Nc a 0099 1128

Page 1

ECRWSS PRESORTED STANDARD U.S. POSTAGE PAID DENTON PUBLICATIONS/ NEW MARKET PRESS PO Box 338 Elizabethtown NY 12932 Postal Patron

Saturday,ÊNo vemberÊ28,Ê2015

>>

www.SunCommunityNews.com

In FEATURES | pg. 13

Local students showcase talent

Area musicians attend Area All State concerts

>>

In PROFILES | pg. 02

>>

In NEWS| pg. 03

Mighty Matthew BCSD’s Digital fights with might Literacy Initiative Local family stays strong as son battles illness

Beekmantown launches phase II of initiative

Mystery shrouds Lewis missile site

As a plan to pump toxic waste from a decommissioned Cold War site surfaces, residents are calling for answers By Pete DeMola

pete@suncommunitynews.com

LEWIS — This stretch of the Adirondack Park is a quiet place. It’s a pocket of wilderness in northern Essex County that serves as a respite of silent meditation among the pines; a place of home and community where generations have

raised their families, worked in the nearby mines and mills and practiced football in the frosty shade of the nearby mountains. It’s because of this remote location that, perhaps unsurprisingly, the federal government designated it as a nuclear missile launch site during the Cold War. The eight-acre site on Hale Hill Road, once a bulwark against nuclear armageddon, has long been praised in national media profiles as a whimsical example of atomic age chic. But those who live in its shadow are now gravely concerned about the lack of transparency surrounding a plan by its new owners to pump the water that has gathered at the bottom of the silo, treat it and discharge it into

HereÊ comesÊÊ SantaÊ Sprint

the land that provides their drinking water. The subsequent sludge, which contains lead and polychlorinated biphenyl (PCBs), would then be shipped off-site for disposal. Residents became aware of the project only after a county worker, through a workplace conversation, learned of a state pollutant discharge elimination system permit that was filed in September. “We’d be left completely in the dark if it wasn’t by accident finding out about this process,” said Dan Canavan, a local resident. But work had already started on the site, located about 30 miles south of Plattsburgh. >> Story Continued | pg. 7

Photo by Pete DeMola

Mooers conducting feasibility study for water and sewer Plans to discuss incorporating a main water and sewer system in the town

Holiday walk/run to take place Nov. 28 ROUSES POINT — Take out your Santa hat and suit early because the second annual Santa Sprint will take place Saturday, Nov. 28 at 9 a.m. The run started last year by a member of the Champlain-Rouses Point Rotary who Teah had a passion for running and thought a Dowling Santa Sprint would be an unique way to Writer raise money for a local cause. The first year, the rotary raised money to support a literacy program for the youth in the Champlain and Rouses Point community. Although the run didn’t have a lot of people, the rotary raised enough funds to support the program. For this year, they wanted to build on that success to support a cause that touched more people: North Country Honor Flight. “This is a great way to kick off the holiday season and support a good cause,” said Molly Ryan, president of the Champlain-Rouses Point Rotary. “It’s also a way to say thank you to the veterans for all that they do year-long.” >> Story Continued | pg. 11

Plans to pump sludge from a former nuclear launch site in Lewis have raised questions from residents who are concerned about the possible effect on their drinking water.

By Teah Dowling

teah@suncommunitynews.com

MOOERS — The Town of Mooers is currently conducting a feasibility study of the water and sewer to see if it’s possible to put in a main system for both. The feasibility study began in August 2015 after considering to clean up the contaminated Great Chazy River because of the sewer run off. After town council discussions, they decided to include water into the study as well to see if it’s feasible and cost effective to incorporate both. Supervisor Jeff Menard said if they can only afford one, they’ll incorporate the sewer. SEWER ISSUES

The second annual Santa Sprint will take place Saturday, Nov. 28. If participants bring a toy to the race, they’ll receive their own Santa hat. Photo provided

Right now, each property is supposed to have its own sewer system. Because of some of the houses being in close proximity to >> Story Continued | pg. 8


2 | November 28, 2015 • The North Countryman Sun

www.suncommunitynews.com

Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

Mighty Matthew continues to fight with might Local family stays strong as son continues battle against mito and CIPO

PLATTSBURGH’S OWN SUPERHERO Over the course of his diagnosis, Matthew has not only become a fan to residents of Plattsburgh, but the North Country. In the summer of 2012, Matthew received keys to the City of Plattsburgh. He also joined SUNY Plattsburgh’s baseball team in November 2014. In Lewis, Matthew took on the role of an Essex County Sheriff ’s deputy on a mission to track down two notorious lollipop bandits in town. Terry stated that the family tries their best to get Matthew out and about in the community to raise awareness for his condition. In return, the community has come together a number of times to raise money and support Plattsburgh’s local hero — something he truly appreciates. “It’s amazing how people are helping me so much just because I’m in the hospital,” Mighty Matthew said. “I just want to say thank you so much for all of it.” To learn more about Mighty Matthew, his and his family’s journey, visit caringbridge.org/visit/matthewcech/journal/index/74/0/desc or his Facebook page “Mighty Matthew.”

By Teah Dowling

teah@suncommunitynews.com

PLATTSBURGH — A two-day trip to Boston for testing turned into a 30-day trip of procedures and unexpected complications for Mighty Matthew. Matthew Cech, Plattsburgh’s 11-year-old local superhero, went to Boston for testing to find out if Matthew could consume more by mouth than he does now: lollipops, popsicles and a few other items — hoping he could maybe consume baby foods and other soft foods such as squash. The testing didn’t go as good as the Cech family hoped, which led into a series of problems — one of the biggest being having emergency surgery to remove his colon and appendix. After eight sedated procedures and a few unexpected complications, Matthew returned home last Thursday. “He’s OK,” said Terry Cech, Matthew’s father. “He’s still recovering and he’s building his strength back up. “Hopefully, he will be back to where he was very soon.” MIGHTY MATTHEW’S BEGINNING Matthew was diagnosed with mitochondrial disease complex I and III CIPO (chronic intestinal pseudo obstruction) at 3 and half years old in January 2008. Matthew’s intestines and stomach don’t work properly. He currently has a feeding tube in stomach in which he receives

Plattsburgh’s local superhero Mighty Matthew continues his fight against mito and CIPO. Photos provided

his nutrition. Because of his illnesses, Matthew visits Boston every three months in two different hospitals and sees 10 to 12 different doctors. Although Matthew’s road has been tough, he fought, and is still fighting, through it alongside Terry, his mother, Lisa, and older brothers Bradley (19) and Steven (17). He also got through it with the help of his superhero persona that began when he was 5 years old as a handmade Halloween costume. “He came up with the name,” Terry said, “and it stuck with him.”


Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

www.suncommunitynews.com

The North Countryman Sun • November 28, 2015 | 3

BCSD launches phase II of Digital Literacy Initiative

By Teah Dowling

teah@suncommunitynews.com

WEST CHAZY — Beekmantown Central School District launched phase II of its One to One Digital Literacy Initiative last week. The One to One (one student to one device) Digital Literacy Initiative supplies Dell Chromebooks to Beekmantown’s students and teachers to help promote future educational technology growth within the classroom. Phase I started in April when a group of 32 teachers and administrators learned the ways of a Dell Chromebook and how to use it in the classroom. At the start of that school year, 670 of those devices were given out to the students of those teachers. “We did our homework and we went to a lot of places,” Superintendent Dan Mannix said. “We looked a lot of different options and we made the right decision.” This year, more teachers joined the initiative and for the next school year, roughly 500 more will be given out to students: As of now, the initiative has spread throughout half of kindergarten, first grade, second grade and third grade; all of fourth, fifth and sixth grades; a lot of seventh, eighth, ninth and eleventh grade; and little to none in tenth and twelfth grades — all based off of the teachers willingness to participate in the initiative. For this phase and the last phase, teachers could choose whether to incorporate Chromebooks into the classroom. Mannix said for future phases, this might be a requirement since the overall goal of the initiative is to match one student with one device. BECOMING TECH-SAVVY One reason as to why teachers are hesitant to joining the initiative is because they don’t consider themselves to be techsavvy. “It’s scary even if you have some technology abilities,” said Amy Couture, second grade teacher. “There have been times in the classroom where things don’t go right with the Chromebooks and I get nervous.” During the meeting, Couture shared her experiences along

with the Google apps she uses in her classroom, including Google Classroom, Kahoot, SchoolTool, Google Docs and, her personal favorite, BlendSpace. She explained how even though she struggled with some of the apps, she learned which ones she preferred over the other through trial and error and assistance from tech-support. CLASSROOM MANAGEMENT Another concern of the teachers is classroom management of their students with their machines. Some concerns include students browsing or going on their Facebook when they’re supposed to be doing an assignment and focusing more on the device than the teacher. “We have the same problems in this classroom setting than one without Chromebooks,” said Sarah Vagi, a seventh and eighth grade social studies teacher. “But when the students go on their Chromebooks, they know that it’s a privilege.” Vagi said if her students do act out, she can monitor them on her computer and see exactly what they’re doing. Also, restrictions can be set up to prevent students from going on specific websites at certain times. PORTABLE LEARNING Students in the higher grades are able to take their Chromebooks out of the classroom to their homes to complete any necessary assignments given by the teacher — giving their parents an opportunity to learn something new along with them. “Everytime my son has to do something on the computer he shows me,” said Stacy Bobbie who has a son in the fourth grade. “Just what they’re doing in that classroom is amazing.” Under specific restrictions similar to the ones they have in school, students are expected to use the Chromebooks at home like they would in school. Now, students without internet access in their homes will be able to use the Chromebooks as well with the help of the school’s new HotSpot Program. HOTSPOT PROGRAM Also on that day, BCSD announced its new program called the HotSpot program, which offers a limited number of free wireless hotspot devices to students in the

Digital Literacy Initiative with Chromebooks who don’t have Internet access at home. This program, funded through the ELT (Extended Learning Time) grant, enables students to check out internet service for up to two weeks at a time at no charge. “For some of these students, this is the first wireless access they’ve ever had and this is the first computer that has ever been in their household,” said Gary Lambert, director of 21st Century Learning. “We’re not just changing their structure, but we’re changing their lives.” To reserve a wireless hotspot, students need to visit the “students” section of the district’s website to fill out and submit the reservation form for the device. Parents will also need to complete a consent form, which is also available on the same page.

A panel of Beekmantown teachers (Sarah Vagi, John Chapman and Amy Couture) and Technology Integration Specialist David Yonteff addressed the concerns of incoming phase II teachers. Photo by Teah Dowling

79738

Roughly 500 more Chromebooks to be released to Beekmantown students


4 | November 28, 2015 • The North Countryman Sun

OPINIONS

Behind the Pressline

OurÊ goalÊ atÊ SunÊ CommunityÊ NewsÊ isÊ toÊ publishÊ accurate,Ê usefulÊ andÊ timelyÊ informationÊ inÊ ourÊ newspapers,Ê newsÊ products,Ê shoppingÊ guides,Ê vacationÊ guides,Ê andÊ otherÊ specialtyÊ publicationsÊ forÊ theÊ benefit of our readers and advertisers. WeÊ valueÊ yourÊ commentsÊ andÊ suggestionsÊ concerningÊ allÊ aspectsÊ of Ê thisÊ publication.

Dan Alexander

Publisher/CEO

O

>> Story Continued | pg. 7

OPINION

Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

www.suncommunitynews.com/editorials

Odd reversals

ur world felt a seismic shift last week after the terrorist raid in Paris that killed far too many. Couple that event with the definite proof that terrorists in fact did down the Russian airliner a few weeks ago, killing all 224 on board. Finally we are seeing nations taking significant steps to put an end to the unspeakable terror we’ve witnessed with increasing regularity throughout the world. During my life time, I’ve known the United States of America to be the world’s leader in addressing hotspots around the world. We learned the hard way many years ago, we could not turn our back on world issues as, sooner or later they would land on our shores and it was always more prudent to face them on our terms and before they became too large to handle. Such is not the case currently despite the threats and attacks we’ve seen both at home and abroad. Perhaps our reluctance to fully engage is just not how we view our role any longer. Perhaps politics have driven our nation so far beyond common sense and finding common ground that we no longer have the ability nor the stomach to lead as we once did. Consider this: Gun violence in this country, not committed by criminals or gangs, but by a few deranged, unstable, or suicidal individuals has caused many in this country to seek the banishment of guns and ammunition ownership by private law biding citizens. The fear being what the guns and ammo may do to innocent citizens. Now as we consider allowing Syrian refugees a free pass into the nation another group of many fear a few among the refugees are terrorists in disguise who seek to conduct their rein of terror within our midst. Just like the guns, we are told by leading law enforcement officials there is no way to verify the intention of every refugee no more than they can predetermine the few already among us who might choose to kill innocent men, women and children. It seems to me both of these groups are making the same argument but in opposite directions strictly for political gain. It’s hard to understand how any country’s citizen can turn a weapon or bomb

www.suncommunitynews.com

Publisher ............................................................................................Daniel E. Alexander Associate Publisher ............................................................................................ Ed Coats Operations Manager ............................................................................... William Coats General Manager Central...................................................Daniel E. Alexander, Jr. Managing Editor ...........................................................................................John Gereau General Manager North ................................................................. Ashley Alexander General Manager South .................................................................Scarlette Merfeld

