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• EDITION •

BATTLE OF PLATTSBURGH Whispering Maples repairs to begin State-funded project to renovate ailing mausoleums will cost at least $1.8 million

PLATTSBURGH | Work to fi x a pair of neglected mausoleums in northern New York is scheduled to begin within the next few By Pete DeMola weeks. • EDITOR • “Construction staging and activities will begin shortly,” said Town of Plattsburgh Supervisor Michael Cashman in a statement. » Mausoleums Cont. on pg. 5 Love Us? Like Us.

See more photos on pg. 13

Local tarot reader lets the cards fall Photo by Teah Dowling

couch, a deck of ornate cards sprawled PLATTSBURGH | Everyone, at across the table before him. one point or another, needs help. When he first started, Byrne did That’s why Plattsburgh resident readings for free. At the prompting Chris Byrne, a former operations of friends, he began doing readings specialist in the U.S. Navy, offers tarot card readings to anyone inter- By Elizabeth Izzo on a donation basis. • STA FF W RITER • ested in one. “But some people can’t pay,” he said. “I just say: ‘That’s okay. Do you “I do this because I want to help need a reading?’” people,” he said. Tarotology goes back centuries. DivinaNestled in a small corner of the Koffee Kat, a popular coffee shop in downtown tion using playing cards is recorded as early Plattsburgh, Byrne spoke with a reporter as 1540. last week while sitting on a brown leather Despite what some people may think, tarot

readings don’t tell you your future — the future is never set in stone, he said. Byrne likened the readings to offering a third party’s perspective on your present life. “You see yourself in the mirror everyday, and you think you know yourself and what’s happening in your life right now,” he said. “Until a third party steps in and tells you something about yourself that you hadn’t realized is true — but it is.” He takes the deck of cards in his hand and flips them over one by one, taking a moment

Photo by Teah Dowling

» Reader Cont. on pg. 9

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2 • September 16, 2017 | The North Countryman Sun

www.suncommunitynews.com

Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

County paratransit plan slated for final vote Legislators expected to decide on controversial deviation service later this month By Elizabeth Izzo STA FF W RITER

PLATTSBURGH | A plan to alter the Clinton County paratransit bus service and move toward route deviation, first spearheaded months ago, is on its way to a final vote. The plan is expected to come before the Clinton County Board of Legislators on Sept. 27. Currently, the county’s wheelchair-accessible bus fleet provides transport for disabled passengers who can’t utilize regular bus routes. In an effort to generate savings in the total $1.3 million transit budget and streamline the system, the new plan will have buses deviate from their regular routes up to three-quarters

of a mile in order to pick up any passenger who requests the service in advance, as per federal regulations. Legislator Simon Conroy (Area 4) in the past spoken about the new plan as a way to ensure public transit remains in place and serves residents’ needs in a sustainable, affordable way. But not everyone agrees with the change. Members of the North Country Center for Independence, including Director Robert Poulin, have said that the plan could limit accessibility and could make it more difficult for disabled residents to maneuver the system. Two public hearings on the county route deviation plan were slated for Wednesday, Sept. 13, after this edition went to print. The deviation plan passed the Clinton County Transportation Subcommittee on Sept. 11 and will be put on the agenda at the Clinton County Board of Legislators regular session on Sept. 27 at 7 p.m. For more information, visit clintoncountypublictransit.com. ■

A plan to alter the Clinton County paratransit bus service and move toward route deviation is expected to come before the Clinton County Board of Legislators on Sept. 27. Photo by Elizabeth Izzo

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The North Countryman Sun | September 16, 2017 • 3

City worker raises concerns over assessment consolidation By Elizabeth Izzo STA FF W RITER

PLATTSBURGH | Concerned with the future of her department, one city employee took to City Hall last week to speak directly to the Plattsburgh Common Council. Included in the final draft of Clinton County’s shared services proposal is a plan for county takeover of the city’s property assessment services. Tami Trembley, a real property tax service assistant with the city assessment office, said the savings expected through shifting her department’s services to the county may not be realized. The consolidation is expected to net the city a savings of $66,654 per year, according to documents obtained through the Clinton County Legislative Office. But Trembley isn’t sold, claiming the savings won’t be realized. According to Trembley, the consolidation plan was proposed based an anticipated $68,000 savings in healthcare and retirement benefits on the city’s behalf — key word: Anticipated. “No one has spoken to me to see what my plans are for the future,” she said, noting that she was told the original plan was for City Assessor Kathy Livingston and herself to be absorbed into county operations. “That savings would abruptly decline if we are not absorbed into the county.” The total budget for the city assessment office this year is $135,402. In Mayor Colin Read’s proposed 2018 budget — which accounts for the county absorption plan — that cost is expected to increase to $139,928. “That’s not a savings,” she said.

‘NO ONE ABSORBED’

But the plan is not to absorb anyone, according to Clinton County Administrator Michael Zurlo. “No one will be absorbed,” Zurlo said, in an email. “There is a possibility that the county could offer a position to positions eliminated by the city.” Trembley said that in her case, the city would need to pay unemployment and grievance costs. If Livingston chooses to retire, the city would still need to pay her health insurance benefits, she said. “I ask you to carefully scrutinize the mayor’s proposal to discontinue city assessment services,” she told the council. “Take a look at what the actual cost to the city would be, versus the anticipated savings.” It is unclear whether the shared services plan will go through a Common Council vote. Read, as a stakeholder on the shared services panel, will vote on the plan on Sept. 15 and decide whether to opt in or out on the assessment portion of the plan. Read did not respond to a request for comment before this edition went to print on Tuesday afternoon.

that will not go up exponentially?” “The county is not mulling a fee hike for this service. The county is looking to break even on this service,” Zurlo said, in an email. “(We) would charge the city only the cost of providing the service.” In a meeting with Clinton County legislators on July 12, Director of Real Property Services Martine Gonyo proposed a $3 per-parcel fee increase for municipalities — apart from the city — that use the county’s full-time assessment services. The county real property office is currently operating at a $40,000 deficit, she said, and the increase in fees could work toward remedying that. Talks on that proposed fee hike continued this month, according to Zurlo. A meeting with town supervisors from effected municipalities has already been held:

“(We’re) looking to finalize the decision this week,” he said.

COUNTY NEEDS

County lawmakers earlier this summer expressed doubts over the real property office’s ability to absorb any further growth. The county currently has two assessors and one senior assessment control examiner. County assessors usually serve two towns each. If Livingston and Trembley don’t take jobs within the county, the county will still need to hire two people if they take on the city’s services, Gonyo said. “Even if we were to absorb (Livingston and Trembley) within our office, they would not be working on the city,” she said, noting that other existing county assessors would take on those responsibilities. ■

BORDERVIEW GROCERY OUYE 11,CHAMPLAIN, NY . 298-3050

AT THE COUNTY LEVEL

If the proposed shared assessment plan is approved, the city will pay a higher perparcel fee than any other municipality in Clinton County. That has to do with the city’s mix of residential and commercial properties, according to Read. Currently, the county’s per parcel fee is set for $13.50 for full services and $2.50 for part-time services. The city would pay $25.50 per parcel for its 5,000 properties, according to Read. Trembley raised concerns last week about that fee going even higher: “That is what they may be charging for services in 2018, but is there any guarantee

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• Worship in The norThern Tier •

ALTONA Holy Angels Church - Main Street, Altona. Mass - 10 a.m. Sunday ALBURGH VT Union Bible Church - 102 S. Main St., Alburgh, VT. Sunday School at 9:30 a.m., Sunday Worship Service at 10:30 a.m., Wednesday Bible Study and Bible Club for Kids at 7:00 p.m. Pastor John Kehoe, 802-796-3055. CADYVILLE St. James Church - 26 Church Rd., Cadyville. 293-7026. Saturday Vigil: 4 p.m., Sunday Masses: 8 a.m. & 10 a.m., Daily Mass Mon.-Fri. CHAMPLAIN Christ & St. John’s Episcopal/ Anglican Church - 18 Butternut Street, Champlain. (518) 298-8543. Sunday Mass at 9:30 a.m. Patricia A. Beauharnois, Deacon Vicar Living Water Baptist Church - 9 Locust St., corner of Main and Locust, Champlain. Sunday School at 9 a.m. Service at 10 a.m. Thursday Bible

Study at 7 p.m. includes activities for children. Phone: 298-4358 St. Mary’s Catholic Church - Church Street, Champlain. Anticipated Mass: Saturday 5:30 p.m., Sunday Mass: 8 a.m. Weekday Masses: Thursday and Friday 9 a.m. Three Steeples United Methodist Church - 491 Route 11, Champlain. 298-8655 or 298-5522. Sunday morning worship 9:30 a.m. Sunday School at same time (Sept. thru June). Steve Loan, Pastor. steeples3@primelink1.net CHAZY Chazy Presbyterian Church - 620 Miner Farm Rd., Chazy. 846-7349 Worship and Sunday School will begin at 11 a.m. Email: chazypres@westelcom.com Sacred Heart Church - Box 549, Chazy 12921. (518) 846-7650. Sunday Mass (Ant) 6 p.m., Sun. 8 a.m. DANNEMORA Dannemore United Methodist

Church - 86 Clark Street, PO Box 488, Dannemora, NY. Pastors Wendy and Gary Rhodehamel. Phone: 518-8919287. Worship and Sunday School -- Sunday 11:00 a.m. tedtrevail@gmail.com ELLENBURG St. Edmund’s Roman Catholic Church - Route 11, Ellenburg. Saturday Anticipated Mass, 4 p.m. Sunday Mass, 8 a.m. and 11 a.m. ELLENBURG CENTER United Methodist Church of Ellenburg - 5 Church St., PO 142, Ellenburg Center, NY 12934 Pastor: Gary Rhodenhamel Phone: 518-8919287 Hours: 9am Service, Sunday Worship & Sunday School ELLENBURG DEPOT Ellenburg Depot Wesleyan Church - 2179 Plank Rd., PO Box 177 Ellenburg Depot, NY 12935. Pastor: Robert R. Phillips. Phone: 594-3902. Sunday Family Bible Hour: 9:50 a.m. Sunday Worship Time: 10:50 a.m.

Children’s Youth Ministries: Call for schedule. MOOERS Mooers United Methodist Church - 14 East St., Located adjacent to old Post Office. Sunday service, 9:30 a.m. Contemporary & traditional music, activities for children, youth and families, 236-7129, pastoral@ twcny.rr.com, www.gbgm-umc.org/ mooersumc Mooers Wesleyan Church - Maple Street, Mooers. Sunday school, 9:45 a.m. Morning Worship 10:45 a.m. Sunday Night Service 7 p.m. Wednesday Night 7 p.m. (518) 236-5330. St. Joseph’s Catholic Church Maple Street, Mooers. 236-7142. Anticipated Saturday Mass, 4 p.m. MOOERS FORKS St. Ann’s Catholic Church - Route 11, Mooers Forks. Mass: Sunday, 8 a.m. Reconciliation announced special Saturday mornings 10 a.m. & by

request. PLATTSBURGH Plattsburgh United Methodist Church - 127 Beekman Street, Plattsburgh, NY 12901. 563-2992. Pastor Phil Richards. Service Sunday 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. Nursery available at 10 a.m. Seventh Day Adventist - 4003 Rt. 22, Plattsburgh, 561-3491 - Pastor Livergood Worship Saturday at 11:30 a.m., Pot Luck Dinner after service Trinity Episcopal Church - 18 Trinity Place, Plattsburgh, NY 12901. 518-561-2244. Services: Saturday 5:00 pm, Eucharist with dialog sermon. Sunday 8:00 am, Eucharist. Sunday 10:00 am, Eucharist (with music, followed by refreshments/ coffee hour). Wednesday 5:00 pm Community Meal ROUSES POINT St. Patrick’s Catholic Church - Lake Street, Rouses Point. Anticipated Mass: Saturday 4 p.m.;

Sunday Mass: 10 a.m.; Weekday Masses: Monday & Tuesday 9 a.m., Communion Service: Wednesday 9 a.m. First Presbyterian Church - 50 Washington Ave., Rouses Point, New York 12979. Telephone 518-297-6529. Telephone 518-846-7349. Sunday Service 9 a.m. Sciota United Methodist Church Sunday service 9 a.m. Route 19, Sciota. St. Louis of France Catholic Church - Route 22, Sciota. Mass 5:30 p.m. Saturday WEST CHAZY St. Joseph’s Catholic Church - West Church Street, West Chazy. Saturday Vigil Mass, 4 p.m. Sunday Mass 10 a.m. Weekday Masses: Monday through Friday at 9 a.m. Confessions: Saturday, 3-3:30 p.m. West Chazy Community Church Pastor Marty Martin. 17 East Church St. Fiske Road, West Chazy, NY. Ph. 493-4585. Sunday: Sunday School 9:30 a.m., Morning Worship 10:30 a.m. Tuesday; Youth Group 6:30 p.m.

