TriLakes Today 04-24-2010

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April 24, 2010

A Denton Publication

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Kids Count

Observations

Folks in the Tri-Lakes area will now receive the Valley News.

Prom and graduation can be a dangerous time.

Dan used his imagination as a child to explore.

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APA commissioners want towers to stay

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New sign regs will cost taxpayers $1.9 million By Matt Bosley matt@denpubs.com

The St. Regis Mountain Fire Tower is one of two towers being discussed by the Adirondack Park Agency Board. By Jon Alexander denpubs@denpubs.com RAY BROOK — Adirondack Park Agency commissioners directed agency staff Thursday to find a way to let the fire towers remain atop St. Regis and Hurricane mountains – provided that a non-taxpayer-based funding source for their upkeep can be found. Located in state-owned Primitive and Canoe areas, both towers are considered non-conforming structures under the current draft of the State Land Master Plan. But considering the public’s affinity for the federally recognized historic structures, commissioners like Dick Booth were torn between the requirements of the SLMP and the preservation of the region’s cultural history. “The big part of me says, look, this is a decision that was made decades ago when the SLMP was crafted and we should finish doing what has been left undone for a long time,” Booth said. “But a part of me also says the towers are there, they are historic and although they have an impact on the wilderness character, it is certainly a bearable impact.” But for Commissioner Art Lussi, the question of the towers’ continued existence is a little more cut and dry. “We need to find a way to preserve them and there’s no easy option,” Lussi said. “But that’s my position. We need to find an option to preserve the towers as they sit.” The Adirondack Local Government Review Board petitioned the agency to find an alternative to their removal, but according to a staff report, each and every method of legally attaining this goal will be time consuming and complicated. Commissioner Lani Ulrich stressed that doing things right supersedes doing things quickly. “The number of years that it will take to get it right doesn’t bother me,” Ulrich said. “I don’t like things taking forever, but I’d like to get it right.” Commissioners directed agency staff to find the most legally viable choice of three options that would allow for the continued presence of the fire towers in their historic locations. Officials said each would have an impact on the SLMP itself, ranging from creating small historic parcels to an outright amendment that would make the towers conforming in Wilderness and Primitive areas. Officials said each option is relatively complex – but doable. Commissioner Jim Townsend chairs the

See TOWERS, page 6

ELIZABETHTOWN — New federal regulations regarding road signage will equate to an expense of nearly $1.9 million for taxpayers in Essex County, according to the county’s top highway official. Essex County Department of Public Works Superintendent Tony Lavigne met with the county’s DPW committee at its April 19 meeting, and expressed his concern regarding regulations enacted in December by the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA). “We are currently in the process of changing all the county signs to meet the new federal standard,” said Lavigne. The regulations require the replacement of signs which have outlived their shelf-life for reflectivity. Lavigne said the county is working to replace an estimated 12,000 such signs on county and town roads in Essex County through the next four years, which will equate to a $1.2 million pricetag for municipalities. In addition, recent changes to the regulations stipulate that rectangular signs with either a chevron or a large directional arrow are “recommended” to be used on curves where the advisory speed is 10 mph less than the speed limit and “required” where the difference is 15 mph or more. To conform with the changes, Lavigne said 2,750 new signs will have to be placed at roughly 1,100 county road curves that previously had none, at a cost of $274,250. He estimated 3,750 new signs on town roads with a cost of $401,250, for a total of $695,500. And that’s just the up-front cost. According to Lavigne, the DPW will be responsible for maintenance of the signs, which will mean the potential for added cost in future years.

Essex County Department of Public Works superintendent Tony Lavigne displays one of the large directional arrow signs that will need to be installed along many road curves throughout Essex County. Lavigne estimates it will cost the county and towns a total of about $1.9 million to meet new Federal Highway Administration guidelines. Photo by Matt Bosley

Lavigne said the changes in regulations will likely have little effect on traffic safety and are particularly burdensome to states in the Northeast where roads tend to have plenty of curves. “Most of the roads in the Northeast were

established before the advent of automobiles and therefore don’t meet most engineering standards,” he said. Failing to replace the signs could put the municipalities at risk for lawsuits, Lavigne

See SIGNS, page 6

Lazio endorsed by North Country Reps Levy attends local TEA Party rally By Matt Bosley matt@denpubs.com PLATTSBURGH — One Republican candidate in the race to become New York State’s next governor has garnered the support of two area legislators while another is making his first tour through the North Country. Assemblywomen Janet Duprey (R-Peru) and Teresa Sayward (R-Willsboro) have given their endorsement to Rick Lazio, the Long Island Republican and former Congressman who announced his bid for governor in September. The announcement of their endorsements comes just weeks after the Essex County Republican Committee announced its endorsement of Lazio, who now faces a challenge from Suffolk County executive Steve Levy and Erie County developer Carl Paladino. “Rick is a life-long Republican with strong fiscally conservative values that people are looking for in government today,” said Sayward. “He

See LAZIO, page 2

Gubernatorial candidate Steve Levy addresses a rally of the Upstate New York TEA Party April 15 in Plattsburgh. UNYTEA leaders say Levy was the first of the candidates to reach out to their organization.


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2 - TRI LAKES TODAY

High Peaks Opera to perform April 24 SARANAC LAKE — Saranac Village at Will Rogers will resound with the songs of “Pirates of Penzance” and “Show Boat,” as well as favorites from “West Side Story,” “My Fair Lady,” and “South Pacific” when High Peaks Opera Studio presents “An Evening of Operetta and Broadway!” on Saturday, April 24, 7:30 p.m. A donation of $5 at the door is requested. This fun program on the venerable Saranac Lake stage will feature popular selections from operetta and musical theater, with songs from the shows of Gilbert & Sullivan, Rodgers & Hammerstein, George Gershwin, Leonard Bernstein, and others. Featured artists will include Metropolitan Opera bass George Cordes, soprano Tiffany Conn, and tenor Robert Soricelli, with Elizabeth Cordes at the piano. This is High Peaks Opera Studio’s second event at Saranac Village at Will Rogers. Its previous performance, “Buona Sera! An Evening of Italian Opera,” was presented last September to a large and appreciative crowd. Other events have included sold-out concerts at Little Italy restaurant in Tupper Lake and a program of operetta and Broadway in Long Lake. For more on these events and other High Peaks Opera Studio activities, please visit www.highpeaksopera.org.

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SATURDAY April 24, 2010

Medieval theme for next Winter Carnival SARANAC LAKE — Members of the Saranac Lake Winter Carnival Committee picked “Medieval Times” as their theme for the 2011 Winter Carnival at their April 14 meeting. The decision was based on results from a recent online poll posed to readers of the Adirondack Daily Enterprise Web site in which two of the four suggested themes rose to the top of the results: Celtic Carnival and Renaissance Faire/Middle Ages. The other themes were Circus/Under the Big Top and Space Alien Invasion. More than 700 votes were tallied during the week of March 15. “There were a lot of great ideas suggested for the 2011 Saranac Lake Winter Carnival, but, in the end, we could

only choose one,” said Committee Chairman Jeff Dickson, “and we believe that the community will rally behind our centerpiece, the Ice Palace, and make the ‘Medieval’ Carnival fit for royalty – our king, queen, prince, princess, court, and maybe a few jesters.” Committee members thanked the dozens of people who suggested themes for 2011, the hundreds of people who voted, and the Adirondack Daily Enterprise for posting the question on its Web site. The next meeting of the Saranac Lake Winter Carnival Committee will be in September. The 2011 Winter Carnival will be held Feb. 4-13. The Saranac Lake Winter Carnival

Pendragon show to be broadcast on radio

Lazio

SARANAC LAKE — Pendragon Theatre will join North Country Public Radio and the Adirondack Non-Profit Network April 24 for a special radio event celebrating the work of nonprofits in the region. The core of the evening’s festivities is a “call in” to NCPR from 8–11 p.m. Many participants, including Pendragon, will call NCPR to share their celebration with listeners. Pendragon’s selection is a reading of A.R. Gurney’s Pulitzer Prize-nominated play, “Love Letters.” Founders Susan Neal and Bob Pettee portray Melissa Gardner and Andrew Ladd III. The play was devised as a reading in which the actors share their letters from across 50 years. Melissa and Andrew discuss the dreams, disappointments, victories and defeats that have transpired throughout their separated lives. In addition to a run on Broadway, the play has been performed as a benefit for many non-profit organizations around the world. Admission to the performance at Pendragon Theatre in Saranac Lake is $10. The performance begins at 8 p.m. A reception with the actors will follow. Pendragon is the only year round professional theatre in the Adirondacks and celebrates 30 years in 2010. For further information and reservations contact Pendragon at 518-891-1854, or via e-mail at pdragon@northnet.org.

From page 1

Committee, Inc. is a not-for-profit group of volunteers dedicated to organizing an annual mid-winter festival during the first two weeks of February. This 10-day, communitywide event traces its roots to a one-day Carnival held in 1897 by the Pontiac Club. The Carnival honors its heritage every year by building an Ice Palace from blocks of ice harvested from Lake Flower ’s Pontiac Bay, where Carnival events have been traditionally held for generations. For more information, visit the Saranac Lake Winter Carnival Web site at www.saranaclakewintercarnival.com.

has a message that is believable and will resonate with all voters.” In addition to Essex County, Lazio has also gained the endorsement of Republicans in St. Lawrence and Herkimer Counties. Conservative party chairs in Warren, Washington and Franklin Counties are among many who have endorsed Lazio, as has the state Conservative Party. Levy, a long-time Democrat in the State Assembly, received the backing of State Republican Party Chairman Ed Cox March 19 and switched parties shortly thereafter. He has since sought to gain enough support from GOP delegates to run in a Republican primary. Franklin County Republican Chairman Jim Ellis, a Levy supporter, organized his recent three-day trip through the North Country where Levy met with business leaders and spoke at a rally of the Upstate New York TEA Party in Plattsburgh April 15. There, Levy laid out his plan as governor, which includes instituting a spending cap at the state level, a property tax cap for local governments, and a plan to waive capital gains taxes as an incentive for businesses locating in upstate New York. “The pundits know that people are fed up, they’re scared, they’re angry, and there’s one thing they care about this election: who has the skill set and who has the plan to save this state from bankruptcy,” said Levy. 33101

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TRI LAKES TODAY - 3

Residents tell legislators that Adirondack towns need jobs, industry thom@denpubs.com CHESTERTOWN — During a forum held by area state legislators to focus on Adirondack issues, Dave Scranton of Inlet stood up in a crowded auditorium and talked of how jobs, commerce and industry were becoming scarce across the region. “For Adirondack communities, it’s about survival,” he said, blaming the state for obstructing development by acquiring land for wilderness. “We’re getting squeezed out here.” As Scranton was blaming the Adirondack Park Agency for over-zealous regulation, forum moderator Bill Farber of the town of Morehouse yanked the microphone from Scranton’s hands. “We’re keeping things positive,” Farber said, noting he didn’t necessarily disagree with the comments, but the meeting was intended to air only constructive ideas. While Scranton’s complaints were cut short, the first public forum of the Adirondack Caucus — a group of state legislators representing the region — heard a mixture of both complaints and initiatives for improving life in the Adirondacks from the 100 or so who attended the two-hour event April 14. Whether it was boosting incentives for business development, consolidating public school administrations or spurring cooperation between communities, people from all over the Adirondacks offered their ideas.

Good jobs, affordable housing are crucial Many of those speaking out did get their criticisms aired, however, as they offered suggestions. Julie Berry of Indian Lake said she had to work two to three jobs to make a living as a health aide to sustain her household. “I can’t work more than 24/7,” she said. “I’d like to see more long-term health care services in place.” She suggested that more long-term health care facilities be established, and for more nursing career educational courses to be available for Adirondack Park residents. Jeremy Burch of Chestertown, 20, a SUNY Adirondack Forestry student, said that employment was scarce, and a large number of Adirondackers were forced to commute long distances for their jobs. “Tax cuts and incentives for small businesses would be amazing, go for it,” he said, referring to a Adirondack economic development zone proposed by the Adirondack Caucus legislators. “There are no really good-paying jobs here.” Holding his seven-month-old son, Jim Kearney of Brant Lake said Adirondack communities desperately needed not only decent jobs and wages, but affordable housing. “My family can’t afford life in the Adirondacks,” he said, noting that others in his generation couldn’t afford to make a reasonable living here. “We need affordable housing programs — not a handout, but a helping hand to get into a house.” The testimony of Berry, Burch and Kearney was underscored by a presentation that launched the forum.