Visit us online at www.suncommunitynews.com or www.suncommunityprinting.com ADVERTISING POLICIES: Denton Publications, Inc. disclaims all legal responsibility for errors or omissions or typographic errors. All reasonable care is taken to prevent such errors. We will gladly correct any errors if notification is received within 48 hours of any such error. We are not responsible for photos, which will only be returned if you enclose a self-addressed envelope. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Local Zone $29.00 annual subscription mailed to zip codes beginning in 128 or 129. Annual Standard Mail delivery $47 annual mailed outside the 128 or 129 Local Zone. First Class Mail Subscription (sent in sealed envelope) $50 for 3 months/$85 for 6 months/$150 for an annual. $47 Annual, First Class Mail (sent in sealed envelope) $50 for 3 months / $85 for 6 months / $150 for an annual. ADDRESS CORRECTIONS: Send address changes in care of this paper to P.O. Box 338, Elizabethtown, New York 12932. EDITORIAL AND OPINION PAGE POLICY: Letters, editorials and photo submissions are welcomed. Factual accuracy cannot be guaranteed in Letters to the Editor or Guest Editorials. Editor reserves the right to reject or edit any editorial matter. All views expressed in Letters or Guest Editorials are not necessarily the views of the paper, its staff or the company. ©COPYRIGHT PROTECTION: This publication and its entire contents are copyrighted, 2015, Denton Publications, Inc. Reproduction in whole or in part is prohibited without prior written consent. All Rights Reserved. Association Members of; FCPNY • NYPA • IFPA • AFCP • PaperChain

EDITORIALS

Gov. Pataki should call it a day H

ere come the holidays. We’re thrilled not only for the obvious reasons — food, family and football — but also because it’s a time when the ever-present political drone becomes slightly muted and the jabber of the presidential race fades into the holiday landscape. Once the presidential hopefuls emerge from their turkey-padded cocoons, the candidates can look forward to another six weeks on the stump before voters in Iowa and New Hampshire kick off the nation’s first nominating contests. The GOP field is showing signs of winnowing, the most recent dropout being Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, whose campaign failed to gain traction and was languishing at 1 percent in national polls when he exited the race earlier this month. “This is not my time,” Jindal said. Neither is it Gov. George Pataki’s. But despite having virtually zero support — the latest Washington Post-ABC News poll has the former New York chief executive polling at less than a half-percent — Pataki remains in the race. Governor, you’ve made a noble effort, but it’s time to drop out. The three-term governor launched his candidacy in May as a moderate Republican, one who presided over the state during 9/11 and could appeal to the broad center of the American electorate. But with the rise of other candidates who have occupied this niche — Ohio Gov. John Kasich as the moderate can-do governor; Chris Christie, of New Jersey, as the red warrior in the deep-blue state — the basis for his candidacy, if that was even a viable one at all, has evaporated. Pataki has now resorted to tossing plutonium-grade bombs from his perch in New Hampshire in a game of one-upmanship as to who can issue the most hawkish remarks. The left has an “agenda of victimhood,” he has said. He’s called Team Obama a “disgrace” and says the administration is “holding the military hostage” — “The Obama-Clinton-Kerry axis of evasion, equivocation & error has left America at the mercy of ISIS cowards,” he wrote on Twitter. Jeez. Sure, we know it’s all just red meat for the party base, much of which may be forgotten by the general election. But it just comes across as increasingly desperate and ill-fitting on the governor, who has never seemed like much of an ideologue. Fear mongering only pays short-term political dividends. It’s never a good sign when you have to constantly remind voters who you are. Even worse is when your campaign is only notable for its invisibility. But harming your legacy with this sharp tack to the right, attempting to leverage unreasonable fear into political gain, is the icing on the cake — It doesn’t make you sound tough, but rather like an opportunist. At 70, it seems like Pataki has no real need to reshape his legacy or carve out another career as a cable commentator, author or cabinet member, like the other long-shot candidates. Nor would he be in contention for a veep spot on the eventual ticket. It all just seems like an exercise in futility (and a wee bit of narcissism). We’d be remiss if we didn’t mention the governor has a home right here in our backyard, a working cattle farm on the shores on Lake Champlain he purchased in 2003. While charting the country’s future doesn’t appear to be in the cards for the governor, it’s not too late to make the world a better place on a smaller scale. Perhaps he can start in this hotbed of the farm-to-table movement.

Plenty of emerging farmers in Essex County, we think, would benefit from the governor’s expertise in public policy and agriculture. It’s just too bad that he’s spending his days focused on the wrong type of bull. The Sun Community News Editorial Board is comprised of Dan Alexander, John Gereau, Pete DeMola and Keith Lobdell. We want to hear from you. What do you think of our new look� Drop us a line on our new Facebook page, or follow us on Twitter, to share your thoughts.

OPINION POLICY

Sun Community News welcomes letters to the editor • Letters can be sent to its offices, 14 Hand Avenue, PO Box 338, Elizabethtown, 12932 or e-mailed to johng@suncommunitynews.com • Letters can also be submitted online at www.suncommunitynews.com. • Letters should not exceed 400 words and must be signed and include a

telephone number for verification. Sun Community News reserves the right to edit letters for length and/or content. Letters deemed inappropriate will be rejected. Endorsement letters for announced political candidates are not accepted and are considered paid advertisements.


Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

The North Countryman Sun • November 28, 2015 | 5

www.suncommunitynews.com

LETTERS

SupportÊ theÊ UnitedÊ Way To the Editor: I represent the United Way Campaign Team for the Adirondack Region. United Way funds 42 different agencies in Clinton, Essex and Franklin Counties. I co-lead one of these agencies: The Champlain Valley Chapter of The Compassionate Friends. This is a self help bereavement support group for families who have had children, grandchildren or a sibling die. This is run by volunteers only. With the funds from United Way we can send out newsletters, run meetings, host a memorial walk and candle lighting ceremony, and also do other fun events for our members. The United Way Campaign is in full swing this Holiday Season and with everyone hustling around to make sure we check everyone off our Holiday lists, I would like for you to consider giving a gift in honor or memory of a loved one to this year’s United Way Campaign. Holiday shopping is exhausting, so why not save some time and drop off a donation to The United Way Office on the Tom Miller Road in Plattsburgh. There are always gifts to purchase for those hard to buy for people on our lists. Why not five a gift that will keep on giving. One gift will help 42 partner agencies. If you have already done your shopping for this season, think about other times of the year when you are invited to anniversary and birthday parties, retirement parties and you just don’t know what to get. A gift to the United Way will take the guessing out of what to get them. Imagine how proud the honoree would feel opening a card with a message inside saying where the gift when in their name. Times are challenging in our world today. Please help our neighbors and together we will reach our goal. Last year alone, our 42 partner agencies helped over 80,000 individuals collectively. DaleAnne Wolter West Chazy

PublicÊ needsÊ toÊ becomeÊ awareÊ To the Editor: The Advocacy & Resource Center provides supports to over 500 people with developmental disabilities. We have committed to advocate and protect people with developmental disabilities. It is critical for the community to be aware of how changes in funding are reducing services to the people we support. Workshops can no longer accept new people. Changes must be made so that people will not be displaced. The ARC has 22 residential homes in Clinton County. Unfortunately, the development of new homes is lagging behind the demand for them. This is true for adult children living at home with parents who have lost their ability to adequately care for them and provide for their future needs. Statewide, there are 6000 people living at home with developmental disabilities waiting for placement. The ARC provides Respite Services for 80 families. With the projected funding cuts, respite services may be eliminated in the future. Direct Support Professionals (DSPs), our frontline staff, are the backbone of services for people with intellectual and other developmental disabilities. The NYS Labor Commissioner has approved a plan to enact a $15 minimum wage for fast food workers. We are advocating that frontline works receive at least the same as fast food workers. We want to make people aware of the issues and how they will impact people with developmental disabilities and their families. It matters to us. If it matters to you please write Governor Cuomo, call or email your Senators,

Assemblywoman and Congresswoman. We are inviting you to attend an informational meeting Monday, Dec, 14, at West Side Ballroom, 253 New York Road, Plattsburgh, from 5:30 to 7:30 pm. Merrilee Hamlin, President Clinton County ARC Board of Directors Plattsburgh

BigÊ thankÊ you!

Run and Suzie Dubay Lewis

HolidayÊ ToteÊ DriveÊ inÊ session To the Editor: Seasons Greetings North Country Residents; It’s that time of the year when I bestow upon the generosity of community members, businesses and organizations to contribute to the Annual Holiday Meal (Christmas) Tote Drive. Last holiday season, I delivered approximately 60 Meal Totes to families enduring financial difficulties, community members enduring health issues as well as senior citizens within the Townships of Jay and Black Brook. With the rising food costs this year, I anticipate the number of meals will surpass the amount from last holiday season. Knowing community members will have a warm and delicious meal on Christmas day is a wonderful feeling. However, over the past four years of coordinating the Annual Meal Tote Drive, I have developed a rapport with so many of the recipients to the point where several of them are comfortable coming to my home to pick up their Tote or stop me on the street and ask to have his/her name placed on my confidentiality list. I can prepare and deliver the Meal Totes but it is the generosity of the North Country community who truly make the Annual Meal Tote Drive a continued success. The following items are greatly appreciated: Turkeys, Stuffing, Cranberry Sauce, Canned Corn & Green Beans, Turkey Gravy, 5lbs Bags of Potatoes, Packaged Dinner Rolls and Apple Pies (Unfrozen, please). Monetary contributions may be mailed to: Kelly C. Murphy/Event Coordinator/Annual Holiday Meal Tote Drive P.O. Box 386 Au Sable Forks/12912. For more information call 524-5806. Have a Happy Holiday Season� Kelly C. Murphy Event Coordinator Annual Holiday Meal Tote Drive Au Sable Forks

across the country on this same evening. All are welcome to attend. For more information about the candlelight ceremony, to add a loved one’s name to the list of those read Dec. 6 or to learn more about the Circle of Healing and Hope, call 518-562-7169 or visit UVMHealth.org/CVPH.

NEWS IN BRIEF

Christmas light contest announced MOOERS — The Town of Mooers Beautification Committee announces their annual Christmas Lights contest. There is no entry fee required. To be eligible to participate in the contest, the residence must be in Mooers or Mooers Forks and must enter contest by the Tuesday, Dec. 15 deadline by 3:30 p.m. There are two categories “Best Overall” and “Best Tree” with two winners. First place for “Best Overall” is $47 second place $25 and for “Best Tree” $50 and second place $25. To enter a residence people may stop by the Town of Mooers office to pick up an application or download an application at mooersny.com. Email an application to brandi@primelink1.net or mail to Town of Mooers, PO box 242 Mooers, NY 12958. Include name, address phone number and directions to the home from Mooers Fire Station NO. 1.

Kiwanis Holiday Auction to be held PLATTSBURGH — Plattsburgh Noon Kiwanis Club will hold its Holiday Auction at their monthly dinner meeting Thursday, Dec. 3, at Perkins Restaurant, at 5:30 p.m. All funds raised from the Holiday Auction will go back into the community to serve the children. For more information call Kathy Snow, Director of Development United Way of the Adirondack Region, Inc at 563-0028.

Christmas Tea, Bazaar slated PLATTSBURGH — There will be a Christmas Tea and Bazaar, Sat-

Gratitude and Sharing

Columnist

To the Editor: A big thank you to our community and school for the wonderful support we gave our soccer team going to the “Final Four”. It was such a positive experience. A lot of hard work and talent from coaches and students and a lot of heart from everyone else.

In bringing the angel to the CVPH campus, the foundation committed to holding the candlelight ceremony each year on the same day to provide people with an opportunity to remember their loved ones. Names of the loved ones lost will be read before the ceremony begins. Because other groups have made the same commitment by bringing the Angel of Hope to their communities, similar ceremonies will occur

Little Bits Gordie Little

Candlelight Ceremony to take place Dec. 6 PLATTSBURGH — The Foundation of Champlain Valley Physicians Hospital’s candlelight ceremony at the Angel of Hope is planned for Sunday, Dec. 6 at 4 p.m. on the CVPH campus. The angel is the centerpiece of the Circle of Healing and Hope. This unique spot on the CVPH campus provides a quiet place for patients, visitors and staff to reflect, rejuvenate and honor those they love.

COMMENTARY

urday, Dec. 5, at Plattsburgh First Presbyterian Church Fellowship Hall, from noon until 3 p.m., featuring Christmas Wreaths, Bake Shop, Specialty Crafts and Boutique Shop, Hand knits, Deli with hot soups, Christmas Shop, Fine Collectibles, and White Elephant corner. For more information call Anne Bailey at 563-5794, or the church office at 561-3140.

Vets to light community tree CADYVILLE — The Cadyville Community Tree Lighting will take place Saturday, Dec. 12, at the Cadyville Fire Station, from 5 to 7 p.m. This year, in remembrance of the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II, we would like to invite World War II Veterans from Cadyville and the surrounding communities to be honorary guests and light the 2015 Community Christmas Tree.

