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BRINGING YOU THE NEWS AND VIEWS OF HISTORIC PLATTSBURGH, AND THE SURROUNDING AREA

Editorial»

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Adirondack communities sorely in need of a casino. PAGE 4

Clinton County, New York

Volunteers spruce up Plattsburgh

Saturday, April 27, 2013

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This Week

GREEN UP DAY

SISTER DEBBIE BLOW

By Shaun Kittle shaun@denpubs.com PLATTSBURGH Ñ As the snow receded in downtown Plattsburgh, places like Trinity Park became marred by the presence of litter and leaves blowing around like urban tumbleweed. Yes, spring is here, and the Clinton County Advocacy and Resource Center teamed up with Plattsburgh StateÕ s newest fraternity, Pi Kappa Phi, to do some spring cleaning on Saturday, April 20. The Earth-Day inspired Green-up Day was the first of its kind for the two organizations. It was also a chance for the ARC, which serves individuals with developmental disabilities throughout the region, and the Eta Kappa chapter of Pi Kappa Phi, which was installed at Plattsburgh State in November 2012, CONTINUED ON PAGE 15

Plattsburgh Sister recognized for her volunteerism. PAGE 3 LIFE SAVING

ARC Direct Support Supervisor Ray Murtagh, right, holds the bag for Angie French of the ARC’s Home Services Department at Trinity Park in Plattsburgh as part of the Green-up Day city clean up. Photo by Shaun Kittle

Adrian Carr’s retrospective art show By Shaun Kittle

Baseball team hopes to find marrow donors. PAGE 8 GIGGLES FOR GIRLS

shaun@denpubs.com PLATTSBURGH Ñ On Saturday, April 20, Adrian Carr put his life on display at ROTA Gallery. His show, Ò The Hidden Art of Adrian CarrÑ A Retrospective 1976-2005,Ó includes about 20 pieces and is open through Monday, May 6. It all starts with Carr’s first oil painting, “Farmhouse,” completed in 1976. It’s of his grandmother’s farm in Wilson, a town in western New York. Carr admitted that the hills in the brightly colored painting are a bit exaggerated, but said that is how he saw them. It is in this way that CarrÕ s surroundings affect his work. In 1977, Carr painted a blizzard in Buffalo. The colors arenÕ t as bold as they are in “Farmhouse”—instead, its whites are splashed over grays in a lively, twisting fury. And then Carr moved to New York City, and his paintings changed again. It was there that his Ò Subway SeriesÓ was born. Adrian Carr performed pieces from his previous recordings at the opening of his new show, “The Hidden Art of Adrian Carr—A Retrospective 1976-2005,” on display at ROTA Gallery in Plattsburgh through Monday, May 6.

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Index

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Online

Comedians to gather in Rouses Point.

GIBSON BROTHERS

3

PUBLISHER’S COLUMN

4

PLATTSBURGH SCENE

5

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

5

ADIRONDACK OUTDOORS

7

TAX RETURN TIME

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CALENDAR

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NEWS IN BRIEF

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CLASSIFIEDS

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AUTO ZONE

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April 27, 2013

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The Burgh - 3

Sister named NYS Woman of Distinction By Katherine Clark

katherine@denpubs.com

Sister Debbie Blow sits with a local child during one of her many visits to Nicaragua. Photo provided

held in the Legislative Office Building in Albany on May 7. The annual award honors outstanding women from across New York State for their professional and volunteer work to enrich the lives of others. Blow said though she is very honored to receive recognition as a woman of distinction, the recognition is not just for her but everyone involved in the organization. “This gives me an opportunity to thank everyone in the North Country for all of their help and hard work, they are the heart of the mission and I want to thank you,” said Blow. More can be learned about the North Country Mission of Hope at www.ncmissionofhope.org.

Gibson Brothers will play performance for seniors

By Katherine Clark

katherine@denpubs.com ELLENBURG Ñ The Gibson Brothers will give a special live performance in support of Ellenburg Senior Housing residents at 7 p.m. on April 26 at the Northern Adirondack Central School, 5586 Route 11. “This will be a homecoming concert, the band hasn’t played in the area in a while,Ó said president to the board of directors for the Ellenburg Senior Housing (ESH), Roman Miner. The performance will be one of the first at Northern Adirondack’s newly finished auditorium which has been under construction for the last few years. The Gibson Brothers are a fun and talented bluegrass group that took home the 2012 Entertainer of the Year Award at the 23rd annual International Bluegrass Music Awards at NashvilleÕ s Ryman Auditorium. The same night the band won the “Gospel Recorded Performance of the Year” award for “Singing As We

Rise.” The group will be previewing their upcoming 2013 release Ò They Called It Music.Ó The concert will benefit the two North Country centers operated by Ellenburg Senior Housing. “We do a fundraiser usually every year to help support the centers,Ó Miner said. The fundraisers have supported the centers’ annual Christmas party, Wii machines for each facility and other things to improve the quality of life for residents. “The Wii’s are a great addition for our seniors to use to stay active and have some fun and the Christmas parties are nice for everyone to enjoy,” said Miner. “The money we raise is just to get a little something more for the people there that isn’t in the facilityÕ s budget.Ó Tickets to the event are $18 for advance tickets or $20 at the door. Tickets can be purchased at DickÕ s Country Store, 7429 U.S. 11 Churubusco; LeBarre’s Store, 5581 State Route 11, Ellenburg Center; Adirondack Penny Saver in Plattsburgh or by calling Miner at 293-7292.

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PLATTSBURGH Ñ A Plattsburgh Sister is being honored for reaching across the hemisphere to bring hope to people in Nicaragua and give people in the North Country an opportunity to change lives. Sister Debbie Blow, a co-founder of the North Country Mission of Hope, will be recognized in Albany early next month as a New York State Senate Woman of Distinction. Blow has been nominated by Sen. Betty Little for the recognition because of her leadership in organizing a sustained humanitarian mission to Nicaragua that, since 1998, has provided healthcare to more than 60,000 people, educated hundreds of students, constructed more than 500 homes, as well as classrooms, a library and community development center, and fed thousands of malnourished children through the Children Feeding Children Program. “Plans for the North Country Mission of Hope’s 50th mission trip are under way, so this is certainly a fitting time to recognize Sister Debbie for her extraordinary work,Ó Little said in a press release. “Tens of thousands of lives have been transformed for the better due to her vision and dedication and the more than 1,300 volunteers who have made numerous trips to Nicaragua. This mission not only has provided Nicaraguans living in poverty critically important tangibles like housing, healthcare and food, but a sense of hope, a remarkable gift.” Blow, a Dominican Sister of Hope, was a 1971 graduate of Northern Adirondack Central School, and later studied religious and scriptural/theological studies at Providence College, she also attended Trinity College, St. Michael’s College, and Notre Dame College. Blow co-founded the mission in response to Hurricane Mitch, which killed more than 22,000 people in Central America in 1998. Blow said her journey to Nicaragua began 13 years before her organization’s conception when she was introduced to the Flores family after they escaped from social unrest and hostility in Nicaragua. “They arrived here in Plattsburgh because during the 80’s, this location was a receiving area/stop off point for refugees from around the world,” said Blow. “They sought refuge here, someone locally told them to approach me to see if I could help their children and when they did, I said yes of course. “What I told the mother was ‘We have no money either, but let us help you now and later, you can give back and help others.Õ Ó Blow helped provide the family with a small apartment that was donated by a local landlord, all furniture and beds, food for several weeks, clothing for the entire family, contacts for employment, and education for their two children. Blow and the Flores family were drawn back to Nicaragua when Hurricane Mitch devastated the country. “It was now a joint effort of Yamilette Flores, Eve McGill and me to ‘give back’ and help others in need, especially in the wake of the single longest sustained category 5 hurricane on record as of 1998,” said Blow.

That year, 52 volunteers including healthcare, construction workers, educators, other professionals, and youths traveled to Nicaragua. When they got there, Blow said the devastation was unimaginable. “Three months after the hurricane there were orphanages and homes still under water, and thousands of people living under trees Ñ thousands,Ó said Blow. The Mission of Hope will be going on its 50th mission, Blow said she has gone on all of them with the exception of one or two trips. “Some people ask if it would not just be better to send the money and not the people. To that I want to say first of all our volunteers pay their own way, all of the money donated to us goes right to the efforts, and secondly if you keep sending money nothing would happen at home, we needed to change the attitudes of people here and help them see they can make a difference,” said Blow. Blow said the people who have gone to Nicaragua with her have kept what they do real at home and that enthusiasm and experience is what has kept the program strong. “On one of our first missions we went into one of the hospitals a few days after we promised to come back and paint a wall,” said Blow. “When we got there the hospital director started crying and I asked her why she was crying, she said that a lot of people had come there, made themselves feel better and never came back, but we came back.” Since the first trip to Nicaragua, Blow said the people who they met in the beginning are finding hope. “We have more than a dozen people employed with North Country Mission of Hope in Nicaragua,Ó said Blow. Ò But there are still hungry people and people in need of help, but we have a choice, we can either look at a challenge as something we can’t fix or see it as an opportunity to help those we can.” The New York State Senate Women of Distinction event will be

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4 - The Burgh

Opinion

April 27, 2013

A COMMUNITY SERVICE: This community newspaper and its delivery are made possible by the advertisers you’ll find on the pages inside. Our sixty plus employees and this publishing company would not exist without their generous support of our efforts to gather and distribute your community news and events. Please thank them by supporting them and buying locally. And finally, thanks to you, our loyal readers, for your support and encouragement over the past 65 years from all of us here at the Burgh and Denton Publications.

Viewpoint

Burgh Editorial

The need for gaming in Life in a dangerous world the Adirondacks is large W I

n 1990, Colorado held a statewide referendum to legalize limited stakes gambling in three struggling mining towns that were on the verge of ceasing to exist. The towns of Black Hawk, Central City and Cripple Creek played a huge role in the boomtown gold rush of the mid-1800s, but when the gold ran dry these once bustling communities became ghost towns. Faced with a dwindling population, deteriorating infrastructure and disintegrating architecture, officials in the towns banded together to lobby for gaming in their commercial districts, and the idea was put before Colorado voters. The measure passed overwhelmingly, and investors began renovating historic structures for use as casinos. Beginning with opening day on October 1, 1991, gaming proved spectacularly successful in attracting new investment in amounts unheard of since the gold boom more than a century before. Today, the same argument of dwindling population and deteriorating infrastructure could be made for many Adirondack towns. Data released in 2009 by the Adirondack Park Regional Assessment Project (APRAP) clearly demonstrate that. Student enrollment in our schools is evaporating, leading to fewer opportunities for our kids and our year-round population is aging. Dilapidated empty storefronts line our Main Streets. Towns like Newcomb, Port Henry and Tupper Lake that once thrived from logging and mining now seem to be headed the way of Black Hawk, Central City and Cripple Creek. Casino gambling would without a doubt stop that trend, just as it did in Colorado, and would be a badly needed source of revenue for the state, hopefully leading to less reliance on things like the local property tax. In Colorado, gaming pumps more than $100 million into the state’s economy each year. That money is used for everything from roads and transportation to infrastructure improvements to tourism promotion to historic preservation. Colorado’s gaming industry also provides more than 27,000 direct and indirect jobs to its citizens and offers above-average wages Ñ

something as scarce in the Adirondacks as a 4-year-old car without rust. In addition, casino employees in Colorado receive competitive fringe benefits like tuition reimbursement, transportation and meals, retirement and pension plans, health and life insurance, and exceptional promotional opportunities. In other words, the very benefits our college graduates are leaving the area in search of. Certainly the argument can be made that casinos would forever alter the quality of life that makes the Adirondacks the special place it is. But through progressive planning Ñ like forcing casinos into commercial districts, limiting stakes and establishing set closing times — casino gambling could be as good a fit here as it proved to be in Black Hawk, Central City and Cripple Creek. The casino building proposal in New York is expected to come to a head later this year when Gov. Andrew Cuomo divulges up to seven potential casino locations. The state legislature has already passed a constitutional amendment approving the new casinos. It must be passed again this year and then, like Colorado, must be approved in a statewide voter referendum before becoming law. Anticipating approval some towns, like Port Henry, North Hudson and Lake George, have already tossed their hats in the ring for consideration to become host to one of the new casinos. Potential locations such as Frontier Town, located at Exit 29 of the Northway in North Hudson; Roaring Brook Ranch off Exit 21 of the Northway in Lake George and the former Lowe’s Home Improvement Center in downtown Ticonderoga have emerged. When it comes down to decision-making time, let’s hope the governor bases his decision on need rather than greed. If so — and there is no conflict with existing Native American casinos — than no other region of the state would benefit more from a gaming operation than the Adirondacks. Ñ

