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North Creek marks 10 years at Tannery Pond PAGE 2 IN RAQUETTE LAKE
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North Creek celebrates business growth By Phil Sherotov newsenterprise@denpubs.com NORTH CREEK — Business leaders held a ribbon-cutting ceremony Saturday, June 30 on Main Street to celebrate the town’s growth. The ceremony began with a speech by Dave Bulmer, the outgoing president of the Gore Mountain Region Chamber of Commerce, who said that
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IN MINERVA
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stephen@denpubs.com PLATTSBURGH — Americans across the country cheered the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision upholding the Affordable Health Care Act, announced Thursday, June 26. Americans across the country also booed the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision. Which side of the aisle one stood
on seemed to largely be determined by one’s political persuasion. Such was the case with Congressman Bill Owens (D-Plattsburgh) and Matt Doheny, the Watertown Republican who will be running against the incumbent for the 21st Congressional District seat in the November election. The Supreme Court voted 5 to 4 to uphold most of President Barack Obama’s health care law. Chief Justice John G. Roberts, in
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where appropriate to improve provisions that still need work,” Owens said. “The goal has always been to expand coverage, improve healthcare outcomes, and reduce costs for patients and providers. Now the debate is over and it’s time to move forward with those goals in mind.” The health care law will reduce federal deficits by $210 billion between 2012 and 2021, according to CONTINUED ON PAGE 9
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n’t happening there,” Bulmer said. Town of Johnsburg Supervisor Ron Vanselow commended the ingenuity and efforts of local business leaders in the town’s successful expansion. “It wasn’t long ago that there were many more investment opportunities in this town,” he noted humorously. Bulmer introduced Edward Maitino, director of tourism for Empire State Development, which administers the I Love New York program.
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Owens, Doheny react to Supreme Court decision By Stephen Bartlett
NORTH CREEK
there aren’t many towns with a population of 2,500 that can say they’ve had 13 new businesses open in the past year, along with 12 established businesses expanding. Bulmer said that in the long history of the town, this year would be remembered as the one during which it became a year-round destination location. “We should all be thrilled because if you go 12 miles down the road or 12 miles north, what’s happening here is-
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Frank Morehouse shows his son, Kieth Eannarino, the ropes at Minerva's Fishing Derby on Saturday, June 30.
Camp Sagamore hosts Black Fly Beer Camp
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NORTH CREEK — On Saturday, July 7, Gore Mountain will officially unveil its new lineup of spring and summer attractions. Some of the activities have been available during June weekends, but Gore will launch an expanded schedule on opening day that will include a variety of recreational and educational activities in addition to the Northwoods Gondola Skyrides and downhill mountain biking usually offered during the summer. The Rumor climbing wall, the Wild Air bungee trampoline, disc golf and daily hiking excursions are already being offered, but visitors will now have the option of participating in an inflatable obstacle course, Bear Mountain interpretive walks and Friday evening happy hours. Cooking classes, yoga retreats, photography camps and jewelry workshops will also be available.
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July 7, 2012
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Tannery Pond Community Center celebrates 10 years newsenterprise@denpubs.com NORTH CREEK — Dozens of residents celebrated the 10th anniversary of the Tannery Pond Community Center Saturday, June 30 with a gala. The event also served to introduce the new executive director for the center, Bernadette Speach. During the reception, Speach introduced herself to the arriving guests. She has been meeting with the various groups and organizations that are involved with the center over the past two weeks. At this stage, Speach said she wants to get a good picture of how all the activities and uses that are made of Tannery Pond fit into the bigger picture. Ultimately, her goal is to find ways to expand, enrich and enhance the role of the center within the community. Several people spoke during a presentation in the performing arts center, reflecting on the role that the Tannery Pond Community Center has played in the community, its future and the individuals who built and donated it to the town — Woody and Elise Widlund. Sen. Betty Little (RQueensbury) spoke first. She noted that she had been to the center several times over the years and was saddened to hear that the Widlunds are moving away. She added that, over the years, the Widlunds’ philosophy of helping people succeed had a tremendous impact on the town, and they had helped in many ways. Little recalled how the Widlunds had purchased a house in North River, paid to have it completely remodeled and then donated it to the Adirondack Community Housing Trust so it could benefit a family in need. In the end, she thanked them for everything they had done “for all of us.” Businessman and author Glenn Pearsall shared how a recent report on cultural centers found that they
Sen. Betty Little, center, talks with Woody and Elise Widlund June 30 at the Tannery Pond Community Center’s gala. Photo by Phil Sherotov
“play a critical role in revitalizing a sense of community spirit … bring economic activity into neglected sectors, improve the quality of life of individuals, generate new tax revenues … and contribute to creative and cultural growth.” Pearsall said that this wasn’t news to the Widlunds; they not only knew how a community center could transform a community 10 years ago, but they actually made it happen. The Widlunds paid to have the previous building torn down and a new, stateof-the-art facility designed and built, and they devoted countless hours to overseeing each step of the process before gifting it to the town of Johnsburg. Continuing Sen. Little’s point, Pearsall added that the generosity and dedication evident in this gift to the town had long been present in their relationship to the
community. Woody had been an advisor to the Earth Club, and in that capacity had chaperoned many hikes and rafting trips. He had also been chair of the Library Capital Campaign, which helped expand the now reopened local library, which has the highest circulation rate of any library in Warren County, apart from Crandall Library in Glens Falls. Both Woody and Elise had also helped support and advise several of the struggling businesses in town. They also provided guidance and contributions to the Adirondack Ensemble, a chamber music group. In the past 10 years, Tannery Pond has hosted 400 live theater productions and concerts, held art exhibits and shows for more than 50 artists, been a home to countless children’s programs and been a safe, alco-
hol-free site for more than 100 dances. Pearsall said there was an article in Adirondack Life called “What’s Up With North Creek?” a few months after the center opened in 2002. The story mentioned the newly restored train depot and museum, the new multi-million dollar community center and several new restaurants and shops on main street. He said that people still ask him that question and follow it up with: “Do they put something in the water up there?” “Well if there is something in the water, it’s Woody and Elise,” Pearsall told the audience. Mike Bowers, a co-chairman of the North Creek Business Alliance, said that in addition to celebrating the anniversary of the community center, they were also celebrating its future. The business community was keenly aware of the importance of Tannery Pond to the community, Bowers said, and was committed to helping it achieve its full potential. Lyle Dye, the recent recipient of the Gore Mountain Region Chamber of Commerce’s 2012 Person of the Year award, presented the Widlunds with a postersized photograph of the center signed by various local residents thanking them for providing the town with a “collective home for our community.” After accepting their gift, the Widlunds revealed yet
New Tannery Pond Community Center Executive Director Bernadette Speach, right, speaks with attendees at the center’s gala June 30. Photo by Phil Sherotov
another gift to the community: a donation to help bring the future of the Tannery Pond Community Center to fruition. It was a check for $2,000, made out to the Tannery Pond Community Center Association “to be used
at the discretion of the TPCCA Executive Director to market Tannery Pond Community Center as a presentation venue,” the Widlunds said in a letter to TPCCA Chair Ken Murray. “Best of luck in this new chapter.”
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Adirondack Museum offers new audio tour By McKenna Kelly
Contemporary voices
newsenterprise@denpubs.com BLUE MOUNTAIN LAKE — Visitors to the Adirondack Museum can now add a new dimension to their experience; an audio tour, featuring the voices of real Adirondack residents. The audio tour is now available for free with museum admission. Visitors can listen in on devices provided by the museum, or they can download an app to their smart phones. The museum launched the tour on opening day, May 25. “It’s a nice enhancement to the visitor experience,” said marketing director Kate Moore. “The audio tour is doing great.” The tour provides listeners with words from many unique personalities. Some are contemporary voices, and some are voices from the past, read by character actors. Though their experiences are different, all are bound by a love for the Adirondacks. Their words open an audible window for visitors, allowing them to see the Adirondacks and the Adirondack Museum’s exhibits through new eyes and with new understanding. “People’s authentic stories will enable our visitors to think about the Adirondacks past, present, and future from intriguing perspectives,” said David Kahn, executive director of the Adirondack Museum. Unlike traditional guided tours, the audio tours don’t follow any set path or direction. There are several starting points visitors may choose from, but they are free to choose which portions of the tour and physical exhibits interest them most. When visitors reach an exhibit they want
This peddler’s wagon was used near Piseco Lake in Hamilton County. It is an audio tour stop. Photo by Andy Flynn
to hear more about, they select the corresponding audio track from their listening device. A short introduction plays, followed by a short voice clip which adds extra information. Some of the clips connect the exhibits to events going on in the Adirondacks today. For example, when a visitor stops at the tin peddler ’s wagon in the “Roads and Rails” exhibit, they’ll hear an introduction from Adirondack Museum Curator Hallie Bond. The wagon was once used near Piseco Lake in Hamilton County and dates to about 1880. It helps Bond open a conversation about the retail business in the Adirondack Park and contemporary businesses, such as
the Community Store of Saranac Lake. She talks about shop peddlers in the 1800s and early 1900s bringing goods to rural areas and then transitions to the Community Store’s board president, Melinda Little, who talks about the current retail situation in Saranac Lake, home to the only community-owned department store in New York state. The Adirondack Museum’s audio tour was sponsored by National Grid and produced by the Richard Lewis Media Group of Watertown, Mass. The Adirondack Museum is open daily from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., through Oct. 14. For more information, call 352-7311 or visit online at www.adkmuseum.org. (Andy Flynn contributed to this story.)
•Kevin Bacon, actor •David Hochschild, grandson of Adirondack Museum founder Harold Hochschild •John Collins, Blue Mountain Lake resident, former Adirondack Museum director and former Adirondack Park Agency chairman •Allison Buckley, director of conservation, Adirondack Council •Phil Terrie, environmental historian, author •Martha Foley, news director, NCPR •Melinda Little, president, Community Store of Saranac Lake •Allison Warner, boat builder •Christine Jerome, author •Peggy Lynn, singer-songwriter, author •Dan Berggren, singer-songwriter •Steven Tucker, farmer •Dan Moore, logger •Thea Moruzzi, educator, ADK •Brian McDonnell, president, Adirondack Watershed Alliance •John Fadden, Six Nations Indian Museum •Michael Bacon, musician •Marty Podskoch, author, retired teacher •Scott Chartier, hunter •Abby and Steven Jacobs, married at Adirondack Museum •Mitch Lee, Inlet storyteller •Hallie Bond, Adirondack museum curator
Historic voices •Miles Tyler Merwin, owner Blue Mt. House •Anne LaBastille, author •George Washington Sears (a.k.a. “Nessmuk”), author, paddler •Frances Boone Seaman, fire tower observer •Thomas Donnelly, Minerva highway superintendent •Emma, waitress at Blue Mt. House •William T. Brown, young river driver
Music by the River concerts begin July 14 By Shaun Kittle
shaun@denpubs.com
Town of Chester Cosmic Jackson will perform in North Creek July 28. by the River concert series for the North Creek Business Alliance. The series is being funded by the Business Alliance and Warren County occupancy tax funds. “The idea is to feature a mix of music from bands throughout the re-
gion,” Nightingale said. “We encourage people to stop at local restaurants and shop before and after the concerts to see all that North Creek has to offer.” The concerts are free, and the music starts at 6 p.m.
Summerfest & Fireworks
Johnsburg Central sets meeting dates
Presented by the North Warren Chamber of Commerce
Saturday, JULY 7, 2012 12 Noon til 9:30 pm ADMISSION is FREE
NORTH CREEK — The Johnsburg Central School Board of Education will meet at 7 p.m. in Room 126 at JCS on the following dates: •July 9 (organizational meeting) •Monday, Aug. 13 •Monday, Sept. 10 •Monday, Sept. 24 •Tuesday, Oct. 9 •Monday, Oct. 22 •Tuesday, Nov. 13 •Monday, Nov. 26 •Monday, Dec. 10 •Monday, Jan. 14, 2013 •Monday, Jan. 28 •Monday, Feb. 11 •Monday, Feb. 25 •Monday, March 11 •Monday, March 25 •Monday, April 8 •Monday, April 22 •Monday, May 13, Budget Presentation •Tuesday, May 21, meeting follows school vote •Tuesday, May 28 •Monday, June 10 •Monday, June 24 •Monday, July 8
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Celebration Begins with Kids Games
Municipal Field
12:00-8:00 pm All Day FREE Full Face Painting
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12:00-7:00 pm Educational Displays & Vendors
Field
3:00 pm
Mark Bowie Slideshow presentation Auditorium “Adirondack Tourism & The Photographic Work of Richard Dean” Auditorium
5:00 pm
Veterans Memorial Dedication Front Lawn Everyone is invited to join our special guests as we express our appreciation to all Veterans who have served this great land of America… Harry Bollbach
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Sponsors: Adirondack Pine B & B, Buckman’s Family Fuel Oil, Brad Hayes Excavating, E-Z Marine & Storage, Inc., Eric & Eric Construction, Glens Falls National Bank, Horicon Museum & Historical Society, Landon Hill B&B, McCluskys’ Hardware, North Warren Chamber, Painted Pony Rodeo, S&S Novelty, Saratoga & North Creek Railway, Stewart’s Shops, Syncopated Clock Shop, Town of Chester, Town of Horicon, Upstate Agency, LLC, Stephenson’s Lumber, Mary Kay Cosmetics.
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NORTH CREEK — The Music by the River concerts will bring four rockin’ bands to the shore of the Hudson River this summer. The series, which takes place at Riverside Park in North Creek next to the train station, will kick off July 14 with the Lazy Suns, a New York Citybased quintet whose music has been featured on the Discovery Channel‘s reality show the “Deadliest Catch.” Cosmic Jackson will perform July 28, the Willie Playmore Band takes the stage Aug. 11 and Collette and the Mudcats will close the series Aug. 25. There will also be a concert in Riverside Park during Columbus Day weekend, but a band has not been booked yet, according to Katie Nightingale, who organizes the Music
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July 7, 2012
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Beer lovers swarm to the deep woods Great Camp Sagamore hosts first-ever Black Fly Beer Camp
By David Blow newsenterprise@denpubs.com RAQUETTE LAKE — Months ago, Jeff Flagg was brainstorming ways to get people to Raquette Lake’s Great Camp Sagamore at a time when the black flies tend to rule the forest. The program director of the historic Vanderbilt family complex decided a weekend centered on craft beer might be the answer. Based on the reactions from the 60 or so visitors who attended the first annual Black Fly Beer Camp June 29-July 1, he was right. “This is so much better than a traditional beer festival,” said Tim Smith, who drove up from near Cooperstown for the two-day event. “They are crowded and always have a bunch of drunk kids. This was more mellow, like, ‘Let’s talk about beer.’” There were demonstrations on how to brew beer from kits and from scratch and a brewing tutorial by Saranac beer ’s master brewer Rich Michaels. There was a dinner on Friday night in which beers were paired with foods like pork with walnuts and apples, green beans and rice and beans. There were samplings — lots of samplings — with beers flavored with everything from peaches and blueberries to maple syrup and coconut. The first sampling session allowed home brewers from all over the region to
Great Camp Sagamore in Raquette Lake
share beer with others, and to seek feedback from experts. Reed Antis, who sells home-brewing supplies at Saratoga Zymurgist, was one of the experts. He liked Queensbury rookie brewer Justin Gray’s American amber flavored with chocolate, although he said it wouldn’t win a competition because it wasn’t true to the genre.
Reed Antis demonstrates how to brew your own beer from a kit. He owns a homebrewing and wine-making shop in Saratoga Springs. Photo by David Blow
Indian Lake Theater, library hold joint events INDIAN LAKE — Indian Lake Theater and the Indian Lake Library are partnering this summer once again for a book/movie program for kids “During the Dog Days of Summer.” They will read a book on Tuesdays at 11 a.m. at the library and screen the movie the following week at the Theater at 10 am. The OTTG Penny Readers will be the guest readers. Here is the schedule: •”101 Dalmations”: Read it at 11 a.m. Tuesday, July 3 at the library; and watch it at 10 a.m. July 10 at the Theater. •”The Adventures of Milo and Otis”: Read it at 11 a.m., Tuesday, July 17; and watch it at 10 a.m. July 24 at the Theater. •”Lassie Come Home”: Read it at 11 a.m., Tuesday July 31 at the library; and watch it at 10 a.m. Aug. 7 at the Theater. •”Balto”: Read it at 11 a.m. Tuesday, Aug. 14; and watch it at 10 a.m. Tuesday, Aug. 21 at the Theater. On Wednesdays, join the NYS Summer Reading Program at the Indian Lake Library at 7 p.m. beginning July 11. The library will use the NYS Summer Reading Program Statewide theme, “Dream Big.” Sandy Bureau of Nature on the Move will help dream and imagine what it’s like to be a bug (July 11), a tiny snail (July 18), a bird (July 25) and a bear (Aug. 1). Kids who report each week on their reading will earn a gift. The final Summer Reading program will be at 7 p.m. on Aug. 8 at Byron Park with a performance of “Dreaming Dragon” by the Puppet People. These programs are free and open to all. Contact Nancy Berkowitz, Indian Lake Library, at 648-5444.
