TriLakes Today 12-05-09

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December 5, 2009

A Denton Publication

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Bridges

Savings

Outdoors

New York State plans to replace bridge.

The Coupon Queen answers some reader’s mail.

Another aggressive buck, but this one didn’t get close.

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APA reassigns Van Cott Demong selected for fourth Olympics Enforcement director removed after e-mailing insults

By Chris Morris denpubs@denpubs.com

By Matt Bosley matt@denpubs.com RAY BROOK — The Adirondack Park Agency has removed its enforcement program director from his position after he sent e-mails to Sandy Lewis calling him a “sociopath.” Paul Van Cott, who since 2004 has headed the APA’s enforcement division, has been reassigned as part of the agency’s general counsel office. According to APA spokesman Keith McKeever, Van Cott’s reassignment is part of an “ongoing, aggressive transition in the agency’s legal division.” Four of the APA’s six senior attorneys are currently eligible for retirement, he said. “Paul is the most senior attorney on staff not eligible for retirement,” McKeever explained. The change in position will give Van Cott a broader range of duties, McKeever said, focusing on Agency rules and regulations and other legal issues besides enforcement. He would not comment on whether Van Cott’s salary would change. However, the move raises speculation as it comes just two weeks after Van Cott e-mailed Lewis, an Essex farmer who won a lengthy court battle with the agency in July and is now suing the agency for more than $200,000 in legal fees. Lewis has regularly sent mass e-mails for several months to area reporters, lawyers, and officials from state and local agencies sharing his disdain for officials at the APA, including Van Cott, who he referred to as “simply not competent” in a Nov. 10 e-mail. Using his APA e-mail account, Van Cott responded. “Mr. Lewis, you are a sociopath,” wrote Van Cott. “Please shut up. Go out and get a shovel and work like a real person on your farm. Enjoy life and be a real farmer. You are very fortunate. Realize that and get a life.” In his reply, Lewis sent copies to State and County officials, including a State Police Sergeant and three members of the State Assembly. “The sociopath is the APA,” wrote Lewis in response. “You and your close-linked 501(c)3 coterie have perfected the art of raping the indigenous to the point of distraction and tears, serious illness and community-wide depression over 6.5 million acres for 37 years.” Van Cott then wrote a second e-mail that went to the same recipients. “Go farm. Dig a hole, milk a cow. Enjoy the 1,000 acres of farmland on Lake Champlain that you have,” he wrote, going on to defend the APA’s Nov. 9 settlement with LeRoy Douglas, the Silver Lake resort owner who recently had his APA enforcement case dropped. “You won your case,” Van Cott told Lewis. “We respect the law. Go farm.” When asked about whether the e-mails had a role in the decision to reassign Van Cott, McKeever offered no affirmation, but did note that the agency took action. “The agency did not condone Paul’s responses,” said McKeever, “and we’ve recused him from his responsibilities in the Lewis and Douglas matters.” Van Cott has been employed by the APA since 2000. Prior to that, he was a lawyer for the state Attorney General’s Office. “He did a heck of a job,” said McKeever, noting that the enforcement division has dealt with over 2000 cases during Van Cott’s tenure, including a high-profile federal case where the judge praised the agency’s handling of the issue. “I think that’s indicative of Paul’s work and the efforts of agency enforcement.” Another senior attorney at the agency, Sarah Reynolds, who has worked in the enforcement division since 2004, will take Van Cott’s place as acting enforcement program director. “We anticipate hiring another attorney in the short-term,” McKeever said.

LAKE PLACID — It’s been more than a decade since Vermontville-native Bill Demong flew half-way around the world to compete in his first Winter Olympics. Demong was just 17 years old when he was tapped to represent the U.S. Nordic Combined team in Nagano, Japan. Now, at 29, he’s qualified for the fourth time and is ready to make history as the first U.S. athlete from his sport to take home an Olympic medal. Demong rounded out his 2008-09 season with a gold medal at the World Championships in the Czech Republic, and joins four-time Olympian Todd Lodwick on the U.S. Olympic Nordic Combined team. Eleven athletes from the U.S. will battle it out for the two remaining spots on the team at the FIS Continental Cup being held Dec. 19 and 20 in Lake Placid. Demong said the Americans are going into Vancouver with one of their strongest teams to date. “Quite honestly, I’m really excited to see who’s going to fill out our team because we’ve got a lot of strong competitors and some young guys pushing to make the team. It’s going to be exciting.” Nordic sports like ski jumping, biathlon and cross-country skiing have never enjoyed the same popularity in the U.S. as they have throughout Europe and Russia.

Vermontville native Bill Demong hopes to lead a strong U.S. Nordic combined team to the podium at the 2010 Vancouver Olympics. Photo courtesy of NYSEF

But the rise of the nordic combined team coupled with strong performances from biathletes Tim Burke and Lowell Bailey – also native upstate New Yorkers – has re-

sulted in increased attention on nordic sports. Last winter, Demong appeared in a

See DEMONG, page 5

Adirondack Singers ring in the holidays By Matt Bosley matt@denpubs.com SARANAC LAKE — The holiday season moves into full swing as one regional vocal ensemble heralds the spirit of Christmas. The Adirondack Singers, a local community choir, will be performing their annual Holiday Concert Sunday December 6th, 2 p.m. at St. Bernard’s Church in Saranac Lake. The 25-person ensemble hails from throughout the TriLakes region and beyond as singers come from Saranac Lake, Lake Placid, Paul Smiths, Cadyville, and Lake Clear to participate. Karen Butters, who has been directing the group for the past 11 seasons, and has traveled to Saranac Lake from her home in Blue Mountain Lake each week since mid-September to help the singers prepare for their performance. “This year's program draws from American holiday music, traditional, sacred and secular, including some new arrangements of traditional Christmas songs,” said Butters. The program also includes a major work, “The Glory of His Majesty,” by composer Jackson Berkey,the featured key-

The Adirondack Singers, a local community choir, will be performing their annual Holiday Concert Sunday Dec. 6, 2 p.m. at St. Bernard’s Church in Saranac Lake. Photo by Pat Hendrick

board artist with the wellknown group Mannheim Steamroller. “It is the one I am most excited about performing because of its depth of musical style and its message,” said Butters. “The work features our accompanist, Carol Lombard, as well as solos by Mary Fay Hendrick, Valerie Abra-

ham-Rogers and Saranac Lake student Jessica Kemp.” As a non-profit organization, the Adirondack Singers rely on member dues, concert proceeds, and grants to operate. The concert is made possible, in part, with a Developing Community Arts grant with public funds from the New

York State Council on the Arts Decentralization Program administered locally by the Arts Council of the Northern Adirondacks. The suggested donation for the concert is $5 for adults or $3 for students and senior citizens. For more information, call 523-4213 or 891-5008.


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SATURDAY December 5, 2009

North Elba will get bridge for Loj Road Adirondack Council selling CO2 allowances ELIZABETHTOWN — As part of its Cool Park/Healthy Planet Carbon Retirement Program, the not-for-profit Adirondack Council is seeking partners to help it purchase thousands of tons worth of Carbon Dioxide Allowances from the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative. The RGGI is the nation’s first government-mandated carbon dioxide control program. It requires power companies to purchase every year at auction one allowance for every ton of carbon the power plant releases. Each year, the number of allowances sold at auction is reduced, requiring the plants to reduce emissions. “For a tax-deducible donation of $25, you can permanently retire three tons of carbon dioxide – keeping it out of the hands of power companies that would use it to create greenhouse gas pollution – and dedicate the certificate to anyone you wish,” said Adirondack Council executive director Brian Houseal. “They will receive a suitable-for-framing certificate explaining the significance of real carbon dioxide emissions reductions.” Carbon Reduction Certificates are available for Christmas through December 23 via secure Web site at www.AdirondackCouncil.org or by calling 866-873-2240 toll free.

High Peaks Opera at Little Italy Dec. 16 TUPPER LAKE — The High Peaks Opera will host a festive program of holiday and operatic favorites at Little Italy Restaurant, 144 Park St., Wednesday, Dec. 16, beginning at 6:30 p.m. The program will feature bassist George Cordes, soprano Tiffany Conn, tenor Robert Soricelli, and pianist Elizabeth Cordes. Admission is $30 and includes an entree, salad and dessert. For reservations or more information, call 359-7177 or visit www.highpeaksopera.org.

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Has the APA taken appropriate action with regard to Paul Van Cott? Yes

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United Way of Clinton & Essex Counties Inc.

LIVE UNITED.™

This temporary bridge on Adirondack Loj Road will soon be replaced by a permanent bridge to be provided by New York State. North Elba Supervisor Roby Politi said the bridge will save the town several hundred thousand dollars. Photo by Matt Bosley

By Matt Bosley matt@denpubs.com LAKE PLACID — North Elba Supervisor Roby Politi said New York State has offered to provide the town with a bridge for the Adirondack Loj Road. Politi met Nov. 23 with officials from the state Department of Transportation, who agreed to grant a 56-foot long and 28-foot-wide bridge to replace a temporary one-lane steel bridge owned by Essex County.