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lives with a greater focus on hile the events the life itself. How we respect of last week conourselves and appreciate the tinue to unfold it contribution of each other to reminds us how fragile life is the world we share. and how quickly our lives can We can never eliminate be turned upside down in the threats, but we can recognize mere blink of eye. ways to make the most of the While the nation was fixtime we spend on this Earth ated by the shocking terrorist and the way we embrace those event in Boston, the good peoaround us. ple in West Texas were literalDan Alexander Anyone who has faced a ly blown away when a fire at a Thoughts from major crisis or lost a loved one fertilizer plant caused a masBehind the Pressline unexpectedly knows you canÕ t sive explosion killing as many get back the time you may as 60 and injuring nearly 200. have foolishly let slip away. The lesson we When the Cold War ended and the Iron must take away from these events is simple; Curtain was torn down, we thought and hoped the world was moving toward a more be on guard, but never fail to appreciate evpeaceful existence. Nations could focus more ery day you and your loved ones have together. on improving the living conditions for its citiThis world Ñ while full of wonder, beauty zens. Ever-developing technological advances would help us realize that with a global and exciting times — is also fraught with economy, war was something the world danger. Danger lurks in every corner, and no could do without. We envisioned the spread one is immune but it is balanced by the gifts each of us is given. Seriously injured Boston of democracy and capitalism throughout the marathoners who may have loved running, world. Other nations were hungry for the and realize they may have lost a limb, are lifestyle we enjoyed in the United States. nonetheless grateful just to be alive. First Unfortunately, the world has not gone in responders in Texas who may have lost a that direction; instead, it has become even fellow responder in the tragedy, will, along more dangerous than before. The events with other brave responders in the near fuof the last week, the threats coming out of ture, charge into another life-threatening North Korea, the recent ricin letters showing up at the capital and the White House, event knowing whatÕ s at risk in an effort to save lives. They do so out of love for their and the rash of gun violence have once again fellow man. proven the depth of our vulnerability. We are That love and commitment to each other perhaps more despised both by people who is always showcased during trying times like feel entitled to our continued financial and these. We must all remember how we feel military support and by Jihadists/revoluduring these events and do our best to keep tionaries who see our freedom as grand opthat feeling ever present as we go about our portunities to humble the nation and break daily lives and not just when we are personour spirit. ally affected. Regardless of the source of the threat, life The journey of life is an ever-learning and is fragile. Life-changing events can come in evolving experience as we cope with joy, the form of a national tragedy, but they can also occur in a private conversation with tragedy, defeat and success. In the end, how we choose to deal with and accept these lifeyour doctor, a slip on the ice or an unintended auto accident. Life, as they say, can sneak altering events is what provides the promise up on you when you least expect it. None of for tomorrow and future generations. us can live our lives in a bubble. We can’t be Dan Alexander is publisher and CEO of Denso fearful that the joy of life is reduced to a ton Publicaions. He may be reached at dan@denwhimper. pubs.com. We can, however, choose to conduct our


www.the-burgh.com

April 27, 2013

T

wo gems in downtown Plattsburgh are Cache Elegant and owner, Barbara Hugus. A cache is a hidden storage of treasures, and that is what Barbara has - a world of well-designed beauty. Barbara describes her shop, Cache` Elegant, as “a boutique of Apparel, Accessories, Gifts and Home Decor at consignment prices.” The first element of believing that the shop will transform you is the artistry displayed and changed weekly in the windows. Barbara combines clothes, home décor and art into a beautiful tapestry of color. Barbara has resurrected the lost art of window shopping! One of her customers describes the shop as, “Sophisticated with color and balance, Cache Elegant is for people with taste, whether it’s modern, country, or vintage - it appeals to the sophisticated consumer; whatever period they admire.” To us at style & substance, sophisticated is not snobby or intimidating; rather, sophisticated simply means attention to beauty and admiring the small details that makes something spectacular. We regularly stop into Cache Elegant, and are always brilliantly overwhelmed by Barbara’s style throughout the shop. We would add, “hip, classic, eclectic, shabby chic, something for everyone”. It is an experience in color, arrangement and beauty. Barbara’s knowledge, enthusiasm and friendly approachability make the shopping experience a series of “ooohs” and “aaah-

The Burgh - 5

hhs”. Her “cache” is arranged to inspire her customers into redecorating, restyling, starting a project or finding their “conversation piece”. Some real hits we saw this past week were a small counter top butcher block which is perfect for the appetizer portion of your entertaining and a ‘to die for’ wrought iron and glass coffee tableÉ with prices that are steals. And this spring, making your outdoor space inviting and attractive is easy with Cache Elegant! The clothing is carefully hand chosen from Barbara’s consigners, and each piece would be considered a Ò one of a kindÓ , boutique-type buy. The sophisticated shopper knows style is not about price, it is about confidence and individuality, and dressing like this everyday is important! Shop for all that is hip, elegant, and sophisticated, right in downtown Plattsburgh. Barbara invites customers to “browse and get to know my merchandise at your own pace.” After-hours personal shopping appointments or at home visits are available by request – New York City services right here in our beautiful downtown! Becoming a consignment customer is a perfect way to update other’s homes and wardrobes, while you do it for yourself, as well. Bring in your lightly used home goods, clothes and jewelry and set up an account. Cache Elegant provides an approachable retail atmosphere with exceptional customer service – it is a shopping opportunity

to make yourself beautiful and at the same time adding beauty and style to your home. OUR RECOMMENDATIONS: Like Ò Cache ElegantÓ on Facebook to catch up with what’s new in the shop. Make a trip to downtown Plattsburg part of your weekly routine, there are many treasures waiting to be discovered.

Style & Substance: Michele Armani and Sally Meisenheimer Email your questions or request a life coaching appointment to yourstyleandsubstance@gmail.com for more information: visit our website at yourstyleandsubstance.com

Letters to the Editor

Misconception over Safe Act To the Burgh: I would like to thank Mr. Sam Huntington from Dresden for his letter questioning a statement I made in my March 30 letter to Denton Publications. “As chief law enforcement officers (C.L.E.O), I believe sheriffs have the constitutional authority to stop all enforcement of the Safe Act and like regulations within their respective counties where constitutional issues are in question.” When they take their oath of office, it is not just a formality, it is a constitutional requirement. ART VI, sec. 3, “All elected representatives and all officers and administrators of both the US and the individual states shall take an oath or affirmation that the shall support this constitution.Ó Sheriffs, as constitutional officers, must protect our constitutional rights. From the National Center for Constitutional Studies, Washington, D.C., Ò The Citizens Rule Book,Ó and the Ò Making of America,” I quote: “The general misconception is that any statute passed by legislatures bearing the appearance of the law constitutes the law of the land. The U.S. Constitution is the supreme law of the land, and any statute, to be valid, must be in agreement. It is impossible for a law which violates the constitution to be valid. This is succinctly stated as follows: 1. Ò All laws which are repugnant to the constitution are null and void.” (Marbury US Madison, 5 US [2 Cranch], 137,174,176 [1803]) 2. “Where rights secured by the constitution are involved, there can be no rule making or legislation which would abrogate them.” (Miranda vs. Arizona, 384 US 436, p. 491) 3. “An unconstitutional act is not law; it confers no rights; it imposes no duties; affords no protections; it creates no office; it is in legal contemplation, as inoperative as though it had never been passed.” (Norton vs. Shelby Co. 118 US 425, p. 442) 4. “The general rule is that an unconstitutional statute, though having the form and name of law, is in reality no law, but is wholly void, and ineffective for any purpose; since unconstitutionality dates from the time of its enactment, and not merely from the date of the decision so branding itÓ (Citizens Rule Book). Ò No one is bound to obey an unconstitutional law and no courts are bound to enforce it” (Vol. 16 American Jurisprudence, 2nd ed., p. 177, late 2nd ed., p. 256). 5. William Pitt, a British Statesman said, “Necessity is the plea for every infringement of liberty; it is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves.Ó Those in power today plead “Necessity” when they say: “Don’t let a good crisis go to waste” (e.g., the horrible Sandy Hook incident is their Ò NecessityÓ ). 6. Archibald Maclaine, a ratifier of the US Constitution from North Carolina, in showing original intent, said, “No officer will be bound by his oath to support any act that would violate the principles of the Constitution.Ó The constitution was written simply and clearly so that even those with limited education could understand it. It seems clear to me that the constitution requires an affirmation of support

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by not only sheriffs but all law enforcement officers and state and local officials including prosecuting attorneys. A law that obviously infringes (interferes, violates, encroaches, exceeds, intrudes, cancels, restricts, conflicts, dilutes, etc.) on one’s rights should be vigorously opposed. More food for thought: A Colorado undersheriff recently asked a class of Colorado state troopers if they would have any objections to going into homes and confiscating firearms. Why would this question even be asked if it wasnÕ t their intent to do so? May God bless and keep us all safe. John Capek Crown Point

Two wrongs don’t make a right To the Burgh: This is to inform you that it seems offensive and contradictory regarding your article on Ò Rock Against RapeÓ in the April 6 issue. This article promotes Planned Parenthood for its activity against rape. These same people who claim objection to rape, would at the same time, be helpful to murder the product of rape. We all know the adage; “Two wrongs don’t make a right.”

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To the Burgh: Most people probably know about the health concerns related to smoking, but they may not know that cigarette butts are the most littered item in the nation, and they’re more than just an eye sore. This toxic litter is mostly made of plastic and does NOT biodegrade when thrown on the ground, putting wildlife in danger and wreaking havoc on U.S. waterways, parks, beaches and roadways. Additionally, cigarette butts contain toxic chemicals that can leach into soil, and chemicals that are poisonous to wildlife and could contaminate water sources. They can be very costly to local communities in terms of clean up and disposal.

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www.the-burgh.com

6 - The Burgh

May 2013

This Menu is approved by a Registered Dietitian

Monday

Tuesday

7

Chicken Breast Baked Potato Garden Vegetables Rye Bread Peaches

13

14

Goulash Green Beans Whole Wheat Bread Fruit Cocktail

20

21

BBQ Pork Chop Rice Pilaf Spinach Pears

27

28 Memorial Day Holiday Sites Closed

Wednesday

1

Swiss Steak Spiral Noodles Peas Whole Wheat Bread Vanilla Pudding Sweet & Sour Pork Brown Rice Broccoli Fruited Jello Turkey Tetrazzini Italian Vegetables Dinner Roll Fruited Jello Salsa Chicken Rice Pilaf Brussel Sprouts Dinner Roll Pineapple Tidbits

Tuna Salad Plate Cucumber Onion Salad Lettuce & Tomato Oat Bread Almond Cookie

Thursday

2

8 Turkey & Swiss on Rye

9

15

16

22

Roasted Chicken Baked Beans Red Slaw Tropical Fruit Salad

29

Seafood Salad Plate Pasta Salad Whole Wheat Crackers Ginger Cookie

23

21044

Spaghetti w/Meat Sauce Italian Green Beens Sour Dough Bread Fresh Fruit

Roast Pork w/Gravy Mashed Potatoes Turnip Spiced Applesauce

Hot Roast Beef Sandwich Mashed Potatoes Peas Maple Walnut Cookie

30

10

17

Michigan on Bun Roasted Potatoes Garden Vegetables Strawberry Mouse

Meatloaf Baked Potato Peas w/Pearl Onions Tapioca Pudding

Baked Cod w/Newburg Sauce Brown Rice, Carrots Whole Wheat Bread Orange Macaroni & Cheese Stewed Tomatoes Dinner Roll Banana

24

Hamburger on Bun Oven Browned Potatoes Cauliflower Lettuce, Tomato & Onion Fresh Fruit

31

Grape Juice Manicotti Green Beans Sour Dough Bread Peach

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April 27, 2013

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www.the-burgh.com

April 27, 2013

The Trout Where-Abouts Girls on grass

The Burgh - 7

T

he cold weather has kept the stream temperatures down so my trout fishing hasn’t been very good. Not one to waste any time though, I’m trying to cut and split some firewood to get ahead of the curve. Working out by my pasture, I get to see the slow changes in the green up of the vegetation. I see the brown dormant grasses slowly turning green, and young clover plants coming to life. As a grazing specialist, this gets me psyched up! I see the leaves of the grass plant reaching out and grabbing all that sunBy Rich Redman light; photosynthesis underway. For grazing farmers who raise beef and dairy cows, itÕ s a good sign. Soon grazing season will be here and the cows will be going out to pasture! The cows are happy. They get out of the barn and out on green grass. The farmer is even happier. The animals get to go outside, barn chores are reduced, manure is getting spread by the cows instead of the spreader and feed is not being hauled into the barn; freedom of a sort. Now it’s time for field chores! Over the last 25 years grazing management has taken hold in this area. Numerous dairy and beef operations have discovered rotational grazing management as a way to raise their animals. Rotational grazing is not just opening the barn door and letting the cows run rampant on a large pasture field and selecting what they want and leaving the rest. Rotational grazing is an organized system where animals are moved to a new small pasture, called a paddock on a daily basis. Grasses are grazed when they reach a height of about 8 inches and grazed down to about 4 inches in height. The 4 inches that are fed are of a high quality, and the remaining 4 inches of leaf, are long enough to allow the solar collecting leaves to capture the sunÕ s energy and turn it into chemical energy. This allows the plant to grow and thrive, in addition to storing energy in the roots. If the plant is grazed too low, the leaf is very small, and photosynthesis takes much longer. The growing point for the plant must start from the base of the plant and energy is taken from the roots robbing the plant of energy and increasing the time it takes to get the leaf growth back to 8 inches. The species of grasses growing in the pasture can actually be manipulated by grazing management. When you graze close to the ground, tight like horses do, this leads to more bluegrass, and less pasture tonnage production per acre. If you allow more time between grazing cycles and maintain a proper grazing height of 4 inches or more, you can have clover and orchard grass, and other species, which favor a longer rest period. With intensive management, overall pasture tonnage is increased meaning less pasture acres are needed. This means there could be more acreage available for other crops, like hay, annual crops such as corn or even grains. I would recommend having additional hay acres available. The finicky way the weather is acting now days, you may need the additional hay acres for grazing when things get dry, or to feed out to supplement the dry pasture times. Worst case would be that you have additional hay acres and that has never been a problem for a farmer. Having surplus hay for sale is always good! By moving dairy cows daily, the bovines get fresh actively growing grass and clovers in their diet. The high protein feed from pasture along with hay and grain fed in the barn makes a balanced ration that helps keep milk production costs down. Beef operations depending on the level of management intensity, may move the cows every day or up to every 2 or 3 days. The overall goal of rotational grazing management is to get quality feed to help the young growing animals gain about 2 lbs. per day if the pasture is managed properly. Quality feed gets quality animals, and animal products such as milk and meat. Other benefits to the farmer include: • Nutrient rich manure is spread directly on actively growing grass by the best possible means; direct deposit! This reduces labor costs. • Fuel costs associated with manure spreading and barn cleaning are reduced. • Electricity costs associated with barn and gutter cleaning are lessened. In many cases milk production increases depending on the quality of stored feed. In other cases milk production may drop, but overall profitability increases, depending on management. For the average Joe or Jane trying to make a living, there are numerous benefits. Some of these include reduced nutrient runoff and less soil erosion. The soil is protected by a permanent sod cover, and the stream banks get fenced out protecting aquatic areas. Wildlife habitat is also created and/or improved. Overall soil quality improves and carbon is stored due to the increasing organic matter buildup in the soils. The infiltration rate of the soil, due to improved soil structure is increased. So during a rainstorm there tends to be less runoff and more infiltration and water storage in the organic matter. The consumer benefits too! Grazing beef farms along with Community Supported Agriculture enterprises (CSAÕ s) are increasing in our area. This means the consumer has a choice of purchasing grass-fed beef and locally grown vegetables, fruits, jams, and other farm fresh, locally grown products. All of these products are available to you from a farm stand owned by a family farm in our community. As citizens and consumers, we should be encouraging our schools to buy local agricultural products so our kids get quality, locally grown foods. We need to teach our children about local agriculture and its importance in our area. Milk doesn’t just come from the store, and meat is from a beef cow, not the deli department. So the next time you are driving down the road and see some dairy cows on pasture grazing, remember they are Girls on Grass! They are making milk from quality feed gathered from the nutrients of the soil and the energy of the sun.

