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Lake Placid Brewfest Returns Sept. 23 pg. 10

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• EDITION •

STUDENTS ROCK KINDNESS

Crown Point students paint kindness rocks and place them around town. pg. 11

Meet the

CANDIDATES * * for the Democratic nomination for New York’s 21st Congressional District

Church helps storm victims Ticonderoga’s United Methodist Church is organizing funds By Lohr McKinstry STA FF W RITER

Photo provided

Photo provided

Photo provided

MARTZ STEPS OUT

WILSON IN COBB TOUTS IT TO WIN IT EXPERIENCE Keene native stresses local connection

Former lawmaker emphasizes experience

By Pete DeMola

By Pete DeMola

By Pete DeMola

EDITOR

EDITOR

AU SABLE FORKS | It’s nine months before the primary election. But Katie Wilson, a small business owner who is seeking the Democratic nomination for New York’s 21st Congressional District, is already making

POTSDAM | A group of college students, most of them from China, sat around a table and chanted in unison, following the lead of their teacher, who was brimming with enthusiasm:

Candidate touts job creation record EDITOR

PLATTSBURGH | Two days after the election that swept President Donald Trump into office, Emily Martz went on her morning jog in Saranac Lake. She had a fleeting thought as she passed by the home of someone who » Martz Cont. on pg. 19

FORTANNEANTIQUES WHITEHALL ANTIQUES MALL LargestSe/et:lionIn llorthemLakeGeorge...

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TICONDEROGA | The First United Methodist Church of Ticonderoga is collecting donations for victims of hurricanes that hit Florida and Texas recently. Pastor Scott Tyler of the Ticonderoga First United Methodist Church said the church has a dedicated fund. “Special donations will be received and sent to the United Methodist Committee on Relief, the agency set up by the Methodist Church for times such as these,” Tyler said. “UMCOR’s work reaches people in more than 80 countries, including the United States. We provide humanitarian relief when war, conflict, or natural disasters disrupt life to such an extent that communities are unable to recover on their own. One hundred percent of donations will be used for the purposes specified. When donors give their money, time and supplies, they join UMCOR as the hands and feet of Christ.” Sandy Sprague of the Ticonderoga First United Methodist Church has organized groups to assemble cleaning kits called Flood Buckets to be relayed from Ticonderoga to Mission Hubs and then on to sites where United Methodist Committee on Relief finds a need. For more information, call the church at 518-585-7995. A relay from Ticonderoga is scheduled toward the end of September. Whenever a natural disaster occurs, many feel the desire and need to reach out to those in harm’s way, said Bishop Mark J. Webb of the Upper New York Annual (Regional) Conference of the United Methodist Church.

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2 • September 23, 2017 | The Times of Ti Sun

Birth Announcement

suncommunitynews.com/ public-notices/birth-announcements

Marissa Joyce Karson

CROWN POINT | A baby girl, Marissa Joyce Karson, was born to parents Tucker Karson and Hilary Goyette on Sept. 15 at Porter Medical Center in Middlebury, Vermont. ■

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‘Fall Into Fun’ is coming to Ti The Ticonderoga Chamber of Commerce is featuring lots of events

The Ticonderoga Area Chamber of Commerce is promoting many events happening in the Ticonderoga area this fall. There are bazaars, crafts fairs, concerts and other events on tap this season. “We extend a heartfelt greeting and invitation to community members and visitors to experience all the area has to offer,” Ticonderoga Area Chamber of Commerce Executive Director Matthew Courtright said. “Whatever the season, the Ticonderoga area offers

By Lohr McKinstry STA FF W RITER

TICONDEROGA | “Fall Into Fun” is coming to the Ticonderoga area.

» Donations Cont. from pg. 1

In part, he said, “Sisters and brothers in Christ, I ask you to continue to keep these people in your prayers. Rebuilding will take weeks, months, even years so I ask you to allow God to make you part of the answer

He released a letter in late August about the devastation caused by Hurricane Harvey, which also applies to victims of Hurricane Irma and any future disasters.

Personalized Service at

for UMCOR Relief and Recovery U.S. Disaster response #901670 or Materials Resources for Supplies #901440, and brought or mailed to the church at 1045 Wicker St., Ticonderoga, NY 12883. ■

*(

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to these prayers.” To make a donation to UMCOR, checks may be sent directly as specified on their website at www.UMCOR.org or to the First United Methodist Church with a notation

a wide variety of scenic beauty, rich history, arts and cultural opportunities, recreational activities and of course fantastic events.” Details, as well as a “Fall Into Fun” rack card, are on the website. Printed versions are available at the chamber office and will be distributed throughout the area and region. For a complete calendar of events, contact the chamber office at 518-585-6619 or visit ticonderogany.com. ■

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The Times of Ti Sun | September 23, 2017 • 3

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Renovating buildings. Revolutionizing patient care. The changes you see at Moses Ludington are more than cosmetic. Our facility is being completely renovated. Clinical services are being enhanced. And we’re now working with The University of Vermont Health Network – Elizabethtown Community Hospital to transform how we provide care. Of course, you can still see us for the medical attention you need, because we’ll be providing care at the same time that we’re transforming it. 1019 Wicker Street | Ticonderoga, NY 12883 | (518) 585-2831

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4 • September 23, 2017 | The Times of Ti Sun

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Seminar to detail American Revolution

Fort Ticonderoga will host annual forum on war for independence By Lohr McKinstry STA FF W RITER

TICONDEROGA | Fort Ticonderoga is giving the 14th annual Seminar on the American Revolution this weekend with a plethora of expert speakers. The Friday-Sunday, Sept. 22-24 forum focuses on the military, political, and social history of the American War for Independence. The seminar takes place in the Mars Education Center and is open to the public; preregistration is required.

This year’s speakers include: - Michael Alkey, a retired director of the New York State Military Museum, “Ballston Raid of 1780: Military Operation and/or Time to Settle Old Scores.” - Todd Braisted, an honorary vice president of the United Empire Loyalist Association of Canada, “Grand Forage 1778.” - Don N. Hagist, editor of Journal of the American Revolution, “Sparing the Lash: A Quantitative Study of Corporal Punishment and Its Effect on British Soldiers’ Careers.” - Ricardo A. Herrera, associate professor of military history at the School of Advanced Military Studies, US Army Command and General Staff College, “Feeding Valley Forge.” - William P. Tatum III, Dutchess County historian, “An Example or Two of Death

is Necessary: The British Military Justice Process during the American Revolution.” - Richard Tomczak, a PhD candidate at Stony Brook University, “To be Ordered upon Corvees: French Canadian Laborers in the American Revolution, 1774-1778.” - Joseph W. Zarzynski, maritime archeologist with the Rhode Island Marien Archeology Project, “Behold the Cerberus the Atlantic plough —The History and Archeology of the HMS Cerberus.” - Matthew Zembo, an associate professor of history and military history at Hudson Valley Community College, “The Battle of Fort Anne: In Consequence of this Action Fort Anne was Burnt and Abandoned.” The seminar also features a presentation by Fort Ticonderoga Vice President of Public History and Operations Stuart Lilie.

His presentation, “Those Marked O are Old-Men of the 26th Foot at Ticonderoga,” examines the 26th Foot’s service in America and how this regiment formed a guard for Ticonderoga. Also featured is Matthew Keagle, curator of the Fort Ticonderoga Museum. His presentation, “More than Red and White: Franco-British Reform and Military Dress in the late Ancien Regime,” will explore the permeability of Franco-British relations and the international character of military dress by the period of the American Revolution. Registration is $155 per person, $135 for Fort Ticonderoga members. Registration forms can be downloaded from Fort Ticonderoga’s website at fort-ticonderoga.org under the “Education” tab by selecting “Workshops and Seminars” on the drop down menu. ■

Appreciation dinner will honor the best Ticonderoga Chamber of Commerce seeking nominations By Lohr McKinstry STA FF W RITER

TICONDEROGA | The Ticonderoga Area Chamber of Commerce will host the annual Community Appreciation Dinner and Awards Ceremony on Thursday, Oct. 26 at 6 p.m.

The free dinner and awards ceremony will be held at the Best Western Plus Ticonderoga Inn and Suites. The event will be used as an opportunity to recognize all area businesses, organizations and volunteers, as well as name this year’s the Business of the Year, Organization/ Non-Profit of the Year, Chamber Volunteer of the Year, Community Volunteer of the Year and more. “This community appreciation event is to honor those individuals, businesses, organizations and committees who work so diligently to provide an array opportunities and growth for the Ticonderoga area throughout the year,”

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said Chamber of Commerce Executive Director Matthew Courtright. “Without the dedication, drive, and true spirit of volunteerism and the commitment of the businesses and organizations within the area so many initiatives, events, and projects would not be possible.” Nominations for the 2017 Business of the Year, Organization/Non-Profit of the Year, Chamber Volunteer of the Year, and Community Volunteer of the Year, as well as other Appreciation Awards are now being accepted. Nomination forms are available at the chamber office. Forms can also be requested via email. Nominations must be received by 4 p.m. on Oct. 6. At last year’s event, the recipient of the Business of the Year award was Libby’s Bakery Cafe, Organization of the Year was Ticonderoga Festival Guild, Chamber Volunteer of the Year was Jodi Gibbs, and the Community Volunteer of the Year was given to Eric and Jess Stoddard. All menu items for this event, which is a casual buffet dinner, are donated by area businesses and organizations to thank and honor area volunteers. Anyone interested in making a menu item donation should contact the chamber office. Space is limited for this event. Reservations are required by Oct. 13 by calling the chamber at 518-585-6619 or contacting chamberinfo@tionderogany.com. ■

(518) 585-9058


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The Times of Ti Sun | September 23, 2017 • 5

North Hudson supervisor to retire Ron Moore guided Frontier Town, Boreas Ponds discussions By Pete DeMola EDITOR

NORTH HUDSON | This tiny town in the central Adirondacks has garnered outsized headlines in recent years with two megaprojects slated to transform the landscape: The opening of Boreas Ponds to the public and redevelopment of the former Frontier Town site. But the leader who has had a firm hand on the tiller throughout the process will not see the efforts through to their completion: North Hudson Supervisor Ron Moore is retiring effective at the end of the year, two years before the end of his second four-year term in office. “What I have started will take a few years, longer than I have left on this term and I will not seek re-election,” Moore wrote to constituents in a letter dated Sept. 8. “Because of that, I believe that it would be best for someone

to come into these projects now and provide the continuity through the next few years to see these projects through to completion.” Moore said the decision was the result of “months of thought and anguish.” “I have worked as hard as I ever have for the past five-plus years to try to make things better for the town and you, the people who live here,” he wrote. “I’ve given my all and did the best I knew how to do the things that I thought were in the best interest of our town, not only for now, but also for the future.” Moore previously served as town assessor and councilman, and has been involved in a number of regional organizations, including the Adirondack Association of Towns and Villages, the Adirondack Park Local Government Review Board and Access the Adirondacks, a pro-access coalition formed following the state’s purchase of Boreas Ponds from the Nature Conservancy last May. He is also a founding member of the socalled “Five Towns,” a group of central Adirondack towns that have joined together to amplify their clout when it comes to local issues, including land use and snowmobile access. Moore said he will likely step away from

North Hudson Supervisor Ron Moore delivers comments at Elk Lake in North Hudson on May 10, 2016. Moore has announced his retirement at the end of the year.