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The bridge is currently in Malta, near Saratoga Springs, but Essex County officials have agreed to transport it to the site and install it. “The town will pay for construction of abutments and the approach of the road to go over the bridge,” said Politi, noting that the cost is estimated to be roughly $250,000. That amounts to a huge savings, Politi said, explaining how the cost of constructing a new bridge was estimated to be between $600,000 and $1 million. The temporary bridge has been in place since 2006 when the previous bridge over North Meadow Brook was deemed unsafe for traffic. Unlike the temporary bridge, the new bridge will go in the same place as the old one. Politi said this will provide a better line of sight

for cars as they approach the bridge. “It provides additional width and it’s a lot more user-friendly,” said Politi, adding the railing of the concrete bridge will be low enough to allow motorists to view the riparian valley as they cross it. Politi said he’s been working for over a year to get the state to help with installing a new bridge on the road, which accesses the Adirondack Mountain Club’s Heart Lake property and state land visited by more than 60,000 people annually. “I think the state understands that they are a stakeholder in the maintenance of this road,” said Politi. “90 percent of the traffic that goes on it is going either to the Adirondack Loj or to the High Peaks trailheads.” For that reason, Politi and other town officials have

been asking the state to take ownership of Adirondack Loj Road. The town has offered to take John Brown road in exchange, but so far the state has been unwilling to make the deal happen. Politi said the exchange is still a possibility, but not likely given the current financial status of the state. Still, Politi said he’s pleased the state has agreed to provide the bridge, which amounts to a huge cost-savings for North Elba. “I’m not going to look a gift horse in the mouth,” he said. The plan to replace the bridge must now obtain permits from both the Adirondack Park Agency and the DEC, but Politi doesn’t expect there to be any difficulties. If all goes well, he said, the bridge should be installed by sometime next spring.

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SATURDAY December 5, 2009

TRI LAKES TODAY - 3

Owens faces first intra-district challenge in airport dispute By Jon Alexander denpubs@denpubs.com SARANAC LAKE — In office for a mere three weeks, Democratic Congressman Bill Owens is facing his first in-district challenge: the growing rift between Harrietstown and Plattsburgh regarding the future provider of air service to the Adirondack Regional and Plattsburgh International airports. And Owens is apparently using his influence by trying to strike a deal that will work for everyone. The two facilities are currently under a single federal Essential Air Service contract through the U.S. Dept. of Transportation, and therefore must have the same regional airline provider. Looking for more growth opportunities, the Clinton County Board of Legislators is considering changing airlines from Cape Air to Colgan Air. County legislators argue that Colgan’s larger jet aircraft would allow Plattsburgh International to grow far beyond the limits of the nine-seat turboprops currently employed by Cape Air. But Harrietstown officials and business organizations argue that although the change may benefit Plattsburgh, Cape Air is the best fit for the Adiron-

dack Regional Airport. And along with elected state officials, Owens has been in negotiations with DOT for several days, with the hopes of creating separate and independent EAS contracts. Owens’ spokesman Jon Boughtin told WNBZ that negotiations are ongoing and that the Congressman will do everything in his power to see that the needs of both communities are well served. “Congressman Owens has spoken with both communities and the Department of Transportation to see where he can be helpful in making sure that this works out well for Saranac Lake and Plattsburgh,” Boughtin said. Harrietstown Supervisor Larry Miller said Monday he had previously asked U.S. DOT to split the two-year contracts – which will be up for renewal in February – but was told that such an occurrence is a rarity. But after discussing the issue with Owens and allowing some time for the wheels of government to move, Miller noticed a different tenor from the federal officials. “I have been trying to reach Bill Owens and he finally called me back at about 1:30 or 2 p.m. He told me that his intention as our Congressman is that he is pushing for U.S. DOT to do two separate bids,” Miller said. “When I spoke

Auditions for Pendragon Dec. 6 SARANAC LAKE — Auditions for Pendragon’s winter show, “The Complete Works of Shakespeare (abridged)” will be held Dec 6, 2 p.m. at Pendragon Theatre in Saranac Lake. One more male is needed to fill a cast of three men. Ideal auditionees should have no inhibitions, be available to rehearse nights and weekends, and handle a rapier; ability to do an English or Scottish accent is a plus. Rehearsal schedule will be flexible but intense. The show will begin rehearsing early in January (mostly in Lake Placid) and open at the Lake Placid Center for the Arts on February 13. It will play for three weekends at LPCA. Come prepared to move during audition. Audition will consist of some improvisational scenes and readings from the script. For more information please contact Pendragon Theatre at 891-1854.

Nobody Does It Better! Tri Lakes Today

to DOT on Friday, they told me that they wouldn’t consider separate contracts. But someone must be changing their minds because when I spoke with them today, I was told that they are considering two separate contracts.” Officials said that if DOT allows for the contracts to be split, it would be a precedent-setting move. According to Saranac Lake Area Chamber of Commerce executive director Sylvie Nelson, who has been lobbying heavily for Cape Air, the number of airline passengers has tripled at Adirondack Regional since Cape Air took the helm. During election season, Owens’s work at Plattsburgh International was a significant portion of his job creation platform. The EAS program was adopted by the federal government in 1992 as a means to incentivize airline service to rural, regional airports. Cape Air currently dominates the EAS market in New York State, being the benefactor of five of the six qualified airports in the state. Only Chautauqua-Jamestown Regional Airport has a different provider. According to U.S. DOT, in the current year, Cape Air has received $1.43 million for service to Adirondack Regional and $1.38 million for service to Plattsburgh International.

Angel of Hope Ceremony remembers children SARANAC LAKE — The public is invited to attend the annual Angel of Hope remembrance Ceremony on Sunday, Dec. 6th at 7 p.m. at the Angel of Hope statue located on the grounds of Adirondack Medical Center. The ceremony will take place regardless of weather. Attendees will be able to read their child's name or designate someone. Readers will be available. Candles are provided and guests are invited to bring a white flower to lay at the Angel in memory of their beloved child. As no seating is provided, those needing to sit are encouraged to bring a lawn chair. For more information C please call Deb or Doug at O 891-0351. ®

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4 - TRI LAKES TODAY

Are we really sheeple? S

Reader mail: Can I save more with store brands?

I

Kids Count

ome suggest that we have become sheeple. By Scot Hurlburt Sheeple are people that accept unquestioningly what they are told by authority figures around them. They follow along impassively, often, at their own peril. This notion is a far cry from the American underpinnings declared by our progenitors that are decidedly not sheepish. “Disobedience is the true foundation of liberty. The obedient must be slaves,” said Henry David Thoreau. The critics that have declared us all sheeple say that we are engaged in rampant consumerism. They make their case in this way: Americans, once a nation of savers have been lead into culture wide indebtedness. They say that corporations have used misleading television advertisements and inducements to compel us to buy an array of unnecessary items formerly known as junk. Most of the junk we own is made in China. Although the items manufactured in China are sometimes unsafe or even lethal, we continue to consume. Capitalizing on an American health crisis and obsession, obesity, millions of Americans have run up sizeable credit card balances in acquiring the next weight-reducing apparatus. We buy weight vests, ankle weights and hand weights. We buy treadmills, Elliptical machines and electric belts that attach to your stomach that cause you to lose weight without doing anything. The Abdominizer, the Belly Buster, the Tummy Blaster, all offer the promise of a washboard stomach in just minutes a day. Because Americans have less and less discretionary time, marketing a device that delivers results in minutes is attractive to Americans. There is also a variety of electrical appliances that cook food faster and with less fat. There are special cooking tools that reduce the time needed to prepare food, utilizing choppers or mini-food processors that have been around for about thirty years, now reborn. They say that sheeple are not angry that the government did not protect us from near financial disaster and did not let us know ahead of time that it would occur. They say that sheeple are not angry about bailing out billionaires while thousands of Americans go into personal bankruptcy not because of greed or avarice but because they cannot pay their health care bills, the number one reason for bankruptcy in America today. I asked a good friend if he thought we were sheeple and the mindless consumers that they make us out to be. After he got off his treadmill, removed his electric tummy blaster and turned off his hair follicle stimulator he said, “No, that is ridiculous.” As I was leaving his house I noticed that he had the newest shoelace greaser model, the Greaser 2000. I borrowed it for a few days and my shoes have never been more comfortable. I have to go now; I’m off to get my own Greaser 2000. Remember, all kids count. Scot Hurlburt can be reached by e-mail at hurlburt@wildblue.net

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t’s time again to answer reader mail from people like you who are learning to Super-Coupon:

Q: “I’ve been reading your columns with great interest. Prices seem so high right now in the grocery store. If I just buy the store brand of products, won’t I save more money than using coupons on the big brands?” A: This is a common misconception among new coupon shoppers. It’s true that when you compare the shelf price of store brands with the price of name-brand products, the store brands often appear to save us more money. But with rare exceptions, we can almost always buy the name-brand products that we like and prefer — with coupons — at an even better price than the store brand. Why is this? Quite simply, there are more coupons and discounts available for name-brand products than for store-brand products. If you look at your coupon inserts from the newspaper and the wide variety of coupons available on the Internet, you’ll quickly notice there are typically no coupons for store-brand items. Large, brand-name product manufacturers work hard to encourage us to try their products. They feature their brands and products in the coupon inserts, offering shoppers significant discounts to try them. Many times, it’s also possible to find store coupons for the same products. If we stack a store and manufacturer coupon together, we’re reaching an even larger savings on the brand-name item than we could by simply purchasing the store brand at its regular low price. As with all things, there are always exceptions. If your store happens to offer coupons for its own brands, that’s a great way to save. Here’s a perfect example. Recently, my store had coupon dispensers set up in the aisle offering $1 coupons for “any [store-brand] paper product.” During this sale, store-brand rolls of paper towels, boxes of facial tissue and packages of the napkins were all on sale for $1. Now, if you’re a regular reader of my column, you know that using a $1 coupon on a $1 sale is one of my favorite

ways to get things for free! Speaking of coupon dispensers, our next question this week pertains to them. Q: “I often see coupon machines on the shelves of the grocery store, but the coupons in them aren’t usually for things on sale. Is there a strategy for getting good discounts with these?” A: Absolutely! You’re right in noticing that most of the time, the coupons in By Jill Cataldo the store’s coupon dispensers don’t link up to the best sales in the store. That’s also true of the coupons we receive in the newspaper each week. Their greatest value comes when the price of the featured item takes a big dip. I regularly “shop” the coupon dispensers in my stores. If I see coupons for an item I like, I will take a few to hold onto until the sale price drops. About six weeks ago, my store’s coupon dispenser offered $2 coupons for turkey bacon. But the turkey bacon was on sale for $4.99, a relatively high price. I took a few coupons from the dispenser and held onto them for four weeks … when the price of the turkey bacon went down to $2.99. Now, I took home turkey bacon for 99 cents a package! If I had used those coupons the week I found them in the dispenser though, I would still have paid $2.99 a package — three times the price. © CTW Features

Coupon Queen

Jill Cataldo, a coupon workshop instructor, writer and mother of three, never passes up a good deal. Learn more about couponing at her Web site, www.supercouponing.com. E-mail your own couponing victories and questions to jill@ctwfeatures.com.

Healthy soil is the key to successful gardening

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o matter what your gardening passion — lawn, flowers, or vegetables — all types of gardening come down to one thing. And that is soil. No matter what you want to grow the one thing you need is healthy soil. To get healthy soil you need to feed your dirt, or to be more accurate you need to feed your microbes and earthworms. Science has gradually learned if we want to get our best yields from our gardens, we must recognize our soil has a vibrant but delicate ecosystem feeding off of the organic matter in the soil. Tilling disrupts this balance and can cause organic matter to be lost, nutrients to be under utilized, and mircrobe levels to be unbalanced. So, what should a home gardener who is used to tilling do? It sounds crazy, but the simple answer is to stop tilling. Wait a second. What was that? Yes, I did recommend we stop tilling. I know it sounds crazy and a clean, weed-free bed is a beautiful. But, I’d rather have a highly productive garden than a clean, weed-free bed. So, here’s how you stop tilling and have a weed-free garden bed. The first thing you have to do is manually dig out any perennial weeds, lay a 1 to 2 inch layer of compost on top of the soil, and then use a smothering mulch to help prevent any new weed seeds from germinating. Grass clippings and leaves are great smothering mulches. Every year simply add another layer of compost and continue to use mulch. The microbes in the soil will fur-

ther break down the compost and the organic mulch. The earthworms, microbes, and rain water will wash the nutrients and the organic material down to the plant’s roots. One of the most important components to no-till gardening is keeping the weeds from establishing. If you see a weed, pull it prior to the plant setting new seeds. The first year will be the hardest, but through the use of mulch, not disturbing the seed bed, and handpulling the number of weeds will drastically be reduced. And, with any new gardening venture one of the best rules of thumb is to start small. Begin with a small area and experiment to find your favorite methods. If it does seem strange at first, do preserve. The rewards are significant. Anne Lenox Barlow is the horticulture educator with Cornell Cooperative Extension in Clinton County. CCE offices may be reached in Clinton County at 561-7450; Essex County, 9624810; and Franklin County, 483-7403. E-mail your questions to askMG@cornell.edu.

Too many cats in need of adoption

CENTRAL PLANT MANAGER..........................................................................Tom Henecker

shelters post photos of their adoptable animals on this Web site. And please, please spay and neuter your cats (and dogs) to help reduce this overpopulation crisis in the North Country. Laura Antonelli, Bloomingdale

BUSINESS OFFICE MANAGER....................................................................Cheryl Mitchell MANAGING EDITOR.........................................................................................................John Gereau GENERAL MANAGER NORTH............................................................................Cyndi Tucker GENERAL MANAGER SOUTH...............................................................Scarlette Merfeld GRAPHICS MANAGER...............................................................Daniel E. Alexander, Jr. PRODUCTION MANAGER.......................................................................................William Coats Central Plant Office

Southern Office

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Elizabethtown 14 Hand Ave. P.O. Box 338 Elizabethtown, NY 12932 Phone: 518-873-6368 Fax: 518-873-6360

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SATURDAY December 5, 2009

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To the editor, Right now, there are more than 50 cats waiting to be adopted at the Tri-Lakes Humane Society in Saranac Lake, at least 15 cats waiting at the Elmore SPCA in Peru, at least 25 at the North Country Animal Shelter in Malone, at least 20 at the North Country SPCA in Westport, and incredibly, more than 100 cats in need of good homes at the Adirondack Humane Society in Plattsburgh. Overcrowded conditions mean that many of these cats have been confined for extended periods to small cages; sometimes for months, a year, or even longer. Please, be a hero and adopt a cat (or dog) today at one of our local animal shelters. You can also search online by entering your zip code on petfinder.com. Most of our local

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TRI LAKES TODAY - 5

NCCC gets stimulus funds to train addiction professionals By Chris Morris denpubs@denpubs.com

SARANAC LAKE — North Country Community College will be hosting their 24th Holiday Arts and Crafts Fair on Sunday, Dec. 6. The event will be hosted in the Sparks Athletic Complex Alumni Gymnasium from 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. In order to maintain the “hand-crafted” integrity of the event, only items personally handcrafted by the artisan will be accepted for display. For more information, please call the NCCC Holiday Arts & Craft Fair Staff at 891-2915, ext. 236 or e-mail hconger@nccc.edu.

Holiday vendor and craft sale Saturday SARANAC LAKE — St. Bernard's Catholic School, 63 River St., will host a holiday vendor and craft sale this Saturday, Dec. 5, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. The sale will feature local home-based business vendors and local crafters. Proceeds will benefit St. Bernard's School Parent Educators Association. Admission is free. For more information, call 891-2830.

Crookston to perform at BluSeed Studios SARANAC LAKE — Joe Crookston, an award-winning folk singer and songwriter, will perform at BluSeed Studios Friday, Dec. 11 at 7:30 p.m. Based in Ithaca, Crookston was awarded the prestigious 2009 “Album of the Year” award during the 21st annual International Folk Alliance Conference in Memphis, Tenn. He received a year-long songwriting grant from the Rockefeller Foundation to travel throughout New York State, interview local residents, and write original songs based on his experiences. Tickets are $14 or $12 for BluSeed Studios members. For more infomation or reservations, call 891-3799.

Demong From page 1 televised ad for Alka Selzter, and this fall he’s featured as one of NBC’s top 25 Olympians to watch in Vancouver. But Demong’s experience helps him stay focused. “It’s been kind of a crazy year,” Demong said. “This being my fourth Olympics already, you get kind of used to the pre-Olympic hype.” His sport’s increasing popularity isn’t the only change Demong has seen in his year ’s competing at the international level. The rapid rise of social media and Internet technology has made the world a smaller place – a comforting thought for an athlete who spends a third of his year traveling abroad. “It’s been huge; I remember when I first went to Europe it was hard to even find a payphone that you could figure out how to call home on,” Demong said. “Now, every day you can make some sort of contact. Between Twitter, Facebook or a blog of some sort, you can let the world know what you’re doing. I think it’s changed the world and made everything a bit smaller and made our sports easier to follow over here. It’s really exciting.” For those looking to follow Demong as he competes inVancouver, he’ll be utilizing some of that social networking technology to keep his fans up-to-date. “You can find me on Twitter, and our team has a blog at usnoco.com,” Demong said. “Our coaches and athletes like to update it from time-to-time with some great pictures and video.” And for his part, Demong hopes to send a one-word “tweet” to his fans following the 2010 Winter Olympics: Gold.