Report details problems in Adirondacks

Forester: timber industry needs legislative boost Jim Cappelliano, a forester, also disagreed with Duvall’s assertion that the Adirondacks’ economic decline was shared by rural America. He said park agency restrictions were hampering the economy, as state land acquisition meant a lot of timber was now off-limits for harvesting. “We’re operating with one hand shackled behind our backs,” he said. Kevin Bartlett, a paper mill worker from Ticonderoga, echoed the point. “Paper mills are the last bastion of good-paying work for high school graduates,” he said. ”Regulations are being rammed down our throats, and bureaucracies hamstring us,” he said. Carol Gregson, 83, of Olmstedville also said that development of the lumber and timber business made sense. “Lumbering is natural and sustainable,” she said.

Residents: cut bureaucracy, taxes Kathie Ferullo of Warrensburg told the legislators hosting the meeting that high taxes were a primary cause of the migration of youth. “You have to really work on property taxes and make sure young people can stay here,” she said. Mark Hall, supervisor of the Town of Fine (St. Lawrence County) said state legislative support was needed for boosting industry. He cited the success of reviving a paper mill that had closed down. Now it employs 120 people, although decades ago it hosted 400 to 500 workers, he said. But more help is needed from legislators to create or retain vital jobs, he said. A former industrial site in his town, now contaminated, needs to be cleaned up with the help of the state so a proposed biomass plant with 100 or so jobs can be built, he said. “The system at this point doesn’t allow us to have the site cleaned up and bring in jobs,” he said, citing 30 years of bureaucratic delay in holding up development. “We have to make processes workable.” A firefighter from Providence said with the young people moving out of the Adirondacks, it was difficult to staff fire companies and ambulance squads to protect the lives and property of residents. “People are building big fancy homes, and we need to have funds so we can protect them,” he said, suggesting the legislators boost aid for emergency response agencies and subsidies for volunteers.

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Proprietor: Get heard in Albany! Others focused entirely on constructive ideas. Laurie Arnheiter, proprietor of Hudson River Trading Co, a shop in North Creek, suggested that all part-year Adirondack residents declare their Adirondack home as their primary residence and register to vote here. Not only could it substantially boost federal aid to the Adirondacks, but it would boost legislative influence in Albany, she said. “This is one way we can have a bigger impact,” she said. Naj Wikoff of Keene Valley said that many creative people were drawn to live in the Adirondacks, and that opportunities in continuing education should be expanded both to meet their needs, and provide more jobs. “The creative economy is one of the fastest growing sectors,” he said. “Education and the arts are opportunities for growth.”

School district reform cited Also, he suggested consolidating school district administrations, as the administrative cost per pupil was exorbitant in Adirondack public schools. Tom Williams of Hudson said the legislators should develop an educational plan. Scott Johnson of Lake George, who migrated from Willsboro for more economic opportunity, said that business proprietors and chambers of commerce should “think globally” and work together to market their offerings rather than be territorial or competitive. He operates several businesses in marketing. “Business owners have to think of the bigger perspective,” he said, noting that businesses should aim to stay open yearround to boost local economies.

Legislators seeking to gain influence Assemblywomen Teresa Sayward (R-Willsboro) and Janet Duprey (R-Peru) and state Sen. Betty Little (R-Queensbury jointly hosted the forum as an outgrowth of their legislative Adirondack Caucus, which is a coalition of lawmakers representing the Adirondacks. They reported Monday they were seeking to expand their group to include legislators who own second home in the Adirondacks, or are sympathetic to the issues of its residents. One objective the three cited was their effort to establish an Adirondack economic zone, a targeted zone for development separate from the state's Empire Zone program, which is set to end soon. The zone could feature special loans, grants, tax credits and other incentives to boost the economy and create jobs, they said. Sayward said the meeting was constructive. “Everyone is tired of the same old gripe session,” she said. “We know many people are holding down two and three jobs and need help. We heard a lot of good ideas, now we're all going to roll up our sleeves and get to work.” Farber, Chairman of the Hamilton County Board of Supervisors — and Fred Monroe of Chestertown, Farber ’s counterpart in Warren County— both said the meeting was constructive. “Some excellent concepts were raised,” Monroe said. “It seems like everyone is pulling in the right direction.”

MY PUBLIC NOTICES • MY PUBLIC NOTICES

•MY PUBLIC NOTICES•

Municipal planner Jim Martin and Brad Dake, both of Saratoga Springs, presented a summary of the Adirondack Regional Assessment Project, which recently revealed that youth are fleeing the Adirondacks for greater opportunity elsewhere, school enrollment is sinking fast, and Adirondackers are saddled with low prevailing wages, limited job opportunities and expensive housing. The study results also indicate that Adirondack residents are relatively poor, aging and undereducated, and that jobs are primarily provided by schools and municipalities. In addition, detailed maps devised in the Assessment Project showed that more land than ever was under strict state control — and that

the job and income problems were most severe in the core areas of the Adirondacks. Lorraine Duvall of Keene, however, said she was concerned that the project data might be used improperly to curb preservationist efforts, because the problems detailed were shared by most all rural U.S. communities. “Let’s not blame this on the Adirondack Park,” she said. “Let’s remember as we talk economic development, that the best thing we have to sell is the environment.” But Neil McGovern of Lake Pleasant disagreed, noting that the project’s map and data showed that merely 0.4 percent of the land in the Adirondacks is reserved for hamlets where it can be developed with minimal restriction. “The report lays it out in spades,” he said. “It’s our peril if we don’t take action.” A prevailing lack of economic opportunity is driving out people in their 20s, 30s and 40s, McGovern said, and it is leading to the erosion of community life. “We should be scared to death,” he said.

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4 - TRI LAKES TODAY

Prom and graduation: a dangerous season for youth

A

survey conducted in 2009 was commissioned by Liberty Mutual Insurance Company. The survey was administered to thousands of 11th and twelfth graders. The results confirm some of the worst fears that many parents are thinking about as the Prom and graduation season is on the horizon. Over 90 percent acknowledged that they and their By Scot Hurlburt peers will drink and drive on Prom night and 79 percent will drink and drive on graduation night. The survey revealed another ominous fact: Only 25 percent of youth believe that drinking and driving on Prom or Graduation night will place them at high risk. When driver distractions, texting, cell phone use and other youth in the vehicle are factored into the risk calculus, parents have good reason to be concerned. According to the National Highway and Traffic safety Administration, more than one third of alcohol related deaths among drivers under the age of 21, died in the months of April, May and June: Prom and graduation season. The survey also revealed a major “perception disconnect” between parents and their children. Nationally, 75 percent of parents say that they have talked to their children about the dangers of drinking and driving while only 25 percent of youth say that their parents have talked to them about the issue. One of the most disturbing outcomes of the survey was that 52 percent of the survey respondents reported that they got their Prom and Graduation party alcohol from their parents or friends’ parents. Parents who host or ignore alcohol parties for youth during Prom and Graduation are exposing the attending youth to a life altering or potentially life ending risk. While we cannot totally stop youth from underage drinking behaviors and subsequently getting behind the wheel of a car, we can do better. When over 50 percent of youth report that they get their alcohol from adults, the issue is no longer about underage drinkers but rather incredibly misguided and irresponsible adults. These are the adults that let young people get drunk at their homes and say that it is OK because, “we have their keys.” They often have a a second set that you don’t know about. Driving cars are not the only danger, either. Every year during the Prom/Graduation season, young people are drowned, burned, sexually assaulted and suffer many other life altering events. If you are a young person, enjoy the Prom or your Graduation this year. Make good decisions for yourself, even if the adults around you do not. Don’t get drunk on Prom or Graduation night; if you don’t, you will have some nice memories to look back on. More importantly, if you do not get drunk on Prom or Graduation night, your chances of being alive and uninjured will increase exponentially. You will still be here to have a life, to live your dream and you will live on so, when you become a parent, you can keep your children safe during Prom and Graduation season. Remember, all kids count.

Kids Count

Scot Hurlburt can be reached by e-mail at hurlburt@wildblue.net

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SATURDAY April 24, 2010

Changes, they are a-comin’ F

olks in the Tri-Lakes region will soon notice a major change to their free, weekly newspaper. Don’t adjust your bifocals; it’s all just part of the plan. Beginning next week, Denton Publications will combine the Tri-Lakes Free Trader Today and the Valley News newspapers to provide you a new and improved news product – one that will bear the same name as its predecessor, which has served the communities of northeastern Essex County for the past 60 years. The Valley News will include news from Lake Placid, Saranac Lake, Tupper Lake and points in between alongside stories from its current territory: Elizabethtown, Westport, Willsboro, Keeseville, Au Sable Forks, Keene, and Wilmington. This way, readers from all these communities will get stories from across the whole of northern Essex County, southern Franklin County, and beyond. Another big change you’ll likely notice will be the layout. Instead of a compact, double-fold newspaper, The Valley News will henceforth be printed as a single-fold 12-by11-inch “short tab.” The new format will allow for articles to be more prominently displayed on each page, and, hopefully, easier to read as well. Photos and design elements, especially on the cover, will be noticeably improved with the goal of creating images that are more pleasing to the eye and allowing the talent of our design staff to shine through. Though all these changes will be realized next week, one

thing that won’t be changing is our commitment to quality, community-oriented news. We will continue to feature local arts and entertainment, fundraiser events, political news, feature stories, local columns, letters to the editor, sports, and, of course, our regional calenBy Matt Bosley dar. The big difference, of course, will be that those stories will now reach a much wider audience – nearly 20,000 – double the number of homes as before. If you have an idea for a story or an announcement for a community event, it’s now even more important for you to share that with us. Personally, I’m excited about the changes and look forward to the possibilities that the new design and the merging of these two papers will bring. I hope you, the reader, will share your feedback with us in the coming weeks, along with any suggestions you have for things you would like to see represented in your free, weekly newspaper.

What the

Bose Knows

Matt Bosley is the editor for The Valley News and Tri-Lakes Today newspapers. He can be reached via e-mail at matt@denpubs.com.

Pea planting season W

ith the warm spring weather we have been enjoying, many vegetable gardeners are eager to get their gardens planted. The temperatures have been so warm it is tempting to plant vegetables that require warm weather to thrive, but we shouldn’t forget here in the North Country, we will most likely experience several more frosty nights! That doesn’t mean we shouldn’t be out working in our veggie patches. Now is the time to plant one of my husband’s favorite vegetables — the pea. The pea, or Pisum sativum, is thought to have originated in Middle Asia and the central plateau of Ethiopia. By the Bronze Age (c. 3,000 B.C.) they were used by the inhabitants of Central Europe, were used by the Greeks and Romans, and were even mentioned in England after the Norman conquest. It is now a popular vegetable all over the world. This legume can be planted as soon as the soil temperature reaches 50 degrees F and the plants grow best at temperatures of 55 to 64 degrees F. This plant does not thrive in the heat of the summer. But it can be replanted for a fall crop. Peas grow best in slightly acidic, well-drained soils. There are many different varieties of the garden pea. With shell peas, the seeds are allowed to fully ripen, removed from the pod, and eaten. Snow peas and snap peas are eaten whole when the pod has reached maturity but prior to

the seeds reaching maturity. Vining cultivars can climb almost 6 feet high by curling their tendrils around any available support. Metal fences, twine, or netting supported by a frame can be used for a pea trellis. Traditionally a structure known as a pea brush was used, which is simply pruned tree branches thrust upright into the soil. There are several newer varieties that are low-growing and do not require a trellis. I have many found childhood memories shelling and eating these sweet, nutritious veggies with my grandparents who grew a prolific amount of peas each spring. Now my husband and I share the joy trying to guess the number of peas each shell will contain as we shuck fresh garden peas with our children on our back patio.