Dairy Day to get moooving next week CHAZY — Miner Institute’s annual Dairy Day meeting will be held Wednesday, Dec. 2 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Joseph C. Burke Education and Research Center, 586 Ridge Road, Chazy. “Dairy Day is essentially a dairy seminar,” Miner Institute’s Public Relations and Marketing Coordinator Rachel Dutil said. It is a free informational workshop for dairy farmers to learn about relative topics to dairy farming and open up discussions about the industry. Vendors from Vermont, Ontario, and Northern New York will be available throughout the day, according to Dutil. This year’s speakers include Dr. Joe Hogan, The Ohio State University; and Dr. Rick Grant, Dr. Heather Dann, Melissa Woolpert and Kurt Cotanch from Miner Institute. For more information, contact Wanda Emerich, event coordinator, at 518-846-7121 ext. 117 or Emerich@whminer.com

T

his is Thanksgiving week--time for being grateful. It’s also a time to talk about sharing. I’m grateful for my family and friends and for being given the opportunity to live and work here for well over half a century. Kaye often says, “We have no secrets. You tell everybody everything.” I share what I have, except for pumpkin pie and turkey sandwiches. I believe I was supposed to share my life and I’ve taken that obligation seriously. I began sharing good news and bad with people who listened to local radio in this region. I knew early I should adopt a humble persona and decided to use a kind of radio nick name: Gordie Little, Who’s He? In other words, I’m nobody. What I do, such as playing records, interviewing people, reading news and weather and sports and sharing all of this with all with you, is the most important part. That’s how it began and that’s how it continues, long after the radio career ended. I’ve been given the opportunity of doing a regular television program with Calvin Castine. I have written for this newspaper and another. I’m allowed to write regular features for magazines. I’m happy to write and tell ghost stories, write children’s books and now—an adult coloring book. For almost 36 years on the radio and during my tenure as a Crime Victims Advocate in Plattsburgh, I doodled while interviewing people. My doodles are odd, strange and very different. I signed and dated every one and Kaye saved them in boxes and drawers. The youngest of the Baker-Little offspring is Dr. Kirk Little, a psychologist in Ohio and Kentucky. He thrilled me by asking permission to “archive” those drawings—well over 5,000 of them. I agreed. He hauled them home and took many months to scan, photograph, categorize and catalogue every image and whatever news story, weather forecast or sports score might be on the other side of the paper they were drawn on. Along came the adult coloring book phenomenon. It was a wave. I was led to grab my surfboard and ride. Those drawings, each signed “G.Little” and dated, revealed themselves as objects ripe for coloring. The signature looks like “Gittle,” thus the name “Gordie Little Gittles.” The book was printed and the fun began. Who knows where this “Gittles” thing will lead? I’ll simply follow the yellow brick road or whatever color you choose to make it. Special thanks to Kim Mason, first to add her personal touch to a Gittle and post it on Facebook. Kaye says it should be framed. I love to share everything about our “Little” house on the Saranac River and I am forever grateful for everyone who cares about what we do. Kaye and I hope you had the best Thanksgiving ever and that each day is better than the day before. Columnist Gordie Little may be reached at gordie@suncommunitynews.com.


6 | November 28, 2015 • The North Countryman Sun

www.suncommunitynews.com

Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

FREE MASON DEC. CHRISTMAS 05 Sat. PARTY@ HERITAGE HOUSE, WESTPORT. Saturday: 11:00 am - 1:00 pm There will be cider, refreshments, crafts for kids, and a visit from Santa! Check it out! Details: Mark Carpenter 518-962-4405 83304

DEC. IDA@ WHALLONSBURG 05 Sat. GRANGE HALL, 1610 NYS RTE 22.

Saturday: 7:30 pm

FREE FAMILY DEC. MOVIE: 06 Sun. SHAUN THE SHEEP MOVIE@ WHALLONSBURG GRANGE HALL, 1610 NYS RTE 22. Sunday: 2:00 pm

Anna, a young novitiate nun in 1960s Poland, on the verge of taking vows, discovers a dark family secret from the Nazi occupation. $6 Adults • $3 under 18 Details: cvfilms.org; 518-963-4170 View our complete listing and other events online.

Shaun takes the day off to have some fun. After a mix up with the farmer, caravan, and a very steep hill, they land in the big city. Shaun must lead them home. FREE! Details: cvfilms.org; 518-963-4170 View our complete listing and other events online.

83301

ROCKING AROUND THE 28 Sat. CHRISTMAS QUEENS@AMERICAN LEGION POST 20, 162 QUARRY RD. NOV.

Saturday: 7:00 pm - 11:00 pm

Annual Toys for Tots Christmas Show Benefit! 18+ allowed. $8.00 at the door $5.00 with an unwrapped new toy Details: 518-563-3650 83297

DIARY OF ANNE FRANK@PERU HIGH SCHOOL. 7:30 pm

DEC.

4 Fri.

And DEC.

4 Fri.

LOVE & INFORMATION A PLAY BY CARYL CHURCHILL@

UPPER JAY RECOVERY LOUNGE.

83300

DEC.

02 Weds.

THRU

DEC.

06 Sun.

Time: 8:00 pm

Series of tantalizing vignettes, over 100 vibrant characters search for meaning in their lives. Directed by James Coleman. $18 at the door. Reservations strongly suggested. Details: 518-946-8315 upperjayartcenter@gmail.com View our complete listing and other events online.

HOLIDAY CRAFT FAIR@ PLATTSBURGH RECREATIONAL CENTER (52 US OVAL).

83299

DEC.

02 Weds.

Wednesday: 9:30 am - 4:00 pm

The Peru Drama Dept. presents the Diary of Anne Frank. This is the diary she kept while her family and their neighbors remained hidden for 2 years, 1 month from 6/14/42 - 8/1/44. View our complete listing and other events online.

83295

NOV. ST. PETERSBURG 29 Sun. MEN’S ENSEMBLE@ WESTPORT FEDERATED CHURCH - 6486 MAIN STREET, WESTPORT, NY.

Sunday: 7:00 pm

All-Night Vigil (Op. 37) Sergei Rachmaninoff (1873-1943) and Russian Folk Songs Free of charge, although donations at the door will be accepted to help pay for their traveling expenses. Details: 518-962-8293 or visit westportfederatedchurch.org View our complete listing and other events online.

79693

Concession Stand - hot dogs, michigans, nachos, chili, snacks, water, & coffee. Family Fun & Shopping! Kids craft area ALL DAY. Santa arrives at noon! $3 admission 12 & older Details: Nikki Edwards 518-420-8842 View our complete listing and other events online.

83298


Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

Missile site << Continued from | p. 1

In March, an unknown amount of water was pumped from the silo to allow for an inspection of the facility by a prospective buyer, a process that was not authorized by the permitting agency, the state Department of Environmental Conservation. Only after a spill was the incident reported to the DEC. Eight months later, the waters remain muddied for elected officials and residents in this town of 1,300. “Does anybody know what they’re doing up there?” Supervisor David Blades asked attendees at a town board meeting earlier this month. “Does anybody know?” The room remained silent. SHORT-LIVED STRATEGY The federal government constructed 107 missile bases across the country during the early 1960s, a post-Sputnik reaction to the arms race. The Lewis site is one of a dozen built in a ring around the Plattsburgh Air Force Base in the early 1960s, the only cluster east of the Mississippi River. Millions were spent constructing the structures — the Lewis site cost $200 million — which were driven 18 stories into the earth and designed to withstand a nuclear blast. Inside were Atlas F intercontinental ballistic missiles topped with nuclear payloads. Guarded by crews standing 24hour watch, the four megaton warheads packed a punch 32 times larger than the device dropped on Hiroshima. But the sites became obsolete as soon as they were finished, explained Ed Peden, a Topeka-based silo enthusiast who has brokered the sale of 59 facilities, including the Lewis site. One reason was because the launch process was complicated. Once elevated, rocket propellant and liquid oxygen would be required for lift-off, a volatile combination. Failures weren’t uncommon at test launches. Four sites, said Peden, had explosions within them while active, making their presence nearly as dangerous to the locals as they were to the Soviets. “It did make local populations a target,” said Peden. “Some could have blown up on the launchpad.” Once the structures were built — construction took twoyears, a non-stop process of pouring solid concrete — the military had developed rocket fuel, a far more superior material. Titan 2 missiles then became the next weapon du jour. The silos were decommissioned after four years of use and sold as surplus property, with most going to municipal governments and salvage operations. 87 HALE HILL ROAD Once decommissioned, the Lewis site saw a variety of uses over the years, including as a research base for SUNY Plattsburgh. Peden made quick business brokering the sale of these structures, working as a middleman between the government and private buyers. In July 1997, he organized the sale of the site from a salvage operator to Alexander Michael for $160,000. Michael, an Australian national, told Smithsonian magazine he had always been “enchanted” by the idea of having his own piece of military-industrial history. Over the next two decades, the industrial designer gradually restored the site into a living space. The finished house over the silo spans 1,800 square feet and was the subject of several glossy magazine profiles. Michael, who flew in twice annually to work on the project, threw lavish parties, held art installations and even gave himself a nickname — Silo Boy. By 2012, Michael had sunk $350,000 into the project. But the water continued to trickle in. A 40-foot subterranean tunnel connects the home to the silo. A staircase winds down 125 feet into the bedrock, leading to two additional levels of living space, including the former launch control center encased in three-foot thick concrete walls reinforced with stainless steel mesh. The retro chic belies a more sobering reality. Over time, decaying electronic equipment and waste materials, including solvents and paint chips, have mixed with water that entered the silo through a ventilation shaft and the roof, which was kept open for decades because the 90-ton doors were unable to be closed. It’s here where a layer of toxic sludge has accrued for the past half-century, encased in a layer of clear water. Tasked with the clean up is a newly-formed LLC with no paper trail. PUMP, CLEAN AND DUMP On May 14, a group called Diversified Upstate Enterprises, LLC, or DUE, filed a notice of formation with the secretary of state of New York. Six days later, in Sydney, Australia, Michael signed an indenture of sale to DUE for $575,000. A deed was then recorded in the Essex County clerk’s office on June 8. Little else is known about DUE. Aside from a Washington, D.C.-based mailing address, the only other clue to their identity is that they, or someone affiliated with their organization,

www.suncommunitynews.com

would like to use the site as a center to monitor seismic activity, said Blades, the Lewis town supervisor, citing a brief on-site discussion. Michael did not respond to an email seeking comment. Work at the site has already begun. Some water has been pumped into a pair of 20,000 gallon storage tanks and is awaiting treatment, said David Winchell, a spokesman for the DEC. On Sept. 14, the agency reviewed a state pollutant discharge elimination system permit, or SPDES, from DUE. If approved, the organization can then begin treating the water using a triple-filter process to remove contaminants, including lead, heavy metals and PCBs. Once cleared by samples and tests, the plan is to pump up to 40,000 gallons per day of the water into a low-lying stormwater pond adjacent to the silo. Lead levels clock in at 15,200 mg/kg; PCBs, 17 mg/kg. Once the sludge has been carted off-site and out of Essex County, any additional water that accumulates at the bottom of the silo will be pumped directly into the retainment area, said Winchell. The water will require sustained monitoring. The operation appears to be a standard one. But open questions remain, including those discussed by town officials at a meeting earlier this month, such as who will conduct the work, monitor the project and who, exactly, is behind the application. The DEC has until Dec. 14 to issue or deny the permit, said Winchell. A decision will likely come before then. Pumping and treatment could begin immediately after the project is given the green light, with work expected to be completed in one week. DARK WATERS Winchell admitted that while a permit related to the pumping and treating of water from a former missile silo is unusual, the agency issues many industrial SPDES permits each year. The DEC conducted the usual notifications, he said. Two days after reviewing the materials, the agency published a notice in the Environmental Notice Bulletin providing a summary of the project and seeking public comment. Blades was provided notice of the complete application and notice followed in a daily newspaper two days later. At least 20 residences are located within a mile of the property, which is located about five miles north of the hamlet. Some homeowners feel as if they have been kept in the dark. “That’s the part that is disturbing,” said Lanita Canavan, who lives nearby with Dan, her husband. One local company, NYCO Minerals, has a policy of sending homeowners letters whenever work is being done that may affect them, said Canavan. “The DEC does not run that way,” she said. Blades, too, said the communication process between all parties — the state, homeowners, local officials and DUE — has been lacking. “It bothers me because I think it’s important that we know what’s going on in our backyard,” said Blades. Residents say the stakes are high because a leak or spill could not only degrade the environment, but could also contaminate the water supply. “I’m deeply concerned,” said John Wimett, who lives on Route 9, about a half-mile downhill from the site. Wimett’s water is derived from a spring-fed system sunk 11 feet deep in the ground. Veins come down the hill and are collected in a cement box. A buried gravity-fed line draws the water into his house, where a basement pump prepares it for usage. After learning of the plans through community chatter, Wimett drew samples and had them tested. The results came back clean, with just trace elements of copper from the supply lines. Wimett said now that he has a baseline, he will keep a close eye on the project. Three other wells spread across his 65 acres feed additional family residences. “If something turns up after that, it’s kind of obvious where it’s coming from,” said Wimett. “I’ve used this water system for 50 years. I enjoy the spring water and am not ready to invest in a well if something should happen up there.” Wimett, 74, has a long relationship with the site, which abuts his land to the west. The federal government even asked for an easement to gain access to the driveway that leads into the facility, which is set back from the road and restricted from public access. Residents say they’re not necessarily opposed to the plan — removing the toxic elements may end up being a good thing, some pointed out — but were rather concerned about the lack of transparency surrounding the project. Wimett’s daughter, Tina Bigelow, said the paucity of information is part of a troubling pattern that has always existed when dealing with the silo site. Results from the water samples taken from the site in March indicated they did not exceed groundwater standards for any contaminants, said the DEC. But Bigelow said while she did not have any definitive proof, she couldn’t help but wonder if the site had negatively affected her health over the years. “Every single one of us girls has had thyroid issues,” said Bigelow, a cancer survivor, citing a list of family members.