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4 • September 16, 2017 | The North Countryman Sun

www.suncommunitynews.com

Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

Valcour Brewing Co. owners honored for restoration work Ceremony will honor Mary Pearl and the late Terry Schmaltz for rehab of old army barracks By Elizabeth Izzo STA FF W RITER

PLATTSBURGH | Adirondack Architectural Heritage (AARCH), a nonprofit historic preservation group, will spotlight the work of two Plattsburgh residents at a special award ceremony next week. Valcour Brewing Company Owners Mary Pearl and the late Terry Schmaltz will be honored for their efforts to restore the Old Stone Barracks on Ohio Avenue. Pearl and Schmaltz are among several business owners — including those of Elizabethtown’s Deer’s Head Inn and the Wakonda Lodge in Lake George — being highlighted for their “extraordinary preservation work,” according to a news release from AARCH. Schmaltz and Pearl took ownership of the former army barracks in 2014 after the building had been mostly-empty for decades, according to the brewery’s website. The duo launched a one and a half year rehab project that resulted in a trendy tasting room, inn and event space replete with exposed stone walls and repurposed wood. “This is a wonderful building,” Pearl told The Sun during a phone interview. When Pearl answered the ' phone, a pair of jovial women CUMBERLAND 12,.;:::;::: :::: ... Cinemas t. ~ could be heard in the backExit 39, Route 9N, Plattsburgh, NY ground clinking glasses. wwwcumberland12com (518) 324-3888 “And when I say it’s back Valid MovieTimesfor to life — it’s back to life. It’s Fri.,Sept.15th- Tues.,Sept.19th being used,” she said.

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The large, limestone structure is the last standing of a proposed military housing quad. The mostly-abandoned facility was put on the national register of historic places on 1971, according to the brewery’s website. Pearl and Schmaltz bought the former barracks in 2014, and the 179-year-old facility was brought to life again — this time as a brewery. “We actually were going to build something new,” Pearl said of her plans to open a brewery on a plot of land overlooking Valcour Island. “But then I saw (the barracks) were for sale. “Growing up here... this building seemed magical.” Pearl and her husband were both in the military. When they retired, they returned to Plattsburgh. “I remember when the (Plattsburgh Air Force) base closed in 1995 and the devastation to the economy,” Pearl said. “Bringing back the history here was important to us.” Restoring the barracks took about one and a half years, according to Pearl. All the while, certain historical aspects of the building had to be preserved: The exterior of the building is just as it was, right down to its railings — which, due to their height, would be noncompliant with current state safety standards, she said. “We are grandfathered in.” As for the interior, all the construction was done by local contractors. All of the design work, she said, was done by her late husband.

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Pearl and Schmaltz, among several business owners, will be honored at the annual AARCH Preservation Awards on Sept. 18. Author Richard Longstreth and Michael Frenette, who worked on restoration of Camp Santanoni, will also receive awards for their personal achievements in the historic preservation realm. “This year we had very diverse group of nominations to select our winners from,” said AARCH Executive Director Steven Engelhart in a statement. “They are all excellent projects and are a true celebration of the meticulous care, creativity and hard work that preservationists put into historic places in our region.” The 2017 Preservation Award ceremony will be hosted at the Nettle Meadow Farm in Warrensburg, Essex County, on Sept. 18 at 11:30 a.m. Tickets are $50 per person and include a farm-to-table lunch. For more information, call 518-834-9328 or visit aarch.org. ■ PICTURED ABOVE: Valcour Brewing Company Owners Mary Pearl and the late Terry Schmaltz will be honored at the annual AARCH Preservation Awards on Sept. 18.

Photo by Elizabeth Izzo

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“The entire public can come in and see this building,” said Pearl. “We left a lot (of the original building) in the tasting room and the upstairs event center.” She noted the brewery’s southern wall as an example, which boasts a portion of exposed stone. “This way, people can actually see the hard work and the beauty of the stone — and what these workers did almost 200 years ago.”

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City eyes sponsorship model for events Department head proposes plan to keep events coordinator position full-time By Elizabeth Izzo STA FF W RITER

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The North Countryman Sun | September 16, 2017 • 5

» Mausoleums Cont. from pg. 1 The state assumed operations of two privately-owned mausoleums and a crematory in Ellenburg in 2015 after declaring the facilities abandoned. Total repair costs are estimated to cost $1.8 million, said Connie Goedert, the state-appointed receiver who has overseen the rehabilitation process since last spring. Goedert declined to break down the repair costs between the facilities. But, she said, “Plattsburgh is over $1 million.” This year’s state budget earmarked $2 million for the repairs — the largest known award for cemetery abandonment funds in the history of the state program.

CREMATORY OPEN

While state engineers have determined the buildings are structurally sound, they were constructed using low-grade materials and have been allowed to deteriorate since their construction in the 1980s. Both facilities require new roofing, and the back of the building in Plattsburgh remains incomplete, its warped, weather-beaten and rebar-studded plywood backing exposed to the elements. The crematorium in Ellenburg is running efficiently, and will remain operational during the construction period. Entombments in the mausoleums will also continue as scheduled, Cashman said. But the mausoleums will be closed to visitation when work is in progress. Families are encouraged to remove personal items from the crypt fronts outside and inside the mausoleums. The crypts themselves will not be affected.

PLATTSBURGH | The Plattsburgh Common Council is mulling a plan that could move city events from a taxpayer expense onto a sponsorship model. The plan was proposed by Community Development Director Paul DeDominicas last week as an alternative to an earlier proposal by Mayor Colin Read. In an effort to slash expenditures and save city residents from a double-digit tax increase, Read proposed cutting the city’s special events coordinator position down to part-time and decreasing events spending. But a sponsorship model, according to DeDominicas, ODOR ADDRESSED has the potential to enable the city to keep the events coThe mausoleum in Plattsburgh has been bedeviled with ordinator full-time and offset the cost of putting on events a foul odor for years. through private partnerships. It hasn’t gone unnoticed by survivors, who have written With his plan, over $100,000 would be cut from the city’s comments in the facility’s guestbooks. event budget — which he hopes could be replaced through “Can’t come in because it stinks so bad in here,” wrote a business sponsorships. visitor, in a message dated Aug. 20. Keeping Events Coordinator Sandra Geddes full-time, Last fall, a crypt was discovered to be leaking — the result he said, is important when taking into consideration the of out-of-state remains with less stringent burial standards, increased responsibilities the Community Development said officials — and a recent visit revealed the carpet to be office will take on through the closure of the Recreation cut away around the vault. Department. Goedert said the odor issues will be addressed during “It’s important from a capacity standpoint,” DeDominicas the renovations. told the Common Council, in a public meeting last week. “There’s all types of ventilation,” she said. “Air exchanges Read noted that the events coordinator, if kept full-time, and all that will be added to the system.” would be responsible for finding over $100,000 in sponsorPlattsburgh-based Branon Construction has been conship money to balance the numbers. tracted for the rehabilitation efforts. 2017 2/15/17 1:35 PM Page 8 “I definitely have the ability to do it,” Geddes said inMASTER a “They are going to start with the roofs at both locations,” phone interview. “I’m already starting to plan for the 2018 Goedert said. “Both at the same time.” budget. What I’d like to do is start planning events, but I’d The completion date for both facilities is Feb. 5, 2018. like to know what’s available to me.” “I think it’s important to note that factors of construction If the Common Council were to agree to switching to a season in the North Country may play an important part sponsorship model, Geddes would take the lead on securin that,” said Cashman. ing those partnerships, DeDominicas said. “We want to show that our city is vibrant, that there’s a lot going on downtown,” he said. “Our events do that.” The city budgeted $62,000 from the general fund on last weekend’s Battle of Plattsburgh celebration. City Chamberlain Richard Marks is expected to deliver the Common Council a report on the impact of reinstating the events coordinator’s full-time position. ■

NO ACCOUNTABILITY

Whispering Maples Memorial Gardens was incorporated as a family-run non-profit in 1980. The three-member board of directors was ordered dissolved by the state Division of Cemeteries in February 2015 upon reports that the facilities were being neglected. The state later determined Whispering Maples had failed

Craft fair set in Dannemora

DANNEMORA | A craft fair hosted by the Dannemora United Methodist Church will take place Sept. 23 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the fellowship hall on Clark Street. Crafts and products will be on sale, along with baked goods and michigans. All proceeds will go toward the church’s mission projects. For more information, call Chris Wood at 518-5939628 or Peggy Canning at 518-570-5895.

to set aside adequate funds to cover the costs of pre-need sales of crypt markers and sales of rights of interment. Under the former owners, a portion of the proceeds from each crypt and niche sale was supposed to go to a permanent maintenance fund. But a state report determined not only was the account underfunded, but the non-profit failed to repay loans they were permitted to withdraw from the fund in 1992. The nonprofit also failed to make regular deposits even as proceeds from internment space and mausoleum usage continued to pour in. The outstanding balance for the fund was $212,399 as of June 2015. The former owners have not been charged with a crime, and have not publicly commented on the reasons for the abandonment. Cashman said he spoke with officials from the state attorney general’s office last September and indicated that the state has launched a probe and may pursue charges once the facilities have been repaired. But nearly a year later, the picture isn’t any clearer. “We have not received any info from the attorney general’s office,” Cashman told The Sun on Tuesday. “We have made inquiries, but no updates have formally been given to us.” The state attorney general’s office did not respond to an email seeking comment by the time this story went to print on Tuesday afternoon.

LEGISLATION PENDING

Once the repairs are completed, Ellenburg and Plattsburgh will take over the facilities. But as the localities prepare to enter the uncharted waters of owning and operating burial and crematory infrastructure, Cashman is pushing for statewide legislation that would ban freestanding mausoleums and crematories. “After this situation, a number of individuals have been trying to wrap their minds around how this can be addressed in the future,” Cashman said. A bill barring the units as the only form of internment at burial grounds has been introduced in the state Senate by Sen. Betty Little (R-Queenbury), who helped the localities secure $300,000 in early funding for repair work. “Mausoleums and columbarium have proven to be successful for many cemeteries when they are part of a larger financial plan and presented as an additional burial option for cemeteries,” reads the bill language. But when a cemetery is created solely for the purpose of construction of a standalone mausoleum or columbarium, local governments and other entities are exposed to financial hardship if a facility is subsequently abandoned. The legislation remains in committee. “The senator hopes with the new session coming up in January, she’ll push the bill and get it to the floor of the Senate for a vote,” said Dan MacEntee, a spokesman for the senator. Assemblyman Billy Jones (D-Chateaugay) has sponsored companion legislation in the state Assembly. ■ — Elizabeth Izzo contributed reporting ON THE FRONT: Restoration of the Whispering Maples Memorial Gardens facilities in Plattsburgh and Ellenburg, declared abandoned by the state in 2015, are scheduled to begin this fall. The $2 million project has a February 2018 deadline.

Photo by Elizabeth Izzo

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6 • September 16, 2017 | The North Countryman Sun

Thoughts from Behind the Pressline

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Opinion

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United we Guest Viewpoint stand We need to talk about race, It’s been a strange year full of turmoil that hasn’t always brought out the best among our countrymen.