Museum hosts paddle-making workshops BLUE MOUNTAIN LAKE — Craftsman Caleb Davis will return to the Adirondack Museum this summer to teach a series of one-day paddle making workshops. Students will use hand-tools to craft their own wooden canoe paddle. The first workshop is offered on July 6. Additional workshops will be held on July 13, 20, 27 and Aug. 3,
There were samplings. Lots of samplings. Photo by Andy Flynn
Photo by David Blow
“It’s not good as an American amber, but you and I would sure enjoy drinking it,” he said. Matt Whalen, co-owner of Good Nature Brewing in Hamilton, liked Ken Bosen’s peach-flavored ale saying it was a “nice summer beer.” After the group tasting, it was time for the pros like Michaels and Whalen to offer samples of their commercial offerings at various stations throughout the great camp. John Carr, owner of Adirondack Pub and Brewery in Lake George even shared a porter that had been aged in used bourbon barrels that sold for $120 a case. By nightfall, it was off to the Playhouse, where Glens Falls area musician Joe Defelice serenaded visitors and staff members alike with vocal help from Gray and guitar and harmonica assistance from Whalen. While he played, there were old soda kegs filled with various beers from a crème ale to one flavored with maple on the porch, all made by Kyle Kelliher and Donia Conn, longtime Sagamore volunteers who met there years ago. There was a vibe at the great camp that is hard to describe. It was one of those rare moments where a group of people were all in sync, engaged in good conversation, good beer and an amazing setting. There was even a family with two young kids — although they didn’t know their annual trip to the Sagamore this year fell on a beer festival weekend. “When we found out there was a beer fest, we were like, ‘ohhh,’” said Syracuse area reident Matthew Cavaliveri, flanked by 6-yearold Sophia who was icing down black fly
bites. “But the people have been great.” Cavaliveri, over a bonfire later Saturday, revealed he was secretly psyched to hear that the beer festival coincided with his annual trip there. As Saturday night headed quickly toward Sunday morning, the bonfire crowd got younger and younger including both college-aged staff and guest’s visitors. On Sunday, folks woke up, ate their breakfast and said goodbyes, vowing to return for next year ’s round two. Flagg hopes subsequent events can add more variety, like maybe ciders, cheeses and foods made with spent grains from the brewing process. “I see it as a rubric for living simply,” said Flagg, also an adjunct professor at Siena College. “And Sagamore is a natural magnet for this kind of people.” Michaels, the Saranac beer representative, said he’ll be back, and, according to Flagg, he wants to help increase the food-beer pairing effort. Whalen, who just got married and was kind of honeymooning on the trip, said he and wife Carrie Blackmore will be back too. “It’s a great idea,” Whalen said from under what must be his trademark fedora. “It’s a great time for education, relaxation — and beer. That should be the slogan.” Asked what the Vanderbilts would have thought of the animated Flagg and his beer camp infiltrating their glorious estate, Sagamore executive director Beverly Bridger was quick with a response. “They never came up until July after black fly season, so they wouldn’t care,” she said with a laugh.
24, 31. Students may choose a single or double blade cherry wood paddle. The workshops start at 8:30 a.m. and end at 5 p.m. The non-refundable fee of $120 is due at registration. Please note this is a physically demanding activity. The Adirondack Museum will offer other craft workshops throughout the season including: adult packbasket workshop on July 25/Aug. 25; stained glass workshop on July 31; plein air painting workshop on Aug. 15; and a rustic birch bark frame workshop for families on Sept. 22. Registration for all workshops is available online: http://www.adirondackmuseumstore.com/workshops1.ht ml. For additional information, visit www.adirondackmuseum.org or call (518) 352-7311.
World’s most famous violin to visit IL Theater INDIAN LAKE — On July 12 at 7:30 p.m., Indian Lake Theater will play host to Elizabeth Pitcairn, celebrated American violin virtuoso, and her Red Violin, the legendary 1720 “Red Mendelssohn” Stradivarius. Joined by acclaimed collaborative pianist Louise Thomas from Chapman University, Pitcairn will perform an evening of virtuoso violin music in the Spanish style by French composer Edouard Lalo. Originally composed for the great Spanish violinist Pablo de Sarasate, it is a work in five movements titled Symphonie Espagnole. Pitcairn and Thomas are recital partners who met at the USC School of Music in 1997 and recently completed a tour of the British Isles. Ms. Thomas is returning to the distinguished faculty of Luzerne Music Center for her second year. Ms. Pitcairn is the new President and Artistic Director of Luzerne Music Center. In an intimate setting, audience members will have a chance to ask questions of the performers and hear the story of her Red Violin during the concert. Proceeds from the concert will benefit the Luzerne Music Center Scholarship Fund. Sponsor tickets, which include reserved seating and a name printed in the program, are available for $50. General admission at the door is $20 and ad-
vanced tickets may be purchased at the theater for $15.
Abanakee Studios to host authors July 14-15 INDIAN LAKE — Abanakee Studios in Indian Lake will host its first ever group event featuring artists working on site, authors signing and selling books, and music. The location will be on Route 28 and LaVergne Road on Saturday, July 14 and Sunday, July 15 from 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Participating artists on Saturday will be watercolorist Sarah Yeoman, pastels artist Joann Quinlivan, illustrator Jan Palmer, and installation sculptor Harry Bower. Authors represented will be Diane Chase, Andy Flynn, Dr. Richard Frost, Larry Gooley, Kathleen Larkin, David Pitkin, Michael Ringer, Mason Smith, Sandra Weber, Bibi Wein, and Donald Wharton. Music will be provided by Brian Mulligan. Sunday’s lineup includes spinner Judy Blanchette, paddle maker Caleb Davis, rustic furniture maker Scott Leidner, basket maker Sandy Muller, totem carver Andree F. Newton. Music will be supplied by Daryl Smith and Friends. For more information call Abanakee Studios at 648-5013, or go to our website at www.abanakeestudios.com.
Bill Weber to speak at Adirondack Museum BLUE MOUNTAIN LAKE — Bill Weber will be featured July 9 for the Monday Evening Lecture program at the Adirondack Museum with a lecture titled, “Out of Africa and Into the Adirondacks: A Conservation Journey from Gorillas to Elephants, Moose and More.” Weber has worked for 30 years in the field of International conservation, combining action to save wild lands and wildlife with concern for local human needs. He has lived in Africa for 10 years, including seven years in Rwanda where he initiated the highly successful mountain gorilla tourism and community outreach program. The program will incorporate Weber's conservation experiences in Africa with that of his work in the Adirondacks. The presentation will be held in the Auditorium at 7:30 p.m. The lecture will be offered at no charge to museum members; the fee for non-members is $5.00. For additional information, please visit www.adirondackmuseum.org.
July 7, 2012
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Community celebrates 25 years of Minerva Day newsenterprise@denpubs.com MINERVA — Minerva residents took to the sunny streets Saturday, June 30, for the town’s 25th annual Minerva Day celebration. A variety of activities awaited both locals and visitors. Minerva Day began as a way to promote the town’s businesses, and though the event has evolved into something much bigger, it hasn’t lost its commercial roots. Twenty-seven garage sales operated throughout the day and Mountain Ink, owned by Jessica Coyle, sold custom printed Minerva Day T-shirts and hats in Courtney Park. The park also hosted St Joseph’s Church, whose officials sold baked goods and hot dogs, and local artist Jimmy Daniels. Operating under the name “Joji’s Art,” Daniels sold hand-carved and painted walking sticks, mirrors and glass bottles. To provide background music for the celebration, Laura King performed on her cello in the morning. The Irishtown Schoolhouse also hosted a collection of local artistic talent for Minerva Day’s third annual art show. Several local women submitted small painted cabinets and Kate McCormick displayed six hand-sculpted puppets featuring characters from Swedish folktales. Sonia Emelianoff and Car-
ol Gregson gave demonstrations of their own crafts; Emelianoff was felting and Gregson spun alpaca fur into thread on a spinning wheel. The fishing derby at Donnelly Beach hit a record high for participation this year with 44 kids aged 3-15 entering. “It’s stiff competition,” said judge Mike Corey. “We’ve got a lot of kids and everyone’s catching fish.” The competition was split into three ages groups, with first-, second- and thirdplace winners based on the weight of the fish. Justice LaPell took first, Tristen Hitchcock took second and Alex Mather took third in the 7 and younger bracket. In the 8 to 11 bracket, Audrey Fish placed first, Anneke Troelstra second and Rachel Seaman third. Finally, in the 12 to 16 bracket, Alex Rusbacki took placed first, Brandon Baker second and Kira Seaman third. Other awards were given out. Jasmine Jenks walked away with the monster fish award — she caught a bass weighing in at more than a pound. Teyah Graves won the prettiest fish award, Noah Dukat won the feistiest fish award, Marina Baker won the smallest fish award, and Alex Ruzbacki won the most fish caught award. The winners received fishing poles and tackle donated by local businesses. At 1 p.m. the Minerva Service Organization held a memorial service for Robert
Morrison, who was part of the MSO for four years and died last fall. Nancy Shaw presented a heartfelt speech highlighting Morrison’s years of service to both the MSO and Minerva Historical Society. Morrison’s children — Rob, Patty and Christine — attended the memorial. The Minerva Historical Society Museum opened at 2 p.m. and was preceded by a series of speeches by Shaw, Robert Savarie and museum director Susan Rawson. Savarie spoke about Minerva Day’s history and contributions to the town. “It’s a special day for special efforts,” said Savarie. “A day to say welcome to visitors to Minerva.” Town Supervisor Sue Montgomery Corey presented the Citizen of the Year
award to Kathy Halloran. Halloran ended the ceremony by cutting the ribbon across the museum steps, officially opening the Historical Society to the public. Morning events also included a breakfast at the Minerva Firehouse and the Pant, Pedal, Paddle race. In the evening, there was the Minerva Day parade, a community potluck dinner, activities at Donnelly Beach and fireworks.
At right, Carol Gregson spins alpaca wool. Photo by McKenna Kelly
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Viewpoint
News Enterprise Editorial
False information can be harmful
I
t seems harmless enough. A reporter writes a story about a school program and a reader comments online that teachers do nothing all summer, and suddenly, the majority of comments revolve around that comment. Or, a reader sends in a speakout submittal and moans about firefighters sitting around doing nothing. Neither comment is remotely true, yet enough members of the public believe them, so the false statements spread and before you know it they have become reality for some. To make matters worse, it’s budget time and many taxpayers now plan to vote no on the school budget, while the fire department suddenly looks like a good place for the city to cut. Whether it’s misinformation or disinformation, these exaggerations and untruths often become the reality for a very large number of people. Media organizations could institute stricter rules for reader submissions, but it is much more widespread than that. Public meetings with public comment portions are notorious for inviting individuals who make exaggerated and false claims. Someone could come out and say that the union president is stealing taxpayers’ funds, the media could report the next day that the statement was false, and still, a large portion of the population, either because they were there or heard the comment through the rumor chain, believes the information to be true. Again, that may not seem important, but it is, especially when budgets pass or fail by a couple hundred votes. The municipality cannot suddenly become totalitarian and restrict free speech, but at the same time, it is pathetic when free speech used maliciously negatively impacts people, the budget process, an important decision, positions and more. There are some steps that can be taken, though. As Plattsburgh Mayor Donald
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Kasprzak suggested, public officials should maintain an open-door policy to ensure they are available to quell such rumors and provide constituents with the factual information. Public officials also have a responsibility to speak up and speak out. If and when they know something exaggerated or false is being put out there, vigorously stand up to that untruth and shout the truth for all to hear. The public itself also has a responsibility to receive information critically and not just believe it is true because it was heard or read somewhere. Verify the information and seek out sources that can verify the information. This is especially important when the information coincides with one’s beliefs, politics and morality. Democrats, for example, have a tendency to take it on face value when a member of their party issues information, even if that information seems outrageous. Then, those same individuals will demand a ridiculous amount of sources if a Republican makes a statement as simple as the sky is blue. The same can be said by so many groups. Frustrated taxpayers often need only hear one individual, even if it is public knowledge this person was just released from jail, say that the school district is spending money frivolously, and suddenly that information becomes fact without it being verified by anyone. Finally, all of us, not just public officials, but all of us have a responsibility to speak out when false and exaggerated information is delivered to the public as truth. And while we cannot restrict free speech, there is nothing wrong with shaming someone who intentionally uses that right recklessly and maliciously. This editorial is the collaborative opinion of a board comprised of Thom Randall, Fred Herbst, Shaun Kittle, Keith Lobdell, Stephen Bartlett, Andy Flynn, and John Gereau. Comments should be directed to denpubs@denpubs.com
You can’t make this stuff up
F
or someone who still considers himself a novice at writing a weekly commentary, I struggle coming up with a topic each week, frequently agonizing throughout the weekend, trying to play out some outlines in my head before sitting down in front of the computer Sunday evening to work up the first draft. Somehow the folks in Washington and Albany continue to provide me material to work with and I hope that, for you, the reader, they are matters of interest, worth investing some time to digest. Well, this last week was a real bell ringer, starting the landmark decision by the Supreme Court on the Affordable Health Care Act. Not only was the outcome a surprise, as most pundits had the odds on the Court’s finding at least a portion of the legislation unconstitutional, but the votes by Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Kennedy seemed out of character. In the 5-4 split decision the normally conservative Roberts opted to side with the more liberal justices, while Justice Kennedy, a moderate, who normally comes in on the side of the more liberal judges, opted to rule with the majority. Going into the major ruling last week the Supreme Court, like most branches of government these days, hasn’t posted a high favorable rating among the American public. Prior to the most recent rulings, the Rasmussen Report had the justices at a 34 percent excellent or good rating while 17 percent rated the court poor. After the rulings, the excellent to good rating dropped to 22 percent, while the poor rating had increased to 30 percent. Now, I’m no expert on constitutional law or the voting records of the justices, but it seems to me that over the course of time, based on the presidential appointments, justices bring a certain political slant to the bench. I do understand the justices are supposed to be impartial, but let’s face it, in Washington, to reach the level of a lifetime appointment in the Supreme Court, the highest in our land, I must admit I am skeptical that all that political baggage can be left at the door. We carry a certain bias slant based on years of experience. I can’t help but notice that, given the time the Court had to deliberate the merits of the legislation, the positions on both side of the argument, the current public opinion regarding the Affordable Health Care Act and the opinion shared by many that the vote would come down to Justice Kennedy’s vote, that once it became apparent to the court members that it was to be a 5-4 split de-
cision upholding the constitutionality by considering it a tax and not a forced mandate, that the justices did two things to Dan Alexander posture the court. Thoughts from Firstly, they found Behind the Pressline a solution by sending the final decision on Affordable Health Care back to the people, leaving its future in the hands of the voters during the fall election. Secondly, could Justice Roberts and Justice Kennedy, once they realized nothing would change the 5-4 vote, reverse roles to give the appearance of a vote not along partisan lines? Now, nobody’s saying it, but one can’t help, in this political climate, to be skeptical, especially when Justice Roberts joked that now the court has finished its session he will go to an “impregnable island fortress.” I think the court punted the ball back to the American people, and perhaps that’s where the final decision on this legislation should ultimately reside. On the same day the court ruled on health care, we witnessed Nancy Pelosi lead more than 100 Democrats up the aisle and out of the House chamber to boycott the first of two Attorney General Holder contempt votes, saying Republicans were more interested in shameful election-year politics than getting their hands on documents for the Fast and Furious debacle. Instead of doing their jobs they stood outside and in unison shouted “Shameful – Shameful” showing their contempt for their Republican counterparts. It’s hard to respect the institution and these members with grandstanding such as this. Thankfully Democrat representative William Owens, who represents many of our readers, stayed on the floor and voted for “transparency.” Regardless of which way he voted, he did the job he was elected to do by staying at his post and registering his vote on behalf of his constituents. Regardless of your personal feelings on health care, immigration or the Holder contempt hearings, the craziness of all these political tactics should leave us all wondering what’s the real truth, who can we really believe and how on earth can we get these people to stop the childish fighting and get to work solving the real problems facing our nation and our children? Dan Alexander is publisher and CEO of Denton Publications and can be reached at dan@denpubs.com.
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We’d like to recognize the volunteers who helped rebuild the dugouts at the Sodom baseball field this spring. In March, leaders of Johnsburg Youth Baseball/Softball asked the Johnsburg Town Board for permission to rebuild dugouts and the concession stand. Rob Readinger told the board that through donations, the group had sufficient materials to revisit the project that started last season. Readinger said the group would tear down what had been started last season, construct completely new dugouts and repurpose the materials from last season’s effort and use them to construct a new concession stand. Readinger had suggested blue and white, consistent with the Johnsburg Central School colors. The board welcomed the notion of volunteers constructing new facilities at the field. Additionally, Rob Wing, who owns a landscaping company, offered to do some grounds work to get the field ready.