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SARANAC LAKE — A local college has received more than $20,000 in stimulus funds to train students for careers in the addictions field. The state Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services announced the release of $500,000 acquired through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act Nov. 27. Karen M. Carpenter-Palumbo is commissioner of the Substance Abuse Services office. She said addictions counseling is among the top 10 fastest growing occupations in the country. “There is a critical shortage of addictions counselors,” she said in a prepared statement. “There’s great demand by employers to hire individuals with this valuable credential.” On Nov. 30, North Country Community College received $20,590 in stimulus funds to provide free tuition to students interested in pursuing a career in addictions counseling. The funds cover a comprehensive 350-hour educational program that includes: an unpaid internship; career counseling and job placement services; aid in acquiring and completing a credentialing application. Joe Keegan is interim vice president for Academic Affairs at NCCC. He said the partnership with the state Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services is invaluable.

“Given the rural nature of our service area and the economic challenges that we face, regardless of a recession, awards like this have a significant impact in helping our community members take those first steps into higher education,” Keegan said. He added that the students affected most by the stimulus funds are the individuals who may not have had the opportunity to pursue higher educations beforehand. Keegan also noted that the state’s resources are stretched thin, and any extra financial aid helps. “The stimulus funds provide another avenue in helping students access higher education,” he said. “Community colleges are on the front line of educating the next generation of addiction professionals.” Keegan says the funding will also help increase the size of future classes and aid in student retention as well. “That leads to positive results for the field and those we serve,” he said. Upon completion of the 350-hour course, students can apply for the Certified Alcohol and Substance Abuse Counselor Trainee certificate. Those individuals are counted among the Qualified Health Professionals necessary to run state-certified chemical dependence treatment programs. Commissioner Carpenter-Palumbo says trainees are in great demand in addictions fields and highly employable.

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SATURDAY December 5, 2009

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Wilderness A

fter nearly three centuries of damage by of flood, wind storm, wildfire, invasive species, climate change and the omnipresent threat of development, the Adirondack forests of 2009 are considered “the most continuous they have been in over 150 years” according to the Adirondack Atlas published by the Wildlife Conservation Society. Although stressed by disease, damaged soils and an assortment of airborne pollutants, the state’s forested lands have proven surprisingly resilient. Forests regenerate after damage, it’s a component of nature restoring itself. The Adirondack Park currently contains some of the largest stands of virgin forest east of the Mississippi. Beginning in the early 1870’s, the state began acquiring nearly 2,000 parcels of forested lands with a combined total of nearly 1.3 million acres that held either virgin forest or lands that were once lightly cut for spruce according to research by the late, Barbara McMartin. As a result of the state’s aggressive land acquisition programs, which have been accomplished through both outright fee purchase and conservation easements, the amount of protected acreage in the Adirondack Park is currently at an all-time high. However, despite the collective force of dozens of advocacy groups pressing for preservation, the park remains a disjointed conglomeration of independent private and public parcels of land. Although it has often been considered a model as one of the country’s oldest and most successful parks, the Adirondack region does not offer an extensive and seamless wilderness. Rather, the park features a varied assortment of lands dispersed around a variety of small communities. It has been said that a park with permanent residents can never become more than a trial wilderness due to the infrastructure of roads and power grids. The dispersed communities divide the landscape and disrupt the connectivity which is vital to a true wilderness. Light and sound pollution do not respect the boundaries established by zoning. Neither do migrating or invasive species of flora, fauna and an annual influx of millions of visitors. Wilderness by definition is a sizable, roadless region where the natural ecological processes continue to evolve with as little human interference as possible according to a federal statute established by the Wilderness Act of 1964. In the Adirondacks, of all the land classifications, man has impacted wilderness areas the least. To further protect them, wilderness areas have restrictions placed upon their use with only conforming "structures and improvements" such as leantos, outhouses and pre-existing dams allowed. In order to foster access, foot trails, log bridges and signboards are permitted but the use of motors or mechanized vehicles such as bicycles is prohibited. When the Adirondack Park Agency was established in 1972, the state identified fifteen parcels consisting of a minimum of 10,000 acres each to be established as wilderness areas. Today approximately 1,030,000 acres of protected lands are designated as wilderness which constitutes approximately 18.2 percent of the public lands within the park. The park encompasses nearly 85 percent of all wilderness lands east of the Mississippi, which is besieged by nearly 9 million visitors annually. The park’s wilderness lands still present a conundrum of disjointed public parcels which are dissected by highways, hamlets, private parks and villages. While there remain numerous opportunities for extensive travel, even the most remote sections of the park lack the contiguous nature of true wilderness. Despite the ‘rewilding’ efforts of travelers are still likely to encounter signs of man at some point in their travels. According to a Draft Map of Primitive Class Areas in the Adirondack Park developed by the Adirondack Park Agency, “The preliminary estimate of potential Primitive Areas indicates the truly remote areas of the Adirondack Park are a relatively small and therefore precious resource.” According to the methodology implemented by the US Forest Service’s Recreational Opportunity Spectrum, less than 3 percent of the park’s total of 6 million acres are considered to be truly primitive enough to be wilderness. Do these lands indeed furnish the vast, contiguous expanse of wild forests, solitary ponds and savage waters that are to be expected of an authentic wilderness or are they a ‘reclaimed wilderness,’ fashioned by regulations, restrictions and zoning? Does the intrusion of an airplane overhead, a fire tower above or the evidence of a long forgotten foundation along

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a trail diminish the wilderness character of the land? And what about people? When a community of campers crops up in an otherwise desolate location, are they any less invasive than the sound or sight of manmade appliances or structures? Is wilderness simply a state of mind? Despite the inherent drawbacks of design, the Adirondack Park remains an outstanding example of what can be accomplished when wild lands are afforded protection from the “hands of man.” Although the park may be considered an imperfect wilderness on a number of levels, it is still a place where it is possible to find oneself immersed in the middle of nowhere. And I must agree with Steve McQueen who once said, “I'd rather wake up in the middle of nowhere than in any city on earth.” Joe Hackett is a guide and sportsman residing in Ray Brook. Contact him at brookside18@adelphia.net

SATURDAY December 5, 2009

After reading my last column about a local man who was attacked by a 10-point-buck, Brian Warrington called to tell me about his own close encounter. As the pictured above shows, however, the outcome was a little different in his case.

A close encounter

F

A couple of firsts: North Creek resident Rick Bennett wrote recently to report that two of his sons, Jesse and Kyle each scored this season. Pictured above is Kyle Bennett with his first Adirondack buck, an 8-pointer that weighed 120 pounds. Pictured below is Rick’s youngest son, Jesse, with his first buck, a 100-pound, 4-pointer he nailed across a field in Onieda County at 200 yards with his 7mm08.

ew hunters I’ve spoken with can believe the sequence of events that played out a few weeks ago when a North Country man was attacked by a 10-point buck near his remote home outside Malone. Minerva resident Brian Warrington, however, no longer falls into that category. That’s because it nearly happened to him, too. The outcome, however, was a shade different. “I read your column last week and couldn’t believe a deer would act like that,” Warrington told me, referring to my last column in which I described how Gerald Dabiew wrestled with a mature buck for nearly 20 minutes as it pounded him into the ground. “Well, I believe it now.” Warrington said his own harrowing encounter began as he and his wife, Patty, started up into the woods to begin a drive. Barely off the blacktop, the duo jumped two deer, one of which was a slammer buck. “So, I pulled out an estrus bleat, and bleated three times,” Warrington said. Before he could put the call away, the deer appeared, stomped at the ground, lowered its antlers and charged. “My wife and I have been hunting together for 30 years,” Brian said. “I’ve seen a lot of unusual things in the woods, but nothing like this.” Brian said Patty lunged for safety behind a tree as the 180-pound buck closed to within 30 feet and fired at the deer, missing it. The shot brought the animal to a stop, however, and Brian dropped it in its tracks. “Obviously, the deer came to the bleat call, but this deer was so aggressive, it was grunting and growling and coming straight for us,” Brain said. “I’ve never seen anything like it,” he said. Patty agreed. “It’s pretty scary when it happens to you,” she said, adding she will never doubt the effectiveness of a call again, or how a rutting buck might respond. “I’m a believer now,” she said, echoing her husband’s earlier sentiment. John Gereau is managing editor of Denton Publications and an avid outdoorsman. His column appears regularly. For more articles by Gereau, checkout his blog at www.denpubs.com.

My cousin, Bill Gereau, shot this big 8-pointer with his crew in Minerva Nov. 6. The buck weighed 152 pounds and was his largest to date.


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SATURDAY December 5, 2009

TRI LAKES TODAY - 9

Send events at least two weeks by: • 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, Dec. 4-Sunday, Dec. 6 ROUSES POINT — Crafty Creations grand opening, 105 Lake St.