While so many of our fellow citizens in Texas, Louisiana and now Florida and the southeast are facing catastrophic issues as a result of Hurricanes Harry and Irma, these storms force our nation to unite and work for the common good. By Dan Alexander • PUBLISHER •

Earlier this week, we remembered another catastrophic event that united our country in a common mission. It seems when our backs are up against the wall or when we are at the mercy of events beyond our control is when we are at our best supporting each other. Sadly, it shouldn’t take events like these to help us realize we how fortunate we are to live in this country. We see generous people who readily rally around those who are at risk and acts of kindness are so abundant we tend to take them granted. There will always but those who see opportunity in the suffering of others, but those are few and far between. The most important points we need to take away from these events and attempt to apply them in different areas are these: •

We need to be far more careful with how we label or classify people into set categories.

The vast majority of us are like minded, hard working, and good people despite our political, religious, nationality or any other persuasion one might like to use.

As individuals, until you get to know someone, none of us know what’s in a person heart or mind just by looking at them. Each is unique and deserves an opportunity to be heard.

We must find ways to better communicate our differences without causing offense or taking offense.

We create laws for a reason and these laws must be equitable and followed by all whether we agree with them or not.

We each have an obligation to be a productive member of society and do our part to support the nation in good and in more trying times.

Citizenship comes with certain responsibilities. While we enjoy many freedoms, we should never consider ourselves free to do as we please, especially when we see others in great need, needing only a hand up during these most unusual circumstances. This free community newspaper exists to serve the informational needs of the community and to stimulate a robust local economy. No press release, brief or calendar item can be guaranteed for placement in the paper nor run in multiple weeks unless it is a paid announcement. All free placement is on a space-available basis.

Publisher .......................................................Daniel E. Alexander Associate Publisher........................................................Ed Coats Operations Manager ...........................................William Coats General Manager Central ..............Daniel E. Alexander Jr. Managing Editor ...................................................... Pete DeMola General Manager North............................Ashley Alexander General Manager South ............................Scarlette Merfled

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even in the North Country

Charlottesville is nowhere near my hometown of Crown Point, New York. Yet the recent acts of racist violence in Virginia stirred up a deep By Daniel Anello and familiar tension. • GUEST COLUMNIST • I spent a week trying to identify where I remembered this sense of anxiety from. Then I heard an interview on the radio with a gentleman from Mineville, less than 10 miles from where I grew up, and realized that gnawing feeling was the same one I felt as a teenager growing up here. You see, I was the black kid. There is some irony in the fact that I am actually mixed— my dad is Italian. But when you are one of so few people of color and you have an afro, those nuances get lost. The fi rst time I recognized this difference was on my very first bus ride to first grade, when a second-grader serenaded me with the “N” word for 40 minutes on the way to school. By age 10, I knew whose house or pool was “off limits” because of the color of my skin. I didn’t give it a second thought. It was just the way it was. In high school, things became much harder. I learned that the color of my skin was an invitation to bodily harm. I had to “keep my head on a swivel,” knowing that

my presence might provoke trouble when I was at a dance, a game, or just walking to a friend’s house. I quickly learned that after a soccer game, many on the opposing team would avoid shaking my hand. I accepted that I couldn’t date certain girls. I learned to defend myself out of necessity. And now? To be honest, the N-word still sends a shiver down my spine. To this day, it is a powerful tool to dehumanize black people, and I am no less vulnerable. Th is brings me back to that radio interview, in which a guy from the North Country talked about race in a way that misses the bigger conversation happening in our country today. Charlottesville was a reminder of the threat that can exist simply by being different. In order to be the America we want to be we have to denounce white supremacist hate groups without hesitation. And we have to hold accountable anyone who fails to do so—even our president. In the same way my childhood friends Nathan and Anita would shut down bigots in my defense, our country needs all of us to stand up against these hate groups and those who tacitly allow them to persist. I get it — talking about civil rights probably feels irrelevant in the North Country. Perhaps it even feels threatening if you aren’t black or brown.

Letters to the Editor

Publisher was misguided in last week’s column

To the Editor: The commentary of Dan Alexander in the Aug. 24 publication is very odd, seemingly uneducated. “The national media love stories that shake the core of middle America.” Our national reporters cover the who, what, when, where and why of news. If a man gets up and takes the bus to work, that is not news. If the man gets up and pulls a gun on the bus driver, that is news. If he gets hit by the bus, that is news. If he stands in front of the bus protesting, that is news. You say these things “drive viewership.” Drive them where? An informed citizenship is necessary for justice and fairness. Having a free press is really the court of last resort. You say “the media promotes highly charged subjects.” The media reports on, not promotes. The headline of your commentary was “Misguided Efforts.” I still do not know who you think was misguided and what behaviors (efforts) they exhibited to cause this judgment. Is it the city councils that have to consider moving the statues off the public squares to museums or is the protesters wanting such removal and others not? Sherry Adams, Lake George ■

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But please keep in mind that this conversation about race emerged because of the same things I confronted in high school. And in cities like Chicago, where I now live and work, that threat of physical harm is multiplied by a thousand. Lives are at stake. We are better than what happened in Charlottesville. We need more of what is in the pictures coming out of the rescue efforts in Houston than what we saw in Virginia. We need to see each other’s humanity and embrace our differences. That’s America. So, here’s my simple request: Find someone different from you, introduce yourself, and spend some time with them. Get to know them. Embrace humanity. Most importantly, vocally denounce racism in any form, like my good friends have on my behalf countless times. I loved growing up in the Adirondacks. I love visiting to share it with my family. I love the people—for their warmth and welcoming nature. So I hope you will hear me as one of your own. Perhaps a little different on the outside, but a North Country kid in my soul. ■ — Daniel Anello is the Chief Executive Officer of New Schools for Chicago Note: Managing Editor Pete DeMola is on vacation this week.

Go out and vote in upcoming primary

The Pledge of Allegiance concludes with the words “with liberty and justice for all.” We, the people, have a right to vote. But as American citizens, we also have the responsibility to know everything we can about who we are voting for and why. What character traits do you want in a candidate you want to vote for? First and foremost, I want the candidate to be honest, forthright, a good listener, open and caring. I want the candidate to be knowledgeable concerning the issues; to arrive at a well-researched plan based on good information and the input of others; and implement the best option for me, my family and our community. Vote in the upcoming primary scheduled for this Tuesday, Sept. 12 from noon to 8 p.m. at your designated voting place. We the voter will have to live with the consequences of the outcome of the election, be it good or bad. So, get out to vote. Vote for the best candidate of your choice. Our future depends on this inherent right to vote. Lucy Bilow, Ticonderoga ■

A paid advertisement will be based on standard advertising rates taking into consideration size and frequency according to the current rate card at the open advertising rate. For rates, call Ashley at (518) 873-6368 x105 or email ashley@suncommunitynews.com Calendar of event entries are reserved for local charitable organizations, and events are restricted to name, time, place, price and contact information. For-profit organization events will be run with a paid advertisement. Bulletin board For-profit for 4 lines (75¢ additional lines) 1 week $9 , 3 weeks $15, 52 weeks $20/month. Not-for-profit for 4 lines (.50¢ additorial lines) 1 week $5, 3 weeks $10, 52 weeks $15/month. Advertising policies: Sun Community News & Printing, publishd by Denton Publications, Inc. disclaims all legal responsibility for errors

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Legislative Thoughts

Showcasing, touring North Country assets As a legislator, I make it a point to stay accessible and available to my constituents. By Assemblyman

Earlier this year, I • GUEST COLUMNIST • pledged to make scheduled stops in every town throughout the 115th Assembly District. Throughout the past several months, I’ve had time to attend many events, meet with hundreds of constituents and visit most of the 37 towns that I represent.

www.suncommunitynews.com

Comic Con coming The hard way to the Burgh From the Mayor

Crete to host actors, artifacts and sci-fi aficionados By Keith Lobdell STA FF W RITER

D. Billy Jones

In the month of August, I traveled to 14 towns throughout Clinton and Franklin counties. While on the road, I met with local officials to discuss the state of their infrastructure, funding opportunities for local projects and the needs of their respective communities. I also got a chance to visit many small businesses and employers that are vital to the economic development of Clinton County. In Franklin County, I held several town hall meetings and met with local officials to discuss their plans to allocate CHIPs and Pave NY funding to repair local roads and bridges. Since taking office, I have made lasting partnerships with legislators at both the state and federal level to get more done for our communities. This past month, I was honored to welcome a few of those legislators to the North Country. On Aug. 1, Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie made a trip to the 115th Assembly District. During his visit, we toured a few of the area’s biggest employers, including Bombardier Transportation, NovaBus and Norsk Titanium.

PLATTSBURGH | With the ever-increasing interest for the sci-fi and animation worlds, local enthusiasts are looking to have their own celebration of all things unworldly. The first Plattsburgh Comic Con will take place at the Crete Civic Center Sept. 30 and Oct. 1 running from 10 a.m. until 6 p.m. Saturday and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday. There will also be a pre-party at Uno Restaurant Saturday evening. “We thought something like this in Plattsburgh would be a great idea,” said Samuel Chase, president of Chase Comics, LLC, who is hosting the event. Chase also hosts a comic con event in Saratoga and felt expansion to Plattsburgh was ideal. “We started working on this last year when we got the dates,” Chase said. “We have built everything up with resources we have through the Saratoga event and wanted to bring a big event here, which will bring in thousands to the community. We have heard from a lot of people who shared our interest in having a show here.”

SCHEDULED TO APPEAR

Several actors and celebrities from different genres are schedule to appear at “the con,” including Rochelle Davis, who played Sarah in the 1994 film “The Crow”; former WWE wrestler Gene Snisky; Marvel and

Tickets are available for $15 daily or $30 for both, along with VIP tickets for $55. There are online specials for $11 and up, with children 6 and under admitted for free. Tickets for presale are available at plattsburghcomiccon.com. Tickets will also be available at the door on the days of the event. For more information, including updated schedule and list of attendees, visit plattsburghcomiccon.com. ■

BEING THE HOMETOWN PAPER IS STILL SPECIAL There is nothing as unique, far reaching and wonderful as the hometown newspaper. It offers tradition, credibility, depth of detail, a permanent record and something to interest every age. Newspapers are the ONLY media that create public consensus and enforces a true sense of community in our hometowns. Local businesses want to promote themselves locally with creative ideas and accurate consumer information that provides the residents to shop with confidence and helps drive the local economy. WE TAKE GREAT PRIDE AND HAVE A REAL PASSION FOR THE SERVICES WE RENDER Knowledge is power. The more you know about an advertiser’s dreams, needs and future plans the more we can assist them in filling those dreams. It’s those dream and their drive that helps power the local economy, support community service organizations and events and helps make our community the very special and unique place we all call home. WE BELIEVE A LOCALLY OWNED NEWSPAPER IS A POWERFUL LOCAL TOOL Believe in our newspaper and the many individuals that we serve with the news, features, values, entertainment and keepsakes we deliver each week. We never stop looking for new ways to improve our creative services and serve the region in a way no short lived digital website from who knows where can ever replace.

Showing two key Assembly leaders what the North Country has to offer is a unique opportunity for our district.

WE ARE UNIQUE AND WE WANT WHAT’S BEST FOR OUR COMMUNITIES Accept no substitute. No other media can offer the educated audience, editorial credibility and consistent results delivered by The SUN. We know that putting our communities first by meeting the needs of our local advertisers will put them first in your mind when it comes to making a purchase.

With roughly a dozen more scheduled stops in the month of September, I look forward to continuing to learn about the needs of our communities and the ways I can help secure funding and support to strengthen our neighborhoods. The North Country is our home, and I’ll always work to make it the best place for our families. ■ — Assemblyman Billy D. Jones represents the 115th Assembly District, encompassing Clinton and Franklin counties, as well as the towns of Brasher, Hopkinton, Lawrence and Piercefield in St. Lawrence County.

ADMISSION

Think again!

We ended the day with a boat tour of Lake Champlain, which gave me an opportunity to show off one of the North Country’s most impressive natural resources.

While he was in the region we sat down with the Adirondack Council and other local officials to discuss some of the challenges and issues the residents are facing. We also went to Paul Smith’s College, Camp Gabriels, Debar Lodge and Eagle Island to help demonstrate the beauty and potential of towns in the North Country.