Photo by Pete DeMola

most of those organizations, but would advocate when needed. “I’m available if I can be of help,” Moore said.

cannot commence until Moore vacates his seat and leaves office — literally. “Until we receive a certificate of vacancy from the town clerk, we can’t take any actions at the

The process to decide Moore’s replacement

» Moore Cont. on pg. 11

SUCCESSION PROCESS

Historic site workers lauded Fort Ticonderoga honored its longtime staff By Lohr McKinstry STA FF W RITER

TICONDEROGA | Fort Ticonderoga recently recognized staff members for their longtime service and dedication to the national historic landmark’s dual mission of education and preservation. Staff lauded include Michael Edson, Robert Bartlett, Claire Bartlett, Stephen Teer, Catherine Burke, Richard Strum, Dorcey Crammond, Kenneth Olcott, Martha Strum, Earl Harrington, Debra Jordan and Carol Stanley. Also honored was the late John Hurlburt, who is sorely missed

by the Fort Ticonderoga staff and the community, the fort said. Each employee received a certificate and a slideshow presentation at a staff reception in the Mars Education Center at Fort Ticonderoga. “Fort Ticonderoga greatly appreciates all employees and their dedication to the remarkable work underway,” said fort President Beth Hill. “We’re especially thrilled to thank our long-standing employees for their commitment to our educational work and guest experience. The employees recognized have contributed substantially to Fort Ticonderoga over the years with their time and talent.” Fort Ticonderoga employs about 80 employees, including 20 full-time year-round employees, and supports 151 jobs in the Ticonderoga region with an economic impact of $12 million annually. ■

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6 • September 23, 2017 | The Times of Ti Sun

Thoughts from Behind the Pressline

Solutions are never easy

I hope we can all agree that the many issues facing our country are not easily solved. By Dan Alexander While many grow • PUBLISHER • fatigued from the constant arguing back and forth, it’s clear that conversational debate far outweighs violence driven by pent-up frustration. We understand that violence is the course of last resort and sadly the cost of settling issues in that manner takes a terrible toll on all involved, even the most innocent. Writing a column each week and touching on subjects we all grapple with is an opportunity to initiate important dialogue. Being a lightning rod for conversation, criticism and praise at the end of each week’s work demonstrates the important role a community newspaper can have in its service to the community. A major part of being a strong community newspaper is to provide a forum for open commentary. One important benefit from the columns are the many exchanges that take place as a result of the topic. What’s most encouraging is when readers engage with letters to the editor, offering their points of view, as well the many back-channel conversations that take place through letters, emails, face to face conversations in parking lots, schools, grocery stores, church or even over a few cold ones. But the truly remarkable conversations take place when readers take up the debate with other readers unbeknownst to anyone associated with the paper. It’s through these conversations that we begin to chip away at the differences that divide us and we begin to understand the issues from a different perspective. Over time, it’s how we arrive at solutions, that today seem inconceivable, but down the road make it hard to understand what all the fuss was about. We know that the fiercest opponents one minute can become the greatest of allies in the next. Many of the major issues we’ve faced, evolved over time and while our conversations are but grains of sand in the hourglass of time, it’s how we go about processing the information and the emotions to arrive at solutions that put us on the road to recovery. Most of us don’t like confrontation but the reality is, more opinions are change as a result of open and honest dialogue. Living in this great land of freedom and respecting our constitutional rights to disagree, the one thing we must always remember is to participate in the process. ■

THESUN CC MM

UN IT Y

NEWS

&

PH INT

ING

This free community newspaper exists to serve the informational needs of the community and to stimulate a robust local economy. No press release, brief or calendar item can be guaranteed for placement in the paper nor run in multiple weeks unless it is a paid announcement. All free placement is on a space-available basis.

Publisher .......................................................Daniel E. Alexander Associate Publisher........................................................Ed Coats Operations Manager ...........................................William Coats General Manager Central ..............Daniel E. Alexander Jr. Managing Editor ...................................................... Pete DeMola General Manager North............................Ashley Alexander General Manager South ............................Scarlette Merfled

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Opinion

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From the Editorial Board

State legislature should support mausoleum moratorium It’s been 18 months since over a hundred residents packed the Plattsburgh Town Hall expressing shock, astonishment and heartbreak over the situation at the Whispering Maples Memorial Gardens. The exact sequence of events leading to the abandonment of a pair of mausoleums remains unclear, including a suspicious fire that destroyed years of records years ago. But the end result is a pair of burial grounds whose deterioration has been heartbreaking. Designed and branded as luxurious resting places, the facilities in Plattsburgh and Ellenburg were instead built using cheap materials and left to moulder since their construction in the 1980s. The roof at the Ellenburg facility has disintegrated to the extent that snowfall has dusted internal crypts. In Plattsburgh, the back of the concrete structure has never been completed, leaving warped and weather-scarred plywood to be exposed to the elements. Windows adorning the columbarium are cracked, outdoor plots have been ignored and light bulbs have burned out, among other cosmetic issues — including unpleasant odors that have left survivors aghast. Interment at the facilities was not cheap, costing thousands of dollars. Like with traditional cemeteries, the proceeds of the crypt sales were supposed to be put in a perpet-

ual care fund designed to allow for eternal upkeep of the properties. But not only have those funds disappeared, a state report determined the nonprofit which owned the facilities failed to repay loans they were permitted to withdraw from the fund. The outstanding balance for the permanent maintenance fund was $212,399 as of 2015. What happened? No one is talking, including the former owners, who local officials have said are being probed by the state attorney general’s office for their possible role in this disastrous series of events. The state has committed $2 million for repairs slated to begin this fall, and the facilities will be handed over to the respective towns once completed next year. State officials have said the situation has presented a peculiar case with few precedents. What a final indignity to the hundreds of decreased and their survivors. Our heart breaks for them. This isn’t supposed to happen in the United States — not in Plattsburgh, not in Ellenburg, not anywhere. That’s why we support the legislation proposed by our state representatives designed to prevent something like this from ever happening again in New York. State Sen. Betty Little (R-Queensbury)

Letters

Newcomers to the North Country?

To the Editor: I must have missed the influx of Southern Rebels who moved to the Adirondacks, but there’s no mistaking the displays of “Stars & Bars” flying from porch roofs and pick-up trucks. What these newcomers don’t understand is how many Adirondack men suffered and died on Southern soil to save the Union. Nelson Goff from Lewis enlisted, was captured and sent to Richmond’s notorious Libby Prison. Three years later, he staggered home broken and unable to hold a job or support his family. Two of his sons, Jeremy and Chesley, died fighting the Rebels and are still buried in Southern soil. Edward McManus from Elizabethtown survived the horrors of starvation in two southern prisons before escaping from a cattle car carrying him and thousands of other Northern soldiers to the killing fields of Georgia’s Ander-

BRIEFS

Local graduates from UAlbany

PORT HENRY | Rachel Demarais of Port Henry recently graduated from the University at Albany with a M.S. in curriculum development and instructional technology. ■

Write to us

Sun Community News welcomes letters to the editor, preferably on topics of local interest. Letters should not exceed 300 words, and must be signed and include a telephone number for verification. Letters must be sourced in an effort to ensure claims are factual. Please keep it civil. Letters containing insults and name-calling will be rejected. Candidate endorsement and thank you notices are not accepted unless run as paid advertising. All letters run as space permits. For thank you notices, contact shannonc@suncommunitynews.com

sonville Prison. Myron Arnold of Au Sable Forks was shot in the leg by Rebels and bled to death on a road near Richmond, Virginia. Lafayette Mason, a free black man from Elizabethtown, faced worse torture when he was taken prisoner by the Rebels. Adirondack men of all colors fought in the 118th “Adirondack Regiment.” New Yorkers fought to save America and were wounded and died at the hands of Southern Rebels who supported slavery and fought under the Confederate flag. Today’s Rebels don’t seem to know they lost the war 150 years ago. They should go South where KKK and Confederate loyalists support their defeated cause. The Stars and Bars might be welcome in Dixie, but in the North Country, our ancestors fought and died for the Union. These brave men wouldn’t tolerate the flying of Rebel symbols or enemy flags in their home towns. Margaret Bartley, Elizabethtown ■

Open house slated at Ticonderoga High School

TICONDEROGA | An open house will be held at Ticonderoga High School on Sept. 21 from 6-8 p.m. Parents will watch a presentation and experience their children’s daily schedule. For more information, call 518-585-6661. ■

Submit letters by email to feedback@suncommunitynews.com Letters can also be sent to our offices: 14 Hand Avenue: P.O. Box 338. Elizabethtown, NY 12932 Letters and guest commentaries do not reflect the editorial opinion of the newspaper and its owners. We’re always looking for guest columnists to offer extended commentaries. Contact pete@suncommunitynews.com to learn more. Endorsement letters for announced political candidates are not accepted and are considered paid endorsements. The paid endorsement notice can be purchased in three sizes — a quick 50 words or less for $15; a 51-175 word endorsement for $ 50 or a 176-300 word endorsement for $75.

has introduced a bill that would ban freestanding mausoleums as the only form of internment at burial grounds. Mausoleums like those in Plattsburgh and Ellenburg have proven to be successful for many cemeteries when they are part of a larger financial plan and presented as an additional option for cemeteries, according to the bill language. But when a cemetery is created solely for the purpose of hosting a standalone mausoleum, local governments and other entities are exposed to financial hardship if a facility is subsequently abandoned. The legislation remains in committee, and is accompanied by companion legislation sponsored by state Assemblyman Billy Jones (D-Chateaugay). While the construction of freestanding mausoleums may no longer be the lucrative industry it was once, trends in the funeral industry are always shifting. As the earliest Baby Boomers begin to shuffle off this mortal coil, we’ve already seen shifts in burial rituals and traditions. The industry needs tighter regulation, and we strongly encourage lawmakers across the state to support this legislation. Doing so is not just a way to shield localities from financial hardship, but is also a moral imperative. ■ — Sun Community News Editorial Board

AARP safe driving course set

TICONDEROGA | An AARP safe driving course will take place Oct. 20 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Ti Area Senior Center on Champlain Avenue. Cost is $20 for AARP members and $25 for others. Seating is limited. For more information or to sign up, call 518-585-6050. ■

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» Cobb Cont. from pg. 1

TEDRA.COBB FOR

CONGRESS

Cashmere coats, diamond rings Don’t mean a thing All I care about is love Foreign students enunciating lines from the hit musical “Chicago” probably isn’t unheard of at English as a second language classrooms across the country. But most teachers probably are not running for Congress. Meet Tedra Cobb, who is seeking the Democratic nomination for New York’s 21st Congressional District. Since 2003, Cobb has worked as a strategic planning and organizational consultant. Cobb served on the St. Lawrence County Board of Legislators from 2002-2010, representing Canton, Potsdam and Madrid, making her the only candidate in the growing primary field to have held elected office as a legislator. (A primary opponent, Ronald Kim, served as Saratoga’s public safety commissioner from 2006-09.) “I’m running first and foremost because I believe that government should be working for the people,” Cobb said. “And if it’s not, then get out of the way.” Cobb cited “affordable and portable” healthcare as one of her chief concerns, and the catalyst for her to announce her candidacy in July. “That was the first domino,” she said. But healthcare has always been a focus. Cobb, 49, served as the executive director of the St. Lawrence County Health Initiative, an agency designed to link un- and underinsured residents to health insurance plans, from 1999 to 2003, steering the group from its inception to an organization with eight full-time staff and an annual budget of over $500,000. It was that experience that prompted her to seek a county legislator seat. “No one understood the services and needs of the community, and that really prompted me to run,” she said. Cobb cited her votes for a project labor agreement, the creation of a bipartisan government review committee and the passage of a new countywide ethics policy as highlights of her eight-year tenure. The Fairport, New York native also led the Democratic strategy to overtake the legislature from Republican leadership, resulting in a Democratic majority in 2006. It is this leadership experience — including the art of compromise, negotiation and listening — that Cobb believes makes her the most qualified candidate to defeat Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-Willsboro) in the 2018 general election. “I had to vote my authentic self,” Cobb said, on the project labor agreement. “I had to vote for what I thought was the right thing and live by that vote.” Cobb criticized Stefanik for her vote to repeal Obama’s signature healthcare law, and for holding a town hall meeting only after the vote — not before as other federal lawmakers had done.