The Final Frontier A

Whatever the reasons, I jumped at any chance to pretend I was battling the forces of evil in a different, much more violent, place and time than the Adirondacks of my youth. And where might a kid in the Adirondacks of my youth find a place all but devoted to pretending to battle the forces of evil in a different, much more violent, place and time? Where else but the nowdefunct Frontier Town? By Dan Leonidas If you’ve never heard of Frontier Town (which would make you a first-class philistine), it was an Old-West themed amusement park in North Hudson. One sweltering day circa July of 1991, I found myself there with my mom, her friend Peggy, and Peggy’s son Robbie (who, at four years my junior, served as the “Sidekick” to my “Chuck Norris”). I remember little about our day on the Frontier, but I’ve attempted to reconstruct the relevant parts by conducting extensive interviews and poring over the photographic record – and it turns out the only relevant part, as far as I’m concerned (and I’m only concerned as far as amusing anecdotes about myself go), was the tail end of our visit, when the “sheriff” of Frontier Town asked if any children wanted to “volunteer” for the “cavalry.” Fully immersed as I was in the Old-West milieu, I donned the Civil-War style cap my mom had bought me in the gift shop and marched into the town square with a handful of other kids. When the “sheriff” asked us to put our hands over our hearts so he could officially “induct” us into the “cavalry,” it was all I could do to keep a grin from breaking the stoic set of my jaw. My violent fantasies hardly ever got this realistic! The only thing that bothered me was that several of my fellow volunteers had inexplicably begun weeping. Looking back, I see that, unlike me, they believed (if only briefly) that they were actually preparing to ship off to battle. Whereas I was “pursuing make-believe,” they were “suffering debilitating hallucinations” – their just deserts, I say, for wasting so much time climbing trees, riding bikes, and trotting.

s a child, I had little love for the kinds of activities out-of-touch old folks expect children to enjoy. Climbing trees? I found heights distasteful. Riding bikes? Moving at high speeds – anything faster than a trot – gave me a headache. Trotting? The idea of breaking out in a sweat made me break out in a sweat. I did, however, manage to live up to one of my elders’ stodgy expectations. To put it in the kind of terms out-oftouch old folks enjoy, I got a kick out of “journeying to the magical and mysterious realm of my imagination.” To put it in terms less likely to induce cringing, I liked to pretend I was someone else doing something much more interesting than I myself ever did. For instance, while climbing a flight of stairs, I’d imagine I was ascending a treacherous Himalayan mountain. To add the right shade of realism to the fantasy, I’d carry a backpack stuffed to bursting with supplies and stop every two or three steps to set up camp. Indeed, I often spent as many as four weeks trekking from the living room to my bedroom. Sure, I have a few questions about why my parents let me miss so much school – I didn’t finish the fifth grade until I was 20 – but I’m glad they encouraged my extreme devotion to the pursuit of make-believe. Why? Because whether you call it “pursuing make-believe” or “suffering debilitating hallucinations,” learning how to go elsewhere in your mind to escape the chaos and meaninglessness of everyday life is the first step down the path to happiness. Also, if most of your debilitating hallucinations involve battling low-lifes with Chuck Norris – and we regard the critically despised 1992 film “Sidekicks,” starring Chuck Norris, as a nonfiction documentary – you might someday get the chance to battle low-lifes with Chuck Norris in reality. Unfortunately for my younger self, I hardly ever imagined hanging out with Chuck Norris. I did, however, spend a lot of time imagining that I lived in different, much more violent, places and times: the Thirteen Colonies during the Revolutionary War, perhaps, or a hostile alien star system during the 35th century’s Second Interstellar Conflict. I blame my fascination with violence on children’s television – in particular, the “Sesame Street” episodes where Bert suffers terrifying yet enthralling Vietnam flashbacks – and Risk, the irresponsible board game that encourages players to aspire to world domination.

Anne Lenox Barlow works at Campbell’s Greenhouse in Saranac and has had experience in the agricultural field as a horticulture educator with Cornell Cooperative Extension in Clinton County. She can be reached by e-mail at a.lennox.barlow@gmail.com.

The Shallow Observer

Dan Leonidas makes shallow observations. He can be reached at dpleonidas@yahoo.com or myspace.com/lastminuteconcerns.


www.Trilakestoday.com

SATURDAY April 24, 2010

Paul Smith’s College hosts pathogens lecture

Tupper Revitalization Committee to meet

PAUL SMITHS — Humans have made huge advances in combating agents that cause infectious disease – but, as recent outbreaks of SARS, West Nile Virus and the H1N1 flu demonstrate, many challenges remain. Dr. David Woodland, president and director of the Trudeau Institute in Saranac Lake, will discuss the relationship between humans and disease-causing microbes when he appears on campus Friday, April 30. His talk, “Infectious Diseases Today: Are the Microbes Winning?”, is free and open to the public. He will speak from 10–11 a.m. in Freer Auditorium. Woodland’s talk will include special emphasis on newly emerging pathogens, which scientists at the Trudeau Institute are striving to understand. Trudeau, established in 1884 as a tuberculosis sanitarium, is today a biomedical research center whose scientists are leading the effort to understand respiratory virus infections and develop novel vaccine strategies. Woodland, who has published more than 150 articles in basic science journals, is regularly invited to present data at national and international meetings, and serves on federal committees that prioritize research applications for funding.

TUPPER LAKE — The Tupper Lake Revitalization Committee, a partnership of municipal officials, business owners, residents, and community groups dedicated to advancing the community’s economic goals, has been meeting regularly over the past months. The group has identified business retention and development as key priorities for 2010. As a first step, the Revitalization Committee will be sponsoring a Business Resource Expo at the Wild Center at 7 p.m. on Thursday, May 6. The purpose of the gathering is to provide information about business assistance resources in the region to existing businesses and to individuals who may be considering starting a business. Regional economic development agencies, sugh sas the Adirondack Economic Development Corporation, the Small Business Development Center, and the Franklin County IDA, along with the Tupper Lakc Chamber of Commerce and representatives from local government, will discuss their programs and the help they can provide to current and potential businesses. Information will also be available on Tupper Lake’s microenterprise and Junction Main Street grant programs and other local programs that can benefit established and prospective businesses. The event is free and all are welcome to attend. The evening will open with each business assistance agency providing a brief summary of their programs, followed by time in the Great Hall for individuals to consult directly with the agencies and ask specific questions. Light refreshments will be served. For more information, or to RSVP, call the Town of Tupper Lake office at 359-3981 or Mary Casagrain at the Village of Tupper Lake office at 3593341.

Spelling Bee supports Literacy Volunteers SARANAC LAKE — The Eighth Annual North Country Spelling Bee is scheduled to take place at the Harrietstown Town Hall in Saranac Lake Saturday, May 1, starting at 10 a.m. Everyone – any age – is invited to join in the fun. This year the top three winning teams will receive tickets to the Westport Depot Theater production of “The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee” in August. Created and organized by Literacy Volunteers of Essex/Franklin Counties, this event will generate proceeds through sponsorships ($50 each, tax-deductible) to fund free educational programs for adults, children, and families. If some teams need help finding sponsors, Literacy Volunteers can match them up. Admittance is free, and as usual for competing teams, there is a complimentary luncheon. Those who want to have fun as a speller (or sponsor other spellers), can call Literacy Volunteers at Saranac Lake, 891-5567; Port Henry, 546-3008; or Malone, 483-9366.

Northern Lights hosts Community Art Day SARANAC LAKE — Northern Lights School will host a Community Art Day Saturday, May 1, 10 a.m. to noon. Northern Lights School is located at 57 Church Street, Saranac Lake. Entrance to the school is in the rear of the building. Join Melanie Niemczura in making flower fairies. Adults and children 10 and older can make a spring flower fairy, made from pipe cleaners, embroidery floss and fabric flowers, to sit on a nature table or hang in your house. Cost is $5 per participant. To register call 891-3206.

Correction In the April 10 edition of Tri-Lakes Today, an article entitled “County leaders praise, chide Paterson” incorrectly stated that Adam Bacon is the new regional representative of the office of Gov. David Paterson. The correct spelling of his name is Adam Bateman.

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Libraries participate in “Battle of the Books” PLATTSBURGH — Six books and nine local libraries add up to the Battle of the Books, slated for July 17 at the Champlain Centre Mall in Plattsburgh. Students in fifth, sixth, and seventh grades are invited to join the Take a Bite Out of Books (TABOB) team at one of these local libraries: Rouses Point, Peru, Schroon Lake, Plattsburgh, Dannemora, Wilmington, Port Henry, Saranac Lake, and Willsboro. Teams are forming and meeting now through July to read and prepare for the Jeopardy-style competition. This year ’s titles are “The Lightening Thief” by Rick Riordan, “The Underneath” by Kathi Appelt, “Three Cups of Tea“ (Young Reader ’s Edition) by Greg Mortenson, “Project Mulberry” by Linda Sue Park, “Code Orange” by Caroline B. Cooney, and “The City of Ember” by Jeanne DuPrau. If interested in TABOB, please contact one the participating libraries.

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WHAT ’ S H APPENING

Essex County GOP to endorse candidates ELIZABETHTOWN — The Essex County Republican Committee will hold a an endosement meeting Wednesday, May 12, 6 p.m., at the Board of Supervisors' Chambers, 7551 Court Street, Elizabethtown. The positions to receive possible endorsements are 23rd Congressional District, 114th Assembly District, Comptroller, Attorney General and U.S. Senate. This meeting is open to everyone. For questions or information, please call Chairman Ronald Jackson.

Let us know what’s going on in your community! Call 873-6368 Fax 873-6360 e-mail denpubs@denpubs.com

Mon.-Fri. 10-6 • Sat. 10-5 • Sun. 12-4 33093

Free Rabies Vaccination Clinics For All Pet Dogs, Cats and Ferrets

May 4 May 6 May 11 May 11 May 13 May 18 May 18 May 20 May 25

TRI LAKES TODAY - 5

2010 Essex County Schedule Crown Point Highway Garage Willsboro Highway Garage Lake Placid Horse Show Grounds Newcomb Fire Hall Ausable Forks Ambulance Hall Elizabethtown Fire House Ticonderoga – Armory Bloomingdale Fire Hall Schroon Lake Fire House

6-7 PM 6-7 PM 6-7 PM 6-7 PM 6-7 PM 6-7 PM 6-7 PM 6-7 PM 6-7 PM

www.co.essex.ny.us/PublicHealth $5 donations per pet accepted.

Every pet dog, cat (even indoor cats) and ferret 3 months of age or older is required to be vaccinated against rabies and receive a booster within 1 year. The booster protects them for 3 years. You must have your pet’s rabies vaccine certificate with you for them to get a booster. Ferrets must be vaccinated each year. All pets must be controlled by an adult and must be on a leash or in a carrier.

Essex County Public Health (518) 873-3500 67783 58773

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Signs

Towers

From page 1

From page 1

said, as counties and towns can be held liable for an accident if the signs are not in compliance with federal and state regulations. Jay Supervisor and Board of Supervisors Chair Randy Douglas called the new regulations “another unfunded mandate that we can’t afford in Essex County.” “Our hands are tied,” he added. “If we don’t comply, we could end up paying more in a lawsuit than we would for the signs themselves.” Westport Supervisor Dan Connell moved for a resolution to request an exemption from the regulations, which was passed unanimously by the committee. Newcomb Supervisor George Canon likened the issue to a recent dispute arising from a FHWA initiative to bring the yellow-onbrown Adirondack signs into compliance with a white-on-brown standard used in other parks. Many local organizations and agencies opposed the change. “We fought them and were able to retain our brown and yellow,” Canon said. Lavigne said he has been talking to highway superitendents in other nearby counties and towns, and hopes to spur widespread opposition to the new regulations. “I do think it’s going to get more vocal in the next few weeks as the word gets out,” he said.

agency State Land Committee and he closed the meeting by summing up what he was hearing from his peers. “There is sentiment to allow these towers to remain in some fashion,” Townsend said. “There are procedural steps to accomplish that.” But several commissioners, including Booth, Ulrich and Cecil Wray, were wary of placing the maintenance costs of the towers on the shoulders of the taxpayers. They indicated that saving the towers is likely contingent on the friends groups associated with the towers legally committing to funding the project. “What are we assuming goes on if we legitimize the towers being there and a corollary concern – who is paying for it?” Wray said. Review Board Executive Director Fred Monroe said that like a cemetery, it is possible to create a dedicated maintenance fund for each of the towers. Both towers have “friends” organizations that have verbally pledged to fund their upkeep. The Friends of the Bald Mountain Fire Tower has adopted the structure and covers all of the costs of keeping it open to the public. The SLMP states the purpose of Wilderness is to provide an experience unadulterated by signs of human activity. Like DEC, APA staff concluded that there were few legally clean courses of action other than tearing down and relocating the towers. But APA Deputy Director of Planning Jim Connelly stressed staff is limited to the requirements of the SLMP and not looking to pick fights with the local citizenry. “We are fully aware of the historic value of the fire tower in the Adirondacks,” Connelly said. “It’s our job to make recommendations based on the State Land Master Plan.” Staff will present their legal and cost analysis next month.