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July 7, 2012
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Riverside & Schroon Lake stagecoach
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Andy Flynn
Adirondack Attic
W
hen the Riverside and Schroon Lake stagecoach was retired in 1917, automobiles had been traversing the primitive roadways of the Adirondack Park for more than a decade. The “Roads and Rails: Everyday Life in the Age of Horses” exhibit at the Adirondack Museum celebrates the romance of horse-drawn vehicles and their eventual retirement as they stepped aside in the early 20th century to make way for faster and more efficient means of transportation. This stagecoach is one of two owned by the Adirondack Museum. In August 1962, the Shelburne Museum in Vermont donated the vehicle to the Blue Mountain Lake facility “in loving memory of its founders, Mr. and Mrs. J. Watson Webb.” The stagecoach was purchased from the Smith Miller estate auction in Schroon Lake before it wound up in Vermont. The Riverside and Schroon Lake stagecoach is a Concord coach circa 1848, made in Concord, N.H. Riverside was the name of a train stop on Dr. Thomas C. Durant’s Adirondack Railroad, from Saratoga Springs to North Creek, opening in 1871. The rail line was eventually acquired by the Delaware & Hudson (D&H) Railroad, and today the Saratoga & North Creek Railway operates passenger service from Saratoga Springs, past Riverside station and to North Creek. The Warren County hamlet of Riverside, now called Riparius, is located downstream from North Creek (a 9-mile car drive via Wevertown). Before motor vehicles, many visitors traveled to the heart of the Adirondack Mountains by railroad, and in order to get from the train station to the hotels, steamboats and villages, they would
This Riverside and Schroon Lake stagecoach is on exhibit at the Adirondack Museum. Photo by Andy Flynn
usually employ the services of a stagecoach. In the 1800s, the museum’s Concord coach had been owned by a man from the Chestertown area named Levitt. By 1906, Waddell & Emerson was operating the Riverside and Schroon Lake stagecoach, taking people from the Riverside Station, across the Hudson River bridge, along the western shore of Loon Lake, northward to Pottersville and the steamboat landing on the southern tip of Schroon Lake. Modern travelers can re-trace this journey by taking state Route 8 from Riparius to state Route 9, north to Pottersville and a quick jog east to the Schroon Lake boat launch. In all, it’s about 8 miles. Once they arrived at the southern Schroon Lake landing, visitors would take the steamer Evelyn to the Essex County hamlet of Schroon Lake. One former resident along this stage route wrote a letter to the New York State Conservationist magazine, which was published in the June-July 1960 issue. C. Albert Jacob Jr., of Scarsdale, N.Y., supplied a photo of the Riverside and
Schroon Lake stagecoach in use around 1907 or 1908. Jacob grew up and owned a farm midway along the road. “They were all single track dirt roads in those days with the occasional ‘turning-out place,’ a section wide enough for two vehicles to pass and their courses meandered up hill and down dale with plenty of sharp turns and ‘thank-youma’ams’ that have long since been bypassed, straightened out and eliminated,” Jacob wrote. Jacob said it was thrilling to see the coach go by the farm, and it was even more thrilling to ride on the vehicle: “Its size and the four horses gave an illusion of speed and power and it gave a rumbling, lurching ride accompanied by a rhythmic rattle of harness and wiffletrees and clinking of horseshoes and tires against the many stones in the roadbed. As a teenager, riding on top in the front seat with the driver seemed to be the nearest thing in this world to ‘sustained flight,’ about like being perched on cloud #7 looking down on the horses through the wrong end of the telescope.”
duced to allow the bacteria to take up the resulting small fragments of alginate. Finally, from a fourth bacterium they had mong alternative renewable fuels currently being re- isolated from fermented cane juice, they obtained a gene that, searched for efficacy, algae has sparked considerable when introduced into their E. coli, turned the alginate fraginterest. Some of its potential advantages over other ments into ethanol with high efficiency. biofuels include its ability to be grown in areas unsuitable for The resulting bacterial Frankenstein, when fed a soup of either growing typical vegetable food crops such common brown seaweed, rapidly brewed the as corn or for raising animals for meat. Switchmixture to a 5% alcohol concentration. It proved grass and wood are both renewable and can be to be twice as good as currently existing algae grown on land unsuitable for crops or grazing, fermentation procedures for seaweed and but both contain lignin, a polymer made by plants achieved more that 80 percent of the theoretical to strengthen their cell walls. The presence of maximum obtainable yield of alcohol. All the lignin makes it much harder to extract the sugars wastes from such an operation remain fully needed to make alcohol from these plant sources. Algae do not contain lignin but the effort to exbiodegradable and, unlike switchgrass, wood or tract sugars is hampered by the fact that much of corn, the process does not require land that their sugar is polymerized to form a complex would otherwise be valuable for growing food chemical called alginate which cannot be easily crops. converted into ethanol by current industrial miThe drawbacks to this process include the folcrobes (yeast or bacteria). lowing: Growing enough of the appropriate alThis then becomes the bioengineering chalgae would require large areas of the ocean along lenge. Can we genetically alter yeast or bacteria by Wes Dingman marine shorelines (in order to allow easy transsufficiently to give them the ability to digest alportation of the fuel stock either by sea or by ginate and efficiently covert the resulting sugars land). Furthermore, the ocean area required to grow enough into ethanol? To date, the story is a fascinating example of our current state of molecular biology and our ability to alter the algae to supply all the fuel for the United States is reported to chemistry and genetics of these micro-organisms without in- be about half the size of the State of Maine, or approximately 15,000 square miles of ocean, enough to remove a significant hibiting their extraordinary ability to multiply. Researchers in Berkeley, California, began with E. coli, the area from supporting either near-shore fishing or the growing common (usually harmless) bacteria of our intestinal tract. of oysters, clams, mussels and lobsters. However, neither of They extracted a gene from a marine bacterium that makes an these drawbacks would seem sufficient to negate using this enzyme that breaks alginate down into small fragments and process altogether. Questions and suggestions from readers are welcomed and put that gene into E.coli. From another micro-organism they obtained a gene that enabled the E. coli to excrete this enzyme will be responded to in future editions of this column. Contact me at cwdingman2@frontier.com. into the culture medium, and then another gene was intro-
Can we bioengineer a renewable fuel?
A
Notes from
Planet Earth
What is the best gift you’ve ever given someone? What made it the best? “I gave flag pictures to my teacher. She loved them.” (Wyatt Kilduff) “When my cousin was in the hospital, I made a card for her. She loved it.” (Dayna Studnicky) “I gave a card to Grandma. I made it myself. She liked it.” (Santino Leo) “I gave a charm bracelet to my best friend that moved away.” (Adrianna Dunkley) “I made my mom a flower poem. She loved it.” (Cameron Highland) “I gave my sister-in-law a Christmas decoration for the Christmas tree. She
Gardening expert to speak CHESTERTOWN — Noted gardening expert Burt Weber will present a program on Composting at 10 a.m. Tuesday, July 10 during the monthly meeting of the Adirondack Mountain Garden Club in the EMS building (across from North Warren School) in Chestertown. Wanda Callihan will bring a floral arrangement. Refreshments will be served by Jan Nickerson. The public is invited.
Letter to the Editor
Question of the Month Johnsburg Central School Mrs. Bedard’s First Grade “I gave Dominic a monster truck and motorcycle for his birthday. I thought they were cool.” (Caden DeGroat) “I gave my mom a little cross with an angel in the middle. My mom really likes crossed and angels.” (Kameron Calvert) “I gave the class toy cars for everyone to use. The cars were neat and clean.” (Matthew Towne Jr.) “I gave a dirty bike toy to my cousin, Nick. He liked it. We played with it together.” (Nathan Lorensen)
wish you all a happy Fourth of July. Be thankful for the freedom we still do have. Enjoy the parades and fireworks. Aaron Conlon enjoyed a few days at Cornell and will spend a week at Camp Colby. Cindy Allen was able to go home from Glens Falls Hospital after major surgery. Joyce Denno is still a patient at Albany Medical Hospital. She has a lot of therapy ahead of her. Davey Wolfe had to have his third surgery since being in Glens Falls Hospital. Alonzo Conlon, son Ian and Dezore Cleveland had supper with Earl Allen on Wednesday. Dezore Cleveland went with her great grandfather Earl Allen to Glens Falls on Thursday. Earl had an appointment with Dr. Hughes. Ryan and Keisha Sprague and Dezore, Khaleah and Yanden Cleveland went to Boliver, NY to attend the graduation party for Tearyn Millington, daughter of Ron and Brandy Millington. Betsy Allen spent a few days in Wisconsin to visit her Aunt Jeanette and attend the Dobie reunion with her two brothers. Jay Witham was in concert at Methodist Church in North River and a dessert social followed on Friday night. There will be a Luau for the opening VBS at the Sodom Community Church on July 22 starting at 4 p.m. Registration for attendance will be now until July 14. VBS will be July 24, 25, 26 from 6 to 8:30 p.m. Call 251-2597 or 251-3121 Happy Birthday to: Lewkus Lorensen, Kaden Wood, Kurt Arnold, Jennifer Lamery, Betty Keller, Cliff Davis, Willie Ordway, Jane Nevins, Trevor Perkins, Robin Morehouse, Erin Dunkley, Kaleb Johnson, Gary Millington, Pansy Allen (90), Janet Allen Rice, Lori Ordway Mosher, Doug Persons, Arlene Ordway, Katherine Ross, Ed Aldous, Walter Allen and Victoria Harris, Happy Anniversary: Kevin and Crystal Ordway, Ken and Rosalie Allen, and Adam and Emily Cleveland Hester ’s history (cont.) I remember one occasion, especially when we children with our mother followed a swarm of bees toward Eleventh Mountain. We went way over into Johnnie Hitchcock pasture and made lots of noise trying to drown the queen's voice so she couldn't take them to the mountain. Johnnie Hitchcock's cattle heard the cowbell and started to come where we were, about the time the swarm of bees lighted. My mother got the bees in a swarm catcher and took them home. Poor Mama, she used to get so tired in the hot sun and almost sun stroked. It was hard work. She also had a pair of bee gloves. I used to have them since my mother and father are gone, but I don't know where they are now. Father used to cut short evergreen trees (spruce, I think) and set several in the meadow with a good amount of the foliage at the top so the bees would light on those bushes. I think they did light there sometimes. (Bees won't stay in a hive infested with millers or webs). The hive must be clean and have some starting comb to allure them. One time a swarm of bees went into a big hollow tree in the edge of our pasture. Father left them until it got cold in the fall then he and his hired man cut the tree down and we had honey galore. We used to come home from school and go to the bee tree and eat honey. I am sure (according to the Bible also) that one should eat honey "as is sufficient" for thee, for if anyone eats too much it makes him sick. A little, it seems, is good for anyone, but too much honey is not good. So I ate too much honey and got sick that time. Enjoy each and every day.
thought it was beautiful.” (Tavia Ellifrtiz) “I am giving my dad a Father ’s Day present. I know he will love it!” (Nicholas McNutt) “I made a candle for my sister. It was nice and she loved it.” (Duncan Cameron) “I gave a birthday card to my friend Tavia. She thought it was nice.” (Autumn Barrett) “I made a Mother ’s Day gift for my mom. She liked it a lot.” (Tanner Baker)
Thanks to the Newcomb House To the News Enterprise: I would like to say a special thank you to some wonderful people. To the Newcomb House that put on a benefit dinner for me on May 19; to their employees and the many friends and relatives that helped with the Newcomb House on behalf of my benefit. Thank you to all who donated food for the benefit dinner, the items given to them that were donated to be auctioned/sold off and the monetary gifts left in envelopes. Thank you is just not enough. Thank you my friends. With much appreciation. Carl Russell North Hudson
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A Day to Remember Anna Elethorp & Tyler Cole The Ceremony The couple was surrounded by their immediate family, while Judge Jim O’Bryan delivered their vows. After the ceremony, they shared shooters as their specialty drink, purchased at Montcalm Liquors. Decorations were white rose petals and handmade summer bouquets, arranged by the bride’s mother; materials were purchased at the Dollar Tree and Joanne Fabrics.
The Reception
July 2, 2011
A
nna Elethorp and Tyler Cole were wed on July 2, 2011 on the top of Mount Defiance, with a majestic view of Fort Ticonderoga and Lake Champlain as their setting.
The reception was held at the Elks Pavilion, where they were greeted by family, friends, and their dog Stihl. They enjoyed a full catered pig roast, horseshoes, and dancing; music was by Paul Ferguson, or DJ Fergy, of Clemons. The cake was hand-sprayed mossy oak and camouflage, made by Jo Denno, in addition to a sheet cake, with a pink browning deer, from Sam’s Club.
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The bride wore a custom made, white satin gown from Camo Formals of Louisiana. Alongside her was her maid of honor in purple, to match the groom and groomsmen that wore mossy oak vests, with pink and purple ties, from Fashion Corner. Hair was done by A Cut Above Salon, rings were purchased from Sears and Kay Jewelers, the maid of honor ’s necklace was from Rathbun’s, while the bride wore earth-tone pearls purchased from Wal-Mart Jewelry. The bride’s flowers were detailed, by Francine of the Country Florist, with white roses from her mother ’s bridal bouquet and finalized with red, white and blue ribbon taken from her grandfather ’s service medals.
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The Rehearsal Dinner A rehearsal dinner barbecue was held at the home of the bride’s parents.
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The Honeymoon Following the wedding day, the newlyweds, family and friends went tubing down the Schroon River. They currently reside in Chilson with their newborn son, Jaxson.
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The Details
laire, was chosen by the father of the bride as she made her entrance. Decorations at the reception were also mossy oak/camo themed, with pink and purple accents, as well as a variety of hunting-related decorations. The wedding day was photographed by Peggy Lamb, of Ticonderoga. The bride and her party got ready at the Belfred Motel, where her bridal party later stayed.
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July 7, 2012
News Enterprise - 9
www.newsenterprise.org
Gore Mountain from page 1 All of the activities will take place daily between July 7 and Sept. 2. Most attractions will be open between 11 a.m. and 5 p.m. The gondola will be open from noon until 3:30 p.m. The new Open Pit Grille on the sundeck offers a full menu of southern barbecue specialties, traditional fare and children’s selections. Year-round catering is available for corporate parties, weddings and other special gatherings. “Summer 2012 has opened up a new window of opportunity for expanding our fourseason activities,” said Emily Stanton, Gore’s marketing manager. “Just as with our winter offerings, we look forward to making steady improvements to the summer customer experience.” But Gore isn’t just revamping its summer roster. The Tannery Pub and Restaurant is undergoing renovations for the winter months and will feature a seating deck for
Health care from page 1 information Owens provided from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. New York has been working with the federal government to establish a statewide
more than 100 patrons, new kitchen, new restrooms and reconfigured bar and seating. The retail shop and Saddle Lodge are also being renovated, and major grooming investments and snow-making system enhancements are also planned. Season pass holders will have access to complimentary skyrides and self-guided hiking this summer and fall, one complimentary group lesson, discounts on daily lunch specials, 10 percent off tuning, repair and retail shop purchases, and 10 percent discounts at 15 other shops, restaurants and attractions in the Gore region. The Gore Mountain friends discount program allows people to obtain discounted or even free season passes. For information on all of Gore Mountain’s recreational opportunities, or to purchase a season pass, visit www.goremountain.com, or call (518) 251-2411. Discounted packages for Gore’s summer and fall activities are available in combination with tickets aboard the Saratoga & North Creek Railway. health insurance marketplace as part of the law. Roughly one million New Yorkers will gain health insurance coverage when the Affordable Care Act is fully implemented. The state’s Division of Budget estimates $18 billion in savings over 10 years. Owens stressed that the key provisions in
Rock climbing at Gore Mountain Photo provided
the law that the Supreme Court preserved included preventing private insurers from placing lifetime limits on the coverage they provide, ensuring that the 10 million New York residents with private insurance coverage don’t have to worry about their coverage running out, banning insurance companies from dropping people from coverage when they get sick, keeping young adults on their parents plan until age 26, and ending pre-existing condition restrictions. Matt Doheny, who hopes to unseat Owens, said the law will result in possibly one of the largest tax increases in American history. It will be a nightmare for the average upstate New Yorker, he said. “My opponent has left behind a string of broken promises,” Doheny said. “He said ObamaCare would pay for itself. It doesn’t. He said it would protect Medicare for seniors. It doesn’t. He said it would allow ordinary Americans to keep the health care plan they like. It doesn’t.” The Affordable Care Act convinced job creators to stand on the sidelines, he continued, something that has lead to the jobless recovery, while keeping the economy “teetering on the brink of another recession.”