DC artist Rusty Gilligan; former Disney sculptor Erik Johnsen and Jay Mooers from Eden Park Tales. “We wanted to have people who brought something from all the areas of popular culture,” Chase said. “We didn’t want just an artist show or a celebrity show; we wanted a show that had everything.” Also set to be at the event are cosplay groups the Montreal X-Men and the Star Wars 501st, along with Jennard Cosplays, The True Mr. J, Coach Moses and R.W. Martin. “The Montreal X-Men will also be there to raise funds for the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention,” Chase said. “They always have a good response when they show up.” Along with the pros of cosplay, there will also be a chance for those in attendance to compete in cosplay contests during the event. There will also be vendor space, guest artists, celebrities, gaming, Super Smash Bros. and Mario Kart tournaments, panels, events, tattooing, live podcasts, the Jurassic Park Jeep, 1966 Batmobile, 1967 Chevy Impala from Supernatural, Star Wars Landspeeder and other pop culture lore.

Think the passion for a printed newspaper has waned in the digital age...

Speaker Heastie and I also went to SUNY Plattsburgh to talk to students about the Equal Opportunity Program’s impact on them and why it is so important to maintain funding for this program statewide.

Later in the month, Assemblyman Steve Englebright, Chairman of the Committee on Environmental Conservation, visited the district as well.

The North Countryman Sun | September 16, 2017 • 7

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(Average reader formula 1.8 readers per 63,484 audited circulation)

Call 518-561-9680 to advertise in The SUN! - Locally Owned since 1948 Source of Data- 2016 CVC Audit & Readership Survey Circulation Verification Council is an independent, third party auditing company. CVC audits and data are an unbiased source of market circulation and reader information. Neither Denton Publications nor The SUN pays CVC to perform its service.

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105194

The City of Plattsburgh Common Council just completed By Colin Read their last bulk • COLUMNIST • of 2018 budget amendments. I’m grateful for their hard work. It’ll make a difference for years. As readers know, the city moved from a $6.8 million general fund balance surplus to a $400,000 deficit in half a dozen years. That represented annual excess spending over revenue by $1.2 million on average for those years, including the budget penned last October. I wish the overspending had stopped much earlier. But once the fund balance disappeared, overspending could certainly not continue. The city had to reform spending, and it had to begin immediately. The only other option was to hike taxes dramatically. Some people have asked why I didn’t recommend raising taxes rather than reducing spending, permitting attrition, and making a handful of layoffs. Spending reductions allowed the city to both reverse the $1.2 million running deficit and turn a $400,000 fund balance deficit into a $500,000 surplus. This represents a combined $2.1 million reversal of city fortune. Residents have a limited capacity to pay more taxes. Had we not reduced spending, we would’ve had to raise the tax rate by 20 points more than the mill rate increase of 2.49 percent we’ve proposed. Next year, the average taxpayer who owns a home valued at $150,000 will pay about $44 more in taxes. Had we not proposed the combined $2.1 million spending reduction, taxpayers would have found their taxes rising dramatically. When combined with the council’s tax increase based on last year’s mayor’s budget, city residents would’ve paid 30 percent more in taxes. These budget cuts allowed us to avoid an increase of about $500 for an average household. Many city residents can afford such an increase. Some have even said they’d be happy to pay that to maintain the services they expect. Perhaps so. But we’ve made difficult cuts not through reductions in our parks and recreation programs, our road and sewer repair, or other services our residents expect. We can reduce spending through efficiency improvements and shared services, not be reduced services, at least to a point. Fiscal conservatives suspect as much. Yes, some owners can pay $500 more, but many can’t. Nor can renters, who’d pay tax increases their landlords pass onto them. That’s a big increase for those on fixed income or those struggling to get by, who don’t know how they can afford to fix their car or patch their roof. These cuts are fiscally compassionate as much as they’re prudent. It’s been very difficult, but I’m grateful we found identical or better work elsewhere for most all affected employees too, if not always at an equal salary. ■ — Colin Read is the mayor of the City of Plattsburgh.


8 • September 16, 2017 | The North Countryman Sun

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TH E L A RG E S T SO U RC E O F CO M M U N IT Y E V E NTS I N TH E N O RTH CO U NTRY.

Calendar of Events SEP. 14

Essex » The 100 Mile House: Why

the Greenest Building Might Be the One that Already Exists held at Belden Noble Memorial Library; 7:00 p.m. Steven Engelhart, Executive Director of Adirondack Architectural Heritage, will discuss the idea that the preservation and reuse of historic buildings is a good choice in terms of energy conservation and sustainability. Suggested donation to the library is $5.

SEP. 14 - SEP. 16

Saranac » Annual Fall Rummage

Sale held at Saranac United Methodist Church; Thurs. from 9:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.; Fri. from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Items 1/2 price, from 4:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Items are 25-cents a bag; Sat. from 9:00 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. ALL Items are FREE.

SEP. 14 - SEP. 17

Peru » Annual Tent Sale held at St. Vincent’s Thrift Store; Annual tent sale of gently used fall and winter clothing on Thursday evening (9/14)

SEP. 16TH

Peru Applefest held at St. Augustine Church

from 6:30-8:30 p.m. and Friday (9/15) through Sunday (9/17) from 9:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m.

Contact Kasey Rosselli at (518) 873-6368 ext. 104 or email kasey@suncommunitynews.com to list your event.

and help those affected by this natural disaster. Peru » Peru Applefest held at St. Augustine Church; All Day Events Enjoy fall festivities at St. Augustine’s annual Applefest in Peru, including crafters, vendors, games, horse rides, music, food and more! Lake Placid » Author Signing: Marguerite Mooers held at The Bookstore Plus; 3:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m. We are pleased to host author Marguerite Mooers for a signing event. Marguerite will be to autographing copies of her book “The Girl in the Woods”. Come meet the author and get your copy of her book autographed. Come and meet this fascinating author. For more information on this event, call The Bookstore Plus at 518-523-2950. Malone » Sidewalk Sale and Street Fair held at Main Street; 9:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. Live Music and Food will be available at Arsenal Green by the chamber office during the event. Public Parking is available the left hand side of Pearl Street, right off of Main Street and on the left, behind the old Flannigan Hotel on Elm Street. Some local businesses may have available parking space in their lots.

Stechschulte.

Museum Tour held at 103 Helen Street; 10:30 a.m. Visit a patient room and cure porch in an historic private home. Meet on the porch of 103 Helen Street. $5/person, children and members of Historic Saranac Lake free. Altona » WoodmenLife sponsored Paint and Sip held at Rainbow Banquet Hall; 6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. Join us in a fun night of painting instructed by Renee in the White room. Doors open at 5:30. Painting starts at 6:00. $20 will supply you with all you need for painting. Appetizers will be provided by WoodmenLife. Drinks and other food items are available for purchase. WoodmenLife Members who bring a non-member will receive $5 off their entry!

Westport » Adirondack Harvest

Saranac Lake » Ventures in

............ . ..... ..... ................. . ........ ........... . ........................... . ........... .. . 0 WWW~~.!~:

SEP. 15

Elizabethtown » Chicken BBQ

held at Cobble Hill Golf Course; 5:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m. Please join us for a chicken BBQ to help raise $$ for a new ambulance!!

SEP. 16

Saranac Lake » Joe Dockery

Trio in Concert held at Saranac Village at Will Rogers; 7:30 p.m. Joe Dockery, Donna Moschek and David Mishanec will present an evening of songs from the 50’s, 60’s and 70’s along with a few jazz standards and more. This program is open to the public and a $5 donation is requested. Refreshments will be served. For more information, please call 518891-7117. Westport » Westport goes BIG for Texas held at Westport Hotel and Tavern; 5:00 p.m. - 12:00 a.m. We are adopting a small town in Texas that’s been impacted by Harvey and send 20% of all sales for the night directly to that town to help them rebuild. Come join us for Real Texas fun, with special food and drink Texas style: chili, cornbread, porterhouse steaks, specialty drinks and Live Music! A jar for personal donations will be available also! Come by and enjoy a drink or dinner

SEP. 19

Saranac Lake » Teddy Roosevelt Show held at Harrietstown Town Hall; 7:00 p.m. An impersonator of Teddy Roosevelt gives a live performance of the life history of the man who would become President. Free event. All are welcome to attend.

SEP. 20

Saranac Lake » Cure Cottage

SEP. 16 - SEP. 17

SEP. 21

Festival held at Westport Fairgrounds; Work up an appetite with a hike in the Lake Champlain Region, then celebrate the Adirondack harvest with music and locally produced food. Spend the day hiking or learn about life on the farm with an afternoon of demonstrations, a movie screening, and a Q & A with filmmaker Ben

Verse held at Saranac Village at Will Rogers; 7:30 p.m. Two North Country writers, Caperton Tissot and Nadine McLaughlin, will offer an hour-long reading of their original poetry. Books by both authors will be available for purchase and signing. This program is free and open to the public. Refreshments will be provided. Details: contact Debbie Kanze at 518-891-7117.

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JAZZ VOCALIST TARYN NOELLE

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Presented by Piano by Nature. Tickets are $15 and $5 for 15 & under. Reservations may be taken by phone and tickets will be sold at the door as well. Visit pianobynature.org and/or call 518-962-8899 for more info.

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REACH EVERY HOUSEHOLD IN YOUR COMMUNITY LOOKING FOR YOUR ACTIVITIES & SERVICES

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PERU - K of C or Knights of Columbus Bingo, Tuesdays @ 7:10 p.m. St. Augustines Parish Center, 3030 Main St. All welcome!

ELIZABETHTOWN – Essec County 2017 WIC Schedule at the Public Health Building January 5, Feb 2 , March 2, April 6, May 4, June 8, July 6, August 3, September 7, October 5, November 2, December 7 8:00 – 3:45pm.

LAKE PLACID – Essex County 2017 WIC Clinic Schedule at the Thomas Shipman Youth Center January 3, Feb 7, March 7, April 4, May 2, June 6, July 5, August 1, September 5, October 3, November 7, December 5 9:30-2:30pm. January 24, Feb 28, March 28, April 25, May 23, June 27, July 25, August 22, September 26, October 24, November 28 December 19 1:30- 6pm. Call us to schedule an appointment or find out more information at 518-873-3560 or 518- 569-3296

CADYVILLE – Al-Anon Family Group Meeting every Sunday 7pm8pm, Wesleyan Church, 2083 Rt. 3, Cadyville, NY. For more information call 1-888-425-2666 or 518-561-0838. PLATTSBURGH - Celebrate Recovery Meeting every Monday, 6:00 pm, Turnpike Wesleyan Church, 2224 Military Tpke., Plattsburgh. Open to the public. N0o charge or commitment required. For more information call 518-566-8764.

PORT KENT - The Port Kent Cemetery Association will hold its Annual Meeting on Tuesday, September 19, 2017 at 7 pm at the Town of AuSable Offices. All concerned parties are encouraged to attend.

January 18, Feb 15, March 15, April 19 , May 17, June 21, July 19, August 16, September 20, October 18, November 15, December 20 10:00-5:30pm Call us to schedule an appointment or find out more information at 518-873-3560 or 518- 569-3296

ELIZABETHTOWN - Two cabaret and jazz-style concerts will be presented by Piano by Nature on Sat., Septemeber 16th at 7PM and Sun., Sept. 17th at 3:00PM by Vermont Vocalist Taryn Noelle @ the Historic Hand House in Elizabethtown, NY. Tickets are $15 per adult, and $5 for 15-and-under. Visit www.pianobynature.org and/or call 518962-8899 for more information.

PORT HENRY Port Henry Knights of Columbus, bingo, 7 p.m. Every Monday TICONDEROGA - Bingo, Ticonderoga fire house, 6:45 p.m. Doors 5 p.m. Every Thursday. BOOKS ELIZABETHTOWN - The Elizabethtown Library on River Street is open M/W/F 10-5 and Sat 10-2. FREE Public WiFi and Computer Use. Copying and Faxing at a minimal fee. FREE Library Card to Checkout Books, Magazines and Movies. Bring the Family and EXPLORE YOUR LIBRARY! COMMUNITY OUTREACH AUSABLE FORKS – Essex County 2017 WIC shedule at the Amblulance Building January 4, Feb 1 , March 1, April 5, May 3, June 7, August 2, September 6, October 4, November 1, December 6, 9:30-2:30pm Call us to schedule an appointment or find out more information at 518-873-3560 or 518- 569-3296 PERU - St. Augustines Soup Kitchen, Free Delicious Meal Every Wednesday, 3030 Main St., 4:30 to 5:30 p.m.