Conservation

Conversations

M

ost rivers and streams are still running high, with water temperatures about average for the season. Most of the ponds will have shed their ice cover by the weekend but water temperatures will only be in the mid 30’s. As water temperatures increase, fish should become more active. The smaller, shallower ponds will be producing first, although water temperatures will need to warm up some before the deeper ponds and lakes turn on. Lake trout and salmon will be the first fish to be active, while brook trout will take a bit longer. However, it will only take a change of a few degrees in water temperatures to turn them on. The annual smelt run appears to be on track following the Full Moon, which is set to occur on Friday, April 25. Following the full moon, trout and salmon will begin feeding actively in and around the inlets and tributaries of the lakes and ponds for the next week or so. Stocking trucks have not yet delivered many trout to area’s streams and rivers, and in the smaller streams and mountain brooks, native brook trout are still in their winter mode. Trout will be slow to react to offerings, and likely sheltered among the rocks and under the overhanging trees. On the rivers, anglers will find the best action in the deeper pools or at the base of falls or dams, where air temperatures will have a greater effect on water temperatures. Think like a fish, and look around, be observant and see what’s going on. Are there flies in the air, or schools of minnows in the shallows? On the streams, seek out areas that provide both food and shelter, and you’ll find the fish. As a result of the floods, many local rivers and streams are still chocked with large accumulations of debris and logjams. These are excellent holding areas for trout, but be careful of your footing. Go where the people aren’t! Large fish are easily spooked, so try to maintain a low profile to avoid spooking the fish. Watch your shadows, and be careful of disturbing rocks or downed trees in or near the water. Fish will pick up on the vibrations and spook easily. If you do spook them, rest the pool and try again in about 20 minutes, fish have short memories. On the ponds, avoid banging or bouncing around in the boat/ canoe, minimize oar splash and be sure to wear your PFD; itÕ s now the law. Always cast to a pool from further away then you think is necessary, and try to be accurate. There is nothing more frustrating than getting hung up on the first cast and ruining a potentially productive area. When retrieving a fly or lure, vary the retrieve and change the speed and depth. Twitch the offering, to give it an erratic motion. If it isn’t working, change lures. Experiment, and figure out a way to trigger their strike response. Most of all, take your time, relax and have some fun, fishing is not supposed to be a chore. It is not intended to be a contest between anyone but the angler and the fish. And be sure to take a friend, or a kid along with you. Angling adventures are more enjoyable if they are shared, and the stories are more likely to be believable.

Erickson, “Exercise increases the amount of blood going to the brain,” which means, “that more of the important nutrients necessary for the brain to function are distributed.Ó Researchers discovered the more often participants walked, the more memory they retained, and those who most had about half as much risk of suffering memory problems as those who walked the least. Humans can expect to lose memory as they age. It is a normal function of aging. However, research has determined that increased exercise also helps improve the portions of the brain that support memory function. According to the researchers, the earlier you begin exercising, the better. Ò But itÕ s never too late!Ó according to researchers, “any amount of exercise you do will help.” It is interesting to note that the loss of short term memory has also been linked to stress and fatigue. It has been well established that time spent in nature, or even viewing natural scenes has a soothing and therapeutic affect on human. Our senses are exercised and enlivened in natural settings, where we can feel the breeze, smell the air and hear the wind and the water. The influences of flowing waters, air quality, mountains and other landscape features of our region contain a setting that is particularly restorative. Not only has it proven to be physically beneficial, it has also contributed to the spirit of our visitors. The region has long been recognized for its ability to help recharge the human battery, reduce fatigue and provide a greater mental clarity and physical vigor. Often, it takes only a simple walk in the woods to boost circulation and clear your senses. The fact that we are more alive and at ease in nature should come as no surprise, afterall human beings have spent 99 percent of their evolutionary time as hunter, gathers. As a nomadic society, we were indelibly linked to the land. It should come as no surprise that when we return to it, we are more natural and at ease. It is afterall, a key component of our heredity. Joe Hackett is a guide and sportsman residing in Ray Brook. Contact him at brookside18@adelphia.net.

Go take a hike, just for the health of it

A recent study conducted at the University of Pittsburgh concludes that walking isnÕ t just good for your waistline, it actually has benefits that can help your memory, as well. Researchers followed nearly 300 participants for over a decade and concluded that walking six to nine miles a week may actually stop your brain from shrinking as you age. According to the studyÕ s author Kirk

Connor Anderson, age 13, of Moriah shows off his first gobbler. The bird, which he shot on opening day of the youth hunt in Westport, had a 5-inch beard. Congratulations Connor!

Rich Redman is a retired District Conservationist for the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service and an avid outdoorsman. His column will appear regularly. He may be reached at rangeric@nycap.rr.com.


www.the-burgh.com

8 - The Burgh

April 27, 2013

Baseball game aims to save lives and remember deceased teammate By Katherine Clark

katherine@denpubs.com PLATTSBURGH — For some people, baseball and other sports are not just a way of life but a reason to live. The SUNY Plattsburgh baseball team will be combining its love of the game with the conviction to save lives in honor of former team member Brian Mehan. The baseball team will host ‘Brian Mehan Be The Match Day‘ on Tuesday, April 30. From 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. the team will be collecting swabs for bone marrow matching in the Cardinal Lounge and before the game there will also be a swabbing station set up at the Lefty Wilson Field on Bailey Ave from 6 to 7:30 p.m. before the team plays SUNY Canton that evening. “It seems right to have the game there, it’s where we played against each other in high school and we played together in college,” said former teammate Joey Painter. Mehan played for Plattsburgh High School and Painter played for Au Sable Valley before they played for PSU.

Organ donor testing

Brian Mehan crossing the field in full catcher’s gear. Photo Provided

his birthday. Mehan would have been 20 years old. Ò He was young, too young,Ó said Doorey. Ò It really puts everything into perspective, especially puts baseball into perspective. “As a coach sometimes you get a little crazy or your expectations of players can get a little crazy. We put so much emphasis on winning,” said Doorey. “But at the end of the game our players are still alive and it’s just a baseball game, we need to just go out and do our best. This has changed the way I look at things for sure.Ó

Countless lives saved

Last year Doorey and Painter along with the baseball team held the first swab in May 2012. The event generated more than 200 possible donor submissions. About three months after testing at the game, Painter got the call from Be the Match that he was a possible match for someone. Ò I think this person could possibly have been waiting for a while for someone to be a match and I was fortunate enough to be a part of that,” said Painter. “They told me this man’s cancer could have spread while he waited for a donor. “It’s not that I’m noble, I just signed up and my body was healthy enough for the transplant. I’m just lucky and proud to be able to say I did it.Ó Painter said a donor must be a 99.9 percent genetic match, which is one reason itÕ s often difficult to match those in need with a donor. Painter said his role as a doIn most cases, you can make a reasonable nor was harder than he thought pre-inspection yourself if you know what you are it would be in the beginning. looking for, and knowing what your looking for Before he went into surgery he can help you prevent little problems from growing needed to have a Ò head to toe

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physical” to make sure he was healthy enough to do the transplant. In October he went through a four-hour procedure and spent two days in the hospital during his bone marrow retrieval where they put needles into his pelvis, leaving him with small scars on his back, in order to retrieve the marrow. After undergoing surgery, Painter was called back to donate plasma on April 15 in Boston. His role as a donor showed him how fortunate he was to be healthy and give the gift of life to a stranger. “It’s a small sacrifice for me, I don’t have cancer and I don’t know anyone who can say their lives havenÕ t been affected by cancer,Ó said Painter. Through Be the Match, Painter said all medical expenses were handled by the non-profit which can include travel, lodging, food and other expenses for donors who must travel to receive treatments. “Be the Match compensates 100 percent,” said Painter. “It doesn’t matter if you have insurance or you don’t they handle it.Ó Be the Match couldn’t tell Painter much about the person who he donated his bone marrow to. Though they were able to tell him it was a male about 48 years old and from a card he received later he learned the man also had been married for 25 years and had two children. A year after the transplant, donors and transplant recipients with Be the Match can have the opportunity to meet or speak. Painter said he hopes to take advantage of the opportunity. “We encourage everyone to come out and get tested, it’s an opportunity to save someone’s life, if you’re on the other side you’re always hoping someone will step up, this is their opportunity to potentially save a life,Ó said Doorey. For more information about the event or to learn more about how to become a donor contact Doorey at Plattsburgh State at 564-2000.

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People can get tested for free during the day at campus or at the baseball field. Those tested will also be put into the organ donor registry. PSU baseball coach Kris Doorey said the Be the Match personnel will take a cotton swab and scrape along the inside of the mouth and from that they’ll be able to tell if the person is a match for someone, he said it is easy and painless. Doorey said the event is not just the last home game of the season but most importantly it is an opportunity to remember a former player who succumbed to leukemia in 2008. Leukemia is a cancer of the blood cells. It starts in the bone marrow, the soft tissue inside most bones. Bone marrow is where blood cells are made. When someone suffers from leukemia, the bone marrow starts to make a lot of abnormal white blood cells, called leukemia cells. The cells don’t do the work of normal white blood cells, grow faster than normal cells, and they don’t stop growing when they should. Doorey said when he first met Mehan he was a “top recruit” for the team as a catcher and a first baseman. Ò He was strong and a great player, we were really looking forward to having him take the field,” said Doorey. During Mehan’s sophomore season, Doorey said Mehan was always tired and the doctors couldn’t find a reason for it, until one test came back confirming he had leukemia. “He underwent treatment for a year and then wanted to be back on the field for the spring 2007 season, he was really ready to come back, he practiced with us all fall,” said Doorey. “Then he came to my office one day and said ‘coach we’ve got to talk’ and he told me they found more cancer.” Mehan went through more treatments, chemotherapy and went into surgery to have a bone marrow transplant at Dartmouth Medical Center. “They were going in, but when they opened him up they saw he had even more cancer than they thought,” Doorey said. “They stitched him back up and they brought him home and I got to spend a whole day with him at his home here.” Doorey said Mehan died on March 2, 2008, a few days before


www.the-burgh.com

April 27, 2013

The Burgh - 9

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www.the-burgh.com

10 - The Burgh

April 27, 2013

H T I W O D O T WHAT ? N R U T E R X A T R U r o f YO g n i h t some

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April 27, 2013

The Burgh - 11

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www.the-burgh.com

12 - The Burgh

April 27, 2013

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April 27, 2013

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Comedians to serve up giggles for girls ROUSES POINT — The Adirondack Comedy Club will present a mostly female show titled “Giggles for Girls” to support the Girl Scouts in Champlain/Mooers. The show will begin at 8 p.m. on April 27 at the Rouses Point American Legion, 29 Pratt Street. Performances will include Adirondack Comedy Club organizer Ray Wayman, with special appearance by comedian Carmen Lagala, Autumn Engroff Spencer and headliner Kit Rivers, who promise to give the girlish giggles in their original sets. Wayman has produced several comedy shows at the American Legion. The upcoming fundraiser will help raise money for the troop to go to New York City at the end of the year. Wayman said they have been doing fundraisers since the fall of last year. “The show is called ‘Giggles for Girls.’ I think it’ll be more fun than a spaghetti feed and a whole lot less messy,” said Wayman. Ò At least no one will get stains on their blouse, unless they spill a beer!Ó The comedy show will offer people in Rouses Point a chance to

Adrian Carr From page 1

The pieces in that series have a dusty, grimy appearance. There is a feeling of movement to them and a soft, geometric monotony expressed in tarnished watercolor whites and incomplete blacks. “When I went to New York (City), everything changed. Your whole vision changes when you hit New York City,Ó Carr said. CarrÕ s surroundings certainly illicit a distinct response, as do events in his life. “You don’t put brush to canvass unless something inspires you,Ó Carr said. Perhaps most striking is “Black Squares,” a piece that represents Carr’s reaction to the World Trade Center bombings. A painting so large it spans two canvasses, Black Squares is as abstract as any of Carr’s other pieces, but what comes through clearly is something intangible. “You can see movement and the passion of the strokes, which has a lot to do with the emotional experience of 9/11,” Carr said. Ò The broken squares are like the broken pieces of the buildings.Ó Those broken squares are black, uneven and painted against an intense earth-tone backdrop. Beneath the squares there are broken pieces, above them there is a series of smaller squares, bright and bleeding. In 2005, Carr left the city and moved north—far north—to be with his wife in Montreal. He met her at the trailhead to Rocky Peak Ridge, the last High Peak he needed to climb to become an Adirondack 46er. The soon-to-be couple got to talking; he warned her about an impending rainstorm and they exchanged cards before parting ways. Carr visited Montreal soon after that, and contacted her. In 2004, they were married. And once again, his paintings changed. His marriage inspired another two-part painting, Ò He Said, She Said,Ó CarrÕ s interpretation on the need for, and difficulties of, communication in a marriage. Carr’s most recent work is a series called Ò Spiritual Light,Ó and is the result of his life in the North Country. Ò I think that the different geographical locations impact on your psyche,Ó Carr said. Ò They bring different things out that you want to explore.Ó

hear top comedians and enjoy a show close to home, Wayman said. “This will be the fourth comedy show that I have produced at the American Legion and they always have a good turnout,” said Wayman. “It’s a fundraiser that is fun and a whole lot less boring than a craft fair, spaghetti feed, bake sale or shaking down grandma’s couch for spare nickels.” The show will feature an array of acts and a plethora of material. Wayman, a native of Rouses Point, has performed throughout Vermont and the Adirondacks. He uses his observational skills to make light of the crazy world he lives in and shares his twisted perspective with his audience. Lagala is a native Vermonter and UVM graduate. In addition to managing LEVITY, Vermont’s only comedy club, Carmen performs comedy all over the state, but still does laundry at her mom’s house. Autumn Engroff Spencer has performed in various venues in and around Vermont. Spencer lives in Burlington with her husband, children, and more cats than she cares to admit. Headliner, Rivers, will bring her plucky brand of comedy ad improv comedy to the stage. The Evansville, Indiana native will bring some spoken word humor and sometimes raunchy humor

for the community to enjoy. Rivers recently open for David Koechner from the movie Anchorman, was a finalist at the Higher Ground Comedy Battle, and competed in New England’s Funniest Comic competition. Rivers is currently studying theatre at Saint MichaelÕ s College in Colchester, VT and performs stand up in and around the Burlington area. Tickets are $10 at the door. Doors open at 7:30 and the show is at 8 p.m. Tickets can be purchased online at https:// adirondackcomedyclub.ticketbud.com/rpvalentine or at the American Legion. For more information contact Wayman at 420-3625.