April 24 is Village Clean-Up Day LAKE PLACID — The 2010 Lake Placid Village CleanUp, sponsored by the Lake Placid Garden Club, is scheduled for Saturday, April 24 with a rain date of May 1. Registration is at the Olympic Center Box Office 9-10 a.m. Participants will register to join or lead a group, be assigned an area, pick-up bags, lunch tickets and recycling information. A volunteer lunch will follow at the Peacock Village Park Beach House. In case of inclement weather please tune to local radio WSLP FM 93.3 for updates. All participants should wear gloves. Garbage bags are provided by the Village of Lake Placid. The Town of North Elba Transfer Station waives the fees for Clean-Up litter and encourages separating the recyclable items.


SATURDAY April 24, 2010

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4-H teams up with DEC’s Grannis: we’re greener now Adk Green Circle than in 1970, but more work remains LAKE PLACID — The Franklin County Cornell Cooperative Extension 4-H Program and the Adirondack Green Circle's Lost Arts program will be teaming up in the coming months to bring a a series of workshops entitled “Truly Wild” to the surrounding community. This program is a series of five workshops that begin on May 2 and will continue through the summer months into September. For those who love to hike, learn and explore, the "Truly Wild" workshop take participants deeper into the world they thought they knew. Learn how to survive on what grows on a lawn, in a field, near a stream or in the Adirondack forest. Learn the history, use and sustainability of Adirondack local “wild” plants, trees and weeds. This 5 part series, taught by Pat Banker, 4-H Living History Instructor will help youth and their adult chaperones learn how to recognize and prepare many types of wild edibles, experience green history in a hands-on environment and construct their own Field Guide as they go along. Gail Brill and Cris Winters, two artists in the Green Circle will help the children construct their own field guide to the plants discovered during the workshops. The first workshop is May 2, 2 p.m. at Heaven Hill Farm, Bear Cub Road in Lake Placid. The dates of the subsequent workshops are June 29th, July 20th, August 24th and September 22nd. Locations for those workshops are to be determined. The workshops are open to adults only if they bring a child between the ages of 9-18. It is part of the Lost Arts and 4-H philosophy that these life sustaining skills be passed on to future generations. There will be a $3 registration fee for insurance and registration in the 4-H Program. Space is limited. Pre-register by calling Pat Banker at 327-3457.

LPI sponsors Open Mic for authors, poets LAKE PLACID — The Lake Placid Institute will host an Open Mic in The Cabin of The Northwoods Inn on Main Street in Lake Placid April 24, 8-11 p.m., part of the Adirondack Non-Profit Network’s and North Country Public Radio’s “Celebrating the Good Works” series highlighting the good works of nonprofits in the Adirondacks. Special guests will include author and poet Paul Pines and St. Lawrence University professor and poet Theo Hummer. All local authors, poets, and aspiring authors and poets are welcome to attend.

LAKE GEORGE — Focusing on environmental improvements both in the Adirondacks and statewide, the state’s top environmental officer joined officials from several area green groups in observing the 40th anniversary of Earth Day Monday with a press conference held atop Prospect Mountain. Department of Environmental Conservation Commissioner Pete Grannis cited improved wastewater treatment, a rebound in wildlife, cleaner waterways and reduced acid rain levels, and closed landfills as achievements over the past four decades. "Forty years ago, the Adirondacks were environmentally threatened because of acid rain, poorly located and outdated landfills, substandard wastewater treatment facilities and potential fragmentation of large timber tracts," Grannis said. "Since then, we've made impressive gains — our mission is certainly not accomplished — but this anniversary gives New Yorkers a chance to take stock of how far we've come." Grannis, who helped organize the first Earth Day in New York City in 1970, is now touring sites around the state that exemplify the environmental progress New York has made over the past 40 years, DEC Spokesman Yancy Roy said. Grannis said that 28 of the 48 lakes in the Adirondack monitored for acid rain have shown substantial declines in acidity, and all of them show reductions in sulfate and nitrate. Also, the number of fish species has increased from three to four, he said. He also noted that moose, Bald Eagles, Peregrine falcons, ravens and ospreys have established themselves in the North Country after long absences. Beaver, otter and fisher populations have flourished to the point that there are now trapping seasons have been resumed. Wild turkey populations have also multiplied, enabling a hunting season. Grannis noted that over the 40 years, 82 unlined landfills have been closed in DEC's Region 5, which encompasses Warren, Essex, Hamilton, Washington, Saratoga, Franklin, Clinton and Fulton counties. Since 1970, he said, more than 700,000 acres of Adirondack lands have been protected under conservation easements. The vast majority of this acreage, he said, represents working forests where logging activity continues. Easements also provide public recreational opportunities on lands and waters previously closed to the public, he said.

Adirondack heritage-strain brook trout and round whitefish have been restored to more than 50 ponds, he noted. Strides in environmental education — for both children and adults — have also been achieved, he said. Since 1990, “Summit Stewards” have worked the Adirondack High Peaks, educating visitors about the rare alpine ecosystem that is found on only 16 of the highest peaks in the state. Grannis said it was important to raise environmental awareness in youth — and prompting their interest in the outdoors has been an important objective for DEC. More than 100,000 children have participated in the Junior Naturalist Program during its 14-year history at DEC campgrounds, he said, and hundreds annually attend DEC environmental education camps. Grannis also cited the substantial reduction of pollution in the Hudson River. The number of waterways classified as severely damaged by pollution have declined 88 percent, he said. The commissioner noted other examples of environmental progress in the state including the cleanup of nearly 1,800 polluted sites. Grannis also cited the comeback of Bald Eagles and Peregrine Falcons, severely threatened decades ago, but now enjoying record-high populations. Grannis was joined by Fund for Lake George Executive Director Peter Bauer, Lake George Association Director Walter Lender, Adirondack Council President Brian Houseal and Open Space Institute President Joseph Martens — all of whom offered their views on achievements in cleaning up and protecting the environment. Grannis said efforts must continue in protecting the environment, noting particularly his concerns over greenhouse gases and global warming. He said that as a member of the state’s Climate Action Council, he and others will be planning how to reduce carbon dioxide emissions in New York State by 80 percent as of 2050. "There is plenty of work to do across the state and many new issues to address — from climate change to invasive species," he said. "If we are to continue making progress, we'll need the same amount of passion and dedication as those first Earth Day marchers had — It's time to re-dedicate ourselves to taking the next step."

• e-mail to northerncalendar@denpubs.com • fax to 1-518-561-1198 • snail-mail in care of “Regional Calendar” to 24 Margaret St., Suite 1, Plattsburgh N.Y. 12901 ...or submit them on-line at www.denpubs.com!

Friday, April 23, and Saturday, April 24 Rodeo and Safety Fair, Plattsburgh State Adults $5, children younger than 18 $2. UPPER JAY — Old and rare book sale, Wells Memorial Library, 12230 State Route 9N, 10 a.m.-2 p.m.

Friday, April 23 PLATTSBURGH —Spring used book sale, Plattsburgh Public Library, 19 Oak St., 9:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. PLATTSBURGH — Chess Club meets, Plattsburgh Public Library, 19 Oak St., 2 p.m. 536-7437. PLATTSBURGH —Preregistration for third annual Race for Stace, St. Peter’s Church, Emmaus Room, 114 Cornelia St., 4-6 p.m. 563-6400. PLATTSBURGH —Turn Off TV Week Family Fun Night, City of Plattsburgh Recreation Gym, 52 U.S. Oval, 6-8 p.m. Free for children up to age 12 and families. 565-4840. PERU — Pianist Adrian Carr performs, Peru Free Library, 3024 State Route 22, 7 p.m. Free. Reception to follow. PLATTSBURGH — Wake Up Film Festival, Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Plattsburgh, 4 Palmer St., 7 p.m.

Saturday, April 24 PLATTSBURGH — Relay for Life Garage Sale, OLV Center, 4919 S. Catherine St., 8 a.m.-1 p.m. 298-2679. PLATTSBURGH — Third annual Race for Stace, U.S. Oval. Kid’s fun run 8:30 a.m. 5K walk/run 9 a.m. 563-6400. BEEKMANTOWN— Champlain Valley Beekeepers annual meeting, Beekmantown Town Hall, 571 Spellman Road, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Bring lunch. 561-7167. PLATTSBURGH — Spring used book sale, Plattsburgh Public Library, 19 Oak St., 9:30 a.m.-4 p.m. ROUSES POINT — Art show, St. Patrick’s Church, 138 Lake St., 10 a.m.-4 p.m. CHAZY — Story time with Kristen McAuliffe, Chazy Public Library, 9633 Route 9, 10 a.m. Ages 3-8. 846-7676 to register. SARANAC LAKE — Miniature golf, Saranac Lake Free Library, 109 Main St., 10 a.m.-5 p.m. 5 for adults and children, and $2 for nonplaying adults. 891-4190. PLATTSBURGH — Customer appreciation day, Easy Self Storage, 788 Staet Route 3, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. 563-9000. PLATTSBURGH — Fun on Wheels Bike

Field House, Rugar Street, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. 562-7169. WESTPORT — Champlain chapter of Daughters of the American Revolution meets, Westport Town Hall, 22 Champlain Ave., 11:30 a.m. 962-8287 or bwhite@westelcom.com. PLATTSBURGH — Benefit for Gloria Duso, Gilligan’s Getaway, 7160 State Route 9, 12-6 p.m. Food, raffles, live music, games, silent auction. Proceeds to help woman battling liver cancer. Donations needed for event. 335-4437. PLATTSBURGH — Suicide Prevention Walk, SUNY Plattsburgh, 224 Rugar St., 12:30-3 p.m. ELIZABETHTOWN — Breathe for Nate Walk, Elizabethtown-Lewis Central School, 7530 Court St., 12:30 p.m. $20 registration fee. PLATTSBURGH — Free concert by 100-voice Potsdam Community Chorus, United Methodist Church, 127 Beekman St., 3 p.m. 315-267-2399 or francojd@potsdam.edu. ELLENBURG CENTER — Pork roast dinner, Ellenburg Center Volunteer Fire Department, 1 Church St., 4-8 p.m. Adults $8, seniors $6, children under 12 $15. LEWIS — Prime rib dinner, Lewis Congregational Church, 8557 State Route 9, 5 p.m. 873-6493. PLATTSBURGH — Youth group service auction and potluck dinner, First Presbyterian Church, 34 Brinkerhoff St., 5:30 p.m. Money raised to be used for summer mission trips for youth. CHAMPLAIN — Northern Lights Square and Round Dance Club graduation ceremony and dance, Northeastern Clinton Central School, 103 State Route 276, 7:30-10 p.m. Caller and cuer Carl Trudo. 298-4599. PLATTSBURGH — “The Touches of Sweet Harmony” concert, SUNY Plattsburgh’s E. Glenn Giltz Auditorium, Hawkins Hall, Beekman Street, 7:30 p.m. SARANAC LAKE — An Evening of Operetta and Broadway, Saranac Village at Will Rogers, 78 Will Rogers Dr., 7:30 p.m. $5 requested donation. WILLSBORO — Champlain Valley Film Society showing of “The Cove,” Willsboro Central School, Farrell Lane, 7:30 p.m.

