Addressed to:
P.O. BOX 338 ELIZABETHTOWN, NY 12932 POSTAL PATRON
GUARANTEED!
39120
We’ll give you the best price for your gold...
ECRWSS PRESORTED STANDARD U.S. POSTAGE PAID DENTON PUBLICATIONS/ NEW MARKET PRESS
From the Editor»
FREE
A Denton Publication
Taxpayers suffer under the heavy weight of specialeducation costs.
TAKE ONE!
PAGE 5
CVES forced to cut more positions
WWW.THE-BURGH.COM
SATURDAY, JUNE 23, 2012
CLINTON COUNTY, NEW YORK
This Week
CATCHING A WAVE
ELIZABETHTOWN
COMMUNITY GARDEN
By Stephen Bartlett stephen@denpubs.com PLATTSBURGH – Officials at Champlain Valley Educational Services knew some time ago they would once again be forced to cut positions as local school officials pulled back special education students to save money. Still, the numbers are jolting, a total of 84 layoffs approved from February 2012 until June 2012. “Those are all employees who will not be returning as of Sept. 1,” said Rachel Rissetto, CVES director of human services. Roughly a year ago, CVES was forced to eliminate 93.5
Students learn to grow healthy food. PAGE 2 SENATE HOPEFUL
Wendy Long stops in Plattsburgh.
Kiters hit the waves on Lake Champlain along the Plattsburgh City Beach.
PAGE 3
Photo by Stephen Bartlett
CONTINUED ON PAGE 13
PTO RAISES FUNDS
Local author writes about Plattsburgh in new book By Stephen Bartlett stephen@denpubs.com
Photo by Stephen Bartlett
CONTINUED ON PAGE 13
Parents help schools offer programs. PAGE 6 KAYAK PARK
Outdoors enthusiasts back kayak park. PAGE 10
Index
Lettuce • Spinach • Swiss Chard • Kohlrabi • Peas • Beets Carrots • Broccoli • Cucumbers • Peppers • Zucchini Summer Squash • Radishes • Scallions • Scapes Berry Bushes • Veggie Plants • Trees • Shrubs MacIntosh • HONEYCRISP • Cortland
BEHIND THE PRESSLINE
P4
OUR FURRY FRIENDS
P5
P7
OUTDOORS
P11
CALENDAR
P15
CLASSIFIED
P16-19
Scan the QR Codes below with your mobile device.
Online
SIGN-UP TODAY!
www.the-burgh.com
www.the-burgh.com/accounts/
Each week we’ll send you the printed edition straight to your email’s inbox, for FREE! -Cancel any time. To sign up, simply go to
TO ADVERTISE YOUR BUSINESS, CALL 518-561-9680
Remember to keep clicking the-burgh.com all day, everyday for the latest local news, featured stories and extras.
P4
BOMBARDIER CONTRACTS P7
31362
470 Union Rd., Peru 643-9806
P3
WEEKLY EDITORIAL
MEDICLA DEVICE TAX
PIES
Open 7 Days 9am-6pm
RUN FOR ROSIE
Facebook & Twitter
“Like” us on facebook, simply searching keyword “the burgh” or follow our tweets at
www.twitter.com/theburghadk
M. Dyland Raskin is at work on his third memoir.
PLATTSBURGH — The rage that fueled M. Dylan Raskin at 22 is fading, as those sporadic spurts of his signature hostility toward the people he loathed become an increasing rarity. That might discourage fans who connected with the author ’s rants against walking clichés and the seemingly endless lack of inspiration in the world. Fortunately for them, Raskin is still able to hurl verbal resentment at the injustices he sees around him while being at peace with his place in an increasingly unstable world he’s once again writing about. “Any given day in Plattsburgh is so rich with material,” said the author of “Little New York Bastard” and “Bandanas & October Supplies.” “A lot occurs in this small town, and it would be foolish to let all of this go untold.”
Raskin once had much to be angry about, growing up in Queens, surrounded by people he detested without the guidance of his father, who had passed suddenly. His first memoir, published in 2003 by Four Walls Eight Windows, detailed a lost, angry young man who briefly leaves New York City and his mother for Chicago in search of inspiration and anonymity. His second memoir, published in 2006 by Avalon, tells the story of a young man who has a nervous breakdown as he bounces from place to place with his mother, who actually passed a few months before after an agonizing battle with ovarian cancer. The book culminated with Raskin unstable, exhausted and in the hospital for three days. Raskin eventually ended up with his dog Esme in Plattsburgh where he has become co-owner of Koffee Kat on Wheels. He hasn’t published since his last book, though he writes for himself in a small space in the back corner of his attic apartment.
2 - www.the-burgh.com
June 23, 2012
Students grow healthy food
$2 Bud Light & Coors Light Cans
By Stephen Bartlett
(DRAW A PARTNER)
stephen@denpubs.com
Friday, June 22
Donnie & Nomads II Saturday, June 23
Shamrock Motorcyle Club Ride In Benefit Jay Walkin Band Rt. 9 North • Plattsburgh, NY • 518-324-7665
31321
(NO COVER)
PLATTSBURGH — They sat quietly in the classroom and talked about the earth. They discussed the healthy vegetables the earth produces and learned about the life cycle of a plant.
26001
Code: TBSE12T
Then they got their hands dirty, and were up to their elbows in soil, planting their own vegetables as their teacher took the classroom lesson outside. “We are making salad baskets to go home with all the students,” explained Nichole Julian. “We are trying to promote healthy eating habits.” This is vital in a country where childhood obesity is a growing problem. That’s why Julian turned to a hands-on approach, after spending time in the classroom, to reinforce what her students had learned. Julian is a special-education teacher for North Country Kids in an integrated preschool classroom in Plattsburgh. That means some of her students fall under the special-education spectrum, while others are typical. The students planted tomatoes, lettuce and flowers in large white buckets. “I told them the flowers would keep animals away,” Julian smiled. All the items were donated by Sam’s Club, except the plants, which a parent provided. Hands-on experiences, coupled with classroom work, are more conducive to learning, Julian said. “This also promotes healthy eating habits over the summer and helps them to understand they can grow their own food.”
North Country Kids teacher Nichole Julian teaches her students about growing healthy food. Photo by Stephen Bartlett
That is especially important in a country where the childhood obesity rate has more than tripled in the past 30 years, according to the Centers for Disease Control. In 2008, more than one third of children and adolescents were overweight or obese. Obese youth are more likely to have risk factors for cardiovascular disease, such as high cholesterol or high blood pressure. Youth who are obese are likely to be obese as adults and are at increased risk for many types of cancer. Roughly 17 percent, or 12.5 million of children and adolescents aged 2-19, are obese.
“We want to promote healthy eating as much as we can,” Julian said. Her students seemed focused on the project, quietly adding dirt to their containers, digging holes and placing vegetables and flowers in before watering their vegetable buckets. Benjamin Coryea, 4, said he enjoyed planting lettuce and liked the crunchy noise it sometimes makes. “It is silly and it is healthy for me.” He said he had learned a lot from the project and his teacher. “Lettuce is a vegetable, and plants need water and sun to grow and need to be planted in dirt.”
31287
Tuesdays @ 6:30pm
June 23, 2012
www.the-burgh.com - 3
Senate hopeful speaks in Plattsburgh
Plattsburgh/Akwesasne
stephen@denpubs.com
H a vin g a b a b y? The IPO Program can help. The Improved Pregnancy O utcome Program provides support from a nurse to help you: Learn about pregnancy Stay well during pregnancy Have a healthy baby For more information call:
32 Court Street, Plattsburgh, NY www.clintonhealth.org
Wendy Long speaking to supporters in Plattsburgh. Photo by Stephen Bartlett
wheels of Congress turn instead of gumming them up,” she said. Family is important to Long, who worries that the current state of affairs in America is detrimental to family values. In fact, Long is concerned that it is harmful to the overall well being of all Americans. “A lot of the problem is certain people of the liberal left believe they are a lot smarter than us and know better how to run our lives and families and churches.” These people believe it appropriate to tax the country out of debt and grow
the economy by writing thousands of pages of legislation. But Long said that is not the answer. The current laws are designed to trip up business, she said, and have created a situation in New York in which the state’s children are its biggest export. There are no job opportunities for young people in New York. “I think a lot of people are fed up with self-satisfied, arrogant politicians,” Long said. “New Yorkers value independence and integrity, someone who will stand for something and be strong.”
GUARANTEED LOWEST INSTALLED PRICE OR YOUR At Time Of Sale TIRE IS
FREE
GOODYEAR • UNIROYAL • FIRESTONE • GENERAL TIRE DUNLOP • MICHELIN • BRIDGESTONE • B.F. GOODRICH • PIRELLI
29642
Run for Rosie planned for weekend Proceeds to go to Stop Domestic Violence
By Katherine Clark
katherine@denpubs.com CADYVILLE — Friends, family and community members will come together for the third annual Run for Rosie on June 23 at the Cadyville Recreational Park. Registration for the threemile run will begin at 8 a.m. at the park, located on Goddeau Road, where Rosie found the most peace according to event organizer Laura Whalen, a friend and former co-worker of Rosie’s. The run is in honor of Rose “Rosie” Rascoe Maynard, a former Civilians Counselor at Clinton Correctional Facility who died
565-4848
33611
PLATTSBURGH – Wendy Long wants to save us. “If our republic survives and revives, it will be because people like you in this room here have a deep love for country and state and care about where it has gone, especially over the last few years,” said the litigation attorney, speaking in Plattsburgh at a Tea Party event. She is happy with her job and said she doesn’t need a new one. Still, Long is seeking the Republican nomination June 26 to challenge Senator Kirsten E. Gillibrand, the litigation attorney. “I’m worried my children won’t grow up in the same America I grew up in,” she said. “We have to worry about everybody in this country.” Long attended college during the Reagan years, a time when she said students can be pulled off track by “all this liberal gobbledygook in class.” Long served as a law clerk for Judge Ralph K. Winter on the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in New York City, and then for Justice Clarence Thomas on the Supreme Court of the United States. She served as a litigation partner for the law firm Kirkland & Ellis and in 2005 joined the Judicial Confirmation Network as a chief counsel. She led public support or opposition to Supreme Court nominations and played a prominent role during the Supreme Court nomination of Sonia Sotomayor. Since 2007, she has been a legal advisor to Mitt Romney’s presidential campaign. Long is a Roman Catholic catechism teacher. “I was a lawyer who tried to help the
Departs Wed. THRU Sunday - 10:00AM • Arrives back at 4:30PM FRIDAY/SATURDAY EVENING SPECIAL! Departs 5:30PM, Arrives back at 12:00PM Ask about your special door to door service! Leaves from It’s All Good Restaurant in the Skyway Plaza (next to OTB) Only $42 Round Trip! (Seats are limited) Call for reservations: 1-518-570-0964 CHARTERS AVAILABLE
26676
CASINO SHUTTLE
By Stephen Bartlett
suddenly on March 26, 2010. Every year her friends, daughters, parents and former co-workers arrange the walk to be held close to her June 26 birthday. Those interested can participate in a one-mile walk/run or the three-mile run. “It’s a really neat course,” Whalen said. “People don’t have to run the whole way. Run, walk, a little of both. It doesn’t matter; it’s for a good cause and it should be a beautiful day.” The entrance fee is $10 and the first 150 people to register receive a free t-shirt. All proceeds benefit Stop Domestic Violence, a cause Whalen said Rosie was very passionate about. “One of the things we want to keep alive about Rosie is how giving, kind and thoughtful she was,”
Whalen said. “She would do anything for anyone. “She was one of the strongest women I know and this was a cause she truly believed in,” Whalen said. One of Whalen’s favorite running memories of Rosie was a Turkey Trot they both ran in for the Lions Club. “She ran up in front of me and was my own little cheerleader, saying ‘C’mon keep running, don’t stop,’” Whalen said. “She was definitely very inspiring.” Stop Domestic Violence is a NYS-certified program that assists victims of domestic violence 24 hours a day. They offer individual and group counseling services, crisis intervention, advocacy with law enforcement, medical services, local departments of Social Services and information,
and referrals for victims of domestic violence. Whalen said it was an organization Rosie had always been passionate about supporting. “She always put 100 percent into her job and it’s a way to continue to pay it forward, like she would have, for an organization that is getting funding cuts little by little every year,” Whalen said. For more information about the run, or to make a donation in Rosie’s name, call 492-2511 ext. 4371. “Come join us in memory of Rose Rascoe Maynard as we celebrate the place where she truly loved to run and find peace,” Whalen said.
Early Advertising Deadline for 4th of July, 2012 (Classifieds, Legals & Display) VERMONT ZONE Green Mountain Outlook The Eagle Friday, June 29th at 9AM NORTHERN ZONE The Burgh North Countryman Valley News Friday, June 29th at 3PM SOUTHERN ZONE Times of Ti Adirondack Journal News Enterprise Friday, June 29th at 3PM
Offices will be closed on Wednesday, July 4, 2012 26658
07 Rockwood 2514 G 2 queen beds, sofa, dinette, bathroom, shower, hot water, fridge, furnace, electric lift, awning, front cargo rack • Was $7,99900
11 Critical Home Inspection Traps To Be Aware Of Weeks Before Listing Your Home For Sale
Cheap Thrills!
you can make a reasonable pre-inspection yourself if you know what you are looking for, and knowing what you’re looking for can help you prevent little problems from growing into costly and unmanageable ones.
Barrett Price - Below Wholesale! $6,99900 tax included* 2012 Wildwood 26TBSS Weighs 6,000 lbs., triple bunks, sofa, dinette slide out, front queen bed, AC, awning, micro jacks, stereo, outside speakers. MSRP $22,98700
Barrett Close-Out Price! $17,99900 tax included*
To help home sellers deal with this issue before their homes are listed, a free report entitled “11 Things You Need To Know to Pass Your Home Inspection” has been compiled which explains the issues involved.
Out The Door!
New 2012 Wildwood X Lite 22RB Factory close-out, discontinued floor plan, very well equipped.
This report is courtesy of Kavanaugh Realty. Not intended to solicit properties currently listed for sale. Copyright © 2012
$ Paid Advertisement 31361
To hear a brief recorded message about how to order your FREE copy of this report, call 1-800282-1097 and enter ID#7003. You can call anytime, 24/7. Call NOW to learn how to ensure a home inspection doesn’t cost you the sale of your home.
Out The Door!
12,99900 tax included*
*Tax included based on 7% Warren Couty Sales Tax
HIGHEST QUALITY! GREAT SELECTION!
www.barrettrv.com • 518-745-8793 674 Quaker Road, Glens Falls, NY • (Exit 19 off I-87, Turn Right, east on Rt. 254, 4 miles)
33728
Whether you own an old home or a brand new one, there are a number of things that can fall short of requirements during a home inspection. If not identified and dealt with, any of these 11 items could cost you dearly in terms of repair. That’s why it’s critical that you read this report before you list your home. If you wait until the building inspector flags these issues for you, you will almost certainly experience costly delays in the close of your home sale or, worse, turn prospective buyers away altogether. In most cases,
ATTENTION!
BARRETT RV
HOME INSPECTIONS Clinton County - According to industry experts, there are over 33 physical problems that come under scrutiny during a home inspection when your home is for sale. A new report has been prepared which identifies the eleven most common problems, and what you should know about them before you list your home for sale.
274 Quaker Rd. Queensbury, NY (across from Lowe’s) (518) 798-1056
4 - www.the-burgh.com
June 23, 2012
Opinion
A COMMUNITY SERVICE: This community newspaper and its delivery are made possible by the advertisers you’ll find on the pages inside. Our sixty plus employees and this publishing company would not exist without their generous support of our efforts to gather and distribute your community news and events. Please thank them by supporting them and buying locally. And finally, thanks to you, our loyal readers, for your support and encouragement over the past 65 years from all of us here at the Burgh and Denton Publications.