“Americans know this bill is bad for our country,” Doheny said. “We must repeal this bill and that’s what I’ll do to put America back to work.” For Nancy Brown, the court’s action reminds everyone that enabling all Americans to obtain affordable, quality health care is important. And for the 122 million Americans with pre-existing conditions, said the CEO of the American Heart Association, the decision will be met with a sigh of relief. “No longer will they be denied coverage of charged high premiums because of their health status.” In a nutshell, explained New York state AFL-CIO President Mario Cilento, the Affordable Care Act “finally puts patients over corporate profits.” Gov. Andrew Cuomo thanked Obama and his administration, saying the Affordable Care Act will provide millions of Americans nationwide and more than one million New Yorkers access to health care. “We will continue to move forward with implementing the health exchange that will lower coverage costs for New York’s businesses and help ensure that uninsured New Yorkers have access to health care.”
Cutting the ribbon on Main Street in North Creek on June 30 Photo by Phil Sherotov
North Creek business from page 1 Maitino said that he has always been a believer in the value of main streets because they serve as focal points for communities where arts and culture can blend with shopping and eating. Now, with all the recent growth combined with the town’s connection to Gore Mountain and all of its assets, as well as the train coming in, Maitino said that North Creek had created a “premier main street.” “You are a model for the Adirondacks, and on behalf of the governor, I’m thrilled to be able to support what you have done here,” Maitino said. “I Love New York will be talking a lot about this main street and what you have achieved here.” John Weatley, vice-president of the Adirondack Economic Development Corporation (AEDC), congratulated the town on its success and told business leaders that the AEDC was “here to help” North Creek. Also on the podium were representatives from several of the new and expanded businesses. Kathy Waite, who along with her husband Dave, recently opened Izzy’s Market & Deli, spoke of her love for the town and excitement at being part of such a dynamic and supportive business community.
Marko Schmale, owner of Whitewater Challengers, said that he was happy to be able to now include an adventure course and paintball center as part of his business. A longtime resident, Schmale said he feels lucky because anything he does to enrich the community also benefits his family. Steve Tomb, who co-owns the Adirondack Pedal Cab Company with Mike Smith, said he was thrilled by the local support and enthusiasm in the community and was looking forward to a busy summer servicing residents of North Creek and Lake George. Laurie Arnheiter, owner of Hudson River Trading Company, had expanded into a new building with the Outlet Store. Another longtime resident, Bulmer noted that 20 years ago Arnheiter had been an active participant in creating the action plan that established the vision and laid down the framework that played a key role in North Creek’s economic development and success. Arnheiter said another committee has recently been formed to develop an action plan for the next 20 years, and that she was excited to be a part of establishing a vision and goals for the continuing growth and success of North Creek. For more information about North Creek, visit www.gorechamber.com or call 251-2612.
Craig Wright of Wright’s Landscaping has offered Free Delivery & Set Up of the Winning Door Prize Tree!
Gore Mountain Region Chamber of Commerce Board of Directors President David Bulmer, right, addresses the crowd on June 30. Photo by Phil Sherotov
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10 - News Enterprise
July 7, 2012
www.newsenterprise.org Submit to the calendar at newsenterprise@denpubs.com.
Thursday, July 5 NORTH CREEK — North Creek Farmers’ Market, 3-6 p.m., North Creek Train Station. NORTH CREEK — E-reader workshop, 3 p.m., Town of Johnsburg Library. Bring your e-reader or portable listening device and a laptop if you have one. Learn how to use your devices to borrow our ebooks and eAudiobooks. Free. NORTH CREEK — Cruise Night, 5:30-8:30 p.m. on Main St. Features classic vehicles, sports cars, hot rods. Live music. Free. www.gorechamber.com.
Friday, July 6 LONG LAKE — Annual United Methodist Women bazaar, Long Lake Town Hall, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Handmade items, such as pillows, knitted items, etc. Admission is free.
UPCOMING SPECIAL EVENTS July 7: Fourth of July Celebration: North Creek. Held at the North Creek Ski Bowl Park. Featuring live music, food, kidʼs activities and fireworks. Activities begin in the early afternoon. Sponsored by the Town of Johnsburg. July 7: Fourth of July Celebration: Indian Lake. Annual Kidʼs Fishing Derby at Byron Park, 8 a.m. United Methodist Churchʼs Bazaar, Bake Sale and Flea Market, 9:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. In Blue Mountain Lake, the Adirondack zLakes Center for the Arts will hold its Annual Auction & Block Party, 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. for auction and 2-5 p.m. for block party. Indian Lake Volunteer Fire Department Annual Chicken Barbecue at the Fire Hall, starts at 4 p.m. Parade down Main Street starts at 7 p.m. Theme is “Salute to Patriots of America.” At Byron Park: Strawberry Shortcake Social, 6-8 p.m., sponsored by the Blue Mountain Lake United Methodist Church, $3 each; fireworks display, 9:30 p.m. Call the Indian Lake Chamber of Commerce at 648-5828.
Saturday, July 7 NEWCOMB — The Newcomb Lions Club will be holding its 47th Annual Chicken Barbecue, noon to 5 p.m., at the town beach. Dinner costs $10, includes half a chicken, baked beans, salad, roll and a beverage. Hamburgers, hot dogs, sausage and peppers and soft drinks can also be purchased. This is a fundraiser for the Newcomb Lions Club. NORTH CREEK — The Lake Placid Sinfonietta will perform a concert at Tannery Pond Community Center, 7:30 p.m. Conductor Ron Spigelman has put together an “Inspiring” program. Cost: $20 for adults, $5 for students. Sponsored by the Upper Hudson Musical Arts. Call Jill Harrington at 681-1715. CHESTERTOWN — Veterans Memorial dedication ceremonies, 5 p.m. on lawn of Chester Municipal Center. Ambitious memorial honoring all those from Chester who served from 1700s to now will be hailed by townspeople, dignitaries. Memorial plaza also to be dedicated. Barbecue and live country music follows at Summerfest, behind municipal center. CHESTERTOWN — Summerfest & Fireworks, noon- 10 p.m. at Chester Municipal Center, 6307 Main St. Hometown carnival with games, music, pie-eating contest, face painting, Bonnie & Clyde mini car show. Barbecue dinner at 5 p.m. Music by the acclaimed Steven L. Smith Band from 6-9 p.m. Fireworks at 9:30 p.m. — if raining, fireworks to be held following night. Details: www.northwarren.com or: 494-2722. CHESTERTOWN — Strawberry Festival & Bazaar, 9 a.m.3 p.m. at Community Methodist Church, Church St. downtown. Strawberry shortcake, milkshakes, other homemade creations utilizing strawberries. Street bazaar. Details: 494-3374. CHESTERTOWN — Authors Carol Gregson and Jessica Kane to present their works, 1 p.m.- 3 p.m. in Art in Chester
at Dynamite Hill Recreation Area, state Rte. 8. Soulful Celtic & American folk & roots music. Bring blankets or chairs. Free. If rain, to be held nearby at North Warren Central School auditorium. Details: 494-2722 or: www.saramilonovich.com. INDIAN LAKE — Concert at 7:30 p.m. with violin virtuoso Elizabeth Pitcairn, who will play her Red Violin, the legendary 1720 “Red Mendelssohn” Stradivarius. Joined by acclaimed collaborative pianist Louise Thomas from Chapman University. Indian Lake Theater. Cost: $20/door, $15 advance tickets.
Friday, July 13 BLUE MT. LAKE — Paddle-making workshop, Adirondack Museum, 8:30 a.m. - 5 p.m. Register online at http://www.adirondackmuseumstore.com/workshops1.html.
Friday-Saturday, July 13-14 Gallery, Main St., downtown. Known as the “Pottersville Complainer,” Gregson talks about rural Adirondack life; Kane is a playwright, poet, sculptor, singer, novelist & installation artist extraordinaire. See www.jessicakane.com. Don’t miss this free session! Details: Contact Fred Holman at 803-4034 or: fholman186@yahoo.com. LOON LAKE — Annual Loon Lake Annual Fishing Derby, 9 a.m.- noon at Loon Lake Beach. Open to children16 years and younger. Hot dogs, awards, soda at noon. Details: Ron Nadeau, 439-5732.
Sunday, July 8 - Friday, July 13 WEVERTOWN — Vacation Bible School Calvary Bible Church in Wevertown, 6:30-8:30 PM. Kids from preK-4 to 6th grade are invited to come, have fun, learn, and grow. Theme is "Adventures on Promise Island." Crafts, lessons and stories, music, games, and snacks. Call Rachel DeGroat at 251-2202.
Monday, July 9 NORTH CREEK — The Johnsburg Central School meets at 7 p.m. in Room 126 for its organizational meeting. BLUE MOUNTAIN LAKE — Monday Evening Lecture Series, 7:30 p.m., Adirondack Museum. Wildlife Conservation Society senior conservationist Bill Weber will present “Out of Africa and Into the Adirondacks: A Conservation Journey.” Free for museum members, $5 for non-members. Call 352-7311.
Tuesday, July 10 CHESTERTOWN — Talk on Composting by master gardener Bert Weber, 10 a.m.- 11 a.m. at North Warren Emergency Squad building, Rte. 8. Sponsored by Adirondack Mountain Garden Club.
Pearsall Foundation seeks requests JOHNSBURG — The Glenn & Carol Pearsall Adirondack Foundation is now accepting grant applications for their 2012-2013 grant cycle. Applications will be accepted from now through Aug. 31, with grants awarded in October. The Glenn and Carol Pearsall Adirondack Foundation is a private foundation founded in 2000 dedicated to improving the quality of life for year-round residents of the Adirondacks. Not-for-profit organizations serving the Adirondack Region may receive an application via: www.Pearsallfoundation.org or via mail at P.O. Box 105, Johnsburg, NY 12843.
Summer jam sessions at Long Lake LONG LAKE — Traditional music jam sessions featuring a variety of acoustic folk instruments will be held on two summer Sundays, July 15 and Aug. 19, from 4 to 6 p.m. at Quackenbush’s Long View Lodge in Long Lake. Musicians of all levels are encouraged to come and join in, and everyone is encouraged to come and listen. Some of the instruments typically used at these sessions are guitar, fiddle, dulcimer, bodhran drum, mandolin, keyboard, banjo,
Wednesday, July 11 CHESTERTOWN — Chestertown Farmers’ Market, 10 a.m. - 1 p.m. on the front lawn of the Town Hall. Assortment of fresh fruits and vegetables, cheeses, breads, herbs, plants, wine, featured artists, and more. NORTH CREEK — Summer Reading Program, Town of Johnsburg Library, 10:30 a.m. Featuring Andy the Music Man. INDIAN LAKE — Summer Reading Program, Indian Lake Library, 7 p.m. Sandy Bureau of Nature on the Move will help kids dream and imagine what it's like to be a bug. Free. Call 648-5444.
Thursday, July 12 NORTH CREEK — North Creek Business Alliance meets at barVino from 8:30-9:30 a.m., Main Street. NORTH CREEK — Talk on Great Camp Sagamore, 1 p.m. at North Creek Depot Museum. Free. NORTH CREEK — North Creek Farmers’ Market, 3-6 p.m., North Creek Train Station. NORTH CREEK — Cruise Night, 5:30-8:30 p.m. on Main St. Features classic vehicles, sports cars, hot rods. Live music. Free. www.gorechamber.com. LONG LAKE — Long Lake Summer Concert Series. Elaine Dewar and Muriel Kerr perform on classical violin and cello. Held in the sanctuary of the Long Lake United Methodist Church, 7:30 p.m. Sponsored by the Long Lake Friends of Music. Donations appreciated. Call 624-2056. CHESTERTOWN — Show by Magician: “Domino the Great,” 3-4 p.m. in Chester Library, town Municipal Center, Main St. Free. Details: 494-5384 or: www.chesterlibrary.org CHESTERTOWN — Concert by acclaimed fiddler/vocalist Sara Milonovich & guitarist Greg Anderson, 7-9 p.m.
bass, tin whistle and flute. Members of the “Bear Strings,” a Long Lake string band, will be on hand to lead the sessions. Music featured will be old time, celtic, folk, bluegrass, or anything anyone wants to play or sing. Listeners are welcome.
Novel workshop set NORTH CREEK — The Town of Johnsburg Library will host a free “Launch Your Novel Toolkit: A Workshop” for adults this summer with Judith Harper. This workshop for adults (18 and older) will be held from 6 to 8 p.m. on three Thursdays, July 19 and Aug. 2, and 16. Each meeting will include instruction on the basics of writing fiction; guided writing exercises to explore characterization, plot and setting; strategies for overcoming writing problems; and pages of novel-writing resource suggestions, both online and in print. Writers will also brainstorm their ideas and share their writing in small groups. Harper, a Johnsburg resident, is an adjunct professor in the English Division at SUNY Adirondack and at North Country Community College. She is an author of nonfiction for adults and children, and for three years led the Johns-
CHESTERTOWN — Chester Library Book Sale, 9 a.m.- 4 p.m. daily, 2nd floor Chester Municipal Center, Main St. Huge selection of novels, non-fiction, textbooks, collectibles. Various media, puzzles too. Details: 494-3584 or: www.chesterlibrary.org.
Saturday-Sunday, July 14-15 CHESTER — Annual Priory Garage Sale, 9 a.m.- 3 p.m. daily at The Priory retreat, 135 Priory Rd. Great bargains, huge selection, quality goods and furnishings at 22nd annual sale. Details: Call 494-3733 or see: www.prioryretreathouse.com.
Sunday, July 15 LONG LAKE — Summer Jam Session, 4-6 p.m., Quackenbush’s Long View Lodge. Traditional music jam sessions featuring a variety of acoustic folk instruments. Free. Listeners welcome.
Monday, July 16 BLUE MOUNTAIN LAKE — Monday Evening Lecture Series, 7:30 p.m., Adirondack Museum. Charles Yaple will present "Foxey Brown: The Story of an Adirondack Outlaw, Hermit, and Guide." Free for museum members, $5 for non-members. Call 352-7311.
Tuesday, July 17 INDIAN LAKE — Book program for kids. ”The Adventures of Milo and Otis” will be read at 11 a.m. at the Indian Lake Library. Call 648-5444.
Wednesday, July 18 CHESTERTOWN — Chestertown Farmers’ Market, 10 a.m. - 1 p.m. on the front lawn of the Town Hall. Assortment of fresh fruits and vegetables, cheeses, breads, herbs, plants, wine, featured artists, and more.
burg NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month) group. Call 251-3006 to register. The workshop is limited to 18 participants and is sponsored by the Friends of the Johnsburg Library.
Forsell, Prezbindowski to wed RAQUETTE LAKE — Mark and Liz Forsell of Raquette Lake, N.Y. are pleased to announce the engagement of their daughter Amanda Lovisa Forsell to Gary Michael Prezbindowski of Houston, Texas son of Gary and Maxine Prezbindowski also of Houston Texas. The bride to be graduated from Indian Lake Central School in 2010 and attended Hudson Valley Community College. She is currently working for American State Bank in Brownfield, Texas. The groom to be graduated from Langham Creek High School class of 2004 and attended University of Houston. Michael is currently employed by South Plains Aero in Brownfield, Texas. The couple plan to be married in August of 2012 at Saint Williams on Long Point in Raquette Lake and will make their home in Brownfield, Texas.
DINING & ENTERTAINMENT Drake’s
25th Anniversary PRIORY RETREAT HOUSE
GARAGE SALE FUNDRAISER
Seafood Fest Every Wednesday ...better than lobster night
Priory Rd. (off Pine Notch Rd.)
1 lb cold water hard shell lobsters $18.95 Twin lobsters $28.95 Fresh Fried New England Whole Belly Clams 1 lb Large Snow Crab Clusters $18.95 • 2 lbs $28.95 Succulent Sea Scallops Fresh Baked Haddock • Fresh Swordfish Steaks
New! Arts & Crafts Tent
Early Bird Menu 4-6pm • Nightly Specials
Located 1 Mile North of Schroon Lake Village www.drakesmotel.com Your hosts: Carl and Debra DeSantis Jr • Chef: Tony Talarico
24637
Open 7 Days A Week at 4pm Restaurant: 518-532-9040 Motel: 518-532-7481
Peaceful Valley Road • North Creek • (518) 251-2111
FEATURED ENTRÉES:
Chestertown, NY July 14th & 15th Time 9-3 both days
July 6, 7 & 8, 2012
Lots of great deals on furniture, household goods, books, art and cds, electronics, toys, sport equipment, clothing for the whole family plus our “Boutique” for special finds. Resfreshments for sale. Call the Priory 494-3733 for details. Volunteers for the sale are needed.