Unlike his previous work, the pieces in ÒS piritual LightÓ were done using charcoal on paper. The images depict a brightness that seems to emanate, or perhaps rise, from a darkness and are balanced by black lines drawn elsewhere on the otherwise white canvas. Carr said that showing his work helps him see it from different perspectives, something he said he has enjoyed. “It’s like looking at your life from a new angle,” Carr said. Ò ROTA Gallery is such a great space because theyÕ re giving people like me, and everybody, a chance to do something that might otherwise have never been done.Ó At the opening reception of his show, Carr mingled with gallery-goers and announced that he was raising money to record a new CD. Shifting gears from the medium of expression hung on the galleryÕ s walls, Carr, who studied at Juilliard School in NYC and has performed in Carnegie Hall, sat behind a keyboard and played two short sets of music from his previous recordings.

Ò IÕ ve been doing art all my life,” Carr said. “I really wanted to share something with the people of Plattsburgh who have been so kind to me.” When he isn’t painting, Carr lectures at Plattsburgh State and teaches piano at the North Country Cultural Center for the Arts. To hear Carr’s music, or to donate money to help fund his upcoming CD, visit adriancarrpiano.com

Comedian Kit Rivers will headline the Giggles for Girls Comedy show at the Rouses Point American Legion.

If you go: What: The Hidden Art of Adrian CarrÑA Retrospective 1976-2005 Where: ROTA Gallery, 50 Margaret St., Plattsburgh When: The gallery is open daily, from noon-5 p.m. CarrÕ s show is up through Monday, May 6. Cost: Free.

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April 27, 2013 196 Water Street, 10 a.m.-noon. UPPER JAY — Board of Trustees Meeting, Wells Memorial Library, 12230 New York 9N, 7-8 p.m. PLATTSBURGH — Karaoke, Olive Ridleys, 37 Court Street, 8 p.m.

Friday, May 3

Friday, April 26

• Week of April 26-May 3

Alexis P. Suter Band to play UJAC

UPPER JAY — The Alexis P. Suter Band will perform at the Recovery Lounge, at the Upper Jay Art Center on Route 9N, at 8 p.m. on April 26. The Alexis P. Suter Band are rising stars in the roots, blues and soul music scene. Alexis’s powerful bass and baritone voice, seasoned with raw emotion and a wide streak of attitude, has made the soulful band widely recognized in the music world. A $10 donation is suggested.

Lost Dog can be found at Delta Blue

LAKE PLACID — Lost Dog will perform their special blend of rock and folk music at Delta Blue, 2520 Main Street, from 9 p.m. to midnight on April 26. The Lost Dog, an Adirondack-style fusion rock trio, plays all original music. Members hail from Lake Placid, Keene and Wadhams with Nick Bailey from the Bailey Bros. on bass, Ben Frantz from Sessions Master on guitar, and Nick Gulli on drums.

Zip City Blues will play at Irises

PLATTSBURGH —Zip City Blues will perform Chicago-style blues and Duke Ellington swing at Irises, 24 City Hall Place, at 9 p.m. on April 26. The band is comprised of veteran musicians at home as both a cool downtown blues quintet or as a full blown swing dance band with an uptown horn section. For the soulful blues lover this show will hold reprieve from the normal music scene.

Maaze will rock out the Monopole

PLATTSBURGH — Maaze will bring a jazzy funk show to Monopole, 7 Protection Ave., at 10 p.m. on April 26. The band delivers to the audience the sensation of the 1960s vibe colliding with a contemporary jam band setting with funk-jazz tunes. The band produces their rocking sound with Alex Mazur on Vocals and keyboard, Leah Matticee on vocals, Lucas Ruedy on bass, and Bobby Kemp on drums.

Young Artists Open minded mic night

SARANAC LAKE — BluSeed Studios presents the final “Young Artist’s Open Minded-Mic Night” of the season on April 27, from 7:30 to 10 p.m., with host Kiah Tucker. All varieties of talent are invited to perform. Up to 12 performers ages 13 to 19 are invited to share their voices and ideas in a professional acoustic setting.

Jeff Rendinaro will perform at Irises

PLATTSBURGH — Jeff Rendinaro & Guest will perform at Irises, 24 City Hall Place, at 9 p.m. on April 27. Jeff Rendinaro, a member of the jazz band Zip City Blues, has been playing harp since the early 1970s and is fluent in several musical traditions. He started with the blues and later toured several years playing bluegrass. His driving jump blues style has a uniquely melodic edge that he incorporates with the “straight and natural” blues more often associated with Chicago and Delta style.

Formula 5 will bring momentum

PLATTSBURGH — Formula 5 will perform at the Monopole, 7 Protection Ave. at 10 p.m. on April 27. Formula 5 is a band that truly represents Upstate New York with members ranging from locales like Albany to Troy to Lake George. This four-piece band brings together its diverse influences to create a sound that gets the audience hopping.

To submit an item for publication go online to www.the-burgh.com or drop us an e-mail at northerncalendar@denpubs.com. For additional information, call Katherine Clark at 873-6368 ext 208.

PLATTSBURGH — Rummage Sale at Plattsburgh United Methodist Church, 127 Beekman Street, 9 a.m. - 5p.m. PLATTSBURGH — Disability Self Advocacy Support Group, North Country Center for Independence, 102 Sharron Ave, noon. 563-9058. LAKE PLACID —Microsoft Operating System 8 computer class, Lake Placid Public Library, 2471 Main Street, 10 a.m.-noon. 523-3200. LAKE PLACID —How to borrow library ebooks and buy ebooks computer class, Lake Placid Public Library, 2471 Main Street, 12:30-2:30 p.m. 523-3200. LAKE PLACID — Georgie Rickard to present her Senior Piano Recital, Lake Placid Center for the Arts, 17 Algonquin Drive, 7 p.m. UPPER JAY — The Alexis P. Suter Band will perform at the Recovery Lounge, at the Upper Jay Art Center on Route 9N, at 8 p.m LAKE PLACID — Lost Dog will perform, Delta Blue, 2520 Main Street, 9 p.m.midnight. PLATTSBURGH —Zip City Blues will perform at Irises, 24 City Hall Place, 9p.m. PLATTSBURGH — Maaze will perform, Monopole, 7 Protection Ave. 10 p.m. 563-2222.

Saturday, April 27

PLATTSBURGH — Rummage Sale at Plattsburgh United Methodist Church, 127 Beekman Street, 9 a.m. - noon. PLATTSBURGH — Autism Awareness Walk and festivities including children’s activities, raffles, a bake sale and resources, US Oval, 52 U.S. Oval, Registration begins at 10 am, walk at 11a.m. www.aaneny.org SARANAC LAKE — Third Annual Daffest Derby, on the corner of Main St and LaPan Highway, 11 a.m. $20 registration fee. 891-8109. LAKE PLACID — The Met: Live in HD Series: Handel’s Giulio Cesare, Lake Placid Center for the Arts Annex, 17 Algonquin, noon. 523-2512. $18-$12. PLATTSBURGH — The Adirondack Youth Orchestra Association Spring 2013 Concert, Plattsburgh High School Auditorium, 1 Clifford Drive, 1 p.m. WESTPORT — Annual meeting of the Wadhams Riverside Cemetery, Wadhams Church Hall, 2569 County Route 10, 6-7 p.m. PLATTSBURGH — Earth Day Film Showings with Last Picture Show Man, Newman College Center, 90 Broad Street, 7:15 p.m. SARANAC LAKE — Young Artists open minded mic night, BluSeed Studios, 24 Cedar Street, 7:30 p.m. PLATTSBURGH — Jeff Rendinaro & Guest will perform at Irises, 24 City Hall Place, 9p.m. LAKE PLACID — Back Porch Society will perform, Delta Blue, 2520 Main Street, 9 p.m.-midnight. PLATTSBURGH — Formula 5 will perform, Monopole, 7 Protection Ave. 10 p.m. 563-2222. SARANAC LAKE — Aqueous will perform, The Waterhole, 48 Main Street, 9 p.m. 891-9502

Sunday, April 28

PERU — 4th Sunday $5 Breakfast, Peru Memorial VFW & Ladies Auxiliary, 710 Pleasant Street, 9 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. WESTPORT — ZUMBA Class with Sarah, Westport Heritage House, Main Street, 6:30 p.m. $5.

Monday, April 29

WILLSBORO — Free osteoporosis classes, Willsboro Congregational Church, NY Route 22, 10:30 a.m. 546-3565. KEENE — Free osteoporosis classes, Keene Community Center, Church Street, 11:30 a.m. 546-3565. PLATTSBURGH — Yoga and Meditation, North Country Center for Independence, 102 Sharron Ave, noon. 563-9058. ELIZABETHTOWN — Turbo Kick boxing with Kye, Parish Hall, 7582 Court Street, 5 p.m. $7. WESTPORT — YOGA Class, Westport Heritage House, Main Street, 6 p.m. $10.

Tuesday, April 30

PLATTSBURGH — Free Art Techniques Group to meet every Tuesday, ROTA Gallery, 50 Margaret Street, 2-30-4:15 p.m. 324-6250, Sarah@nami-cv.org. PLATTSBURGH — Trivia Night, Geoffrey’s Pub, 5453 Peru Street, 7-9 p.m. 5613091. LAKE PLACID — African Dance Classes with Soma Beats Every Tuesday through May 28, Lake Placid Center for the Arts Annex, 17 Algonquin Drive, 7:30 - 8:30 p.m. $8.

Wednesday, May 1

WILLSBORO — Free osteoporosis classes, Willsboro Congregational Church, NY Route 22, 10:30 a.m. 546-3565. ELIZABETHTOWN — ZUMBA class with Kye, Parish Hall, 7582 Court Street, 5 p.m. $5. WESTPORT — ZUMBA Class with Sarah, Westport Heritage House, Main Street, 6:30 p.m. $5. WILMINGTON — Wilmington Historical Society to meet, Wilmington Community Center, 7 Community Center Circle, 7 p.m. 420-8370. ESSEX — Open Mic Poetry, Belden Noble Library, Main Street, 7 p.m. LAKE PLACID — Open Mic Blues Jam, Delta Blue, 2520 Main Street, 8:30 10:30 p.m. 523-3106. PLATTSBURGH — Open Mic Night at the Monopole, 7 Protection Ave. 10 p.m. 563-2222.

Thursday, May 2

ELIZABETHTOWN — Elizabethtown Parent-Child Play Group free and open to parents and caregivers and their children birth to 5 years of age, Families First,

PLATTSBURGH — Disability Self Advocacy Support Group, North Country Center for Independence, 102 Sharron Ave, noon. 563-9058. SARANAC LAKE — Pendragon Theatre’s 10th annual Wine Tasting Whiteface Club and Resort, 6-9 p.m. www.pendragontheatre.org, 891-1854. PLATTSBURGH — The band, Real Live Tigers, Adrian Aardvark, Agent 922, and S.W.I.M., to perform, ROTA Gallery, 50 Margaret Street, 7 p.m. $3 to $10 pay-whatyou-can sliding scale admission. SARANAC LAKE — CD release party for ADK singer & songwriter Dan Berggren’s new album, “Tongues in Trees,” BluSeed Studios, 24 Cedar Street, 7:30 p.m. $10. 891-3799.

Saturday, May 4

AU SABLE CHASM — North Star Underground Railroad Museum Opening Day, 1131 Mace Chasm Road, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. 834-5180. AU SABLE CHASM — North Star Underground Railroad Museum Mini Bus Tour of Underground Railroad sites in Keeseville and Peru., 1131 Mace Chasm Road, 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. 834-5180. UPPER JAY — Music Appreciation for Ages 3-6, with Julie Robinson Robards. Rhythm instruments, motion songs & storytime, Wells Memorial Library, 12230 New York 9N, 10:30 - 11:15 a.m. PLATTSBURGH — First Annual Youth Activity Day, Plattsburgh Lodge of Elks, 56 Cumberland Ave, noon-3p.m. AU SABLE FORKS — Holy Name School’s Annual Spring Dinner/Auction at the American Legion, 11 Mc Crea Street, dinner 4-6 p.m. and auction at 6 p.m. PLATTSBURGH — The bands; Mitch The Champion, Garrettsucks, For The Kid In The Back, and Marco Polio, to perform, ROTA Gallery, 50 Margaret Street, 7 p.m. $3 to $10 pay-what-you-can sliding scale admission. LAKE PLACID — Reason To Smile Benefit, Lake Placid Center for the Arts Annex, 17 Algonquin, 7 p.m. 523-2512. $20-$15. JAY — Cuddle Magic will perform at the Recovery Lounge, 1 Springfield Road, 8 p.m. $10. PLATTSBURGH — Relay For Life Bazaar and Craft Fair at Our Lady of Victory Center, 4919 South Catherine Street, 10 a.m. – 4 p.m. 569-7850.