The North Countryman Sun • November 28, 2015 | 7

Many other residents in this tightly-knit community echoed similar sentiments, that folks just seemed to get sicker here. Bigelow and her husband had a spring dug after building their home. Not long after, their second son was born. The boy was sickly, suffering from fistulas and nausea. The Bigelows ran tests. When the results came back, they learned the water was loaded with bacteria and chloroform. “The longer it was boiled, the browner it got,” Bigelow said. Dye dropped into toilet tanks and sewers revealed those sources were not poisoning the spring, recalled her brother, Tom Wimett. When the family broached the subject of the silo as a possible source of the contamination with officials from the state health department, they had an about-face. “We’re done with the investigation,” Bigelow recalled the officials as saying. They also advised them to obtain legal counsel. The family left it alone. For years, they hauled water before grant funds allowed the town to conduct new drilling projects. Since word started trickling out about the new buyers, Tom, who resides on Hale Hill Road, said he has noticed increased activity on the sparsely-populated street — like convoys of trucks moving covered loads in the middle of the night. “Something’s fishy,” he said. “They’re messing with Pandora’s box once they start pumping that water out.” NAGGING DOUBTS The water is currently safe to drink. Due to the depth of the silo and the fact that it is built in watertight bedrock, it is currently not impacting groundwater and the drinking water taken from nearby residential wells, said Winchell. Following the spill earlier this spring, a test well was installed on-site. The applicant, said Winchell, plans on running a closed loop test of the system in which no water will be released before the permit is issued. Monitoring of these results will determine the effectiveness of the system. “DEC is confident that the project will protect the water quality of nearby residential drinking wells,” said Winchell. Canavan said while he suspects DUE will legally do everything right, he questioned their commitment to the environment. He has visited the property in the past and said the proposed containment area appears to be undersized. What would happen if it contaminated the surrounding area? he asked. Who would be liable? What about possible damage to Church Brook and the surrounding wetlands? “It’s been proven time and time again that corporations and big government get it wrong environmentally on a heartbreaking, regular basis,” wrote Canavan in a letter to the DEC. Peden, the silo expert, said he was surprised that testing didn’t reveal the presence of trichloroethylene, or TCEs, byproducts from degreasing agents. “It’s a very common contaminant found on Atlas sites,” said Peden, who lives in one. “It’s a nasty substance.” The volatile organic chemical is a colorless or blue liquid with a chloroform-like odor. According to the EPA, those who drink water containing the substance in excess of the maximum contaminant level for many years could experience problems with their liver and may have an increased risk of getting cancer. Peden said he didn’t want to raise alarm bells. But the US Corp of Engineers, he said, should be tasked with cleanup and remediation as part of their Formerly Utilized Sites Remedial Action Program. “The state should not have to do those types of measures,” said Peden. Local officials visited the restricted site in mid-October. While they didn’t notice any activity, it doesn’t necessarily mean that something did not happen in the interim period, said Blades. Prompted by audience members, Blades admitted the town was continuing to scramble for answers: Who will notify residents in the event of a spill? Who will be responsible for taking samples and testing the water? “We’ll continue to try to make sure that what’s happening is legitimate,” said the supervisor, who is retiring at the end of December. “We will continue to monitor what goes on there as a town — it is our responsibility.” Supervisor-elect James Monty said the town will send a formal letter to the new owners asking them to detail their plans for the site. “It’d be nice to know what their plan is,” said Monty. “No one really formally knows.” On a golden autumn afternoon, John Wimett motioned through the trees— stately firs, spruce and pines — up toward the site. The sun glinted through the forest. He used to watch tests in the early 1960s. The doors would open and the rocket would rise each morning at 5 a.m. “It looked like a silver bullet,” Wimett recalled. “Now we don’t know what’s going on up there.”


8 | November 28, 2015 • The North Countryman Sun

www.suncommunitynews.com

Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

City of Plattsburgh outlaws feeding of wild animals By Teah Dowling

teah@suncommunitynews.com

PLATTSBURGH — City of Plattsburgh councilors approved a change in a law that will prohibit people from feeding wild animals.

The former city law from 1964 banned the feeding of only pigeons. However, Councilor Paul O’Connell wanted to expand the law after he received complaints from residents within his ward. The law now prohibits people from intentionally feeding wild animals, including, but not limited to, raccoons, skunks, possums, coyotes, squirrels or within the city. FUTURE ENFORCEMENT POSSIBILITIES Mayor James Calnon plans on meeting with City Police, Public Works and the Building Inspector’s Office to discuss how the amended law will be enforced. Violators of the law could face a fine of up to $250 or up to 15 days in jail. However, a setback, O’Connell said, could be people who unintentionally feed wild animals by leaving food for their pets outside, along with birds and feral cats, which is still allowed. CATS NOT INCLUDED After doing research on the 1964 law focusing solely on pigeons, O’Connell brought up the resolution for the new law on Oct. 15, which, at the time, included feral cats. “The addition of feral cats was a mistake,” O’Connell said. “We did not want them included.” O’Connell addressed this mistake during the meeting, which had a great turnout of people against the idea of including feral cats, including Elmore SPCA Shelter Manager Rebecca Burdo, who’s currently working with the rest of Elmore SPCA to incorporate a program that would help solve

Feasibility study

the feral cat population. SPAY/NEUTER INCENTIVE PROGRAM SNIP would allow pet owners in Clinton County to go to Elmore SPCA, fill out paperwork and obtain a voucher that would be redeemable at a participating veterinarian office — a list that is still pending. Pet owners would then use that voucher, which would be valid for 30 days, to make a partial payment toward the cost of getting their animals spayed or neutered. The incorporation of this program, which they hope to have in place by year end, Burdo hopes will help decrease not only the feral cat population in Peru, but all over Clinton County. “The community has spoken very articulately that they want the cat population controlled and they want us to take care of the problem,” she said. “This program is going to help stop this problem.” THE COMMUNITY’S WELL-BEING Although the city chose not to include feral cats within the law, they included the other animals, declaring them a public nuisance and a menace to the health of the community. The town council plans on looking into certain areas where there seems to be more of a problem with these animals and inform people of the potential dangers of feeding the animals. “We didn’t want people to feed them and draw them in,” O’Connell said. “It’s dangerous.” To learn more about this law, visit cityofplattsburgh-ny. gov. UNDRINKABLE WATER

<< Continued from | p. 1

each other, not all houses have enough land to place a septic tank, so it has to be placed on an adjoining neighbors property, if they themselves have the room to do so. The sewer systems currently on the residents property are getting old and in need of an upgrade. However, Menard said the new systems coming in are bigger with more drainage — leaving the town with the options to either incorporate a main sewer system for all the properties or continue the struggle of having individual tanks. The study is going to focus on how to feasibly incorporate a main system and where to put it in order to provide sewer for all homeowners and business owners currently in the town and ones wanting to move into the town in the future. “We want our residents to not have to worry about where their septic is going,” Menard said. “We would also like to bring in more industry to the town.”

Not only does each property has its own septic tank, it contains its own well for drinking water. However, the water isn’t desirable. “The water in this village is terrible,” Menard said. “It’s very hard and rusty.” The supervisor said that because of the quality of the water, he, and a majority of the rest of the town, buys and drinks bottled water. If the town can afford to address the water issue, Menard said they hope to incorporate a town water system by drilling bigger and deeper wells in one location. “If we can bring better quality water to the town, that would be great,” he said. “We want to help the town get nice drinking water.” Menard said he anticipates the study to be done by June. For more information about this feasibility study, visit mooersny.com.


Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

www.suncommunitynews.com

The North Countryman Sun • November 28, 2015 | 9

Champlain Valley Voices to perform holiday concert By Natasha Courter

news@suncommunitynews.com

PLATTSBURGH — Champlain Valley Voices will put on a festive performance of holiday classics next weekend. Titled ‘A Joyous Nowell,’ the concert is scheduled for the Strand Theatre in Plattsburgh on Saturday, Dec. 5 at 7:30 p.m. On deck are Schubert’s “Mass in G Major” and Pachelbel’s “Nun danket alle Gott” with additional pieces by Gustav Holst, Pachelbel and John Rutter. Champlain Valley Voices began as the Champlain Valley Ontario Society in 1983. Faith Monzeglio, president of the board of directors of Champlain Valley Voices, said the choir is dedicated to two performances every year focusing on major chloral works. The choir has a history of performing pieces by composers like Handel, Vivaldi, Mozart and Bach. In December 2014, the outfit performed Handel’s ‘Messiah.’ The following spring, the group collaborated with the Adirondack Jazz Orchestra in presenting an evening of Big Band classics. This will be the third time that the group has performed at The Strand Theatre. Timothy Morningstar, an adjunct lecturer at SUNY Plattsburgh, has been recently hired to direct the choir.

“He has extensive choral conducting skills and is a superb vocal instructor,” Monzeglio said. The choir meets about 12 weeks prior to performances, and they practice every Monday in the Meyer’s Fine Arts building on the SUNY Plattsburgh campus. Member Ronald Goddeau encourages anyone who can or cannot read music to join the group. “There are plenty of groups in the area for people who don’t necessarily want to get dedicated or cannot read music,” Goddeau said. Champlain Valley Voices is a non-profit group who receives support from chorus and community members as well as local businesses and organizations. Tickets are available from choir members and The Strand’s box office for advance purchase, or can be bought the night of the show. General admission for the public is $14 advanced and $19 at the door; for senior citizens, it’s $12 advanced and $14 at the door; non-PSU students cost $10 and children cost $12. PSU students with an ID can get tickets for $4 at the door. Tickets are also made available at the strandcenter.org. A small orchestra and the famous restored Wurlitzer organ will accompany the choir. Soloists include soprano Jo Ellen Miano, tenor Andrew Ellis, and baritone Jason Levesque.


10 | November 28, 2015 • The North Countryman Sun

www.suncommunitynews.com

Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

Museum to host holiday ornament workshop CHAZY —The Alice T. Miner Museum will again host a holiday ornament workshop at the museum on Saturday, Dec. 5 from noon to 4 p.m. Kids of all ages and their parents/ guardians are invited for an afternoon of crafts, music, and games to celebrate the holiday season. Materials for making a variety of ornaments will be provided, and light refreshments will also be available. This free family-friendly event will be held in the third floor ballroom of the museum.

“Alice and William Miner were known for their love of holidays and generosity toward the children of Chazy at Christmastime, and we’re very happy to be carrying on that tradition here at the museum. Last year’s event was so much fun, we knew right away we had to do it again,” said Ellen Adams, Director/Curator at The Alice T. Miner Museum. More information is available by contacting Ellen Adams at director@minermuseum.org or 518-846-7336.

Event to honor veterans in Old Post Cemetery PLATTSBURGH — As part of the national “Wreaths Across America Day” program, local members of the American Military Retirees Association and Lake Champlain Chapter NY1 invite the public to help honor veterans buried in the Old Post Cemetery. This year’s event is being held on Saturday, Dec. 12, 2015 at noon at the Old Post Cemetery located on the corner of Route 9 and Lake Forest Drive. The Old Post Cemetery, closed for new burials, is the final resting place for 136 unknown soldiers and sailors of the Battle of Plattsburgh. Additionally, 163 known veterans, many family members and Thomas Kelly, a Spanish American War recipient of the Medal of Honor, are also buried there. This year’s event will mark the fifth year this cemetery has been honored as part of the Wreaths Across America

program, and it is hoped that attendance will be even better than previous years. Area businesses, private citizens, schools, service groups, local veterans organizations and auxiliaries are invited to purchase wreaths for placement during the ceremony so that as many veterans graves may be honored as possible. Wreaths are $15 each and may be purchased using forms available at AMRA National Headquarters or at the County Veterans Service Office. Orders must be placed by Nov. 30 for this year’s event. Late orders will roll over to next year. People interested need not be present or live locally to sponsor a wreath, which will be placed by local veterans and others attending the ceremony. A reception after the ceremony with cookies and hot cocoa for participants

will be available at the Valcour Brewing Company located at the Old Stone Barracks. For more information, call 5630038 or 565-4720.


RACE DETAILS The second annual Santa Sprint will take place Saturday, Nov. 28 at 9 a.m. starting and finishing at the Last Resort, where a small reception will take place. Prizes will be given to the top male and female runners and walkers. Day-of-race registration will go from 7:30 to 8:30 a.m. at the Last Resort. It costs $20 for pre-registration and $25 the day of the event. First 50 registrants will get a free T-shirt. If participants bring a toy for the family chosen for the rotary’s Adopt-A-Family Program, they’ll receive their own Santa hat to run in. Extra Santa and other holiday attire is encouraged and welcomed. To pre-register, visit www.adirondackcoastevents.com. For more information, contact Pamela Keable at 518-2976932. For more information about the Champlain-Rouses Point Rotary, visit their Facebook page.

Traffic limitations, road closures released for holiday parade PLATTSBURGH — The Downtown Plattsburgh Holiday Parade on Friday, December 4 at 5p.m. will begin at Redcay Hall at the corner of Court Street and Beekman Street of SUNY Plattsburgh and takes a left onto Court Street to go a short distance down Beekman Street before taking a left onto Brinkerhoff Street. The parade will continue down Brinkerhoff Street before taking a right onto Margaret Street and it will finish at Stafford Middle School. The following streets will have limited access for traffic except in emergency cases from 3p.m. until parade clears the area: upper Court Street, Beekman Street, Brinkerhoff Street to Margaret Street. Broad Street will be closed from all west bound traffic at the intersection of Durkee Street. All east bound traffic on Broad will be diverted at the North/South Catherine Street intersection. All south bound traffic on North Catherine Street will be diverted at Cornelia Street. The traffic pattern between Broad and Cornelia streets will be accessed via Draper Avenue. Pine Street will also have limited access for duration of parade to allow parade participants to end at the school parking area. There will be additional traffic posts at Wells at Court Street,

Williams at Couch Streets, Pleasant at Brinkerhoff streets and Helen at Couch Streets. For questions and more information, contact Sandra Geddes, City of Plattsburgh special events/promotions coordinator, at geddess@cityofplattsburgh-ny.gov or 5180536-7458.

•MY PUBLIC NOTICES• •MY PUBLIC

MY PUBLIC NOTICES Now Available at... htt://newyorkpublicnotices.com

NOTICES•

Denton Publications in collaboration with participating newspapers, the New York Press Association, and the New York Newspaper Publishers Association provides online access to public notice advertisements from throughout New York and other parts of the country. WHAT ARE PUBLIC NOTICES? Public Notices are advertisements placed in newspapers by the government, businesses, and individuals. They include: government contracts, foreclosures, unclaimed property, community information and more!