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The Times of Ti Sun | September 23, 2017 • 7

·Re-Elect

~

WYLIE District Attorney

“Not only was she accountable, but she was the whip,” Cobb said. “She needs her feet held to the fire on that.” Social media is a valuable tool for engagement, said Cobb. But it must be leveraged with other forms of communication with constituents, including the elderly, many of whom may lack online access. If elected, Cobb said she will hold a town hall in all 12 of the district’s counties each year. “That’s 12 town halls. That seems to me completely doable,” Cobb said. Cobb said the U.S. needs to better prioritize funding for veterans in particular. “Every single veteran should have health care for life,” she said. “It should be nonnegotiable — that’s a principle.” And for Cobb, that’s what governing is all about — principles and core values, not party politics, including the ideological schism that has emerged in the Democratic Party since Hillary Clinton’s defeat last year by Donald Trump, a Republican. “I think sometimes the problem with Democrats and with Republicans is that they get stuck with ideology, and I try very hard not to get stuck with ideology,” Cobb said. “It is about being authentic to who we are and how to communicate that. We get into these labels, and then we start to move into ideology and away from values. That’s when we get lost.” That’s precisely why Congress is gridlocked, Cobb said. The congressional district went overwhelmingly for Trump last year — the tough-talking New Yorker won all but one county (he lost Clinton County by less than one percentage point) — while Stefanik racked up a divisive 35 point victory over her Democratic opponent. “I trust that people in this district care about the values that I care about, and if I can communicate those with people, then people will be engaged,” Cobb said. The field for the Democratic nomination is

deep, and Cobb must emergence victorious from the pack of the five other candidates who have announced campaigns, including Patrick Nelson (Stillwater, Saratoga County), Emily Martz (Saranac Lake), Ronald Kim (Queensbury, Warren County), Dan Boyajian (Cambridge, Washington County) and Katie Wilson (Keene, Essex County). Cobb, who is married and has two college-age children, said she looks forward to hitting the road in the expansive district to meet with voters. She’ll host an event at the American Legion Post 20 Plattsburgh on Saturday, Sept. 23. In the meantime, she’ll continue to focus on consulting work and teaching her group of students in the community room at the Potsdam Public Library.

Mondays are singing classes, a highlight. One of Cobb’s students this summer was a young man from Jordan. He taught her a phrase: Inshallah, which means “God willing.” “I will win the Democratic primary,” Cobb said. “Inshallah.” ■ ABOVE: Tedra Cobb, a former St. Lawrence County legislator and economic development consultant, is seeking the Democratic nomination for New York’s 21st Congressional District. Photo by Pete DeMola

BELOW: Cobb teaches English as a second language as a hobby. She’s pictured here with students at the Potsdam Public Library on July 28. Photo by Pete DeMola

full-time

news clerk / designer Nationally award winning Sun Community News is seeking a full-time news clerk and paginator to join our team. Applicants must have strong editing, writing, analytical and communication skills, as well as a good working knowledge of Apple computer operating systems. Preferred candidates must also work under deadline pressure. A working knowledge of digital photography and social media is also required. In addition to helping the news team create and edit copy — including breaking news and crime coverage — chosen applicants will use copy, photographs, charts and supplied material to lay out copy and headlines as needed to construct pages that attract reader attention and assist in newsroom projects. Generous wage, paid time off, and life insurance offered. This is an opportunity to work for a 69-year-old independently owned company with an excellent business and financial reputation, that is growing and looking to enhance our reporting & design team. We are locally owned and locally committed to the continued development of our organization and the communication needs of the communities we serve. No corporate edicts, no staff furloughs, nor are decisions made from outside our local management team. We do community reporting the way it was meant to be done. Send resume to: Pete DeMola, Managing Editor, Sun Community News,

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8 • September 23, 2017 | The Times of Ti Sun

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TH E L A RG E S T SO U RC E O F CO M M U N IT Y E V E NTS I N TH E N O RTH CO U NTRY.

Calendar of Events SEP. 22

SEP. 23

held at American Legion; 4:30 p.m. - 7:00 p.m. Cost is $7 a person or $25 for family of four. Meal will be spaghetti, salad, bread, beverage and dessert. The dinner benefits the Distinguished Young Woman Scholarship Program.

Boat Regatta held at Long Lake Town Beach; 10:00 a.m. A competitive event featuring war canoes and C4 boats. Spectators are encouraged to attend. Boats paddle to the south end of the lake and back up towards Round Island. Paddlers from all over the north east converge on this fun, yet competitive event. Details: 518624- 3077 or mylonglake.com.

Ticonderoga » Spaghetti Dinner

Long Lake » Long Lake Long

SEP. 23

Ticonderoga » Spooky Pumpkin

Decorating! held at Ti Farmers Market; 10:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. Come to Ticonderoga Area Farmers’ Market! On September 23, participate in spooky pumpkin decorating!

SEP. 23

SEP. 23

North Creek » Simple Gifts held at

Tannery Pond Community Center; 7:30 p.m. Come meet and enjoy the music of Linda Littleton and Karen Hirshon, two women with twelve instruments who play a variety of ethnic folk music. The event is sponsored with the help of LARC. Tickets $15. Details: 518-251-2505 ext 9.

Glens Falls » North Country Arts Presents “Last Call: A Collaborative Oratorio” held at Charles R. Wood Theatre; 7:30 p.m. Tickets for the performance are $20 each. Tickets can be obtained by calling the Box Office at 518-480-4878. The corresponding art exhibit will open on September 16 and remain at the Wood Theater until September 30. The art exhibit will then be moved to the Crandall Public Library Gallery for the month of October.

SEP. 23

Ticonderoga » Chilson Founders

SEP. 23

Chester » Cemetery Preservation

held at Darrowsville Cemetery; 10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. Learn how to clean straighten &re-mortar gravestones with Reed Antis. Work apparel suggested. Free program to the public sponsored by The Historical Society of the Town of Chester.

SEP. 23

Crown Point » Autumn Open

House & Customer Appreciation Day held at Tromblee’s Greenhouse; 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Pick your own discount. Up to 40% off your entire purchase. Door prizes and freebies. Snacks, Grilled hot dogs 11:30- 1:00. Come enjoy the flavors of fall. Mums, pumpkins, cornstalks, hay bales and a gift shop packed with old & new treasures.

SEP. 23 - SEP. 24 Indian Lake » 8th Great

Adirondack Moose Festival held at Throughout the Town; All Weekend The Festival will include Guided hikes, Moose themed activities , Crafters & Artisans, Old Fashion Turkey Shoot, , Wine Tasting, Hudson River White Water Rafting, Scavenger Hunt, Fly Tying Demos, Live Music, Chain Saw Carving Demos, Current Adirondack Moose Research, Raquette LakeNavigation: Brunch Cruise, Children’s Activities and Bruce the Moose and Smokey Bear photos. Details: 518-648-5112 or visit indianlake.com.

SEP. 24

Crown Point » Points of Interest:

at Lake Champlain Bridge; 1:00 p.m. Enjoy the views and learn about the nearly 9,000 years of human history at this important and beautiful location on Lake Champlain. Rain or shine, $6.

SEP. 24

Lake Placid » 4th Annual Mutt Strutt held at Lake Placid Oval; 9:00 a.m. 5k Fun Run/Walk to jointly benefit the NCSPCA and Tri-Lakes Humane Society. $20 registration fee includes T-shirt $25 for the day of. Visit: ncspca.org/events or call 518-873-5000.

SEP. 27

Chestertown » Moose in the

Adirondacks held at Chestertown Library; 7:00 p.m. Explore the current status of and ongoing research concerning the moose population in New York, which began to recolonize the state after being extirpated from much of the northeast in the mid 1800’s. Presented by Samuel Peterson, SUNY Dept of Fish & Wildlife Biology Management.

Ticonderoga » Fall Open House!

held at Sugar & Spice; Fall Gathering Open House with NEW Friday evening hours 4-8 p.m. on Sept 29th through Saturday, Sept 30th, 10-5 p.m. Come enjoy warm mulled cider, seasonal treats, door prize drawings, specials and the sights and smells of autumn!

SEP. 30

Chestertown » Town Wide Garage Sale held at Route 8 and Route 9; 9:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. People interested in bringing their garage sale into town should call the Chamber office at 518-494-2722. People who want to have a garage/ yard sale at their home can have their location listed on a map that will be available at the Chamber and various other locations. .

29 SEP.

SEP. 28

Crown Point » Fall Make & Take

held at Tromblee’s Greenhouse; 6:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. In this class, we will create “Primitive Scarecrows”. We will also paint the backside of the board as a snowman! Enjoy appetizers as you learn how to make this project. We’ll accept the first 12 adults who sign up for the class. The cost of this class is $40.00. A deposit of $20 (non- refundable) is due at registration. To reserve your spot and pay your deposit, contact Pam Lemza Putnam via Private Message on Facebook.

F R I DAY

COLE NAKOA & TREACHER held at

Whallonsburg Grange Hall, Essex. Friday: 7:30 pm

A Brooklyn-based trio with a powerful sound that unites folk, roots, rock & Jazz. Musicians Brad Cole, Matt Nakoa, and Robinson Treacher join forces to weave their distinct styles into a soulful performance. Tickets $12 / $5 under 18. Details: thegrangehall.info or 518-963-7777

Historian-Narrated Bridge Tour held

Bulletin Board

SEP. 29 - SEP. 30

100415

Day Pig Roast held at Chilson Community Center; 1:00 p.m. Food served at 2:00 p.m. Catered by Val and Craig Dixon from the Hot Biscuit Diner. Enjoy an afternoon of music, raffles, basket raffle, as well as help support the SEP. 23RD Chilson Founders Spooky Pumpkin Association. Decorating! held Tickets at Ti Farmers available Market

at the Hot Biscuit Diner or call 518585-7739.

Contact Kasey Rosselli at (518) 873-6368 ext. 104 or email kasey@suncommunitynews.com to list your event.

Contact Shannon Christian at (518) 873-6368 ext. 201 or email shannonc@ suncommunitynews.com to place a listing.

REACH EVERY HOUSEHOLD IN YOUR COMMUNITY LOOKING FOR YOUR ACTIVITIES & SERVICES

BINGO

COMMUNITY OUTREACH

COMMUNITY OUTREACH

COMMUNITY OUTREACH

COMMUNITY OUTREACH

PUBLIC MEETINGS

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

LAKE GEORGE - Grief and Loss Support Group Wednesdays , 3:00 pm. Explore the root of your grieving & learn to process it in a healthy, healing way. Randi Klemish, a retired mental health thrapist leads this healing group All are welcome. Group meets every Wednesday, From 3-5 pm at St. James Episcopal church in Lake George Village.

PORT HENRY - Grief Support Group First Thursday of Each Month Port Henry, St Patrick's Parrish Center 11:00-12:00pm For more information. Marie Marvull 518-743-1672 MMarvullo@hphpc.org

SCHROON LAKE – Essex County 2017 WIC Clinic Schedule at the Schroon Lake Health Center January 11, Feb 8, March 8, April 12, May 10, June 14, July 12, August 6, September 13, October 11, November 8, December 13 9:302:30pm. Call us to schedule an appointment or find out more information at 518-873-3560 or 518-569-3296

TICONDEROGA – Essex County 2017 WIC Clinic Schedule at the Cornerstone Alliance Church January 9, 23, 30, Feb 13, 27, March 13, 20, 27, April 10, 17, 24 May 8, 15, 22 ,June 12, 19, 26, July 10, 17, 24, August 14, 21, September, 11,18, 25, October 16, 23,30 November 13, 20, 27, December 11,18 9:30- 2:30 PM.

INDIAN LAKE - American Legion Post 1392 in Indian Lake would like to announce that as of October 2017 until April of 2018 the regular meeting times have been changed to 4 PM every first Wednesday of the month instead of 7 PM.

TICONDEROGA - Bingo, Ticonderoga fire house, 6:45 p.m. Doors 5 p.m. Every Thursday. CLASSES & WORKSHOPS NORTH CREEK - Water Aerobics July – September Tues, Thurs and Friday 11:00am – 12 ;00pm at the Copperfield Inn. For more info call 518-251-2225. TICONDEROGA - Take Control Exercise classes. Ticonderoga Armory Senior Center. 9:30 a.m. Free. Details: 518-585-6050, rsvp@logocail.net. Every Wednesday. COMMUNITY OUTREACH TICONDEROGA Alzheimer's Caregiver Support Group monthly support group for caregivers InterLakes Health, Ethan Allen Library. 4 p.m. Details: 518-564-3370. Second Tuesdays

MORIAH – Essex County 2017 WIC schedule at the Moriah Fire Department January 10, Feb 14, March 14, April 11, May 9, June 13, July 11, august 8, September 12, October 10, November 14, December 12 9:30-2:45pm. Call us to schedule an appointment or find out more information at 518-873-3560 or 518- 569-3296 TICONDEROGA - Essex County Lethernecks, Marine Corps League, Det 791, Ticonderoga American Legion Post. 6 p.m. Active Marines and Marine Veterans invited. First Thursday of every month.