Fish Fry on Fridays
The Inn On Gore Mountain
76127
Friday: Seared Sea Scallops Tossed With Angel Hair, Slivers of Kale, Bell Pepper And Leek, Garlic Scape Pesto Saturday: Mexican Fish Tacos With Tomatillo Salsa, Avocado, Tangy Cabbage Salad, And Chipotle Crema, Black Beans And Rice Sunday: Shellfish Paella With Clams, Mussels, Shrimp, Sea Scallops, Cumin-Spiced Chicken And Chorizo, Baked In Spanish Rice With Tomato, Bell Pepper And Onion
79739
Restaurant & Motel Steaks, Seafood & Italian Specialties
FRANK R FOWLER JAN 01, 1929 - JAN 14, 2012 A memorial service will be ga, NY from 2-4 PM. Internheld to celebrate the life of ment will take place on MonFrank R. Fowler who died on day July 9, 2012 at the Gerald January 14, 2012. Friends are B. H. Solomon Saratoga Nainvited to attend with the tional Cemetery at 9:00 AM. family On Sunday July 8, 2012 at the Best Western in Ticondero-
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CLEANING SERVICES FULL SERVICE CLEANING Spring, Fall, Weekly, One Time, or Specialty. We accommodate your personal preferences.Brant Lake and surrounding areas. $13/hr (518)494-2129
PERMANENT LIFE INSURANCE Qualify to age 86. Fast. Easy. Few Questions. No Exam! 1-800-9383439, x24; 1-516-938-3439, x24
NORTH CREEK Efficiency units for working adults, all util. and cable TV incl, NO security, furnished, laundry room, $125/week 518-251 -9910
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NORTH CREEK Studio Apartment, Ideal Location, Private Entrance, Walk to Town, Minutes to Gore. Could Be a Great Office. 518-2512511
SFH ENTERPRISES Lawn care, landscaping, and property maintenance. Fully insured. (518) 3217279
LOGGING LAVALLEE LOGGING is looking to harvest and purchase standing timber, primarily Hemlock & Hardwood Willing to pay New York State stumpage prices on all species. References available. Matt Lavallee, 518-6456351
REAL ESTATE
1, 2 and 3 Bedroom units at the base of scenic Gore Mountain. The units are spacious with lots of storage space and washer dryer hookups. Rent includes heat, trash removal, snow removal and maintentance. Pet Friendly. Rents are: 1 Bedroom: $600.00 2 Bedroom: $725.00 3 Bedroom: $850.00 19 Peaceful Valley Ridge, North Creek, NY Please contact CRM Rental Management, Inc. at (518) 798-3900 for information.
AFFORDABLEO NE BEDROOM APARTMENTS AVAILABLEI MMEDIATELY AT Indian Lake Senior Housing 138 White Birch Lane Indian Lake, NY 12842
Please call for an application: 518-532-0144 • TDD 711 Email:s chroonlake@dimarcogroup.com Baldwin Real Estate Corporation is an equal opportunity provider, employer and lender.
HOME IMPROVEMENT HAS YOUR BUILDING SHIFTED Contact Woodford Bros. Inc. for straightening, leveling and foundation repairs at 1-800-OLD-BARN / www.woodfordbros.com QUALITY, DURABLE AND AFFORDABLE COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS. Free on-site consultation. Call CB Structures 1-800-9400192 or www.cbstructuresinc.com REPLACEMENT WINDOWS $179 Installed. Double Hung Tilt-ins, Lifetime Warranty,Energy Star tax credit available. Call Now! 1-866272-7533www.usacustomwindow s.com
INSURANCE BIKES FOR TYKES look for them in Items under $100 Super savers ads
PUTNAM 1 BR ground floor w/ small deck & private yard. Satellite TV included. No pets/smoking. 1 mo sec & ref required. $500/mo + util. 518-547-8476 or 914-8793490.
TEMPORARY WORKERS Crown Point, lrg 1 bdrm, furnished apt. Full living room, bath & kitchen. Sleeps 2-4. Private w/ample parking. Inc. Utilities & cable. $200/wk. 518-597-4772 TICONDEROGA MT Vista Apts 3 bdrm $572+ rent. Appliances/ trash/snow. No smokers. Rental assistance may be avail; must meet eligibility requirements. 518584-4543 NYS TDD Relay Service 1-800-421-1220 Handicap Accessible Equal Housing Opportunity.
TICONDEROGA NEW luxury apartments. Quiet, all appliances, no pets/no smoking. References required. (732) 433-8594 TICONDEROGA REFURBISHED ground floor single bedroom, water & elec included, referenes & deposit. $595/mo. 802-758-3276. TICONDEROGA DOWNSTAIRS apartment 1 bedroom on Warner Hill Road. Range & Refrigerator incl., cable avail, no pets/smoking. 518-585-6832.
ADIRONDACK " BY OWNER" www.AdkByOwner.com 1000+ photo listings of local real estate for sale, vacation rentals & timeshares. Owners: List with us for only $275 per year. Visit online or call 518-891-9919
TICONDEROGA 1 bdrm, heat included, residential area, yard, $560 + electric. Call George 518585-3222 or Rich 518-615-7551.
TREE SERVICE
8000B STATE Route 8, Brant Lake 2 BR/1 BA, Small 2 bedroom house. Heat included. Washer and dryer in basement. $650 a month plus security. Call 518-494-2966
FIREWOOD FIREWOOD GREEN or seasoned available. Cut, split & delivered. 25 years of year-round, dependable service. Steve Smith 518-4944077. Brant Lake. Warren County HEAP Vendor.
PORT HENRY 1 Lrg Bdrm, new kitchen & bath, hardwood floors, no utilities, $450/mo. 518-5464069.
TICONDEROGA 1 Large 3 Bdrm, w/d hook-up, $625 + Util & Sec. 1 Large 2 Bdrm, w/d hook-up, $575 + Util & Sec. 1 Small 2 Bdrm. w/d hook-up, $525 + util & sec. Available July 1st, references required. Call (518) 585-6705.
Must be 62 or older or disabled regardless of age. Rent based on income. New stove and refrigerator included. New carpeting and kitchen cabinets. On-site laundry room. Mail delivery right to your apartment. Intercom Access Building. Lovely tree lined setting.
SONJA’S CLEANING SERVICE Residential/Commercial Reasonable, Dependable Free Estimates (518)932-7577
PORT HENRY Downtown, short walk to groceries, shopping. Large 1 BR apartment. $465 per month. 802-363-3341.
SCHROON LAKE Rural 1st. floor Apartment in 2 family Home, Available August 1st., suitable for couple, non smokers, no pets & references required. 518-2659875
26684
JOYCE SCHMELING MOURADIAN JAN 09, 1925 - JUN 19, 2012 Joyce Schmeling Mouradian Taiwan. was born in Rockford, Illinois She was truly an artist at on January 9, 1925 of second heart, and enjoyed the Gargeneration German immiden Club, her own garden, grants, William Schmeling, and her harp more than anyand Helene Kupthing except her sky, whose famichurch, but she lies emigrated also enjoyed from Germany in photography, the mid-19th and Silver Bay century, settling used her picture in Wisconsin. Afof their chapel ter high school, for a Christmas she trained as a card. She was hematology techbrave, and took nologist, and flying lessons at worked for the age 65, but her U.S. Army durhusband was too ing World War II, studying scared for her to continue. the blood of German prisonAfter 9/11, she wasn't afraid ers, seeking out malaria conto board a plane that winter tracted in Rommel's African telling her son, "They will not campaign. She had also bemake me afraid; that's what come interested in harp at an they want." When a grandearly age, and moved to New son started skydiving, she York in 1944 to study harp. said, "Oh I wish I could have She married Henry Mouradidone that." She cared for her an in 1945, and had two chilhusband by herself for years, dren, William and Wendy, and bravely lived alone at born in 1947 and 1950. She the Lake afterwards, with the continued to play the harp help of neighbors Jimmy and while living in New York Cathy Bolton. and had several civic inShe was progressive. She was volvements. She worked ecumenical, believed strongwith her husband as a dental ly in civil rights and was a assistant. They moved to woman's libber. In all of Ticonderoga in 1973, and these things, she was ahead soon after moving there of her time. She was also Ticonderoga, she helped to tenacious. When she failed to organize the New Horizons recover from the effects of a Literary Club and the Chamserious car accident last year, plain Valley Chorale. She she moved to California to be was the New York State Preswith her son and his family. ident of Christian Women She enjoyed herself in CaliUnited from 1984 -1987 and fornia, and liked to be driven received their highest honor, along the beach, to be pushed the "Valiant Woman Award". around in the stores, and She received May Walton watch Wheel of Fortune and (Floral) Designer of the Year Jeopardy, but her balance award in 1999. She served as and breathing continued to the State Garden Club Disfail. She was never in pain trict IV Awards Chairperson and not afraid to the very from 2001-2008. She received end. She passed quietly at the "Law Day Award" from home, with family, on June the Essex County Bar in 2004, 19, 2012. the award she cherished the She is survived by two chilmost. She was elected Carildren, William and Wendy, lon Garden Club President seven grandchildren, Amanfrom 2006-2008. She served da, Lauren, Will, Samantha, on the by-laws committee for James, Lily, and Christophe, the Troy Conference of the and two great-grandchildren, Methodist Church from 2006Mikayla and Derek. 2009. She received the State Services will be held at Rice Garden Club President's Chapel in Torrance CA on Proud Pedestal Pin in 2008 Saturday June 30 at 10am for distinguished service. In and at the First United 2011, she received the Award Methodist Church in Ticonof Honor from the National deroga, NY on Saturday July Garden Club. 21 at 11am. In lieu of flowers, At the Methodist Church in donations may be made to Ticonderoga, she served on the First United Methodist the Staff Parish Relations Church, 1045 Wicker Street, Committee for 20 years, and Ticonderga, NY 12883. Please was the Church Council go to Rice Mortuary's webChairperson for 10 years. She site, www.LAfuneral.com to was also on the Hospital send the family messages, Foundation and the Town share memories, or to obtain Parks and Recreation Comdirections to the services. mittee. She participated in Check back to view the onmedical missionary projects line video tribute and a webin Dominican Republic and cast of events.
Equipment q p
TREE WORK Professional climber with decades of experience w/anything from difficult removals to tasteful selected pruning. Fully equipped & insured. Michael Emelianoff (518) 251-3936
APARTMENT CROWN POINT 2 BR Home. Available immediately. Cozy, efficient, fully carpeted, quiet area. Deposit required, 1 year lease. $575/mo. 518-597-3372 Leave Message. FOR RENT Studio Apartment Ticonderoga, 5 Dudleyville Drive. Tenant pays electric & propane heat. Deposit required. Available August 1st. 802-825-8700 MINEVILLE 2 bdrm duplex, newly renovated, no smoking, w/d hookup. Nice quiet street. $800/mo. includes fuel & electric. 518-5463411.
To place your classified ad, call 1-800-989-4237 Monday-Friday 8AM-5 PM
HOME
CROWN POINT For Rent, 1 bedroom house, partially furnished, $475/mo., Please call 518-5973935.
VACATION PROPERTY LAKE CHAMPLAIN/CROWN POINT Summer Rental. Large studio apartment in private home on water. Sleeps 2/3, Beach, dock. Fishermen Welcome! 3 days minimum. $700/week. (518) 645-2426 OCEAN CITY, MARYLAND. Best selection of affordable rentals. Full/ partial weeks. Call for FREE brochure. Open daily. Holiday Real Estate. 1-800-638-2102. Online reservations: www.holidayoc.com
GARAGE SALE/ BARN SALE
170 EAST SHORE DR. Adirondack. FRI & SAT, July 6 & 7. Big sale, low prices! 3/4 mile north of boat launch. Follow signs. ATTN:GARAGE SALE ENTHUSIASTS! Buying or selling second-hand treasures?The NYS Department of State's Division of Consumer Protection, in conjunction with the Free Community Papers of New York, recommends checking the following websites to help assure that the item has not been recalled or the subject of a safety warning: http:/www.recalls.gov and the Consumer Product Safety Commission at www.cpsc.gov. For other important recall and product safety information visit the Division of Consumer Protection at www.dos.ny.gov GARAGE SALE Queensbury 340 Queensbury Avenue. July 7th, 7a5p. ONE DAY ONLY! BIG! Priced to SELL! Indoor/outdoor furniture, collectibles, records, sports/fitness equipment, tools, cedar chest, wood stoves, LOTS! To benefit girls orphanage in Guatemala. Jewelry made by girls for sale. Boy Scout Car Wash. www.lamanchaonline.org Rain or Shine. GARAGE SALE Whitehall 85 Poultney Street, . Please come & get treasures in my garage! Clothes & etc. Monday-Friday, 9am-1pm until all is gone. MINERVA, GARAGE SALES 772 & 615 14th Road. Fri. July 6 - Sun. July 8. 9AM-3PM. White Wicker Furniture, Mr. Meat Smoker, Jewelry, Oriental Rugs, Computer Desks, Kitchen, Coffee&End Tables, Clothes (Small Designer Jeans), Books, Games, Kitchen & Dinner Wares, Household ItemsCurtians, Duvet Covers, TV's, Crystals, Ceiling Fans, and more. MINERVA, NY, MOVING Sale 1385 Route 28N, Minerva, NY 12851, Saturday June 30, 9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, Sunday July 1, 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, Saturday July 7, 9:00 AM - 5:00 PM. Furniture, tools, art, books, collectibles, more. Rain or Shine. MORIAH CENTER 5 Family Moving Sale! 2617 Ensign Pond Road. June 23 & 24, July 7 & 8, July 14 & 15. 9am-5pm. MORRISONVILLE, NY, GARAGE SALE 1241 Jersey Swamp Road, Morrisonville, NY, Friday July 06, 8:00 AM - 4:00 PM, Saturday July 7, 8:00 AM - 4:00 PM. Furniture, Christmas decorations/village items, home decor, clothes, and much more. Rain or Shine. MULTI FAMILY Yard Sale, many items, some old & collectible, sporting equipment, Kayak, Saturday July 7th 9am-4pm. 113 Whiteschool House Rd, Chestertown, NY RADISSON, MOVING SALE 8734 Columbine Circle, Baldwinsville, Friday July 06, 9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, Saturday July 7, 9:00 AM - 5:00 PM. Retiring Kindergarten teacher Moving West! Furniture, toys , books, household items, dressers, vanity antique, mirror, antique oak dining table and chairs , antique china cabinets, much more TICONDEROGA, GARAGE Sale 79 Race Track Road. Fridays & Saturdays. May 11th & 12th, 18th & 19th, 25th & 26th. Clothes $1.25/ bag, couch, books, dishes, etc.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY MA$$IVE CA$H FLOW Returning Calls, No Selling, Tax Free. For proof leave message.Training/Support daily. 1-641-715-3900 Ext. 59543# MEDICAL CAREERS BEGIN HERE Train ONLINE for Allied Health and Medical Management. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified.SCHEV certified. Call 1800-494-2785 www.CenturaOnline.com
29734
Help Wanted
OBITUARIES
News Enterprise - 11
www.newsenterprise.org
76100
July 7, 2012
CAREER TRAINING
Teaching Assistant
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. 1-800-3210298.
10 month position, Pre-K-12 responsibilities, technology skills a must. Send letter of interest, resume, certification(s), (3) recommendations and application found at www.longlakecsd.org to Mary Dickerson, Long Lake Central School, PO Box 217, Long Lake, NY 12847. Deadline is July 20, 2012.
HELP WANTED
76136
**2012 POSTAL JOBS!** $14 TO $59 hour + Full Federal Benefits. No Experience Required. NOW HIRING! Green Card OK. 1-866593-2664, Ext 107. - ACTORS/MOVIE EXTRAS needed immediately! $150- $300/day depending on job. No experience, all looks needed. 1800-561-1762 Ext A-104
30700
AIRLINES ARE HIRING -Train for hands on Aviation Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified -Job placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance 866-296-7093
An Experienced Service Technician We offer . . . • Paid Salary • 401K Plan • Paid Vacation • Health Benefits • Modern Facility With Great Environment • 30 Years of Loyal Customers • Management Team Committed to YOUR Success Apply in person or online at christopherchevy.com St. Rt. 9N Ticonderoga, NY 12883
1-800-336-0175 or 585-2842 CHEVROLET • BUICK
AIRLINES ARE HIRING -TRAIN FOR hands on Aviation Career. FAA approved program.Financial aid if qualified - Job placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance 1-877-202-0386. AIRLINES ARE HIRING -TRAIN FOR hands on Aviation Career. FAA approved program.Financial aid if qualified - Job placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance 1-877-202-0386.
