 12804. The latest date CENTRAL SCHOOL DIS- served. SSNY shall mail for free or paid subscripauthorized officer in its Warren County. SSNY The undersigned shall tion. Go to http://warupon which the LLC is TRICT invites Sealed process to: 189 Stock jurisdiction of organiza- 2018. Office location: designated as agent of receive sealed bids for rencountyny.gov Warren County. SSNY is Farm Road, Chestertown Bids for the Tennis and to dissolve is January tion where a copy of its NY 12817. Purpose: any PLLC upon whom pro- sale and delivery to the Resurfacing choose BIDS AND PROCertificate of Organiza- designated as agent of 31, 2114. The character Court cess against it may be County of Warren as fol- POSALS to access the lawful act. or purpose of the busi- Project. tion is filed is the Trea- the LLC upon whom served. SSNY shall mail lows: Empire State Bid System surer of the State of New process against it may ness of the LLC is own- Sealed Bids will be re- NE-03/10-4/14/2018process to: The PLLC, WC 27-18 ENGINE LU- OR go directly to ership and operation of ceived by the North War- 6TC-178329 Jersey, Department of be served. SSNY shall 100 Park St., Glens mail a copy of process an Oxi Fresh Carpet ren Central School Dis- First Colony Engraving, Falls, NY 12801. Pur- BRICANTS, FLUIDS AND http://www.EmpireStatethe Treasury, P.O. Box COOLANT FOR WARREN BidSystem.com. If you Cleaning franchise, and trict, 6110 State Route 002, Trenton, NJ to: c/o The LLC, 313 LLC, Art. of Org. filed pose: practice the pro- COUNTY DPW AND MU- choose a free subscripall activities incidental or 8, Chestertown, NY with SSNY on 12/21/17. fession of medicine. 08625-0002. The char- Quaker Road, P.O. Box NICIPAL SUBDIVISIONS 4808, Queensbury, New tion, please note that complementary thereto, 12817 until 3:00pm lo- Off. loc.: Warren Co. NE-02/03-03/10/2018acter or purpose of the You may obtain these cal time on 04/12/18, at you must visit the site business of such For- York 12804. Purpose: and such other activities SSNY designated as 6TC-175234 Specifications either onAny lawful act or activiwhich time and place the up until the response as may be engaged in by eign Limited Liability agent upon whom proline or through the Purties. deadline for any addena company formed un- Bids will be publicly Company is any activity NOTICE OF FORMATION cess may be served & chasing Office. If you NE-02/17-03/24/2018opened and read aloud. da. All further informader the Limited Liability within the purposes for shall mail proc.: 40 Hill OF LIMITED LIABILITY have any interest in tion pertaining to this 6TC-176712 Any proposal received Company Law. which Limited Liability COMPANY (LLC) Dr., Lake Luzerne, NY these Specifications onafter the time and date bid will be available on NE-02/10-03/17/2018Companies may be NOTICE OF FORMATION Name: ROCKWOOD line, please follow the in- this site. Bids which are above stated will be re- 12846. Purp.: any lawful formed pursuant to the COTTAGE, LLC. Articles OF LIMITED LIABILITY 6TC-175961 purp. structions to register on turned to the Bidder unnot directly obtained New Jersey Limited Lia- COMPANY of Organization filed with NE-02/03-03/10/2018the Empire State Bid opened. from either source will bility Company Act. the Secretary of State Under Section 203 of NOTICE OF FORMATION 6TC-175233 System website, either be refused. Bids may be OF LIMITED LIABILITY Each Bid must be made NE-02/3-03/10/2018(SSNY) on 02/23/2018. the Limited Liability for free or paid subscrip- delivered to the underupon the prepared bid- NOTICE OF FORMATION COMPANY (LLC) Office Location: Warren 6TC-175521 Company Law tion. Go to http://war- signed at Warren County Name: Balsam Motel, ding sheets, in dupli- OF LIMITED LIABILITY County. The SSNY is Name: Adirondack and Human Services BuildCOMPANY designated as agent of rencountyny.gov Transportation III, LLC, LLC Articles of Organiza- cate, furnished with the choose BIDS AND PRO- ing, Warren County Purdocuments, Under Section 203 of the LLC upon whom tion filed with the Secre- Contract Articles of Organization NOTICE OF FORMATION chasing Department, 3rd tary of State of New and sealed within an the Limited Liability process against it may POSALS to access the filed with the