Sunday, May 5

WESTPORT — ZUMBA Class with Sarah, Westport Heritage House, Main Street, 6:30 p.m. $5. ESSEX — “Lift Up Our Library” Benefit Concert for Belden Noble Library, Essex Community Church, corner of NYS route 22 and Main Street, $10. 963-8079.

OBITUARIES CATHERINE BENINCASA MCALEVEY Catherine Benincasa McAlevey passed away in Albany, New York on April 13, 2013 after a brave battle with breast cancer. Survived by her Father & Step Mother, John F. and Marlene McAlevey of New York City and Jay NY. HAROLD A. LECLAIR JUN 20, 1920 - APR 17, 2013 Harold A. LeClair, 92, a resiney Aircraft from 1941 until dent of Keene Valley, NY his retirement in 1977, at age died Wednesday, April 17, 57. He loved his life, his fam2013 at Horace Nye Home. ily, the sun, his many friends Mr. LeClair was born June and neighbors and his home20, 1920 in Upper Jay, NY to town of Keene Valley. His Exilda and William LeClair. garden was his pride and joy He was preceded in death and sharing his vegetables by his parents, one sister, made him very happy. Thelma Brown, brother A memorial service will be William LeClair, Jr. and his held Sunday April 21st at wife of 63 years, Nona Lovett 2PM with Rev. Milton DudLeClair. Survived by daughley at the Keene Valley Conters, Elaine Walsh and husgregational Church. Burial band James of North Branwill be held at a later date. ford, CT, Janet Peterie and Donations in his memory can husband Jon of Denver, CO, be made to the Keene Comgrandchildren, Kevin Walsh munity Trust, PO Box 498, and wife Kim, Jennifer Walsh Keene Valley, NY 12943, and husband Jason Massai, Keene Veterans Memorial on great granddaughter Olivia the memo line. Walsh, sister-in-law Hilda Arrangements have been enSenecal and 6 nieces and trusted to W.M.Marvins Sons nephews. funeral home in ElizabethProud Navy veteran of town. For online condolences World War II serving on the please visit USS Independence. He was www.wmmarvins.com employed by Pratt & Whit-

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April 27, 2013

News Briefs

Youth Theater classes at NCCCA PLATTSBURGH — Theater for Youth program will be hosted by the The North Country Cultural Center for the Arts. The two spring classes include: Intro to theater and Improvisation, and character development class called “What a Character!.Ó Classes are for students ages 5 to 12. Classes begin on April 20 and run through May 4. The classes will be taught by Deb Vanneman. The intro course for ages 5 to 8 teaches students to develop stage skills through improv exercises and theater games. Students will learn about stage movement, give and take between actors, visual and vocal storytelling, and creative focus in this beginner-level class. The class will be held from 10 a.m.to noon. In “What a Character!,” children ages 9 to 12 learn to interpret scripts, experiment with body lead and different voices, explore a characterÕ s history and point of view, and create a believable and interesting persona on stage. The class will run from 1 to 3 p.m. The cost of the program is $95 or $85 for Arts Center members. For more information or to register, call the Arts Center at 563-1604.

Schools partner for local IMPACTT PLATTSBURGH — Beekmantown High School and Clinton Community College have partnered with ETS, Inc., CITEC and The North Country Workforce Investment Board to pilot IMPACTT −the “Innovative Manufacturing Partnerships; Advancing Careers through Technical TrainingÓ program −to address the local manufacturing industry’s need for a skilled workforce, while also helping high school graduates find sustainable-wage jobs in Clinton County. IMPACTT began in November and will run through this summer, giving BHS students the opportunity to meet business and industry professionals as well as educators, to explore the advanced manufacturing industry and options for entry-level employment after graduation. In July, new BHS graduates will participate in training to obtain the Manufacturing Skills Standard Council (MSSC) Certified Production Technician (CPT) and National Work Readiness Credential (NWRC). IMPACTT will culminate with an employment event focused on job placement in local manufacturing companies. For more information contact Paul DeDominicas at 5624144 or via email, paul.dedominicas@clinton.edu.

Richard L. Foreman, D.M.D. 518.297.8110

representatives of the ARC, some of the individuals they serve, and members of Pi Kappa Phi worked shoulder to shoulder using rakes to scoop debris into plastic bags. “We decided we wanted to look into local opportunities, so we reached out to the ARC,” said Victor Delregno Jr., president of the Eta Kappa Chapter of Pi Kappa Phi. “We’re the only (national) fraternity to own and operate our own philanthropy, Push America, which aims to change the way society views people with disabilities.Ó Delregno pointed out that, when working to change peoplesÕ perceptions, even seemingly trivial distinctions, like saying ‘people with disabilities’ instead of ‘disabled people,’ are important. “The person always comes before the disability,” Delregno said. “We’re Marvin Desrocher helped paint over graffiti as part of Green-up Day on Saturday, April 20. The event all the same. Some of us are born a litwas a collaborative effort sponsored by the Clinton County Advocacy and Resource Center and the tle different, but thatÕ s not a reason to Eta Kappa chapter of Pi Kappa Phi, a Plattsburgh State fraternity installed in Nov. 2012. ostracize people or to stay away from Photo by Shaun Kittle them.” Delregno said he has a cousin who is autistic, and that being close to her while growing up is what From page 1 inspired him to do more to help individuals with disabilities. Pi Kappa Phi will be participating in the Autism Awareness to begin a partnership of volunteering in the community. Walk on Saturday, April 27 at the Plattsburgh Oval. Volunteering in Plattsburgh might be new to the fraternity, The walk has already raised almost $10,000 to support local but itÕ s standard procedure for the ARC. programs and increase awareness about autism in the commuÒ The people we serve have a lot of interest in giving back to nity. the community through volunteerism,” said Mike Clausen of Registration for the event begins at 10 a.m., and the walk bethe ARC, who helped organize the event. Ò This is not just a one gins at 11 a.m. day a year thing. We have people volunteering at the Humane To pre-register, sponsor a walker, or make a donation, visit Society, soup kitchens and the Tiger Scouts. We have volunteers aaneny.org. all over the place.Ó Rounding out a busy weekend, Pi Kappa Phi is also helping Clausen consulted the City of Plattsburgh Department of Pub- the North Country Down Syndrome Association throw a bowllic Works, who recommended some projects for Green-up Day. ing jamboree Sunday, April 28 Those projects included picking up leaves and litter, and do- from 1-5 p.m. at North Bowl ing some light painting underneath the railroad bridge that Lanes in Plattsburgh. spans the Saranac River downtown. The entry fee, which inOne of the volunteers with the ARC, Marvin Desrocher, took cludes shoe rentals, is $60 for part in the painting. teams of four and $18 for indi“Everybody’s been spraying graffiti down here, and I viduals. It is also $18 per perSat., April 27 - Thurs., May 2, 2013 thought, ‘why not paint over it?’” Desrocher said. son for teams of two or three Desrocher carefully ran a paint roller over the unsightly word- people. 42 (PG13) age, making the scenery for those entering or leaving PlattsTo register, email the North 12:45PM • 3:30PM burgh by train a little more welcoming. Country Down Syndrome 7:00PM • 9:40PM He took a step back, admiring his own handiwork, and said Association at ncdownsynEvil Dead (R) heÕ d be happy to participate in Green-up Day again. drome@gmail.com. 2:35PM • 9:45PM The level of enthusiasm was the same at Trinity Park, where G.I. Joe: Retaliation (PG13) (RealD 3D) 12:10PM • 4:55PM • 7:20PM Iron Man 3 (PG13) (RealD 3D) (MAY 2) 9:00PM Iron Man 3 (PG13) (MAY 2) 9:45PM Jurassic Park (PG13) (RealD 3D) 12:45PM • 3:35PM • 6:45PM Oblivion (PG13) 12:00PM • 1:00PM • 3:05PM 4:00PM • 6:15PM • 7:10PM 9:00PM • 10:00PM Olympus Has Fallen (R) 12:30PM • 3:25PM 7:00PM • 9:50PM Oz: The Great and Powerful (PG)(RealD 3D) 12:00PM • 6:40PM Oz: The Great and Powerful (PG) 3:00PM • 9:30PM Pain and Gain (R) 12:30PM • 3:20PM 6:55PM • 9:40PM Scary Movie 5 (PG13) 12:10PM • 2:45PM • 5:10PM 7:35PM • 10:00PM The Big Wedding (R) 12:15PM • 2:30PM • 5:10PM 7:30PM • 9:35PM The Croods (PG) 12:05PM • 2:20PM 4:35PM • 6:50PM The Place Beyond The Pines (R) 1:00PM • 4:00PM 7:05PM • 10:00PM

Green up

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16 - The Burgh

Sell it local or sell it regionally! Call 1-800-989-4237 x201 today! or visit our self-service site at www.theclassifiedsuperstore.com BLOWN HEADGASKET? Any vehicle repair yourself. State of the art 2-Component chemical process. Specializing in Cadillac Northstar Overheating. 100% guaranteed. 1866-780-9038 www.RXHP.com

HOME IMPROVEMENT HAS YOUR BUILDING SHIFTED Contact Woodford Bros. Inc. for straightening, leveling and foundation repairs at 1-800-OLD-BARN / www.woodfordbros.com HAS YOUR BUILDING SHIFTED OR SETTLED? Contact Woodford Brothers, Inc. for straightening, leveling, foundation and wood frame repairs at 1-800-OLDBARN. www.woodfordbros.com. "Not applicable in Queens County" REPLACEMENT WINDOWS $179 Installed. Double Hung Tilt-In. New $500.00 Tax Credit Avail. Lifetime Warranty. Call Now! 1866-272-7533.

INSURANCE PERMANENT LIFE INSURANCE Qualify to age 86. Fast. Easy. Few Questions. No Exam! 1-800-9383439, x24; 1-516-938-3439, x24.

PERMANENT LIFE INSURANCE. Qualify to age 86. Fast. Easy. Few Questions. No Exam! 1-800-9383439, x24;

LOGGING LAVALLEE LOGGING is looking to harvest and purchase standing timber, primarily Spruce , White Cedar & Chip Wood. Willing to pay New York State stumpage prices on all species. References available. Matt Lavallee, 518-6456351

REAL ESTATE 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 AMERICA’S BEST Buy! 20 AcresOnly $99/mo! $0-Down, No Credit Checks, MONEY BACK GUARANTEE, Owner Financing. West Texas, Beautiful Mountain Views! Free Color Brochure, 1-800-7558953 www.sunsetranches.com AVAILABLE NOW 2-4 Bedroom Homes Take Over Payments No Money Down. No Credit Check. Call Now!! 1-888-269-9192

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ESCAPE THE WINTER BLUES Avg. 250 Sunny Days New Construction in St. Augustine, Florida Choose your home lot, floorplan and location HomesByDeltona.com 904.797.6565

VACATION PROPERTY OCEAN CITY, MARYLAND. Best selection of affordable rentals. Full/ partial weeks. Call for FREE brochure. Open daily. Holiday Real Estate. 1-800-638-2102. Online reservations: www.holidayoc.com

FOR SALE BY OWNER LP Mirror Lake Drive residence - $849,000 LP Victor Herbert Road residence - $599,000 LP Main St. Office & Apts. $349,000 LP Mill Hill income-producing residence/garage - $65,000 SL Prospect Street - residence fix-up $49,000 SL Prospect Street - .13 acre vacant land - $12,000 SL William Street - residence $65,000 Dannemora Bouck Street residence - fix-up - $39,000

GARAGE SALE/ BARN SALE ATTN: GARAGE SALE ENTHUSIASTS! Buying or selling second-hand treasures?The NYS Department of State's Division of Consumer Protection, in conjunction with the Free Community Papers of New York, recommends checking the following websites to help assure that the item has not been recalled or the subject of a safety warning: http:/www.recalls.gov and the Consumer Product Safety Commission at www.cpsc.gov. For other important recall and product safety information visit the Division of Consumer Protection at www.dos.ny.gov

Essex 2.7 acres vacant land $13,000

Mooers 27.7 acres with house/ mobile home/barn - $220,000

FORT ANN VILLAGE WIDE SALE, May 4th & 5th. Antiques, Collectibles, Housewares, much more! Vendors Welcome. Call 518-639-8634 after 5pm. Great food and fun!