Viewpoint
The Burgh Editorial
Athletes win titles; deliver pride for entire region
M
ost Ticonderoga High School students were sleeping-in the morning of June 12. Classes had ended the day before and a little shuteye was in order after a long school year. Not for Jay Hebert. While others were dreaming of future success, Hebert was working to make his dreams a reality. The rising junior was on the school track, working out. That’s why Hebert is a champion. Hebert has established himself as one of the most successful Section VII track and field athletes ever. Hebert won the New York State Public High School Athletic Association small-school championship June 9 in the 110-meter hurdles. He then won the New York Federation championship, which pits the top eight runners from schools of all sizes against each other. Hebert went undefeated this season with a best time of 14.07 seconds — the fastest time in New York and the fourth fastest high school time in the nation, according to his coach. The Olympic B qualifying standard is 13.72 seconds. He’s only 1.2 seconds away from the world record in the 110 hurdles held by Cuba’s Dayron Robles. Ti Coach Walter Thorne believes Hebert can run in the Olympics, but the Sentinel champion is more reserved than his coach. “That’s too far away to think about,” Hebert said. “I just want to work hard, improve and run in college.” Hebert is just one champion area residents can take pride in. Section VII athletes won three state titles at the track and field
championships June 8 and 9. Also bringing home championships were Dan Lennon of Peru in the Division II 3,200-meter run, and the Beekmantown 400-meter relay team of Jess Huber, Mikaela Frechette, Kallie Villemaire and Courtney Wilson. Hebert and Lennon ran in the high school national championship track meet last weekend in Greensboro, N.C., proving their mettle once again. Hebert finished second in his heat of the 110-meter hurdles in the “emerging elite” class. Lennon battled all the way before finishing third in the 5,000meter championship race. He also added a 22nd place finish in the championship two-mile race. Lennon, who graduates this weekend, will take his talents to the Syracuse University cross country and track programs in the fall. What makes a champion? Certainly talent plays a huge role. So does work ethic. Kenyan distance runners, who dominate distance running throughout the world, often comment, “Somewhere, right now, one of my competitors is running.” It’s a reminder that dedication can never wane. Jay Hebert, Dan Lennon and a handful of others, although still young, know that. It’s one of the reasons they’re champions — champions we can all be proud of.
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
Denton Publications, Inc.
W e’re m ore tha n a n ew spa per.W e’re a com m un ity service.
Our goal at Denton Publications is to publish accurate, useful and timely information in our newspapers, news products, shopping guides, vacation guides, and other specialty publications for the benefit of our readers and advertisers. We value your comments and suggestions concerning all aspects of this publication.
Denton Publications Founded By Wm. D. Denton PUBLISHER................................................................................................................................................................Daniel E. Alexander ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER................................................................................................................................................................Ed Coats OPERATIONS MANAGER..............................................................................................................................................William Coats BUSINESS OFFICE MANAGER...........................................................................................................................Cheryl Mitchell GENERAL MANAGER CENTRAL.............................................................................................Daniel E. Alexander, Jr. MANAGING EDITOR.............................................................................................................................................................John Gereau ASST. MANAGING EDITOR...............................................................................................................................................Andy Flynn GENERAL MANAGER NORTH.....................................................................................................................Ashley Alexander GENERAL MANAGER SOUTH.....................................................................................................................Scarlette Merfeld HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGER.......................................................................................................................Tom Henecker FINANCIAL CONTROLLER..............................................................................................................................................Nicole Pierce
Visit us online at www.denpubs.com The official web site of Denton Publications and its community newspapers
Northern Office
Central Plant Office
Southern Office
PLATTSBURGH 14 Hand Ave., P.O. Box 338, Elizabethtown, NY 12932 Phone: 518-873-6368 Fax: 518-873-6360
ELIZABETHTOWN 14 Hand Ave., P.O. Box 338, Elizabethtown, NY 12932 Phone: 518-873-6368 Fax: 518-873-6360
TICONDEROGA 102 Montcalm St., Suite 2, Ticonderoga, NY 12883 Phone: 518-585-9173 Fax: 518-585-9175
Or drop us a line at feedback@denpubs.com Tell us how we’re doing, make a suggestion or send us a news tip!
Denton Publications’ Adirondack Northern Editions North Countryman • The Burgh • Valley News Denton Publications’ Adirondack Southern Editions Adirondack Journal • News Enterprise • Times of Ti Scan this QR Code from your mobile device.
Ask about our sister publishers Eagle Newspapers (Central NY), New Market Press (Vermont) and Spotlight Newspapers (NY Capital District), and their fine community publications.
28950
ADVERTISING POLICIES: Denton Publications, Inc. disclaims all legal responsibility for errors or omissions or typographic errors. All reasonable care is taken to prevent such errors. We will gladly correct any errors if notification is received within 48 hours of any such error. We are not responsible for photos, which will only be returned if you enclose a self-addressed envelope. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Local Zone $29.00 Annual Voluntary (includes subscription to Grocery Dough), Standard Bulk Mail outside local zone (no refunds due to late postal delivery) $47 Annual, First Class Mail (sent in sealed envelope) $50 for 3 months / $85 for 6 months / $150 for an annual. ADDRESS CORRECTIONS: Send address changes to P.O. Box 338, Elizabethtown, New York 12932. EDITORIAL AND OPINION PAGE POLICY: Letters, editorials and photo submissions are welcomed. Factual accuracy cannot be guaranteed in Letters to the Editor or Guest Editorials. Editor reserves the right to reject or edit any editorial matter. All views expressed in Letters or Guest Editorials are not necessarily the views of the paper, its staff or the company. ©COPYRIGHT PROTECTION: This publication and its entire contents are copyrighted, 2010, Denton Publications, Inc. Reproduction in whole or in part is prohibited without prior written consent. All Rights Reserved.
Members: FCPNY NYPA IFPA afcp PaperChain
28986
Will there be a daily newspaper in your future?
T
hat question has been asked, not only in this country, but around the world, in the past few years. In New Orleans, Birmingham, Mobile and Huntsville the discussion has taken center stage with the announcement that this fall they will cease publishing a daily print product and will instead be switching to an online publication, with a print product only 3 times per week. The situation in the above named communities is important to watch. For one, the ownership is the same as The Cleveland Plain Dealer, where reportedly there were meetings recently to quell concerns there. But in general, the daily newspaper revenuemodel dilemma is happening across America, including here in the North Country. In Canada similar moves are taking place in Calgary, Edmonton and Ottawa. Newspapers are not going to become extinct, but they are facing the types of challenges they’ve been unaccustomed with dealing. Toward the end of the last century, daily newspapers enjoyed healthy bottom lines and became popular investment opportunities. Unfortunately, their primary mission was not so much with an eye on future technology investments and research as it was on maximizing the bottom line. They must now face the realization that there is no easy fix that will allow them to maintain their profit margins and at the same time reclaim the lofty status they once enjoyed. Many daily newspapers blame the downfall on people reading their news online for free while dropping their paid subscription. The revenue model they have been accustomed to operating under was based on 80 percent adverting revenues and 20 percent circulation revenues. As paid subscriptions continue to drop, advertising revenues were affected. In 2005, daily newspapers registered $47 billion in ad revenues and by 2010 they were down to $22.8 billion. While the dailies try to reposition themselves with paywalls, reduced print days, outsourcing certain tasks while trimming staff and news coverage, not all types of newspapers have abandoned their true mission. About 45 minutes from Asheville, in Yancey County, North Carolina, where the population is less than 18,000, the Yancey County News won two major journalism awards in 2011, its first year of publishing—the E.W. Scripps Award for Distinguished Service to the First Amendment and the Ancil Payne Award for Ethics in Journalism. The Yancey County News is a weekly, available online for free as well as in print, with a circulation of 1,200 copies and a masthead that lists only two people as staff—hus-
band and wife Jonathan and Susan Austin. Being a newspaper is not about all the trappings that come with running a large, profitable business. Large corporate or publicly traded companies may Dan Alexander not be the best stewThoughts from ards of newspapers in Behind the Pressline the future as the renowned Poynter Institute for Media Studies in St. Petersburg, Fla. recently reported. Officials acknowledge their traditional revenue source, the Tampa Bay Times, can no longer finance its parent organi zation. The institute, which owns the Tampa Bay Times, has traditionally relied on dividends from the paper, as well as tuition, foundation support and donations. The institute once received dividends—millions annually—from the Tampa Bay Times, but those checks are no longer being cut. In its raw form a newspaper is still what it has always been about, it’s a partnership with the community it serves. The community provides the financial support while the newspaper holds up its end by being the community watch dog, reporting on hometown events, providing the local merchants with a proven advertising medium and being the hometown cheerleader. Yes, to stay in business you must run a profitable operation or you can’t sustain the effort, but what still counts to the community you serve is providing the platform for publishing local news and useful advertising information that readers find of value and can afford. This community newspaper has had to face some of the same financial challenges as our area daily counterparts, but while they have released staff recently as a result of outsourcing and cutbacks we’ve added six experienced staff castoffs in recent weeks, with more in the wings. We are continuing to expand our digital offering, which will remain free, and we look to the future with promise and optimism as we continue to live up to our founders motto of being “more than a community newspaper, we’re a community service.” In the end, the real problem lies with the newspaper investors who require profit priority over the informational needs of the local community. Dan Alexander is publisher and CEO of Denton Publications. He may be reached at dan@denpubs.com
June 23, 2012
www.the-burgh.com - 5
Practicing tough love for angry taxpayers C
hamplain Valley Educational Services was forced to cut more than 80 positions on top of the nearly 100 that were cut last year as schools pull their special education students back in attempts to save money. Special education students are costly for taxpayers, partly because the federal government doesn’t keep promises, such as covering more of the costs related to educating such students. What’s come through loud and clear during all of this is comments by many taxpayers who are fed up with having to cover the costs of educating special education students. They claim it is too costly and requires too many services. So, typical taxpayers, I’m sorry. By typical, I mean one who doesn’t fall under the special-education label. I apologize for my son, Samuel, who was born with 1p36 deletion
syndrome, a disorder caused by a genetic deletion. It is characterized by moderate to severe intellectual disability, delayed growth, hypotonia, seizures, limited speech ability, malformations, distinct facial features and hearing and vision impairment . I don’t know why Sammie was born with this. I do know he is adorable, and like everyone, he loves and wants to be loved and feel safe and secure. But Samuel also takes advantage of typical taxpayers who shouldn’t have to shoulder some of the financial burden to help him live to his potential. Since he was born, Sammie has received speech, physical and occupational therapy, in the home. He is five and just graduated from his first year of kindergarten at Champlain Valley Educational Services and continues those therapies there. He has a one-on-one aide since he can’t walk, change his clothes or go to the bathroom
Stephen Bartlett
From the Editor’s Desk on his own. He recently started crawling, though it cost taxpayers money since it was partly due to the work of his therapists. Had I known, I would have told them sitting on his butt forever was fine, and less expensive. I realize I need to be tougher and less caring with Samuel. So, tough you were born with 1p36 deletion syndrome. I know that in order to learn to walk,
talk, feed yourself and function in society you require assistants, aides and therapists, but tough. Tough, Sammie, because taxpayers don’t care, nor should they. Take away the assistants, aides and therapists and let children like Samuel sit around and drool and defecate and urinate on themselves from birth to death. Samuel will look and act drastically different at say, 13, without those services, and many disabled individuals will die young, but hey, it’s costly, and typical taxpayers need their money. So, tough Samuel. I hugged you and said I love you when you said “Dadda,” but a speech therapist helped with that. I know the gait trainer is supposed to help you walk, but I’m gonna have to sell it and reimburse the taxpayers. My heart smiled when I balanced you by your arms and for the first time you put one foot in front of the other as I held you up and you
giggled, but that was the result of a physical therapist, so forget about walking, ‘cause that’s expensive. I can’t afford those services, and it’s not because I don’t work full time, because I do, but they are way out of my price range. I’m already drowning in medical debt because of mine and my family’s medical issues. Still, I’ve been selfish, and my typical neighbor needs to buy organic this week and gas up the SUV for a weekend in Montreal. Awwww, Sammie just woke up and is smiling at me from his bed with his big eyes. There I go again, acting soft when what typical taxpayers need is hard. Look Sammie-Sam, I know I promised you would walk and talk one day, but, er…tough. Reach Editor Stephen Bartlett at stephen@denpubs.com.
Our life coaches, Style and Substance: From our readers Dear Style & Substance: We have decided that every tenth column we will let you give the advice. In other words, share the best advice you have been given. Let this advice given to and shared by others inspire you to discuss life’s trials and solutions; take this advice and add to it, molding it to help you in your own journey or when you are lending an ear and some advice to someone you care about. Peg Tucker: Start each day with gratitude for a cozy night's sleep and for the simple things that start your day. The more you recognize the things that are nourishing you right now, the more you become aware of how much there is to be grateful for and the more you become aware of simple blessings every day. Paul DeDominicas: Be mindful of the words we choose and how we speak to each other because once something is said it cannot be taken back; you can apologize but that is different. Julie Houghton: Live within your means while actively and purposefully seeking a better life. Let go and let God provide you with guidance, strength and wisdom. Learn from all of life’s trials and tribulations.
Our Furry Friends Our Furry Friends is a weekly feature brought to you by Denton Publications. For more information about these and other fine pets available for adoption, contact: St. John Feral Cat Fund P.O. Box 2884, Plattsburgh, 534-0824 North Country SPCA 23 Lakeshore Road, Westport 962-8604 Elmore SPCA, 556 Telegraph, Peru 643-2451 Adirondack Humane Society, Plattsburgh 561-7297 (PAWS)
Beck Meisenheimer: The problem, often not discovered until late in life, is that when you look for things like love, meaning and motivation, it implies they are sitting behind a tree or under a rock. The most successful people recognize that in life they create their own love, they manufacture their own meaning and they generate their own motivation. This man was driven by two main philosophies, know more today about the world than he knew yesterday. And along the way, lessen the suffering of others. He finished by saying, “You'd be surprised how far that gets you.” Donna Fessette: Every problem is an opportunity in disguise.
Michele Armani: Don’t look back, only look ahead! Steven Dorr: From my mother, “be true to yourself and let your heart guide you.” Sally Meisenheimer: From my mother, “get your education before you get married and when you get married, move far, far away to start your family without any outside influence!” John Hetfield: From my dad, “Treat every job you com-
North Country SPCA
T
Michele Armani and Sally Meisenheimer
Jerry Fliss: Listen to your heart above all other voices.
his week, the NCSPCA would like to remind you about the upcoming second annual NCSPCA Golf Tournament, "Gimme Shelter," to be held on Friday, July 20, at the Westport Country Club. Last year's tournament was a great success, and we are hoping this year's event will be even more spectacular! Now is a purrfect time to gather your friends together to form a team - your registration should be turned in by Monday, July 16. Team entries are $300 ($75/player) and includes golf with cart, player gift, buffet, and a chance to win Closest to Pin, Long Drive, and Net/Gross Prizes.Team entry with hole sponsorship is $300; hole sponsorship only is $100 and includes your business name or a personal message on a hole. Details and online registration can be found at www.ncspca.blogspot.com.You can also register by phone at 962-4470, fax your entry to 351-4130, email your entry to ncspca@markedbywm.com, or mail in your entry with check to: NCSPCA, 23 Lakeshore Road, Westport, NY 12993. Monies raised by this event will be used toward the building of our new shelter! Our featured pet this week is Ed, an adorable brown and white, Beagle/Bassett Houndmix who was found wandering the streets, lonely and hungry. Ed has a loving personality and
mit to doing with the goal of being the best you can be at that job, always giving 100 percent. This applies to all jobs, whether it is bagging groceries or designing rocket engines!”
ASK Style & Substance creative life coaching solutions
Email your questions to yourstyleandsubstance@gmail.com
a gentle demeanor, with deep, soulful eyes that will win your heart over. He has excellent leash manners and does not bark or "bray" like most of his Beagle cousins. If you are looking for a smaller dog who is good with people of all ages and will reward you with lots of affection, Ed is the dog for you. Why not come down to the shelter and meet him today? We know you won't be able to resist those sad, chocolate-brown eyes!
Ed
6 - www.the-burgh.com
June 23, 2012
Parents come together to save school programs By Stephen Bartlett
stephen@denpubs.com
Kristin Roy sits with her daughter Katharine at a fundraiser at Peru Central School. Photo by Stephen Bartlett
courage family involvement in the school system and pick up some of the educational supplements the district can no longer afford. “If the PTO wasn’t as active as they are, we wouldn’t have some of these opportunities,” Osborne said. The PTO tries to bridge the gap between the school and community, said K-5 PTO President Kim Chamberlain, who also has three children in the district. “A lot of times a parent won’t come to school but will come to
school activities,” she said. “This is a way to get families into the school.” Fundraisers that ultimately enhance the educational experience or cover the costs of activities and/or programs the district is unable to afford are a no-brainer, Chamberlain said. Field trips, for example, are especially important for children who my not have access to such activities otherwise. “This allows each student to go on at least one field trip,” Cham-
Angell Hicks pushes her daughter Eryn on the swing at Peru Central School Photo by Stephen Bartlett
berlain said. “We also brought in authors, storytellers and artists. A lot of kids won’t be exposed to those things.” At a recent fundraiser at the school, community members lined up outside the door for ice cream and a chance to purchase raffle
tickets and participate in games. “It is nice to see such a huge turnout,” Chamberlain said. The PTO will begin its activities again this September. “Come to a PTO fundraiser and see what it’s all about,” Chamberlain said.