LAKE PLACID — Open mic night for authors and poets, The Cabin of the Northwoods Inn, 2520 Main St., 8-11 p.m. 5231312. SARANAC LAKE — Performance of “Love Letters,” Pendragon Theatre, 15 Brandy Brook Ave., 8 p.m. $10 admission. 891-1854.

Sunday, April 25 ROUSES POINT — All-you-can-eat breakfast, Rouses Point Fire Department, Lake Street, 8 a.m.-12 p.m. PLATTSBURGH — Customer appreciation day, Easy Self Storage, 788 State Route 3, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. 563-9000. MOOERS FORKS — Spaghetti dinner to benefit Make-A-Wish Foundation, St. Ann’s Center, 24 Town Hall Road, 11 a.m.3 p.m. Adults $8, children $4, preschoolage children free. PLATTSBURGH — Environmental/Global Youth Awareness Fair, Champlain Centre Mall, 60 Smithfield Blvd., 12-2 p.m. AUSABLE FORKS — North Jay Cemetery Association meeting, 293 Rolling Mill Hill Road, 3 p.m. Cemetery clean-up planning. 647-5980. PLATTSBURGH — Adirondack Regional Theatre auditions for Sondheim’s “Into The Woods,” Clinton Community College Theatre, 136 Clinton Point Drive. 3:30 p.m. www.adktheatre.com or jrobertin@yahoo.com.

Monday, April 26 PLATTSBURGH — Scrabble game, Seniors Citizens Council of Clinton County Senior Center, 5139 N. Catherine St., 9 a.m.-12 p.m. 563-6186, ext. 102. PERU — Adult co-ed volleyball, Peru Primary School, 116 Pleasant St., 7-9 p.m. Fee $1. 561-7167.

Tuesday, April 27 Clinton-Essex-Franklin Library System Bookmobile. Lake Clear Post Office, 6373 Route 30, 11-11:45 a.m.; park across from Corner Cafe, Gabriels, 12:45-1:15 p.m.; across from town hall, Bloomingdale, 1:30-2 p.m.; Vermontville Post Office, 6 Cold Brooke Road, 2:15-2:45 p.m.; Church of the Assumption, 78 Clinton St., Redford, 3:30-4 p.m. SARANAC — Saranac Hollow Jammers perform, Saranac Town Hall, 3662 State Route 3, 6-9:30 p.m.

Clinton-Essex-Franklin Library System Bookmobile. Champlain Children’s Learning Center, 10 Clinton St., Rouses Point, 12:30-1 p.m.; Northern Senior Housing, corner of Route 9 and Route 11, 1:15-1:45 p.m.; Champlain Headstart, Three Steeples Church, Route 11, 1:50-2:20 p.m.; Twin Oaks Senior Housing, Altona, 3:10-3:40 p.m.; D & D Grocery, Sciota, 3:50-4:30 p.m. DANNEMORA —Story hour, Dannemora Free Library, 1168 Cook St., 11:30 a.m. All ages welcome. 492-7005. PLATTSBURGH — Soup kitchen, Trinity Episcopal Church Parish Hall, 18 Trinity Place, 5:30-6:15 p.m. Volunteers: 5615771. PLATTSBURGH — Great Books Reading and Discussion Group meets, Plattsburgh Public Library, 19 Oak St., 6-7:45 p.m. 563-0921 or sahnell@charter.net. PLATTSBURGH — “Challenges of an Aging Society: The Positive Benefits of Intergenerational Programming, Alumni Conference Room, SUNY Plattsburgh Angell College Center, 101 Broad St., 6-7 p.m. 593-5492. WADHAMS — “The Messages of Meditation” illustrated talk by Brian Trzaskos, Wadhams Free Library, 763 State Route

ra Elementary School, 40 Emmons St., 10 a.m.-12 p.m. Hosted by Family Connections. Runs weekly through May 13. 5614999. WESTPORT — Story hour, Westport Library, 6 Harris Lane, 10 a.m. 962-8219. LAKE PLACID — Story hour, Lake Placid Public Library, 2471 Main St., 10:15 a.m. 523-3200. SARANAC LAKE — Story hour, Saranac Lake Free Library, 109 Main St., 10:30 a.m. 891-4190. PLATTSBURGH — Showing of “The Pink Panther,” Plattsburgh Public Library, 19 Oak St., 6 p.m. PLATTSBURGH — Journey Into Reading, Champlain Centre Mall, 60 Smithfield Blvd., 4:30-6:30 p.m. Reading for children up to age 16 with free book provided. Hosted at center court. www.journeyintoreading.org. PERU — Adult co-ed volleyball, Peru Primary School, 116 Pleasant St., 7-9 p.m. Fee $1. 561-7167. PLATTSBURGH — Coast Guard Auxiliary/Plattsburgh Flotilla 15-08 weekly meeting and class, South Plattsburgh Volunteer Fire Department, 4244 State Route 22, 7 p.m. Classes in seamanship and crew qualification. New members welcome. 2937185. ROUSES POINT — Book club, Dodge Memorial Library, 144 Lake St., 7 p.m. Book: “Olive Kitteridge,” by Elizabeth Strout. WHALLONSBURG — Lyceum presentation entitled “Military Issues in Early America,” Whallonsburg Grange Hall, State Route 22, 7 p.m.

22, 7:30 p.m. 962-8717.

Friday, April 30

Thursday, April 29

PAUL SMITHS — Presentation by Dr. David Woodland entitled “Infectious Diseases Today: Are the Microbes Winning?” Paul Smith’s College Freer Auditorium, corner of State Routes 30 and 86, 10-11 a.m. PLATTSBURGH — Ladies Night Out to benefit Relay for Life, American Legion Post 20, 162 Quarry Road, 6 p.m. Chinese auction, vendors and music provided by Dave’s DJ Service. 578-5233. JAY — Martha Gallagher performs, Amos and Julia Ward Theatre, corner of routes 9N and 86, 7 p.m.

DANNEMORA — Open basketball for children ages 8-18, Dannemora Elementary School, 40 Emmons St., 6:30-8 p.m. 492-2606. ROUSES POINT — North Country Music Club meeting, Dodge Memorial Library, 144 Lake St., 7 p.m. Theme: “Music You Won’t Hear on the Radio.”

Wednesday, April 28

Clinton-Essex-Franklin Library System Bookmobile. Beekmantown Senior Housing, 80 O’Neil Road, 1:30-2 p.m.; 39 Hobbs Road, Plattsburgh, 2:15-2:45 p.m.; Champlain Park, end of Oswego Lane, 3:15-4 p.m. PLATTSBURGH — Annual Alzheimer’s Disease Conference, SUNY Plattsburgh Angell College Center, Rugar Street, 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Registration: 564-3054. Information: 564-3370. DANNEMORA — Gym time for infantsage 6, parents and caregivers, Dannemo-


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SATURDAY April 24, 2010

TRI LAKES TODAY - 9

PLACE A CLASSIFIED ANYTIME DAY OR NIGHT EVEN WEEKENDS AT WWW.DENPUBS.COM

94,000

The sified Clas Gail is always happy to help.

ADOPTION ADOPT: MARRIED couple offers your precious baby a life filled with love, family, education and bright future. Expenses paid. Call Jo Ann & Dave 1-888-778-4095 ADOPTION: BIRTHMOTHERS looking to create an adoption plan: Loving couple eager to adopt an infant to complete our family! Contact Christina and Dave: 1-888392-7893 or www.ChristinaandDaveadopt.com. ADOPTION: LOVING parents and their 9 year old adopted daughter would love a baby brother or sister. Stay at home mom, professional dad. Expenses paid. Please call Becky/ Mike 800-472-1835 ADOPTION: PREGNANT? Need adoption advice/ financial assistance? Licensed adoption agency with compassionate counselors are here to help. Call Joy at Forever Families Through Adoption 1-866-922-3678 CARING, LOVING couple seeks to adopt a newborn. Will help with expenses. Call Brian at 877-574-0218.

518-561-9680 | 1-800-989-4ADS GEEKS-IN-ROUTE On-site & Remote Computer Repair, Free AVG Internet Security w/every Appointment. Lowest Hourly Rates Guaranteed! Checks & All Major Credit Cards Accepted 1-866-661-GEEK (4335) GET 2 COMPUTERS FOR PRICE OF ONE! Bad Credit? NO PROBLEM! Starting at $29.99/week. Up to $3000 credit limit. Guaranteed approval. Call now! 888-8602421 NEW DELL-HP COMPUTER GUARANTEED! Bad Credit? NO PROBLEM! FREE Printer Digital Cam & LCD TV. Starting at $29.99/week. Up to $3000 credit limit. Call now! 888-860-2421

ELECTRONICS * REDUCE YOUR CABLE BILL! * - Get a 4room, all-digital satellite system installed for FREE and programming starting under $20. Free Digital Video Recorders to new callers. So call now, 1-800-795-3579. AIWA COMPACT Stereo, Dolby Pro Logic, graphic equalizer w/multi disc CD/cassette, receiver & speakers $50 518-494-7560

X-BOX 360 Rock Band Bundle “Special PREGNANT? CONSIDERING ADOPTION? Edition” guitar, drum, etc. original box, like You choose from families nationwide. LIVING new. $149.99. Call 802-558-4860 EXPENSES PAID. Abby’s One True Gift Adoptions. 866-413-6292. 24/7. Void/IL

FARM LIVESTOCK

ANTIQUES DUNCAN PHYFE breakfront (hutch). Flame mahogany, glass cabinets above, wood drawers & cabinets below. Fold out writing surface. 80”h x 56”w x 14”d. Approximately 80 years old. Matching drop leaf coffee table. Both in beautiful condition. $500 for both. 518-304-3586. VINTAGE ITALIAN MARBLE LAMP: black and white marble - 4 sided. $299.99. Call 802-459-2987.

APPLIANCES WHIRLPOOL SELF cleaning electric range, $125. Energy Star Kenmore dishwasher, $150. Have manuals, both in excellent condition. 569-7423.

AUCTIONS ANTIQUE FAIR AND FLEA MARKET May 1st & 2nd at the Washington County Fairgrounds, Rte. 29, Greenwich NY. $2 admission. (Sat. 8a-6p, Sun 9a-4p) Featuring over 175 dealers. GREAT FOOD. Early-Bird Friday (4/30 - 6a-6p $10). RAIN or SHINE. Call (518) 3315004

COINS & COLLECTIBLES COORS EXTRA Gold neon sign in original box $150 518-668-5819

COMPUTERS A NEW DELL-HP COMPUTER? You’re APPROVED! Bad Credit OKAY. No cash today. From $29.99 week. Checking Account Qualifies. Free Bonus Items!! 877-899-9988 PCFAIRY.com COMPUTER DELL desktop Windows XP $50 518-494-2823 DELL DESKTOP computer, Windows XP $50 518-494-2823

REACHING OVER READERS IN THE NORTHERN REGION

PIGLETS FOR SALE. 518-236-5925.

FINANCIAL SERVICES $$$ ACCESS LAWSUIT CASH NOW!!! Injury Lawsuit Dragging? $500$500,000++within 48/hrs? Low rates 1-800568-8321 $$CASH NOW$$ Pending Lawsuit! As seen on TV! Cash Advances for injured clients. Auto, Workers Comp. Fast Approval! All Cases Accepted. $500-$50,000. 1-866-7091100 www.glofin.com ARE YOU Buried in DEBT with no end in sight? Stressed out? Call Free! 1-866-4155400. We can HELP YOU Today! www.thefinancialsolution.net Free call 1-866-415-5400 CASH NOW! Get cash for your structured settlement or annuity payments. High payouts. Call J.G. Wentworth. 1-866 SETTLEMENT (1-866-738-8536). Rated A+ by the Better Business Bureau. CASH NOW! Get cash for your structured settlement or annuity payments. High payouts. Call J.G. Wentworth. 1-866-SETTLEMENT (1-866-738-8536). Rated A+ by the Better Business Bureau.