Wilmington 2.7 acres/vac land on Ausable River - $12,000

CAREER TRAINING

Jay Ausable acres residence $99.000

Owner Financing 518-523-2595 GEORGIA LAND SALE! Great investment! Developed 1Acre20Acre homesites. Augusta Area. Financing from $195/month. Owner 706-364-4200 ORGANIC FARM 1ST TIME OFFERED- APRIL 27TH! 5 acres- 30 Mile Views - $19,900. 4 acresTrout Stream - $24,900. 2 to 17 ac tracts! Just off NY Thruway, 30min west of Albany Region! Call (888) 905-8847 www.NewYorkLandandLakes.com

ROOFING WHY REPLACE WHEN YOU CAN REPAIR! SAVE $$ When choosing a repair. Call today for your emergency repair! LAKESIDE KANGA ROOF, 1-800-FOR-ROOF. AD #: 030713-G

MEDICAL CAREERS BEGIN HERE MEDICAL CAREERS BEGIN HERE Train ONLINE for Allied Health and Medical Management. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified.SCHEV certified. Call 1800-495-8402 www.CenturaOnline.com

HELP WANTED $1,960.00 WEEKLY! Mailing Postcards! Easy! Register Online Today! www.PostcardsToWealth.com ZNZ Referral Agents Wanted! $20-$60/ Hour! www.FreeJobPosition.com More Legitimate Opportunities Available! www.LegitCashJobs.com $5000 BONUS for Frac Sand O/O's with complete rigs. Relocate to Texas. Great economy and working conditions. www.Quick-sand.com 817-9263535 AIRLINES ARE HIRING -Train for hands on Aviation Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified -Job placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance 866-296-7093

GENERAL EMPLOYMENT Owner Operators Wanted! 85% of Gross, 40% Advance. No Forced Dispatch, Trailer Rental Program. O/ OP's with own Authority Welcome. Flatbed 866-777-8319 HEALTHCARE SERVICES - PERSONAL ASSISTANT seeking assist. for disabled teenager summer. Duties: help w/daily activities in home & community 6-8 hrs a day Drivers lic a must. Begin late June, need applicants ASAP. Keene peabomom@gmail.com HELP WANTED Earn Extra income Assembling CD cases From Home. Call our Live Operators Now! No experience Necessary 1-800-4057619 Ext 2605 www.easyworkgreatpay.com HELP WANTED AIRLINES ARE HIRING Train for hands on Aviation Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified Job placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance 866-296-7093 HELP WANTED! MAKE $1000 weekly mailing Brochures From Home! Genuine Opportunity! No Experience Required. Start I m m e d i a t e l y ! w w w . m a i l i n ggroup.com HELP WANTED!!! - Local People Needed to Mail Our Brochures$575/WEEKLY Potential Assembling Products- Online Data Entry Positions Available. Genuine! www.LocalHelpNeeded.com MAKE OVER $1480 IN SIX HOURS as independent defensive driving instructor PT/ FT.essam@idrivesafely.com www.multilineins.com 1-888-4181681 NEED 18-24 energetic people to travel with young successful business group. Paid travel. No experience necessary. $500-$750 weekly. 480-718-9540 RETAIL - STORE MANAGER STORE MANAGER Looking for a "PLAYER/COACH" to lead our Team in Westport New York. Manager will be responsible for C-Store Operations. Duties to include staffing, merchandising and cash control. Competitive Wages and Benefits. If you want to be part of the winning Team please send or email your resume to: Midway Oil Corporation 217 North Main Street Rutland, VT 05701 Attn: Linda - Westport Linda@midwayoil.biz

HELP WANTED LOCAL

AIRLINES ARE HIRING -TRAIN FOR hands on Aviation Career. FAA approved program.Financial aid if qualified - Job placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance 1-877-202-0386. ASSISTANT MANAGER AND SALES ASSOCIATES Westport Mobil has immediate openings for Assistant Manager and Sales Associates. Apply in Person at: Westport Mobil 7341 NYS 9 N, Westport, NY 12993 No Phone calls ATTENTION HOMEMAILERS!! $5/ ENVELOPE! www.MailingBrochure sForCash.com - MYSTERY SHOPPERS Earn $150/Day. www.AmericanShopperJobs.com CAN YOU SPEAK TWO LANGUAGES? YOU ARE HIRED! www.OnlineTranslatorsWanted.co m AVAILABLE HELP WANTED!! Earn extra money in our free popular homemailer program, includes valuable directory. Genuine! Start now! 888-519-1920 www.easywork-fromhome.com 28989

AUTOMOTIVE

SALES EXECUTIVE NORTHERN INSURING Agency, Inc. is looking for a qualified professional to join our Best in Class insurance team. This position in our Plattsburgh office will be fast paced and challenging while working with a Senior Sales Executive on the handling of Personal Insurance Accounts. The qualified candidate must have excellent communication skills, enjoy working with the public, and be a team player. Accurate data entry is required. If you are looking for the right career, submit your resume. Experience is preferred but we are willing to train the right person. Send resume AND salary requirements by April 29, 2013 to: Northern Insuring Agency, Inc., Attn: Tracy Berry, HR Manager, PO Box 789, Plattsburgh, NY 12901 or email to: tracyb@northerninsuring.com. EOE

ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS for Secretary to the Elizabethtown Zoning Board of Appeals. Applicants must have secretarial and computer skills. Attending the monthly ZBA evening meetings is required. Salary based on experience. Send letter or e-mail of interest to etown@etownny.com or mail to ZBA PO Box 265 Elizabethtown, NY 12932. BUS DRIVERS NEEDED: Camp Dudley YMCA in Westport is looking for qualified school bus drivers to drive during the upcoming camp season. The season starts on June 25, 2013 and ends on August 18, 2013. Personnel must meet all mandatory state requirements for transporting passengers in vehicles with a 16 passenger or greater seating capacity. Interested drivers should contact Steve Denton at 518-962-4720. The deadline for applying is May 25, 2013. COOK & BARTENDER Full or Part Time Michele 518-354-2092 Leave Message. Westport, NY ESSEX COUNTY HORACE NYE Home Announces Vacancy for a Full Time Supervising Nurse, $26.06/Hour with benefits. For applications and more information contact Essex County Personnel @ 518-873-3360 or on website: http://www.co.essex.ny.us/person neljobs.asp FARM HELP NEEDED Handyman with tools and own transportation for farm located in Westport. Call: 518-572-9391 THE CLINTON, ESSEX, WARREN, WASHINGTON BOCES Is Currently Accepting Applications For The Following Anticipated Positions: Temporary On-Call Custodial Workers Mineville Campus Must meet Civil Service requirements and provide copy of NYS Driver's License Salary: Per Contract Reply By: May 7, 2013 Effective Date: ASAP Send (Short Form) Application (obtained from the Human Resources Office or From Website: CVES.Org), Letter of Intent, Resume, copy of High School Diploma or GED, and 3 Letters of Recommendation to: Rachel Rissetto CVES P.O. Box 455 518 Rugar Street Plattsburgh, NY 12901 (518) 536-7320 BOCES is an EO/AAE

WESTAFF SERVICES We'll find the perfect employee and make you the hero! Office /Clerical, Light Industrial Professional/Technical Managerial Call today 518-566-6061

ADOPTIONS A BABY IS OUR DREAM: Neil and Naomi are longing to ADOPT. Happily married, creative, active, loving couple. Please call: 1-800-9823678 or www.coupleseeks adoption.com EXPENSES PAID. ADOPT: A loving married couple wishes to adopt newborn to support wholeheartedly, educate fully, discipline fairly, engage completely and love unconditionally! Natalie/David: 1-855-759-2229. www.davidandnatalie.info.

Juggling Your Budget? Advertise Small, Get Big Results! Call 1-800-989-4237


www.the-burgh.com

April 27, 2013 ADOPT: A childless couple seeks to adopt. Loving home with tenderness, warmth, happiness. Financial security. Expenses paid. Regis & David. (888) 986-1520 or text (347) 406-1924; www.davidandregisadopt.com ADOPT: OUR hearts reach out to you. Couple seek newborn bundle of joy to complete our family. Please call Maria and John (888)988-5028. johnandmariaadopt.com ADOPT: A loving married couple wishes to adopt newborn to support wholeheartedly, educate fully, discipline fairly, engage completely and love unconditionally! Natalie/David: 1-855-759-2229. www.davidandnatalie.info. ADOPT: A childless couple seeks to adopt. Loving home with tenderness, warmth, happiness. Financial security. Expenses paid. Regis & David (888)986-1520 or text (347)406-1924; www.davidandregisadopt.com ADOPTION A childless married couple seeks to adopt. Financial security. Homestudy approved! Let's help each other. Expenses paid. Carolyn & Ken. 1-800-2186311. ADOPTION A BABY IS OUR DREAM: Neil and Naomi are longing to ADOPT. Happily married, creative, active, loving couple. Please call: 1-800-982-3678 or www.coupleseeksadoption.com EXPENSES PAID. CARING, ENERGETIC COUPLE with so much love to give wish to adopt a newborn into our loving and secure home. Expenses Paid. Please call Courtney & Dan 1-888942-9599 courtneydanadopt.info IS ADOPTION RIGHT FOR YOU? Choose your family. LIVING EXPENSES PAID. One True Gift Adoptions. Call 24/7. 866-4136292. Void in Illinois/New Mexico/ Indiana PREGNANT? CONSIDERING ADOPTION? Talk with caring adoption expert. Choose from families Nationwide. LIVING EXPENSES PAID. Call 24/7 Abby's One True Gift Adoptions 866-4136296 Florida Agency #100021542 Void in Illinois/New Mexico/Indiana

ANNOUNCEMENTS

CANADA DRUG CENTER is your choice for safe and affordable medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy will provide you with savings of up to 75 percent on all your medication needs. Call today 1-800-413-1940 for $10.00 off your first prescription and free shipping. DISH NETWORK STARTING AT $19.99/month (for 12 mos.) & High Speed internet starting at $14.95/month (where available). SAVE! Ask About SAME DAY Installation! CALL 1-888-823-8160 HEAVEN OR HELL ARE JUST A HEARTBEAT AWAY. Repent and have faith in Jesustoday. Wayne 1607-793-0760. HIGHSPEED INTERNET EVERYWHERE BY SATELLITE! Speeds up to 12mbps! (200x faster than dial-up.) Starting at $49.95/mo. CALL NOW & GO FAST! 1-888-927-0861

ANTIQUES/ COLLECTIBLES

NOTICES•

PUBLIC

PUBLIC

Denton Publications in collaboration with participating newspapers, the New York Press Association, and the New York Newspaper Publishers Association provides online access to public notice advertisements from throughout New York and other parts of the country. You can access the legal notices on the publication landing pages under the home button at denpubs.com. WHAT ARE PUBLIC NOTICES? Public Notices are advertisements placed in newspapers by the government, businesses, and individuals. They include: government contracts, foreclosures, unclaimed property, community information and more!

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MY PUBLIC NOTICES Now Available at... www.denpubs.com

NOTICES•

•MY PUBLIC NOTICES•

42267

AIRLINE CAREERS begin here Become an Aviation Maintenance Tech. FAA approved training. Financial aid if qualified - Housing available. Job placement assistance. Call AIM (888) 686-1704

DO YOU RECEIVE regular monthly payments from an annuity or insurance settlement and NEED CASH NOW? Call J.G. Wentworth today at 1-800-741-0159.

AIRLINE CAREERS begin here Become an Aviation Maintenance Tech. FAA approved training. Financial aid if qualified - Housing available. Job placement assistance. Call AIM (866)453-6204

FIREWOOD FIREWOOD GREEN Hardwood Cut, Split & Delivered. Call for pricing. 518-593-3263

FOR SALE 1972 GRAND TORINO runs, needs work comes with some new parts $3200; Chevy Van 30 Travelmaster camper $2500. 518-962-4394 6 ALUMINUM Dock Sections, 4' wide 10-13' long, $2400. 518-523 -0190

ANTIQUE FAIR AND FLEA MARKET May 4th & 5th at the Washington County Fairgrounds, Rte. 29, Greenwich NY. $3 admission. (Sat. 8a-6p, Sun 9a-4p) Featuring over 200 dealers. GREAT FOOD. Early-Bird Friday (5/3 - 7a-6p $10). RAIN or SHINE. Call (518) 331-5004 ROCKWELL KENT COLLECTABLES Call for details. 518-576-9751

APPLIANCES GRADUATING HIGH SCHOOL? Get ready for College. Dormsize 4.3 cu. ft. Kenmore Compact Refrigerator for Sale. Works great, $85 OBO. 518-643-9391.

ELECTRONICS *LOWER THAT CABLE BILL! Get Satellite TV today! FREE System, installation and HD/DVR upgrade. Programming starting at $19.99. Call NOW 1-800-935-8195 BUNDLE & SAVE on your CABLE, INTERNET PHONE, AND MORE. High Speed Internet starting at less than $20/mo. CALL NOW! 800-291-4159 DIRECT TO Home Satellite TV $19.99/mo. Free Installation FREE HD/DVR Upgrade Credit/Debit Card Req. Call 1-800-795-3579

60TH ANNUAL PLANT SALE (106 CHAPEL ST, FAYETTEVILLE, NY) Trinity Church will host its 60th annual Plant Sale on Sat, May 11, 9am to 11am. Prices range from 25 cents to $5 per plant for more than 60 varieties and up to 2,000 plants. There will also be a garden shop featuring used decorative pots and garden equipment, and a bake sale for your sweet tooth.