CHEVROLET • BUICK
24634
July 7, 2012
www.newsenterprise.org
BUICK THE NEW CLASS OF WORLD CLASS
DRIVERSHIRING EXPERIENCED/ INEXPERIENCED TANKER DRIVERS! Great Benefits and Pay! New Fleet Volvo Tractors! 1 Year OTR Exp. Req.Tanker Training Available. Call Today: 877-882-6537 www.OakleyTransport.com DRIVERS: DEDICATED Runs with Consistent Freight, Top Pay, Weekly Home-Time & More! Werner Enterprises: 1-800-3972645
CDL DRIVER - PREMIER TRUCKing co. seeking experienced driver for local P&D position at remote Plattsburg, NY service center. Requires class A CDL with Hazmat and Tanker (or willingness to obtain these endorsements) and at least 1 yr of exp. Excellent benefits with low cost to employee. www.aduiepyle.com 1-800-9012204, x6138 FULLER BRUSH SALES DISTRIBUTORS NEEDED. Start home based business. Servicing your area. No Investment. Email: sbhaney@gmail.com HELP WANTED!! EARN EXTRA income mailing our brochures from home! FREE Supplies!Genuine Opportunity! Start Immediately! www.theworkhub.net MYSTERY SHOPPERS Needed Earn up to $150 per day Undercover Shoppers Needed to Judge Retail & Dining Establishments Experience Not Required Call Now 888-380-3513 OVER 18? Can't miss limited opportunity to travel with successful young business group. Paid training. Transportation/Lodging. Unlimited income potential. 877646.5050 WANTED: SALES REPRESENTATIVE, to sell collection agency services. Well qualified leads. Car required. Dixon Commercial Investigators - Irene 1-800-388-0641 ext. 4053
HELP WANTED LOCAL ADIRONDACK TRI-COUNTY NURSING & REHAB CENTER Immediate Openings FT LPN/RN Supervisor LPN-Charge Nurses CNA FT/PT/Per Diem 518-251-2447/fax 518-251-5443 debbiep@adirondacknursing.com Adirondacknursing.com CNA/HOME HEALTH AIDE Part Time. Must be able to assist in all aspects of senior care. Flexible hours. Good salary. 518-585-3472 COOK MUST have references. Apply in person at EMA Club, 9 Maplewood Lane, Ticonderoga, NY. HEALTHCARE SERVICES - Respite Care RN Experienced Registered Nurse will care for your elderly or ill loved one while you enjoy a few hours away from your daily routine. Schroon Lake area. Excellent references. Call 518-651-5683 and leave a message. VENDORS/FOOD VENDORS Looking for Vendors/Food Vendors for event in Putnam, NY on August 18th. Call Eric at (518) 586-6273.
MINERVA CENTRAL School openings: Part-time High School Social Studies Teacher; Teachers' Aide, special education class; Teachers' Assistant (anticipated opening); effective September 1, 2012. For application information contact: Heidi Kelly, Principal, Minerva Central School, PO Box 39, Olmstedville, NY 12857, 518-251-2000, kellyh@minervasd.org Application Deadline: July 13, or until positions are filled. PRODUCTION LABORERS - Part Time Riverside Truss, Riparius, NY. Apply To: Lisa Graham, 5 Riverside Drive, Chestertown, NY.
ADOPTIONS ADOPT LOTS of LOVE & blessings to share! Let us be the answer to your prayers for your baby. Wendy & Tim 1800-409-5224. Expenses paid. ADOPT: OUR hearts reach out to you. Adopting your newborn would be our dream come true. We will devote our love to this special baby. Financially secure. Expenses paid.Jeanette & Michael 1-800644-7290 PREGNANT, SCARED, NEED help? Licensed agency offers free confidential counseling, financial assistance, guidance, opened/ closed adoption, choice of loving, pre-approved families. Call Joy: 866-922-3678.www.ForeverFamili esThroughAdoptionl.org PREGNANT? CONSIDERING ADOPTION? Talk with caring adoption expert. You choose from families nationwide. LIVING EXPENSES PAID. Call 24/7 Abby's One True Gift Adoptions 866-4136296 PREGNANT? CONSIDERING ADOPTION? You choose family. LIVING EXPENSES PAID. Abby's One True Gift Adoptions. 1-866459-3369 PREGNANT? CONSIDERING ADOPTION? You choose from families nationwide. LIVING EXPENSES PAID. Abby's One True Gift Adoptions. 866-413-6292, 24/7 Void/Illinois
AT&T U-VERSE JUST $29.99/MO! Bundle Internet+Phone+TV & SAVE. Up to $300BACK! (Select plans). Limited Time CALL 1-800283-6371 DISH NETWORK STARTING AT $19.99/month PLUS 30 Premium Movie Channels. Free for 3 Months! SAVE! Ask About SAME DAY Installation! CALL 1-888-8238160 FEELING OLDER? Men lose the ability to produce testosterone as they age. Call 1-866-686-3254 for a FREE trial of Progene-All Natural Testosterone Supplement FREE DESIGNER NURSING COVERS made by moms. Six styles, great gift! Use code'freexyz' www.Modest-Mom.com MEMBERS WANTED Year around family sportsman's club. Long Lake area, 5000 acres, bordering unlimited state land. 3 lakes and miles of streams. Fish, hunt, canoe, kyack, trap, hike, ATV, snowmobile. Cabin sites avail, Summer RV spots. Only $800 a year per family. $400 Summer trail. Go to kempshallmtclub.com NYS UNCONTESTED DIVORCE. Papers Professionally Prepared. Just Sign & File! No Court/Attorney, 7 days. Guaranteed! 1-914432-7870 SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. You WIN or Pay Us Nothing. Contact Disability Group, Inc. Today! BBB Accredited. Call For Your FREE Book & Consultation.1-888-587-9203
APPLIANCES AIR CONDITIONER Kenmore 8,000 BTU. Very good condition. 518-251-2511. $60.00 CHEST FREEZER 11 cu. ft. Asking $185.00. Please call 518-5467561
ELECTRONICS
ANNOUNCEMENTS
AT&T U-VERSE just $29.99/mo! Bundle Internet+Phone+TV & SAVE. Get up to $300 BACK!(Select plans). Limited Time CALL 800-418-8969 & Check Availability in your Area!
ADULT HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA AT HOME. 4-6 weeks. No age limit. Accredited,state listed. FREE CLASS RING. Free Brochure. 1305-940-4214
BUNDLE & SAVE on your CABLE, INTERNET PHONE, AND MORE. High Speed Internet starting at less than $20/ mo. CALL NOW! 800-291-4159
DIVORCE $450* NO FAULT OR Regular Divorce. Covers Children, Property, etc. Only One Signature Required! *Excludes govt. fees. Locally Owned!1-800-522-6000 Ext. 100. Baylor & Associates, Inc. Est. 1977
Classified Ads help you find the job that fits your career goal. There’s a job tailor-made just for you in the Classified Superstore 1-800-989-4237.
GARAGE SALE! GARAGE SALE!
GARAGE SALE!! One Person’s Trash Is Another Person’s Treasure
3 WEEKS FOR $15 (ONLY $5 PER WEEK)
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$9.00 DEADLINE IS FRIDAY AT 5PM. This special rate is for non-commercial ads only. Sorry, business ads are excluded from this offer.
HURRY!, THIS OFFER IS VALID 04/28/12 - 07/28/12
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The Classified Superstore is a product of Denton Publications, Spotlight Newspapers, Eagle Newspapers and New Market Press.
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12 - News Enterprise
FINANCIAL SERVICES $$$ ACCESS LAWSUIT CASH NOW!!! Injury Lawsuit Dragging? $500-$500,000++ within 48 /hrs? 1-800-568-8321 www.lawcapital.com CREDIT CARD DEBT? LEGALLY HAVE IT REMOVED! Minimum $7,000 in debt to qualify. Utilize Consumer Protection Attorneys. Call now! 1-888-2370388 DEBT FREE IN I MONTH. LITTLE Known Government Debt Relief Program Guaranteed to Erase Debt. www.GovRelief.com
FOR SALE BOAT - MOTOR - TRAILER 1955 Lyman, Lap Strake, Wood, Runabout - old, but solid Canvas cover; 2 sets oars Mercury '08; 15 HP; 4 Stroke; elec. start - excellent cond. $2,500. CEDAR STRIP Canoe Beautiful Wee Lassie, handmade 315-5275874 $2700.00 or best offer CLARINET, VIOLIN, FLUTE, TRUMPET, Amplifier, Fender Guitar $75 each. Upright Bass, Cello, Saxophone, French Horn, Drums $189 each. Others 4-sale 1-516377-7907 ELITE SERIES Generator 8000 watts. 13500 starting. Power disconnect. Elec start. Used 2x. 518955-7215 After 5pm. $1,800 KOI FOR SALE-BEAUTIFUL STANdard Butterfly Koi. All Varieties. Quantity Discounts. Pond Supplies. 1-516-809-6771 KURBY CENTRIA Vacuum Cleaner with shampoo kit. 518-623-5444. $800 MATHEWS ULTRA 2 RH Bow Ready to hunt, 70#, adj 29" to 28" draw, Black Gold Flash Point sight, QAD Ultra rest, stabilizer, limb savers, Kwikee 6 arrow quiver, hard case, Cobra wrist rel incl. 518 -624-6690 $300. MEMORY FOAM THERAPEUTIC NASA MATTRESSES T-$299 F-$349 Q-$399 K-$499 ADJUSTABLES - $799 FREE DELIVERY LIFETIME WARRANTY 90 NIGHT TRIAL 1-800-ATSLEEP 1800-287-5337 WWW.MATTRESSDR.COM MOTORIZED TRAVEL Chair new batteries, excellent condition. 518222-1338. $1,200 PEAVEY VALVE King 112 never used w/foot switch & new Danelectro honeytone amp. 518-2515375 $400 SKIS (2 pair) Cross Country, Rosignol, Alpino men's boots & bindings, Size 45, $125. Back Country, bindings fit regular hiking boots, $75. Charlie 518-623-2197. SUN TEC Skylite new 2'x 4' to fit 24" rafter space. New costs $408 + tax, sell $250 OBO. 518-668-3367. WALKER TURNER Collectible Drill Press '50s, good cond., $225 offers considered. 518-494-2270. WOODWORKERS PECAN slab w/ bark side, 3" thick, 25" circumference width. 518-494-2270 $200
FURNITURE BUNK BEDS black metal w/2 bunk bed mattresses $270. Bunk bed only $170 OBO. 518-668-3367 COUNTER CHAIRS Highback oak swivel used 3 mnths WoodCrate $125ea firm 518-494-2270 HIDE AWAY Bed Sofa, fair condition, Free. Please Call 518-5853062
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News Enterprise - 13
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GARDEN RAKE Drop-Tyne New Holland, 64"w/60"l, double 32" sleds, good operating condition. 518-623-3772 $230
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HEALTH AFFORDABLE DENTAL PLANS from $9.95/month. Save 15%50%. Not insurance! Call Toll Free 1-866-213-5387. www.connectionbenefitgroup.com OVER 30 MILLION WOMEN SUFFER FROM HAIR LOSS! Do you? If so, we have asolution! CALL KERANIQUE TO FIND OUT MORE 1-877-218-1590 OXYGEN DEPENDENT CLIENTS WELCOME Susan Kuhne, NYS Licensed Massage Therapist Accepting new clients. Complex Medical Histories, Oxygen/ Portable Vent Dependent clients are welcome. Pinnacle Place Professional Bldg. Suite 110 Albany, NY 12203 518-248-2914 $70 STOP PAYING for Overpriced Medications! Fill your prescription at our Canadian Pharmacy & you'll SAVE up to 90%! CALL NOW 800-315-8208 for $10 off+FREE Shipping TAKE VIAGRA 100MG and CIALIS 20mg! 40 Pills +4FREE for only $99. #1 Male Enhancement. Discreet Shipping. Save $500! Buy The Blue Pill! 1888-796-8870 TAKE VIAGRA /CIALIS?40 100MG/ 20mg Pills + 4 Free. Only $99! Save $500.00. Call 1-888-7968878
PORT HENRY Duplex apartment building, completely renovated, excellent rental history, some owner financing available. $89,000. 518-546-8247.
FARM FARMLAND LIQUIDATION! 5 acres - $19,900. 8 acres $24,900. Gorgeous views,fields, woods! 30 minutes Albany. Just off I-90. Fully approved for your country home!1-888-775-8114 www.NewYorkLandandLakes.com
LOST CAT-JOHNSBURG Lost on 6/24. Large grey tiger male cat. 4 white paws. Answers to, "El". Very friendly. Might have jumped into an open car window. Last seen on Goodman Rd, Johnsburg MISSING ORANGE Tabby Cat comes to the name Little. Last seen on Trout Lake Rd, Diamond Point, NY. Please call 518-6447034
WANTED TO BUY CA$H PAID- up to $26/Box for unexpired, sealed DIABETIC TEST STRIPS. Hablamos Espanol. 1-800 -371-1136 SCRAP METAL & SCRAP CARS We Will Pick Up All Call Jerry at 518-586-6943 WANTED ALL MOTORCYCLES, & Memorabilia pre 1980, $Top CASH$ PAID! Running or not. 1315-569-8094 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
DOGS AKC LARGE Lab Puppies. Chocolate, Black & Yellow. Ready midAugust. $650 females, $550 males. 518-623-4152. F1B GOLDENDOODLE puppies black, chocolate. Vet checked, 1st shots. Ready to go. (518)6430320 or cjeiwray@juno.com PUREBREAD MIN Pin Puppies Black & Tan, 3F/2M, 1st shots & dewormed, ready to go 6/24. 518597-9663 $450 YELLOW LAB male, AKC Reg, born 10/13/10, very loving, all shots, good for breeding/pet. $850. 518- 623-4152 Wrnsbrg.
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY DOWNTOWN TICONDEROGA Commercial Rental, approx. 1,000 ft., customer parking, heat & air included. $600/mo. 352-597-5221
LAND 5 ACRES ON WEST BASS POND $19,900. 8 Acres Waterfront home, $99,000. Financing. www.LandFirstNY.com 1-888-683 -2626 ABANDONED FARM! 25 ACRES/ $39,900. Marketable hardwoods, nice stream,across from State Land! 2 &1/2 hrs NY City! Call NOW! 1-888-701-1864 www.NewYorkLandandLakes.com BANK FORCED SALE: 5.9 ACRES Salmon River, Lake Altmar uses. $18,900 sacrifice.Financing. www.LandFirstNY.com 1-888-683 -2626 COOPERSTOWN RIVERFRONT! 7 acres - $69,900! 400 ft sandy shoreline, 4 milesfrom Village! Field, woods. Priced WAY below market! Call NOW! 1-888-7758114 www.newyorklandandlakes.com FARMLAND LIQUIDATION! 5 acres -$19,900; 8 acres -$24,900. Gorgeous views, fields, woods! 30 min. Albany. Just off I-90. Fully approved for your country home! (888)905-8847. www.NewYorkLandLakes.com LENDER SAYS SELL! 5 TO 40 acre Tracts! All Upstate NY Holdings! Prices from $19,900 or $282/month! Waterfront, Views, Streams! Hunt, Build, Invest! Call 1-888-701-1864 for free info packet! NY LAND & Cabin Bargain Sale Classic Adirondack Camp 5 acres$29,995. Cozy Cabin- Base Camp 5 acres - $19,995. Near 1000's of acres of Stateland, lakes, & rivers. Access to snowmobile & ATV trails. Our best deal ever! Call 800 -229-7843. See pics at www.landandcamps.com NY LAND & CABIN BARGAIN SALE Classic Adirondack Camp 5 acres - $29,995. Cozy Cabin - Base Camp 5 acres $19,995. Near 1000's of acres of Stateland, lakes, & rivers. Access to snowmobile & ATV trails. Our best deal ever! Call 1-800-2297843. See pics at www.landandcamps.com TOWN OF Lake George 1/2 acre building lot. Village sewer, upscale neighborhood, build-out basement, mountain views. $47,000. Will hold mortgage for qualified buyer, 20% down. 518-793-3356 or 518-321-3347.