PORT HENRY – Essex County 2017 WIC shedule at the Knights of Columbus January 12, Feb 9, March 9, April 13, May 11, June 15, July 13, august 10, September 14, October 12, November 9, December 14 9:30-2:30pm. Call us to schedule an appointment or find out more information at 518-873-3560 or 518- 569-3296 TICONDEROGA - Nar-Anon Family Group A support group for family and friends of addicts. Location: Office of the Prevention Team 173 Lord Howe St., Ticonderoga, N.Y.Mondays at 6PM (excluding Holidays). For more info go to naranon.org

TICONDEROGA - The Champlain Valley Chorale announces resumption of fall rehearsals for its upcoming Christmas concerts. Weekly rehearsals will be held each Tuesday evening at 7 p.m. in Fellowship Hall of the First United Methodist Church, 1045 Wicker St., Ticonderoga, beginning Tuesday, Sept. 12, and continuing to the December concert presentations. New singers in all sections are welcomed. For further information, contact Bob Elling at 518 585-2173.

January 19, Feb 6, 16, March 6, 16, April 3, 20 , May 1, 18, June 5, 22, July 3, 20, August 7, 28, September 21, October 2, 19, November 6, 16, December 4, 21 1:30-6pm. Call us to schedule an appointment or find out more information at 518-873-3560 or 518- 569-3296

TICONDEROGA - American Legion Post #224 Monthly Meeting. Second Thursday TICONDEROGA - The Champlain Valley Bluegrass & Old Time Music Association holds their Monthly Meeting on the 2nd Sunday of each month at the Ticonderoga American Legion, Montcalm Street at 1 p.m. All are welcome to attend. Please bring a dish to share. SENIORS

DINNERS & SUCH TICONDEROGA - Elks cook to order breakfast will start Oct. 23, from 8-11 every 2 and 4th Sunday each month any question please contact me at 518-585-1052

TICONDEROGA - Free arthritis exercises. Ticonderoga Senior Center, 10 to 11 a.m. Details: Cornell Cooperative Extension of Essex County 518-962-4810, mba32@cornell.edu. Second and Fourth Wednesday

DINNERS • MEETINGS • BINGO • EXERCISE CLASSES • CHILDREN’S PROGRAMS • SENIOR ACTIVITES • BOOK SIGNINGS • BLOOD DONATION • ARTS & CRAFTS & MORE

What's not to

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The Times of Ti Sun | September 23, 2017 • 9

Eye on the Arts

==============~-F--===============

Arts & Entertainment

The Adirondack Lakes Center for the Arts in Blue Mountain Lake will screen “Blissville... An Investigation,” a film that works to chronicle a remote corner of Queens, on Sept. 29 at 7 p.m. For more By Elizabeth Izzo information, visit adirondackarts.org. • COLUMNIST • Ahead of Plattsburgh’s second annual pride parade on Sept. 30, a screening of “Pride” is slated for Sept. 29 at 7 p.m. in Yokum 200 on campus at SUNY Plattsburgh. “Pride,” a movie that chronicles the work of gay activists in the United Kingdom to help miners during a lengthy strike in the summer of 1984, is rated R. For more information, contact 518-564-5212. The Whallonsburg Grange will kickstart its six-part lecture series, “What’s the Big Idea,” on Sept. 26. Author Nick Muller is this season’s first presenter with a presentation about the life of Ethan Allen at 7:30 p.m. Admission is $5, free for students. For more information, visit thegrangehall.info. Plattsburgh’s Stafford Middle School will see a performance from the Champlain Valley Chorus on Sept. 23. The show, “Broadway... with a Twist,” features a barbershop tribute to music from some of Broadway’s most popular shows. The Champlain Valley Chorus of the Sweet Adelines will open the show at 5 p.m. Tickets are $10 per person, $8 for students and seniors. For more information, visit champlainvalleychorus.org. Simple Gifts will perform at North Creek’s Tannery Pond Center on Sept. 23 at 7:30 p.m. Simple Gifts is known for playing traditional folksongs, Irish jigs, Balkan dance music and more. Tickets are $15 per person. For more information, visit tannerypondcenter.org or call 518-251-2505. On Sept. 30, the Not Too Far From Home comedy tour will land at the Adirondack Lakes Center for the Arts in Blue Mountain Lake. Comedian Aaron David Ward and friends will take the stage at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $15 in advance, $20 at the door. For more information, visit adirondackarts.org.

Glens Falls on Sept. 29. An opening reception is slated for 5-7 p.m. For more information, visit northcountryarts.org. Saranac Lake’s Adirondack Artists Guild will display an exhibit of oil paintings by artist Sandra Hildreth through Oct. 1. For more information, visit adirondackartistsguild.com. The Strand Center for the Arts in Plattsburgh opened a new exhibit featuring the works of oil painter Susan Hoffer on Sept. 1. Hoffer’s exhibit at the Strand will run through Sept. 29. Normal gallery hours are Tuesday through Friday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. For more information, visit strandcenter.org.

MARK YOUR CALENDAR

The Champlain Wine Company in downtown Plattsburgh will open a new exhibit featuring the works of local author and artist Amy Guglielmo on Oct. 6. The opening reception, which will double as a book signing, is slated for 5-8 p.m. Guglielmo’s work is colorful, lively — reminiscent of the innocence and wonder of child-

hood. For more information on the exhibit, titled “Colors Everywhere,” contact 518-564-0064. Soovin Kim and Gloria Chien will perform at the Saranac United Methodist Church on Oct. 8 at 3 p.m. This duo, renown locally for their skill and engaging live performances, will perform works by Charles Ives, Richard Strauss and Robert Schumann. Tickets are $15 per person, $12 for students and seniors. For more information, contact 518-293-7613. On Oct. 6, the NorthWind Fine Arts Gallery in Saranac Lake will open a new exhibit featuring the works of Anne Hughes. For more information about Hughes and the gallery’s upcoming displays, visit northwindfineartsgallery.com. ■ BELOW: The Champlain Wine Company will open a new exhibit featuring the works of author and artist Amy Guglielmo on Oct. 6. Photo by Elizabeth Izzo

EXHIBITIONS

A new exhibit featuring the work of area artists, “Viewpoint,” will open at the NCA Gallery at Shirt Factory in

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Ticonderoga Alumni Association Thank you sponsors and players for helping make our 2017 Ticonderoga Alumni Golf Tournament held on July 29th a huge success! Because of your support, we are able to continue awarding scholarships to graduating THS seniors and support school programs. Congratulations to the Moore’s Maple Farm who were the winners of the sponsor $50 gas card!

Tournament Sponsors Adirondack Dental Health Adirondack Hair Creations Adirondack Waste Management American Flatbread of Middlebury Maria Bagneschi John and JoAnne Bartlett Belfred Court Best Western Plus Bodette’s Barbecue Steve and Sylvia Boyce Brannock Properties Burleigh Golf Team Carney and Breitenbach Joan and Jim Charboneau Paul Charboneau Circle Court Motel Community Bank Joyce and Jerry Cooper DeFranco Engineering and Landscaping Emerald’s Restaurant Hot Biscuit Diner Paul Ingrey and Ed Konikowsky International Paper Company Jay’s Sunoco Keith’s Market Marty Loughlin Lake George Steamboat Company Charles and Sharon Maneri Carolyn Malaney John and Andrea McDonald McDonald’s Restaurant

Montcalm Liquors Moore’s Maple Farm Optics of Ticonderoga Porter Land Surveying Reale Construction Rite Aid Silver Bay YMCA Conference Center Snug Harbor Marina Snug Harbor South Stewart’s Shops Ticonderoga Federal Credit Union Ticonderoga Golf Course Ticonderoga Heritage Museum Ticonderoga Teachers Association Ticonderoga Paint and Decorating Center Tony’s Sports TSW Construction Trout House Village Wagon Wheel Restaurant Walmart Windchill Factory Bill and Sandra Bolton Five Nations Golf Pat Ida CPA Country Florists and Gifts E.F. Nolan Builders Sons of the American Legion Hague Fish and Game Club Shear Heaven Pearsall Wealth Management Upstate Agency Cory Phinney 105787


10 • September 23, 2017 | The Times of Ti Sun

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Lake Placid Brewfest to showcase growth of beer biz

PHOTO CONTEST

As you enjoy your favorite brew, organizers ask you tag your photos with #WFLPFallFests and #LPBrewFest. Favorite pics will be selected and featured as the “Fall Festival Photo of the Day” on whitefacelakeplacid.com.

LAKE PLACID | It’s go time for craft beer, and lovers of suds will have plenty to celebrate at the Lake Placid Brewfest. The event returns for its sixth year on Saturday, Sept. 23 at the Olympic Center’s 1932 Rink. Dozens of vendors will participate, both local craft breweries and those from as far away as Maine, including the York-based SoMe Brewing Company. “We love it,” said David Rowland, head brewer. “It gets better every year.” Rowland has an Adirondack connection: His father once lived in Jay, and Rowland was a frequent visitor to the Olympic Village. “Really for us, it’s a great excuse to go back home and see people and share our beer,” Rowland said. Rowland will be showcasing three SoMe beers he feels will be a good representation of their seven-barrel operation: Their flagship Whoopie Pie Stout (“We didn’t bring it one year, and people got mad,” Rowland quipped), Nubble Weiss — a German-style sour wheat beer — and Apostrophe IPA, a new creation that’s gaining traction with its big fruit flavor and citrus-forward aroma. “Our M.O. has always been ‘something for everyone,’” Rowland said. About a dozen local brewers from the North Country’s tightly-knit beer scene will also participate, including Raquette River Brewing, whose Imperial Pumpkin Ale took the People’s Choice Award last year.

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Bottom’s up! The Lake Placid Brewfest returns for its sixth year on Saturday, Sept. 23 at the Olympic Center’s 1932 Rink. Photos provided via ORDA/Whiteface Lake Placid

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advance by visiting whiteface.com/events/ lake-placid-brewfest: $75/$55/$45 (VIP/ general admission/pre-sale). The cost is $10 for designated drivers. For a complete list of breweries, visit whiteface.com/events/lake-placid-brewfest. ■

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

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NOTICES•

EDITOR

“We’re brewing three or four times a week to keep up, but it’s just not enough,” said Dylan Badger, co-owner. While Badger, who operates the brewery with his brother, Dan, is still zeroing in on what to bring to the brewfest, expect an Oktoberfest and something called a Wayne Legitzky, or a pale ale in honor of “how legit” the Canadian hockey legend is. “We always try to be unique in bringing something interesting,” Badger said. The biz is indeed growing, said the brewer. But the trend will start to slow down at some point. “We’re seeing it grow at incredible rates now, and that’s going to end,” Badger said. “A lot of smart brewers need to find a place in the industry now before things start to go the other way.” Smaller breweries with loyal local followings may be better positioned to ride out the wave than mid-sized breweries, he said. Badger envisions a scenario where mid-sized operations — companies large enough to sell in a taproom but not enough for guaranteed retail shelf space — might be squeezed into increasingly competitive skirmishes with larger microbreweries to remain sustainable and hold onto their market share. Hockey said he’s unsure of the industry’s future, but it’s evident that the trend towards buying local isn’t subsiding anytime soon. “Every 10 days, there’s another brewery opening in New York State,” Hockey said. “Is there a bubble? I don’t see it bursting anytime soon.” Lake Placid Brewfest: Saturday, Sept. 23 from 4 to 8 p.m. at the Olympic Center’s 1932 Rink. A special VIP hour opens at 3 p.m. VIP and general admission tickets can be purchased in

PUBLIC

By Pete DeMola

While the Tupper Lake-based brewery is going for a repeat, they will do so with a different invention. “We’ve got a couple of other surprises,” said Joe Hockey, owner. Business is booming in the craft beer industry — the market volume share for craft brewers has more than doubled to 12.3 percent since 2011 — and the regional scene is no different. Despite their popularity, Raquette River Brewing participates in just one event per year. “Our growth has been so rapid, we just don’t have time,” Hockey said. The brewery is in the process of their third expansion in a little over three years, from a two, to four to a 10-barrel system that will go online this month, allowing them to produce 2,000 barrels of beer annually — more than doubling their production. Beer and outdoor activities go hand-inhand, Hockey said, and the Adirondacks is primed to capitalize on the popularity of both. “There’s a huge demand for it.” Nationwide, craft beer is a $23.5 billion industry. Craft brewing and spirit production is surging in New York — the state is now home to at least 320 breweries, according to the New York State Brewers Association — due to a series of legislative and economic incentives, including the creation of the Farm Brewery License, tax credits for brewers and modernization of the state’s Alcoholic Beverage Control Law. Promotional funding and high-profi le press — including state-sponsored beer summits and contests attended by the governor himself — hasn’t hurt. Ausable Brewing Company is also undergoing an expansion that will allow the Keeseville-based operation to boost production and expand their hours. The brewery, which hosts a popular summertime event series, nearly ran out of beer in August.