DIVORCE $450* NO FAULT or Regular Divorce. Covers children, property, etc. Only One Signature Required! *Excludes govt. fees. 1-800-522-6000 Ext. 100. Baylor &Associates, Inc. Est. 1977

DIRECTV, INTERNET, & Phone From $69.99/mo + Free 3 Months: HBO® Starz® SHOWTIME® CINEMAX® +FREE GENIE 4Room Upgrade + NFL SUNDAY TICKET! Limited Offer! Call Now 888-2485965 DIRECTV, INTERNET, & Phone From $69.99/mo + Free 3 Months: HBO® Starz® SHOWTIME® CINEMAX®+ FREE GENIE 4 Room Upgrade + NFL SUNDAY TICKET! Limited offer. Call Now 888-2485961

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

BUS TICKETS 20-Essex County Bus Monday-Friday 8:25am from Ausable Forks to Jay, Wilmington & Lake Placid. Return 3:50pm Lake Placid to Wilmington, Jay & Ausable Forks. $30. 518-335-6904 CLARINET, VIOLIN, FLUTE, TRUMPET, Amplifier, Fender Guitar $75 each. Upright Bass, Cello, Saxophone, French Horn, Drums $189 each. Others 4-sale 1-516377-7907 CLEARSPAN FABRIC Storage Building, 14'W x 14'H x 28'L. Ideal for boat or RV storage, $1500. 518-561-0528. EPOXY FLOOR GROUT Color Slate, 6 kits, new in box, sells for $261 a kit Asking $40. 518-2983595. GAS STOVE Avalon Cedar EF 31,000 btu stove with blower and gold accents $950.00 518-523-2066 HALF PRICE INSULATION most thickness, up to 3", 4x8 sheets High R Blue Dow. Please call 518 -597-3876. HAMILTON DRAFTING Table, 5' x 3', Oak w/ 4 drawers, like new, $400. 518-576-9751 NEW STROLLER asking $50. Call Darlene at 518-742-9658. RANCH MINK Coat, Black, size 12, seldom worn. A 1 condition. New $2000 Asking $700 OBO. 518-335-3687 SAWMILLS FROM only $3997.00MAKE & SAVE MONEY with your own bandmill- Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. FREE Info/DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com 1800-578-1363 Ext. 300N SAWMILLS: SAWMILLS from only $3997.00- MAKE & SAVE MONEY with your own bandmill- Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. FREE Info/DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com 1800-578-1363 Ext.300N TWO TOOL BOXES full of Snapon Craftsman Tools $3000 Call 518-728-7978 or Email pparksfamily@gmail.com WELL PUMP Gould, 1 HP, 4 months old, $500.00. 518-5760012

GET A FREE VACATION as well as IRS tax deduction BY DONATING your vehicle, boat, property, collectibles to DVAR. Help teens in crisis. Call: 1-800-338-6724

WOLFF SUNVISION Pro 28 LE Tanning Bed, very good condition, $1000. 518-359-7650

Need A Dependable Car? Check Out The Classifieds. Call 1-800-989-4237

FURNITURE

FINANCIAL SERVICES

FOR SALE 5 Drawer Solid Oak Desk 36"x60" Good Condition $200 OBO Call 518-546-7120

$$$ ACCESS LAWSUIT CASH NOW!!! Injury Lawsuit Dragging? $500-$500,000++ within 48 /hrs? 1-800-568-8321 www.lawcapital.com

43570

GENERAL

AMERICA’S BEST Buy! 20 AcresOnly $99/mo! $0-Down, No Credit Checks, MONEY BACK GUARANTEE, Owner Financing. West Texas, Beautiful Mountain Views! Free Color Brochure, 1-800-7558953 www.sunsetranches.com ARE YOU TAKING VIAGRA 100mg and CIALIS 20mg? 40 Pills + 4/ FREE only $99. #1 Male Enhancement, Discreet Shipping. Save $500! Buy The Blue Pill! 1-800213-6202 ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from Home. *Medical,*Business, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. SCHEV authorized. Call 800-5100784 www.CenturaOnline.com ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from Home. *Medical, *Business, *Criminal Justice, *Hospitality. Job placement assistance. Computer and Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV Authorized 800-494-3586 www.CenturaOnline.com ATTEND COLLEGE Online from Home. *Medical, *Business, *Criminal Justice, *Hospitality. Job placement assistance. Computer and Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV authorized. Call 888-2018657 www.CenturaOnline.com CASH FOR CARS, Any Make or Model! Free Towing. Sell it TODAY. Instant offer: 1-800-8645784 CASH FOR CARS: All Cars/Trucks Wanted. Running or Not! Top Dollar Paid. We Come To You! Any Make/Model. Call For Instant Offer: 1-800-864-5960 CASH PAID- UP TO $28/BOX for unexpired, sealed DIABETIC TEST STRIPS! 1 DAY PAYMENT & PREPAID shipping. BEST PRICES! Call 1-888-776-7771. www.Cash4DiabeticSupplies.com DIRECTV OFFICIAL TV Deal America's top satellite provider! DIRECTV Plans starting at $29.99/ mo for 12 months after instant rebate. Get the best in entertainment. 800-965-1051 DISH NETWORK. Starting at $19.99/month (for 12 mos.) & High Speed Internet starting at $14.95/month (where available.) SAVE! Ask About SAME DAY Installation! CALL Now! 1- 800-3091452 FINISH HIGH School at home in a few weeks. First Coast Academy, 1 -800-658-1180 x130. www.fcahighschool.org GET A FREE VACATION as well as IRS tax deduction BY DONATING your vehicle, boat, property, collectibles to DVAR. Help teens in crisis. Call: 1-800-338-6724 HIGHSPEED INTERNET EVERYWHERE By Satellite! Speeds up to 12mbps! (200x faster than dialup.) Starting at $49.95/mo. CALL NOW & GO FAST! 1-800-3570727 MEDICAL CAREERS begin here Online training for Allied Health and Medical Management. Job placement assistance. Computer And Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV certified. Call 800-5100784 www.CenturaOnline.com MEDIUM BUILD WHITE Female would like to meet good family man, 29 to 60, with morrales and family values, who would not mind relocating to another State, Love to escape to the mountains and I am a singer. I plan on leaving the State in August or September. Love to hear from you!! Call Joyce at 518-493-6441

ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from Home. *Medical, *Business, *Criminal Justice, *Hospitality. Job placement assistance. Computer and Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV authorized. Call 888-2018657 www.CenturaOnline.com

MEET SINGLES NOW! No paid operators, just people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages, connect live. FREE trial. Call 1-877-737-9447

!!OLD GUITARS WANTED!! Gibson, Martin, Fender, Gretsch. 1930 -1980. Top Dollar paid!! Call Toll Free 1-866-433-8277

MEET SINGLES right now! No paid operators, just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call now 1-888909-9905

**OLD GUITARS WANTED!** Gibson, Martin, Fender, Gretsch, Epiphone, Guild, Mosrite, Rickenbacker. Prairie State, D'Angelico, Stromberg, and Gibson Mandolins/Banjos. 1920's thru 1980's. TOP CASH PAID! 1-800-401-0440

ORCHARD SIDE RESTAURANT Chazy, NY (across from Chazy Orchards) 846-8855

The Burgh - 17 PAPA JOHN’S 1038 Route 11., Champlain, NY 298-3865 REVERSE MORTGAGES -NO mortgage payments FOREVER! Seniors 62+! Government insured. No credit/income requirements. Free 28 pg. catalog. 1-888-660 3033 All Island Mortgage ROTARY INTERNATIONAL - Start with Rotary and good things happen. Rotary, humanity in motion. Find information or locate your local club at www.rotary.org. Brought to you by your free community paper and PaperChain. SAVE ON Cable TV -Internet-Digital Phone-Satellite. You`ve Got A Choice! Options from ALL major service providers. Call us to learn more! CALL Today. 1-800-6820802 THE OCEAN CORP. 10840 Rockley Road, Houston, Texas 77099. Train for a New Career. *Underwater Welder. Commercial Diver. *NDT/Weld Inspector. Job Placement Assistance. Financial Aid available for those who qualify. 1 -800-321-0298. THE THINK And Grow Rich of the 21st Century! For free CD! www.thepaywindow.com 414-939 -5950 VT GUN SHOW APRIL APRIL 2728, AMERICAN LEGION #27, MIDDLEBURY, VT. 05753 For INFO CALL 802-875-4540 GREENMTGUNSHOWTRAIL.COM WORK ON JET ENGINES - Train for hands on Aviation Maintenance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified - Job placement assistance. Call AIM (866) 854- 6156.

GUNS & AMMO VT GUN SHOW April 27-28, Am Legion, Middlebury,05753 info 802-875-4540 greenmtgunshowtrail.com

HEALTH DO YOU TAKE VIAGRA 100MG and CIALIS 20mg? 40 Pills + 4/ FREE only $99. #1 Male Enhancement, Discreet Shipping. Save $500! The Blue Pill! Now 1-888796-8870 EYE CARE FOR THE ADIRONDACKS Plattsburgh:566-2020 Saranac Lake: 891-2412 Malone:483-0065 http://www.eyecareadk.com GANIENKEH WHOLISTIC HEALTH CENTER 3083 Rand Hill Rd., Altona, NY 493-6300 IF YOU USED YAZ/YASMIN/OCELLA BIRTH CONTROL PILLS between 2001 and the present time and suffered a stroke or heart attack or developed blood clots, you may beentitled to compensation. Call Attorney Charles Johnson. 1-800-5355727 MEDICAL ALERT FOR SENIORS 24/7 monitoring. FREE Equipment. FREE Shipping.Nationwide Service. $29.95/Month. CALL Medical Guardian Today. 1-888-905-4710 RICHARD L. FOREMAN DMD GENERAL FAMILY DENTISTRY 78 Champlain Street (Route 11) Rouses Point, NY 12979 297-8110 TAKE VIAGRA/CIALIS? 40 100mg/20MG Pills + 4 FREE only $99. Save $500! 1-888-7968878 WERE YOU IMPLANTED WITH A ST. JUDE RIATA DEFIBRILLATOR LEAD WIRE between June 2001 and December 2010? Have you had this lead replaced, capped or did you receive shocks from the lead? You may be entitled to compensation. Contact Attorney Charles Johnson 1-800-535-5727

LAWN & GARDENW 2003 22 HP 50" Mower w/ Snow Blower attachment and cab - Sears $2500.00 OBO. 518-891-6791 BRUSH HOG Model EFM600. Used 1 year, like new. Finish mower. 518-570-8837 $1,000

YOU CAN’T ESCAPE THE BUYS IN THE CLASSIFIEDS! 1-800-989-4237

North Country Telephone Exchange Directory (518) 236.............Altona/Mooers 251.................North Creek 293.......................Saranac 297...............Rouses Point 298...................Champlain 327.................Paul Smiths 352..............Blue Mt. Lake 358...............Ft. Covington 359................Tupper Lake 483........................Malone 492.................Dannemora 493.................West Chazy 494................Chestertown 497.................Chateaugay 499.....................Whitehall 523..................Lake Placid 529...........................Moria 532..............Schroon Lake 543..........................Hague 546.......Port Henry/Moriah 547........................Putnam 561-566...........Plattsburgh 576....Keene/Keene Valley 581,583,584,587 ..............Saratoga Springs 582....................Newcomb 585................Ticonderoga 594..........Ellenburg Depot 597.................Crown Point 623...............Warrensburg 624...................Long Lake 638............Argyle/Hartford 639.......................Fort Ann 642......................Granville 643.............................Peru 644............Bolton Landing 647.............Ausable Forks 648..................Indian Lake 654.........................Corinth 668...............Lake George 695................Schuylerville 735.............Lyon Mountain 746,747..........Fort Edward / Hudson Falls 743,744,745,748,761,792, 793,796,798. . . .Glens Falls 834....................Keeseville 846..........................Chazy 856.............Dickerson Ctr. 873....Elizabethtown/Lewis 891..............Saranac Lake 942......................Mineville 946..................Wilmington 962......................Westport 963...........Willsboro/Essex

VERMONT (802)

247.......................Brandon 372....................Grand Isle 388...................Middlebury 425......................Charlotte 434....................Richmond 438...............West Rutland 453.......Bristol/New Haven 462......................Cornwall 475.........................Panton 482....................Hinesburg 545...................Weybridge 655......................Winooski 658....................Burlington 758........................Bridport 759.......................Addison 654,655,656,657,658,660, 860,862,863,864,865,951, 985....................Burlington 877...................Vergennes 769,871,872,878,879 ..................Essex Junction 893...........................Milton 897....................Shoreham 899......................Underhill 948..........................Orwell 888....................Shelburne

42266

•MY PUBLIC NOTICES•


www.the-burgh.com

18 - The Burgh WANTED TO BUY

ACCESSORIES

FARM LIVESTOCK

BUYING EVERYTHING! FURS, Coins, Gold, Antiques, Watches, Silver, Art, Diamonds."The Jewelers Jeweler Jack" 1-917-696-2024 By Appointment. Lic-Bonded.

BARREL RACING SADDEL, 15" seat, dk. oil finish, great condition, includes headstall & breastplate, pad, all for $500. "Imperial" brand made by Circle "Y". Great for teenager or med. woman getting into gaming. Call 9am-9pm 802-524-6275.

BABY PIGLETS FOR SALE $70 Call for details. 518-962-2060

WESTPORT: OFFICE SUITES. Fully furnished w/cubicles, desks, computer & phone hook-ups. 720 sq. ft. Lake views. Contact Jim Forcier @ 518-962-4420.

WANTS TO PURCHASE minerals and other oil & gas interests. Send details P.O. Box 13557, Denver, Co 80201

GARAGE SALE!!

One Person's Trash Is Another Person's Treasure.

OLDE ENGLISH BULLDOGGE PUPPIES Reg.4Males,Family Raised,Shots/ Wormings/UTD Health Guarantee www.coldspringkennel.com For Prices Please Call: 518-597-3090

1 ACRE OF Land at Wood Rd., West Chazy, NY, close to schools, nice location. Please call 518-4932478 for more information. BUILDING LOTS for Sale in Town of Moriah Starting at $22,500 Call 518-572-3825 for more info

MOBILE HOME

FOR SALE 1.4 Acres, Well & Electric done. 518-546-4037

Juggling Your Budget? Advertise Small, Get Big Results! Call 1-800-989-4237 FURNISHED PARK Model with attached room, Voyager Resort, Tucson, Arizona #6-256. Prime corner lot with 3 fruit trees, and a 1995 Buick Roadmaster. Go to www.forsalebyowner for pictures and details. Ad Listing #23927596. $23,950. Call Karen Armstrong 518-563-5008 or 518 -569-9694.