67565

NOTICES•

<< Continued from | p. 1

PUBLIC

Santa Sprint

The North Countryman Sun • November 28, 2015 | 11

www.suncommunitynews.com

•MY

Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

•MY PUBLIC NOTICES•


12 | November 28, 2015 • The North Countryman Sun

www.suncommunitynews.com

Published by Denton Publications, Inc.


Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

www.suncommunitynews.com

The North Countryman Sun • November 28, 2015 | 13

Area musicians attend Area All State concerts

By Keith Lobdell

keith@suncommunitynews.com

PERU — The talent of many local students were on display Saturday, Nov. 21, as youth who excel in the field of music were recognized as members of the Zone 6 Area All State concerts. Area All State brings together the top musicians and vocalists from North Country schools for a two-day festival, where students rehearse new pieces with their selected conductors on the Friday before the concerts, followed with more practice and the performances. This year, the concerts were held at Peru Central School. Westport student Lucy Misarski was selected to attend the Zone 5 Area All State concert, which was held at Indian River Central School. Students selected to attend the Area 6 concerts included:

Concert band Christina Fray (Saranac), Emily Sipley (Peru), Emily Lombard (Peru), Ashley Chris (Lake Placid), Sarah Edwards (AuSable Valley), Mya DeLong (Ticonderoga), Omni Bazan (Ticonderoga), Maria Vincelette (Peru), Zoya Qudsi (PHS), Lizzie Trudeau (Saranac), Hannah Gochenaur (Saranac Lake), Victoria Bruno (Saranac), Zoe Taber (Beekmantown), Eshna Prajapiti (Saranac Lake), Rachel Barnes (Beekmantown), Megan Frederick (Beekmantown), Tara Allen (Beekmantown), Ella LaMora, Jared Banker (Peru), Casandra Kellaway (Saranac), Jacob Andre (Peru), Liz Loso (Saranac Lake), Elliot Hurwitz (Beekmantown), Chloe Hurteau (Lake Placid), Tyler Andre (Peru), Melissa Garvey (Saranac), Lincoln Sydnor (Beekmantown), Andrew Woodruff (Saranac), Steven Miner (Saranac), Joel Cook (Ticonderoga), Connor Bashaw (Peru), Steffany Jabaut (Chazy), Riley O’Hara (Ticonderoga), Rachel Lake (Saranac), Witter Swanson (Saranac Lake), Brian DeWalt (Keene), Rachael Woodruff (Saranac), Aymee-Lynne Fisk (Saranac Lake), Erica Swarsky (Saranac Lake), Saidi St. Andrews (Ticonderoga), Will Gray (Saranac Lake), Erik Woodruff (Saranac), Lydia Aierle (Saranac), Gareth Mansfield (Plattsburgh), Finn Gardner-Puschak (PHS), Matt Keating (Saranac Lake), Niamh CreedonCarey (PHS), Marc Malseptic (Plattsburgh MS), Antonio Villani (Saranac Lake), Keegan Bulluck (Saranac), Michael Nystoriak (Saranac), Olivia Leavine (Plattsburgh), Eli Moore (Saranac), Clarissa Chambers (Beekmantown), Lorenzo Villani (Saranac Lake), Amy Darst (Peru).

Jazz Band Justina Hewitt, Taylor Hesseltine, Silas Swanson (Saranac Lake), Jamie Cox (Ticonderoga), Maria Rothaupt, Donnie Nadon (Saranac Lake), Liam Chaskey (Plattsburgh), Tim Ryan (Ticonderoga), Sawyer Chase (Saranac Lake), Eusung Choe (Plattsburgh), Colvin Chapman (Ticonderoga), Natalie Orman (Saranac Lake), Andrew Vanier (Beekmantown), Eric Potthast (AuSable Valley), Jacob Sandvig (Chateaugay), Samuel Perkins (Plattsburgh), Ethan Magram (Beekmentown), Michael Sandvig (Chateaugay).

Mixed Chorus Annachristi Cordes (Tupper Lake), Caitlyn Cliche (Saranac), Liza Amirault (Keene), Brianna Drake (AuSable Valley), Emma Caton (Saranac), Jessica Dandrow (Plattsburgh), Kimberly Collins (Saranac Lake), Samantha Barney (Lake Placid) Elsa Evans-Kummer (Saranac Lake) Noah Cordes (Tupper Lake), Cole Denton (Beekmantown), Caitlyn Fortune (Tupper Lake), Brenna Fuller (Beekmantown), Pacey Couture (Saranac Lake), Claire Deshaies (Plattsburgh), Megan LeClair (AuSable Valley), Kaitlin Lawless (Saranac Lake), Nicholas Fitzgerald (Ticonderoga), Audrey Draper (Lake Placid), Rebecca Manning (Ticonderoga), Julia DeTar, Madelyn Mader (Saranac Lake), Michael Guymp (AuSable Valley), Latalya Duell (AuSable Valley), Xenia Matthews (Plattsburgh), Emma Disogra (Elizabethtown-Lewis), Casey O’Connor (Tupper Lake), David Mihill (Lake Placid), Laura Farrell (Saranac), Autumn Flora (Ticonderoga), Ian Urquhart (Saranac Lake), Elizabeth Leclerc (AuSable Valley), Sophie Morelli (Lake Placid), Katelin Guerin (Northern Adirondack), Teresa Smith (Lake Placid), Matthew Varden (Tupper Lake), Elodie Linck, Savannah Nixon, Louisa Hameline, Abigail Wolff (Saranac Lake), Nha-Thi Luu (Plattsburgh), Lillian O’Connor (Saranac Lake), Terrah Jabaut (Chazy), Kaylee McLean (Saranac Lake), Faith Rand (Lake Placid), Hannah McNally (Chazy), Clara Meyer (AuSable Valley), Lucy McSweeney (Plattsburgh), Grace Redmond (Northern Adirondack), Krisandra Munson (AuSable Valley), Laurel Miller, Olivia Sawyer (Lake Placid), Victoria Payette, Eve Seals (AuSable Valley), Casey Raymond (Ticonderoga), Sydney Pelton (Chazy), Willa Shakeshaft (Ticonderoga), Alivia Sapone (Saranac Lake), Alyssa Waters (Beekmantown), Cheyanne Tuthill (Ticonderoga), Gabrielle Wells (Tupper Lake), Ethan Blanchette (Ticonderoga), Dorran Boucher (Tupper Lake), Caleb Barton (Plattsburgh), Elijah Bushey (AuSable Valley), Michael Cross (Saranac Lake), Connor Celeste, Louis Catania (Saranac Lake), Jeremy Davies (Plattsburgh), Ross Coughlin (Peru), Connor Douglass (Peru), Kevin Garcia (Saranac Lake), Antonio Matos (Lake Placid), Elliot Gosrich (Plattsburgh), Cooper Holmes (Lake Placid), Christian Murguia, Bennett Martino (Saranac Lake), Chad Hassinger (Plattsburgh), John Matthews (Plattsburgh), Jesse LaPlante (Saranac Lake), Michael Miller, Austin Larabie (Saranac Lake), Brady Terry (Peru), Dermott Morgan Jr. (Saranac Lake), James Matthews (Peru), William Waldy (Lake Placid), Alexander Wilson (AuSable Valley), Michael Monroe (Saranac Lake), Coby Schaefer (Elizabethtown-Lewis). Alternates: Lucas Smith (Saranac), Trinity Paquin (Saranac), Maria Gates (Keene), Mistre Newton (Saranac Lake), Alexandra LaTorra (Plattsburgh), Antonio Finsterer (Keene).

Women’s Chorus Camryn Lincoln, Erin Butler, Kassie LaHart (AuSable Valley), Brooke Bjelko, Dorothy Deno, Julia Mull, Kiersten Harvey, Kitara Myatt, Montana Sorrell, Skylar Curtis, Franchesca Julian (Beekmantown), Emmalee Turner, Shannon Canavan (Elizabethtown-Lewis), Elaina Smith, Maeve Brammer (Keene), Emma Bishop, Lily Flanigan (Lake Placid), Nathalie Jubert (Northeastern Clinton), Izabelle Almodovar (Northern Adirondack), Erin Sears, Miranda Smith, Sophia Defayette, Stephanie Pietz (Peru), Amelia Arguelles, Angelica Sanchez, Casey Gardner, Claire Keever, Elisa Megarr, Haley Wright-McGivney, Katherine Carron, Niki Rodgers (Plattsburgh), Alyssa Viveiros, Grace Thew, Kendra Primo, Alissa Aquila (Saranac), Abigail Hunt, Alexa Clark, Ayla Buerkett, Brooke Tuttle, Caitrin Bodmer, Faith Rothaupt, Hannah Gochenaur, Jada Meadows, Karina Williams, Kayleigh Merrill, Lauren Roberts, Lexi Valentin, Logan Hochwald, Maeve Peer, Mary Keating, Morgan Paul, Natalie Dewey, Sarah Dalton (Saranac Lake), Susan Ward (Ticonderoga), Brionna Staves, Kendall Davison, Saide Johnson (Tupper Lake), Malynda Lobdell (Westport)


14 | November 28, 2015 • The North Countryman Sun

www.suncommunitynews.com

Published by Denton Publications, Inc.


Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

www.suncommunitynews.com

The North Countryman Sun • November 28, 2015 | 15


16 | November 28, 2015 • The North Countryman Sun

www.suncommunitynews.com

Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

BULLETINÊ BOARD T

ARTS NOTICES

ADVERTISE IN THE SUN COMMUNITY BULLETIN BOARD! FOR PROFIT FOR 4 LINES (.75 FOR ADDITONAL LINES) 1 WEEK $9, 3 WEEKS $15, 52 WEEKS $20 A MONTH. NOT FOR PROFIT FOR 4 LINES (.50 FOR ADDITONAL LINES) 1 WEEK $5, 3 WEEKS $10, 52 WEEKS $15 A MONTH.

DEADLINE THURSDAY AT 3PM PLEASE CALL SHANNON 518-873-6368 EXT. 201 OR EMAIL

shannonc@suncommunitynews.com

H

BEEKMANTOWN - VFW 1466 Spellman Rd. Sunday, 6:30 Doors open at 4:30. KEESEVILLE - Keeseville Fire Dept. North Country AmVets 1309 Rt. 9 South Saturday, 7:30 pm.

U

N

C

O

M

M

U

N

I

T

Y

CLASSES & WORKSHOPS

COMMUNITY OUTREACH

PUBLIC MEETINGS

SENIORS

KEESEVILLE - VFW #1505 North Country AmVets 1309 Rt. 9 South Sunday, 7pm.

WILMINGTON - Yoga for the Community Every Sun., 5:30-6:30pm @ Riverstone Wellness, Wilmington, NY. For more info send email to: riverstonewellness@yahoo.com

KEESEVILLE – 2015-2016 WIC schedule at the United Methodist Church November 25, December 30, January 13, Feb 25, March 24, April 28, May 26, June 23, July 28,August 25, September 22, October 27, November 23, December 22, 9:30 am - 2:15 PM Call us to schedule an appointment or find out more information at 518-873-3560 or 518- 569-3296

CHAZY – Chazy Public Library Meetings: January 20, 2016, February 24,2016, March 30, 2016, April 27, 2016. Organizational Meeting May 18, 2016.

MOOERS - Nutrition Site Watson Senior Housing 2448 Route 11Mooers, NY Lunch served at 11:30 a.m. Monday Friday. Tel: (518) 236-5111

ELIZABETHTOWN - December 8. Pleasant Valley Quilters meeting at 7:00 p.m. in the Elizabethtown Community Hospital conference room, Park Street, Elizabethtown. Contact janiceorlowski@gmail.com for details

PERU - Adult Center VFW 710 Pleasant Street Peru, NY Open Monday - Friday 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. Lunch served at 11:45 a.m. Tel: (518)643-2829

PERU - Knights of Columbus 3452 Main St. Rt. 22 Tuesdays, 7:30 pm. PLATTSBURGH - Knights of Columbus #255 St. Peter's School 518-561-4501 Mondays, 7pm. PLATTSBURGH - Our Lady of Victory 4919 South Catherine St. Wednesday Nights, Doors open at 6:00 with games starting at 7:10 pm. PLATTSBURGH - VFW Post 124 116 Boynton Ave. Tuesdays, 7pm doors open at 5pm. PLATTSBURGH American Legion Post 20 162 Quarry Rd. 518-5631692 Sundays, 7pm.

TICONDEROGA - Bingo, Ticonderoga fire house, 6:45 p.m. Doors 5 p.m. Every Thursday.

ALTONA - Ganienkeh Territorial High Stakes Bingo 4 Devil's Den Road 518-236-7099 Wednesdays & Fridays doors open at 5pm Games start at 6:30 pm.

S

BINGO

PORT HENRY Port Henry Knights of Columbus, bingo, 7 p.m. Every Monday

BINGO

E

BOOKS

COMMUNITY OUTREACH AUSABLE FORKS – 2015-2016 WIC schedule at the Ambulance Building-Ausable Forks December 2, January 6, Feb, 3, March 2, April 6, May 4, June 1, July 6, August 3, September 7, October 5, November 2, December 7, at 9:30 am - 2:15 PM Call us to schedule an appointment or find out more information at 518-873-3560 or 518- 569-3296 ELIZABETHTOWN - Al-Anon Family Group, family, friends of problem drinkers. Elizabethtown Community Hospital Board Room. 4 to 5 p.m. Anonymous, confidential, free. Details: 518-962-2351, 518873-2652. Every Sunday.

LAKE PLACID – Monthly Saturday Play for Pre-K thru Grade 5 kids & families at the Lake Placid Public Library 10am to 11am. Indoor games, activities and children's classic books. For more info 518523-3200.