Saturday, Dec. 5 K E E S E V I L L E — Ke e s ev i l l e United Methodist Church’s 7th Annual Holiday Gala, Keeseville Elks Lodge, 1 Elks Lane, 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Luncheon served from 11 a.m.-1 p.m. Gifts for sale, silent auction, bale sale and more. Photos with Santa for $5 per picture from 11 a.m.-1 p.m. MALONE — Free pancake breakfast, St. Mark’s Episcopal Church, 34 Elm St., 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Santa and Mrs. Claus to visit at 10 a.m. 521-3477. LAKE PLACID — John Brown Symposium, High Peaks Resort, 2384 Saranac Ave., 9 a.m. March to John Brown’s grave to follow. P L AT T S B U R G H — E l m o r e S P C A H o l i d ay F u n d ra i s e r, Champlain Centre, 60 Smithfield Blvd., 10 a.m.-7 p.m. Sale to be held between Old Navy and Victoria’s Secret. 643-2451. PLATTSBURGH — Adirondack Humane Society Santa Pet Photos Fundraiser, Tails of the Adirondacks, Airport Plaza, 770 State Route 3, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. 5617297. PERU — Fall into Winter Craft Show, St. Augustine’s Church, 3035 Main St., 10 a.m.- 3 p.m. Gently-used clothing, baked goods, workshops, food and entertainment by Sweet Adelines from 1-1:30 p.m. WHALLONSBURG — Holiday Craft Bazaar, Whallonsburg Grange Hall, State Route 22, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. 963-4166. SARANAC LAKE — 2009 Winterfair and Gift Shoppe, Northern Lights School, 57 Church St., 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Crafts, games, puppet show, refreshments and entertainment. Admission $3 per child, $5 per adult, or $12 maximum per family. SARANAC LAKE — Holiday craft sale, St. Bernard’s School, 63 River St., 10 a.m.-2 p.m. 8912830. ESSEX — Christmas Bazaar, Essex Community Church 2743 State Route 22, 10 a.m.- 2 p.m. Luncheon 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m. ROUSES POINT —

Scrapbooking open house, Gaines Marina, 141 Lake St., 10 a.m.-2 p.m. 297-7000. KEESEVILLE — 7th annual Holiday Gala, Keeseville Elks Lodge, 1 Elks Lane, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Luncheon, silent auction, bake sale, and pictures with Santa. 834-2072. PLATTSBURGH — 4th annual Poker Run/Fun Run/Walk. Starts at Geoffrey’s Pub and continues to Mickey’s, 4th Ward, and Bobby’s Lounge. Registration 11:15 a.m.; starts 12 p.m. Benefits The Christmas Bureau and Dave Justus Toys for Needy Kids. PLATTSBURGH — Christmas Tea and Bazaar, First Presbyterian Church, 34 Brinkerhoff St., 12-3 p.m. Book sale starts at 11 a.m. 561-3140. SARANAC — Santa Claus visits Saranac Volunteer Fire Department, 3277 State Route 3, 12 p.m. AUSABLE FORKS — Story hour, Ausable Forks Free Library, 9 Church St., 2:30 p.m. CHAZY — Family Movie Night, Chazy Presbyterian Church, 620 Miner Farm Road, 6 p.m. Veggie Tales movie “St. Nicholas: a Story of Cheerful Giving.” AUSABLE FORKS — Tree lighting, Ausable Forks Clock Park, corner of E. Ausable and Main streets, 6 p.m. MORRISONVILLE — Square dancing, North Country Squares Building, Clinton County Fairgrounds, 84 Fairground Lane, 7 p.m. 561-5801. TUPPER LAKE — Open Mic/Broken Ear hosted by Philadelphia Jones, The Park, 8 p.m.-12 a.m. Special guests “Tres Amigos,” Yod, Ron Jones, Kirk Gagnier and others. No cover. WILLSBORO — Champlain Valley Film Society movie “The African Queen,” Willsboro Central School, 29 School Lane, 8 p.m. www.cvfilms.org or 963-8662. PLATTSBURGH — Mike and the Monsters performs, Olive Ridley’s, 37 Court St., 8 p.m. www.oliveridleys.com.

Sunday, Dec. 6 ELIZABETHTOWN — John Brown Commemorative, Adirondack History Center Museum, 7590 Court St., 8736466.

SARANAC LAKE — North Country Community College Holiday Arts and Crafts Fair, Sparks Athletic Complex, 112 Dorchester Road, 10 a.m.-3:30 p.m. 891-2915. CHAZY — Friends of the Chazy Public Library Christmas open house, Chazy Public Library, 9633 State Route 9, 11 a.m.-1 p.m. 3141161 or 846-7302. WESTPORT — John Brown Coming Home, Westport Marina and Heritage House, Washington Street, 12-2 p.m. $15. 873-6466. MOOERS FORKS — Christmas dinner hosted by Mooers Good Fellowship Club, St. Ann’s Church, 3062 U.S. Route 11, 12 p.m. $8 for nonmembers, free for members. PLATTSBURGH — Christmas dinner, Seton Catholic Central School, 206 New York Road, 12 p.m. www.setoncatholic.net. KEESEVILLE — Holiday Extravaganza with Speedy Arnold, Santa Claus and Roy Hurd, AuSable Valley Grange, 1749 Main St., 1-5 p.m. PERU — Winter Greens Production Open House, Rehoboth Homestead Farm, 66 Jabez Allen Road, 1-3 p.m. 5617450 or alb326@cornell.edu. SARANAC LAKE — Auditions for “The Complete Works of Shakespeare (abridged),” Pendragon Theatre, 15 Brandy Brook Ave., 2 p.m. 891-1854. SARANAC LAKE — Adirondack Singers Holiday Concert, St. Bernard’s Church, 27 St. Bernard St., 2 p.m. Suggested donation $5 for adults, $3 for students and seniors. 523-4213. ELIZABETHTOWN — John Brown Coming Home, United Church of Christ and Old County Courthouse, Court Street, 3-5 p.m. 873-6466. P L AT T S B U R G H — S o u l f u l Christmas Concert, SUNY Plattsburgh’s Hawkins Hall, E. Glenn Giltz Auditorium, Beekman Street, 5 p.m. CHAZY — Candlelight vigil to remember children who have passed away, Riverview Cemetery, 6 p.m. 846-8304 or 846-7818. SARANAC LAKE — Angel of Hope remembrance ceremony, Adirondack Medical Center, 2233 State Route 86, 7 p.m. 891-0351.

In the Military

Monday, Dec. 7 ELIZABETHTOWN — Advent Musical Meditations with Susan Forney Hughes, soprano, and Mary Lu Kirsty, pianist, United Church of Christ, 7580 Court St., 12:15-12:30 p.m. Donations accepted. 873-2667. LAKE PLACID — John Brown Coming Home, John Brown Farm State Historic Site, John Brown Road, 3-6 p.m. WADHAMS — Anatomy and Physiology Class instructed by Brian Trzaskos, Wadhams Free Library, 763 State Route 22, 6-7 p.m. $10 per class. 963-8142. ELIZABETHTOWN — Boquet River Association annual meeting, Hand House, 8273 River St., 7 p.m.

Tuesday, Dec. 8 Clinton-Essex-Franklin Library Bookmobile stops: Lake Clear Post Office, 6373 Route 30, 1111:45 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. ROUSES POINT — Rouses Point Playgroup, Champlain Children’s Learning Center, 10 Clinton St., 10 a.m.-12 p.m. 3141191. For children ages 0-6. PLATTSBURGH — Storytime for preschoolers, Plattsburgh Public Library, 19 Oak St., 10:3011 a.m. LAKE PLACID — John Brown memorial service, John Brown Farm State Historic Site, John Brown Road, 11 a.m. ELLENBURG DEPOT — NAC Capital Excel Project informational forum, NAC, 5572 Route 11, 6 p.m.

Wednesday, Dec. 9 Clinton-Essex-Franklin Library Bookmobile stops: 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., 11:15 a.m. Ages 3 and older. PLATTSBURGH — Storytime, Plattsburgh Public Library, 19 Oak St., 6:30-7:15 p.m. SARANAC LAKE — Chess club, Lake Flour Bakery, 14 River St., 7 p.m. Open to all, experienced players preferred. PLATTSBURGH — Completely Stranded Improve Comedy Troupe performs, Olive Ridley’s, 37 Court St., 6 p.m. www.oliveridleys.com.

Thursday, Dec. 10 Clinton-Essex-Franklin Library Bookmobile stops: 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. SARANAC LAKE — Children’s holiday story hour, Saranac Lake Free Library, 109 Main St., 10:30 a.m. 891-4190. LAKE PLACID — Children’s story hour, Lake Placid Library, 2471 Main St., 10:15 a.m. WESTPORT — Baked ham dinner, Westport Federated Church, 6486 Main St., 4:30 p.m. PLATTSBURGH — Zumbathon benefit for Clinton County Christmas Bureau and JCEO, Gilligan’s Getaway, 7160 State Route 9, 6-8 p.m. KEESEVILLE — “The Belle of Amherst” by William Luce, AuSable Valley Grange, 1749 Main St., 7 p.m. Kathleen Recchia as Emily Dickinson, directed by Tyler Nye. Admission $10. 8346097.