Secretary OF LIMITED LIABILITY of State of New York Floor, 1340 State Route York (SSNY) on Jan- opaque envelope. The Company Law be served. SSNY shall Empire State Bid System COMPANY Name: Hearthstone Op- mail a copy of any pro- OR go directly to 9, Lake George, New (SSNY) on February 12, uary 12, 2018 Office Lo- contract for which the http://www.EmpireStatecation: Warren County. Bid is submitted and the erating Group, LLC, Arti- cess to the principal Under Section 203 of 2018. Office location: York between the hours The SSNY is designated the Limited Liability name of the Bidder shall cles of Organization filed of 8:00 am and 4:00 pm. business location of BidSystem.com. If you Warren County. SSNY is choose a free subscrip- Bids will be received up Company Law Name: designated as agent of as agent of the LLC be indicated on such en- with the Secretary of LLC: 1 Terrace Road, tion, please note that until Tuesday, March 27, upon whom process 3259 Lakeshore Drive, the LLC upon whom velope. The Board of State of New York Silver Bay NY 12874. LLC, Articles of Organi- process against it may against it may be served. Education reserves the (SSNY) on March 1, Purpose: All lawful activ- you must visit the site 2018 at 3:00 p.m. at up until the response zation filed with the Sec- be served. SSNY shall which time they will be SSNY shall mail a copy right to reject any or all 2018. Office location: ities. deadline for any adden- publicly opened and retary of State of New mail a copy of process of any process to 90 bids. Warren County. SSNY is NE-03/10-04/14/2018da. All further informa- read. All bids must be York (SSNY) on March State Street, Suite 700, Bid forms may be picked designated as agent of 6TC-178321 to: c/o The LLC, 313 tion pertaining to this 1, 2018. Office location: submitted on proper bid Office 40, Albany, NY up in the North Warren the LLC upon whom Quaker Road, P.O. Box bid will be available on proposal forms. NOTICE OF FORMATION Warren County. SSNY is Any 4808, Queensbury, New 12207. Purpose: To en- Central School located at process against it may OF LIMITED LIABILITY this site. Bids which are designated as agent of York 12804. Purpose: gage in any lawful act or 6110 State Route 8, be served. SSNY shall changes to the original not COMPANY directly obtained (LLC) the LLC upon whom Chestertown, NY, or if mail a copy of process bid documents are Any lawful act or activi- activity. The name of the LLC is from either source will grounds for immediate process against it may ties. mailing is desired, call to: c/o The LLC, 3210 NE-02/24-03/31/2018be refused. TDC RECRUITING & be served. SSNY shall (518) 494-3015 ext 762. disqualification. Late 6TC-176843 Lakeshore Drive, Lake NE-02/17-03/24/2018mail a copy of process With his proposal, and George, New York LEADERSHIP CONSULT- Bids may be delivered to bids by mail, courier or 6TC-176714 ING SERVICES, LLC. the undersigned at War- in person will be reNOTICE TO BIDDERS to: c/o The LLC, 3210 attached thereto, each 12845. Purpose: Any The Articles of Organiza- ren County Human Ser- fused. Warren County FORMATION OF A NEW THE NORTH WARREN Bidder shall furnish a lawful act or activities. Lakeshore Drive, Lake tion of the LLC were vices Building, Warren will not accept any bid George, New York YORK LIMITED LIABILI- CENTRAL SCHOOL DIS- Bidders Proof of General NE-03/10-04/14/2018filed with the NY Secre- County Purchasing De- or proposal which is not TY COMPANY TRICT invites Sealed Liability and Workers 12845. Purpose: Any 6TC-178333 tary of State on February partment, 3rd Floor, delivered to Purchasing 1. The name of the limit- Bids for the Gymnasium lawful act or activities. Compensation. No Bid 13, 2018. The purpose NOTICE OF FORMATION 1340 State Route 9, by the time indicated ed liability company is Floor Refinishing NE-03/10-04/14/2018will be considered which Lake George, New York ASSEMBLY POINT Project. OF Kenny Schon, LLC of the LLC is to engage 6TC-178335 is not accompanied by above, on the time in any lawful act or ac- between the hours of stamp in the Purchasing Articles of Organization HOLDINGS, LLC (The Sealed Bids will be re- such Proof of Insurance. tivity. The office of the 8:00 am and 4:00 pm. LLC). ceived by the North War- BY