•MY

Craft beer industry is surging in U.S. — including here in the Adirondacks

•MY PUBLIC NOTICES•


Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

Crown Point kids rock

www.suncommunitynews.com

The Times of Ti Sun | September 23, 2017 • 11

Painting kindness rocks uplifted Crown Point Central School. By Lohr McKinstry STA FF W RITER

CROWN POINT | Crown Point Central School students covered their community with kindness during their annual beginning of school kickoff event. Taking a school-wide field trip on the second day of school has become a tradition over the past few years at Crown Point Central School and this year was no different, said teacher Rachael Leclaire-Charron. “This year, administration and staff decided that the 20172018 school year would begin with asking students to pay it forward in their community,” she said. “Students were ABOVE: Crown Point Central School seniors (from left) Hunter Pertak, Riley Thomas and Cade Debrobander work on their kindess rocks. COVER: Staff kindness rocks on display at Crown Point Central School. BELOW: Crown Point Central School juniors Alex Russell and Hannah Palmer show their rock LEFT: Seventh grader Ryan Woods paints a kindness rock at Crown Point Central SchooL

Photos provided

introduced to the kindness rock project, an initiative that went viral on social media over the last few months.” All students in grades pre-K through 12 painted rocks in their homerooms at the start of the school day. “Students painted their rocks with inspirational words, uplifting messages and cheerful pictures,” she said. The rocks were then placed by students in various locations around the town, including the Hammond Library, parks, Monitor Bay, the Champlain Bridge, Penfield Homestead Museum and the Crown Point State Historic Site. “Students hope these small tokens of kindness spread joy and happiness throughout the community, remind others to pay it forward and show others that ‘Panthers Have Character,’” Leclaire-Charron said. For more information about this initiative, go to the website: www.thekindnessrockproject.com. ■ » Moore Cont. from pg. 5 board of elections,” said Essex County Republican Election Commissioner Allison McGahay. Once that certificate is delivered, there are two options to fill the position: The town board can appoint an interim acting supervisor. Depending on the date, the board of elections will then make a determination when the position will next appear on the ballot. Or the governor can call a special election, which is unusual, McGahay said. “The reason we don’t act on resignation letters is people can change their minds,” McGahay said.

BOREAS UPDATE

Several environmental groups have called for Boreas to be restricted to all but foot traffic. But Moore has played a leading role in calling for some tracts to be opened up to increased recreational usage, including snowmobiling and electric-powered boats.

As part of Access, Moore joined coalition members at public hearings across the state to lobby for more access for sportsmen, the disabled and the elderly for the 20,578-acre tract located in the heart of his community. More access, he said, is also critical for economic development. “We’ve been waiting a few months now to hear the APA’s decision on the Boreas Ponds classification,” Moore wrote. “I’m not sure if it will be this month or not, but hopefully no later than October.” A spokesman for the Adirondack Park Agency said on Tuesday the agency is continuing to “finalize the Final Environmental Impact Statement which includes reviewing over 10,000 public comments.” “We anticipate the Agency Board will deliberate the classification package this Fall,” said Keith McKeever, the spokesman.

FRONTIER TOWN PROGRESS

Since its closure in 1998, Moore has long grappled with Frontier Town, the decaying Wild West theme park located off Exit 29 of the Adirondack Northway. Essex County seized the parcel from the owner for failure to pay back taxes. After years of inaction, Moore in 2014 oversaw a whipsaw process that saw the county put the parcel in a tax auction, only to pull it after an offer had been made. Litigation between the county and the prospective buyer followed, and residents in a permissive referendum ultimately voted to prohibit the town from purchasing the property themselves. The state announced plans in January to invest up to $13 million in the transformative project this fiscal year, which has been branded as a tourism hub replete with state Department of Environmental Conservation-run campgrounds, an equestrian area and other tourist amenities.

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The deadline for Requests for Proposals was Sept. 15. “Empire State Development is currently reviewing the proposals we’ve received and since this is an open procurement, we cannot release information on specific proposals or the number of proposals received, as it would impede our ability to negotiate in the best interest of New York State,” said Adam Ostrowski, a spokesman for the agency. Essex County was recently awarded $200,000 grants that will allow for a demolition of a number of buildings along Route 9, the site of future development. Moore has also pushed for high-speed broadband in the town of just 240 year-round residents, and said he was “hopeful” installation will begin within the next several months. “I’m proud of what we’ve accomplished and I thank all who have served on the board and helped steer the course,” he wrote. ■

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12 • September 23, 2017 | The Times of Ti Sun

www.suncommunitynews.com

Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

Insect menace headed north Eastern hemlocks are endangered by an Asian pest By Lohr McKinstry STA FF W RITER

HAGUE | Eastern hemlocks are becoming infected with an insect called the hemlock woolly adelgid and Hague Town Councilman Steve Ramant is spreading the word. “There’s an hemlock woolly adelgid problem

heading our way,” he said. “This is a big problem. We’re devastated by this insect.” The Town of Hague is sponsoring a public information meeting on the pest at 7 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 29 at the Hague Community Center. Ramant said there will be a video presentation, followed by a question-and-answer period. “I hope people attend the meeting and spread the word to their neighbors,” he said. He’s lined up several experts to speak. Dr. Mark C. Whitmore is a forest entomologist with the Cornell University Department of Natural Resources. Stay tuned for community clinic dates!

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“The hemlock woolly adelgid has been a huge problem in the south but there is promise emerging for long-term control with predators for biological control, however this will take years to fully develop,” Whitmore said. “The important thing is to find emerging infestations early and implement short term management to slow the spread and buy valuable time to build our biocontrol capacity.” Jamie Brown is executive director of the Lake George Land Conservancy. “The hemlock woolly adelgid outbreak at Prospect Mountain shows that this powerful invasive is now here in the Adirondacks and unfortunately right here in the Lake George watershed,” Brown said. Others coming to the forum are Cathy Pedler, director of government relations and conservation at the Adirondack Mountain Club, and Warren Rosenthal, conservation manager at the Lake George Land Conservancy. “The hemlock wooly Adelaide is a small,

aphid-like insect that came to the states from Asia,” Ramant said. This insect was found first in the southern states, and has been steadily heading north, he said. “Once a hemlock is infected by the hemlock woolly adelgid, the tree dies within 4 to 10 years,” he said. “Early detection is something everybody can do and you’ll be shown how to recognize this blight in the meeting’s slide show. The ecological impacts of the hemlock woolly adelgid in our forests is devastating, and you’ll learn how your woods, streams, lakes and animals are affected. “In addition, there will be an opportunity to help by volunteering your time to fight this menace.” ■ Mark Whitmore is a researcher at Cornell University on invasive forest pest issues who will be coming to Hague to talk about the hemlock woolly adelgid. Photo provided

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To learn more, please attend the informational meeting on September 29th at 7pm at the Town of Hague Community Center. Featuring: Dr. Mark C. Whitmore, Department of Natural Resources Forest Entomologit at Cornell University. “HWA has been a huge problem in the south but there is promise emerging for long-term control with predators for biological control, however this will take years to fully develop. The important thing is to find emerging infestations early and implement short term management to slow the spread and buy valuable time to build our biocontrol capacity.” Cathy Pedler, Director of Conservation, Adk Mountain Club

Jamie Brown, Executive Director of the Lake George Land Conservancy. “The HWA outbreak at Prospect Mountain shows that this powerful invasive is now here in the Adirondacks and, unfortunately, right here in the Lake George watershed.” Warren Rosenthal, Conservation Manager, Lake George Land Conservancy This is your opportunity to learn about this horrible outbreak happening in your own back yard through video presentations, hand-outs and a Q&A session with the experts.

We encourage you to attend this meeting and spread the word to your neighbors! Meeting sponsored by the Town of Hague.

105789


www.suncommunitynews.com

Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

The Times of Ti Sun | September 23, 2017 • 13

Reiki master coming to area Moriah’s LightWorks Reiki is sponsoring a seminar By Lohr McKinstry STA FF W RITER

LAKE PLACID | LightWorks Reiki of Moriah is presenting “Jikiden Reiki Seminar in the Adirondacks” at the Courtyard Marriott-Lake Placid from Oct. 5-13. The featured guest lecturer, author Frank Arjava Petter, is a dai shihan — or final level instructor — and vice chair-

man of the Jikiden Reiki Institute of Japan. LightWorks Reiki owner Luci Carpenter said Petter’s visit presents a chance to learn reiki as originally taught and practiced in Japan. “It’s a big deal, as Arjava generally only comes to the (country) once a year in May,” she said. “I have hosted him twice in Florida and assisted him at least three times when teaching in Connecticut on his May trips. This year, he was in San Diego in May, and in New Orleans and Virginia Beach. “It is very special that he has agreed to come to our area in October. It is his only stop in the (country) this fall.” Reiki is part of holistic medicine.

“Holistic medicine is the art and science of healing that addresses the whole person: mind, body and spirit,” Carpenter said. “Reiki is a simple form of energy healing that has been shown to be effective in stimulating and promoting the body’s natural healing response. Jikiden Reiki is the original Reiki, entirely free of Western and New Age influences.” She said LightWorks Reiki offers Jikiden Reiki sessions and training seminars and is certified through the Jikiden Reiki Institute of Japan. For more information or registration for the Lake Placid event, contact Carpenter at 518-572-6427 or lightworksreiki@gmail.com, or visit lightworksreikiny.com. ■

Town looks for public parking The Port Henry truck route is finally gone. By Lohr McKinstry STA FF W RITER

MORIAH |There could be more public parking in downtown Port Henry soon. Mountain Lakes Services has notified the Moriah Town Council it wants a shared services arrangement for downtown parking. The agency for the developmentally disabled would buy vacant land for sale west of the Port Henry Post Office on Broad Street. Town owns a small adjacent parking lot. “The town would be responsible for paving (the lot) and it would be used for Mountain Lake’ parking and open to the general public seven days a week,” Mountain Lakes Execu-

tive Director Martin Nephew wrote to the town. Mountain Lakes Services has offices on Main Street and St. Patrick’s Place in Port Henry. Many downtown parking spaces, including most of the spaces on Church Street next to the Mt. Moriah Presbyterian Church are filled daily with employees’ vehicles. Officials seemed receptive to the proposal at the recent Town Council meeting. “I believe it would resolve a lot of the parking issues we have in the village,” Town Supervisor Thomas Scozzafava said. “I fully support this. I feel it’s a good solution to a continued problem.” He said he’ll start a dialog with Nephew and report back to the board. Scozzafava also said there are few handicap spaces on Main Street. A check showed seven handicap spaces, two near Mt. Moriah Presbyterian Church and other spaces next to Glens Falls National Bank branch, the former chiropractic office and the King George Restaurant, both on

Broad Street, Sherman Free Library, and the Lee House, a senior citizen facility. Evelyn Celotti complained by letter that two spaces in front of her liquor store on Main Street had one hour parking signs and she wanted it changed to 15 minutes. The board voted 4-0 to do so and redo the signs. The Town Council authorized the Town Highway Department to remove truck route signage at Broad, College and Grove streets in Port Henry hamlet. The action will effectively end Port Henry’s unusual truck route through residential neighborhoods that was established in the 1970s. “This is the one we’ve had a lot of controversy over,” Scozzafava said. “The truckers will decide what way they want to go.” The vote was 4-0, with Councilor Timothy Garrison absent, to take down the signs. The truck detour was established after a dump truck lost its brakes on Broad Street hill and crashed into a downtown store, resulting in fatalities. ■

The 128th Annual

LABOR DAY CELEBRATION was a great success thanks to the generous contributions of our donors!