250 GALLON fuel tank with 100 gallons of heating oil. $350 OBO. 298-4647. 26’ ABOVE ground swimming pool. Solar cover on roller, winter cover, new liner, all parts included, $1800. 518-566-9365. BRAND NEW Jacuzzi double black cast iron under mount kitchen sink, 33x22. $75. 518566-9365. DIRECTV SAVE $29/MO FOR A YEAR! NO Equipment/ Start-Up Costs! Free HD/DVR Upgrade! Other Packages Start $29.99/mo! Ends 7/14/10. New customers only, qualify. Pkgs. Call DirectStarTV 1-800-206-4912 FOR SALE Small wood stove with fire bricks & glass door, good heater. $100. Call 518873-6787 FOUR GOODYEAR EAGLE RS-A tires P205/55R16 $150.00; Bissell Fliip It Vacuum used once $20; Bissel Pro-Heat used twice $75 - 518-963-7057 FREE 6-Room DISH Network Satellite System! FREE HD-DVR! $19.99/mo, 120+ Digital Channels (for 1 year.) Call Now $400 Signup BONUS! 1-888-430-9664 GIGANTIC GYM MIRRORS, $99 48’x100’ (11 available) @ $99/each. 72’x100’ (9 available) @ $149/each. 60’x84’ beveled (3 available) @ $135/each. Will deliver free. 1-800473-0619 KENNEDY TOOL box with machinist tools and gauges. Will sell or trade for rifle. 8917411. MEMORY FOAM THERAPEUTIC NASA VISCO MATTRESSES WHOLESALE! T$299 F-$349 Q-$399 K-$499 ADJUSTABLES - $799 FREE DELIVERY 25 YEAR WARRANTY 90 NIGHT TRIAL 1-800ATSLEEP 1-800-287-5337 WWW.MATTRESSDR.COM ORGANIC TOMATO plants. Ready to blossom. $4 each. 298-5144. PROFESSIONAL OFFICE has replaced its printer and has 1 Black PCU, 1 Color PCU,1 Transfer Unit, 1 Waste Toner Bottle, 2 Cyan Toners, 3 Yellow Toners 3 Magenta Toners, and 1 Black Toner available. These are unopened, manufacturer supplies for the Ricoh Afficio CL2000N. Total cost was $1,000 will sell all for $500. Make offer for just toner. CALL 1-315-472-6007 ask for Nancy or Dan. QUEEN SIZE bed. Mattress, box spring, rails, headboard w/mirror. Like new. Must pick up. $220 FIRM. 518-291-4610. ROYAL DALTON service for 8. “Berkshire” pattern. $200. 643-2313.

FREE

WE BUY STRUCTURED SETTLEMENTS, insurance, annuities, lawsuit settlements. Why wait? Call 123 Lumpsum TODAY!! 1877-966-8669

TWO MALE CATS . Neutered and shots. Need homes, owner passed away. 563-7059 or 563-9020.

FIREWOOD

FURNITURE

FIREWOOD FOR sale, log length, cut to order. 518-962-4592 leave message

FOR IMMEDIATE sale. Must sell furnishings ASAP. Have new smaller house. All in good condition. 1 large couch w/2 recliner seats & recliner chair, can match or be used separately. Another large couch w/2 reclining chairs, used together or separately. Assorted small tables. Stackable washer. Matching chest & mirror dresser. Call 518-637-7908.

FOR SALE 1/2 price insulation, 4x8 sheets, high R, up to 4” thick, Blue Dow, 1/2” insul board. 518-5973876 or Cell 518-812-4815 2005 POLARIS Sportsman 90, 4 wheeler, 2WD, 2 stroke, 90cc, low hours, $1,000 FIRM. Monitor heater, kerosene, direct vent, Toyostove, laser 56, $400. Leave message. 497-6796 or 562-2031.

RECLINER, MAUVE velour, good condition, $40, 518-582-2432 WOODEN TABLE with 2 chairs, 42” x60” $125 Warrensburg 518-504-4211

92398

GARAGE SALES ATTN: GARAGE SALE ENTHUSIASTS! Buying or selling second-hand treasures? The New York State Consumer Protection Board, 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 atwww.cpsc.gov. For other important recall and product safety information visit the Consumer Protection Board website at www.nysconsumer.gov FORTANN VILLAGE Wide Garage Sales, May 1st&2nd, Antiques, crafts, housewares, books, much more! Food & Fun! Dealers for Park $20weekend 518-639-8634

GENERAL **ALL SATELLITE Systems are not the same. Monthly programming starts under $20 per month and FREE HD and DVR systems for new callers. CALL NOW 1-800-7994935 AIRLINES ARE HIRING - Train for high paying Aviation Maintenance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified Housing available. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance (888) 686-1704 AIRLINES ARE HIRING: Train for high paying Aviation Maintenance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified Housing available. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance. 866-453-6204. ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from Home. *Medical,*Business,*Paralegal, *Accounting, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available.Financial Aid if qualified. Call 800-510-0784 www.CenturaOnline.com ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from home. *Medical, *Business, *Paralegal, *Accounting, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. Call 888-201-8657 www.CenturaOnline.com ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE FROM HOME. Medical, Business, Paralegal, Accounting, Criminal Justice. Job Placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. 1-800-494-2785. www.CenturaOnline.com ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from home. Medical, Business, Paralegal, Accounting, Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial aid if qualified. Call 800-494-3586 www.CenturaOnline.com ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE. Teaching, Business, Court Reporting, Accounting, Criminal Justice. Receive free information. 1800-930-3546, www.onthenetdegree.com CHERRY BEDROOM SET. Solid Wood, never used, brand new in factory boxes. English Dovetail. Original cost $4500. Sell for $749. Can deliver. 917-731-0425 CHRISTIAN DATING & FRIENDSHIP SERVICE Our 21st Year with over 100,000 members, countless relationships & marriages! Singles over 40 receive A FREE package! 1877-437-6944 (toll free) COMBINATION POOL/ping pong table, excellent condition, great for camps, $150 O.B.O. must sell 518-623-4253 FREE 6-DISH Satellite System! $19.99/mo (1 year) $400 Signup Bonus! Call 1-800-9159514.

DIRECTV - $26OFF/mo! 150+ Channels & Premium Movie Channels ONLY $29.99/mo. FREE SHOWTIME - 3 mos. New customers only. 1-888-420-9472

REACH OVER 30 million homes with one buy. Advertise in NANI for only $2,795 per week! For information, visit www.naninetwork.com

DIRECTV FREE MOVIES 3 MONTHS! NO Equipment or Start-Up Costs! Free HD/DVR Upgrade! Other Packages Start $29.99/mo! Ends 7/14/10. New cust. only, qual pkgs. DirectStarTV 1-800-620-0058

STEEL BUILDINGS: 4 only. 20x28, 30x48, 40x40, 45x82. Selling for Balance owed! Free delivery. 1-800-211-9593x181

DIRECTV FREE Standard Installation! FREE SHOWTIME+STARZ (3 mo)! FREE HD/DVR upgrade! Ends 7/14/10. New Customers Only. Qual. Pkgs. from $29.99/mo. DirectStarTV, 1-877-462-3207 DIRECTV FREEBIES! FREE Standard Installation! FREE SHOWTIME + STARZ 3/mo., FREE HD/DVR Upgrade! PLUS Save $29/mo for 1 yr! Ends 7/14/10. New cust only, qual pkgs. DirectStarTV 1-800-279-5698 DISCOUNT CIGARETTES, CIGARS & TOBACCO delivered to your door. ALL CHEAP. Toll free 1-877-600-4210. ADULTS (18+) DISH NETWORK - $19.99/mo. Lowest Price, FREE Installation - No Equipment to Buy FREE HBO for 3 months. 150 HD Channels Available. Call 1-877-554-2014. DISH NETWORK. $19.99/month. Why Pay More For TV? 100+ Channels. FREE 4RoomInstall. FREE HD-DVR. Plus $600 Sign-up BONUS., Call Now! 1-866-578-5652 DIVORCE IN ONE DAY. No Court Appearance. Guaranteed From $895.1-978443-8387. 365 Boston Post Rd, #241, Sudbury, MA 01776, www.divorcefast.com DIVORCE: $175-$450* Covers Children, etc. Money Back Guarantee! *Excludes govt. fees. Baylor & Associates, Inc. 1-800-5226000 Ext.100. FREE 6-Room DISH Satellite System! $19.99/mo (1 year) $400 Signup Bonus! Call 1-877-207-6359.

STRESSED ABOUT Bladder Control? Take Charge! Have the products you need delivered discreetley to your home. Call 1-800617-7147. THE OCEAN Corp. 10840 Rockley Road, Houston, Texas 77099. Train for a New Career. *Underwater Welder. Commercial Diver. *NDT/Weld Inspector. Job Placement Assistance. Financial Aid available for those who qualify. 1-800-321-0298. TRUNK SALE: large variety of fabric, patterns, notions, $5 and up, 518-352-7337 TV FOR LESS *$19.99/mo. 120 Channels. FREE HBO & SHOWTIME 3 mos. FREE Installation, FREE DVR upgrade. $100 CASH BACK Available. Limited Offer: 888849-3474 UNEMPLOYED? Train for high paying Aviation Maintenance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified - Job placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance 866-854-6156 WANTED DIABETES TEST STRIPS Any Kind/Any brand Unexpired. Pay up to $16.00 per box. Shipping Paid. Call 1-800-267-9895 or www.SellDiabeticstrips.com

GUNS/AMMO GUN COLLECTION for sale. Some handed down, some newer. Only serious inquiries. 891-9043. H&R 1906 22 Rev-Nickel 3” 7 Shot, almost new condition $300 Firm, Chesterown 518796-6502 VERMONT GUN SHOW April 24th - 25th 100 table show with dealers selling, buying, trading new and used guns and knives. Free appraising - Public Invited. American Legion #90 Rt. 7, Pownal (05261) 9am-5pm & 9am-2pm 802-875-4540 http://www.greenmtgunshowtrail.com/ $1.00 off with this ad

GET DISH - FREE Installation - $19.99/mo. HBO & Showtime FREE - Over 150 HD Channels. Lowest prices - No Equipment to buy! Call for full details. 1-877-554-2014. LIFE INSURANCE, NO MEDICAL EXAMINATIONS. Purchase ages 18 to 85. Fast acceptances. 1-800-938-3439, x24; 1-516938-3439, x24 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 PAYOFF YOUR MORTGAGE IN 5-8 YEARS. Works for purchases or existing mortgages. Informative brochure shows how. Request information at mtgepayoff@yahoo.com PROMOTE YOUR PRODUCTS, SERVICES OR BUSINESS TO 6.1 MILLION HOUSEHOLDS THROUGHOUT NEW YORK STATE. Reach As Many As 12 Million Potential Buyers Quickly and Inexpensively. ONLY $490 FOR A 15 WORD AD. Place Your Ad in The CPAN Classified Ad Network by Calling This Paper or call CPAN directly at 1877-275-2726. Also check out the CPAN website at www.fcpny.com where you can download the complete media kit right from the homepage.

LAWN & GARDEN ELECTRIC LAWN mower with long cord for your small yard, only $50 call 518-585-7015 LAWN CARE. “YOU GROW IT, I’LL MOW IT”. Bob Meier. Responsible and dependable. 643-8266

LOST & FOUND FOUND: FEMALE Tiger cat. Very sweet. Found near AuSable Valley School, Rt. 9N. 834-2036. GOLDEN RETRIEVER pup lost on Rt. 28 in Indian Lake Th. night March 25. If found, please call 648-6430. Reward for return.

TV FOR LESS *$19.99/mo. 120 Channels. FREE HBO & SHOWTIME 3 mos. FREE Installation, FREE DVR upgrade. $100 CASH BACK Available. Limited Offer: 888849-3474

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CASH FOR older 4 door sedan, 6 cyl., must be in excellent condition & good gas mileage 518-946-7258 leave message

PHYSICAL FITNESS

RABBIT CAGE with water bottle and feeder. 39”l x 20 1/2”w x 18”d. $35. 518-636-0770.