Friday, Dec. 11 (Hanukkah begins) REDFORD — Back Porch Band performance, Big Daddy’s Restaurant, 4655 State Route 3, 5:30 p.m. Donations benefit Hospice of the North Country. CHAMPLAIN — Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing, Northeastern Clinton Central School, 103 State Route 276, 6 p.m. Tickets $3 advance, $5 at door. Kids younger than 12 free. 236-7373 or 236-4543. PLATTSBURGH — Zumbathon to benefit The Christmas Bureau and JCEO Food Shelf, Gilligan’s Getaway, 7160 State Route 9, 6 p.m. Cost $6 donation.

Dealer #7078619

Romeyn graduates from basic training SAN ANTONIO, Tex. — Air Force Airman Daniel J. Romeyn graduated from basic military training at Lackland Air Force Base, San Antonio, Texas. The airman completed an intensive, eight-week program that included training in military discipline and studies, Air Force core values, physical fitness, and basic warfare principles and skills. Airmen who complete basic training earn four credits toward an associate in applied science degree through the Community College of the Air Force. Romeyn is a 2008 graduate of Saranac Lake High School, N.Y. He is the son of Thomas Romeyn of Tyler Road, Vermontville, N.Y.

Home $ of the

1999

Oil Change*

BEST BUYS ON ALL USED VEHICLES! TIRE CENTER

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

Call Today 518-891-1680

30472

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

North Country Telephone Exchange Directory (518) 236.............Altona/Mooers 251.................North Creek 293.......................Saranac 297...............Rouses Point 298...................Champlain 327.................Paul Smiths 352..............Blue Mt. Lake 358...............Ft. Covington 359................Tupper Lake 483........................Malone 492.................Dannemora 493.................West Chazy 494................Chestertown 497.................Chateaugay 499.....................Whitehall 523..................Lake Placid 529...........................Moria 532..............Schroon Lake 543..........................Hague 546.......Port Henry/Moriah 547........................Putnam 561-566...........Plattsburgh 576....Keene/Keene Valley 581,583,584,587 ..............Saratoga Springs 582....................Newcomb 585................Ticonderoga 594..........Ellenburg Depot 597.................Crown Point 623...............Warrensburg 624...................Long Lake 638............Argyle/Hartford 639.......................Fort Ann 642......................Granville 643.............................Peru 644............Bolton Landing 647.............Ausable Forks 648..................Indian Lake 654.........................Corinth 668...............Lake George 695................Schuylerville 735.............Lyon Mountain 746,747..........Fort Edward / Hudson Falls 743,744,745,748,761,792, 793,796,798. . . .Glens Falls 834....................Keeseville 846..........................Chazy 856.............Dickerson Ctr. 873....Elizabethtown/Lewis 891..............Saranac Lake 942......................Mineville 946..................Wilmington 962......................Westport 963...........Willsboro/Essex

VERMONT (802) 247.......................Brandon 372....................Grand Isle 388...................Middlebury 425......................Charlotte 434....................Richmond 438...............West Rutland 453.......Bristol/New Haven 462......................Cornwall 475.........................Panton 482....................Hinesburg 545...................Weybridge 655......................Winooski 658....................Burlington 758........................Bridport 759.......................Addison 654,655,656,657,658,660, 860,862,863,864,865,951, 985....................Burlington 877...................Vergennes 769,871,872,878,879 ..................Essex Junction 893...........................Milton 897....................Shoreham 899......................Underhill 948..........................Orwell 888....................Shelburne 16898

Automotive

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

Find what you’re looking for here!

16899

CARS $1,000-$2,999 GREEN HORIZON gasification wood boilers. BLOW OUT SALE! 85% efficient, burns round wood, no splitting. As low as $7,500 extras included. GREENWAY ENERGY SOLUTIONS. 518-834-6021

THIS IS a test ad to see about the extras and edirions

CARS $15,000-$19,999 1979 CHEVY CORVETTE. Black, red interior, T-tops, automatic. Runs great, fast. Needs some TLC. New exhaust sounds mean. $15,000 OBO. 518-524-6793.

AUTO ACCESSORIES 4 BLIZZAK WS50 175/65R14 Snows $150 Great Tires Sold Car (518) 891-7295

4 SNOW tires set used 2 seasons Dunlop 215/50R17 91q. Excellent (518) 293-8077 COOPER STUDDED snows 215/65/15 Like new 60pr firm. Mike 668-9813. (518) 6689813 MAGNAGRIP RADIAL HT winter tires, P185-70R14. Used 2 seasons. Four tires, $80. 518-251-4068. TIRES(6), 8.75x16.5LT on Dodge wheels under 500mi, $600/OBO 4-225x15LT Michelin X-Radial $175, 4-235/75R15 Liberator M+S on Ford 4x4 Alloys 518-4947150 TRUCK TIRES & wheels. Nitto tires 38/18/15.5, 8 ply, 8 lug. Fit Dodge or ford. $4700 invested. Asking $2000 OBO. 518726-0687. WHEELS/RIMS for Ford Escape 225/75R15; original rims not used in winter; $300 OBO (518) 648-5337

AUTO WANTED Call us at 1-800-989-4237

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. FREE TOWING. “Cars for Kids”. Any condition. Tax deductible Outreach Center. 1-800-597-9411 DONATE YOUR VEHICLE UNITED BREAST CANCER FOUNDATION. Free Mammogram www.ubcf.info RECEIVE $1000 GROCERY COUPON 1-888-4685964

CARS FOR SALE $500! POLICE IMPOUNDS FOR SALE! Honda Civic 1995 only $775! Hondas,Toyotasand more! For listings 1-800366-0124 ext L127

MOTORCYCLE/ ATV 2001 YAMAHA Blaster 200cc. Less than 5hrs. on total engine. Rebuilt 30 over. Good condition. $950. 873-6805 2005 360 Kawasaki\’ca4-wheeler,\’ca4wd, Red, $2500. 518-962-2376 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.

SNOWMOBILE FOR SALE 2008 SKI-Doo MXZ 550 fan, only 229 miles, very good condition, includes cover & extra belt, $3900. 518-359-8234.

AUTO DONATIONS DONATE YOUR CAR. FREE TOWING “Cars for Kids” Any Condition. Tax Deductible Outreach Center 1-800-521-7566

AAAA+ DONATE YOUR CAR. TAX DEDUCTION. Bluebook value some repairablevehicles. CHILDREN’S LITERACY 1-800-3397790 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, Boat or Real Estate. Fully Tax Deductible. IRS RecognizedCharity. Free Pick-Up & Tow. Any Model or Condition. Help Needy Children.outreachcenter.com 1-800-9304543 DONATE YOUR CAR, TREE OF LIFE, “Food on Wheels” Program, Family ReliefServices, Tax Deduction Receipt Given On-The-Spot, Any Condition, FREE TOW within 3hrs 24/7, 1-800-364-5849, 1-877-44MEALS. 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 CAR, TRUCK OR BOAT TO HERITAGE FOR THE BLIND. Free 3 DayVacation, Tax Deductible, Free Towing, All Paperwork Taken Care Of. 1-866-8546867

TRUCK OR VAN FOR SALE 1988 FORD Ranger ext. cab. V6, 2WD, standard. For parts or fix. $450 OBO. 518-8349296. 1995 Ford F-250 4x4 4.6Triton Auto/OD solid Great for winter $4500/OBO, 1993 F150 4x4 parts $500, Fisher plow $400/OBO 518-4947150 1996 GMC Jimmy. Body/frame excellent. Needs battery, fuel pump. 129K miles. $1,500 OBO. 518-643-2947 or 518-3359160.

You can’t escape the buys in the Classifieds! 1-800-989-4237.


www.Trilakestoday.com

10 - TRI LAKES TODAY

SATURDAY December 5, 2009

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: ADORING couple longs to adopt your newborn. Endless love, security and happiness. Family awaits your baby. Expenses Paid. Gail & Eric 800-611-8840 A BABY IS OUR DREAM: We’re Lori & Steve, a loving couple who’s longing to adopt! We care about you. Please call 1-800982-3678. Expenses paid. A loving couple wishes to adopt a newborn into a home filled with happiness, security and endless love. Expenses paid. Please call Brendan and Laura toll-free at 1-800-9910782 or email us at adoptbaby2009yahoo.com Faced with an unplanned pregnancy? Loving couples await. Receive information/pictures; you choose. Open or closed adoption. Assistance available. Call compassionate counselor. 1-866-236-7638; 24/7 PREGNANT? CONSIDERING ADOPTION? You choose from families nationwide. LIVING EXPENSES PAID. Call 24/7 Abby’s One True Gift Adoptions. 866-413-6292.