KEESEVILLE – Essex County WIC 2017 schedule at the United Methodist Church January 26, Feb 23, March 23, April 27, May 25, June 29, July 27, August 24, September 28, October 26, November 30, December 28 9:30- 2:45pm. Call us to schedule an appointment or find out more information at 518-873-3560 or 518- 569-3296 PLATTSBURGH - The Unitarian Universalist Fellowship Tuesdays, 7 p.m., Search for Meaning Discussion Group. An evening of personal growth and a chance to join others in the search for truth and meaning. This fall, the group read and explore A New Earth: Awakening to your Life's Purpose by Eckhart Tolle, author of The Power of Now. All are open to the public, free and at 4 Palmer St., unless otherwise noted.

DINNERS & SUCH WESTPORT - Roast Pork Dinner, Thursday, September 21, 2017 at the Westport Federated Church, 6486 Main St., Westport, NY. Serving starts 4:30pm with takeouts available. $10.00 Adults, $5.00 Children 12 & under, Preschool free

TICONDEROGA - Essex County Lethernecks, Marine Corps League, Det 791, Ticonderoga American Legion Post. 6 p.m. Active Marines and Marine Veterans invited. First Thursday of every month.

AU SABLE FORKS - Please take note that the regular monthly meetings of the Au Sable Forks Fire District for the year 2017, will be held on the second Tuesday of each month at 6:30 PM at the Au Sable Forks Fire Station located at 29 School Lane, Au Sable Forks, N. Y. 12912. The meetings are open to the public.

PLATTSBURGH – Al-Anon Adult Children Meeting every Monday at 7pm-8pm, United Methodist Church, 127 Beekmantown Street, Plattsbugh. For more information call 1-888-425-2666 or 518-5610838. PLATTSBURGH – Al-Anon Family Group Meeting every Thursday at United Methodist Church, 127 Beekman Street, Plattsburgh 7:30pm-8:30pm. For more information call 1-888-425-2666 or 518-561-0838. PLATTSBURGH – ALATEEN Meeting every Thursday at United Methodist Church, 127 Beekman Street, Plattsburgh 7:30pm8:30pm. For more information call 1-888-425-2666 or 518-561-0838.

WESTPORT – Teen Challenge Choir will present a program of gospel music and testimony at: 10am at the Westport Federated Church, Sunday September 17, 2017.

CADYVILLE – Al-Anon Family Group Meeting every Sunday 7pm8pm, Wesleyan Church, 2083 Rt. 3, Cadyville, NY. For more information call 1-888-425-2666 or 518-561-0838.

PORT KENT - The Port Kent Cemetery Association will hold its Annual Meeting on Tuesday, September 19, 2017 at 7 pm at the Town 0of AuSable Offices. All concerned parties are encouraged to attend.

SARANAC LAKE – Grief Support Group First Tuesday of Each Month Saranac Lake, St. Luke's Church in the Baldwin House 12:30-1:30pm. For more information. Marie Marvull 518-743-1672 MMarvullo@hphpc.org

PUBLIC MEETINGS

WESTPORT - Cornell Cooperative Extension Association of Essex County will hold a regular board meeting on Monday, September 18 at 6:30pm at the CCE building at 3 Sisco Street in Westport. This meeting is free and open to the public. For more information please contact Laurie Davis, 518962-4810 x404 or email lsd22@cornell.edu.

WESTPORT - The Westport Central School District Board of Education will hold their regular monthly meeting on Thursday, September 21, 2017 at 6:30 PM in the Conference Room. Agenda items include a preliminary student enrollment report, a brief reception and introduction of new employees, a preview of monthly snapshot reports on instructional programs and support operations, a status report on the merger study process underway, and any other business that may come before the Board. Community members and interested others are welcome to attend.

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The North Countryman Sun | September 16, 2017 • 9

» Reader Cont. from pg. 1 to explain the symbolism behind each card. He flips over the “death” card and smiles. “This isn’t a bad thing,” Byrne explains. “This is good. It’s a transformation.” Byrne is a North Country transplant. Originally from the Philippines, he grew up in California before entering into the military three months before the Gulf War in 1990. Two decades later, he retired from the military and ended up in Plattsburgh for what was meant to be a brief visit. “Seven years later, I’m still here,” he said, smiling. Byrne is set up in the Koffee Kat six days a week, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Visitors sometimes stop in and sit with Byrne out of curiosity, but he also has a flock of regulars, people who come in seeking comfort and clarity during tumultuous times, or just return because it makes them happy. Recently, he’s started getting calls from people out-ofstate seeking his services. “I try to help over the phone, though I prefer meeting people face to face,” he said. “It’s easier to feel someone’s energy when they’re right in front of you.” For Byrne, it’s not about growing a huge business — it’s just about being there, helping people and making a small impact in the lives of others in his community. “That’s why I do this,” he said. Byrne doesn’t have a website yet. But for those interested in his readings, they can visit the Koffee Kat on Margaret Street. ■

Local author to speak in Champlain

CHAMPLAIN | Local author Rich Frost will speak about several of his published works on Sept. 21 from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. at the Champlain Meeting House on Main Street. For more information, call 518-298-5548. ■

Kids fair and festival slated

PERU | A kids fair and festival is set for Sept. 23 and 24 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Babbie Rural & Farm Learning Museum. Festivities include games, stage coach rides, Thomas the Train rides, shelling corn, milking the “cow” and blacksmith, border collie and sheep herding demonstrations. A food vendor will be on site. For more information, call 518-643-8052. ■

Plattsburgh resident Chris Byrne offers tarot card readings at the Koffee Kat on Margaret Street six days a week. Photos by Teah Dowling

Champlain Valley Chorus to perform

PLATTSBURGH | The Champlain Valley Chorus will put on a fall show Sept. 23 at Stafford Middle School. A concert featuring the Champlain Valley Chorus of the Sweet Adelines, Timeless (Don and Rance) and several quartets will start at 5 p.m. General admission is $10 and $8 for students and seniors. Admission is free for children under 5 years old. For more information, call 518-569-6188 or visit champlainvalleychorus.org. ■

Antique, quilt appraisal set

PLATTSBURGH | The 5th annual Out of the Attic Antique and Quilt Appraisal is set for Sept. 23 from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Clinton County Historical Museum. Antique

specialist Ted Comstock and quilt historian and appraiser Barb Stadnicki will be on site to appraise a variety of goods. For more information, call 518-561-0340 or email director@clintoncountyhistorical.org. ■

SUNY Plattsburgh University Police swears in new officer

PLATTSBURGH | SUNY Plattsburgh University Police Officer Rachel Youngers was sworn into service by President John Ettling on Aug. 28. The Angola-native graduated from SUNY Canton with a bachelor’s degree in criminal investigations. She finished the first phase of the police academy at the David Sullivan Academy in St. Lawrence County and will go through the second phase at the Zone Nine Training Academy in Plattsburgh. ■

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Lewis veteran honored in D.C. ELIZABETHTOWN | One recent Honor Flight to Washington D.C. carried U.S. Air Force Veteran Dale Moss back in time. The ceremonial visit to the national Korean War Memorial delivered renewed honor, a fresh medal and a title as Ambassador for Peace in a formal proclamation from South Korea. The trip was about a year in planning, the 84-year-old veteran said. And it brought back memories of years he spent stationed in hot zones in Japan as war raged in Korea. Moss has a framed collection of ribbons and medals earned in wartime between 1953 and 1963. He was almost 21 years old when he went in, having grown up the Deer Head section of Lewis. “I loved the work, I enjoyed every minute of it,” the octogenarian mused. “I served 10 years, three months and 28 days,” the veteran said, looking back through photos of places and the plane he worked during and after the Korean War. In the war years, Moss spent much time at what was then known as Johnson Air Base, which Japanese used as Irumagawa Base for kamikazi attack flights in World War II. It became the American base for the 41st Air Division between 1952 and 1962, before the 41st moved to Yokota Air Base, a strategic location that remains a key base for Pacific operations in a western section of Tokyo today. Part of the ground crew and crew chief for F86 Sabre jet fighters, Airman Moss’s job was to keep the planes running. “You never knew,” he said of when planes came in hot from missions in Korea.

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The group returned to Plattsburgh that day to a Party in the Park about 10 p.m. Two additional Honor Flights are scheduled this fall on Sept. 30 and Oct. 21, Sheriff Cutting said. “We usually try for at least four Honor Flights per year,” Cutting said. There are hundreds of veterans in this region, he said, “from Hague to Plattsburgh, we have a large group here.” North Country Honor Flight was founded as a non-profit organization in 2013. If anyone knows a veteran that might be honored by a trip to Washington or wishes to volunteer with upcoming programs, information is online at http://www.nchonorflight.org/ ■

Korean War veteran Staff Sgt. (Ret.) Dale Moss relaxes at his home in Lewis with the new medal and proclamation given to him on a recent Honor Flight visit to the Korean War Memorial in Washington, D.C.

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New York State Police Troop B Major John Tibbitts accompanied Moss as his guardian. “We’ve known each other a long time,” Moss said of his traveling companion. “We had a ball.” It was particularly notable, he said, when they arrived at the airport in Baltimore to ceremonial greetings from Maryland firefighters with a water salute over the airplane. “And as you walked into the airport there were three airmen, one soldier, one sailor and a marine to meet you.” “They had a guy calling every so often as we walked through ‘This is the Honor Flight from the North Country with World War II and Korean War veterans. That was something else.” The former military men received police escorts to the war memorials around D.C. As they were walking up to the Korean War Memorial, Moss said an envoy approached. “And I says to the major (Tibbitts), what’s that, a group of college ladies? Then they came over and three of them got a hold of us.” The women were dressed in stark white uniforms. A Korean general was with them. “This officer came over and put that around my neck,” Moss said, pointing to the medal strung on a multicolored ribbon. Raised letters on the medal say, “Korean War Veteran ... You Will Always Be Our Hero.” They thanked Moss for his service in the Korean War. The meeting was unscheduled and a surprise to the veterans. The proclamation mounted in the blue silk box says, in part: “We cherish in our hearts the memory of your boundless sacrifices in helping us reestablish our Free Nation,” given to Moss to honor him as “an Ambassador for Peace with every good wish of people of the Republic of Korea. Let each of us reaffirm our mutual respect and friendship that they may endure for generations to come.” Indeed a meaningful message in these times, Moss agreed. “The whole thing was just out of this world,” he said. “We also went to Arlington Cemetery and watched the changing of the guard; we drove through part of the cemetery,” the veteran reflected of his trip.

PUBLIC

By Kim Dedam

“You practically lived by your aircraft all of the time. If a plane came back and needed to be fixed, you fixed it.” Moss has photos of his entire squadron beside one of the F86s they kept running and flew when needed. The F86 was instrumental in engaging Soviet MiG-15 planes in skies over Korea and the dogfights are legendary feats of war. Among the top 10 percent of airmen in his group, Moss also kept commanders’ aircraft in top-flight condition. “We trained on them and stayed right on them,” he recalled. Poring over photo albums and clippings, Moss said he re-upped for service in the Air Force after the war and earned rank as staff sergeant, moving between Fort Ethan Allen, Stewart Field in Newburgh to Minot, North Dakota and back. When the war ended, Moss returned home and worked for Mobile Oil. His daughter Lori also served in the U.S. Air Force and now works for the federal government in Nebraska. His recent Honor Flight came at the invitation of Essex County Sheriff Richard Cutting, who is on the North Country Honor Flight board of directors. “Sheriff Cutting pretty much coordinates it,” Moss said of the invitation that came last year. “I decided, ‘What the heck.’ Lou Egglefield was the one that convinced me to go.” The Sept. 2 flight left Plattsburgh early in the morning with a formal motorcade, ceremony, speeches, and fanfare. “The sheriff’s department picked me up here with an escort and motorcade right into Plattsburgh,” he said. “There were 8 or ten machines (motorcycles, fire and police vehicles), from here in the parade. A couple more joined in Keeseville and on Lake Shore Road. You’d think you were a king the way they treated you.” At the former Plattsburgh Air Base Oval, each veteran was called to the platform. “They call off your name and you go sit on a chair, it was just before 7 a.m.,” Moss said. Speakers reflected on their years of service and on the EQUIPMENT wartime efforts of each.