26183
PERU — Strapped by shrinking revenues and rising costs last year, Peru Central School officials decided to stop paying for field trips starting this school year. Parents, sympathetic to the district’s plight and concerned about their children’s educational experience, stepped up and raised enough money at the intermediate school to bring field trips back. This was just one example of the power of fundraising and the increasing important role it plays in public education. “Our PTO has sponsored field trips for each grade level,” said Scott Storms, Peru Intermediate School principal. “They covered transportation costs and brought two authors to school.” Parent volunteers have also sponsored other events, such as teacher appreciation. “This was really helpful to our school, because this school year we pulled out field trips from the budget,” Storms said. “It is important for students to get that realworld experience. They can see things in books and on the Internet, but to go to the 1812 Homestead and Adirondack Farms is a handson experience.” Scott Osborne, another principal at Peru, said the PTO works to en-
June 23, 2012
www.the-burgh.com - 7
Medical device tax bad for business? By Stephen Bartlett
ness. “After considering both sides of the issue and gathering information from a medical device manufacturer who was concerned that an excise tax may have a disproportionate impact on his business, I decided there are better ways to pay for expanding health coverage,” Owens said. The 2.3 percent excise tax on medical devices was part of President Barack Obama’s health-care bill that was passed two years ago. Owens was speaking at Plattsburgh State, during a Town Hall
stephen@denpubs.com PLATTSBURGH — Congressman Bill Owens is one of many Democrats who oppose a tax on medical devices. Earlier this month, he voted to repeal the tax, just one aspect of “Obamacare” that has some people up in arms. Owens said he voted for a bill to repeal the tax because the tax on medical devices would hurt busi-
meeting, when he heard from a constituent who pleaded with Owens to help repeal the tax, saying jobs would be lost because of it. The House voted 270 to 146 in support of a repeal to the new tax. But it has little chance of approval in the Senate and Obama has said he will veto the measure if it reaches his desk. The tax is scheduled to take effect in January as part of a package of fees being imposed to help offset the cost of subsidizing insurance coverage for more than 30 million people.
Critics say it will increase health care costs and result in job losses. The 2.3 percent excise tax on medical devices is expected to raise $29 billion over the next 10 years. It would apply to manufacturers and importers of defibrillators, stents, artificial hips and knees, X-ray machines, surgical tools and more. Supporters of the tax say businesses that create such devices can more than afford the tax. Yet, many companies claim they will be forced to lay off workers and send jobs overseas.
Democratic lawmakers from states such as Minnesota and Massachusetts also say they want to repeal the tax. “This is another opportunity for both parties in Washington to put politics aside and work together for the good of the country,” Owens said. Owens cosponsored a separate bill that would repeal the same device tax, but pay for the loss in revenue by eliminating subsidies for oil and gas companies.
Bombardier lands a pair of substantial contracts By Stephen Bartlett stephen@denpubs.com PLATTSBURGH — Bombardier Transportation signed contracts for nearly 600 new rail cars in New York City and San Francisco. The combined orders are valued at more than $1.2 billion. The cars will be assembled at Bombardier ’s manufacturing plant in Plattsburgh. The first contract was signed with the Metropolitan Transportation Authority for 300 rail cars and is valued at nearly $600 million. The cars will be assembled in Plattsburgh, Bombardier ’s “Centre of Excel-
lence.” The Plattsburgh facility is the company’s center for rolling stock production in the United States. In operation since 1995, it has produced more than 3,000 passenger rail cars and locomotives now in service across the United States. Bombardier is expected to deliver 10 pilot cars in the third quarter of 2014, followed by the remaining balance between mid 2015 and early 2017. Bombardier and New York City Transit began their partnership in 1982. “Since then, we have delivered close to 1,900 vehicles to our valued customer,” Bombardier Transportation North America
President Raymond Bachant said in a press release. “We are proud that New York City Transit has shown its confidence in our products and technologies once again, and we look forward to providing high-quality, reliable, safe rail cars for the millions of people who ride New York’s subway system every day.” Bombardier also signed a contract with the San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit District for 260 rail cars, and is valued at about $631 million. The contract includes a first option order for 150 cars that will be ordered June 25, and additional orders, which could bring the
total number of cars ordered to 775, pushing the total order to around $1.5 billion. These cars will also be assembled in Plattsburgh. They will replace the Bay Area Rapid Transit District’s entire existing fleet and will make boarding faster and easier, as well as increase priority seating for seniors and people with disabilities. They will include more comfortable seats, bike racks, energy efficient lighting, an improved public address system and onboard security cameras. Bombardier is expected to deliver 10 cars in spring 2015, followed by another 250 between early 2017 and spring 2019.
“Bombardier is honored to have been selected to build BART’s Fleet of the Future and delighted to add the San Francisco Bay Area to the list of major metropolitan regions across North America and around the world that rely on Bombardier for metro cars that offer the highest levels of quality, performance and reliability,” Bachant said. “We look forward to working with BART to provide environmentally responsible, energy efficient and convenient transportation for the citizens of the Bay Area for years to come.” Bombardier ’s current North American metro car orders also include 706 new
cars for Chicago, 420 cars for Toronto and 468 cars for Montreal. Congressman Bill Owens said the contracts were great news for the North Country. “I would like to congratulate Bombardier and thank the many members of our community who continue to work to maintain and grow jobs in the region,” he said. “Clinton County continues to emerge as an industry leader in the assembly and manufacturing of transportation equipment, and it is important that we continue to work together and build on this momentum to increase economic activity in Upstate New York.”
VERMONT LIQUOR OUTLETS
Black Velvet
$ Sale
Price
BIG S AV IN G S !
14
99 1.75L
Tanqueray Gin R S U P EY ! BU
Sale Includes Price All VT Taxes
$
36
99 1.75L
Captain Morgan Spiced Rum
Jagermeister
R S U P EY ! U B
Sale $
$ Sale
Price
26
99 1.75L
BIG S AV IN G S !
Price
15
99 750ML
BEAM SvedkaJIM Vodka BOURBON BIG S AV IN G S !
Sale Price
$
21
99 1.75L
A list of all sale items is available via E-mail: dlc-promos@list.state.vt.us June 25, 2012 - July 8, 2012
Other Featured Items at Great Low Prices! 77 Convenient Locations Throughout Vermont For A Complete Price List Call (802) 828-2345 Not responsible for typographical errors.
26202
8 - www.the-burgh.com
June 23, 2012
CVPH receives millions in grant money By Stephen Bartlett
stephen@denpubs.com PLATTSBURGH – CVPH Medical Center will receive more than $7 million as part of grants created to transform the state’s health care system. The funds will help create private rooms that will be used for medical and surgical patients. “These are important investments which not only assure better outcomes for patients but a more efficient, more cost-effective health care system in the long-
term,” said Senator Betty Little. “I congratulate CVPH for their successful application and look forward to seeing the progress they continue to make to transform the delivery of health care in the North Country.” Gov. Andrew Cuomo recently announced $20.2 million in grants to three hospitals in the North Country. That money is expected to improve patient care, reduce costs and ensure that all New Yorkers have access to quality treatment. The grants totaled $9,144,000 for Carthage Area Hospital, $3,753,430 for River Hospital and $7,309,572
for CVPH Medical Center. The grants are made available through New York State’s Health Care Efficiency and Affordability Law. Statewide, the $301.1 million in grants will help 40 hospitals and nursing homes improve primary and community-based care, eliminate excess bed capacity, and reduce over-reliance on inpatient care in hospitals and nursing homes. "As a result of the hard work of the Medicaid Redesign Team and our actions to transform the state's health care system, we have already taken important steps toward reducing costs
and improving care for patients," Cuomo said in a press release. "These grants to hospitals in the North Country will help our health care facilities deliver better quality care in a more efficient and cost effective manner so all New Yorkers have access to the best care possible when it is needed." The awards are allocated through the New York State Department of Health and the Dormitory Authority of the State of New York and are part of nearly $3 billion in funding that has been invested in health care reform over the past seven years. The grants will help im-
plement recommendations from Cuomo's Medicaid Redesign Team, including enabling health care facilities to deliver more efficient, higher quality care through restructuring, merging and realigning operations. The awards will also help develop collaborative projects among health care providers and will support capital projects, such as the conversion of hospital inpatient space to outpatient and ambulatory care and inpatient nursing home capacity to other less-restrictive forms of long-term care. "I commend these hospitals and nursing homes for
their resourcefulness and effectiveness in reconfiguring their beds and services to achieve greater efficiency and to deliver care most appropriate to address the identified needs in their communities,” said State Health Commissioner Nirav R. Shah. "These grants will support improvements and collaborations that will strengthen services and deliver care that will benefit our communities," said Paul T. Williams, president of the Dormitory Authority of the State of New York.
Mobile health clinics to be held PrimeLink awards employees PLATTSBURGH — Community Link will hold a women’s health clinic on June 30 in front of the Plattsburgh Imaging Center in the CVPH Plaza from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Appointments are recommended. Services at the clinic include clinical breast exams with mammograms, pap smears, along with blood pressure, blood sugar and cholesterol screenings. Medicaid and other insurances are accepted. Women 40-years-old and older without insurance may be eligible for a yearly mammogram, and pap smear every two years at no cost. For more information or to make an appointment call 563-7129.
Fri., June 15 - Thurs., June 21, 2012
Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter (RealD 3D) (R) 12:15PM • 2:40PM • 5:05PM 7:30PM • 9:50PM Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter (2D) (R) 1:00PM • 3:25PM 6:00PM • 8:25PM Brave (RealD 3D) (PG) 12:00PM • 2:20PM • 4:40PM 7:05PM • 9:20PM Brave (2D) (PG) 12:50PM • 3:10PM • 5:25PM 7:50PM • 10:00PM Madagascar 3 (2D) (PG) 12:50PM • 3:00PM • 5:10PM 7:20PM • 9:30PM Men in Black 3 (2D) (PG13) 12:30PM • 3:00PM • 5:25PM 7:45PM • 10:00PM Prometheus (2D) (R) 12:30PM • 3:15PM 6:45PM • 9:30PM Rock of Ages (PG13) 12:20PM • 3:10PM 7:00PM • 9:40PM Seeking A Friend for the End of the World (PG13) 12:10PM • 2:40PM • 5:05PM 7:20PM • 9:40PM Snow White and the Huntsman (PG13) 12:35PM • 4:00PM 7:15PM • 9:50PM That’s My Boy (R) 12:15PM • 3:15PM 7:15PM • 9:45PM The Avengers (2D) (PG13) 12:35PM • 3:35PM 6:50PM • 9:45PM
Pick up your copy of this week’s Burgh at one of these local businesses!
PLATTSBURGH — PrimeLink and Champlain Telephone were recognized with state level marketing awards. PrimeLink, Inc, and parent company Champlain Telephone telecommunications companies were honored with three ONYX Marketing Awards presented by the New York State Telecommunications Association (NYSTA) during the organization’s annual conference held June 4 through June 6 in Cooperstown. The three ONYX (Observing NY’s Excellence in Marketing) awards received by PrimeLink/Champlain Telephone included recognition in the print media category for a campaign highlighting the company’s Free Home Networking promotion for Champlain Telephone Company, accolades in the multimedia category for the 2011 promotional video for the PrimeLink Great Northern ShootOut Division III hockey tourna-
ment, and acknowledgement in the “most innovative” category for theme and creativity during PrimeLink’s 2012 PlattsburghNorth Country Chamber of Commerce “After Hours” Mixer. PrimeLink President and General Manager Greg MacConnell said, “On behalf of our committed PrimeLink and Champlain Telephone employees, I am very proud to have accepted awards in three out of five possible categories in marketing at the NYSTA annual conference.” Since 1921, The New York State Telecommunications Association, Inc. (NYSTA) has represented the interests of New York’s premier telecommunications providers. Currently, in addition to the 52 telecommunications carriers, the Association includes 19 internet service providers and more than 150 associated manufacturers, suppliers, and consultants to the industry.
Summer Dollar movies at Regal PLATTSBURGH — Moviegoers of all ages can climb aboard the Summer Movie Express to enjoy a great selection of films. During this 9-week festival, 282 Regal Cinemas, United Artists and Edwards Theatres will offer selected G- or PG-rated movies for only a dollar on Tuesday and Wednesday mornings at 10 a.m. A portion of proceeds from the Summer Movie Express will be donated to the Will Rogers Institute. Will Rogers uses the money to fund the institute's mission in the areas of medical research and health education. The Regal Foundation, a non-profit 501(c)(3) charity established by Regal Entertainment Group, also provides monetary grants to local Boys & Girls Clubs to bring club members to the Summer Movie Express. "We are excited to kick off another year of the Regal Summer Movie Express. This is a great activity for children and parents to enjoy together while raising funds for a worthy cause," stated Dick Westerling Regal Entertainment Group Senior Vice President of Marketing and Advertising. "Regal is proud to support the Will Rogers Institute and their ongoing initiatives for medical re-
The Jungle Goldie’s Grocery Post Office Clinton County Govt. Center Frechette’s Grocery Under One Roof Racines Laundry New York Pizza Sunoco Mini Market Mobil Mini Mart Cumberland Market A-Plus Gas Gus’s Red Hots Butcher Block Chamber of Commerce Chase’s Mobil Stewarts Super 8 Georgia Pacific Gate Kinney Drugs Meadowbrook North Home Alix True Value C&C Unisex C V Fitness My Greek Kitchen Bizarre Bazaar Big Lots Jade Buffet Champy’s Mobil Kinney Drugs Holiday Inn Mangia Jrecks Subs Price Chopper Shell Guiseppi’s Panera Bread Wendy’s Restaurant America’s Best Vaue Inn Maplefields Champlain Centre North Discount Liquor Blockbuster Monroe Brake Midas Muffler La Quinta Econo Lodge Microtel Hampton Inn Mobil Rt. 3 Cutting Connection Ernie’s Flea Market Pizza Palace Maplefields Ron’s Corner Restaurant Homestead Restaurant Ashley Home Center Duke’s Diner Beekman Towers Yando’s Big M Kinney Drugs It’s All Good Freihofer Outlet Parents Pizza Redemption Center/Sharron Ave. China Buffet Liquor and Wine Warehouse
search and health education." Since 1991, Summer Movie Express 2012 has offered movies for only a dollar on select Tuesdays and Wednesdays at Regal Cinemas located in the Champlain Centre Mall in Plattsburgh. The movies will run from June 26 to August 22. June 26-27 Journey 2 & Kit Kittredge: American Girl July 3-4 Dolphin Tale & Happy Feet 2 July 10-11 Legend of Guardians & Yogi Bear July 17-18 Cats & Dogs: Revenge & Hugo July 24-25 Adventures of Tin Tin & Puss in Boots July 31-August 1 Kung Fu Panda 2 & Rango August 7-8 Rio & Spy Kids August 14-15 Chimpanzee & Hoodwinked Too August 21-22 Arthur Christmas & Smurfs
Donations bring in books PLATTSBURGH — Thanks to a major donation from the Plattsburgh Lions Club, the Clinton-Essex-Franklin Library System has just added more than 40 ebooks for adults, young adults and children to a collection that is available to all patrons of member libraries who possess a library card. The collection, and hundreds of other titles, can be accessed on the library system’s web site at ecollection.cefls.org. “It’s amazing that we just added some adult titles yesterday and many of them are already checked out,” said Elizabeth Rogers, Head of Adult Collection Development at the System. “‘Beach Season’ by Lisa Jackson and ‘The Book Thief ’ by Markus Zusak were snapped up immediately,” she added.
OR To get your FREE subscription, visit: 31690
the-Burgh.com Click on the About tab and select subscription 26052
“Donations from groups such as the Plattsburgh Lion’s Club really help us keep up with demand, which we expect to grow even more as the summer progresses,” Rogers stated. Patrons of the System’s member public libraries in Clinton, Essex and Franklin counties can check out up to two titles at a time online with a borrower ’s card. “We’re going to see lots of e-readers in use this summer since they’re so portable and go just about anywhere,” she predicted. E-readers have become a trend around the country. Library systems have been strapped for cash, which is why donations, small or large, are welcome.
June 23, 2012
www.the-burgh.com - 9
Second-graders from Morrisonville Elementary School visit Denton Publications in Elizabethtown Friday, June 15 and learn about how The Burgh and other newspapers are put together every week. Front row, from left: Dylan Medley, Connor Goodwin, Nate Bragg, Braeden McGinnis and Haiden Blair. Middle row, from left: Lexie Denis, Phoebe Kotsogiannis, Careena St. Andrew, Jacob Vann, Keegan Smith and Danielle Borner. Back row, from left: Abbey Archuleta, Kennedy Ubl, Jenny Burdo, Brady Doorey, Reese Montville and Mackenzie Converse. Missing from the photo is teacher Kristina Brown. Photo by Andy Flynn
ENJOY THE FREEDOM OF DVR. EMPHASIS ON FREE. We’ve made the Charter bundle even better— with Internet speeds up to 15 Mbps, TV in HD and, right now, free DVR* that lets you watch TV on your schedule. Sign up today, starting at only $79.98/mo. for twelve months.