The Moriah Chamber of Commerce would like to thank the following for making this event possible:

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Mineville Oil Corp Mt. Moriah Presbyterian Church Paul Salerno Port Henry Fire Department Port Henry Fire Department Auxiliary Port Henry Marina Port Home Goods PRE Tech Plastics Red Brick Cafe/Village Inn Rev. & Mrs. Kenneth Parker ROOST Sandra Kukie Stewart’s Shops Sun Community News Ticonderoga Federal Credit Union Town of Moriah 105197


14 • September 23, 2017 | The Times of Ti Sun

www.suncommunitynews.com

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Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

The Times of Ti Sun | September 23, 2017 • 15

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16 • September 23, 2017 | The Times of Ti Sun

www.suncommunitynews.com

From the Sidelines

One more week...

While both Scott Nephew and Don Tesar are making sure this week does By Keith Lobdell not become a • SPORTS EDITOR • trap game for the Ticonderoga Sentinels and Moriah Vikings, respectively, that does not mean we are not going to sneak a peak into week five. The seventh-ranked Sentinels and 11th ranked Vikings both come off of convincing wins last weekend, with Ticonderoga scoring a 56-21 win in a game not as close as the score indicates. The Sentinels were up, 34-0, with over three minutes left in the first quarter. They were averaging not four yards a play, but FOUR POINTS A PLAY! It was a mismatch from the word go as Hayden Scuderi had 170 yards and two scores, Jevyn Granger 57 rushing yards and two more touchdowns, and Evan Graney throwing for 90 yards on two completions and one touchdown. The same thing happened at Linney, where it took Dylan Trombley only six completions to rack up 197 yards and four touchdowns in a 50-7 win over Beekmantown. Connor Anderson added 76 yards and a score, while Dewey Snyder accounted for 54 yards and a touchdown. Both teams are away this week, as Moriah heads to Saranac and the Sentinels go to Saranac Lake. If both teams take care of business, it will be a battle of 4-0 football teams under the lights of Sentinel Field Friday, Sept. 29, 7:30 p.m., in one of the best rivalry games in all of the state.

VIKINGS ATOP SOCCER STANDINGS

With a 2-2 tie against Seton Catholic and a Chazy bye Sept. 18, the Lady Vikings took the lead in the Division II soccer standings by one point over the Eagles, who beat them earlier in the year. Madison Olcott and Juliette Baker each scored for the Vikings, while Olcott, Hailey Crossman and Stephania Zelinski scored in a 3-2 win over Northern Adirondack last week. Earlier in the week, Olcott scored twice and Crossman scored the gamewinner as the Vikings defeated

Lake Placid, 4-3. In the Lady Eagles only game of the week, they scored a 6-4 win over the Lady Sentinels, with Grace Montville recording a hat trick. The Lady Sentinels also suffered a 2-0 loss to Seton Catholic as Aubrey Smith made 26 saves.

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LADY PANTHERS TO THE LEAD, BOYS KEEP PACE

The Crown Point girl’s soccer team is also leading in Division III after scoring a 2-0 win against Schroon Lake. Swade Potter and Torrie Vradenburg scored goals, while Hannah Palmer made 19 saves for the shutout. Alora Bearor made 23 saves for the Wildcats, who also suffered a 2-1 loss to Johnsburg as Lily Slyman scored and Bearor made 18 saves. Potter, Lauren Kimball and Shawna McIntosh scored goals in a 3-0 win over Minerva/ Newcomb, while suffering a 6-2 setback against Division II’s Elizabethtown-Lewis/Westport as Palmer made 21 saves while Potter and Vradenburg each scored. The Panther boys, meanwhile, continue to play unblemished soccer in Division III as they approach their Sept. 19 matchup with Keene. Zach Spaulding had two goals and two assists as the Panthers scored a 13-1 win over Indian Lake/Long Lake, with Hunter Pertak adding two goals, while Pertak scored three goals and Spaulding 2 in a 6-0 win over Minerva/Newcomb.

Moriah’s Dylan Trombley gives a stiff arm to a Beekmantown defender as the Vikings scored a 50-7 win over the Eagles last week. For more pictures from this game, visit mycapture.suncommunitynews.com. Photo by Jill Lobdell

MORE SOCCER

The Schroon Lake boys team scored a 1-0 win over Minerva/ Newcomb to end the week on a high note as Andrew Pelkey scored both goals. Earlier in the week they were not able to find the back of the net in a 1-0 loss to Johnsburg, with Harrison Gereau making 15 saves.

Crown Point’s Shawna McIntosh looks to trap the ball away from EL/W’s Ellie Storey in their inter-divisional meeting Sept. 15. The Lady Panthers currently lead in the Division III standings after defeating Schroon Lake and Minerva/Newcomb this week. For more pictures from this game, visit mycapture.suncommunitynews.com. Photo by Jill Lobdell

ON THE COURSE

Sierra Stacy finished in fifth place as Ticonderoga was unable to score a win against Peru in cross country, while Caleb Pike placed eight in the boys meet with the team going 0-2on the day. Ben Wisser placed atop the podium at the Schuyler Falls meet, but Schroon Lake was unable to pick up a win. ■ Harrison Gereau dives for the save for Schroon Lake.

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The Times of Ti Sun | September 23, 2017 • 17

Breakfast, fire alarms offered

Chilson Fire Department is hosting a pancake breakfast By Lohr McKinstry STA FF W RITER

Ticonderoga’s Caleb Pike.

Photo by Jill Lobdell

Schroon Lake’s Lily Slyman gets tangled up in trying to possess the ball against Johnsburg’s June McCarthy last week. For more pictures from this game, visit mycapture.suncommunitynews.com. Photo by Jill Lobdell

The Moriah girl’s soccer team took a one point lead in Division II heading into the end of the first half of the regular season this week. For more pictures from the Vikings game against Elizabethtown-Lewis/Westport from Sept. 20, visit mycapture.suncommunitynews.com. Photo by Ciara Thompson

CHILSON | The Chilson Fire Department is participating in Fire Prevention Week with a pancake breakfast on Saturday, Oct. 14. The department is also offering free smoke alarms and batteries to Chilson Fire District residents. The breakfast is from 8-10 a.m. at the department’s Chilson Community House at 60 Putts Pond Rd. “The Chilson Volunteer Fire Department will mark National Fire Prevention Week this year with a pancake breakfast,” Firefighter Stephen Phelps Jr. said. “Drop in to enjoy Larry Lauman’s famous apple pancakes, with sides of bacon and sausage, and plenty of coffee, of course. Breakfast is free to our Chilson and Ticonderoga neighbors and friends, although donations will be gratefully accepted.” For Chilson Fire District residents, the department has free smoke alarms and free smoke-alarm batteries, he said. “Just drop in to have breakfast with us and you can sign up to get these life-saving necessities for your home and family,” he said. Firefighters will go to homes to install the alarms so they conform to building and safety codes. This year’s Fire Prevention Week theme is “Every Second Counts: Plan 2 Ways Out!” “First, sit down with everyone who lives at your house, and draw a map of the house,” he said. “Mark two exits from each room, and a path to the outside from each exit. Second, practice your home fire drill twice a year.” ■

NOTICE! ROAD CLOSURES SUNDAY MORNING DURING THE LISTED HOURS CALL THE ADIRONDACK MARATHON COMMAND CENTER FOR ASSISTANCE. 518-532-7737 On Sunday Sept. 24th, the 21st Adirondack Marathon will be held around Schroon Lake from 7:00 am to 3:00 pm. Access to local roads will be restricted and controlled by NY State Police and Essex and Warren County Sheriff’s. You are requested to restrict use of affected roads during the indicated times to attendance of Houses of Worship and Emergencies only.

RACE WEEKEND

ROADWAYS AFFECTED 1. Leland Avenue (Schroon Lake) 6am - 3pm. 2. Dock Street (Schroon Lake) 8:40 am - 9:10 am & 10 am - 2:45 pm.

For Runners & Sports/Fitness Enthusiasts

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Alternating police escorted one-way traffic in South Bound Lane on US Route 9 for local residents attending Houses of Worship

Thank you for your cooperation.

Complete Race Weekend Details at:

www.adirondackmarathon.org

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• Helpers Fund 5K & 10K: 9:30am on Saturday at Chestertown Municipal Center • Expo & Packet Pick-up: 10am-5pm on Saturday at Schroon Lake Central School. 3pm session Featuring Fred Dunaway who has run 37 marathons (5 ADK). Eat, Drink and be Merry: The active lifestyle meets the ADK Marathon Distance Festival • 1K Children’s Fun Run: 2pm on Saturday at the Adirondack Marathon Finish Line, Schroon Lake • Pasta Dinner: 5:30-7:30pm on Saturday at Word of Life Inn, Schroon Lake • Marathon & Relays: 9am on Sunday, Schroon Lake • Half Marathon: 10am on Sunday, Adk to Schroon Lake

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18 • September 23, 2017 | The Times of Ti Sun

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» Wilson Cont. from pg. 1

FOR THE NORTH COUNTRY the rounds and meeting with voters. Wilson, 33, sketched out the early outlines of her campaign platform last week to Adirondack Indivisible, the local chapter of the nationwide progressive activist group that mobilized last winter to resist Republican policies following President Donald Trump’s inauguration. Numerous grassroots groups have sprouted since Trump’s come-from-behind victory, and Wilson has been active in many of them — including traveling to North Dakota to participate in the protests against the Dakota Access Pipeline. “I have a renewed faith of participation in government, and I think my candidacy is a product of that,” Wilson said. Since declaring her campaign to unseat Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-Willsboro) in June, Wilson has staked her candidacy on her ability to empathize with working class voters in the rural, remote district. After all, she’s cut from the same cloth. A Keene native, Wilson traced her roots back to the 1930s when her grandparents cashed in a coin collection to purchase a farm on what was known as “The Mountain Road.” Everyone thought they were crazy. But the family persevered. “We were land rich but cash poor,” Wilson said. Wilson’s parents divorced when she was young, and she moved to Elizabethtown with her mother. After graduating from the National Sports Academy in Lake Placid, Wilson attend,' ed the University of Vermont CuMBERLANol2 ..::.-, --- __::, · Cinemas t. ~ and Sierra Nevada College Exit 39, Route 9N, Plattsburgh, NY on Lake Tahoe. wwwcumberland12com (518)324-3888 She moved back to Keene Valid MovieTimesfor in 2009, where she is raising Fri.,Sept 22nd- Tues.,Sept 26th her two children, ages 9 and 8. ***3D*** Wilson currently owns and 3DTheLEGONinjagoMovie operates the Adirondack Attic, (PG)(RealD3D) a consignment shop. 4:40PM• 7:45PM Business can be tough, she ***3D*** said, and she knows what it’s AmericanAssassin(R) like to live from paycheck to 12:20PM• 2:45PM• 5:10PM paycheck.