SCHWINN/BOWFLEX excellent condition, $300 518-532-4223

SPORTING GOODS BICYCLE ROLLERS. $50. 643-2313. WILSON ARNOLD Palmer Autographed Golf clubs, register # 6185. 3 woods, 9 irons, great bag. $150. 802-287-4041 Someone Cares!

Call 561-9680 To L i s t Yo u r Business!

PROFESSIONAL COUPLE looking for 3 bedroom, 2 bath home in Chazy School District to rent or buy. 518-846-3534 evenings. TOW BEHIND utility trailer for riding lawn mower 518-946-7258 leave message

Birthright

WANTED GOOD used laptops. 561-3525.

Emergency Pregnancy Service Free Self Administered Pregnancy Test Available

TOOLS

COMPLETE CHIMNEY CARE Cleaning • Repairs Stainless Steel Lining Video Camera Inspection 1-800-682-1643 597-3640

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ERECTILE DYSFUNCTION can be treated safely and effectively without drugs or surgery. Covered by Medicare/Ins. 1-800-8151577 ext. 1013, www.LifeCareDiabeticSupplies.com

WEIGHTLOSS MEDICATIONS Phentermine, Phendimetrazine etc. Office visit, one month supply for $80. 1-631-4626161; 1-516-754-6001; www.MDthin.com

The Classified Superstore

49784

IF YOU USED TYPE 2 DIABETES DRUG AVANDIA AND SUFFERED A STROKE OR HEART ATTACK, you may be entitled to compensation. Attorney Charles Johnson -1800-535-5727.

BACK BRACE. Covered by Medicare/Ins. Substantial relief, comfortable wear. 1-800815-1577, Ext 404. www.LifeCareDiabeticSupplies.com

EVERY BABY DESERVES A HEALTHY START. Join more than a million people walking and raising money to support the March of Dimes. The walk starts at www.marchforbabies.org/one day

Brian Dwyer Member of NYS & National Chimney Sweep Guilds

NO. 45 Combination Stanley Plane with 17 cutters in original box, $250.00. 518-5634210.

HEALTH

CHIMNEY SWEEP

BUSINESS DIRECTORY

LOGGER WITH small equipment looking for any size wood lots with good saw logs to harvest. Fair stumpage paid. 518-524-1972.

• No Charge • Strictly Confidential

66 Clinton St., Plattsburgh 563-4300 • 1-800-550-4900 Not A Medical Facility 33507

YOUR COMMUNITY

FULL SIZE mannequin. Preferably with a head. Elizabethtown Thrift Shop. 518-8736415, leave message.

1-800-989-4237

EDUCATION HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA FROM HOME, 68 Weeks. ACCREDITED. Career Opportunities. FREE Brochure. Toll Free 1800-264-8330, www.diplomafromhome.com HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA! Graduate in 4 Weeks! FREE Brochure. CALL NOW! 1-800532-6546 Ext. 412 www.continentalacademy.com HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA! Graduate in 4 Weeks! FREE Brochure. CALL NOW! 1-866562-3650 Ext. 30 www.southeasternhs.com

EQUIPMENT ELECTRIC WOOD splitter $200 on wheels 518-546-8614

57761

NEW NORWOOD SAWMILLSLumberMatePro handles logs 34” diameter, mills boards 28” wide. Automated quick-cycle-sawing increases efficiency up to 40%! www.NorwoodSawmills.com/300N 1-800661-7746 Ext 300N TOW DOLLY, heavy duty, very good condition 2004 $450 518-494-0053 TROY BILT chipper shredder super tomhawk 8H.P. Briggs Stratton Engine $275 518-7473558

LOCALBUSINESS AFFORDABLE LOCKSMITH. Keys made, locks opened, changed, repaired, installed. 24 hour emergency openings. Free estimates, senior discounts. Call Mike, 518-2064073.

57763

Service You Want & Deserve. Walk In 6 ways to place a classified ad in the...

24 Margaret St., Suite 1, Plattsburgh (Next to Arnie’s)

Call Email gail@denpubs.com

Mail

...Gail is always happy to help.

LOGGING LANDOWNERS!! LAVALLEE LOGGING is looking to harvest and purchase standing timber, mostly hardwood firewood. Willing to pay New York State stumpage prices on all species. References available. Matt Lavallee, 518-645-6351.

Need a dependable car? Check out the classIfieds. Call 1 800 989 4237

MY PUBLIC NOTICES

(518) 561-9680 Ext. 109

d To e l i a ly M t c kly e r e i e D W mes o H 0 0 37,3

FOR ALL Your Excavating needs, Call Brookfield Excavation. Serving Clinton & Essex Counties. Fully insured / Free estimates. Call 518-962-4592 or 518-802-0850.

MY PUBLIC NOTICES • MY PUBLIC NOTICES

92395

DOG CAGE 90” wide 13 feet long 70” high $125 518-798-1426

WANTED

57765

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

CLARINET, VIOLIN, FLUTE, TRUMPET, Amplifier, Fender Guitar $75 each. Upright Bass, Cello, Saxophone, French Horn, Drums, $189 each. Others 4-sale 1-516-3777907

FREE BANTAM Roosters email:ofearthspirit@yahoo.com (518) 668-9881 email preferred.

57767

VERMONT (802)

PETS & SUPPLIES

57769

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

MUSIC

Denton Publications 24 Margaret St., Suite 1 Plattsburgh, NY 12901

Web www.denpubs.com

Fax (518) 561-1198 33001

MY PUBLIC NOTICES

Now Available at...

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! 56638

MY PUBLIC NOTICES • MY PUBLIC NOTICES

North Country Telephone Exchange Directory (518)

SATURDAY April 24, 2010

MY PUBLIC NOTICES


www.Trilakestoday.com

SATURDAY April 24, 2010

TRI LAKES TODAY - 11

Automotive

Need an auto? Need someone to take that auto off your hands?

Find what you’re looking for here!

92397

AUTO ACCESSORIES MYDMV.PRO creates your DMV Forms Fast and free. Send your paperwork to Maggard to Rush your Registration, Plates and Title. Call 888.DMV PROS or visit MyDMV.Pro

BOATS 1973 NAUTALINE houseboat, 34’, good condition, new engine. $16,500. 518-587-8220, richie5226@aol.com

CARS FOR SALE 1993 NISSAN Pathfinder, runs, fairly new tires, will not pass inspection. $200. (518)668-5450 1996 FORD Escort wagon. 97,000 miles. $499. Call 492-2523, ask for Jose. 2000 FORD ECONOLINE Ride Away conversion van. 5 door, wheelchair lift, 50K. Mint condition. Must see to appreciate. $17,500. 518-563-5464. 2004 F350 Ford 4x4, 12,500 miles. 2003 Lance truck camper Model 1130, 11’6”. One owner, generator, many extras. Must see. Call 518-834-7615. 2004 JEEP Liberty Sport 2wd. Florida car in excellent condition, air, power, V6, 3.7, 70,000. $500 below Blue Book at $6,250. 518-420-6245.

HARD TOP for 1985 CJ7. Tinted windows, excellent shape. $400. 518-293-8141.

MOTORCYCLE/ ATV WANTED JAPANESE MOTORCYCLES KAWASAKI,1970-1980, Z1-900, KZ900, KZ1000, H2-750, H1-500, S1-250, S2-250, S2-350, S3-400. CASH PAID. 1-800-7721142. 1-310-721-0726.

REC VEHICLES SALES/RENTALS 1988 WILDERNESS Yukon camper by Fleetwood, 18’. $3500. 518-293-8219. 32’ MOTORHOME low mileage. Sleeps seven with one slide-out. $28,900 or best offer 518-335-9272

AUTO DONATIONS AAAA ** DONATION Donate your Car Boat or Real Estate. IRS Tax Deductible. Free Pick-up/Tow. Any Model/Condition. Help Under Privileged Children. Outreach Center. 1-800-928-7566

DONATE VEHICLE: RECEIVE $1000 GROCERY COUPON. NOAH’S ARC SUPPORT NO KILL SHELTERS, RESEARCH TO ADVANCE VETERINARY TREATMENTS FREE TOWING, TAX DEDUCTIBLE, NONRUNNERS ACCEPTED 1-866-912-GIVE DONATE YOUR CAR Boat or Real Estate. Fully Tax Deductible. IRS Recognized Charity .Free Pick-Up & Tow. Any Model or Condition. Help Needy Children. outreachcenter.com 1-800-596-4011 DONATE YOUR CAR! Breast Cancer Research foundation! Most highly rated breast cancer charity in America! Tax Deductible/Fast Free Pick Up. 800-771-9551 www.cardonationsforbreastcancer.org DONATE YOUR CAR, “Food on Wheels” Program, Family Relief Services, Tax Deduction. Receipt Given On-The-Spot, Any Condition, FREE TOW within 3 hrs ,1-800364-5849, 1-877-44-MEALS. DONATE YOUR CAR. FREE TOWING “Cars for Kids” Any Condition. Tax Deductible Outreach Center 1-800-521-7566

DONATE YOUR CAR, Boat or Real Estate. Fully Tax Deductible. IRS Recognized Charity. Free Pick-Up & Tow. Any Model or Condition. Help Needy Children. outreachcenter.com 1-800-930-4543 DONATE YOUR CAR. FREE TOWING. “Cars for Kids”. Any condition. Tax deductible Outreach Center. 1-800-597-9411 DONATE YOUR CAR: To The Cancer Fund of America. Help Those Suffering With Cancer Today. Free Towing and Tax deductible. 1-800-835-9372 www.cfoa.org DONATE YOUR VEHICLE UNITED BREAST CANCER FOUNDATION. Free Mammogram www.ubcf.info RECEIVE $1000 GROCERY COUPON 1-888-4685964

Nobody Does It Better! TRI LAKES TODAY

AAAA+ DONATE YOUR CAR. TAX DEDUCTION. Bluebook value some repairable vehicles. CHILDREN’S LITERACY 1-800-3397790 CHECK us out at www.denpubs.com

Dealer #7078619

Home $ of the

19

We are looking for people to work in our Keene, Elizabethtown, Ausable, and Lake Placid shops.

Manager Trainees Assistant Managers Shift Leaders Full and Part Time Hourly Partners Full and part time partners enjoy: • Excellent starting pay • Health and dental insurance (full time only) • Stability and local growth opportunities • Great work atmosphere • Flexible schedule • Profit sharing retirement plan If you are looking for a permanent job or just seasonal employment, come to our job fair for an interview:

99 Oil

*Up to 5 qts. of Oil and Filter. (excludes Change* specialty filters) - We Accept Used Motor Oil -

Call Today 518-891-1680

JOB FAIR!

Tues. April 27th, from 1pm to 6pm at our Keene Shop! www.stewartsshops.com

67777

Lake Colby, Saranac Lake, NY • www.evergreenautocenter.com

47444

67787

Help Wanted

Need a job? Looking for that “right fit” for your company?

Find what you’re looking for here!