Miner Institute summer intern Sarah Williams talks to fifth graders from Cumberland Head about caring for calves during the annual Farm Days for Fifth Graders event Thursday, June 7. Photo provided
Welding contest to be held SENECA FALLS — New York State FFA Welding Contest at Empire Farm Days to be held on August 9. All students are welcome to compete as teams of two or individually for certificates, but only active FFA students will be scored and compete for $2,250 in scholarship funds. The first place prize is $1,000, the second place prize is $750 and the third place prize is $500. Awards are also presented for high team performance. Each student must perform three welds with two different types of tools provided by Haun Welding. Contestants also complete a metal identification quiz and a multiple choice quiz. The students are also judged on professional appearance, attitude, preparedness and safety. Students interested in competing should pre-register by August 1, by contacting contest coordinators Jim Taylor, (315)527-8262, and Johanna Fox-Bossard, (315) 440-1044. Students may also register on-site at 9 a.m. on contest day. The competition will begin at 10a.m. Empire Farm Days’ events for youth also include the FFA/4-H Tractor Safety Contest on Thursday, August 9.
1-888-GET-CHARTER CHARTER.COM
©2012 Charter Communications, Inc. Offer expires 6/24/12. Valid to qualified residential customers who have no outstanding obligation to Charter. Offer includes Charter TV in Digital with HD and Internet Express with speeds up to 15 Mbps. Standard rates apply after 12 months. *Free DVR service includes lease of one DVR receiver; additional DVR receivers are extra. Installation, taxes, fees, surcharges & equipment extra. Charter HD/DVR receiver may be required to receive all HD programming; TV must be HD capable; HD programming may vary. Internet speeds may vary; available Internet speeds may vary by address; small percent of customers will receive lower than advertised speeds. Services are subject to all applicable service terms & conditions, which are subject to change. Services not available in all areas. Restrictions apply.
33415
10 - www.the-burgh.com
June 23, 2012
Local kayakers ask Plattsburgh to consider downtown whitewater kayak park By Shaun Kittle
shaun@denpubs.com PLATTSBURGH — An old idea to put a whitewater kayak park in downtown Plattsburgh is starting to make waves. When Ryan Ward has a free moment, he reaches for his kayak. To watch him navigate the Saranac River ’s sweeping current when the white-capped water is high is to witness gracefulness in an unlikely setting. Yes, he makes it look easy. But the ability to surf eddies and perform Eskimo rolls — a move that rights the kayaker after capsizing — comes with practice; something Ward commits himself to with unabashed fervor. In fact, the 22-year-old’s pursuit of the sport has been so relentless that he has paddled his way from beginner to assistant instructor in only one year. And the Saranac River has been an integral part of his learning process. “Last season, I was on the water five or six days a week,” Ward said. “We have an excellent whitewater kayak training ground right in our backyard.” Ward is one of many local kayakers who support the idea of creating a whitewater kayak park from the South Catherine Street bridge to downtown Plattsburgh, and he thinks that support could also pour in from the community. “I was kayaking the Saranac with some friends recently, and there were some kids on the shore watching us,” Ward said. “I paddled over and asked them if they would learn to kayak if they had the opportunity to do so, and they said, ‘Yes, absolutely.’ I’d say we have people show interest like that at least once a week.” Steve Maynard, a world-class kayaker and head paddling instructor of Plattsburgh State’s expeditionary studies program, introduced Ward to kayaking, and to the Saranac. Maynard uses the river to teach his students, and thinks the city could use it to promote recreation and tourism as well. The problem is, in its present state, the river ’s water level is usually too low in mid-July and August to be run. The solution, Maynard said, is to pinch the river in a few places to facilitate a consistent flow, and then rearrange some rocks to create features. “An assessment would have to be done, but when I saw them working on the General Electric plant, I thought some of that equipment could be used to move rocks around,” Maynard said. “This could be a good time to get a project like this finished quickly and cheaply.” Feeling inspired, Maynard attended a city council meeting last spring and put the idea in front of the board, but interest from the common council, he said, was lacking. “My heart just sank,” Maynard said. “They wouldn’t even consider it. I’m at the point now where I don’t know what else to do.” Maynard might have recently brought the proposal to the
attention of the city, but talk of a kayak park in Plattsburgh has ebbed and swelled since Larry Soroka, chair of the expeditionary studies program, concocted the idea about fifteen years ago. “I meet people all the time while kayaking who tell me they are from other places, like Boston or Buffalo, and they come here to kayak,” Soroka said. “One day, it just clicked.” The day it clicked, Soroka was in Saranac Lake, waiting for a friend in the parking lot of the town’s small whitewater kayak park. He watched as a woman pulled up in a station wagon to drop off three young boys, who got out and headed to the river to kayak. “I thought about how those kids could be hanging out on some steps somewhere, doing whatever, but instead they’re getting exercise and enjoying the day,” Soroka said. A seed was planted, and the more Soroka considered it, the better the idea Ryan Ward surfs an eddy near the Bridge Street bridge in downtown Plattsburgh. seemed. Photo by Shaun Kittle “If we (Plattsburgh) limit our thinking to the easy and obvious, we’ll be doomed to short-term growth,” Soroka be an invaluable asset to his team, which trains monthly. said. “Instead, we can be thinking about recreation in gen“We live in an area with a lot of major rivers, and, as eral, about building a brand and a reputation that costs litwe’ve learned recently, they can come up fast,” Bresett said. tle to nothing to maintain once it’s in place.” “A kayak park can give us access to conditions that are closSoroka added that whitewater kayak parks have been er to what we actually deal with during a rescue. It would springing up in U.S. cities for 20 years, and that they have give us real-life training” been proven to add to local economies. As an avid kayaker, Bresett has visited several kayak “We have people calling my office all the time asking parks, including one in Alabama and a few in Colorado. about outdoor recreation in the area,” Soroka said. “People “A kayak park creates a safe place for people to learn to want to live, play and move to areas where there are recrekayak,” Bresett said. “If we build one it will bring people, ational opportunities.” and money, to the area.” In August 2001, a small non-profit organization in Having a kayak park might draw people to Plattsburgh, Rochester called Genesee Waterways Center took the but the actual cost of creating one locally is unknown. plunge and opened the city’s Lock 32 kayak park. Steve Peters, Plattsburgh’s superintendent of recreation, Cindy Stachowski, the non-profit’s executive director, said a feasibility study would have to be done before the said the park has become a prominent part of the commuproject could even be considered, but wouldn’t comment nity and has given rise to festivals and competitions like on whether the city would get behind the study. Lockapalooza, an event that draws national athletes, who “We are aware of the potential use of the river, but right demonstrate their skills on the river. now it’s only conceptual,” Peters said. “No one is commit“So far, I haven’t seen any negative impacts to having the ted to anything, it’s just being talked about.” kayak park,” Stachowski said. “The water in the Northeast In the meantime, paddlers will have to settle for enjoyis abundant and should be celebrated.” ing the river the way it is. But Lock 32 is more than a magnet for recreation—it is “If we do a preliminary assessment and find it isn’t feaalso utilized as a training ground for the area’s swift water sible, then at least we know we can put the issue to rest,” rescue team. Soroka said. “But if we find we can build it, it could become Reliable whitewater is something Chris Bresett, team a meaningful piece of our future.” leader of Champlain Valley Search and Rescue, said could
On the go?
So are we!
Come Celebrate 20 Years of Upscale Resale to the North Country!
Bookmark us now.
OVER $150 IN HOURLY GIVEAWAYS! REFRESHMENTS, CAKE & HORS D’OEUVRES
the-burgh.com —It’s where the locals go!
164 Boynton Square • Plattsburgh, NY 518.562.2302 • www.fashionexchangeplattsburgh.com
39121
26144
m.the-burgh.com
20%-70% OFF STOREWIDE!
Can’t Get A Job Without Experience? Can’t Get Experience Without A Job...
Prove It! ® Online Assessment Tests. Over 1,200 Assessments From Clerical, Software, Technical, Call Center, Financial, Legal, Medical And More!
Universal Classes®
HIRED
Choose From Over 500 Online Courses! Anything From Office Skills 101, Book Keeping, Beginners Web Development, Working With Difficult People And Many More!
This Is Where You Want To Be. Call Today For More Information. Plattsburgh Public Library • 19 Oak Street • 518.536.7434 • 518.536.7436 • www.ncworkforce.com
39125
COMMUNITY COMPUTER & EMPLOYMENT RESOURCE CENTER
June 23, 2012
www.the-burgh.com - 11
Backlash on the World Record Bass
A
lthough the recent weather patterns have been decidedly summer-like, the actual summer season did not officially begin until Wednesday, June 20. It seems like we have been enjoying summer since March! However, for many eager anglers the true summer actually arrived just a few days ago, with the opening day of bass season on Saturday, June 16th. Bass fishing, like apple pie and the Fourth of July, has become an American tradition. Bass are one of the most widely distributed of all freshwater game fish species, and they are to be found almost anywhere there is water and a forage base. In fact, Andy Griffith and Opie opened the popular television program Mayberry RFD while toting an impressive stringer of bass back from the fishing hole. Bass, Bubba and beer, these are American traditions. Alaska is the only state in the union without a bass population, which is too bad because bass can actually be fished through the ice. Hawaii received the state’s first bass when they arrived by boat, likely while being transported for introduction into Japan in 1925. That was the year Akabishi Tetsuma, a Japanese businessman shipped over seven-dozen largemouth bass from California’s Ashino Lake for introduction to the island nation. Although American servicemen that were stationed in Japan after the war enjoyed the opportunity to fish for bass, the non-native fish is still considered an invasive species. Many Japanese anglers would prefer to see it eliminated. It is an unfortunate perspective, since it was a Japanese largemouth bass that captured the current world record largemouth, when a 22-pound, 5-ounce largemouth was taken from Lake Biwa on July 2, 2009.
The monster largemouth fell for a live bluegill on a reservoir near Tokyo that was offered up by Japanese angler, Manabu Kurita. His catch topped the historic world record by only one ounce. George Perry had established the bass world record on Georgia's Montgomery Lake way back in June 2, 1932. It was, and still is, one of angling’s oldest remaining world records. There’s still a lot of controversy surrounding the issue. Even though the Japanese largemouth tipped the scales at 22 pounds, 5 ounces, which topped the current bass record by a full ounce, the International Game Fish Association requires potential record fish to outweigh the old record by at least 2 ounces. The IGFA, which certifies game fish records worldwide, ruled the record a tie, and now, both fish jointly hold the World Record. When Manabu Kurita was awarded the world record for Largemouth Bass in 2009, it constituted the second time in five years that a Japanese angler had intruded on a blue blooded, American tradition. The first occasion happened in Plattsburgh, NY, when Japan finally topped the United States at its own game. Short of knocking off the New York Yankees in the World Series, there had never been such an upset in modern day sports. The initial incident occurred on June 24, 2004, when Shinichi Fukae of Osaka, Japan, the reigning Japan Bass Angler of the Year, made professional bass fishing history by fending off his closest American challenger to win the coveted Land O’Lakes Angler of the Year title. Fukae’s win marked the first time in the 36-year history of professional bass fishing, that someone earned angler of the year titles in two countries, and it occurred on Lake Champlain
WE’RE YOUR HAULING HELPER!!! • Utility Trailers • Cargo Trailers • Horse & Stock Trailers • Heavy Equipment Trailers • Dump Trailers • Snowmobile Trailers • Used Trailers Available
Exhibiting potential as a future Bass Angler of the Year, Chad Hagar of Saranac Lake smiles while admiring a fine largemouth he had just landed. Photo by Joe Hackett
of all places. Is it any wonder that Gary Yamamoto manufactures Senko’s, which have rapidly become the most popular, and likely the most productive softbait ever? Maybe the US should never have allowed either baseball or bass to be taken out of the country. Joe Hackett is a guide and sportsman residing in Ray Brook. Contact him at brookside18@adelphia.net.
Rentals, Lessons & Tours all Summer long. Kids Paddlesports Courses start in July. Weekly, M-F, 9-4 NEW PADDLESPORTS CENTRE ON THE AUSABLE RIVER & RT. 9 Park ~N~ Paddle. Open Daily at 9am. Beginning 6/15. Don’t let Summer get away...
The Kayak Shack • 3999 Rt. 9 • Plattsburgh, NY 12901 • 518-566-0505
33470
NORTHEAST ROOFING™ Roofs of all Types • Siding • Roof Repairs
Complete Parts Department HITCHES & WIRING INSTALLED
802-482-2250 • 1-800-533-0504
33448
Area Referrals • Free Estimates
33 Gardner Circle • Hinesburg, VT 05461 Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9-5; Sat. By Appt. www.upperten.net
Vincent Place President
Cell: 518-907-4827 Office: 518-962-4646
26181
26164
ME TRY
EVERY DA
– SPECIAL – Cut & Wrapped $ 1.59 lb. Can.
Pork Loin – SPECIAL – Approximately 15 lbs. $ 2.69 lb. Can. Regular Smoked Bacon – SPECIAL – 5 lbs. or More $ 4.49 lb. Can. Home Smoked Meat $ 7.99 lb. Can.
.com
o www.b
eviau ucheri
Bone-in Leg of Ham $ 2.29 lb.
Heavy Smoked Bacon $ 5.49 lb. Can.
Fresh Pork Spareribs $ 2.29 lb. Can. Frozen$1.79 lb.
Boneless Leg of Ham $ 3.99 lb. Can.
1/4 Hind Beef – SPECIAL – Cut & Wrapped $ 3.99 lb. Can.
Canadian Bacon – SPECIAL – $ 6.99 lb. Can. Salt Pork $ 3.99 lb. Can. Smoked Pork Chops $ 4.99 lb. Can. Whole Picnic Ham $ 1.69 lb. Special
Rib Section of Beef Approx. 50-60 lbs. - SPECIAL $ 5.29 lb. Can. 1/2 Beef Cut & Wrapped (350-400 lbs.) $ 3.29 lb. Can.
Beef Long Loin – SPECIAL – Approx. 75-80 lbs. Cut & Wrapped $ 5.09 lb. Can. Homemade Blood Pudding $ 12.00/pan Can.
PIG ROA AVAILABLST ON ORDE E R (allow 12 days
notice)
83 Covey Hill Hemmingford • (450) 247-2130 NEW HOURS: Mon.-Wed. 8-5; Thurs. & Fri. 86; Sat. 8-5; Closed Sun. Reservations Appreciated
OUR BEEF IS NATURALLY RAISED - BLACK ANGUS • RED ANGUS • LIMOUSIN BRAND • “LOCAL FARMS”
31357
I HAVE NICE R NCEOW PRODUCTES RIB STEAKS!!!OAUND TASTE ONY-S! IT Half or Whole Pork
12 - www.the-burgh.com
June 23, 2012
Summer Swim lessons announced PLATTSBURGH — The Town of Plattsburgh announces their summer swimming lesson program schedule as follows: Bus transportation will begin June 25 for swimming instruction for those children from: North Plattsburgh, Treadwells Mills, Cumberland Head and South Plattsburgh. All areas will be bused to the East Morrisonville Beach for instruction Monday through Friday. Instructions will be held from noon to 2 p.m. for these areas with bus pick-ups and times as follows: Cumberland Head - 11:30 a.m. - Corner of Sears Blvd. and Moffett Rd., the Recreation Park, Cumberland Bay Market, Corner of Allen Rd. and Cumberland Head Rd., St. Mary's Church, Gus' Red Hots and Tara Lane. North Plattsburgh - 11:15 a.m. - May Currier Park, Corners of Facteau Avenue, Melody Lane, Graves Lane and Tom Miller Road; Corners of Wallace Hill Rd. and Michelle and Daytona Blvd.; Corners of Wallace Hill Rd and Bell Rd., Vintage Estates and Rasco Rd.; the corner of Military Turnpike and Independence Dr.; and the corner of Wallace Hill Road Extension and Nightengale Drive. South Plattsburgh - 11:25 a.m. –Corner of
South Junction Road and Rt. 22, Corner of Salmon River Road and Rt. 22,Rt. 22 and LTS Homes, Corner of Irish Settlement Road and Pleasant Ridge Road, entrance to Abenaki Trailer Court and Corner of Runway Dr. & Rt. 22. Treadwells Mills - 11:30 a.m., in front of Pine Rest Trailer Court, the Recreation Park, Brown Road, Cross Road and the entrances to Rugar Park. Lessons will also be offered at the Cadyville Beach from 2 to 4 p.m. Parents must provide transportation to this beach. There will be two separate three week sessions this summer: Session 1 will begin June 26 and run through July 13, and Session two will begin – July 16 through August 3. Children in all areas may still register by filling out a registration form at the Town Recreation Department between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. Town of Schuyler Falls children may also enroll in classes at Cadyville or East Morrisonville. Anyone wishing further information about the swimming program is asked to call the Town Recreation Department, at 562-6860.