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Congress contains just one member who is a single mother, Wilson said. But, she said, “I’m not here to talk about glass ceilings — I’m here to talk about sturdy floors.” The first-time candidate sketched out an early campaign platform to the crowd of about two dozen attendees, mostly retirees, including better health care for veterans, more local control for schools, additional resources to combat the opiate epidemic, tax relief for small businesses and a Medicare buy-in option on the Affordable Care Act exchange, an option Wilson says will serve as a bridge to universal healthcare. As Democrats at the national level are torn between how to rebuild and rebrand their party, Wilson said she is not interested in revisiting the reasons that ultimately saw Trump defeat Hillary Clinton, but would rather speak to the real issues on the ground. The candidate was unsparing in her criticism of Stefanik, who voted in favor of repealing President Barack Obama’s signature health care law in May. The replacement bill would have jeopardized Medicaid funding for nursing homes, a measure that would have left “thousands of seniors” homeless, Wilson said — including people like her father, Olympic biathlete Joe Pete Wilson, who resides in a local nursing facility. “These are real lives on the line,” she said. Stefanik “doesn’t care about the North Country the way you and I do,” Wilson said. The candidate also criticized Stefanik’s environmental record, including the lawmaker’s 2015 vote to reject Environmental Protection Agency limits for coal-fired power plants. “She voted for acid rain,” Wilson said. “You don’t come back from that.” Stefanik bucked her party in July and was one of only two New York GOP lawmakers to vote against the Ozone Standards Implementation Act of 2017, which would have delayed implementation in further reductions for smogcausing power plants. She is a member of the bipartisan Climate Solutions Caucus and the co-chair of the House Invasive Species Caucus. Stefanik also received the “Supporter of Nature” Award from the Nature Conservancy, and just last week, crossed party lines to vote against an amendment that would block the EPA’s methane rule. Wilson doesn’t think the pivot to a more moderate stance on green issues is sincere: “It’s her just trying to keep her seat,” Wilson said. Wilson also criticized Stefanik for her support of the 2018 House appropriations bill, which would reduce funding for

Work will start soon on the new Essex County budget

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family planning and reproductive health services, and accused the lawmaker of capitulating to corporate donors — including the insurance and healthcare industries. Lenny Alcivar, a Stefanik campaign spokesman, said: “Our district doesn’t need more partisan, political rhetoric. Republicans, Democrats and Independents know that Elise is not only recognized as one of the most bipartisan members of the U.S. House of Representatives, she is ranked among the most bipartisan leaders in Washington.” Stefanik wrote the largest fi x to the ACA last Congress: the repeal of the auto-enrollment mandate, which was signed into law by President Obama, Alcivar said. And last week, Stefanik introduced bipartisan legislation to protect funding for community health centers in the district. But before Wilson can go head-to-head with the sophomore lawmaker, who racked up the largest point spread out of any Republican congressmember in the state in her successful reelection bid last year, Wilson must dispatch a growing Democratic primary field. Six candidates have declared so far — Patrick Nelson (Stillwater, Saratoga County), Emily Martz (Saranac Lake), Ronald Kim (Queensbury, Warren County), Dan Boyajian (Cambridge, Washington County) and Tedra Cobb (Hermon, St. Lawrence County)— and it’s largely expected the field will continue to swell. “I’m not in this game to win a primary,” Wilson said. “I’m in this game to win a general.” Key in that is short-circuiting a primary, which she estimates could cost as much $500,000. “With so many candidates in the field, it’s been really hard, and we’ve had to tweak our approach a bit,” Wilson said. The candidate already appears to have a sleek campaign operation replete with a finance director and public relations team, which has been issuing press releases, as well as a glossy online campaign video last week. As the field continues to shape up, Wilson wants to avoid getting stuck in “ideological litmus test type” conversations that might make good soundbites to appeal to the left but would alienate more conservative voters in next fall’s general election. For now, the candidate will continue traveling the district in an attempt to connect with voters and understand their concerns, as well as draw broad contrasts between her and Stefanik. “If I can understand their needs better than any other candidate, that’s just as good as having more money than any other candidate,” Wilson said. “My dedication is simply to getting around as much as possible and making sure that I know the differences between life in Watertown and life in Lake George.” ■

County seeks accounting upgrade

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ELIZABETHTOWN | Essex County is looking to replace and modernize the financial software that keeps the county running. The program they’ve been using, SunGard Public Sector Pentamation, from a Bethlehem, Pa. firm, is no longer sufficient, County Manager Daniel Palmer told the County Board of Supervisors Finance Committee on Monday. “The software that runs our system is from 1993,” Palmer said. “We’ve had some problems.” The committee voted to allow Palmer to get prices on other packages. “Their code is outdated to the point where we’re having trouble putting barcodes on checks,” he said. “There’s software we would like to look at.” He said he’ll check with county departments on their needs in financial and accounting software. “I do think it’s time,” Palmer said. “We need something better.” Other municipalities might be able to piggyback on the contract, Palmer said. The new software also has to be able to integrate with the county’s time clock system and import the Pentamation files. Essex County Treasurer Michael Diskin said Palmer is on the right track. “This company hasn’t kept up with technology,” Diskin said. “It’s (the program) been around a long time.” The committee voted to issue a request for quotations. The Finance Committee gave preliminary approval on a local law to override the state tax cap for the county, which is 2 percent next year.

Whether they meet the cap with the 2018 county budget will be based on various factors, Palmer said. “It will depend on whether you chose to do something with EMS,” Palmer told supervisors. “Short of that...” The county is considering a countywide EMS system that would hire EMTs to assist towns with ambulance service. The September Ways and Means meeting will feature a public hearing on the cap override just before the 10 a.m. session. Budget workshops will start the first week in October, said Supervisor Thomas Scozzafava (R-Moriah), the Finance Committee chair. Motions approved at Monday’s committee meetings will get another vote at Ways and Means, and a final vote at the regular October session if they pass Ways and Means. Supervisors also looked at some building needs. A lightning strike on a solid-waste trailer at the County Transfer Station in Lewis did more than $23,000 in damage. The County Public Works Committee voted to award contracts to Lucky’s Trailer Sales of Colchester, Vt. for repairs to the hydraulic floor system in the trailer and other fire damage. The costs will be paid from insurance reimbursement and budgeted funds. Supervisor Roby Politi (R-North Elba) said he was in the Public Defender offices in the county complex and found them to be inadequate. “We’re looking at moving Planning and Community Development (department) down to DPW (Department of Public Works in Lewis), because there’s a relationship there,” Palmer said. “That would free up some space here.” The Public Defender offices could then be moved, Palmer said. County Printer Lori Hall is retiring Dec. 29, and the board voted to commend Hall for her service. ■


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» Martz Cont. from pg. 1

MARTZ FOR CONGRESS

she knew voted differently: Should she engage them in discussion? “Clearly you voted differently. Would you be willing to have a conversation with me?” Martz asked. The man said no. But as winter turned into spring, she did it again — and again and again — and efforts at dialogue eventually blossomed. It’s that listening and sense of open-minded engagement that underpins Martz’s campaign for the Democratic nomination for New York’s 21st Congressional District. Regardless of how they voted, everyone wants the same thing, Martz told prospective voters at a campaign event in Plattsburgh on Sunday: Healthcare, jobs, food on the table and a way forward through higher education. For roughly an hour, Martz engaged in a back-and-forth with about a dozen voters at a downtown coffee shop. The biggest issue facing the district is the wealth gap, Martz said. “There are economic and political systems that are set up that so those who already have are able to get more, and it makes it very difficult for the have-nots to get ahead,” she said. “And what its led to is not just economic challenges, but we know it’s also starting to lead to social instability.” Martz, the deputy director of Adirondack North Country Association and a former Paul Smith’s professor, said she has a proven track record of job creation, pointing at renewable energy projects she spearheaded in Malone and Keene. She cited the Institute of Advanced Manufacturing at Clinton Community College

Church

Stefanik wrote the largest fi x to the ACA last Congress: the repeal of the auto-enrollment mandate, which was signed into law by President Obama, Alcivar said. The lawmaker last week, noted the spokesman, introduced bipartisan legislation to protect funding for community health centers in the district. With six challengers vying for the nomination, Martz admitted fundraising remains a challenge — “It’s the financial obligations that come with running. That’s the biggest obstacle we have,” she said — but would continue crisscrossing the district and engaging with voters. Support from young people appears strong, she said, and her campaign has been contacted by high school students asking how they can help. That involvement seems to be increasing, she said. “When we talk about young people and engagement, we need to remember that all generations have been apathetic,” she said. And as the Democratic Party licks its

wounds and weighs it future following last year’s election upset that saw the undercard take the White House, Martz said she’ll stay focused on local issues. “I do shy away from that identity thing,” she said, indirectly referring to the criticism that Democrats ignored economic issues last fall, paving the way for Trump’s brand of economic populism. “I stay away from identity politics.” Martz, who spearheaded a coalition of grassroots progressive groups shortly after the election, said she was confident she could engage in measured discussion with voters and local government officials — even rockribbed Republicans. “I’m demonstrating my commitment to making this district stronger by sitting with them,” she said. “I believe, and (former House Speaker) Tip O’Neill said it best, all politics is local.”■

Services

worship is on Saturday at 3:00 p.m. Christ Episcopal Church, Route 9, Pottersville. For information please call 772-321-8692or 772-321-8692 . email: barefootrev1@gmail.com. Pastor Bruce E. Rudolf

torSteve@AdirondackCommunityFellowship.org• www.AdirondackCommunityFellowship.org Sunday Service at 10:30a.m. Celebrate RecoveryThursday at 6:30 p.m. in cooperation with HagueWeslyan Church. Tuesday6 p.m. Bible Study. Cornerstone AllianceChurch:Sunday School 9:30 a.m., Worship Service 10:30 a.m. Sunday B.A.S.I.C. youth group meeting 9:30 a.m.WednesdayPrayer Meeting 7 p.m. 178Montcalm Street. Everyone is Welcomed! Contact PastorCharlie Bolstridge. 518· 585-6391 FirstBaptistChurch:Services: Sun. School 9:30 a.m.; Sun. worship 10:45 a.m.; Sun. evening 6 p.m.; Wed. Prayermeeting7 p.m. For info call PastorBill Whittington,585-7107 . FirstUnitedMethodistChurch: Sun. Services 8:30 & 10:30 a.m. EveryoneWelcome! 518-585-7995 . Rev. ScottTyler. 1045Wicker St. LakesideRegionalChurch(HagueWesleyanChurch): 2nd Sunday of every month 10 a.m. Service at the BestWestern ConferenceCenter. A fellowship cafe time immediately following the service. Children's church and nursery available. Senior Pastor Skip Trembley. www .lakesideregionalchurch.org St. IsaacJoguesRoman: Masses: St. Mary's: Masses: Sat. 4:30 p.m. and Sun. 9 a.m., Pastor Rev.Kevin McEwan, Deacon Elliott A. Shaw. 12 FatherJoques Place585-7144 The EpiscopalChurchof the Cross:Sunday Eucharist, Church Service 9 a.m. with Eucharist. 129 Champlain Ave. 585-4032 Ticonderoga Assemblyof God: Sunday Morning Worship 10:00a.m. (Children'sChurch Provided) Wednesday Bible Study at 6:30 p.m. Thursday Prayer Meeting 6:30 p.m.. PastorSheridan Race,32 Water Street. 585-3554.