APPAREL & ACCESSORIES BASKETBALL SNEAKER Men’s Reebok White Size 7 Brand New $45 (518) 566-7609

APPLIANCES GE REFRIGERATOR, 17 cubic feet, brown, $75. Lake Placid. Call (518) 523-5345 Maytag washer/dryer good condition $200 518-494-2205

BUSINESS SERVICES CARPENTER AND handyman. Cabinets, closets, doors, wall units. Home repair, kitchen/bath projects, and more. From design to finishing. Lewis, NY 518-9622774

COMPUTERS Computer $80 HP Pavilion WIN98 Monitor, Keyboard, Mouse, Printer, Scanner, Great computer (518) 668-9813 Computer XP $65 free keyboard, monitor, No Friday night Saturday calls 518-251-3653 FREE COMPUTER printer, Epson Stylus C86, with guide booklet. 802-475-2044 Geeks-In-Route & On-site Computer & Computer Networking Services by A+ & Microsoft or CISCO Certified Technicians. If We Can\’92t Fix It, It\’92s Free! MC/DIS/AMEX/VISA. 1-866-661-GEEK (4335)

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.

FARM LIVESTOCK Free Roosters to good home, Bantam mix, Call 518+668-9881

REACHING OVER READERS IN THE NORTHERN REGION

518-561-9680 | 1-800-989-4ADS FINANCIAL SERVICES $$$ ACCESS LAWSUIT CASH NOW!!! Injury Lawsuit Dragging? $500$500,000++within 48/hrs? Low rates 1-800568-8321 www.fastcasecash.com BANKRUPTCSHARE1 on SNAP107361:Classified Headers DO NOT TOUCH:Classified Headers EPS $299 plus $399 for court costs. Fast, easy, secure, proven. Let us handle your entire bankruptcy. GUARANTEED. No additional fees. Call now 1-800-878-2215 www.signhere.org. GET FAST CASH! Pre-approval by phone. Bad Credit OK. No Faxing Cash in 24 hrs. Apply now! 1-800-895-1021 LAWSUIT SETTLEMENT LOANS, Auto Accidents & Work Comp. LOW FEES on all cases. 866-709-1100, www.glofin.com

FIREWOOD DRY FIREWOOD, mixed hardwood, split $70 per face cord, on site. Call 518-643-9759

FOR SALE (2) 275 gallon oil tanks, used. $125/ea. call 802-869 3386 17 inch color monitor with built in microphone. Excellent condition. Cables included (802) 388-9717 2002 WELLS CARGO 5’x8’ Enclosed Trailer. White, two back doors. Removable storage shelf. Excellent Condition inside and out. $1350. (518) 873-2152 AB REVOLUTIONIZER, Smart arms, aerobics step w/video (all three). $50/OBO. 802773-6129 DIRECTV SAVE $26/MO FOR A YEAR! Ask how! NO equipment to buy, NO start costs! Free DVR/HD upgrade! Other packages start $29.99/mo! Details call DirectStarTV 1-800206-4912 DISH Network. $19.99/mo, Why Pay More For TV? 100+ Channels. FREE 4-Room Install. FREE HD-DVR. Plus $600 Sign-up BONUS. Call Now! 1-888-430-9664 Get Dish - FREE Installation - $19.99/mo. HBO & Showtime FREE-Over 50 HD Channels FREE. Lowest Prices - No Equipment to Buy! Call Now for full Details 877-242-0983 H.B.SMITH boiler, oil fired, 85,000 BTU. Utica indirect hot water tank includes circulator. $350/obo. 492-7191 HEAT TAPE 40’ heavy duty with power indicator light, $30. 518-576-4592 HOLIDAY TIME 9’ artifical Christmas Tree in box. Used twice. $50 OBO. 523-7384 Kero/Oil Tank, 275 Gal., with legs, gauge, filter, used indoors, like new, $250.00. 518532-7390 KITCHEN TABLE 3.5x3.5 WITH 2 LEAVES 5 FEET x 3.5 $30.00 WARRENSBURG NY(518) 623-3957 LUGGAGE-NEW. 29” wheeled pull along. Dark green, $40. 518-582-2432 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

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LARGE DUTCHWEST cast iron wood stove. Used 2 winters, glass door, $1,000. 518-8736379 after 8pm. Elizabethtown NEW GT Express 101 double size $30. Call 518-563-1558

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

PORTABLE MIRACLE HEATER cuts heating bills 50%. Heats 1000 sq. ft. Factory Warranty. Money back guarantee. Retails $397, Limited time only $279. www.lowpricedheat.com 1-877-256-1364

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

RECIEVE $1000 in Groceries! Real relief program helping people just like you! Pay only $4.90 for your grocery voucher. Use on your favorite brands! Consumer Advocate Response introductory price. 1-800-430 9507 RUG. 10’X8’6”, orange red color, looped pile. $45 OBO. 802-388-7035 please leave message. SERTA SAVANNAH mattress, queen sizefirm. In excellent condition. (No box spring). $ 75.00 (518) 643-0931

Sunheat Zone Heater, Model SH1500, oak cabinet, used 2 months, excellent condition, $300 (518-298-2652) SURROUND SOUND Home Theater. Receiver Yamaha with Pioneer surround speakers and wires, sub-woofer, remote control. Reasonable offer not refused. 518-2938239.

FREE Free waste oil Call 518-942-6525 Piano Chickering, good shape with bench, FREE, you move 518-644-5578

FURNITURE

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. Call 800-494-3586 www.CenturaOnline.com CUT EXPENSES NOW! . Never Been Easier. GLOBAL DISCOUNT CARD MEMBERS Saver BIG- Walmart, Target, Starbucks, Walgreens. Discount Movie Tickets. Restaurants.GO TO WWW.GDCDISCOUNT.COM Only $29.95! Enter Publication Code: 05 DIRECTV - $26 off/mo! 150+ Channels & Premium Movie Channels ONLY $29.99/mo. FREE SHOWTIME - 3 mos. New customers only. 1-888-420-9472 DIRECTV FREE MOVIES 3 MONTHS! Ask How! NO Equipment to Buy NO Start Costs! Free DVR/HD Upgrade! Other Packages Start $29.99/mo! Details Call DirectStarTV 1800-620-0058 DIRECTV SAVE $26/MO FOR A YEAR! Ask How! NO Equipment to Buy NO Start Costs! Free DVR/HD Upgrade! Other Packages Start $29.99/mo! Details Call DirectStarTV 1800-279-5698

Holiday Dishes-NEW, service for 8, w/4 serving pieces. Ivory w/holly design $45 A great gift 518-585-6255

CLARINET PRIMO - Bflat Black woodwind with case and beginners book (518) 5320306

HONEST & ACCURATE PSYCHIC READINGS on all matters of life. $10.00 from the privacy of home www.mytruepsychic.com

PETS & SUPPLIES

ITALIAN LEATHER LIVING ROOM SET in original plastic, never used. Original price $3,000, sacrifice $975. Bill 347-328-0651 LAW OFFICES of Thomas H. Hanna Jr.,P.C. Loan Modifications, Debt Consolidation. Lower Monthly Payments, Save Thousands, Stop Harassing Calls, Qualify for Cash Back,Become Debt Free! Toll Free 1-877614-2662 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\’92Angelico, Stromberg, Rickenbacker, and Mosrite. Gibson Mandolins/Banjos. 1930\’92s thru 1970\’92s TOP CASH PAID! 1-800-401-0440 OLD GUITARS WANTED! Gibson, Martin, Fender, Gretsch. 1930 - 1980. TOP DOLLAR PAID. Call toll free 1-866-433-8277. PROMOTE YOUR PRODUCTS, SERVICES OR BUSINESS TO 6.1 MILLIONHOUSEHOLDS THROUGHOUT NEW YORK STATE. Reach As Many As 12 MillionPotential 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 callCPAN directly at 1-877-275-2726. Also check out the CPAN website at www.fcpny.com where you can download the complete media kit right from thehomepage.

BEDROOM SET. Queen or Double. Headboard, 2 dressers, nightstand and mirror. Great shape. $400. (518) 891-5962

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

Receive $1000 in Groceries! Real relief program helping people just like you! Pay only $4.90 for your grocery voucher. Use on your favorite brands! Consumer Advocate Response introductory price. 1-800-4309507

COFFEE TABLE AND END TABLE. BLACK METAL WITH GLASS TOP. PIC AVAILABLE. $100. (518) 321-5310

DISH TV. $19.99/mo., $600 Sign-up Bonus! FREE 4-Room Install. FREE HD-DVR! Call now. 1-800-915-9514.

Trains “NScale” many extra track, MRC power, sound system, turnouts ( Atlas) $300 518-585-7282

Electric Fireplace, very good condition, thermostat w/blower $75 518-585-7895

EARN COLLEGE DEGREE ONLINE *Medical, *Business, *Paralegal, *Accounting, *Criminal Justice.Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. Call 800-510-0784 www.CenturaOnline.com

Wanted to Buy: Wild Ginseng Roots, Top Cash Paid for Quality Roots.Serving the Ginseng Hunters since 1936. Cash Paid, Fair Dealing. Dave Hicks- 518-632-5422

10’ ALUMINUM John boat. $299 firm. 518636-0770.