26070
Births
NOW AVAILABLE
5
Only$
Plus Tax, Shipping & Handling
A COLLECTION OF STORIES & PHOTOGRAPHS
Reflections, photos and stories of the former historic 1929 Lake Champlain Bridge, to its destruction in late December of 2009 — and finally its rebirth as the new, modern structure that exists today.
RADIBEAU — A son, Jacob Robert, was born on June 1, 2012 to Jamie and Jerad Rabideau. MAACK — A son, Owen Arthur, was born on June 1, 2012 to Sara Maack and Justin Supple. PEKRUL — A son, Sebastian James, was born on June 1, 2012 to Jeanne Hall and Michael Pekrul. LASHWAY — A daughter, Kylie Star, was born on June 1, 2012, to Renee and Brian Lashway. GEARHART — A son, Sawyer William, was born on June 3, to Amber and William Gearhart III. DANIELS — A daughter, Adele Catherine, was born on June 9, 2012 to Janel Daniels and Randy Darrah Jr. TYLER — A son, Titan Frederick, was born on June 4, 2012 to Tiffany Lee and Timothy Tyler Jr. PLUMADORE — A son, Adam Douglas, was born on June 4, 2012 to Randi and Mathew Plumadore. BENWARE — A son, Brock Michael, was born on June 4, 2012 to Miranda and Carl Benware. BURRELL — A daughter, Emilyn Rowan was born on June 5, 2012 to Stacy and Mark Burrell Jr. LAROSE — A son, Anthony Stanley Thomas, was born on June 5, 2012 to Misty Stone and Christopher LaRose. PAYRO — A daughter, Abigayle Adell, was born on June 5, 2012 to Erin and Lukas Payro. BARRY — A daughter, Lydia Elizabeth, was born on June 5, 2012 to Melissa Morgan and Jason Barry. VAN NORTWICK — A son, Jace Joseph, was born on June 6, 2012, to Hilary and Philip Van Nortwick. LAMOTTE — A daughter, Brynn Montana, was born on June 5, 2012 to Stephanie Colby. MUSCHERA — A son, Mark Clifford Jr. was born on June 7, 2012 to Genessa Rounds and Mark Muschera. SPOOR — A son, Mathew James, was born on June 7, 2012 to Carly Sweeney and Lee Spoor. COCHIE — A daughter, Abigail Rose, was born on June 8, 2012 to Amara Favero and Jeremy Cochie. CHESBROUGH — A daughter, Aubrey Marie, was born on June 6, 2012 to Nicole and Johnathan Chesbrough. DAVISON — A daughter, Mia Grace was born on June 8, 2012 to Christina and Joshua Davison. HARRIS — A daughter, Kailee Jean,was born on June 8, 2012 to Carla and Jason Harris. PERSUN — A daughter, Kyla Ryanne, was born on June 8, 2012 to Katelyn and Jarrod Persun. HEALY — A son, Owen Christopher, was born on June 8, 2012 to Carrie and Brian Healy.
Mayor’s Cup Regatta seeks sailors PLATTSBURGH — The 35th annual Mayor ’s Cup regatta on July 14 is open to anyone and includes events for cruising, racing and multi-hull classes. The Sunrise Rotary Club and Plattsburgh Mayor Donald Kasprzak will present the coveted Mayor's Cup trophy and other awards at a BBQ immediately following the races at 4 p.m. A day of stiff breezes, good food and great fun are predicted for Rotary's largest community fundraising event. For more information go to mayorscup.com, or contact race organizer Kjell Dahlen at regatta@mayorscup.com.
Order this 130 page collector piece, commemorating our local history of the Lake Champlain Bridge. Get one, or as many as you like for yourself, family member or a friend for as little as $5* each. Order today before they’re gone.
ORDER ONLINE OR COMPLETE THE FORM BELOW. Go to www.denpubs.com/order/bridgebook to order yours today! How many books are you ordering?
Name: Shipping Address:
Quantity
5
$
Only
Memorial pony pull and dinner to take place
Each
The price of each book is $5.00 plus 40¢ sales tax. Shipping & handling is extra: pay $5 for 1-4 books or $11 for 5-10 books.
Town/City State Zip
For large quantity orders, Please call (518) 873-6368 x105
Daytime Phone: E-mail Address:
CHECK PAYABLE TO: DENTON PUBLICATIONS, INC. PLEASE BE SURE TO INCLUDE TAX, SHIPPING & HANDLING.
MAIL YOUR TO ORDER FORM TO: Denton Publications - Bridge Book PO Box 338 • 14 Hand Ave. Elizabethtown, NY 12932
This book is presented by Denton Publications & New Market Press
28459
LYON MOUNTAIN – A memorial benefit for Harry Frenyea will be held on June 24. The event will include a memorial horse and miniature pony pull and spaghetti dinner. The event will be held at the Lyon Mountain Legion on 3958 State Route 374, and will run from 3 to 5:30 p.m. The dinner will include spaghetti, tossed salad, rolls and a dessert. The event will cost $8 for adults, $6 for senior citizens and kids 5-years-old and younger can eat for free. For more information call Jim at 483-7461.
June 23, 2012
www.the-burgh.com - 13
District 21 congressional primaries slated for June 26 as an independent contractor consultant in the area of global trade and logistics. She also worked as a realtor in Arizona from 2005-2011 and specialized in assisting clients during the housing bust and economic crisis. Kellie has been involved in politics and a GOP Activist for the past 8 years in Arizona. She is a strong advocate of border security.
By Shaun Kittle
shaun@denpubs.com PLATTSBURGH — The 21st District congressional primaries will be held June 26, with polls open from noon-9 p.m. A total of two incumbents will be challenging Democratic incumbent Bill Owens this election.
Kellie A. Greene, a Republican, was born in Oswego, NY. She has several degrees: an Associate of Science from Bay Path College in accounting and business administration, a Bachelor of Science from Syracuse University in logistics management, an MBA from Rochester Institute of Technology in international business and a Master of Arts in theology at Fuller Theological Seminary. Greene has worked in international trade, and has spent the last eight years working with manufacturing companies
Author from page 1 “Nothing I would publish.” The 34 year old recently started a project that was to be published, a fictional survival story that takes place in the North Country after the dollar collapses and martial law is declared. “I think that could happen, and it probably will,” Raskin said recently during an interview at his Plattsburgh apartment. “It’s a guy and his dog and shotgun out in the woods.” The book was also turning into a love story when Raskin
CVES from page 1 positions, again, largely due to districts pulling special education students back. A few of those positions were reinstated, but the majority remained vacant. CVES officials stressed that they will continue to offer the same programs, just fewer sections of them. At the same time, CVES, which offers technical training and specialeducation services to 17 school districts in Clinton, Essex, Warren and Washington counties, plans to provide at least two new programs under its special education wing. “I certainly think our special education division is evolving based on our districts’ future needs,” Rissetto said. “That is absolutely not a bad thing. I think we will continue to respond to the needs of our districts, and as their needs change, the services we provide will change.” Rising special education costs have long been a burden for area school districts. When the federal government passed legislation in 1975 ensuring all disabled students received
PLATTSBURGH — The Mayor ’s Cup Boat Parade of Lights seeks entries. Businesses and organizations can join by entering a boat in the 2012 parade, competing in a category just for them. The 35th edition of the Mayor ’s Cup Festival will get underway with decorated boats gliding along the Plattsburgh shore of Lake Champlain. Contestants will compete for bragging rights as the best-looking boat on the lake on Thursday, July 12, at 9 p.m. No boat is too large or too small. This year, any boat can represent a business or community organization. Have a boat, but no team? Have a team, but not boat? We can help. A decorating party will take place before the main event, at 7 p.m. at Wilcox Dock. For more information, contact Jake DeSnyder at parade@mayorscup.com, 569-5595, or go to mayorscup.com.
had a change of heart and switched to the memoir. The Plattsburgh-based book is about a small town with big lessons, though it is not a morality tale. It’s mostly a conversational book about nothing, sort of like a Seinfeld episode. It takes place over the course of a day in Plattsburgh and includes flashbacks to experiences with various people Raskin has encountered in the area. Much of it occurs in the local coffee shop, the Koffee Kat. It’s less aggressive than his previous work, but so is Raskin. Much of that is due to his age and the people he fell in with in Plattsburgh. “I’ve met some of the best people I have ever met in my
entire life,” Raskin said. “Plus, it’s hard to be bitter when you are surrounded by lakes and mountains.” And life is simpler now, normal and quiet, with his feet firmly planted. He runs and bikes daily and hikes with his dog. Raskin plans to complete the new book in September, with a possible publishing date sometime next year. He suspects this book and the novel he started will be the last works he publishes, though he will always write for his own pleasure. “I find that publishing is a great invasion of my privacy,” Raskin said. “Plus, I hate deadlines and being beholden to a publisher.”
Ju ly
17 $ MEGA PASS sponsored by Price Chopper
20
Phil Dirt Presents SURF’S UP “Tribute to the Beach Boys”
8PM Champlain Valley Classic Cruisers Car Show
GARAGE SALE! GARAGE SALE!
GARAGE SALE!! One Person’s Trash Is Another Person’s Treasure
4 LINES ADD ANOTHER ZONE FOR ONLY
~ 22
ND
$9.00
Includes Gate Admission & Free Carnival Rides to use any one day of the fair!!
Wednesday, July 18th
Thursday, July 19th
Front Gate Admission: $8
Front Gate Admission: $8
KENTUCKY HEADHUNTERS All Seats $13 - includes gate admission
8PM CHILDREN’S DAY
Sponsors: Econolodge Inn & Suites, WIRY Hometown Radio, TD Bank, Roberts Sport Center. Age 12 & Under FREE At Dusk Pyrotecnico Display Fireworks sponsored by Reithoffer Shows, Clinton County Fair Sponsors: Econolodge Inn & Suites, 97.5 Eagle Country, TD Bank, Key R-D Trailer Sales $5 Grandstand Admission
HUNTER HAYES COUNTRY CONCERT 8PM Sponsors: 97.5 Eagle Country Radio, Econolodge & Suites Track Seat $23 Grandstand $18 (includes gate admission)
Saturday, July 21st
Sunday, July 22nd
STREET LEGAL TRUCK PULLS 6PM
ADIRONDACK TRACTOR PULL 3PM
DEMOLITION DERBY 1PM & 7PM
Sponsor: Budweiser
Sponsors: Dragoon’s Farm Equipment and NYSEG
Grandstand Admission: $6 each show; $10 Pit Pass (one-time
Grandstand Admission: $5 Adirondack Tractor Pull, $5 Pit Pass
All on the Casella Waste Management Stage in front of the Akwesasne Mohawk Casino Grandstand!
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
Call 9-4237 1-800-9873-6368 -8 OR 518ore informatioenr for m ce an ad ov or to plae phone. th
Your Name: Your Mailing Address:
Your Daytime Phone: Your E-mail Address: PAYMENT INFO:
purchase at 1PM which is admission to both shows) Sponsors: Budweiser, Rent-A-Wreck & 97.5 Eagle Country 31688
CASH
CHECK
CREDIT CARD
Please note: your ad will not run until payment has been received.
Name on Card: Card Type: Card Number:
Write Your Message In The Boxes Below: Exp. Date:
Friday, July 20th Grandstand Admission $5.00/ $5.00 Pitpass for Street Legal Truck Pulls
expressed by area special education directors. The first is a Day Treatment Program, which would serve students with severe mental-health disabilities. This program could prevent them from being shipped out of the area and away from their families, and should be in place halfway through the 2012-13 school year. The second is a Job Target Program, which would provide special-education students with training in fields such as food-service, hospitality and manufacturing. The handson program could be in place by the 2013-14 school year. “There are a number of hotels and factories in the area,” Pombrio said. “Once they leave this program, hopefully they will have employment opportunities.”
(ONLY $5 PER WEEK)
2012 Grand Stand Entertainment: Tuesday, July 17th
will impact administrators, faculty, teaching assistants, clerical and support staff. “In the fall, we will have fewer numbers in the programs we offer,” said Roxanne Pombrio, CVES director of special education. “For example, we now have four 6-1-1 classrooms, and in the fall we will have two. The class will run just as it does currently. If a student needs an aid, that student will have an aid. “The students we have remaining will still get the same level of service.” This year, the special-education department provided services to 209 students, and this fall that number will drop to around 130. Classrooms have dropped from 39 during the 2009-10 school year to an anticipated 12 for the 2012-13 school year. Despite the cuts, CVES is planning to offer two new programs in response to needs
3 WEEKS FOR $15
Passes will go on sale June 4th at the Fair office by calling 561-7998 and also at the Plattsburgh and Champlain Price Chopper June 17th (if you use your Price Chopper Advantage Card, you will save an additional $1.00 on the MEGA PASS (yours for only $19.00) Not Available After July 16th. Can also be purchased online at www.clintoncountyfair.com
Front Gate Admission: $3 (4 years & up)
Boat Parade & light show
Matthew A. Doheny, a Republican, was raised in Alexandria Bay, NY. He has an undergraduate degree from Alleghany College and a law degree from Cornell University. After college, Doheny became Deutsche Bank’s managing director for distressed assets, where he helped purchase large troubled companies and restructure them so they could once again operate independently. He started his own company in 2010 called North Country Capital LLC. The company lends start-up funds to entrepreneurs who don’t have access to traditional funding streams. It also provides working capital to existing businesses to help them grow. Doheny also sits on the boards of two national companies, Bridge Street and YRC Worldwide.
a public education, it had indicated it would reimburse 40 percent of the costs, but to this day that figure has hardly reached 14 percent. The majority of school officials and the public agree such students should be educated and provided the resources required to participate in and benefit from that education, but the cost burden largely falls on schools and local taxpayer ’s shoulders. CVES, in some instances, has been better equipped to provide special education services to area children. However, rising costs and inadequate aid over the past few years have caused school officials to return special education students from CVES to the districts in an attempt to provide them with services at a lower cost. Parents and concerned educators have said some districts do this well, while others are not providing special education students with adequate services now. Parents wonder how a district that previously said it did not have the resources to educate their children will be able to do so now with less money. The most recent reductions at CVES, which are a direct result of these pull-backs,
th
He has taught business at Clarkson University and Jefferson Community College. and is a Flower Memorial Library trustee, a member of the Elks, the Watertown Noon Rotary Club, the North Side Improvement League and the ItalianAmerican Civic Association.
CID#:
ALL ADS WILL APPEAR ON OUR CLASSIFIED NETWORK SITE AT NO ADDITIONAL COST.
Make Check Payable to Denton Publications SEND TO: PO Box 338, Elizabethtown, NY 12932
TheClassifiedSuperstore.com The Classified Superstore is a product of Denton Publications, Spotlight Newspapers, Eagle Newspapers and New Market Press.
26308
Polls for the congressional primaries open at noon around the North Country
14 - www.the-burgh.com
June 23, 2012
Essex County GOP supervisors endorse Doheny for Congress By Keith Lobdell keith@denpubs.com ELIZABETHTOWN — Republican Essex County Supervisors have thrown their support behind Matt Doheny in the race for U.S. Congress. During a press conference June 18 at the Deer ’s Head Inn in Elizabethtown, St. Armand Supervisor Joyce Morency made the official announcement to back the Watertown Republican candidate in advance of the June 26 federal GOP primary. “We will work very hard for him and he will be proud of us,” Morency said. “The supervisors are following the lead of the Republican Committee,” Essex County GOP Chair Ron Jackson said. “This is the second time that we have endorsed him. We feel that he is the best qualified to represent us and to get the jobs issue straightened out and work on getting the economy back on track.” Doheny said that he was grateful for the endorsement. “This endorsement means a lot to me,” Doheny said. “You supervisors are the people who are on the front lines of the challenges that we face. I have met with everyone and we are going to work hard with you to get the economy back on track.” Doheny has also been endorsed by New York State Sen. Betty Little. “We pushed to cut spending and close our multi-billion dollar
Essex County GOP supervisorrs endorse Doheny. deficit in New York,” Little said via a June 11 press release. “Our federal government should be expected to do the same. I have the utmost confidence that Matt Doheny will be a leader in this effort, and that’s why I’m pleased to endorse him.” Doheny is facing a June 26 primary against Kellie Greene in the race top be the Republican nominee for the 23rd Congressional Dis-
trict, a seat that is currently held by Plattsburgh Democrat Bill Owens. Doheny was one of nine candidates who attempted to seek the party nomination after then congressman John McHugh was tabbed to be the Secretary of the Army in 2009, eventually losing out to Dede Scozzafava, who dropped out of the race three days before the election and endorsed
Owens. In 2010, Doheny won his party’s primary against Lake Placid accountant Douglas Hoffman, who then ran as a Conservative and was pointed to as the reason why Doheny lost a close race to Owens after receiving 6 percent of the General Election vote. Also on June 26, three candidates are vying for the Republican nom-
ination to face current Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, including Wendy Long, Bob Turner and George Maragos. Last week, Long received the endorsement of the Essex County GOP and has picked up the majority of endorsements in the campaign.