VIRGINIA SEASIDE Lots- Spectacular 3+ acre estate lots in exclusive development on the seaside (the mainland) overlooking Chincoteague Bay, islands and ocean beyond. Gated entrance, caretaker, private paved roads, community pier, pool and club house which includes 2 bedroom guest suites for property owners. Great climate, fishing, clamming and National Seashore beaches nearby. Just 30 miles south of Ocean City, Md. Absolute buy of a lifetime, recent bank sale makes these lots available at 1/3 original price! Priced at only $49,000 to $65,000. For info call (757) 8245284, email: oceanlandtrust@yahoo.com, pictures on website:www.corbinhall.com
MOBILE HOME BRANT LAKE 1970 Mobile Home, 12' x 70', 4 bedroom, 1 1/2 bath, refrigerator & stove. You move. $2000 (718) 810-1179 BRANT LAKE 1970 Mobile Home, 12' x 70', 4 bedroom, 1 1/2 bath, refrigerator & stove. You move. $2000 (718) 810-1179 MOBILE HOME 1970 Mobile Home, 12' x 70', 4 bedroom, 1 1/2 bath, refrigerator & stove. You move. $2000 (718) 810-1179
SINGLE-FAMILY HOME OWNER WILL FINANCE. Bank or Seller won't finance? We Help! No qualifying. No credit! Low Down. Call Today! 1-800-5632734. kanthony@cigrealty.com
VACATION PROPERTY FOOTHILLS OF the BERKSHIRES: 5 bedroom, 3 bath, 2 EIK, living room w/fireplace, dining room, screened porch and upper & lower decks overlooking golden pond. Great for fishing, boating & tranquility. 1/4 mile from Copake lake w/lake rights. Taconic S.D., Reduced to sell at $349,000. Call 646 -243-6530
FOR SALE ATV WINDSHIELD $35 518-623-2203
FURNITURE CORNER ENTERTAINMENT Center cherry, 36" x 57", fits up to 32" TV, 2 doors w/open center, adjustable shelves. 518-494-5030 $89
AUTO DONATION A-1 DONATE YOUR CAR! Breast Cancer Research Foundation! Most highly rated breast cancer charity in America! Tax Deductible/Fast Free Pick Up. 1-800-771-9551 www.carsforbreastcancer.org Call us at 1-800-989-4237
TAKE VIAGRA? SAVE $500! 100mg,/Cialis 20mg. 40+4 FREE, PILLS . Only $99.00 Discreet. .1-888-797-9024 WEIGHTLOSS MEDICATIONS Phentermine, Phendimetrazine, etc. Office visit, one-month supply for $80! 1-631-462-6161; 1-516754-6001; www.MDthin.com WERE YOU IMPLANTED WITH A ST. JUDE RIATA DEFIBRILLATOR LEAD WIRE between June 2001 and December 2010? Have you had this lead replaced, capped ordid you receive shocks from the lead? You may be entitled to compensation. Contact Attorney Charles Johnson 1-800-535-5727
LAWN & GARDEN BLUEBERRY PLANTS - Northern Hardy, $8 and up. 264 Diamond Point Road, Diamond Point, NY. (518) 792-6240. CASE SC Farm Tractor $500 Firm. (518) 547-8730. PRIVACY HEDGE, Windbreak, Cedar Tree, Evergreen Mail Order $7.50, Delivery, Installation Other Species Available! Services Available in NY, NJ, & New England. CALL 1800-889-8238 or 518-3141446 discounttreefarm.com
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July 7, 2012
14 - News Enterprise AUTO DONATION
BOATS
CANOE 14' Grumman Osprey. Great shape. Seldom used. 518494-5719. $500
CARS/TRUCKS WANTED! Top $$$$$ PAID! Running or Not, All Years, Makes, Models. Free Towing! We're Local! 7 Days/ Week. Call Toll Free: 1-888-4162330
14’ ADIRONDACK Guide Boat complete w/trailer, oars, cover & cherry caned seats. Never been used. $5500 firm. 518-642-9576.
KAYAK PERCEPTION, 15', room for gear, used twice. (518) 5044393. $850
1980 18 1/2 FT. Century Cuddy Cabin, 120 HP I/O, trailer, GPS depth finder, down rigger, plus. $2900. 518-963-8220 or 518-569-0118
ROWBOAT ALUMINUM, about 14', includes oars. Great little boat for fishing, fun for the kids, or dingy boat. Located in Hague. $550 845325-7059
20’ BLUE SeaRay Bowrider 350 Merc/c, I/O. 1978 with cover & galvanized trailer. (973) 715-1201. $2,895
USED HOBICAT 14', Green & White sail, Yellow Hulls, Sail boat is housed in Indian Lake, asking $900.00. 518-648-5619 or 518439-3485
2005 WHITEHALL SPIRIT rowing/sailboat. Classic boat, rare find. Must sell! Asking $9000 OBO. 845-868-7711
CARS
DONATE VEHICLE: RECEIVE $1000 GROCERY COUPONS. National Animal Welfare Foundation. Support NO KILL Shelters. Help Homeless Pets. Free Towing, TAX DEDUCTIBLE, NON-RUNNERS Accepted 1-888-333-3848 DONATE YOUR CAR to CHILDREN'S CANCER FUND of AMERICA and help end CHILDHOOD CANCER. Tax Deductible. Next Day Towing. Receive Vacation Voucher. 7 Days 1-800-4698593
AUTO WANTED CASH FOR CARS AND TRUCKS. Get A Top Dollar INSTANT Offer! Running or Not! 1-888-416-2208 (888) 416-2208 TOP CASH FOR CARS, Any Car/ Truck, Running or Not. Call for INSTANT offer: 1-800-454-6951
BLUE NOSE SAILBOAT 1979, 23.5, McVay w/4 HP motor. 1 owner. Lovingly maintained. Ready to sail. Mooring available on Skaneateles Lake. $6,800.00 bearcreek6448@verizon.net FOR YOUR QUIET LAKE 18' red sailing canoe, 15' x 10' arms, 75 sq. ft. sail, complete rigging, lee-boards, unsinkable, fiberglass, good condition. 518668-2086 $1,500
Attention Post 9/11 Veterans Become a Certified Heavy Equipment Operator at the
HEAVY CONSTRUCTION ACADEMY! Just 3 to 6 weeks to a new career. Post 9/11 GI Bill reform is now active and may cover 100% of the tuition. T O
July 7, 2012
www.newsenterprise.org
L E A R N
M O R E
CALL TODAY! 1-877-287-4053
www.operator-academy.com
1952 DESOTO White/Blue, no rust, small Hemi,, great project car. Serious inquires only. $3500. 518-962-4688 2000 DODGE Neon 518-894-4494 $2,400 OBO 2007 DODGE Grand Caravan, Wheelchair accessible by VMI, driver transfers to drivers seat, tie downs for two wheelchairs in back, tie downs for one wheelchair in front passenger position available when passenger seat is removed, automatic everything, air, air bags all around including sides, enhanced stereo, Ultimate Red Crystal in color, no scratches/dents or other damage, has always been kept in an attached garage, seats have always been covered, never been smoked in, 5,040 miles, VIN 2D8GP44LX7R256881, original price $52,000, asking $30,000 or make an offer, call Jerry in Tupper Lake at 518-359-8538
1978 FIAT Spider Convertible, classic, running condition, garage stored. Asking $6,000 will accept offers. 518-668-2638 2007 PORSCHE BOXSTER Burgundy/Beige Excellent condition. 5,6000 Miles, 6 cylinder, 5 speed automatic w/ Tiptronic Transmission, loaded w/many options, in show room condition. 315-447-0888 $35,500 OBO.
2010 FORD FUSION HYBRID Dark Forest Green exterior, Black interior, 29,500m, SYNC, Auto Sun/Moon Roof, Power Driver Seat/Windows/Locks, CD Changer/MP3/USB/XM Stereo, Tinted Windows, 17" Alloy Wheels. $23,000 Call: (561) 699-4670
2000 DODGE Ram 1500 Maroon/ Black 130,000 kms, Good condition. with 4-way Hiniker plow and cap w/sliding window. Many new parts. On the road. $3,900 OBO 518-494-2129
URAL SIDECAR Motorcycle Durable, versatile, fun vehicle, with classic retro styling. Reliable 650 cc horizontal two-cylinder engine and shaft drive. 1999 model with just 3100 miles; excellent condition. Priced for quick sale. $2,500 518-494-5871 WANTED JAPANESE MOTORCYCLE KAWASAKI 19671980 Z1-900, KZ900, KZ1000, ZIR, KZ1000MKII, W1-650, H1500, H2-750, S1-250, S2-350, S3400 Suzuki GS400,GT380, CB750 CASH PAID. FREE NATIONAL PICKUP. 1-800-772-1142, 1-310721-0726 usa@classicrunners.com
FARM EQUIPMENT
MUSTANG 2010 convertible, V-6, auto, leather interior, runs great, 45,000 miles, loaded. Asking $17,000 OBO or trade for a classic car. Call 518962-8539
MOTORCYCLES 1982 HARLEY Davidson FXRC 80" Shovelhead. Very nice. Wide glide w/sweeper fender. (518) 251-2470 $5,500 SCOOTER 2008 50CC, no motorcycle license required, 90 miles to the gal, only 900 miles, runs great, Asking $750.00 OBO. Call 518-962-8539
1964 FORD 4000 4 cyl., gas, Industrial loader & industrial Front End, 12 spd., German Transmission, Pie Weights, $4650.00. 518-962-2376 Evenings.
RECREATIONAL VEHICLES 1979 SOUTHWIND Motor Home 27', sleeps 6, self contained generator, air condition, micro oven, everything works. Firm $3500. 518-494-3215.
26716
26717
GULF STREAM MOTORHOME 2004, 38' CUSTOM PAINT, UNDER 30K MILES, 3 SLIDES, SLEEPS 4 ADULTS, WORKHORSE GAS CHASSIS, NEW REAR BRAKES, MANY EXTRA'S, DRIVES AND LOOKS GREAT, CALL 315-452-1437. $50,000 OBO
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26719
800-467-0295
TRUCKS
t 64" 1IZTJDJBOT BOE 1IBSNBDJFT 0QFO .POEBZ UP 4VOEBZ t 5SVTUFE CZ NPSF UIBO DVTUPNFST TJODF
1998 F250 Super Duty V10 with Fisher plow. 518-624-2580. $6,500
26715
North Country Telephone Exchange Directory (518) 236.............Altona/Mooers 251.................North Creek 293.......................Saranac 297...............Rouses Point 298...................Champlain 327.................Paul Smiths 352..............Blue Mt. Lake 358...............Ft. Covington 359................Tupper Lake 483........................Malone 492.................Dannemora 493.................West Chazy 494................Chestertown 497.................Chateaugay 499.....................Whitehall 523..................Lake Placid 529...........................Moria 532..............Schroon Lake 543..........................Hague 546.......Port Henry/Moriah 547........................Putnam 561-566...........Plattsburgh 576....Keene/Keene Valley 581,583,584,587 ..............Saratoga Springs 582....................Newcomb 585................Ticonderoga 594..........Ellenburg Depot 597.................Crown Point 623...............Warrensburg 624...................Long Lake 638............Argyle/Hartford 639.......................Fort Ann 642......................Granville 643.............................Peru 644............Bolton Landing 647.............Ausable Forks 648..................Indian Lake 654.........................Corinth 668...............Lake George 695... .............Schuylerville 735.............Lyon Mountain 746,747..........Fort Edward / Hudson Falls 743,744,745,748,761,792, 793,796,798. . . .Glens Falls 834....................Keeseville 846..........................Chazy 856.............Dickerson Ctr. 873....Elizabethtown/Lewis 891..............Saranac Lake 942......................Mineville 946..................Wilmington 962......................Westport 963...........Willsboro/Essex
BUSINESS DIRECTORY CALL 585-9173 TO PLACE YOUR AD HERE FOR ONLY $12!* *13 WEEK COMMITMENT REQUIRED
(518)251-2929 www.bettysfunnyfarm.com
79645
676 14th Rd., Minerva, NY 12851
Email:b ettysfunnyfarm@yahoo.com
GORE ELECTRIC SERVICES
Greg’s
PC Problem Solving
Barbershop
Serving All of Your Computing Needs
Mens & Boys Haircuts
Over 30 Years’ Experience
Gregory J. Fresca
518-251-5535 26 Cable Access Way, Minerva, N.Y. 12851 (off 28N between Firehouse & 14th Rd.) HOURS: Wed. 10-8; Fri. 10-5 Thurs. 10-5; Sat. 10-5
Sales & Service Residential-Commercial-Industrial
3239 State Rte 28 North Creek, NY 12853
518-251-3990 VisitO ur Website: goreelectricservices.com
Generators
518-251-9957 help@kenwhitney.biz www.kenwhitney.biz
FULLY INSURED - AUTHORIZED DEALER
36511
SELF STORAGE
SERVICING
SMALL ENGINE REPAIR
Adirondack Log Home Restorations, LLC
North Country Storage
Heid’s Hodaka, Inc.
Rich’s Small Engine Repair
PO Box 3, Indian Lake, NY 12842 29672
518-251-3738 (Located off Route 28, North Creek)
29641
Specializing in service on Polaris ATVs and Snowmobiles and BMW Motorcycles. We Service All Brands 2033 Garnet Lake Road, Johnsburg
251-2110
36760
Aunt Polly’s Material Girls Come and Visit the New Shop on the Hudson River!
Gillis Realty, Inc.
SALES & SERVICE
We Service All Brands Over 20 Years Experience
We Sharpen Chainsaw Chain New Building in Process 22 Old River Road North Creek, NY (518) 251-5774 90055
Rt. 30, Long Lake
90054
www.gillisrealty.com Donna J. Mundinger, LSA Licensed Salesperson Robert Gillis, Broker
SPECIALTY SHOP
WELL DRILLING & PUMP SERVICE
518-582-2260 3 Hudson River Rd. at the Hudson River Bridge Newcomb, NY
Rt. 28 & LaVergne Road Indian Lake NY 12842
518-648-5013 Kathleen Larkin Jane Zilka
Antiques Gifts/Gallery Workshops Open For The Season June2 8th SummerH ours: 10-5pmT hurs.-Tues. ClosedW ed. Open Weekends After Labor Day
Wolfe’s Well Drilling & Wolfe’s Pump Service INSTALLATION & SERVICE Fully Insured & Certified
79721
(518) 648-5488
Self Storage Units 5x5, 10x10, 10x15, 10x20 24-hour access
REAL ESTATE
36759
LOG CABINS
• Chinking • Rafters • Rotted Log Replacement • Foundation Repair • Log Railing/Stairs • Doors • Rustic Accents • Interior/Exterior Finishes Paul Burgess
FABRICS & NOTIONS
79740
In the of the Adirondacks “Our gift store features the finest quality homemade& hand-knit goods!”