ELIZABETHTOWN – 2015-2016 WIC Schedule at the Public Health Building December 3, January 7, Feb 4, March 3, April 7, May 5, June 2, July 7, August 4, September 1, October 6, November 3, December 1, 8:00 - 3:30 PM November 19, December 17, January 21, Feb 18, March 16, April 21, May 19, June 16, July 21, August 18, September 15, October 20, November 17, December 15, 11:30 am - 6:30 PM Call us to schedule an appointment or find out more information at 518-873-3560 or 518- 569-3296

CARS

CARS

LAKE PLACID - The LPI Book Club generally meets at 7 p.m. on the last Monday of each month at the library to discuss books about the arts. All are welcome. CHILDREN'S PROGRAMS

2006 Chevy HHR 4 door, Blue, some rust, asking $3000 OBO. Call after 5pm. 518-962-2376.

2012 VW Beetle, excellent condition, 50,000 miles. $10,500 OBO. 518-873-6430. CARS/TRUCKS WANTED! Top $$$$$ PAID! Running or Not, All Years, Makes, Models. Free Towing! We're Local! 7 Days/Week. Call Toll Free: 1-888-416-2330 Donate Your Car to Veterans Today! Help and Support our Veterans. Fast - FREE pick up. 100% tax deductible. Call 1-800-656-1632

Donate your car to Wheels For Wishes, benefiting Make-A-Wish. We offer free towing and your donation is 100% tax deductible. Call 518-650-1110 Today!

MG Midget 1971 Conv. Red, New Tires. Can be seen at call for details. 518-962-8276

Win a $2,000 grand prize! Take our survey at www.pulsepoll.com and tell us about your media usage and shopping plans. Your input will help this paper help local businesses. Thank you! SUV 2008 TOYOTA SEQUOIA Limited 5.7L V8 4x4, 109,000K, loaded, single owner, interior like new, exterior in good condition, $21,000 must be seen! Call 518-359-3510.

94 Bassboat 18' 150HP Yamah motor, Tandem trailer, new trolling motor, new batteries, $7000 OBO. 518-561-2586. AUTO'S WANTED A-1 DONATE YOUR CAR FOR BREAST CANCER! Help United Breast Foundation education, prevention, & support programs. FAST FREE PICKUP - 24 HR RESPONSE - TAX DEDUCTION 855403-0213 CASH FOR CARS and TRUCKS. Get A Top Dollar INSTANT Offer! Running or Not! 1-888-416-2208 MOTORCYCLES 2006 SPORTSTER XL 883 Low, practically new, mint. $5,700. Call 518-208-4111. MOTORCYCLES WANTED Before 1985. Running or not. Japanese, British, European. $Cash$ paid. Free appraisals! CALL 1-315-569-8094 Email pictures or description to: Cyclerestoration@aol.com

ELIZABETHTOWN – Elizabethtown Thrift Shop will have it's Monthly Meeting Second Monday of Every Month at 7pm @ The Episcopal Parish Hall. WESTPORT-The Boy Scouts will be meeting from 7:30 to 9 p.m. every Thursday at the WADA Building For more info: troop8063@gmail.com, Jill Lobdell 962-4664 or Larry Carroll 569-5431.

ELIZABETHTOWN – Senior Meal Site Luncheon, Every Friday at Church of the Good Shepherd, 11 William Street. Come enjoy lunch $3.50, play Bingo, socialize with friends & neighbors.

DONATIONS

ELIZABETHTOWN – Senior Meal Site Luncheon, Every Friday at Church of the Good Shepherd, 11 William Street. Come enjoy lunch $3.50, play Bingo, socialize with friends & neighbors.

ELIZABETHTOWN - Cobble Hill Inn in Elizabethtown will hold its 9th Annual Toy Drive on Friday, December 4th from 5:00pm to 7:00pm to benefit ACAPs Holidays For Sharing. Donate a new, unwrapped toy and enjoy a free buffet, karaoke, and raffles. For further info call 518-873-3207 Marge Garcia SNOWMOBILES 2002 MXZ 700 SALT LAKE CITY Edition, 1700 original miles, one owner, like brand new, no scratches, or dents. Serviced every year, garaged or trailer storaged, will deliver within a reasonable amount of miles, $2,250.00. Call Brian 518-586-6401

ELLENBURG-Adult Center St. Edmunds Church Hall 5538 Route 11 Ellenburg, NY Open Monday Friday 9 a.m. - 1 p.m. Lunch served at 11:30 a.m. Tel: (518) 594-7311

Many RN positions available in your area. Hospitals, correctional facilities, and home health assessments. Great Pay & Benefits. Call: 1-718-387-8181 #202 or email: recruit@whiteglovecare.net MEDICAL BILLING TRAINEES NEEDED! Train at home to process Medical Billing & Insurance! NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED! Online training at Bryan University! HS Diploma/GED & Computer/Internet needed. 1-888-734-6711

TO ADVERTISE IN THE SUN COMMUNITY BULLETIN BOARD PLEASE CALL SHANNON AT 518-873-6368 EXT. 201 OR EMAIL shannonc@suncommunitynews.com

CAREER TRAINING AVIATION GRADS work with JetBlue, Boeing, Delta and others start here with hands on training for FAA certification. Financial aid if qualified. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance 1-866-296-7093

RECRUITING EMPLOYEES FROM A LARGER MARKET? Reach nearly 2.4 million potential candidates (plus more online readers) in downstate NY and Long Island with a 25-word classified ad for just $359! Place your ad online at AdNetworkNY.com or call 315-437-6173

seeking a friendly person to operate the motel. Theresa Callahan has retired after 27 years. Please call 802-793-3268 for more info. THE TOWN OF ESSEX has two openings for the Zoning Board of Appeals. Please submit a letter of interest to: Town of Essex, PO Box 335, Essex NY 12936. By Order of the Town Board Patricia Gardner

HELP WANTED

Make $1,000 Weekly! Paid in Advance! Mailing Brochures at Home. Easy Pleasant work. Begin Immediately. Age Unimportant. www.MyHomeIncomeNow55.com

VENDORS

HELP WANTED

HILLTOP MOTEL IN WESTPORT, NY Is

EXPERIENCED OTR van drivers for trips originating out of WI & delivering to the NorthEast. Avg 27003000 miles/week. Home weekends. Paid vacation, 401k, vision, dental, disability & health insurance. Class A CDL, 2 years OTR experience, good MVR, references required. Online application @ ttitrucking.com or Call Ruth/Mike 1-800-222-5732

MINEVILLE – Open Bowling Fridays at the VFW. For more info call 518-942-6514

RECRUITING EMPLOYEES FROM A LARGER MARKET? Reach nearly 1.9 million potential candidates (plus more online readers) in central and western New York with a 25-word classified ad for just $349! Place your ad online at AdNetworkNY.com or call 315-437-6173

HELP WANTED LOCAL

2005 POLARIS SUPER SPORT 550. Anniversary edition, fan cooled with reverse and new ice ripper track with built in studs. Female adult owned in excellent condition with 3,827 miles. Great reliable sled at a great price. $2,000 OBO. Snowmobile can be seen at 5880 State Route 9N in Westport or call 518-962-8434.

SPORTS & RECREATION

SENIORS

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.

BOATS 1968 Launch Dyer 20' Glamor Girl, Atomic 4 inboard engine, 30HP, very good cond. Safe, reliable, spacious, ideal camp boat. Reasonable offers considered. Located in Essex, NY. 802-503-5452

LEGAL NOTICES FOR THIS NEWSPAPER AND NEWSPAPERS AROUND THE STATE MAY BE FOUND ONLINE AT http://newyorkpu blicnotices.com

LAKE PLACID – 2015-2016 WIC schedule at the Thomas Shipman Youth Center December 1, January 5, Feb 2, March 1, April 5, May 3, June 7, July 5, August 2, September 6, October 4, November 1, December 6 , 9:30 am - 2:15 PM November 24, December 22, January 26, Feb 23, March 22, April 26, May 24, June 28, July 26, August 23, September 27, October 25, November 22, December 27 1:30 PM - 6:00 PM Call us to schedule an appointment or find out more information at 518-873-3560 or 518- 569-3296

WESTAFF SERVICES We'll find the perfect employee and make you the hero! Office /Clerical, Light Industrial Professional/Technical Managerial Call today 518-566-6061 CAREER TRAINING 25 DRIVER TRAINEES NEEDED! Become a driver for Stevens Transport! NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED! New drivers earn $800+ per week! PAID CDL TRAINING! Stevens covers all costs! 1-888734-6714 drive4stevens.com

ATTEND AVIATION COLLEGEGet FAA approved Aviation Maintenance training. Financial aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. Call AIM for free information 866-296-7093

THE OCEAN CORP. 10840 Rockley Road, Houston, Texas 77099. Train for a New Career. *Underwater Welder. Commercial Diver. *NDT/Weld Inspector. Job Placement Assistance. Financial Aid available for those who qualify. 1-800-321-0298. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY MAKE MONEY Online! *Work From Home* $1,000 per day Informative Video at: www.OLcashFLOW.com MISCELLANEOUS A PLACE FOR MOM. The nation's largest senior living referral service. Contact our trusted, local experts today! Our service is FREE/no obligation. CALL 1-800217-3942 A PLACE FOR MOM. The nation's largest senior living referral service. Contact our trusted, local experts today! Our service is FREE/no obligation. CALL 1-800-553-4101 ACCESS YOUR LAWSUIT CASH! In an Injury Lawsuit? Need Cash Now? Low Rates. No Credit Checks/Monthly Payments. Call Now 1-800-568-8321. AIRLINE CAREERS. Get FAA approved maintenance training at campuses coast to coast. Job placement assistance. Financial Aid for qualifying students. Military friendly. Call AIM 888-686-1704 ALL THINGS BASEMENTY! Basement Systems Inc. Call us for all of your basement needs! Waterproofing, Finishing, Structural Repairs, Humidity and Mold Control FREE ESTIMATES! Call 1-800-957-4881 CASH PAID for unexpired, sealed DIABETIC TEST STRIPS! 1 DAY PAYMENT & PREPAID shipping. HIGHEST PRICES! Call 1-888-7767771. www.Cash4DiabeticSupplies.com DIRECTV OFFERS STARTING AT $19.99/mo. Free premium hannels HBO, Starz, Cinemax and Showtime for 3 months with Choice Package. Free Receiver upgrade! NFL 2015 Season Included in select packages. Some Exclusions Apply, Call for details. Offer valid for new customers only. CALL 1-800-931-4807


Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

www.suncommunitynews.com

MISCELLANEOUS

MISCELLANEOUS

DIRECTV Starting at $19.99/mo. FREE Installation. FREE 3 months of HBO SHOWTIME CINEMAX starz. FREE HD/DVR Upgrade! 2015 NFL Sunday Ticket Included (Select Packages) New Customers Only. CALL 1-800-614-8506

ENJOY 100% guaranteed, delivered-to-the-door Omaha Steaks! Save 76% PLUS 4 FREE Burgers-The Happy Family Celebration-ONLY $49.99. ORDER Today 1-800-992 -3148 mention offer 47222VPP or www.OmahaSteaks.com/mbfave31

DISH Network - Get MORE for LESS! Starting at $19.99/month (for 12 months.) PLUS Bundle & SAVE (Fast Internet for $15 more/month.) CALL Now 1-800-826-4464

HERO MILES - to find out more about how you can help our service members, veterans and their families in their time of need, visit the Fisher House website at www.fisherhouse.org

DISH TV Starting at $19.99/month (for 12 mos.) SAVE! Regular Price $34.99 Ask About FREE SAME DAY Installation! CALL Now! 877477-9659

HOTELS FOR HEROES to find out more about how you can help our service members, veterans and their families in their time of need, visit the Fisher House website at www.fisherhouse.org

DIVORCE $390* Covers Children, etc. *Excludes govt. fees*. LOCALLY COVERING ALL COUNTIES IN THE STATE. CALL 1-888-498-7075, EXT. 700 (Weekdays: 8AM-7PM). BAYCOR & ASSOCIATES. DO YOU SELL TO A LARGER MARKET? Reach nearly 4.3 million potential buyers in print -- plus more online -- quickly and inexpensively! Only $489 for a 25word ad; less for smaller zones. Visit us at AdNetworkNY.com or call 315-437-6173

JAMBERRY NAIL WRAPS!! Buy 3 get 1 free! Visit my website https://nacole.jamberry.com or call 518-962-8319 for catalog and samples. Make a Connection. Real People, Flirty Chat. Meet singles right now! Call LiveLinks. Try it FREE. Call NOW: 1-888-909-9905 18+. SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. Unable to work? Denied benefits? We Can Help! WIN or Pay Nothing! Contact Bill Gordon & Associates at 1-800-290-8321 to start your application today!

MISCELLANEOUS

LEGAL NOTICES FOR THIS NEWSPAPER AND NEWSPAPERS AROUND THE STATE MAY BE FOUND ONLINE AT http://newyorkpu blicnotices.com

MISCELLANEOUS

The North Countryman Sun • November 28, 2015 | 17 ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES

REVERSE MORTGAGES - Draw all eligible cash out of your home & eliminate mortgage payments FOREVER! For Seniors 62+! Serving NY, NJ, Florida. FHA Government insured. Purchase, refinance & VA loans also. In home personal service. Free 28 page catalog. 1-888-660-3033. All Island Mortgage. www.allislandmortgage.com ANNOUNCEMENTS

ONGOING EVENTS AT SARNAC TOWN HALL EVERY TUESDAY NIGHT FROM 7PM TO 9PM.GOOD COUNTRY MUSIC, ROUND, SQUARE AND LINE DANCING. ADMISSION A NONE PARISHABLE FOOD ITEM FOR THE LOCAL FOOD SHELF. REFRESHMENTS ARE SERVED WITH DONATION. CALL 518293-7056

FOR SALE 2-55 Gallon Fresh Water Aquariums, Best Equipment, $200 Each. 518-708-0678


18 | November 28, 2015 • The North Countryman Sun

www.suncommunitynews.com

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

HEALTH & FITNESS

24 THOMAS KINKADE SANTA set. Sells for $1200, Selling for $900 OBO. Call 518-643-2556

UNIQUE HOLIDAY GIFTS! Cheese, fudge, gift boxes, cider, toys! Visit us online: www.flycreekcidermill.com or enjoy fun holiday shopping at Fly Creek Cider Mill, 607-547-9692.