CONGRATULATIONS TO OUR FATHER’S DAY CONTEST WINNERS!
PATRICIA HARTSHORN OF PLATTSBURGH, NY TO DAME’S LIQUOR STORE
KATIE ZUCKERMAN OF PLATTSBURGH, NY TO GEOFFREY’S PUB
THANK YOU Visit the-Burgh.com
26005
26180
FOR PARTICIPATING AND BE SURE TO WATCH FOR UPCOMING CONTESTS
N O T I C E S •
Email: stephen@denpubs.com
Email: joey@denpubs.com
www.the-burgh.com
26140
Denton Publications in collaboration with participating newspapers, the New York Press Association, and the New York Newspaper Publishers Association provides online access to public notice advertisements from throughout New York and other parts of the country. You can access the legal notices on the publication landing pages under the home button at denpubs.com. WHAT ARE PUBLIC NOTICES? Public Notices are advertisements placed in newspapers by the government, businesses, and individuals. They include: government contracts, foreclosures, unclaimed property, community information and more! 20913
•MY PUBLIC NOTICES•
P U B L I C
P U B L I C
EDITORIAL NEWS Stephen Bartlett, Editor Phone: 561-9680 x223 Fax: 873-6360
• M Y
• M Y
ADVERTISING Joey Painter, Advertising Representative Phone: 561-9680 x103 Fax: 873-6360
MY PUBLIC NOTICES Now Available at... www.denpubs.com
N O T I C E S •
•MY PUBLIC NOTICES•
June 23, 2012
www.the-burgh.com - 15 IMPROV COMEDY PERFORMANCE. Olive Ridley's, 37 Court St., 10 p.m. 3242200.
Thursday, June 28
Friday, June 22
Monday, June 25
SENIOR FITNESS. Clinton County Senior Center, 5139 N. Catherine St., 8:15 a.m. 563-6186, ext. 102. SENIOR ZUMBA. Clinton County Senior Center, 5139 N. Catherine St., 9:30 a.m. 563-6186, ext. 102. MAH JONGG CLASS. Clinton County Senior Center, 5139 N. Catherine St., Noon. 563-6186, ext. 102. MUD & MERLOT CLASS. North Country Cultural Center for the Arts, 23 Brinkerhoff Street, 5:30 - 7:30 p.m. for adults, Ages 21+ years, $25. GARY PEACOCK TUNES AND TRIVIA. Monopole, 7 Protection Ave., 4-7 p.m. 563-2222.
Saturday, June 23 KIDS CLAY CLASS. Youth class for kids age 6 to 12. North Country Cultural Center for the Arts, 23 Brinkerhoff Street, 10 a.m. CHILD SAFETY SEAT CHECK. AAA Northway Office, 20 Booth Drive, 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. 565-4397, carrierem@co.clinton.ny.us. FAT KID RIDE TO TAKE PLACE. John "Fat Kid" Coryea Memorial Ride. 11:30 a.m. North End Harley Davidson, Rte 3, $20 per rider. $10 per passenger. sbart001@plattsburgh.edu. STAR TREK & FRIENDS 'symposium'. North Country Food Co-op, 25 Bridge St. 7:15 p.m. ROADSIDE MYSTIC TO PERFORM. Monopole, 7 Protection Ave., 10 p.m. 563-2222.
Sunday, June 24 SOULFULL YOGA. Soulfull Sunday Yoga Rota Gallery, 19 Clinton St. 11:00 a.m. GENERAL ASSEMBLY MEETS. ROTA Art Gallery, 19 Clinton St. 4 p.m. LEFT AND RIGHT TO PERFORM. ROTA Art Gallery, 19 Clinton St. 7 p.m. $3-$10.
SENIOR FITNESS CLASS. Clinton County Senior Center, 5139 N. Catherine St., 8:15 a.m. 563-6186, ext. 102. QUILTING & SCRABBLE GAME. Clinton County Senior Center, 5139 N. Catherine St., 9 a.m.-12 p.m. 563-6186, ext. 102. MAH JONGG CLASS. Clinton County Senior Center, 5139 N. Catherine St., 12:30 p.m. 563-6186, ext. 102. COMPUTER CLUB. Clinton County Senior Center, 5139 N. Catherine St., 1:30 p.m. 563-6186, ext. 102.
Tuesday, June 26 SENIOR TAI CHI. Clinton County Senior Center, 5139 N. Catherine St., 9:30 a.m. 563-6186, ext. 102. WII BOWLING LEAGUE MEETS. Clinton County Senior Center, 5139 N. Catherine St., 10:30 a.m. 563-6186, ext. 102. SENIOR ZUMBA. Clinton County Senior Center, 5139 N. Catherine St. 10:30 a.m. STAINED GLASS CLASS. Clinton County Senior Center, 5139 N. Catherine St. 1 p.m.
Wednesday, June 27 SENIOR FITNESS CLASS. Clinton County Senior Center, 5139 N. Catherine St., 8:15 a.m. 563-6186, ext. 102. ROTA ORG MEETING. ROTA meeting held every Wednesday, Rota Gallery, 19 Clinton St. 8 p.m. CAREGIVERS GROUP TO MEET. ST. Peter’s Church, 114 Cornelia Street, 6:30-8:30 p.m. OPEN MIC NIGHT WITH MIKE PEDERSEN. Monopole, 7 Protection Ave., 10 p.m. 563-2222.
OSTEO EXERCISE CLASS. Clinton County Senior Center, 5139 N. Catherine St., 9 a.m. 563-6186, ext. 102. STRAWBERRY FEST. Picnic Fare, United Methodist Church, 127 Beekman Street, noon to 7 p.m. AFTERNOON POKER. Clinton County Senior Center, 5139 N. Catherine St., 12:30 p.m. 563-6186, ext. 102. JOURNEY INTO READING. Champlain Centre Mall outside Kay Jewelers, 60 Smithfield Blvd, 561-4999, 4:30 -6:30 p.m. www.journeyintoreading.org RUNNING BOAR TARGET SHOOTING. Plattsburgh Rod and Gun Club, Rte. 9N, $10, $5 for members, 6 p.m. 298-5161. OPEN MIC/POETRY NIGHT. Rota Gallery, 19 Clinton St. 7:30 p.m.
Friday, June 29 SENIOR FITNESS. Clinton County Senior Center, 5139 N. Catherine St., 8:15 a.m. 563-6186, ext. 102. SENIOR ZUMBA. Clinton County Senior Center, 5139 N. Catherine St., 9:30 a.m. 563-6186, ext. 102. MAH JONGG CLASS. Seniors Citizens Council of Clinton County Senior Center, 5139 N. Catherine St., Noon. 563-6186, ext. 102. GARY PEACOCK TUNES AND TRIVIA. Monopole, 7 Protection Ave., 4-7 p.m. 563-2222. SHAMELESS STRANGERS TO PERFORM. Monopole, 7 Protection Ave., 10 p.m. 563-2222. IMPROV COMEDY PERFORMANCE. Olive Ridley's, 37 Court St., 10 p.m. 324-2200.
Saturday, June 30 KIDS CLAY CLASS. Youth class for kids age 6 to 12. North Country Cultural Center for the Arts, 23 Brinkerhoff Street, 10 a.m. PRINT MAKING CLASS. Meditative and Transformative Printmaking, North Country Cultural Center for the Arts, 10 a.m.-noon. $25. SINECURE TO PERFORM. Monopole, 7 Protection Ave., 10 p.m. 563-2222.
PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE • PUZZLE PAGE
DOUBLE-O SEVEN By Gareth Bain 1 6 11 15 19 20 21 22 23 26 27 28 29 31 32 33 34 42 46 47 48 51 53 54 55 56 57 59 63 66 67 68 71 76
ACROSS Mell Lazarus comics matriarch Clublike weapons Latin trio member Son of Homer Bite the bullet, e.g. Inundated Chorus syllables On the quieter side Where chicks learn their ABCs? Colorful horse Keying in Switch ending President after Calvin Critical hosp. area Witticism Bizet’s “Habanera,” e.g. Midday duelers? Mushrooms, say Irish-born actor Milo Nina who had a 1959 hit with “I Loves You, Porgy” Slow-on-the-uptake response Little green men Web or sky follower Do some gliding She played WKRP’s Jennifer Parka feature Chapter of a sort Establishment boasting whiskey and pedicures? They connect stories Mailing H.Q. Champagne toast? Part of a gig Lowdown on Wrigley’s? Little green men
77 79 80 82 87 88 92 93 94 96 98 100 103 104 105 108 111 112 113 116 118 123 124 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134
British noblemen __ Jima Mistreat Deposit on a brownstone entrance? Literary preposition Antarctica’s __ Ice Shelf Barflies Family depiction Unprocessed Peloponnesian War side Yellow turnip Hot pot spot Special forces unit Ring centerpiece Quaint caption for a cavalry photo? Highlander Facilities, for short Greek securities org. Lady in a harbor Yemeni seaport Decisive experiment Avocado’s shape Question about a noisy pet owl? Brain part Whenever Bottled benefactor Wields a hoe God of hawks? Retired boomers Barack’s second High Court appointee Grammy winner Jones
DOWN 1 Lecturer’s aid 2 God with raven messengers 3 Register freebie 4 Statistical calculation 5 “__ Pie” 6 Wine buys 7 Like happy tails 8 Airport rental 9 Italian noble family
Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit, 1 to 9
10 Civil War general with a Shawnee middle name 11 “Jo’s Boys” author 12 Red Guard leader 13 Dual-purpose island word 14 Become thinner 15 Campy 1968 Fonda title role 16 Burn remedy 17 Seat warmer? 18 Hiking gear item 24 Wealthy, in Juárez 25 “For __”: Beatles’ song 30 “The Avengers” co-star 34 Saver of pairs 35 Scandinavian capital 36 Indiana neighbor 37 They may be pressing 38 Antacid option 39 Docs’ lobby: Abbr. 40 Pyramid, perhaps 41 Chimney schmutz 43 Two-time Oscar nominee for portraying Henry II 44 Triumph against odds 45 Tours of duty 49 Small sum of money, slangily 50 Org. with many unhappy returns? 52 12-time Pro Bowl NFLer Junior 54 Finland, in Finland 58 Umbrella spoke 60 Spur 61 15-Across’s Squishee provider 62 Egyptian snakes 64 Recipe amt. 65 Icky stuff 68 Mr. and Mr. 69 Give the cook a day off, perhaps 70 Cavern 72 Woolly mammal 73 Worked the fields 74 José’s hooray
75 Partly mine 78 California’s most populous county 81 Poets’ Muse 83 Gp. to benefit students 84 Bol. neighbor 85 “Woo-hoo!” 86 Salt Lake City daily, briefly 89 One dunked after school 90 One of the Berenstains 91 Wal-Mart wholesale club 95 Monopoly abbr.
97 99 100 101 102 106 107 109 110 113
Computer scrolling key Berenstain critter Bit of sports news Dish best served cold, so it’s said Respiratory conduit Causes to beam “Dream on!” Value system Rhône’s capital Kinks hit whose title is spelled out in the lyrics
114 115 117 118 119 120 121 122 125
Novello of old films Ruth not in the Bible Holiday song Votin’ no on Palm smartphone Observer Happy Meal option Fanny Mo. known for color changes 126 A in French?
This Month in History - JUNE 22nd - Doughnuts are created. (1847) 23rd - US Secret Service is created. (1860) 25th - Lt Colonel George Custer and the 7th Cavalry are wiped out by Sioux and Cheyenne Indians at the Battle of Little Big Horn. (1876) 26th - The Saint Lawrence Seaway is opened. (1959)
SOLUTIONS TO LAST WEEK ’ S PUZZLES !
(Answers Next Week)
16 - www.the-burgh.com
ALDEN (CHUCK, COACH) DUMAS AUG 18, 1940 - JUN 11, 2012 Alden (Chuck, Coach) DuHe was an author, publishmas of Keene Valley, and foring two novels: an Adironmer well-known teacher, dack action-adventure: Mists coach and athletic director at of the Couchsacrage, and a Keene Central School died western: Sons of the DoubleMonday June 11, 2012 at his J. Both are available on the home. Internet and at the Dumas He was born on August 18, home. 1940 in Tupper Lake, NY, the He was a collector of movies, son of Leonard Dumas and especially vintage ones. He Margaret (Hinkson) Dumas. had a massive collection of Besides his loving wife, early rock, pop, and country Pauline, he leaves a son Matt music. He did some gigs as a and his wife Barbara of DJ. Keene, NY; and a son Andy He and Pauline are founding and his wife Michelle of Jefmembers of the Wild Center ferson, NY; plus four grandMuseum in Tupper Lake, children, (Whom he was very N.Y. proud of): Alexandra, BranHe was a member of the don, Alexa Ruth, and Kara Keene Valley Fire DepartGrace. ment for over 25 years, acting He was predeceased by his as Secretary and a member of parents, a brother, Frank, and the Board of Directors as a beloved son, Jay. well. Alden graduated from TupHe and Pauline toured the per Lake High School in USA and Canada, basically 1958. He participated in living in their pick-up truck. many sports, he was a class They enjoyed great experiofficer, as well as being a ences in nearly every state in member of the drama club the union. Their last journey and the National Honor Sociwas a road tour of Alaska ety, among other things. He and a cruise down the Pacific graduated from Cortland coast to Vancouver. State in 1962, with a major in Pauline and he celebrated 50 physical education and a miyears of marriage in June nor in science. 2011 with a wonderful party In 1961 he married Pauline at the Ausable Inn in Keene Passino, in Tupper Lake, iniValley. Many friends, relatiating one of the greatest tives, and former students atlove affairs in history. tended; some traveling long In the fall of 1962 he took a distances. job teaching science at McHe was proud of his life's Graw High School in Cortwork, very proud of his familand County. He also ly, and all of the friends he coached soccer and basketmade down through the ball. years. During his long battle In 1970, he arrived at Keene with ALS he was very appreCentral School in Keene Valciative of all of the messages ley, teaching gym classes as he received on Facebook and well as classroom assignemail. ments. He also served as Calling hours will be athletic director, and coached Wednesday June 13, 2012 both boys and girls teams in from 4:00 to 7:00 PM at the soccer and basketball. He WM Marvin Funeral Home coached boys' baseball as in Elizabethtown. A funeral well. He developed impresservice will be held Thursday sive teams at both McGraw June 14, 2012 at 1:00 PM from and Keene Central. the Keene Central School He was instrumental in the Gymnasium. Burial will be establishment of National private and at the conveHonor Society chapters to nience of the family. two schools: McGraw High Due to his diagnosis ALS, he School in 1966, and Keene fought through anxiety and a Central in 1982. deep depression. In lieu of Once he arrived in Keene flowers, you may consider Valley; he and his son Matt sending a donation to were enthralled by the high The ALS Association Greater peaks. Alden is 46er #840, New York Chapter (800)-672joining eight-year-old Matt, 8857) 42 Broadway, Suite who finished with him. 1724, New York, NY 10004 Alden had many hobbies, inBe sure to mention the Alden cluding hunting, fishing, Dumas family (c/o Pauline) bowling, family tree rewith your contribution with search, baseball history, and their address (P.O. Box 535, Civil War battle history. He Keene Valley, NY 12943) was president of Packard For online condolences Club, a hunting camp in the please visit wmmarvins.com. western Adirondacks. ELIZABETH F. VOGAN NOV 12, 1912 - JUN 13, 2012 Elizabeth F. Vogan, age 99, great grandchild. She was a died June 13, 2012. She was member of and active in born in Geneva, NY, NovemMooers Wesleyan Church ber 27, 1912 to George E. and where she taught Sunday Louise Oughterson Fordon. School and Release Time Mrs. Vogan grew Classes and was up on a dairy s e c r e t a r y-t r e a farm near Genesurer of Wesva and graduatleyan Women for ed from Geneva 40 years. High School and She enjoyed William Smith reading, doing College. She word puzzles, completed 24 poetry, letter hours of library writing, crochetcourses at Geneing, flower arseo State Teachranging, and ers College. She keeping a jourtaught English at Mooers nal. High School for three years She was pre-deceased by her and later substituted in Enparents and a brother and glish and library in area sister. schools. She was the librarian Calling hours will be held at Mooers Free Library for 40 Friday, June 22 from 2 to 4 years. and 7 to 9 p.m. at the R. W. She married Paul E. Vogan Walker Funeral Home, 69 June 22, 1937 who died in Court St., Plattsburgh. A fuMay, 2007. Their three sons neral service will be held at and two daughters survive: Mooers Wesleyan Church on Robert (Ruth) of Orchard June 23 at 10:30 a.m. Park, NY; John (Madli) of Burial will follow in RiverCandiac, Quebec; Carolyn side Cemetery in Mooers. Tysinger of Clayton, CA; Donations in her memory James Vogan of Orchard may be given to Mooers Free Park, NY; and Pamela Library or Mooers Wesleyan (Richard) Lynch of Oneida, Church. NY. She is also survived by Online condolences may be 12 grandchildren, 26 great made at grandchildren, and 1 great www.rwwalkerfh.com.