ORDER OF THE filed with the Secretary Department Office. LLC is to be located in Bids will be received up The right is reserved to 2. The date of filing of ren Central School Dis- BOARD OF EDUCATION of State of New York 333 Cleverdale LLC, the Articles of Organiza- trict, 6110 State Route The until Tuesday, March 20, reject any or all bids. OF THE NORTH WAR- SSNY On January 10, Warren County. Arts of Org. filed with tion with the Department 2018. Office Location: Secretary of State is 2018 at 3:00 p.m. at Julie Butler, Purchasing 8, Chestertown, NY REN CENTRAL SCHOOL which time they will be Sec. of State of NY of State was 12817 until 3:15 pm lo- DISTRICT, Agent WARREN Warren County. SSNY designated as the agent publicly opened and (SSNY) 1/24/2018. Cty: 02/12/2018. cal time on 04/12/18, at COUNTY, NEW YORK. designated as agent of of the LLC upon whom Warren County Human Warren. SSNY desig. as 3. The county in New which time and place the Margaret Hill, District LLC upon whom Pro- process against the LLC read. All bids must be Services Building agent upon whom pro- York in which the offices cess against it may be may be served. The ad- submitted on proper bid Bids will be publicly Tel. (518) 761-6538 Clerk cess against may be of the LLC are located is served. SSNY shall mail dress to which the Sec- proposal forms. Any NE-03/10/2018-1TCopened and read aloud. NE-03/03-03/10/2018process to: The LLC, retary of State shall mail changes to the original 178332 served & shall mail pro- Warren County. Any proposal received 2TC-177611 bid documents are 3007 Lakeshore Dr, a copy of any process cess to 180 N. State Rd., 4. The Secretary of State after the time and date grounds for immediate Lake George, NY 12845. against the LLC is 28 Briarcliff, NY 10510. has been designated as above stated will be rePurpose: any lawful ac- Oak Valley Way, Queens- disqualification. General Purpose. agent of the LLC upon turned to the Bidder unLate proposals by mail, tivity NE-02/03-03/10/2018bury, NY 12804. whom process may be opened.
16 • March 10, 2018 | The AJ/NE Sun
2017 CHEVY CRUZE LT
MSRP$24,565 I Stk #171021I VIN#192403
www.suncommunitynews.com
$
s·0 0 0 . ,
--- .
(
.
--~
/~ . -
//
.
.
'""
-
OFFMSRP(1)
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
2018 CHEVY MALIBU LS MSRP$24,425 I Stk #181012I VIN#118056
Or Lease
.:,;
~
LARGE SELECTION OF PRE-OWNED VEHICLES • ALL MAKES & MODELS 2006Hyundai Tiburon Coupe
2007KiaSedona
129,903Miles,Leather,KeylessEntry
137,467Miles,TopSafetyPick,RearNC
VIN 203487
VIN 130984
201S Chevy Equinox 1LT
2014Honda PilotLX
2011JeepPatriotSport
2013Nissan Juke
2015Chevy Trax
93,207Miles,Auto.,CD/MP3
36,285Miles,AWD,30 MPG,Bluetooth
24,023Miles,31 MPG,OneOwner
VIN 231420
VIN 236294
VIN 245355
201SChevy Equinox LT
2017Buick Encore
23,845Miles,RemoteStart,BackupCam. 59,043Miles,4WD,BackupCam.,TowHitch 27,494Miles,AWD,Backup Cam., Remote Start
VIN 150299
VIN 053054
VIN 369689
,
201SChevy Traverse
9,988Miles,AWD,30MPG,BackupCam.
47,053Miles,RearNC,Remote Start
VIN 089520
VIN 164238
(518} 5i 5~2°8d42a
1
SALES HOU RS: Member of the DELLA Auto Group
MON-THURS: 9:00AM-7:00PM•FRI: 9:00AM-6:00PM SAT: 9:00AM-5:00PM • SUN: CLOSED
FIND
ROADS .
Offersand availabilitysubjectto change.Tax,tag, title, and OMVfeesdue at signingfor all offers.Musttake deliveryfrom in-stock. Dealershipnot responsiblefor typographicalerrors. Photosfor illustrativepurpose. Offersexpire3/12/18.Seedealerfor details.(1) On selectmodels,while supplieslast.Not availablewith specialfinance,lease,and someother offers.Includesall availablerebates,incentives,customercash,down payment assistance,conquestand/or loyalty as applicable.A 1999or newer non-GMvehicle in householdis requiredfor select rebates.No trade required. Silverado/Cruze:Must qualify and finance through GM Financialfor DPA.(2) 36 month closedend lease.10,000miles per year,$.25/milefor overage.No securitydeposit required.Must qualify and leasethrough GM Financial.Includesall availablerebates,incentives, customer cash,down payment assistance,conquest and/or loyalty as applicable.Must have a current leasein householdto qualify for select rebates. Lesseepays for maintenance,repair,and excesswear. *Pre-ownedpricesare plus tax, tag, title, and OMV. 220033