92391

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES ALL CASH Vending! Be your own boss! Local Vending route. 25 machines + candy. $9,995. 1-800-807-6485. (Void/SD/CT) ALL CASH VENDING! Do you earn $800 in a day? Your own local candy route. Includes 25 Machines and Candy All for $9,995. 1888-771-3496 ALL CASH VENDING! Do you earn $800/ day? Local Vending Route.25 Machines + Candy, $9,995. 1-888-776-3061 FAST MASSIVE CASH FLOW. Receive $500/day returning phone calls, no selling, no convincing, no explaining - 2 min. recording 1-641-715-3900 x59543 GET YOUR DEGREE ONLINE *Medical, *Business, *Paralegal, *Accounting, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available.Financial Aid if qualified. Call 800-510-0784 www.CenturaOnline.com OWN A RED HOT! DOLLAR, DOLLAR PLUS,MAILBOX OR DISCOUNT PARTY STORE FROM $51,900 WORLDWIDE! 100% TURNKEY CALL NOW 1-800-5183064 WWW.DRSS4.COM

WORLD’S MOST AFFORDABLE Business! Free Website, Free Leads, Unlimited Income & No Commute! Call Ron at 800-516-4418

HELP WANTED $$ EARN EXTRA INCOME$$ Working from home. $5.00 for every envelope Processed with our sale brochures. Guaranteed!! Free Information. 1-800-210-2686 or visit: www.funsimplework.com $$$ 13 PEOPLE WANTED $$$ Make $1,400 - $4,600 Weekly Working From Home Assembling Information Packets. No Experience Necessary! Start Immediately! FREE Information. CALL 24hrs. 1-866-8992756 $$$ START NOW $$$ Earn Extra Income. Assembling CD Cases from home! No Experience Necessary. Call our Live Operators for more information! 1-800-4057619 Ext 2181 www.easywork-greatpay.com ASSEMBLE MAGNETS & CRAFTS at home! Year-round work! Great pay! Call toll free 1-866-844-5091 ASSEMBLE MAGNETS & CRAFTS AT HOME! Year-round work! Great pay! Call Toll-Free 1-866-844-5091

** AWESOME CAREER** Government Postal Jobs! $17.80 to $59.00 hour Entry Level. No Experience Required / NOW HIRING! Green Card O.K. Call 1-800-913-4384 ext. 53

DON’T FIND A JOB, FIND A CAREER. Combined Insurance is looking for individuals to join its sales force. Training, Bonus, Benefits, Leads for your Local Market. Contact Carl: 1-866-445-9427.

RV DELIVERY Drivers needed. Deliver RVs, boats and trucks for PAY! Deliver to all 48 states and Canada. For details log on to www.horizontransport.com/hope 800-3204055

**AWESOME CAREER** Government Postal Jobs! $17.80 to $59.00 hour Entry Level. No Experience Required / NOW HIRING! Green Card O.K. Call 1-866-477-4953 Ext 237.

EARN UP TO $150/DAY! Undercover Shoppers needed to judge retail & dining establishments. Call: 1-800-901-8710

SALES & ACCT Execs Needed! Make $45,000-$80,000/yr No Exp Needed, Paid Training! Benefits, Bonuses - FT/PT avail. For more info 866-809-3957 ext. 196

AIRLINES ARE HIRING- Train for high paying Aviation Maintenance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualifiedJob Placement Assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance (866)2967093 AWESOME CAREER. $20/hr, $57K/yr, Postal jobs, Pd Training, Vac. Benefits. Call M-F, 9-5CST. 888-361-6551, Ext.1034

GOVERNMENT JOBS - $12-$48/hr Paid Training, full benefits. Call for information on current hiring positions in Homeland Security, Wildlife, Clerical and professional. 1-800320-9353 x 2100 MAKE MONEY assembling dollhouse miniatures at home. Call 1-877-489-2900 or visit http://www.TinyDetails.com to get started! MYSTERY SHOPPERS! Earn up to $150 daily. Get paid to shop pt/ft. Call now 800690-1272.

BETWEEN HIGH School and College-over 18-Earn what you are worth! Travel with successful young Business Group. Paid training, transportation, lodging provided. 877-6465050

MYSTERY SHOPPERS. Earn up to $150/day. Undercover Shoppers needed. Retail and dining establishments. 877-8803229.

EARN UP to $30 per hour. Experience not Required. Undercover shoppers needed to judge retail and dining establishments. Call 800-742-6941

REGIONAL DRIVERS NEEDED! More Hometime! Top Pay! NEWER EQUIPMENT! Up to $.43/mile company drivers! 12 months OTR required. HEARTLAND EXPRESS 1800-441-4953 www.heartlandexpress.com

THE JOB For You! $500 sign-on bonus. Travel with US with our young minded enthusiastic business group. Cash and bonuses daily. Call Jan 888-361-1526 today!

HELP WANTED/LOCAL CHEF/COOK 2 positions am/pm, menu planning, budgeting, supervision and ServSafe a plus. Full-time summer, part-time seasonal 518-494-2620 ESSEX COUNTY Horace Nye Home Announces vacancies for Per Diem Certified Nursing Assistants, Registered Nurses, and Licensed Practical Nurses. Applications will be accepted continuously. For more information please call Essex County Personnel Office at 518-873-3360

PART TIME private duty nurses, days and over-night shifts, local in-home setting. Call for more details 518-546-3218 after 5p.m. THE ELIZABETHTOWN Social Center is looking for a well-suited individual to fill its Director position. The Director’s responsibilities include program development, staff management, business and fiscal administration, and property oversight. Excellent organizational skills, sound leadership qualities, and good business ethics are essential. The successful candidate will also possess strong interpersonal and communication skills, as s/he will be interacting with community members of all ages. Living within the community for which the Center provides services (Elizabethtown, Lewis, and New Russia) is preferred. The Director reports to a Board of Directors through regular monthly meetings and as required. Beginning salary: $30,000/year. Sick/personal/vacation time included. The Elizabethtown Social Center is a 501-c, non-profit organization dedicated to the betterment of the community through physical, cultural, social, and teen programs. Please mail your resume to: Elizabethtown Social Center, PO Box 205, Elizabethtown, NY 12932 or e-mail to: lnielsen@charter.net All resumes must be received by May 01, 2010.

Real Estate

Need a home? Looking for someone to fill that vacancy?

Find what you’re looking for here!

92396

APARTMENT FOR RENT

TURNKEY CAFE/Bakery Main St., Schroon Lake, $800 per month + util. Call 518-6816154

***FREE FORECLOSURE LISTINGS*** Over 400,000 properties nationwide. Low down payment. Call now 1-800-749-3041

UP TO 4,500 SQUARE FEET. Very reasonable and negotiable rents! Free High Speed Internet Connection! Large paved parking. Space good for just about anything! 1,500 square feet concrete floors, 1,000 square feet carpeted, 1,500 plywood. Rent only as much space as you need! Located off Route 22, halfway between Essex and Willsboro. CALL Tony 963-7016

ELIZABETHTOWN, NY village home in good condition. Four bedrooms, garage, private back yard, covered side porch. Walk to all. Owner responsible for utilities. Non smoking, no pets. References, credit check. Home available May 01, 2010. Please reply to contact owner directly, 914-882-0307 FOR RENT Elizabethtown 1 bedroom Apartment, heat, hot water, stove, refrigerator furnished, no pets, HUD approved. Call 518-873-2625 Judy or 518-962-4467 Wayne WESTPORT: 2 bedroom apartments available now. Onsite laundry. Utilities seperate. Rent starting at $500 plus security Call 518962-8500.

COMMERCIAL RENTAL

HOME IMPROVEMENT REPLACEMENT WINDOWS $179 INSTALLED 30% Tax Credit avail. w/stimulus. Energy Star Pkg. Call Now! 1-866-2727533 www.usacustomwindows.com STANDARD DESIGN AND CUSTOM BUILT POST FRAME STRUCTURES. Visit us online at www.cbstructuresinc.com 1-800940-0192

WHITE PINE 5/4 x 8 log siding, 90 cents linear foot. 5/4 x 6 log siding, 79 cents linear foot. 5 1/2” Oak flooring, $2.49 per square foot. 518-335-7546.

REAL ESTATE ***FREE FORECLOSURE Listings*** OVER 400,000 properties nationwide. Low down payment. Call now 800-250-2043. ADIRONDACK “ BY OWNER” www.AdkByOwner.com 1000+ photo listing of local real estate for sale, vacation rentals & timeshares. Owners: List with us for only $275 per year. Visit on-line or call 518-891-9919

LAND DEALS OF A LIFETIME Adirondack Raging River 19 Acre Tract WAS: $119,995 NOW: $59,995! 5 Acres w/ New Rustic Camp- $19,995. Call now to hear more! 800229-7843 www.LandandCamps.com OPEN HOUSE SPECIALS, now thru April 25, six locations. American Homes www.americanhomes.info

ARIZONA LAND LIQUIDATION. Starting $129/mo. 1 and 2 1/2 acre ranch lots. One hour from Tucson, No Credit Check. Owner financing. Money Back Guarantee. Free maps-pictures. 1-866-858-2511, www.sunsiteslandrush.com

*NY LAND FOR SALE* Call for our current LAND SALE FLYER w/discounts up to 50%!COMING SOON! Summer Land Catalog. Over 100 new properties. Call now for info and to schedule a preview. 1-800229-7843. www.Landandcamps.com

CLOSEOUT SALE! 87 ac- $34,900 Gorgeous So. Colorado Ranch reduced by $45,000. Incredible opportunity to own land at a fraction of its value. All utilities. Terrific financing. Must see today! Call now 1-866696-5263, x 5515

5 ACRES BORDERS 10,000 ACRES NYS FOREST, 4 Lakes - $15,900. Owner Broker. Financing Available. 1-888-683-2626

COASTAL NORTH Carolina free list of land bargains, water access homesites from $35,900- direct access ICWW, Pamlico Sound, Atlantic Ocean. Financing available. 1-800-566-5263 FACTORY DIRECT PRICING TO YOU. Ownership of 4 manufacturing housing plants. American Homes www.americanhomes.info

REAL PROPERTY FOR SALE

ABANDONED UPSTATE NY FARM 16 acres- $39,900. Abuts State Land, stream, fields,woods, apple trees, views! Great deer hunting! Build, hunt, camp or make a solid investment! 1-866-762-0667 www.newyorklandandlakes.com

VACATION/ RECREATIONAL RENTALS NORTH WILDWOOD, NJ- FLORENTINE MOTEL Beach/Boardwalk Block, Heated Pools, Efficiency/ Motel units refrigerator, elevator. Color Brochure/ specials 609-5224075 DEPT.104 www.florentinemotel.com

CAPE COD ESTATE- FUN, FUN, FUNChatham Ma, Family reunions, vacations, gat-away weekends. Open year round. Booking summer 2010. 9 Bedroom Estate sleeps 19. Nantucket sound views walk to beach & tennis. Joan Forger- (781)828-2809, virtual tour www. ourgreatgatsbycapecod.com NC MOUNTAINS CLOSEOUT SALE! Cabin Shell, 2+ acres with great view, very privte, big trees, waterfall, & large public lake nearby. $99,500. Bank financing. 866-275-0442 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

TIMESHARES FOR SALE/Rent, 10th floor condo on beach, Charter Club of Marco Island Florida, Available Dec. 2010 518-615-7380

The Classified Superstore

1-800-989-4237


www.Trilakestoday.com

12 - TRI LAKES TODAY

SATURDAY April 24, 2010

CHECK OUT A SAMPLE OF OUR PRE-OWNED SELECTION 2005 Chevy Trailblazer LS

2003 Toyota Rav4 4WD

2006 Chevy Trailblazer LS

2008 Toyota Highlander

2007 Toyota Corolla LE

Stk#101332B, 4WD, auto, AC, PW, PL, cruise, tilt, gray, 47,842 miles, local trade

Stk#13023, 4cyl., auto, AC, PW, PL, blue, 64,447 miles, local 1 owner trade

Stk#101323A, 4WD, auto, AC, P/Roof, PW, PL, blue, 42,931 miles, local trade

Stk#101363A, 4WD, V6, auto, AC, PW, PL, cruise, tilt, silver, 30,176 miles

Stk#13018, 4cyl., auto, AC, PW, PL, blue, 4,358 miles

$14,875

$11,495

$15,995

$28,975

$13,900

2008 Hyundai Accent

2004 Dodge Dakota Quad Cab SLT 4WD

2006 Toyota Prius Hybrid

2005 Pontiac Sunfire

Stk#101085A, 4.7 V8, auto, AC, PW, PL, alloys, gray, 51,250 miles

Stk#101196A, auto, AC, PW, PL, gray, 54,500 miles

Stk#101119A, 4cyl., auto, AC, PW, PL, blue, local trade, 49,157 miles

$14,825

$14,995

$7,295

2007 Nissan Maxima Stk#100T300, V6, auto, leather, M/R, AC, PW, PL, alloys, silver, 69,015 miles, local trade

$16,195

Stk#101068A, 4cyl., 5spd., AC, gray, 9,587 miles, local trade

$13,575


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