Help Wanted Appliances pp
For Sale Legals General Financial Services Garage g Sales
Equipment q p
Real Estate Automotive Apartments p For Rent Wanted
theclassifiedsuperstore.com
Free
On the go?
So are we!
Scan this QR-Code from your mobile device, and search our classifieds from anywhere.
20915
OBITUARIES
June 23, 2012
Sell it local or sell it regionally! Call 1-800-989-4237 x201 today! or visit our self-service site at www.theclassifiedsuperstore.com APPLIANCE BLOWN HEAD GASKET? ANY VEH icle repair yourself. State of the art 2-Component chemical process. Specializing in Cadillac Northstar Overheating. 100% guaranteed. 1866-780-9041 www.RXHP.com
AUTOMOTIVE SHOP EARLY,SHOP LATE! Early or Late Find it or sell it in the Classifieds. Log on anytime! theclassifiedsuperstore.com
BLACKTOP REMINGTON BLACKTOP a third generation paving company serving the Adirondacks and capital region for over 40 yrs all work guaranteed , fully insured call or email Kris for a free estimate 518-729-8263 remingtonblacktop@yahoo.com
HOME IMPROVEMENT ELIMINATE YOUR heating bills. OUTDOOR WOOD FURNACE from Central Boiler. Adirondack Hardware Company 518-834-9790 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 ROUGH CUT White Pine Lumber 2x4x16 @ $4.79 ea. 2x6x16 @ $7.20 ea. 1x6x12 @ $2.70 ea. Picked up at Maicus Mill 518-647-5170
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS $179 Installed. Double Hung Tilt-ins, Lifetime Warranty,Energy Star tax credit available. Call Now! 1-866272-7533www.usacustomwindow s.com
INSURANCE PERMANENT LIFE INSURANCE Qualify to age 86. Fast. Easy. Few Questions. No Exam! 1-800-9383439, x24; 1-516-938-3439, x24
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 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
APARTMENT E-TOWN 1 BR/1 BA, Second floor, convenient location, $600 inc utilities call 518-944-0734 or email throwawaypups@aol.com
VACATION PROPERTY
HELP WANTED
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
**2012 POSTAL JOBS!** $14 TO $59 hour + Full Federal Benefits. No Experience Required. NOW HIRING! Green Card OK. 1-866593-2664, Ext 107.
GARAGE SALE/ BARN SALE ATTN: GARAGE SALE ENTHUSIASTS! Buying or selling second-hand treasures?The NYS Department of State's Division of Consumer Protection, in conjunction with the Free Community Papers of New York, recommends checking the following websites to help assure that the item has not been recalled or the subject of a safety warning: http:/www.recalls.gov and the Consumer Product Safety Commission at www.cpsc.gov. For other important recall and product safety information visit the Division of Consumer Protection at www.dos.ny.gov CAZENOVIA, HUGE MULTI-FAM 4800 Lincklaen RD, 6/22-6/24, 8A4P NEW Creative Memories, Infant, Child & Maternity items, Household, Gifts & MUCH MORE!!
YARD SALE June 23rd & June 24th 9am3pm, Toys, Tools, A little of everything. 35 Jackson Street, Keeseville, NY
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
HOME WESTPORT HOME for Rent, 2 bdrm, 1 bath, security deposit & references required. Call for more info 518-962-8957 or 518-570-9043 CLEAN SWEEP and free yourself from those unwanted items.
MA$$IVE CA$H FLOW Returning Calls, No Selling, Tax Free. For proof leave message.Training/Support daily. 1-641-715-3900 Ext. 59543# $294.00+ DAILY MAILING POSTCARDS! Guaranteed Legit Work! Register Online! www.ThePostcardGuru.com Earn $95/Hr Using Your PC! www.FreeJobPosition.com Big Paychecks Paid Every Friday! www.LegitCashJobs.com ATTN: COMPUTER WORK. Work from anywhere 24/7. Up to $1,500 Part Time to $7,500/ mo. Full Time. Training provided. www.workservices3.com EXPERIENCED & DEPENDABLE CARPENTERS Wanted. Long-term employment.Established, reputable, 40-year old company. Clyde, Batavia, Homer,Albany areas. Medical/Dental/Life insurance. Vacation & holiday pay. Call 1-800 -328-3522 or applyonline: www.fingerlakesconstruction.com. Drug-free workplace. EOE
90045
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 START IMMEDIATELY: Earn up to $150/Day shopping undercover. No ExperienceNeeded. Call now 1888-292-1329.
CAREER TRAINING 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. VETERANS...POST 911 & V.R.A.P. [Age 35- 60] Use your educational Benefits for C.D.L.A. Training [Tractor/Trailer]. National Tractor Trailer School [NTTS] Liverpool NY, Branch in Buffalo 1-800-243-9300 www.ntts.edu www.ntts.edu/programs/disclosures 90044
ACTORS/MOVIE EXTRAS needed immediately! $150-$300/day depending on job. No experience, all looks needed. 1800-561-1762 Ext A-104 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 (866)296-7093 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 DRIVERS! CDLTRANINGNOW.COM accepting applications 16 day company paid CDL training. No experience needed. 1-800-991-7531 www.CDLTrainingNow.com DRIVERS- GREAT Pay, quarterly safety bonus. Hometime choices. Steady freight, full or part-time. Safe, clean, modern trucks. CDLA, 3 months current OTR experience. 800-414-9569 www.driveknight.com DRIVERS: DEDICATED Runs with Consistent Freight, Top Pay, Weekly Home-Time & More! Werner Enterprises: 1-800-3972645 EARN UP to $500 a day! We're hiring 10,000 people across America No training required, just a home computer! Featured on CNN. Apply today! www.PaidWingMan.com HELP WANTED The Clinton, Essex, Warren, Washington BOCES Is Currently Accepting Applications For The Following Anticipated Positions: AIRFRAME & POWER PLANT TEACHERS 1 Full Time and/or 1 Part Time Day and/or Evening Session 10 Month School Year Plattsburgh Satellite Campus FAA Airframe & Power Plant License with Minimum of 5 Years' Experience, NYS Teacher Certification in Airframe Maintenance & Repair 7-12, and NYS Teacher Certification in Power Plant Maintenance & Repair 7-12 .50 VEHICLE MECHANICAL REPAIR TEACHER Part Time/10 Month School Year CV-TEC/Mineville Campus Qualifications: NYS Teacher certification in Vehicle Mechanical Repair and a minimum of five (5) years of experience in automotive repair Salary: Per Contract .50 MARINE ACADEMY INSTRUCTOR Part Time/10 Month School Year Ticonderoga Central High School Qualifications: NYS Teacher Certification in Motorcycle, Marine & Outdoor Power Equipment 7-12 Salary: Per Contract Reply By: July 6, 2012 Effective Date: September, 2012 Send Application (obtained from Human Resources Office or From Website: CVES.Org), Resume, Copy of Certification/License, Copy of FAA License (For Airframe & Power Plant Teacher), Letter of Intent, and 3 Letters of Recommendation, to: Rachel Rissetto CVES P.O. Box 455 Plattsburgh, NY 12901 (518) 536-7316 Email: boyea_kim@cves.org BOCES is an EO/AAE
June 23, 2012
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 NEW TO TRUCKING? Your new career starts now! *$0 Tuition Cost *No Credit Check *Great Pay & Benefits. Short employment commitment required. Call: (866)304-9526 www.joinCRST.com 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
ESSEX COUNTY Anticipated Vacancy for a Aging Services Aide, Last Date to submit applications is June 22nd, 2012. For applications and more information contact Essex County Personnel (518)873-3360 or at http:// www.co.essex.ny.us/personneljob s.asp HOUSEKEEPER/ASSISTANT FOR Westport Area, PT, flexible hrs., reliable, experience preferred. References required, able to start immediately, SERIOUS INQUIRES ONLY! Please call 518 -962-4688.
ADOPTIONS ADOPT: LOTS of LOVE & blessings to share! Let us be the answer to your prayers for your baby. Wendy & Tim 1-800-4095224. Expenses paid LOOKING TO EXPAND OUR FAMILY through adoption. If you are pregnant and considering adoption, call 1-866-918-4482. www.lindaanddave.com PREGNANT, SCARED, NEED help? Licensed agency offers free confidential counseling, financial assistance, guidance, opened/ closed adoption, choice of loving, pre-approved families. Call Joy: 866-922-368. www.ForeverFamilies 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
WE'LL FIND the perfect employee and make you the hero! Office /Clerical, Light Industrial Professional/Technical Managerial Call today 518-566-6061 A/C TECHNICIAN WANTED IMMEDIATELY! Highly competitive wages w/unlimited OT and earning potential. Great benefits! Apply in person at: M.A. Jerry & Co., Inc. 4365 Rt.22 Plattsburgh
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
ANTIQUES/ COLLECTIBLES CLASSIC CAR NEEDED Feature your Classic Car in a Movie!Looking for 1930's-1950's cars and pick up trucks to feature in film, Also seeking Retro JUKEBOX. Send pics to: fortapachefilm@gmail.com Call 310-729-3996
WANTED "CONTRACT" Physical Therapist for Essex County, Cert. Home Health Agency. Contact: Sarnia for further info. 518-8733540
ANNOUNCEMENTS
AT&T U-VERSE JUST $29.99/MO! Bundle Internet+Phone+TV & SAVE. Up to $300BACK! (Select plans). Limited Time CALL 1-800437-4195
FREE DESIGNER NURSING COVERS made by moms. Six styles, great gift! Use code'freexyz' www.Modest-Mom.com
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
APPLIANCES
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 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 PSYCHIC SOURCE: FIND OUT WHAT LIES AHEAD with a psychic reading! New members buy a 5minute reading for $5 and get 5 additional minutes absolutely FREE. Call Now1-888-803-1930. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Entertainment only. 18 and over. RUSSETT/FARRITOR ENGAGEMENT/WEDDING Barbara Ann and Francis Joseph Russett of Baldwinsville, NY, are pleased to announce the engagement of their daughter, Karen Marie, to Bret William Farritor, son of CJ and Robert Burrows of Indio, CA and Jean and John McKinley of Vista, CA. The couple was engaged in Niagara Falls, Ontario in April. Karen is a graduate of C.W. Baker High School, Onondaga County Community College and holds undergraduate and graduate degrees from Columbia College. She is employed with Onondaga County Child Protective Services. Bret is a magna cum laude graduate of both Palomar College and California State University, San Bernardino College of Social and Behavioral Sciences and attended Western State University College of Law. He is a former San Diego Transit Officer and a retired United States Army noncommissioned officer. The couple will wed in December, 2012. Attendants will be, maid of honor, Karissa Marie, daughter of the bride and best man, Jesse David, son of the bride.
AIR CONDITIONER Kenmore 8,000 BTU. Very good condition. 518-251-2511
ELECTRONICS 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! BUNDLE & SAVE on your CABLE, INTERNET PHONE, AND MORE. High Speed Internet starting at less than $20/ mo. CALL NOW! 800-291-4159
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 LAWSUIT CASH Auto Accident? Cases Qualify? Get CASH before your case settles! Fast Approval. Low Fees. (866) 709-1100 or www.glofin.com
FOR SALE ’09EVOLO RS2 Custom Carbon 55cm Road Race Bike Hi-modulus carbon,1050gram weight, Alpha QCS-10 carbon fork with carbon steerer - Professionally maintained, excellent shape Paid $3775 $1,500.00 518-3592469
SAVE AT LEAST 7% OFF YOUR GAS & ELECTRIC bill GUARANTEED!! No cost/obligation. 1 -585295-3671 www.gogreenman.joinambit.com
1972 GRAN TORINO runs, needs work, $4000 or best reasonable offer; 7140 Hesston Chopper, hay & corn head, $1,575; Chevy Van 30 Travelmaster camper $2800. 518-962-4394
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
24’ ROUND POOL new liner, new pump, excellent condition, includes 14'x8' deck & all pool accessories, $1,700 OBO. 518-962-4688
KOI FOR SALE-BEAUTIFUL STANdard & Butterfly Koi. All Varieties. Quantity Discounts. Pond Supplies! 1-516-809-6771 CAR TIRES AND RIMS 4- black wall P185R 14 inch tires mounted on black rims. Tires are in good shape. $200.00. 518494-7183 CLARINET, VIOLIN, FLUTE, TRUMPET, Amplifier, Fender Guitar $75 each. Upright Bass, Cello, Saxophone, French Horn, Drums $189 each. Others 4-sale 1-516377-7907 FULL 10X15 STORAGE UNIT Have a 10X15 rental storage unit full of muliple items which I want to sell all for one price. Stuff can be resold for profit or do as you wish. Feel free to contact me for more info. $1500. Will dicker. 518-297-6656 MEMORY FOAM THERAPEUTIC NASA MATTRESSES T-$299 F-$349 Q-$399 K-$499 ADJUSTABLES - $799 FREE DELIVERY LIFETIME WARRANTY 90 NIGHT TRIAL 1-800-ATSLEEP1800-287-5337 WWW.MATTRESSDR.COM
AT&T U-VERSE for just $29.99/mo! SAVE when you bundle Internet+Phone+TV and get up to $300 BACK! (select plans). Limited Time Call NOW! 877-276-3538 ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from Home. *Medical, *Business, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Call 800-510-0784 www.CenturaOnline.com ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from home. *Medical, *Business, *Criminal Justice, *Hospitality, Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV certified. Call 888 -201-8657 www.CenturaOnline.com CA$H PAID-UP TO $27/BOX for unexpired, sealed DIABETIC TEST STRIPS! 1 DAY PAYMENT & PREPAID shipping. SE HABLA ESPANOL. Emma 1888-776-7771. www.Cash4DiabeticSupplies.com CASH FOR CARS, Any Make or Model! Free Towing. Sell it TODAY. Instant offer: 1-800-8645784
RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT, for sale, stove, pots & chairs etc. Call for more info. 518-359-3310 after 4pm
CASH FOR CARS: All Cars/Trucks Wanted. Running or Not! Top Dollar Paid. We Come To You! Any Make/Model. Call For Instant Offer: 1-800-864-5960
SUNMARK 4 arm crutch, new, never used, $40. 518-359-9594 Ask for Lynn.
FINISH HIGH School at home in a few weeks. First Coast Academy, 1 -800-658-1180x130. www.fcahighschool.org
WELL PUMP Gould, 1 HP, 4 months old, $600.00. 518-5760012
HELP! I’VE FALLEN & I Can’t GetUP! You or a loved one live alone? Get Immediate Help in an Emergency! Call LifeAlert Now-FREE Info!Call-800-916-2138
GENERAL **OLD GUITARS WANTED!** Fender, Gibson, Martin, Gretsch, Prairie State, Euphonon, Larson, D'Angelico, Stromberg, Rickenbacker, and Mosrite. Gibson Mandolins/Banjos. 1930's thru 1970's TOP CASH PAID! 1-800-401-0440 AIRLINE CAREERS begin here - Become an Aviation Maintenance Tech. FAA approved training. Financial aid if qualified Housing available. Job placement assistance. Call AIM (888)6861704 AIRLINE CAREERS begin here Become an Aviation Maintenance Tech. FAA approved training. Financial aid if qualified - Housing available. Job placement assistance. Call AIM (866)453-6204 ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from Home. *Medical, *Business, *Criminal Justice, *Hospitality. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. Call 800-494-3586 www.CenturaOnline.com
LIMITED TIME! Bundle DIRECTV® service & High-Speed Internet and Save! Call DirectStarTV - Authorized DIRECTV Dealer: 1-888-6626598. Ask about current offers MEDICAL CAREERS begin here - Online training for Allied Health and Medical Management. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV certified. Call 800 -510-0784 www.CenturaOnline.com MEET SINGLES right now! No paid operators, just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call now 1 -877-737-9447 MEET SINGLES right now! No paid operators, just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call now 1-888909-9905
The Classified Superstore
1-800-989-4237
90041
90043
75434
HELP WANTED
www.the-burgh.com - 17
90042
18 - www.the-burgh.com
June 23, 2012
REVERSE MORTGAGES -NO mortgage payments FOREVER! Seniors 62+! Government insured. No credit/income requirements. Free 28 pg. catalog. 1-888-660 3033 All Island Mortgage SAWMILLS FROM only $3997.00MAKE & SAVE MONEY with your own bandmill- Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. FREE Info/DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com 1800-578-1363 Ext.300N
WORK ON JET ENGINES - Train for hands on Aviation Maintenance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified - Job placement assistance. Call AIM (866) 854-6156.