•MY

Dale Moss praised during trip to Korean War Memorial

•MY PUBLIC NOTICES•


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BATTLE OF PLATTSBURGH —

Photographer Teah Dowling caught the action from the annual Battle of Plattsburgh celebration Sept. 7 to 10.

These and more photos are available for purchase at mycapture. suncommunitynews.com

The North Countryman Sun | September 16, 2017 • 13


14 • September 16, 2017 | The North Countryman Sun

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Sports

From the Sidelines

Highlights

suncommunitynews.com/sports

One week into the 2017 fall sports season and once again, the two most northern teams in Section VII are showing they are forces to be reckoned with once again. The Northeastern Clinton boy’s team started By Keith Lobdell the year winning their annual tournament and • SPORTS EDITOR • opened Division I play with a 4-0 win over Beekmantown as Nicholas LaDue had two goals and Brady LaFountain made six saves. In their second game, the Cougars and Peru Indians played to a 1-1 tie, with Rylee Hollister scoring the lone goal and LaFountain making five saves to preserve the point, leaving the second meeting of the season between these teams Sept. 28 one that could determine the top seek in the Class B playoffs. In Chazy meanwhile, the Eagles rebounded from their championship game loss in the Frankie Garrow Memorial Tournament to score a 3-0 win over Lake Placid. Alex Chapman and Bryan McAfee each scored a goal and offered an assist in the game, while Justin Collins scored the third goal and Ben Norcross finished with nine saves

LADY EAGLES SOAR ON PITCH, COURT

The Beekmantown girl’s soccer and volleyball programs are also on track for another set of strong seasons, as both have started strong in Northern Soccer League and CVAC action. Kiersten Villemarire scored eight goals and added six assists as the Eagles scored wins of 5-4 over Northeastern Clinton (Brinley Lafountain and Emily Royea had a goal and assist each), 9-0 over AuSable Valley and 6-0 over Peru. With that, Villemaire is now 10 goals shy of the 100-goal mark for her stellar career while showing she can find her teammates, making the Eagles offense even more powerful as Avery Durgan has added five goals over the same period of time. The Lady Eagles also scored a pair of 3-0 wins on the volleyball court, extending their set winning streak to 57. The Eagles scored a 3-0 win over Northern Adirondack, as Hannah LaFountain had 19 digs while Alexis Kerr had seven digs for NAC. In their other game, a 3-0 win over Northeastern Clinton, LaFountain had 19 digs and Courtney Macey had 10 kills while Katera Poupore had six assists for NCCS.

ABOVE: Northern Adirondack’s Avery Lambert looks up the field for a pass as Elibzathetown-Lewis/Westport defender Hannah Schwoebel nears. BOTTOM LEFT: Northeastern Clinton’s Patrick Polniaszek chases down the ball against Seton Catholic in their tournament championship game Sept. 1. The Cougars scored a tie against Peru this week, leveling the teams at the top of the Class B rankings. BOTTOM RIGHT: Chazy midfielder Kendra Becker seeks to chase down the ball, along with Keene’s Kim Doan, in the opening round of the Chazy girl’s soccer tournament Aug. 30. The Eagles earned their first win of the Divsion II season with a 6-3 score against Keene in a rematch of the 2016 Class D final. For more pictures from these games, visit mycapture.suncommunitynews.com. Photos by Jill and Keith Lobdell

SOCCER ROUNDUP

The Northern Adirondack girl’s soccer team was able to earn a point last week, as they rallied to score a 3-3 tie against Seton Catholic with Avery Lambert, Emily Peryea and Brynne Gilmore scoring goals, while Paige Chilton made 10 saves. Chilton also had 10 saves against the Lady Griffins, but the Bobcats dropped a 3-1 score as Peryea had the lone goal for NAC in the second half. The NCCS girl’s soccer team opened with a 5-0 win over Peru as Arleigh LaFountain scored a pair of goals in the win. Meanwhile, the Chazy Lady Eagles split their pair of Division II opening games, with the Eagles falling 2-1 to Lake Placid before scoring a 6-3 win against Moriah. Kendra Becker scored three goals over the two games, while Emily Moak added two. The Northern Adirondack boy’s soccer team also earned a split, rebounding from a 5-0 loss to Seton Catholic with a 6-0 win over Elizabethtown-Lewis/Westport, as Cody Lambert scored two goals and Brett Juntunen added a goal and assist. Lucas Smart made 20 saves over the two game.

CROSS COUNTRY

The Cougars placed three runners in the top 10 in their CVAC opener against Saranac and Beekmantown, but were unable to score a win as they started 0-2 on the season. Nolan Guay finisher in ninth place while Mason Supernaw finished in 10th. ■

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Annual 9/11 memorial marks 16 year anniversary SUNY Plattsburgh students, faculty remember lives lost in 2001 terrorist attacks By Elizabeth Izzo STA FF W RITER

PLATTSBURGH | For a few moments this week, silence took hold at the SUNY Plattsburgh campus. Amid a crowd of students, faculty and staff gathered at the edge of Hawkins Pond for a special memorial ceremony to commemerate the Sept. 11 attacks, the only sound was the serene swash of water from the pond fountain. The wounds remain. A small stone sat at the edge of the water, engraved with the names of two college alumnus: Robert Sutcliffe, Class of 1984, and William Erwin, Class of 1992. Both men had been working in the World Trade Center that day. “There are many people connected to SUNY Plattsburgh who suffered that day,” said William Hodge, president of the Omicron Delta Kappa leadership honor society. Beyond the two alumnus, the ceremony

honored the nearly 3,000 people who perished as the result of the attacks on the twin towers in New York City, the Pentagon in Washington, D.C., and the plane crash in Pennsylvania. Though she was only 7 years old at the time, Student Association President Vrinda Kumar said that she struggled to understand the attacks: “I could not understand why such incidents of hate took place in the world,” she said. But as a child, the devastation and loss were not the only thing she saw on the television screen. She also saw the people who showed up to help. “To me, 9/11 is an example of how people can come together and fight for one another,” said Kumar. Regardless of what a person’s passport says, each individual can contribute and have a positive impact, she said. And when help is needed? “We need you and we hope you’ll be there,” she told the crowd. Beyond the stone memorial at the edge of Hawkins Pond, the college’s art museum currently has a sculpture on loan made from steel taken from the World Trade Center, according to Hodge. “Tempered by Memory,” by John Van Alstine and Noah Savett, is on display at the Myers Fine Art Building. ■

The North Countryman Sun | September 16, 2017 • 15

William Hodge, president of the Omicron Delta Kappa leadership honor society, leads the annual 9/11 memorial ceremony on campus at SUNY Plattsburgh. Photo by Elizabeth Izzo

ABOVE: The SUNY Plattsburgh Gospel Choir sang as part of the college’s annual 9/11 memorial ceremony. TOP: A memorial stone at the edge of Hawkins Pond honors the SUNY Plattsburgh alumnus lost in the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

Community service panel encourages kids to get involved “We’re trying to teach the kids about community,” says Erin Kelley By Elizabeth Izzo STA FF W RITER

BEEKMANTOWN | Seventh graders at Beekmantown Central School this week learned one of their first lessons of the school year: not all heroes wear capes. A panel of local officials, law enforcement and public safety volunteers spoke to students on Monday about ways they can get lend their time to benefit the community. “We’re trying to teach the kids about community, and how a community can come together to make a town, city — the world — successful,” said Erin Kelley, seven-grade teacher. “We’re going to challenge these kids to find a community service that they can do to show their appreciation for all the good people do in society.”

ADVICE FOR FUTURE VOLUNTEERS

Each panelist had their own advice for students, revolving around a similar theme: being true to oneself. New York State Police Trooper Bernard Bullis encouraged the students to find their passion, and always be willing to help out. “If someone falls, help them up,” he said. “There’s no greater joy than to be in public service.” Jim Snook, a bank manager for Community Bank and member of the Sunrise Rotary

Club and Red Cross Board of Directors, said that it’s important to look closely at where help is needed: “Look into the community. What do we need? If you see something, fi ll the gap,” he said. Snook told students to call around to various organizations and take the initiative in finding volunteering opportunities. Panelists suggested a number of options, ranging from volunteering for Morrisonville EMS when they turn 16, collaborating with teachers to spearhead a blood drive, to simple, everyday things like helping someone cross the street. Whatever you do, put 100 percent into it, Morrisonville EMS Volunteer Kezia Giddings said. “It can be rough, but you put everything into it,” said Giddings, of her job.

REMEMBERING SERVICE OF THE FALLEN

Following the panel, teachers lead their students to the Beekmantown Town Hall, where WWII veterans and members of the North Country Honor Flight awaited. North Country Honor Flight Director Barrie Finnegan lead a special ceremony remembering the lives lost as part of the Sept. 11 attacks. Finnegan likened Sept. 11 to other generation-defining world events like Pearl Harbor and the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. “Sept. 11 is something you won’t remember,” he said, to students. “But you feel the after effects — though you may not know, not having lived beforehand.” ■

Photo by Elizabeth Izzo

ABOVE: Leading a special Sept. 11 memorial ceremony at Beekmantown Town Hall, North Country Honor Flight Director stood beside Dorothy LeClair, who served as an Army nurse during WWII, Ross Bouyea, who landed on Normandy, and North Country Honor Flight Executive Secretary Pauline Stone. BELOW: A panel of local officials, law enforcement and public safety volunteers spoke to students on Monday about ways they can get lend their time to benefit the community. Panelists included (left to right) Jim Snook, New York State Police Trooper Bernard Bullis, Beekmantown Volunteer Fire Department Chief Darryl Menard, Plattsburgh City Councilor Rachelle Armstrong (Ward 1) and Morrisonville EMS Volunteers Kezia Giddings and Lisa Robinson. Photo by Elizabeth Izzo


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State police to host open house Troop B celebrating 100 years of service By Keith Lobdell STA FF W RITER

RAY BROOK | From the southern edge of the Adirondack Park to the Canadian border, Troop B of the New York State Police (NYSP) has been here to serve the community since 1917.

To celebrate, an open house celebration will be held at their Ray Brook headquarters on Saturday, Sept. 23 from 11 a.m. until 3 p.m. “We are opening our doors up to people so they can see what we do and how we do it,” said Troop B Commander John Tibbitts. “It’s also a chance to keep our relationship with the community strong because this has been a great area to the state police and we have had a great bond with the communities we serve.” The day will feature a tour and demonstrations — includ-

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ing those from Special Operations Response Team and K-9 units — as well as historical displays detailing mounted and aviation units. “The historical displays will be traveling showcases of state police history as well as displays specific to Troop B,” Tibbitts said. Attendees will also get a chance to see the new memorial garden with commemorative bricks. The troop reconstructed the area around the flag poles at Ray Brook as part of the event. The grassy area is now replaced with engraved pavers to memorialize the service of those members, sworn and nonsworn, who have worked in Troop B. “Similar to war memorials and other police memorials in New York and across the nation, our vision is that this monument will permanently preserve, with dignity and respect, state police service to Troop B,” said Tibbitts in a statement. Food vendors and will be on site. The event is free and open to the public. For more information, call 518-897-2000.