Viagra!! 52 Pills for Only $99.00! Your #1 trusted provider for 10 years. Insured and Guaranteed Delivery. Call today 1-888-796-8878

Hand Gun Ruger Vaquero 44 Magnum Stainless Steel, Single Action, Wood Grips, Fires 44 Mag. And 44 Special, Like New fire only once $550 OBO. 518-354-8654 HUGHES PRODUCTS-HUNTING Box Blind,4x4 Bow Blind,4x4 Box Blind, and 4x8 Rockeater Lounge Blind. Multiseason Blinds: Hunting to Ice fishing! See them at TimberKing Northeast:(518)834-2051 tknemitchell@frontiernet.net

HUNDREDS OF RECORDS all for $99 OBO. Call 518-359-3614.

Win a $2,000 grand prize! Enter to win. Take our survey at www.pulsepoll.com and tell us about your household shopping plans and media usage. Your input will help us improve the paper and get the advertising specials you want. Thank you! GENERAL CASH FOR CARS: All Cars/Trucks Wanted. Running or Not! Top Dollar Paid. We Come To You! Any Make/Model. Call For Instant Offer: 1-800-864-5960 Make a Connection. Real People, Flirty Chat. Meet singles right now! Call LiveLinks. Try it FREE. Call NOW: Call 1-877-737-9447 18+ HEALTH & FITNESS

MINATURE TRAINS-LIONEL, American Flyer and HO scale, Vintage collection, perfect working condition, all electric, tracks, transformers, switches, display boards & buildings-negotiable 518-834-7929 QUADRA-FIRE CASTILE, Pellet Stove 30,000 BTU output excellent Condition and in working order, New door gaskets, Extra ignition element. Thermostat controlled blower fan & heat output control switch [H, M, L].All operation manuals and video tape with unit. New Unit $2,500 asking $1,100. Call 518 494 7608

SAWMILLS from only $4397.00 MAKE & SAVE MONEY with your own bandmillCut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. FREE Info/DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com 1-800-578-1363 Ext.300N

**FALL SPECIAL** VIAGRA 40x (100 mg) +16 "Double Bonus" PILLS for ONLY $119.00. NO PRESCRIPTION Needed! VISA payment required. 1-888-3868074 www.newhealthyman.com Satisfaction Guaranteed!! Stop OVERPAYING for your prescriptions! Save up to 93%! Call our licensed Canadian and International pharmacy service to compare prices and get $15.00 off your first prescription and FREE Shipping. Call 1-800-413-1940 VIAGRA & CIALIS USERS!! 60 Pill SPECIAL $99.00 FREE Shipping! 100% guaranteed. No Prescription Needed. Call Now 1-888-509-9371 VIAGRA & CIALIS! 50 pills for $95. 100 pills for $150 FREE shipping. NO prescriptions needed. Money back guaranteed! 1-877743-5419 VIAGRA 100MG and CIALIS 20mg! 40 Pills + 10 FREE. SPECIAL $99.00 100% guaranteed. FREE Shipping! 24/7 CALL NOW! 1-888-223-8818 VIAGRA 100MG and CIALIS 20mg! 50 Pills $99.00 FREE Shipping! 100% guaranteed. CALL NOW! 1-866-312-6061 VIAGRA 100mg, CIALIS 20mg. 50 tabs $90 includes FREE SHIPPING. 1-888-836-0780 or Metro-Meds.net VIAGRA! 52 Pills for only $99.00! The Original Blue Pill. Insured and Guaranteed Delivery Call 1-888410-0514

Viagra!! 52 Pills for Only $99.00! Your #1 trusted provider for 10 years. Call 1-888-797-9024 LOGGING GRIMSHAW LOGGING is looking to pay cash for all standing timber of any species fully insured and references available. please call Erick 518534-9739.

LAVALLEE LOGGING

is looking to harvest and purchase standing timber, All Species. Willing to pay New York State stumpage prices on all species. $ or % paid. References available. Matt Lavallee 518-645-6351 A CUT ABOVE THE REST!

LOGGING. LAND CLEARING. TIMBER MARKETING. Double Average Pay Immediately to Land Owner on Timber & Low Grade Chip Wood. Neat Forestry. 518-593-8752

PRECISION TREE SERVICE 518-942-6545 WANTED TO BUY ADVERTISE to 10 Million Homes across the USA! Place your ad in over 140 community newspapers, with circulation totaling over 10 million homes. Contact Independent Free Papers of America IFPA at danielleburnett-ifpa@live.com or visit our website cadnetads.com for more information. CASH for Coins! Buying Gold & Silver. Also Stamps, Paper Money, Comics, Entire Collections, Estates. Travel to your home. Call Marc in NY 1-800-959-3419 CASH PAID- up to $25/Box for unexpired, sealed DIABETIC TEST STRIPS. 1-DAYPAYMENT.1-800371-1136

Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

WANTED TO BUY CASH FOR DIABETIC TEST STRIPS Up to $35/Box! Sealed & Unexpired. Payment Made SAME DAY. Highest Prices Paid!! Call Juley Today! 800-413-3479 www.CashForYourTestStrips.com EXTRA DIABETIC TEST STRIPS? I Pay Top Dollar! 1-Day Fast Payment Guaranteed Up To $60/Box! FREE Shipping! www.CashNowOffer.com 1-888-210-5233 Use Code: CashNOW! EXTRA DIABETIC TEST STRIPS? I Pay Top Dollar! 1-Day Fast Payment Guaranteed Up To $60/Box! FREE Shipping! www.CashNowOffer.com 1-888-210-5233 Extra $10 Use Code: CashNOW! MOTORCYCLES WANTED Before 1985. Running or not. Japanese, British, European. $Cash$ paid. Free appraisals! CALL 1-315-569-8094 Email pictures or description to: Cyclerestoration@aol.com WANTS TO PURCHASE minerals and other oil & gas interests. Send details P.O. Box 13557, Denver, Co 80201 Wants to purchase minerals and other oil and gas interests. Send details to P.O. Box 13557 Denver, Co. 80201

DATE 11/12/15 11/12/15 11/12/15 11/12/15 11/12/15 11/13/15 11/13/15 11/13/15 11/13/15 11/13/15 11/13/15 11/13/15 11/13/15 11/13/15 11/13/15 11/16/15 11/16/15 11/17/15 11/17/15 11/18/15 11/18/15 11/18/15 11/18/15

REAL ESTATE RENTALS

MOBILE HOME RENTALS

For Rent-Vacant Mobile Home Site Water & Electric Available. 70'X80'- $500 A Month + Utilities Lewis, NY 518-873-6727

New Russia – 3 bdrm, 12.6 acres, waterfront, no neighbors, access to Giant Mnt. Hunt, fish, hike, enjoy! Sec. Ref, available 12/1/15. $650/mo. 518-597-3270.

APARTMENT RENTALS

REAL ESTATE SALES REAL ESTATE WILLSBORO, NY 1.06 acre lot w/water/sewer/power ($26,000) or Above lot with 1998 2bd/2bath mobile home ($49,000) 518-963-7320 COMMERCIAL PROPERTY

Elizabethtown, NY 1 bedroom down stairs apt. HUD approved, heat, hot water, refrigerator, & stove furnished. No pets, No exceptions. Call 518-873-2625 Judy, 518-962-4467 Wayne or 518-962-2064 or 518-6375620 or 518-962-2064 Gordon. SNOWBIRDS: Ages 55+ Condo for rent: Nicely furnished 2 bedroom, Bradenton/Sarasota Fl. Includes utilities, pool, clubhouse $1200/mo for 3mo; $1,000/mo for 6mo (Price negotiable/# of months). 607-723-8561 860-965-5655 4388 HOME RENTALS KEESEVILLE, NY 4 BDRM LOG Home For Rent, Available November 11th, Monitor & Wood Heat, Scenic, Lease, $1,000/mo. Call 518-834-7743

GRANTOR James Smith et al Thomas Peryea Timothy Mullaney Jeordi Mcewen and Mary Lawrence LNV Corporation 21st Mortgage Corporation Patrick and Heather Maure Brian and Kevin Lavarnway Laurie Goddeau Federal National Mortgage Association David and Candice Hislop Thomas, Margaret and Nancy Malone Reginald Bedell and David Staley Reginald Bedell and Gary Rivers Thomas and Ellen Welch Jin Zhang Michael Hanlon John and Kikuko Jardine Towne & Country Homes LLC Gail Hekkema James Connolly Arthur Carter and Linda McCasland Denise Lind and Ruth Fitzgerald

CLINTON

GRANTEE Rolland Dupuis Rena Bombard Steven and Crystal Simpson Gene Chauvin Richard Mcewen Karla Daniels John and Pamela Harrington John and Jaimee Bierman Angela Sussdorff Douglas and Sherry Shepard Stephen and Susan Welch Brandon and Denise Drapeau Dannemora Federal Credit Union Maurice Gilbert Austin Bordeleau 319 Changs Inc Adam Besaw Cory and Bernard McCoy Wesley and Sandra Lee Wright Joseph and Christy May Sackett Ethan and Dennis Bonville Brian and Judy Labounty Matthew and Amanda Warner

ELIZABETHTOWN, NY OFFICE Space For Rent, Newly Refurbished, Near Post Office & Stores. Call Judy 518-8732625, Wayne 518-962-4467, Gordon 518-962-2064 or 518637-5620. HOMES ADIRONDACK “BY OWNER” AdkByOwner.com 1000+ photo listings of local real estate for sale, vacation rentals & timeshares. Owners: List with us for only $299 per year. Visit on-line or call 518-891-9919

LOCATION Ellenburg Altona Ellenburg Peru Saranac Town of Plattsburgh Mooers Beekmantown Ausable Champlain Saranac Beekmantown Dannemora Schuyler Falls City of Plattsburgh Plattsburgh Peru Schuyler Falls Beekmantown Beekmantown Schuyler Falls Saranac Champlain

PRICE $25,000 $2,000 $5 $250,000 $42,500 $55,900 $63,000 $129,000 $115,000 $12,000 $62,500 $70,000 $50,000 $20,500 $130,000 $90,000 $114,000 $119,000 $215,000 $250,000 $86,750 $8,000 $94,000

Schroon Wilmington Keene North Elba Moriah North Hudson Ticonderoga Ticonderoga Willsboro North Hudson Wilmington North Hudson Moriah Westport Chesterfield Ticonderoga Moriah Moriah Moriah Essex Jay Jay North Elba North Elba Schroon Keene North Elba North Elba Wilmington Schroon Ticonderoga Schroon Schroon

$4,000 $1 $111,500 $62,000 $50 $3,750 $600 $50 $10,000 $3,500 $13,500 $2,500 $7,250 $20,000 $40,000 $18,500 $90,000 $1 $140,000 $50,000 $77,500 $9,500 $420,000 $700,000 $340,000 $105,000 $1 $99,500 $20,000 $20,000 $159,000 $25,000 $20,000

ESSEX 11/12/15 11/12/15 11/12/15 11/12/15 11/12/15 11/12/15 11/12/15 11/12/15 11/12/15 11/12/15 11/12/15 11/12/15 11/12/15 11/12/15 11/13/15 11/13/15 11/13/15 11/13/15 11/13/15 11/13/15 11/13/15 11/16/15 11/16/15 11/16/15 11/16/15 11/16/15 11/17/15 11/17/15 11/17/15 11/17/15 11/17/15 11/18/15 11/18/15

Erika Dobler Michael and Kristin Eidens Jay and Morgan Hole Jerilyn Wright Anthony and Lynn Nania Thomas Nason and Jennifer Martin Essex County and Hidden Pines LLC Frank Sears Essex County and Parry Griffith Nicholas Daigle Essex County and johnston Violet Constance Anzovino and Bruce Koch Essex County and Dennis Babin Robert Harper Essex County and Constantine Iliev Robert Harper Essex County & Nicholas & Jessica Denton Gregory Dennin Essex County & James & Carol Wharton Duane Dickerson Essex County and Stanley Karwowski Douglas Smith Essex County & James & Carol Wharton Duane Dickerson Essex County and Carl Mazarian Craig Sherman Essex County and McCooey Property Theodore and Kathleen Taylor Paul Schoenig et al Bernard and Sharon Austin Kenneth Buckley Jon Cooke James and Dominick Datri Andrew Baker and Chassidy Goyette Philomine Ezzo Mary Jean Waldron Norman and Pamela Fields Nicholas Popp Gerard Power Keith and Tammy Bigelow Chester and Sharon Pulsifer Michael Manor Paul and Valerie Coolidge Jean Philippe Christopher and Cathy Towsend Brian Swenson Nordic Moon Enterprises LLC Lake Placid Properties LLC Martin and Pauline Gyves George and Linda Leming Marsha Kameron Daniel and Lauri Auer Moongate Limited Partnership Corp Rabideau Corp Rabideau Vickie Brown Bonnieview Ridge LLC Richard and Kelly Whitney Richard and Valerie Shaut Scott and Roxanne Stowell Richard Harker Shawn and Miranda Holman Richard Edelman James Decostello Pamela Scavera and Christine Raffo Stephen and Deirdre Schrader