GARAGE SALE! GARAGE SALE! 3 WEEKS FOR

$15

Personal ClassiďŹ ed Ads Only - No Commercial Accounts. One Item Per Ad - Ad Must Include Price. Ad Must Be Prepaid Cancellations Accepted At Any Time, No Refund After Ad Is Placed. * 4 Lines is approximately 15 words

AUCTIONS MONTGOMERY COUNTY, NY REAL PROPERTY TAX FORECLOSURE AUCTION: May 22nd @11AM, America's Best Value Inn, Amsterdam, NY. 800-2927653. Free brochure: www.HAROFF.com

Name: ________________________________________________________________ Address: _______________________________________________________________ Phone: ________________ E-mail (Required): __________________________________ Amount Enclosed:________Card #: _________________________ Security #: _________ Exp. Date: ___________________ Signature: __________________________________

Add a Border for $2.50

Add Shading for $3.00

2 BEDROOM ON .3 ACRE, Front Street, Keeseville. $29,000. 5 to 1 P/E ratio. 518-335-6904.

ALTONA, NY 3 BR/2 BA, Single Family Home, bulit in 1994, Perfect entertainment home, peaceful country setting 15 minutes from Plattsburgh. Large deck, 28' pool, patio with built in gas grill, 2 car garage with workshop. A MUST SEE $105,000 518-570-0896 MORRISONVILLE 4 BR/2.5 BA, Single Family Home, 1,920 square feet, bulit in 1998, Colonial Cape, attached 2 car garage, gas fireplace, finished basement, large fenced in backyard with above ground swimming pool on corner lot. Located in Morrisonville in the Saranac School District. Great Family Neighborhood. $229,500 Call 518 -726-0828 Dfirenut@gmail.com

REAL ESTATE AUCTION

Adirondacks South - Times of Ti, Adirondack Journal, News Enterprise Adirondacks North - North Countryman, Valley News, Tri-Lakes Valley News, The Burgh Vermont - Addison Eagle Capital p District - Spotlight Newspapers Central New York - Eagle Newspapers

Add a Picture for $5.00

SPECTACULAR VIEWS 79.5 Acres Adk. 518-546-4037

FARM

(ONLY $5 PER WEEK) 4 LINES ADD ANOTHER ZONE FOR ONLY $9.00

MORRISONVILLE, NY , 3 BR/1 BA Single Family Home, 1,056 square feet, built in 1979, New roof, kitchen, bath & water heater. Full basement. $99,500 OBO. MAKE ME MOVE! 518-4209602

Add a Graphic for $2.00

Deadline: D ead dline: F Friday riiday att 4 4pm pm

Mail to: The Classified Superstore - P.O. Box 338, Elizabethtown, NY 12932 FFax: 518-873-6360 • Phone: 518-873-6368 • Email: adirondacksnorth@theclassiďŹ edsuperstore.com

20150

All Ads will appear on our classified network site at NO ADDITIONAL COST!

LAND FOR SALE ORGANIC FARM 1ST TIME OFFERED-APRIL 27TH ! 5 acres- 30 Mile Views - $19,900 4 acres- Trout Stream - $24,900 2 to 17 ac tracts! Just off NY Thruway, 30min west of Albany Region! Call (888) 905-8847 www.NewYorkLandandLakes.com

SINGLE-FAMILY HOME

43569

AIRLINE CAREERS Begin Here

 �

877-205-2315

49360

•MY PUBLIC NOTICES•

•MY PUBLIC NOTICES• 42273

MY PUBLIC NOTICES Now Available at... www.denpubs.com

Denton Publications in collaboration with participating newspapers, the New York Press Association, and the New York Newspaper Publishers Association provides online access to public notice advertisements from throughout New York and other parts of the country. You can access the legal notices on the publication landing pages under the home button at denpubs.com. WHAT ARE PUBLIC NOTICES? Public Notices are advertisements placed in newspapers by the government, businesses, and individuals. They include: government contracts, foreclosures, unclaimed property, community information and more! 42270

NOTICES•

WANTS TO purchase minerals and other oil and gas interests. Send details to P.O. Box 13557 Denver, Co. 80201

LAND

LAKE SALE: 6 ACRES COAN LAKE, $24,900. 8 Acres house, Bass Ponds, $99,900. 5 Acres lake access $18,900. www.LandFirstNY.com 1-888-683 -2626

PUBLIC

WANTED ALL MOTORCYCLES, before 1980, Running or not. $Top CASH$ PAID! 1-315-5698094

DOGS

FOR RENT Elizabethtown, 4 Room office with bathroom and closet, reception area, in-floor heat, fire place, off street parking, . Near County Government Center. $700. per month, utilities included. 518578-7916

ORGANIC FARM. 1ST TIME OFFERED - APRIL 27th! 5 acres 30 Mile Views -$19,900. 4 acres Trout Stream - $24,900. 2 to 17 ac tracts! Just off NY Thruway, 30 min west of Albany Region! Call 1888-701-1864. www.newyorklandandlakes.com

•MY

CASH PAID- up to $28/Box for unexpired, sealed DIABETIC TEST STRIPS. 1-DAY PAYMENT. 1-800371-1136

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY

April 27, 2013

•MY PUBLIC NOTICES•


www.the-burgh.com

April 27, 2013 ACCESSORIES

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

CARS

BILL’S BODY SHOP 390 Military Turnpike, Plattsburgh, NY 643-8591

BOATS

1999 CHEVY BLAZER LS, V-6, auto, air, 2 door, new tires/brakes, 4 WD, Asking $2,900. 518-9468341

TIRES FOR SALE Michelin (4) Brand New Still in Wrap, 225/ 60R18 PRIMACY MXV4 $600. Grand Touring - All Season-Blackwall. 518-569-1681

1977 156 GLASTRON Boat with 70 HP Johnson motor, with trailer, excellent condition. $2500. 518-359-8605

VACATION PROPERTY

CROWN POINT 1 BR/1 BA, WATERFRONT cottage on Lake Champlain w/ dock and beach! csegard4346@yahoo.com or 518 -576-4346 ELIZABETHTOWN COTTAGE 1bedroom, 1 bath Available for short term rental. Full Kitchen Sleeps 4. Call for availability and rates. 518-873-1011 VACATION RENTALS OCEAN CITY, MARYLAND. Best selection of affordable rentals. Full/partial weeks. Call for FREE brochure. Open daily. Holiday Real Estate. 1-800-6382102. Online reservations: www.holidayoc.com

LOST & FOUND LOST CAT Male, orange tabby, answers to Calvin. Lost in NCCC neighborhood in Saranac Lake 4/ 8/13. Very Shy. Has distinctive black smudge on lower mouth. 518-891-2335

The Burgh - 19

TIRES ON steel rims, four, 215/ 65/R16, $99. 518-582-4252.

2005 DODGE MAGNUM RT HEMI Cool Vanilla/Gray Leather, 5-Speed Auto, 80K Miles, Sunroof/Roof Rack & More, Pristine Condition, Includes Four (4) Standard Snows on Wheels. Call For Price 518-569 -1681 RILEY FORD Route 9. , Chazy, NY www.rileyfordinc.com Call: (518) 846-7131

AUTO DONATION DONATE YOUR CAR to CHILDREN'S CANCER FUND of AMERICA and help end CHILDHOOD CANCER. Tax Deductible. Next Day Towing. Receive Vacation Voucher. 7 Days 1-800-469-8593

AUTO WANTED

2007 STINGRAY BOAT 25' Stingray Criuser, only 29 hours, LIKE NEW, sleeps 4, has bathroom, microwave, fridge, table, includes trailer, stored inside every winter. (518) 570-0896 $49,000

CARS/TRUCKS WANTED! Top $$$$$ PAID! Running or Not, All Years, Makes, Models. Free Towing! We're Local! 7 Days/Week. Call Toll Free: 1-888-416-2330

BOAT FOR SALE 1984 Cobia 17' bowrider, 115HP Evenrude outboard (newer), 2002 Karavan trailer, runs but needs some work. $1,500. 518-576-4255

CASH FOR CARS AND TRUCKS. Get A Top Dollar INSTANT Offer! Running or Not! 1-888-416-2208 (888) 416-2208

BOAT LIFT model# 1501, sits on the bottom of the lake. Make an Offer. 518-891-2767 Leave Message on Mail Box 1.

MOTORCYCLES

1999 HONDA REBEL good condition, Red/Black, 6500 miles. Asking $1695 OBO. Call after 3pm 518-962-2376 2006 HARLEY DAVIDSON SPORTSTER 883 Mint condition. 11,000 miles. Many extras incl. new battery, removable luggage rack, back rest & windshield. 518-946-8341. $4395 2010 HONDA STATELINE 1500 Miles, Black, Factory Custom Cruiser, 312 CC $7,800 518-5698170

WANTED JAPANESE MOTORCYCLE KAWASAKI 1967-1980 Z1900, KZ900, KZ1000, ZIR, KX1000MKII, A1-250, W1-650, H1 -500, H2-750, S1-250, S2-350, S3 -400 SUZUKIGS400, GT380, GT750, Honda CB750 (1969,1970) CASH. FREE PICKUP. 1-800-7721142, 1-310-721-0726 usa@classicrunners.com

TRUCKS 2000 RANGER 2000 Ranger XLT 4x4 Super Cab, camper top, liner, tonneau cover, 6 cyl., auto, AC, stereo, 130K, Asking $3595. 518-576-9042

RECREATIONAL VEHICLES 2000 24’ LAYTON Sleeps 6, very clean, excellent condition, must see, $6700 OBO. 518-643-9391

BUY-SELL-TRADE With The Classified Superstore 1-800-989-4237

2005 CHEVROLET SILVERADO 1500 Z71 CREW CAB (LOADED) 4X4, Silver, 78,500 mi, Elizabethtown, NY $12,000 (518) 572-3792

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

1-800-989-4237

THE EGGLEFIELD SPECTACULAR TRUCK-TACULAR SALES EVENT NEW 2013 FORD F-150 4X4 SUPERCAB STX STK# HSP712 18” CAST ALUM WHEELS, CHROME STEPS, SYNC SYSTEM, V8, 6 SPD. AUTO, SIRIUS

MSRP Ford Credit Customer Cash* Ford STX 5.0 Bonus Cash Ford 5.0 Special Cash Ford Retail Customer Cash Dealer Discount

$

$35,775 -$1,000 -$1,000 -$500 -$2,500 -$780

29,995 offer ends 7/8/13

TAKE THE ECO BOOST CHALLENGE 2013 FORD FIESTA SE

39 MPG HWY & CITY NEW!

NEW!

0% + $500 offer ends 6/3/13

2013 FORD MUSTANG

0% + $1,000 offer ends 6/3/13

NEW!

2013 FORD FOCUS

38 MPG HWY & CITY

2013 FORD TAURUS

0% + $1,750 offer ends 6/3/13

0% + $500 offer ends 6/3/13

NEW!

NEW!

30 MPG HWY & CITY

2013 FORD EDGE

0% + $1,000 offer ends 6/3/13

2013 FORD ESCAPE 4X4

NEW!

0% + $800 offer ends 6/3/13

2013 FORD FLEX

0% + $1,000 offer ends 6/3/13

*0% Requires Ford Motor Credit approval. All customers may not qualify. Ford Programs subject to change.

49032

NEW!


www.the-burgh.com

20 - The Burgh

BRAND NEW! 2013 DODGE DART SE

MSRP $18,885 Stock #AN124 Tungsten, 2.0 Liter 4 Cyl., Automatic, AC, Power Windows & Locks, 10 Airbags A

BRAND NEW! 2013 DODGE DART SXT

MSRP $20,830 Stock #AN241 Redline, Tigershark 16-Valve 2.0 Liter Engine, 6-Speed Powertech Automatic Transmission, Projector Fog Lamps, Remote Start, LED Racetrack Tail Lamps, UConnect Voice Command with Bluetooth, Sirius

April 27, 2013

BRAND NEW! 2013 DODGE DART LIMITED

MSRP $24,070 Stock #AN30 Tungsten, 1.4 Liter Intercooled Turbo w/ MultiAir Engine, 6-Speed Manual Transmission, Power Sunroof, UConnect 8.4N Radio with Navigation, Sirius, UConnect Voice Command with Bluetooth, Projector Fog Lamps, Parview Back-up Camera, Power Driver Seat

• Choice of 3 Engines • Up to 41 MPG Highway • Up to 184 HP • 10 Standard Airbags • Projector Headlamps • Dual Integrated Exhaust • Active Grille Shutters

The fast lane for small business.

Court Street • Elizabethtown, NY Located just 1/4 mile south of Cobble Hill Golf Course on Route 9 in Elizabethtown.

First Time Visitors, plug in to your GPS “7440 US Route 9, Elizabethtown, NY 12932” and we’ll greet you at the door!

(518) 873-6386

Tax, title extra. Photos are for illustration purposes only.

Dealer#3160005 49026

873-6386

7440 U.S. Rt. 9 Elizabethtown, NY

2012 Jeep Liberty Sport - Stk. #AN91A, black, approx. 23,000 mi............................................... $21,777 SOLD2012 Jeep Wrangler - Stk. #AN223A1, green, approx. 6,000 mi. ................................................... $24,480 2012 Jeep Patriot - Stk. #AN177A, red, approx. 20,000 mi............................................................. $18,980 2011 Dodge Ram 1500 - Stk. #AN211A, blue, approx. 23,000 mi. ................................................. $19,993 2011 Jeep Liberty Jet - Stk. #AN145A, blue, approx. 28,000 mi. .................................................. $18,888 SOLD 2010 Dodge Ram 2500 Crew TRX4 - Stk. #AN210A, black, approx. 19,000 mi. ....................... $31,997 2010 Dodge Caliber - Stk. #AP1251, white, approx. 33,000 mi. ..................................................... $15,880 SOLD 2009 Dodge Journey SXT - Stk. #AM275A, tan, approx. 47,000 mi. ............................................ $15,983 2008 Jeep Compass Sport - Stk. #AN217A, blue, approx. 63,000 mi. .......................................... $10,977 2007 Dodge Grand Caravan SXT - Stk. #AN134A, red, approx. 68,000 mi. .................................$9,987 2003 Chrysler Sebring - Stk. #330A, red, approx. 118,000 mi. .........................................................$5,450 2005 Dodge Dakota - Stk. #AM169B, blue, approx. 87,000 mi. ..................................................... $13,480

And Many More To Choose From! Stop In, Call, Look At Our Inventory On Our Website adirondackauto.com FIRST Come, FIRST Served!

Don’t have A+ credit? We work with several banks - give us the opportunity to work for you!

Dealer #3160005

www.adirondackauto.com di d k t

*Tax, title and registration not included.

49025


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