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The open house in Ray Brook is part of a celebration of the NYSP centennial happening state-wide throughout 2017. The state police were formed in response to the 1913 murder of Sam Howell, a construction foreman, according to the state police’s official website. When local law enforcement were unable to catch all the suspects, his employer, Miss Newell, was outraged. With the assistance of her friend, author Katherine Mayo, Newell started the campaign to establish a force that would provide police protection to rural areas in New York. The first fatality in the line of fire in the current Troop B boundaries was when James Nathan Skiff was riding in a motorcycle side car in the city of Ogdensburg. The side car was involved in a motor vehicle accident with a trolley car on May 19, 1920. Skiff never regained consciousness and died on May 25, becoming the first state police member to be killed in the line of duty. The most recent Troop B death in the line of duty was Trooper Brian S. Falb, who died from cancer stemming from his assignment to the World Trade Center site following the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001. Troop B, also known as the Black Horse Troop, was the third to have a mounted patrol, which was done away with in 1948. Notable Troop B moments include the Ganienkeh Settlement occupation from 1973 to 1977; the eight-day manhunt for serial killer Robert Garrow in 1973; providing security and support for the 1932 and 1980 Winter Olympic Games in Lake Placid; assisting and aiding those in need during the 1998 Ice Storm; sending a response team to New York City in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks and, most recently, the manhunt for two escaped Clinton Correctional Facility convicts in 2015. ■

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I AM INTERESTED IN BUYING a few acres with a well and or septic system on. $2500- $3000 a acre Cash or more then a few acres seller would hold the contract for a few years. Get back to me if you have anything that I can work with I have a few options i'd like to put a mobile home or a fixer upper. Also If you no anyone also looking to sell or rent with option to buy!!! I would be interested in a 2 to 3 bedroom home/Mobile home or house Need a few acres. My email is poolboy48@icloud.com Or Cell is (401)-529-4909]

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REAL ESTATE DIRECTORY & REAL ESTATE CLASSIFIED RATES REAL ESTATE DIRECTORY $25 PER WEEK INCLUDES B&W PHOTO, HEADING, PRICE, LOCATION, MLS#, 3 LINE DESCRIPTION, CONTACT INFO (2 LINES) ADD'L LINES: $2 EA. FEATURED PROPERTY BLOCK (in weekly rotation w/participants) REAL ESTATE CLASSIFIEDS $25 PER MONTH INCLUDES HEADING, LOGO, CONTACT INFO (2 LINES) (Real Estate Classifieds will appear on the same page beneath the directory.) CONTACT SHANNON CHRISTIAN 518-873-6368 EXT. 201 shannonc@suncommunitynews.com

DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSIONS WILL BE 4PM ON THURSDAYS!

For Sale – 1990 Pen Yan 24ft inboard, outboard boat. Been shrink wrapped past 4 years. Can be seen at 45 Osawentha Drive, Lewis. Call 518-873-2017 for info. Reasonable offer will be accepted. SHOREMASTER BOAT LIFT 5000lbs, on wheels w/ canopy, $1500. 58-36903325424180814629397 RECREATIONAL VEHICLES 1997 REALTA 22RD, 60K miles, 2.8L, $4,452. Contact meat: (843) 416-9893. NYSCAN AIRLINE CAREERS Start Here Get trained as FAA certified Aviation Technician. Financial aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. Call AIM for free information 866-296-7094 DIVORCE $349 - Uncontested divorce papers prepared. Only one signature required. Poor person Application included if applicable. Separation agreements. Custody and support petitions. - 518-2740380 DONATE YOUR CAR to Wheels For Wishes, benefiting Make-A-Wish. We offer free towing and your donation is 100% tax deductible. Call518-650-1110 Today! Lakefront Land Liquidation 15 Lakefront lots Discounted for One Weekend Only September 16th & 17th Sample Offers: 2 Acres w/463ft Lakefront- $49,900 8 Acres w/600ft Lakefront- $89,900 Unspoiled Lake, Woods, Views, Perfect for Getaway Cabin! 3 hrs NY City! Wine Country! EZ terms! 888-905-8847 NewYorkLandandLakes.com Privacy Hedges - FALL BLOWOUT SALE 6 ft Arborvitae (Evergreen) Reg $149 Now $75 Beautiful, Nursery Grown. FREE Installation/FREE delivery, Limited Supply! ORDER NOW: 518-5361367 www.lowcosttreefarm.com Rochester, VT: 3BR/3BA executive home on 65 acres w/horse barn, stunning mountain views, 2 ponds, plus 230 acre parcel. Auction: Oct. 8 @12PM. THCAuction.com 800634-7653 SAWMILLS from only $4397.00MAKE & SAVE MONEY with your own bandmill- Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship! FREE Info/DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com 1-800-578-1363 Ext.300N

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HART APPLE FARMS, LLC IS SEEKING Seasonal Apple Packers for 6:30am-3:00pm shift, 20-40 per week. Duties to include removing blemished apples from coveryer belt, packing apples into bags or cartons, lifting up to 50lbs onto the converyer belt, taping & stacking cartons on to pallets, cleaning lunch room, work area, & restroom at the end of the day. Other misc. duties as needed. Apply in person 2301 State Rte. 22, Peru, NY or Call 518-8346007.

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Clinton County Transactions

DATE

GRANTOR

GRANTEE

08/17/17

William Morgan

Mark Lukens

-LOCATION

Peru

PRICE $21,000

08/17/17

Kathryn Haupt

Brian Talley

08/17/17

Norman Lavigne

Claude Landry

08/17/17

Bonnie Pelkey

Chelsea Durivage

Beekmantown

08/18/17

Suellen Bonville

David Kirkum

Schuyler Falls

08/18/17

Mousseau Properties

David Ellsworth

Plattsburgh

08/18/17

Gabriel Girard

Mousseau Properties

Plattsburgh

$17,000

08/18/17

Castlerock 2017 LLC

Arthur Bachelder

Champlain

$31,500

08/18/17

Catherine Hendrix

Scott Booth

Plattsburgh

$179,900

08/18/17

Chapman Properties LLC

Bridgebrook LLC

Plattsburgh

$540,000

08/18/17

ACR Properties LLC

Bridgebrook LLC

Plattsburgh

$392,500

08/21/17

Jin Kim

Jonathan Chew

Plattsburgh

$184,500

08/21/17

Michael Lucas

Kayla Backer

Plattsburgh

$108,100

08/21/17

Arthur Paul Coach

Raymond DiPasquale

Beekmantown

$335,000

08/21/17

June Seymour

Aaron Kellett

Plattsburgh

08/22/17

Joseph Bruno

Matthew Winaldi

Peru

$175,000

08/22/17

Kevin Clark McCallister

Michael Thomas

Black Brook

$170,000 $140,000

Plattsburgh

$245,500

Peru

$125,000 $15,000 $2,500 $227,500

$60,000

08/22/17

Timothy Castle

Ralph Parrotte

Plattsburgh

08/22/17

Cole Lapoint

Eric Robideau

Mooers

$90,000

08/22/17

Suburban Heating LLC

Andrew McLaughlin

Peru

$111,000

08/22/17

Bonnie Lee Rabideau

Jennifer Warren

Beekmantown

$14,500

08/23/17

Paul LaValley

Aaron Merrill

Mooers

$92,000

08/23/17

Diane Coolidge

Antonio Pinto

Clinton

$100,000

08/23/17

Carol Laflesh

Todd Labombard

Chazy

$122,000

08/23/17

Anthony Bianco

Jessica Hanson

Champlain

$240,000

08/23/17

Donald Hanson

Daniel Beggs

Chazy

$100,000

08/23/17

Couch Properties LLC

Chad Poirier

Plattsburgh

$225,000

08/24/17

Gisela Lange

Raymond Atkinson

Black Brook

$10

08/24/17

Bryant Fortin

Chistopher Stark

Ellenburg

$127,850

08/24/17

Amanda Christon

Michael Baker

Saranac

$186,000

08/24/17

Adebambo Kadri

Maher Hanna

Plattsburgh

$330,000

08/24/17

Michelle Winters

Francis Wheelahan

Black Brook

08/24/17

Thelma Gadway

Robert Russin

Clinton

$10,000

08/24/17

Federal National Mortgage Association

Judy Palmer

Plattsburgh

$50,000

08/24/17

Raymond Lacroix

Raymond Lacroix

Plattsburgh

$10

08/25/17

William Favreau

206 West Bay Plaza LLC

Plattsburgh

$249,000

08/25/17

Secretary of Housing and Urban Development

Castlerock 2017 LLC

Champlain

$25,000

08/25/17

Matthew Douthat

Wells Fargo Bank NA

Beekmantown

$151,209

08/25/17

Michael Baker

Jared Booth

Plattsburgh

$117,000

-

Essex County Transactions

DATE

GRANTOR

GRANTEE

--

$1

LOCATION

PRICE

Crown Point

$130,000

08/17/17

Eric Spetelunas

Ashley Tefoe

08/17/17

Francis Taitt

Michael Richards

08/17/17

Danielle DeMarzo Foundation

JLKN Acres LLC

08/17/17

Essex County

Fred and Joyce Namer

Ticonderoga

$14,964

08/17/17

Daniel Bragoli

Michael Frank

Wilmington

$38,800

08/17/17

John and Dana Rodeghiero

Edwin Sarmiento-Pani

Moriah

$20,000

08/18/17

Saran Callan McCune

Upper Farm LLC

Lewis

$1

08/18/17

Dorothea Lincoln

Robert Lincoln

Jay

$1

Eric Supernault

Moriah

08/21/17

Larry Koller

Georgi Morozov

Minerva

08/21/17

Mark Dingley

Anthony Esoff

Jay

08/22/17

Frederick Donlon

Sean Evanoff

Crown Point

08/22/17

Julia Loomis

Ausable Valley Habitat for Humanity

Keene

08/22/17

Richard Brooks

Bernard Waleski

Schroon

$285,000

08/22/17

Claude Patry

Andrew Chatterton

Willsboro

$59,900

08/22/17

Larry Gadwaw

John Hinrichsen

North Elba

$285,000

08/22/17

Laura Smith

John and Tammy O'Donnell

Newcomb

$76,500

08/22/17

Annett Family Trust

Beryle Mary Carson

North Elba

$39,000

1-800-GO-GUARD • NA TIONALGUARD.com ! 08/21/17 Ann Marie Tursky

AM ·~~

GENERAL

CADNET

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

4 BEDROOM HOME for sale in Lewis, NY Master bedroom on 1st floor large fenced in back yard Priced to sell at only $79,000 (518) 873-2362

FOR SALE Frigidaire Dishwasher $25; GE Electric Stove $25, both good condition. Call 518-873-2253

Chesterfield Jay

$700 $95,000

$132,500 $2,500 $80,000 $165,000 $25,000


18 • September 16, 2017 | The North Countryman Sun HEALTH & FITNESS

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LEGALS 8 SOUTH PLATT STREET ENTERPRISES, LLC NOTICE OF FORMATION of a domestic Limited Liability Company (LLC): DATE OF FORMATION: The Articles of Organization were filed with the New York State Secretary of State on August 30, 2017. NEW YORK OFFICE LOCATION: Clinton County AGENT FOR PROCESS: The Secretary of State is designated as Agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. The Secretary of State shall mail a copy of any process against the LLC to 8 South Platt Street, Plattsburgh, New York 12901. PURPOSE: To engage in any lawful act or activity. NC-09/09-10/14/20176TC-162537 NOTICE OF FORMATION Adirondack Professional Building, LLC, a domestic LLC, filed with the SSNY on 08/14/2017. Office Location: Clinton County, SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail process