HEALTH AFFORDABLE DENTAL PLANS from $9.95/month. Save 15%50%. Not insurance! Call Toll Free 1-866-213-5387. www.connectionbenefitgroup.com CLEAN SWEEP and free yourself from those unwanted items.
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
WEIGHTLOSS MEDICATIONS Phentermine, Phendimetrazine, etc. Office visit, one-month supply for $80! 1-631-462-6161; 1-516754-6001; www.MDthin.com
LAWN & GARDEN BRUSH HOG Model EFM600. Used 1 year, like new. Finish mower. 518-570-8837 $1,000
PRIVACY HEDGE, Windbreak, Cedar Tree, Evergreen Mail Order $7.50, Delivery, Installation Other Species Available! Services Available in NY, NJ, & New England. CALL 1800-889-8238 or 518 -314-1446 discounttreefarm.com
WANTED TO BUY BUYING EVERYTHING! Furs, Coins, Gold, Antiques, Watches, Silver, Art, Diamonds."The Jewelers Jeweler Jack" 1-917-696-2024 By Appointment. Lic-Bonded. CA$H PAID- up to $26/Box for unexpired, sealed DIABETIC TEST STRIPS. Hablamos Espanol. 1-800 -371-1136 MINERALS WANTS to purchase minerals and other oil and gas interests. Send details to P.O. Box 13557 Denver, Co. 80201 WANTED ALL MOTORCYCLES, & Memorabilia pre 1980, $Top CASH$ PAID! Running or not. 1315-569-8094 WANTED UNEXPIRED DIABETIC TEST STRIPS UP TO $26/BOX. PRE PAID SHIPPING LABELS. HABLAMOS ESPANOL! 1-800-266 -07002 www.SellDiabeticStrips.com WANTS TO purchase minerals and other oil & gas interests. Send details P.O. Box 13557, Denver, Co 80201 WINDOWS - DOORS WANTED Will pay CASH for good working windows, doors and most other building materials. Will buy entire lots. 518-524-5456 or email at salvage4cash@yahoo.com
DOGS 8 WEEK OLD Boxer Puppies, all Brindles, vet checked, $800 each. Call 518-5242947 AKC PAPILLON 6 Months. Playful spayed female, all shots up to date. Must have loving home only. $500. 518324-5179
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
SINGLE-FAMILY HOME GREAT FAMILY HOME IN ALTONA, 10 ACRES! 3BD/2BA Country setting & hunting. 1750sqft, Built '96, addition w/ metal roof - '07. 2 car gar, Lg yard. F/B decks. Maintained field could be used for horses. $147,000 Call 493-3989
VACATION PROPERTY FISHING, HUNTING HIDEAWAY. Access to Canonsville Reservoir. Lakehouse Properties. Country Homes. Big Diamond Real Estate 1 -607-843-6988 www.bigdiamondre.com (607) 843-6988
APPLIANCES BATH TUB Soaking tub with front apron. Oval in rectangle. Built in armrests. Measures about 60 x 48. Excellent condition. $99 518-962-8840
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 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 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 CANCER FUND of AMERICA to help SUPPORT CANCER PATIENTS. Tax Deductible. Next Day Towing. Receive Vacation Voucher. Call 7 Days 1-800-835-9372 DONATE YOUR CAR Fast Free Pickup. Running or Not. Live Operators - 7 Days! Help yourself and the Cancer Fund of America. Call Now 888-317-7257
LAND
AUTO WANTED
5 ACRES ON WEST BASS POND $19,900. 8 Acres Waterfront home, $99,000. Financing. www.LandFirstNY.com 1-888-683 -2626
CASH FOR CARS AND TRUCKS. Get A Top Dollar INSTANT Offer! Running or Not! 1-888-416-2208 (888) 416-2208
•MY PUBLIC NOTICES•
21500
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
F1B GOLDENDOODLE puppies black, chocolate. Vet checked, 1st shots. Ready to go. (518)6430320 or cjeiwray@juno.com
•MY PUBLIC NOTICES•
20956
TAKE VIAGRA? SAVE $500! 100mg,/Cialis 20mg. 40+4 FREE, PILLS . Only $99.00 Discreet. .1 -888-797-9024
CASE SC Farm Tractor $500 Firm. (518) 547-8730.
VERMONT (802) 247.......................Brandon 372....................Grand Isle 388...................Middlebury 425......................Charlotte 434....................Richmond 438...............West Rutland 453.......Bristol/New Haven 462......................Cornwall 475.........................Panton 482....................Hinesburg 545...................Weybridge 655......................Winooski 658....................Burlington 758........................Bridport 759.......................Addison 654,655,656,657,658,660, 860,862,863,864,865,951, 985....................Burlington 877...................Vergennes 769,871,872,878,879 ..................Essex Junction 893...........................Milton 897....................Shoreham 899......................Underhill 948..........................Orwell 888....................Shelburne
TAKE VIAGRA /CIALIS?40 100MG/ 20mg Pills + 4 Free. Only $99! Save $500.00. Call 1-888-7968878
MY PUBLIC NOTICES Now Available at... www.denpubs.com Denton Publications in collaboration with participating newspapers, the New York Press Association, and the New York Newspaper Publishers Association provides online access to public notice advertisements from throughout New York and other parts of the country. You can access the legal notices on the publication landing pages under the home button at denpubs.com. WHAT ARE PUBLIC NOTICES? Public Notices are advertisements placed in newspapers by the government, businesses, and individuals. They include: government contracts, foreclosures, unclaimed property, community information and more!
20914
•MY PUBLIC NOTICES•
REACH OVER 20 million homes nationwide with one easy buy! Only $2,395 per week for a 25 word classified! For more information go to www.naninetwork.com
TAKE VIAGRA/ CIALIS? Save $500.00! Get 40 100mg/ 20mg Pills, for only-$99! +4Bonus Pills FREE! #1 Male Enhancement. 1-800-213-6202
28989
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
GENERAL
•MY PUBLIC NOTICES•
North Country Telephone Exchange Directory (518)
TOP CASH FOR CARS, Any Car/ Truck, Running or Not. Call for INSTANT offer: 1-800-454-6951
BOATS 1974 STARCRAFT ALUMINUM 15 Foot BOAT. 1984 Evinrude 28 H.P. Motor Boat, Motor and Trailer, $750.00. Call 315-492-4655 and Leave Message. (315) 4924655 1977 156 GLASTRON Boat with 70 HP Johnson motor, with trailer, excellent condition. $3000. 518-359-8605 KAYAK NEW. Pungo 140 Wilderness. Color is sand. $700. 518-576-0012.
June 23, 2012
www.the-burgh.com - 19
BOATS 1985 17 1/2’ open bow, full canvas, in/out board motor, new seats, interior, Shoreline trailer included, great condition, $3400 OBO. 518-5630983 or 518-593-5408 2001 SUPRA SANTERA low hrs., mint cond., great ski wake board boat, beautiful trailer included, $25,000. 518-354-8089 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 HEWITT PONTOON BOAT Lift, model# 1501, sits on the bottom of the lake. Make an Offer. 518-891-2767 Leave Message on Mail Box 1.
CARS 1952 DESOTO White/Blue, no rust, small Hemi,, great project car. Serious inquires only. $3500. 518-962-4688 2005 DODGE NEON auto, 40,000 miles, Red, new brakes, radiator, good on gas mileage, $3,000. Call: (518) 5231681
1989 TOYOTA SUPRA fully loaded, all electric, all power, 5 spd., hatch back, sunroof, runs good, $4500. 113 Flat Rock, Morrisonville, NY. 518-563-9967
2007 FORD Mustang Coupe, never seen Winter, 6000 + miles, show room condition, premium stereo, CD, $15,000 FIRM. 802-236-0539 Call: (802) 236-0539
1999 VOLVO V-70 Station Wagon, 207,000 miles, Green. Asking $2300 OBO. 518310-0622
HEAVY EQUIPMENT 2008 bws tagolong equipment trailer ez2 load xhd 25 tons with tilt never used new was 26000 asking $18,000.00 518-5241956
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.
2001 VOLKSWAGEN BEETLE Black 2 door. New tires, rotors, brakes catalytic converter. $4,500 Call: (518) 946-7550 2004 HONDA CIVIC DX Green/Beige 80,000 kms, Good condition. Very little damage to interior/exterior $7,000 OBO Call: (518) 420-3445
HEAVY EQUIPMENT 2003 olympian standby 20kw towable perkin diesel generator with 3143hrs excellent condition asking $5,000.00 518-524-1956
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
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
2000 RANGER 2000 Ranger XLT 4x4 Super Cab, camper top, liner, tonneau cover, 6 cyl., auto, AC, stereo, 130K, $3995. 518-576-9042
HEAVY EQUIPMENT
MOTORCYCLES 2002 HONDA VTX 1800, mint condition, many extras, $5300. 518-492-2348
FARM EQUIPMENT
2005 SUZUKI BOULEVARD S50 VS 800CC, New battery & tires, 13,000 miles, very clean, garaged. (518) 946-8341. $2,800
1964 FORD 4000 4 cyl., gas, Industrial loader & industrial Front End, 12 spd., German Transmission, Pie Weights, $4750.00. 518-962-2376 Evenings.
SCOOTER 2008 50CC, no license required, 90 miles to the gal, only 900 miles, runs great, Asking $750.00 OBO. Call 518-962-8539
RECREATIONAL VEHICLES
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
1984 SHASTA Travel Trailer 32 1/ 2' long, 25' awning, good condition. $4,000 518-623-3037
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
TRUCKS 1981 INTERNATIONAL single axle dump truck, runs great, inspected and on the road. $4000 OBO. 518-834-9088.
2002 SUNLINE 29’ Camper, Sleeps 6, excellent condition, 14' Slide Out, Awning with screen room, many extras, Hitch included $11,000 (518) 873-6857 28’ CLASS C FORESTER Motor Home, 2 slides, generator, sleeps 6, 27K miles, excellent condition, $31,000. 518-297-3467
Fishing for a good deal? Catch the greatest bargains in the Classifieds 1-800-989-4237
Fishing for a good deal? Catch the greatest bargains in the Classifieds 1-800-989-4237
Summer
SALES DAYS AT EGGLEFIELD FORD
NEW! W!
2012 Ford Escape 4x4 XLT MSRP.........................................$29,635 Ford Retail Cust. Cash .................$1,500 Ford Retail Bonus Cash ...............$1,000 FMCC Bonus Cash*.........................$750 Dealer Discount...........................$1,190
NEW! W!
Payment..................................$249 mo.* Price...........................................$27,684 Term........................................... 36 mos. Miles@Yr.....................................10,500 Down Payment ............................$1,000 Due At Inception .........................$1,324 Tax, title fees extra Ford Cash...................... $2,500 included Lease-end ..................................$16,466 Lease rate........................................0.25
$
249
NEW! W!!
Lease
2012 Ford Escape 4x4 XLT MSRP.........................................$28,240 Ford Retail Cust. Cash .................$1,500 Ford Retail Bonus Cash ...............$1,000 FMCC Bonus Cash*.........................$750 Dealer Discount..............................$995
$
25,195
23,995
V6, AUTO, TRL TOW, REMOTE START, POWER MOONROOF, POWER WINDOWS/LOCKS, SEATS, SYNC SYSTEM, STOCK#EN417, OFFER ENDS 7/2/12
2012 Ford Taurus SEL
36 mo.
AUTO, AIR, POWER SUNROOF, SYNC SYSTEM, STK#EN455, OFFER ENDS 7/2/12
$
NEW! EW!
2012 Ford Escape 4x4 XLT 2012
AUTO, POWER MOONROOF, SYNC SYSTEM, POWER WINDOWS/SEAT/LOCKS STK#SEN361, OFFER ENDS 7/2/12
NEW!
2012 Ford Fusion SE
MSRP.........................................$33,610 Ford Retail Cust. Cash .................$2,500 FMCC Bonus Cash* ........................$500 Dealer Discount...........................$1,615
MSRP.........................................$23,990 Ford Retail Cust. Cash .................$1,500 FMCC Bonus Cash* .....................$1,750 Dealer Discount..............................$525
$
$
28,995
V6, AUTO, AUTO TEMP AIR, SIRIUS, SYNC SYSTEM, REAR VIEW CAMERA, 12 SPKR. SONY SOUND STK#EN291, OFFER ENDS 7/2/12
19,995
AUTO, AIR, POWER WINDOWS/LOCKS/MIRRORS, SIRIUS STK#EN491, OFFER ENDS 7/2/12
31291
*FMCC Credit approval reguired. All customers may not qualify
20 - www.the-burgh.com
June 23, 2012
Route 9 Elizabethtown, NY
Dealer #7085874
518-873-6389 www.adirondackchevrolet.com
2012 12 CHEVY VYY MALIBU MA MALIBBU LSS
2011 BUICK LACROSSE CXS
20112 C 2012 CHEVY CH HEVY VY CRUZE C U E LS S
CR86, FULLY LOADED, PLUS XM RADIO AND ONSTAR. UP TO 38 MPG!!
CQ241, MOONROOF, NAVIGATION, LEATHER, BLACK
CR189, AUTO, FULLY LOADED, ONSTAR, XM RADIO, BLUE GRANITE
$
††*
246
MSRP $37,900 Adk. Chevy Disc. -1,400 Rebate -4,000
PER MONTH
$
YOUR PRICE
$
33,500
††*
235
PER MONTH
2012 BUICK VERANO FWD
2012 012 BUICK REGAL
2012 CHEVY 1500 EXT CAB
CR144, LOADED, 6 SPD. AUTO, RED
CR49, FULLY LOADED, 6 SPD AUTO, BLACK
HIGH MPG!!
HIGH MPG!!
CR80, LT, 4X4, “ALL STAR EDITION PKG.”, 5.3L, Z71, RED, FULLY LOADED!!
$
††*
316
$
PER MONTH
††*
299
PER MONTH
$
393
††*
PER MONTH
*TAX, TITLE, REG. NOT INCLUDED. †† 10,000 MILES PER YEAR/39 MONTH LEASE. ** MUST OWN GM PRODUCT. ALL LEASES APPROVED BY ALLY. MUST HAVE A FICO CREDIT SCORE OF 700 OR MORE. INCENTIVE PROGRAMS SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTIFICATION. SEE DEALER FOR COMPLETE DETAILS.
CHECK OUT THESE QUALITY USED VEHICLES!
31298
GREAT SELECTION OF TRUCKS & SUVS 2008 Chevy HHR LS
2011 Ford Mustang GT
2010 Dodge Challenger RT
CR163A, Auto, Fully Loaded! Low Miles
AM254A2, 5.0L V8, Leather, 6 Spd. Trans., Fully Loaded!
AM263A, Leather, 6 Spd. Trans, Hemi V8, Loaded!
23,780 OR $373/MO* 2012 Chevy Impala LT
27,870 OR $438/MO* 2004 Chevy Colorado Ext Cab 4x4 LT
CP244, OnStar, XM Radio, Moonroof, Fully Loaded!
CR191A, Fully Loaded! Great Condition!
HIGH MPG
2009 Hyundai Santa Fe SE AWD
10,280 OR $178/MO* 2010 Nissan Rogue 4x4
CR116A, Auto, Fully Loaded
AM116A, Fully Loaded! Low Miles
$
$
$
HIGH MPG
$
9,980
16,800 OR $266/MO* 2007 Jeep Compass Sport AWD
18,980 OR $304/MO* 2003 Chevy 500 Ext. Cab 4x4 LT
2011 Dodge Grand Caravan “Crew”
2011 Chevy Tahoe LT
CR206A2, 6 cyl., Fully Loaded, Auto
CR130B, Fully Loaded
CP253, DVD, Stow & Go, Sat. Radio, Fully Loaded
CP241, Leather, Fully Loaded, XM Radio, OnStar
$
$
10,880 OR $195/MO*
$
$
11,880 OR $279/MO*
$
$
19,480 OR $312/MO*
21,480 OR $338/MO*
$
36,880
GREAT SELECTION OF TRUCKS & SUVS Give Buzzy, Bruce or Bucky a call today for more great everyday savings! 518-873-6389
31299
*Tax not included. †10,000 miles per year, 39 month lease. All leases approved by ALLY. Must have a FICO Credit Score of 700 or more.