ELECTRIC
518-251-2212
Mobile: 518-409-5679 24 Hr. Emergency Service:
518-251-4389
or: 518-409-5679
38145
Betty’s Bed & Breakfast
COMPUTERS
BARBERSHOP
24640
ACCOMMODATIONS
July 7, 2012
LEGALS News Enterprise Legal Deadline Monday @ 3:00pm Please Send Legals By EMAIL To: legals@denpubs.com
STATE OF NEW YORK SUPREME COURT WARREN COUNTY IN THE MATTER OF THE FORECLOSURE OF TAX LIENS BY PROCEEDING IN REM PURSUANT TO ARTICLE ELEVEN OF THE REAL PROPERTY TAX LAW BY THE COUNTY OF WARREN NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE INDEX NO. 57326 PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that on the 11th day of June, 2012, the Warren County Treasurer, hereinafter the Enforcing Officer of the County of Warren, hereinafter the Tax District, pursuant to law, filed with the Clerk of Warren County, the original of this Petition and Notice of Foreclosure against a parcel of real property for unpaid taxes. Such Petition and Notice of Foreclosure pertains to the following parcel: Town of Queensbury ID# 302.8-1-2 275 Bay Road Mullen J David 50 Main Street 1.09Ac Manuf Effect of Filing: All persons having or claiming to have an interest in the real property described in this Petition are hereby notified that the filing of this Petition constitutes the commencement by the Tax District of a proceeding in the Supreme Court of Warren County to foreclose each of the tax liens therein described by a foreclosure proceeding in rem. Nature of Proceeding: This proceeding is brought against the real property only and is to foreclose the tax liens to the extent the same exist on the parcels described in Schedule A of this Petition. No personal judgment will be entered herein for such taxes or other legal charges or any part thereof. Persons Affected: This Notice is directed to all persons owning or having or claiming to have an interest in the real property described in this Petition. Such interest is evident from the Schedules attached to this Petition and Notice of Foreclosure. Such persons are hereby notified further that a duplicate of this Petition and Notice of Foreclosure has been filed in the Office of the Enforcing Officer of the Tax District and will remain available for public inspection up to and including the date specified below as the last day for redemption. Right of Redemption: Any person having or claiming to have an interest in any such real property and the legal right thereto may on or before said date, redeem the same by paying the amount of all such unpaid tax liens thereon, including all interest and penalties and other legal charges which are included in the lien against such real property, computed to and including the date of redemption. Such payments shall be made to Michael R. Swan, Warren County Treasurer, Warren County Municipal Center, 1340 State Route 9, Lake George, New York 12845. In the event that such taxes are paid by a person other than the record owner
News Enterprise - 15
www.newsenterprise.org of such real property, the person so paying shall be entitled to have the tax liens affected thereby satisfied of record, but title to the property will not be otherwise affected. Last Day for Redemption: The last day for redemption is hereby fixed as the 30th day of September, 2012. Service of Answer: Every person having any rights, title or interest in or lien upon any parcel of real property described in this Petition may serve a duly verified answer upon the attorney for the Tax District setting forth in detail the nature and amount of his or her interest and any defense or objection to the foreclosure. Such Answer must be filed in the Office of the Warren County Clerk and served upon the attorney for the Tax District on or before the date above-mentioned as the last day for redemption. Failure to Redeem or Answer: In the event of failure to redeem or answer by any person having the right to redeem or answer, such person shall be forever barred and foreclosed of all his or her right, title and interest and equity of redemption in and to the parcel described in this Petition and Notice of Foreclosure and a Judgment in foreclosure may be taken by default. MICHAEL R. SWANWARREN C O U N T Y TREASURER Martin D. Auffredou, Esq. Warren County Municipal Center 1340 State Route 9 Lake George, NY 12845 (518) 761-6463 Pub. June 23, July 7, July 21 NE-6/23,7/7,7/21/123TC-26669 ----------------------------NOTICE OF FORMATION OF A LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY (LLC) Name DAREDEVLIN MARINE LLC, Articles of organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSN) on 04/09/2012 Office location Warren County, SSNY has been designated of agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of process to C/O DAREDEVLIN MARINE LLC. 38 South Street, Glens Falls, NY 12801. Purpose Any lawful Purpose. Lates date upon which LLC is to dissolve: No specific Date. NE-6/2-7/7/12-6TC26591 ----------------------------NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY. NAME: PSGaz, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 05/14/2012. Office location: Warren County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of process to the LLC, 15 Hickory Hollow Rd., Queensbury, NY 12804. Purpose: For any lawful purpose. NE-6/2-7/7/12-6TC26593 ----------------------------NOTICE OF FORMATION OF A LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY (LLC): FISCHER CREATIVE MEDIA, LLC, Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 3/14/2012. Office location: Warren County. SSNY has been designated agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of process to: C/O Donald Fischer,
PO Box 2716, Glens Falls, NY 12801. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. NE-6/2-7/7/12-6TC26598 ----------------------------NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY (LLC) The name of the Limited Liability Company that was formed is: JCD HOLDINGS , LLC. The Articles of Organization were filed with the Department of State of the State of New York on MAY 30th, 2012. The office of said Limited Liability Company is located in Warren County . The Secretary of the State of New York has been designated as agent of the Limited Liability Company upon whom process against said Company may be served and the post office address within the state to which the Secretary of State shall mail a copy of any process is: GERALD GRUBBS, 57 Revere Rd , Queensbury , NY 12804 . The purpose of the LLC is to engage in any and all business activities permitted under the laws of the State of New York . NE-6/9-7/14/12-6TC26603 ----------------------------NOTICE OF FORMATION OF NEW YORK LIMITED L I A B I L I T Y COMPANY 1. The name of the limited liability company is KAIDAS KITCHENS, LLC. 2. The date of filing of the Articles of Organization with the Department of State was May 4, 2012. 3. The county in New York in which the offices of the LLC are located is Warren. 4. The Secretary of State has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process may be served, and the Secretary of State shall mail a copy of any such process served against the LLC to KAIDAS KITCHENS, LLC, 149 Ridge Street, Glens Falls, New York 12801. 5. The business purpose of the LLC is to engage in any and all business activities permitted under the Limited Liability Company Law of the State of New York. NE-6/9-7/14/12-6TC26604 ----------------------------NOTICE OF FORMATION OF NEW YORK LIMITED L I A B I L I T Y COMPANY 1. The name of the limited liability company is PEDAL CAB MANAGEMENT, LLC. 2. The date of filing of the Articles of Organization with the Department of State was May 22, 2012. 3. The county in New York in which the offices of the LLC are located is Warren. 4. The Secretary of State has been designated as agent of the upon whom LLC process may be served, and the Secretary of State shall mail a copy of any such process served against the LLC to PEDAL CAB MANAGEMENT, LLC, c/o Stephen D. Tomb, 26 Main Street, North Creek, New York 12853. 5. The business purpose of the LLC is to engage in any and all business activities permitted under the Limited Liability Company Law of the State of New York. NE-6/9-7/14/12-6TC26613 ----------------------------NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LLC: Pursuant to Section 206 of the NY LLC Law. Name: Hot Co. Heating, Cooling, Plumbing, LLC. The Articles of Organization were filed with the
Secretary of State on 10/2/2009. The office of the Limited Liability Company is to be located in Warren Co. The Secretary of State of NY (SSNY) is designated as agent of the limited liability company upon whom process against it may be served. The SSNY will mail a copy of any process served to PO Box 229, Lake George, NY 12845. The LLC is formed for any legal purposes. NE-6/9-7/14/12-6TC26623 ----------------------------CHIP PERONE IMAGES LLC, a domestic LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with the SSNY on 03/29/2012. Office location: Warren County. SSNY has been designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, 1 Cedarwood Dr, Queensbury, NY 12804. Purpose: Any Lawful Purpose. NE-6/16-7/21/12-6TC26650 ----------------------------NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY ( LLC ) Name: LEASE RITE, LLC Articles of Organization filed with the Se retary of State of New York ( SSNY ) on 5/31/2012 Office Location: Warren 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: 1 Lawrence Street, Glens Falls, NY 12801. For any lawful purpose. Filer: Peter Fidopiastis, Esq. NE-6/16-7/21/12-6TC26653 ----------------------------NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY Articles of Organization for The Meeting Place at Cherry Street, LLC were filed with the Department of State on May 25, 2012. The office of the LLC is located in Warren County. The Secretary of State has been designated as agent of the LLC for service of process against it; the address for service of process is 169 Bay Street, Glens Falls, NY 12801. The latest date upon which the LLC is to dissolve is May 21, 2112. The business of the LLC is to own, maintain and/or lease real estate, to operate a massage business and/or to operate a retail store, and all activities incidental or complementary thereto, as well as to engage in such other activities as may be engaged in by a company formed under the New York Limited Liability Company Law. NE-6/16-7/21/12-6TC26663 ----------------------------NOTICE OF FORMATION OF NORTH C R E E K MARKETPLACE LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 06/08/12. Office location: Warren County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC, 3235 State Rt. 28, P.O. Box 11, North Creek, NY 12853. Purpose: Any lawful activity. NE-6/23-7/28/12-6TC26667 ----------------------------NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY (LLC) N a m e : STREAMLINED GRAPHICS, LLC Articles of Organization filed with Secretary of State of New York
(SSNY) on June 12, 2012. Office location: Warren County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of process to: 16 Lexington Avenue, Glens Falls NY 12801. Purpose of LLC is to engage in any and all business activities permitted under the laws of the State of New York. NE-6/23-7/28/12-6TC26672 ----------------------------ARTICLES OF ORGANIZATION OF RED ROCK VENTURES OF WARREN COUNTY LLC Under Section 203 of the New York State Limited Liability Company Law The undersigned, for the purpose of forming a limited liability company under Section 203 of the New York State Limited Liability Company Law, hereby certifies: 1. The name of the limited liability company shall be: Red Rock Ventures of Warren County LLC. 2. The county within the state in which the office of the limited liability company is to be located is: the County of Warren. 3. The Secretary of State of the State of New York is designated as agent of the limited liability company upon whom process against it may be served. The address to which the Secretary of State shall mail a copy of any process against the limited liability company served upon the Secretary of State is: Alexander Powhida, Esq., Deily, Mooney & Glastetter, LLC, 8 Thurlow Terrace, Albany, New York 12203. 4. The Articles of Organization are effective upon filing. 5. The limited liability company is to be manager managed. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, these Articles of Organization have been signed by the organizer this 8th day of June, 2012, by the undersigned. Alexander Powhida, Organizer NE-6/30-8/4/12-6TC26692 ----------------------------NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION FOR A NEW YORK LIMITED LIABILITY C O M P A N Y PURSUANT TO NEW YORK LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY LAW SECTION 206(c) 1) The name of the Limited Liability Company is: T-RAYS BBQ, LLC. 2) The date of filing of the Articles of Organization with the Department of State was June 11, 2012. 3) The county in New York in which the office of the company is located is: Warren. 4) The principal place of business for the Limited Liability Company is: 102 Third Street, Glens Falls, NY 12801. 5) The Secretary of State has been designated as agent of the company upon whom process may be served, and the Secretary of State shall mail a copy of any process against the company served upon him or her to: Ray Sipowicz, 102 Third Street, Glens Falls, NY 12801. 6) The business purpose of the company is to engage in any and all business activities permitted under the Laws of the State of New York. NE-6/30-8/4/12-6TC26694 ----------------------------NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY ("LLC") Name:LEFEBVRE ENTERPRISES, LLC Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New
York ("SSNY") on 6/19/2012 Office Location: Warren 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: 20 Michaels Drive, Queensbury, NY 12804. For any lawful purpose. Filer: Peter Fidopiastis, Esq. NE-7/7-8/11/12-6TC26708 ----------------------------NOTICE TO BIDDERS The undersigned shall receive sealed bids for sale and delivery to the County of Warren as follows: WC 43-12 - 2013 WARREN COUNTY TRAVEL GUIDE PRINTING You may obtain these Specifications through the Purchasing Office. Bids may be delivered to the undersigned at the Warren County Human Services Building, Warren County Purchasing Department, 3rd Floor, 1340 State Route 9, Lake George, New York, during regular business hours. Bids will be received up until Thursday, July 26, 2012 at 3:00 p.m. at which time they will be publicly opened and read. All bids must be submitted on proper bid proposal forms. Any changes to the original bid documents are grounds for immediate disqualification. Late bids by mail, courier or in person will be refused. Warren County will not accept any bid or proposal which is not delivered to Purchasing by the time indicated on the time stamp in the Purchasing Department Office. The right is reserved to reject any or all bids. Julie A. Pacyna, Purchasing Agent Warren County Human Services Building Tel. (518) 761-6538 NE-7/7/12-1TC-26712 ----------------------------ADVERTISEMENT/N OTICE TO CONTRACTORS The undersigned shall receive sealed bids for the furnishing of all materials and doing all work necessary for the performance, according to the specifications, of the following contract to the County of Warren. WC BID NO. 47-12 T-HANGAR APRON PAVING PROJECT AT THE FLOYD B E N N E T T MEMORIAL AIRPORT QUEENSBURY, NEW YORK Sealed Bids will be received at the Warren County Human Services Building, 3rd Floor, the Office of the Purchasing Agent, until no later than Monday, July 30, 2012, at 3:00 pm local time, at which time they will be publicly opened and read. Late proposals by mail, courier or in person will be refused. Warren County will not accept any bid that is not delivered directly to Purchasing by the time indicated on the time stamp in the Purchasing Department Office. This project includes placing asphalt pavement around Thangars currently being constructed by a private developer. The area is approximately 70,000sf and the asphalt depth is four inches. The site grading, stone subbase and utility installations have been completed by others. This project will include all incidentals such as fine grading and compaction of the stone sub-base, tack coat, NYSDOT plant mix asphalt placement and compaction, joint sealing and pavement markings. The Contract Documents (consisting of
the Advertisement, the Proposal, the Agreement, and the Specifications) and Contract Drawings may be obtained only from the Office of the Purchasing Agent, Warren County Human Services Building, 3rd Floor, 1340 State Route 9, Lake George, New York 12845, (518) 7616538. Contract Documents will be available on Compact Disks (CD) in PDF electronic format for distribution beginning Monday, July 9th, 2012. CD s are free of charge. Copies of the above described Contract Documents may be examined at no expense at the Office of the Purchasing Agent, Warren County Human Services Building, 3rd Floor, 1340 State Route 9, Lake George, New York 12845 (518) 7616538; the Eastern Contractor’s Association, Inc., 6 Airline Drive, Albany, NY 12205-1095; and at Dataflow- McGraw Hill Construction/Dodge, 71 Fuller Road, Albany NY, 12205. Questions regarding the project should be directed in writing to Christopher Brubach, of C&S Engineers, Inc. at phone: (315) 455-2000, fax: (315) 455-9667, email: cbrubach@cscos.com Proposals must be submitted on, and according to, the appropriate forms in the bid specifications, and shall be made and received upon the following conditions: Each bid must be accompanied by a certified check or bid bond of not less than 5% of the total maximum bid price (combination of base bid or alternate bid plus addon items). Bid bond must be with a bonding company licensed to do business in the State of New York. If the proposal is accepted, the successful bidder shall enter into a contract for the work and shall execute, within 7 days from the date of the acceptance of the proposal, (1) a suitable security bond for the guarantee of payment of labor and materials as per specifications, and (2) a performance bond in the amount and containing the terms set forth in the bid specifications, for the faithful and prompt performance and completion of the work specified in the contract. No proposal may be withdrawn without the consent of Warren County for a period of 45 days after date of bid opening. The right is reserved to reject any or all bids or to waive any informalities in any bids and to accept any considered advantageous to Warren County. All bid bonds or certified checks, except those of the successful bidder, will be returned. Upon acceptance of their bid, if the successful bidder fails to enter into a contract pursuant to the requirements of the bid documents, or fails to give the further security prescribed in this notice within the time limited therefore, then the check deposited as aforesaid and the monies standing to the credit of the same shall be forfeited to Warren County as liquidated damages, or the payment of the bond shall be enforced for the benefit of Warren County. Julie Pacyna, Purchasing Agent Warren County Human Services Building, 3rd Floor 1340 State Route 9 Lake George, New York 12845 (518) 761-6538 NE-7/7/12-1TC-26713 ----------------------------NOTICE TO BIDDERS The undersigned shall
receive sealed bids for sale and delivery to the County of Warren as follows: WC 49-12 - WORK Z O N E MAINTENANCE & PROTECTION OF T R A F F I C EQUIPMENT You may obtain these Specifications either on-line or through the Purchasing Office. If you have any interest in these Specifications on-line, please follow the instructions to register on the Capital Region Purchasing Group website, either for free or paid subscription. Go to http://warrencountyny.gov and choose BIDS AND PROPOSALS to access the Capital Region Purchasing Group OR go directly t o www.govbids.com/scri pts/crpg/public/home1 .asp?utm_medium=re ferral&utm_source=W AR72NY&utm_campaign=web_site. If you Choose a free subscription, please note that you must visit the site up until the response deadline for any addenda. All further information pertaining to this bid will be available on this site. Bids which are not directly obtained from either source will be refused. Bids may be delivered to the undersigned at the Warren County Human Services Building, Warren County Purchasing Department, 3rd Floor, 1340 State Route 9, Lake George, New York, during regular business hours. Bids will be received up until Thursday, July 19, 2012 at 3:00 p.m. at which time they will be publicly opened and read. All bids must be submitted on proper bid proposal forms. Any changes to the original bid documents are grounds for immediate disqualification. Late bids by mail, courier or in person will be refused. Warren County will not accept any bid or proposal which is not delivered to Purchasing by the time indicated on the time stamp in the Purchasing Department Office. The right is reserved to reject any or all b i d s . Julie A. Pacyna, Purchasing Agent Warren County Human Services Building Tel. (518) 761-6538 NE-7/7/12-1TC-26721 ----------------------------NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY (LLC) The name of the Limited Liability Company that was formed is: NLN JASEN REAL E S T A T E ENTERPRISES, LLC. The Articles of Organization were filed with the Department of State of the State of New York on October 4, 2007. The office of said Limited Liability Company is located in Warren County. The Secretary of the State of New York has been designated as agent of the Limited Liability Company upon whom process against said Company may be served and the post office address within the state to which the Secretary of State shall mail a copy of any process is: NLN JASEN REAL E S T A T E ENTERPRISES, LLC, c/o Nicole Jasen, 1602 State Route 9, Lake George, New York 12845. The purpose of the LLC is to engage in any and all business activities permitted under the laws of the State of New York. NE-6/2-7/7/12-6TC26588 ---------------------------Find a buyer for your no-longer needed items with a low-cost classified. To place an ad, call 1-800-989-4237
16 - News Enterprise
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North Creek/Town of Johnsburg will celebrate Independence Day on the 7th of July from noon to ???. There will be bands, food, kids & grown up games and activities all day long ending at dusk when the firework display begins. BANDS: Decadence, Fingerdiddle, The Willy Play More Band and Avalanche. FOOD: The Pack 36 Cub-Scouts will be serving hamburgers, hotdogs, sausage w/ peppers and more... • Petes Ahh (our local pizza joint) will be serving jalapeno poppers, chicken wings, garlic knots, chicken tenders and of course pizza & drinks. • Tom will be serving a pork and/or turkey, salt potato, corn on the cob meal with a roll for only $10.00!!!! • You can purchase tickets in advance @ Braley & Noxon Hardware • Mark Kenyon will be serving home made Maple Cotton Candy. ENTERTAINMENT: Our local business community and Fire Departments (Braley & Noxon Hardware, Izzy’s Deli and Market, Pete’s Ahh, Saratoga and North Creek Railway, Hudson River Trading Post, Alpine Motel, North Creek Fire Department & Johnsburg Fire Department) will be hosting kids games (ring toss, balloon game, kiddy duck fishing, bounce house, face painting, dunking booth and dime toss...to name a few) as well as horse shoes, poker and a misting tent for us older kids. • There will also be a women’s all star game Friday evening (July 6th) @ 6pm • The boys all star game will be Saturday (July 7th) @ noon. • R andy LaFountain will host a dice game & a ball toss @ the celebration • Braley & Noxon will be raffling a girls and boys Huffy bike. Tickets can be purchased @ the North Creek Hardware or @ the Independance Day Celebration. The tickets cost $1.00 ea, or 6 ea for $5.00. The drawing will take place around 6pm at the Celebration.
COME ONE, COME ALL AND ENJOY A DAY WITH YOUR FAMILY, FRIENDS AND SURROUNDING COMMUNITIES!!
July 7, 2012