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Liability Company (LLC): DATE OF FORMATION: The Articles of Organization were filed with the New York State Secretary of State on August 21, 2017. NEW YORK OFFICE LOCATION: Clinton County AGENT FOR PROCESS: The Secretary of State is COMMUNITY NEWS designated & PRINTING as Agent Published by Denton upon Publications Inc. NOTICE OF FORMATION whom process Adirondack Professional against the LLC may be Building, LLC, a domes- served. The Secretary of tic LLC, filed with the State shall mail a copy of any process against SSNY on 08/14/2017. the LLC LEGALS to 16 Brandell Office Location: LEGALS Clinton County, SSNY is desig- Drive, Plattsburgh, New York 12901. nated as agent upon whom process against PURPOSE: To engage in the LLC may be served. any lawful act or activity. SSNY shall mail process NC-09/09-10/14/2017to Adirondack Profes- 6TC-162538 sional Building, LLC, Bracy Properties LLC. 675 State Route 3, Suite 105, Plattsburgh, New Filed with SSNY on York 12901. General 7/28/17. Office: Clinton Purpose. Perpetual du- County. SSNY designated as agent for process ration. & shall mail to: 124 US NC-09/02-10/07/2017Oval Plattsburgh NY 6TC-162086 12903. Purpose: any B T & G MANAGEMENT, lawful. LLC NC-09/02-10/07/2017NOTICE OF FORMATION 6TC-161910 of a domestic Limited Liability Company (LLC): IMPORTANT INFORMADATE OF FORMATION: TION ABOUT YOUR The Articles of Organiza- SPECTRUM CHANNEL LINEUP tion were filed with the Served: New York State Secre- Communities Towns of Altona, Bantary of State on August gor, Bombay, Burke, 21, 2017. NEW YORK OFFICE LO- Champlain, Chateaugay, Chazy, Constable, EllenCATION: Clinton County AGENT FOR PROCESS: burg, Fort Covington, Malone, Moira, The Secretary of State is Waverly, designated as Agent Moosers, Westville and Villages of upon whom process Brushton, Burke, Chamagainst the LLC may be served. The Secretary of plain, Chateaugay, MalState shall mail a copy one and Rouses Point, of any process against NY. Effective on or after the LLC to 16 Brandell October 1, 2017, SpecDrive, Plattsburgh, New trum Sports NY on Basic/Starter TV channels York 12901. PURPOSE: To engage in 19 and 323 will no longer be available. any lawful act or activity. For a complete lineup, NC-09/09-10/14/2017-

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CONROY CAMP, LLC NOTICE OF FORMATION of a domestic Limited Liability Company (LLC): DATE OF FORMATION: The Articles of Organization were filed with the New York State Secretary of State on August 9, 2017. NEW YORK OFFICE LOCATION: Clinton County AGENT FOR PROCESS: The Secretary of State is designated as Agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. The Secretary of State shall mail a copy of any process against the LLC to 68 Cooper Drive, Plattsburgh, New York 12901. PURPOSE: To engage in any lawful act or activity. NC-09/02-10/07/2017-

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Adverof a domestic Limited tise with us! We connect you with Liability Company (LLC): nearly 3-million consumers (plus DATE OF FORMATION: more online!) statewide NOTICEwith OF aFORMATION The Articles of OrganizaclassifiedOF ad. Advertise propLIMITED your LIABILITY tion were filed with the erty for just $489 for(LLC): a 25-word COMPANY Name: New York State Secre*Free Vehicle/Boat Pickup ad, zoned ads start at $229. Visit SMASH BROTHERS ANYWHERE tary of State on August AdNetworkNY.com or *We Accept All Vehicles CAPITAL, LLC., Articles 9, 2017. call 315-437-6173 Running or Not of Organization filed with NEW YORK OFFICE LOMake-A-Wish® * Fully Tax Deductible theIMPROVEMENTS Secretary of State of CATION: Clinton County HOME New York (SSNY) on AGENT FOR PROCESS: .. *_ N ortheast New York locaThe Secretary of State is CENTRAL08/14/2017. BOILER Office CERTIFIED PROPERTY tion: OUTDOOR Clinton County. designated as Agent LAKEVIEW Classic Edge FURWheelsForWishes.org SSNY has been desigHOLDINGS LLC, Arts. of upon whom process NACES. Exceptional performance Call: (518) 650-1110 nated as agentHardware of the Org. filed with the SSNY against the LLC may be Adirondack and value. * Car Donation d/b/a Wheels For Office Wishes. To learn more about our programs LLCToday upon518-834-4600 whom proon Foundation 07/28/2017. NOTICE OF FORMATION served. The Secretary of Call Dennis or fimwdal i11forma1io11, n'sit www.wlteelsforwisltes.org. State shall mail a copy cess against it may be loc: Clinton County. OF LIMITED LIABILITY Ext. 6 of any process against served. SSNY shall mail SSNY has been desig- COMPANY (LLC) the LLCLEGALS to 68 Cooper nated as of process to: agent upon Name: LEGALS Poirier Proper- a copy LEGALS LEGALS Drive, Plattsburgh, New whom process against ties, LLC Articles of Or- C/O SMASH BROTHERS York 12901. the LLC may be served. ganization filed with the CAPITAL, LLC., 52 Court PURPOSE: To engage in SSNY shall mail process Secretary of State of Street Apt. A, Plattsto: The LLC, 18 Lake- New York (SSNY) on burgh, NY 12901. Purany lawful act or activity. view Dr, Plattsburgh , May 3, 2017 Office Lo- pose: Any Lawful PurNC-09/02-10/07/2017NY 12901. Reg Agent: cation: Clinton County. pose. Will continue per6TC-161739 NYSCORPORATION.The SSNY is designated petually. NOTICE OF FORMATION COM, 1971 Western as agent of the LLC NC-09/02-10/07/2017OF LIMITED LIABILITY Ave., #1121, Albany, NY upon whom process 6TC-162087 COMPANY (LLC) 12203. Purpose: Any against it may be served. Name: Empire Dance Lawful Purpose. SSNY shall mail a copy Company, LLC Articles of any process to the NC-08/19-09/23/2017of Organization filed with LLC at: 9592 Route 9, 6TC-160283 the Secretary of State of Chazy, NY 12921. PurNew York (SSNY) on LOTUS SALON & SPA pose: Any lawful pur- FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY 07/26/2017 Office Loca- LLC Articles of Org. filed pose permitted for LLCs tion: Clinton County. The NY Sec. of State (SSNY) under NY Limited Liabili- (LLC) Name: Strongbox USA, LLC Articles of OrSSNY is designated as 8/11/2017. Office in ty Company Act. ganization filed with the agent of the LLC upon Clinton Co. SSNY desig. NC-09/09-10/14/2017Secretary of State of whom process against it agent of LLC upon 6TC-154808 New York (SSNY) on may be served. SSNY whom process may be 004/28/2017 Office locashall mail a copy of any served. SSNY shall mail NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY tion: Clinton County. process to the LLC at: copy of process to 1107 7678 State Route 22, Cumberland Head Rd., COMPANY (LLC): Name: United States CorporaBROTHERS tion Agents Inc (USCAI) West Chazy, NY 12992. Plattsburgh, NY 12901. SMASH is designated as agent of Purpose: To engage in Purpose: Any lawful pur- CAPITAL, LLC., Articles of Organization filed with the LLC upon whom any lawful act or activity. pose. Principal business the Secretary of State of process against it may NC-08/12-09/16/2017location: 12 Plattsburgh 6TC-159982 Plaza, Plattsburgh, NY New York (SSNY) on be served. USCAI shall 08/14/2017. Office loca- mail a copy of any pro12901. LAKEVIEW PROPERTY NC-08/26-09/30/2017tion: Clinton County. cess to the LLC at: 26 SSNY has been desig- Oakwood Drive Rouses HOLDINGS LLC, Arts. of 6TC-161263 nated as agent of the Org. filed with the SSNY Point N.Y 12979. The LLC upon whom pro- LLC's purpose is to enon 07/28/2017. Office NOTICE OF FORMATION loc: Clinton County. OF LIMITED LIABILITY cess against it may be gage in any lawful activiserved. SSNY shall mail ty SSNY has been desig- COMPANY (LLC) nated as agent upon Name: Poirier Proper- a copy of process to: NC-08/26-09/30/2017ties, LLC Articles of Or- C/O SMASH BROTHERS whom process against 6TC-160890 the LLC may be served. ganization filed with the CAPITAL, LLC., 52 Court SSNY shall mail process Secretary of State of Street Apt. A, Plattsto: The LLC, 18 Lake- New York (SSNY) on burgh, NY 12901. Purview Dr, Plattsburgh , May 3, 2017 Office Lo- pose: Any Lawful Pur-

DONATE YOUR CAR Wheels For Wishes .,,.;; ,;.,


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The North Countryman Sun | September 16, 2017 • 19

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7/n Stock!

39 MO. LEASE,l OK plus Tax, Title, Registration,

2017 CHEVY1500 CUSTOM

l st Payment

2017 CHEVYSILVERADO CREWCAB

LEASEFOR

#CB314 MSRP$43,395

$333°0

#CB360 MSRP $49,715 ADKCHEVYPRICE $46,678 ADKCHEVYDISCOUNT-$8,000

36 MO.,1OKMI./YEAR 1STPAYMENT, PLUSTAX,TITLE& REG WITHCOMPETITIVE LEASE

$386-iB '

PLUSTAX,TITLE& REG. MUSTHAVECHEVYVEHICLE.

Photosare for illustration purposesonly. Not responsiblefor typographicalerrors.

Route 9 • Elizabethtown,

NY· 518-873-6389

PRE-OWNED

• www.adirondackchevrolet.com

VEHICLES

2016 CHEVYEQUINOXLT ~~rJ~~~~ CC37A,REMOTE START,HEATED SEATS,45,000 Ml .............. $19,999

2016 CHEVYTRAXLT ~~rJ~~~~ CB365A,REMOTE START,POWERSEAT,21,000 Ml ................ $18,595

2015 CHEVYEQUINOXLT CC43A,REMOTE START,POWER,HEATED SEATS, 42,000 Ml .......................................................................................... $17,595

2014 CHEVYIMPALALTZ ~~rJ~~~~ CC54A,SUNROOF, LEATHER, 21,000 Ml ................................... $22,595

~~rJ~~~~

2014 CHEVYs1LvEA A\aD DBLCAB CB252A,ALL-STAR!PJ il1'oN,38,000 Ml .................................. $28,995 2013 CHEVYSILVERADO LTZEXTCAB ~~rJ~~~~ CB233A,HARDTONNEAU, STEPS,LEATHER, 45,000 Ml......$29,995

2014 BUICKENCORELT ~~rJ~~~~ CB299A,LEATHER, HEATED SEATS,39,000 Ml........................ $17,995 2011GMCSIERRACREW CB234A,ALL-STAREDITION, STEPS, SPRAYED IN BEDLINER,68,000 Ml ............................................. $24,595

2010 BUICKLUCERNECXL CB380A,LEATHER, REMOTE, 45,000 Ml ................................... $12,995

GREAT SELECTION OF PRE-OWNED VEHICLES!

GiveOurSalesDepartmenta CallTodayat 518-873-6389


20 • September 16, 2017 | The North Countryman Sun

\I.

www.suncommunitynews.com

Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

~

2016

u

13260

#3174

2017

RAM_ 1500QUAil

BMW328XI_ WHITE,POWERMOONROOF,AWD

13277

DODGE CHAllliER

MAROON, HEM/,SLT,4X4

CONTIJS/ON BWEPEARLCOAT, SXTSEDAN3.6 v6, 8 SPEED,AUTOMATIC

~ #3300

CHRYSLER 3_0Q MAX STEEL METAWCCLEARCOAT, BASE SEDAN,V6,BSPEED,AUTOMATIC

2015

#J17204A

KIAFORTE_ SX

BLACKSXFWD,HATCHBACK, 6 SPEED, ' AUTOMATIC

2015

#T1l194A

CHMCAMAllO

SILVERLT1/ILT,COUPE, REARWHEEL DRIVE,6 ' SPEED MANUAL

#3301

2014

#J17199A

CH RYSLER 2oac DODGE CHA/lGER

GRANITE CRYTALS METAWC,AWD,V6

BLACKSEDANREARWHEEL DRIVE,5-SPEED ' ' AUTOMATIC

MARKETVALUE......................... $28,500

2014

#J17227A

2014

fl1

619

2013

2A

JEEP WRAN_GLERFORD ESCAl!E

COPPERHEAD PEARLCDAT, SPORT 4X4,6-CYL, 4X4 5.sPEEDAUTOMATIC,

fl17258A

RAif 1500REBEL BRIGHTWHITEPEARLCDAT, 5.7LV-BCYI., BSPDAUTO

DODGE JOURNEr

SUNSET, SE,6 SPEED AUTOMATIC, 4X4

2016

#Jl7152A

#J1720A

BLACK,SESUV,4-CYL,FRONTWHEEL DRIVE

2014

#3237

2017

#3286

KIASPDRTAGE DODGE CHEROKEEJEEP RENEGADE BLACK,SXAWD,SUV,6-SPEED

CHERRYRED, fflAILHAWK4X4,SUV,6-CYL4X4

GRAY, UMITED4X4, SUV,4X44-CYL


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