Ivory one armed couch, excellent condition $120 518-321-6598 Lift Chair $325 518-623-2443 Walnut entertainment center. Fits 27” TV. 48” wide, 41” long. $20. 802-773-3916.

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 1-800-799-4935 AIRLINE MECHANIC - Train for high paying Aviation Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified - Job placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance 866-854-6156 AIRLINE MECHANIC: Train for high paying Aviation Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified - Job placement assistance. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance. 866-453-6204.

Electric Service Panel Meter Pan Breakers and GFI outlets on P.T. Pedestal $350 O.B.O. 518-494-7150 Free Advice! We’ll Help You Choose A Program or Degree To Get Your Career & Your Life on Track. Call Collegebound Network Today! 1-877-361-0641 Get Dish - FREE Installation - $19.99/mo. HBO & Showtime FREE - Over 50 HD Channels FREE. Lowest prices - No Equipment to buy! Call now for full details. 1877-242-0976 Get Dish - FREE Installation - $19.99/mo. HBO & Showtime FREE - Over 50 HD Channels FREE. Lowest prices - No Equipment to buy! Call now for full details. 1877-554-2014.

REACH OVER 30 million homes with one CHERRY BEDROOM SET. Solid Wood, buy. Advertise in NANI for only $2,795 per never used, brand new in factory boxes. week! For information, visit www.naninetEnglish Dovetail. Original cost $4500. Sell for work.com $749. Can deliver. 917-731-0425 Call us at 1-802-460-0104

HORSES/ACCESS. TWO HORSES, western trail ride. Sound Mare’s. $1,500 OBO. Moving, must sell. 518681-0290

LOST & FOUND ORANGE LONG Haired CAT in vicinity of TI Veterinary Hospital on Shore- Airport Road. REWARD (518) 585-9218

ADORABLE LITTLE Shitzu/Yorkie puppies. 3 females, 2 males. Vet checked, first shots. Will be ready before Christmas. $350 each. 518-643-0167 Free Cats, that were abandoned. Help give them a good home. Call 518-942-7034 Free dog, Akita 5 year old male, good with people 518-546-8257

WANTED COMPLETE SNOWPLOW set up to fit 1996 Ford F150. 524-8377 DISH Network. $19.99/mo, Why Pay More For TV? 100+ Channels. FREE 4-Room Install. FREE HD-DVR. Plus $600 Sign-up BONUS. Call Now! 1-877-249-4584 MUSIC COLLECTOR wants to buy old record collections, all speeds, Also sheet music. Call 518-846-6784. jgill@westelcom.com WANTED: DRUMMER and bass player for Roots Rock band. Covers and originals. Greater Bellows Falls area. Call 802-3765543.

TOOLS Parks Planer HO 12” 220V Extra Blades, cost $1200 new, asking $475, 518-543-6419

HEALTH HERNIA REPAIR? DID YOU RECEIVE A COMPOSIX KUGEL MESH PATCH BETWEEN January 2001 AND Present? If the Kugel patch was removed due tocomplications of bowel perforation, abdominal wall tears, puncture of abdominal organs orintestinal fistulae, you may be entitled to compensation. Attorney Charles Johnson1-800535-5727 HOME CAREGIVER by the hour. 2 years experience. Call 518-314-7114. IF A LOVED ONE UNDERWENT HEMODIALYSIS and received Heparin between July1, 2007 and August 31,2008, and died after the use of Heparin, you may be entitled tocompensation. Call Attorney Charles Johnson 1-800-535-5727. Men’s Health FDA Medical Vacuum pumps, testosterone, Viagra, Cialis. Free brochures. 619-294-7777. www.drjoelkaplan.com (discounts available) VIAGRA - 40 Pills $89.00 Cialis - 30 Pills $99.00. Limited Time. Hablamos Espanol! Newhealthyman.com 1-888-735-4419

MUSIC

WANTED DIABETES TEST STRIPS Any Kind/Any brand Unexpired. Pay up to $18.00 per box. Shipping Paid. Call 1-800-267-9895 or www.SellDiabeticstrips.com

BALDWIN SPINET piano. Very good condition. Needs tuning. Makes nice Christmas gift. $490/OBO. 518-532-9555

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

CLARINET, VIOLIN, FLUTE, TRUMPET, Amplifier, Fender Guitar $75 each. UprightBass, Cello, Saxophone, French Horn, Drums, $189 each. Others 4-sale 1516-377-7907 Spinette Piano “Schumer” with bench. Very good condition & in-tune $499 518-963-7144

EDUCATION 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

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www.Trilakestoday.com

SATURDAY December 5, 2009

EDUCATION MY PUBLIC NOTICES • MY PUBLIC NOTICES

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! 20723

MY PUBLIC NOTICES • MY PUBLIC NOTICES

MY PUBLIC NOTICES

MY PUBLIC NOTICES

TRI LAKES TODAY - 11

Earn your high school diploma at home. First Coast Academy, nationally accredited. 1-800-658-1180, www.fcahighschool.org

EQUIPMENT SAWMILLS FROM ONLY $2,990.00— Convert your LOGS TO VALUABLE LUMBER with your own Norwood portable band sawmill. Log skidders also available. norwoodsawmills.com/300n. Free information: 1-800-578-1363-Ext300-N.

LOCALBUSINESS FOR ALL Your Excavating needs, Call Brookfield Excavation. Serving Clinton & Essex Counties. Fully insured / Free estimates. Call 518-962-4592 or 518-802-0850. Someone Cares! • No Charge • Strictly Confidential

Birthright Emergency Pregnancy Service Free Self Administered Pregnancy Test Available 66 Clinton St., Plattsburgh 563-4300 • 1-800-550-4900 Not A Medical Facility 29987

Benefits LOCAL JCEO Food Pantry. No classified ad needed to donate! Personal Ads Only. Maximum 20 Words. Denton Publications reserves the right to reject any advertising. Ad runs for 1 week. No animals. Please print your message neatly in the boxes below:

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Sold To Your Phone # Name

55933

Address City/Town

Help Wanted

16902

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES ALL CASH VENDING. Do you earn $800 in a day? Your own local candy route. Includes 25 Machines and Candy. All for $9,995.888771-3496 ATTENTION READERS: Earn money from home processing mortgage assistance postcards. No advertising. Direct deposit available. References available. No gimmicks. 800-650-2090. Travel - This may or may not be the right opportunity for you, but if you’re looking for a good solution to your monthly financial shortage, then come to the informational meeting Wednesday, Dec. 2 at the Park Squeeze Restaurant in Vergennes. Find out how you can start you own travel business and have fun in the process. (802) 782-1187

ALL CASH VENDING! Do you earn $800/ day? Local Vending Route.25 Machines + Candy, $9,995. 1-888-776-3061 All Cash Vending! Do you earn $800/day? Local Vending routes. 25 machines + candy. $9,995. 1-800-807-6485. (Void/SD,CT,MD)

HELP WANTED $$$ START NOW $$$ 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 $$$ START TODAY $$$ Earn $1,400 $4,600 Weekly Working From Home Assembling Information Packets. No Experience Necessary! Start Immediately! FREE Information. Call 24hrs. 1-888-255-2802 SENIOR 55 or older to work PT. at Schuyler Falls DEC. Call 518963-7106 (Morris).

State

...Gail is always happy to help!

44372

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www.Trilakestoday.com

12 - TRI LAKES TODAY

In Memory Of “Your Loved One”

In Memory Of “Your Loved One”

In Memory Of “Your Loved One”

In Memory Of “Your Loved One”

In Memory Of

SATURDAY December 5, 2009

2009 Memory Tree

Choose a present under the tree or choose an ornament on the tree! In Memory Present Only $12.50 In Memory Ornament Only $8.50 DATE OF PUBLICATION: Wed., Dec. 19th & Sat. Dec. 23rd

In Memory Of “Your Loved One”

In Memory Of “Your Loved One”

PLEASE MAIL IN TO RESERVE YOUR SPACE NOW! DEADLINE IS MONDAY, DECEMBER 7TH!

In Memory Of “Your Loved One”

In Memory Of “Your Loved One”

In Memory Of “Your Loved One”

“Your Loved One”

In Memory Of

In Memory Of “Your Loved One”

In Memory Of

In Memory Of “Your Loved One”

In Memory Of

“Your Loved One”

“Your Loved One”

“Your Loved One”

In Memory Of

In Memory Of

In Memory Of

“Your Loved One”

“Your Loved One”

“Your Loved One”

Please check one…

Name Address

Ornament $8.50

Phone Name of Loved One PLEASE PRINT

Present $12.50

Name of Newspaper Please return by December 7th. ALL MEMORY SPOTS PAYABLE IN ADVANCE.

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Payment Enclosed

PLEASE MAIL TO: DENTON PUBLICATIONS CUSTOMER SERVICE DEPT.

14 Hand Ave., ELIZABETHTOWN, NY 12932. Or Call 873-6368, ext. 201 or email: shannonc@denpubs.com

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