Published by Denton Publications, Inc. HOMES

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 LAND GREENE COUNTY, 6 acres, $29,900. Beautiful open and wooded property, old stone walls, easy access to NYS Thruway and skiing, abundant wildlife. Bank financing available. Call 1-800-447-0779 So. Adk Lakefront Land & Cabin Sale! Sat. Dec 5th! One Day Only! 111 acres Pristine Lake $194,900 50 acres Lakefront Cabin - $199,900 7 tracts with lakes, streams, cabins & State Land! 3 hrs NY City! Last chance this yr! Terms avail! 1-888-701-1864 WoodworthLakePreserve.com

LEGALS BROCKWAY CONSULTING LLC Articles of Org. filed NY Sec. of State (SSNY) 11/4/15. Office in Clinton Co. SSNY desig. agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 1455 Lake Shore Rd., Chazy, NY 12921. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. NC-11/14-12/19/20156TC-100843 ConDom Holdings LLC. Filed with SSNY on 10/16/15. Office: Clinton County. SSNY designated as agent for process and shall mail to: 176 U.S. Oval Plattsburgh NY 12903. Purpose: any lawful NC-11/07-12/12/20156TC-100126 Crosley Holdings, LLC Articles of Org. filed NY Sec. of State (SSNY) 11/06/15. Office in Clinton Co. SSNY desig. Agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 24 River St., Chazy, NY 12921, which is also the principal business location. Purpose: Any lawful purpose NC-11/14-12/19/20156TC-100845 DENEAULT APARTMENT 1, 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 October 23, 2015.

www.suncommunitynews.com LAND

CRUISE & TRAVEL

SO. ADIRONDACK Lakefront Land & Cabin Sale! Saturday, Dec. 5th, one day only! 111 acres – Pristine Lake $194,900. 50 acres – Lakefront Cabin $199,900. 7 tracts with lakes, streams, cabins and state land. 3 hours NY City! Last chance this year! Terms available. 888-905-8847. WoodWorthLakePreserve.com.

CRUISE DEALS available for a limited time. Royal Caribbean, Celebrity, Carnival and Norwegian. Hurry as these offers wont last! Call 877-270-7260 or go to NCPTRAVEL.COM to research.

VACATION PROPERTY

Fishing For A Good Deal? Catch The Greatest Bargains In The Classifieds 1-518-873-6368 Ext. 201

IS YOUR VACATION HOME FOR SALE OR RENT? Promote it in print to nearly 4.3 million potential buyers (plus more readers online!) with a statewide classified ad. Advertise your property for just $489 for a 25-word ad, less for smaller coverage areas. Visit AdNetworkNY.com or call 315-437-6173 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES

NCL CRUISE SPECIAL Pick one FREE Unlimited Beverages / FREE Specialty Dining / FREE WIFI / Free Shore Excursions! Hurry, limited time offer. Call for full details 877270-7260 or go to NCPtravel.com

When it’s time to

CLEAN HOUSE

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

DIVORCE $349 - Uncontested divorce papers prepared. Only one signature required. Poor person Application included if applicable. Separation agreements. Custody and support petitions.- 518-274-0380.

DENEAULT APARTMENT 1, 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 October 23, 2015. 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 1463 Lavalley Road, P.O. Box 108, Mooers, NY 12958. PURPOSE: To engage in any lawful act or activity. NC-11/28-01/02/20166TC-102091| FURFARO PASTENA PROPERTIES LLC Articles of Org. filed NY Sec. of State (SSNY) 10/15/15. Office in Clinton Co. SSNY design. Agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to Incorporating Services LTD 3500 S DuPont Hwy Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: Any lawful activity. NC-10/31/2015-1TC99331 GB TRAILER SALES, LLC Articles of Org. filed NY Sec. of State (SSNY) 11/03/2015. Office in Clinton Co. SSNY desig. agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 188 Boas Rd., Mooers Fork, NY 12959. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. Principal business location: High Falls Park Campground, Cemetery Rd., Chateaugay, NY

Call 518-873-6367

THE SUN

C O M M U N I T Y

N E W S

&

P R I N T I N G

Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

GB TRAILER SALES, LLC Articles of Org. filed NY Sec. of State (SSNY) 11/03/2015. Office in Clinton Co. SSNY desig. agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 188 Boas Rd., Mooers Fork, NY 12959. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. Principal business location: High Falls Park Campground, Cemetery Rd., Chateaugay, NY NC-11/21-12/26/20156TC-101631 Lilsay Holding Company LLC. Filed with SSNY on 10/19/15. Office: Clinton County. SSNY designated as agent for process and shall mail to: 176 U.S. Oval Plattsbrugh NY 12903. Purpose: any lawful NC-11/7-12/12/20156TC-100127

PLATTSBURGH BAY COMMONS, 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 November 17, 2015. 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 107 Wood Cliff Drive, Plattsburgh, New York 12901. PURPOSE: To engage in any lawful act or activity. NC-11/28-01/02/20166TC-102088

Mountain Sanitation L.L.C. Arts of Org filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 10/6/15. Office in Clinton Co. SSNY desig. agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served & shall mail process to William C West, 6481 State Rte 22 Apt B5, Plattsburgh, NY 12901. Purpose: General. NC-11/28-01/02/20166TC-102258

NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY (LLC) Name: Polished From Head to Toe LLC Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 08/03/2015 Office Location: Clinton County. The SSNY is designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of any process to the LLC at: 3085 RT. 22, Peru, New York 12972. Purpose: To engage in any lawful act or activity. NC-10/31-12/02/20156TC-98934

PLATTSBURGH BAY COMMONS, 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 November 17, 2015. 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 107 Wood

SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF ESSEX CUC Mortgage Corporation, Plaintiff, - against PLAINTIFF'S ADDRESS 1021 Watervliet Shaker Road Albany, NY 12205 SUMMONS INDEX NO. 11-228 ACTION TO FORECLOSE MORTGAGE ON PROPERTY SITUATED IN ESSEX COUNTY Kimberly J. Blanchette a/k/a Kimberly J. Nadeau, Daniel J. Blanchette

SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF ESSEX CUC Mortgage Corporation, Plaintiff, - against PLAINTIFF'S ADDRESS 1021 Watervliet Shaker Road Albany, NY 12205 SUMMONS INDEX NO. 11-228 ACTION TO FORECLOSE MORTGAGE ON PROPERTY SITUATED IN ESSEX COUNTY Kimberly J. Blanchette a/k/a Kimberly J. Nadeau, Daniel J. Blanchette "JOHN DOE", "RICHARD ROE", "JANE DOE", "CORA COE", "DICK MOE" and "RUBY POE" the six defendants last named in quotation marks being intended to designate tenants or occupants in possession of the herein described premises or portions thereof, if any there be, said names being fictitious, their true name being unknown to plaintiff, Defendants. X TO THE ABOVE DEFENDANTS: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to answer the complaint in this action, and to serve a copy of your answer, or if the Complaint is not served with this Summons, to serve a Notice of Appearance on the Plaintiff's attorneys within twenty (20) days after the service of the Summons exclusive of the day of service or within thirty (30) days after completion of service where service is made in any other manner than by personal delivery within the State. In case of your failure to appear, or answer, judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in this Complaint. TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANTS: The foregoing Summons is served upon you by publication pursuant to an Order of the Hon.

SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF ESSEX CUC Mortgage Corporation, Plaintiff, - against PLAINTIFF'S ADDRESS 1021 Watervliet Shaker Road Albany, NY 12205 SUMMONS INDEX NO. 11-228 ACTION TO FORECLOSE MORTGAGE ON PROPERTY SITUATED IN ESSEX COUNTY Kimberly J. Blanchette a/k/a Kimberly J. Nadeau, Daniel J. Blanchette "JOHN DOE", "RICHARD ROE", "JANE DOE", "CORA COE", "DICK MOE" and "RUBY POE" the six defendants last named in quotation marks being intended to designate tenants or occupants in possession of the herein described premises or portions thereof, if any there be, said names being fictitious, their true name being unknown to plaintiff, Defendants. X TO THE ABOVE DEFENDANTS: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to answer the complaint in this action, and to serve a copy of your answer, or if the Complaint is not served with this Summons, to serve a Notice of Appearance on the Plaintiff's attorneys within twenty (20) days after the service of the Summons exclusive of the day of service or within thirty (30) days after completion of service where service is made in any other manner than by personal delivery within the State. In case of your failure to appear, or answer, judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in this Complaint. TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANTS: The foregoing Summons is served upon you by publication pursuant to an Order of the Hon. Robert J. Muller, a Justice of the Supreme Court, Essex County, dated June 23, 2015 and filed with the complaint and other papers in the Essex County Clerks Office. The object of the action is to foreclose a mortgage recorded in said Clerks Office on the 14th day of June, 2007 in Book 1722, mortgage page 20, covering prem. k/a 160 Vineyard Rd., Ticonderoga, NY a/k/a Section 139.2, Block 2, Lot 34.2. NOTICE YOU ARE IN DANGER OF LOSING YOUR HOME If you do not respond to this summons and complaint by serving a copy of the answer on the attorney for the mortgage company who filed this foreclosure proceeding against you and filing the answer with the court, a default judgment may be entered and you can lose your home. Speak to an attorney or go to the court where your case is pending for further information on how to answer the summons and protect your property. Sending a payment to your mortgage company will not stop this foreclosure action. YOU MUST RESPOND BY SERVING A COPY OF THE ANSWER ON THE ATTORNEY FOR THE PLAINTIFF (MORTGAGE COMPANY) AND FILING

the six defendants last named in quotation marks being intended to designate tenants or ocin possession Thecupants North Countryman Sun • November 28, 2015 | 19 of the herein described premises or portions thereof, if any there be, said names being fictitious, their true name being unknown to plaintiff, Defendants. X TO THE ABOVE DEFENDANTS: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to answer the complaint in this action, and to serve a copy of your answer, or if the Complaint is not served with this Summons, to serve a Notice of Appearance on the Plaintiff's attorneys within twenty (20) days after the service of the Summons exclusive of the day of service or within thirty (30) days after completion of service where service is made in any other manner than by personal delivery within the State. In case of your failure to appear, or answer, judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in this Complaint. TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANTS: The foregoing Summons is served upon you by publication pursuant to an Order of the Hon. Robert J. Muller, a Justice of the Supreme Court, Essex County, dated June 23, 2015 and filed with the complaint and other papers in the Essex County Clerks Office. The object of the action is to foreclose a mortgage recorded in said Clerks Office on the 14th day of June, 2007 in Book 1722, mortgage page 20, covering prem. k/a 160 Vineyard Rd., Ticonderoga, NY a/k/a Section 139.2, Block 2, Lot 34.2. ARTICLES OF ORGANINOTICE ZATION OF Zafra, LLC YOU ARE IN DANGER Under Section 203 of OF LOSING YOUR HOME the Limited Liability If you do not respond to Company Law this summons and com- FIRST. The name of the plaint by serving a copy limited liability company of the answer on the at- is Zafra, LLC. torney for the mortgage SECOND. The county company who filed this within this state in which foreclosure proceeding the limited liability comagainst you and filing pany is to be located is the answer with the Clinton. court, a default judg- THIRD. The secretary of ment may be entered state is designated as and you can lose your agent of the limited liahome. bility company upon Speak to an attorney or whom process against it go to the court where may be served. The adyour case is pending for dress within or without further information on this state to which the how to answer the sum- Secretary of State shall mons and protect your mail a copy of any proproperty. cess accepted on behalf Sending a payment to of the limited liability your mortgage company company served upon will not stop this fore- him or her is: c/o United closure action. States Corporation YOU MUST RESPOND Agents, Inc., 7014 13th BY SERVING A COPY OF Avenue, Suite 202, THE ANSWER ON THE Brooklyn, NY 11228. ATTORNEY FOR THE FOURTH: The name and PLAINTIFF (MORTGAGE street address in this COMPANY) AND FILING state of the registered THE ANSWER WITH agent upon whom and at THE COURT. which process against Dated: Carle Place, New the limited liability comYork pany served is: United April 19, 2011 States Corporation Pranali Datta, Esq. Agents, Inc., 7014 13th Stein, Weiner & Roth, Avenue, Suite 202, L.L.P. Attorneys for Brooklyn, NY 11228. Plaintiff FIFTH: The word Zafra One Old Country Road, has no translation; It is Suite 113 Carle Place, late summer or early auNew York 11514 (516)- tumn harvest of sugar 742-1212 cane, of Spanish origin. 54865/XCUC - #86697 IN WITNESS WHEREOF, NC-11/28-12/19/2015the undersigned has ex4TC-102090 ecuted these Articles of Organization on the date below. ARTICLES OF ORGANI- LegalZoom.com, Inc., ZATION OF Zafra, LLC Organizer Under Section 203 of Date: October 8, 2015 the Limited Liability /s/ Cheyenne Moseley, Company Law Assistant Secretary FIRST. The name of the 9900 Spectrum Drives limited liability company Austin, TX 78717 is Zafra, LLC. NC-11/07-12/12/2015SECOND. The county 6TC-99498 within this state in which the limited liability company is to be located is Clinton. THIRD. The secretary of state is designated as agent of the limited liability company upon whom process against it may be served. The address within or without this state to which the Secretary of State shall mail a copy of any process accepted on behalf of the limited liability company served upon him or her is: c/o United States Corporation Agents, Inc., 7014 13th Avenue, Suite 202, Brooklyn, NY 11228. FOURTH: The name and street address in this


20 | November 28, 2015 • The North Countryman Sun

www.suncommunitynews.com

Published by Denton Publications, Inc.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.