NEWCOMB St. Barbara'sEpiscopal Church: Sunday 9 a.m. NYS Rte 28N, Newcomb. For information call Adirondack Missions 494-3314. Contact persons: DeaconJohn Caims. Website: theadirondackmission .org. NORTH CREEK St. James Catholic Church· Main St. sunday Mass at 9 a.m. Pastor Rev. John O'Kane

HAGUE

HagueBaptistChurch:Pastor- Cory MacNeil. Sunday morning: Adult Bible Study 9:30 a.m.;Worship Service 10:30 a.m., 543-8899 LakesideRegionalChurch(HagueWesleyanChurch): Sunday morning services at 10 a.m. at the Hague Campus with a fellowship cafe time immediately following the service. Children's church and nursery available. Senior Pastor SkipTrembley. www .lakesideregionalchurch.com St. IsaacJoguesRomanCatholicChurch : 9790Graphite Mtn. Rd. Sunday Mass at 9 a.m. thru Labor Day. Pastor Rev. John O'Kane MIDDLEBURY Churchof Jesus Christ of Latter-daySaints (Middlebury Ward) - SacramentWorship Service: Sunday 9:00am. Meetinghouse-133ValleyView, Middlebury, VT 05753. MINEVILLE

as a model that should be emulated to foster workforce development in the region, including vocational training for electricians and plumbers, fields that remain in high demand. Health care for veterans needs also to be bolstered, Martz said, citing a discussion on Sunday with a Navy veteran in Inlet, Hamilton County about what he felt was the most pressing issue in his life. “He said the broken promise that vets enlisted or drafted and were promised by the government that if they served, they would have benefits,” Martz said. If successful in her bid to defeat Elise Stefanik (R-Willsboro), Martz, 45, said she will bring this record of building partnerships to Congress. National Democrats in recent weeks are lining up behind the bill introduced by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) that includes a major provision written by Sen. Gillibrand (D-NY) for a Medicare buy-in Martz said she supports the measure and criticized Stefanik for her vote to repeal the Affordable Care Act in May, citing the effectiveness of the law in reducing the number of uninsured people in the district. “We know that the ACA has helped,” Martz said. “We just need to keep asking my opponent, ‘Why do you want to take something away that is providing healthcare of tens of thousands of additional people in your district? Why do you want to take away healthcare from your constituents?’” Martz likened the vote to a betrayal: “It seems like she’s using the position to bolster her own professional career and serve her party’s agenda as opposed to the people she represents,” Martz said. Lenny Alcivar, a Stefanik campaign spokesman, said: “Our district doesn’t need more partisan, political rhetoric. Republicans, Democrats and Independents know that Elise is not only recognized as one of the most bipartisan members of the U.S House of Representatives, she is ranked among the most bipartisan leaders in Washington.”

Tarbell Hill Rd., Sunday Worship 9 a.m.; Fellowship & coffee hour following . Sunday School offered. Everyone is welcomed! Rev. Dr. Kenneth N. Parker

CROWN POINT

CrownPointBibleChurch:1800Creek Road,5973318. Sunday Morning Worship 10 a.m.; Sunday EveningYouth. Discipleship Ministry and Adult Grow Groups 6 p.m.; Wednesday Bible Study and Prayer Meeting, 7 p.m. Pastor Doug Woods, 597-3575. CrownPointUnited MethodistChurch: Sunday Services at 9:30 a.m. Located at 1682CreekRd. Pastor LeeAckley. FirstCongregational Church: Sunday Service 9:30 a.m. ReverendDavid Hirtle, 597-3398. Park Place. SacredHeart CatholicChurch: Mass: Sun. 9 a.m., Pastor Rev. Albert Hauser,Main Street 597-3924

The Times of Ti Sun | September 23, 2017 • 19

OLMSTEDVILLE St. Joseph'sCatholic Church - Weekend Masses: SchoolYear Sunday 11a.m.; Summer Saturday 7 p.m. Rev. PhilipT.Allen, Pastor. 518-648-5422 PORT HENRY

LakeChamplainBibleFellowship : 6 Church Street, Port Henry, NY (518) 546-4200. Pastor D. Mitchell Mullenax. Worship Service 10:30 a.m. Visit our website to see our full calendar: www .lcibible.org Mount MoriahPresbyterian Church: 19 Church Street, 546-7099. Sunday Worship, 10:30 a.m., Communion on first Sunday of each month. All are welcome. Rev. Dr. Kenneth N. Parker St Patrick'sChurch: Mass: Sun. 11a.m. Pastor Rev. Albert Hauser, 12 St. Patrick'sPlace546-7254 POTTERSVILLE

LighthouseBaptistChurch : Sunday PreachingServices 10 a.m. and 11:15 a.m. Wednesday Prayerand Bible Study 6 p.m. 12 Olmstedville Road, Pottersville, NY.PastorJim Brown Jr. SonRiseLutheranChurch: EasterSchedule: April 9 & April 16: 9:30 a.m.; HolyThursday (MaundyThursday) 7 p.m. Last 2 weekends in April (4/22& 4/29)

All SaintsChurch:Mass: Sat. 4 p.m. Pastor Rev. Albert Hauser,23 Bartlett Pond Rd., 546-7254 MountainMeadowsChristianAssembly:office located at 59 Harmony Rd.,Mineville N.Y. SNUG 12956. Office 518HARBOR 942-8031,Pastors Martin & Deborah BOAT RENTALS Mischenko. Bible study and prayer "On Beautiful 40 Industrial Drive Thurs 7am-10am SchroonLake,New York Lake George" at Pastor's office. Installation Service Firefighters for 92Block Point Rd ., Ticonderoga Sales, of Oil-Fired & LP Gas Christ Adk chapter Heating Equipment www .snughorbormorinoinc.com 1st Tuesof the Keith,Tim& DarrylVander Wiele month at ministry (5181532-7968 57566 office. Call for ti mes. Service times & locations on website. Road Riders for Jesus M.M check website. Food Our Business Is Pantry by appt Customer Satisfaction only. Office hours Mon-Fri 9am-4pm 50 Gallons FREE or by appt. for NEW & DECORATING CENTER

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LogChapelFellowship:Rt. 22. Services: Sun. School 10 a.m.; Sunday Worship Service 11a.m.; Pastor Roger Richards. Pleasecall 260-9710for more information . UnitedPresbyterian Church:Join us for Sunday worship services at 10 a.m. All are welcomed! The choir rehearseson Thursdays at 7 p.m. - New singers invited! 365 County Rt. 2, Off Rt. 22 in Putnam. 547-8378. SCHROON LAKE

MountainsideBibleChapel:Sunday Worship Service, Children's Church & Nursery· 10 a.m.; Sunday EveningYouth Programsfor Pre-Kthrough Grade 12 - 6 p.m. from Septemberthrough mid-June. For more information, call 518-532-7128ext. 3. Mountainside is located four miles south of Schroon LakeVillage. Our Ladyof Lourdes : Mass: Sat. (Summer only) at 7 p.m. thru Labor Day; Sun. 11a.m., Pastor Rev. Kevin McEwan, Main Street 532-7100 SchroonLakeCommunityChurchUnitedChurchof ChristUnitedMethodist: Sunday Worship Service 10 a.m. Children's Sunday School 10 a.m. Coffee hour at 11a.m. All are welcome. PastorLynnetteCole. 5327770or 532-7272. St. AndrewsEpiscopalChurch: Sunday 10 a.m. US Rte 9, Schroon Lake. For information call Adirondack Missions 494-3314. Contact persons: Deacon John Cairns. Website: theadirondackmission.org. SILVER BAY

GraceMemorialChapel: Sunday service July 3rd September 4th at 10 am. All Are Welcome. TICONDEROGA Adirondack Community Fellowship: 14 ParkAve.Tel: 518-636-6733 . PastorSteve Blanchard Email: Pas-

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BELOW: Emily Martz is seeking the Democratic nomination for New York’s 21st Congressional District. She engaged with voters Sunday, Sept. 17 at the Koffee Kat in Plattsburgh.

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20 • September 23, 2017 | The Times of Ti Sun

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Crown Point eyes waterfront revitalization strategy

Plan will see expansion of Monitor Bay Campground, county-run fish hatchery By Lohr McKinstry STA FF W RITER

CROWN POINT | The waterfront revitalization strategy for Crown Point includes expansion of the town’s Monitor Bay Campground and the Essex County Fish Hatchery, a visitor center and a pedestrian-friendly downtown. If implemented, the improvements would be the biggest changes to Crown Point in decades. Saratoga Associates, Behan Planning and Design, the

MONITOR BAY PARK Relocate Town Offices - Create snack bar with pi cnic area, and space for paddl i ng & fishing rentals - Add restt00ms OOH requires minimum 2 tolletsl1 sink per sei • Add utility s inks for dishwater per DOH • Modify campground layout to preserve center green space 12 sites on North edge, 20 In center , 9 to south - Develop boat trailer parking - Reconstruct boat \aunch - Provide boat washing station - Create dofined beach and Jnclude p laygrour1d space • Waterfront pavilion with rentaf potential - Hand launch for canoes, kayaks . SUP • E,r:lstlng piorfor pedestrian acce&s .-nd fishfng a

Essex County Office of Community Resources and the Town of Crown Point prepared the draft document that details how improvement efforts could proceed. The purpose of the strategy is to prepare the town for future planning efforts and get grant funding for local improvements. Six residents and Crown Point Town Supervisor Charles Harrington attended a recent presentation on the proposed plan in the Crown Point Central School cafeteria. “We do need improvements in our waterfront, our campsite, our main street and other areas,” Harrington said. “We realize there is difficulty for improvement without funding.” Harrington said the work was done with a state Department of State planning grant. Many ideas came from a public forum held in March, Harrington said. “Saratoga (Associates) refined their recommendations and proposals and they are in front of us tonight for review,” he said. Michael Allen of Behan Planning and Design said a new water management system at the Fish Hatchery, a Main Street revamping project, new Town Health Center, commercial distillery being constructed, and installing public docks at Monitor Bay are all major upgrades coming to the town. The town owns the Monitor Bay Campground and Park on Lake Champlain, which would get a full makeover. “We’re promoting the idea of relocating town offices and reusing the building to serve the park, a gift shop, snack bar, restaurant,” Allen said. “We’d redesign the whole park, so it’s a green mall that looks to the water. A new pavilion would be proposed that could be rented out.” Slips for small boats would be added for more boating access, he said. On the main street corridor, a visitors center and youth center would be added at the Hammond Library. “Sidewalks, street trees, pedestrian lighting, benches would be added to give it a more pedestrian feel,” he said. » Improvements Cont. on pg. 21

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» Improvements Cont. from pg. 20 “The town offices, court would be relocated to the former town health center (on Miller Road).” A bike lane would be added on Main Street. The park next to the library would be enhanced with the visitor center kiosk. A nature trail that encircles the downtown would be added, using the Route 9N/22 fishing access area as a trailhead. “At the Fish Hatchery, we’d add a new public building which would be an attraction for families to come, school trips,” Allen said. “We’d develop a new parking area, a visitors center up the hill, with an outdoor patio, to make it a much more inviting facility.” Penfield Homestead Museum and the Crown Point State Historic Site would be part of a historic resources guide to Crown Point, Allen said, with information on the town website. “All of these things would be working together to try to improve what there is to do around the area,” he said. “There’s a new Empire State Trail that will run from New York City to Buffalo.” The trail, which would pass through Crown Point, has been announced for future construction. The Village Green, Veterans Memorial Park, would host a farmers market. A business incubator park would also be a possibility, he said. Resident Clint Griffin said new infrastructure might be paid for with grants, but the town would still have to pay for maintenance. He said a cost-benefit analysis should be done. Dan Shearer of Saratoga Associates said it was a draft conceptual plan, and the cost analysis would be something for a future date. Harrington said a new building has been designed for the hatchery and is part of their water grant improvements, for which they were awarded a $2.1 million grant. The town’s waterworks is located on the hatchery property. “The county is behind us for all of the improvements,” he said. “I am happy with the grant we have at hand for the Fish Hatchery.” He said the improvements will be on the agenda for the

The Times of Ti Sun | September 23, 2017 • 21

County Fish Hatchery Committee when it meets next. He said they might not be able to move the town court, since the state Office of Court Administration has invested $70,000 in the existing building. “I do welcome a trail system,“ Harrington said. “I’m glad the Empire State Trail is going through our town.” He said Route 9N is narrow in the area and cyclists must pedal close to tractor trailers. “A bike path is not impossible to occur here, which would improve the safety for all involved,” Harrington said. “It’s totally doable.”

“We can talk until we’re blue in the face about all the things we’d like to see, but the bottom line is funding,” Harrington said. Barbara Kendall of the state Department of State said state money might be available on a project by project basis from different agencies, and said they needed to prioritize and submit applications that justified the need. “We want things that are implementable in the future,” Shearer said. “We’ll take the good ideas and include them.” ■ These are conceptual drawings of improvements suggested for the town of Crown Point. Graphics provided

MAIN STREET CORRIDOR

-\j

1 t~::::o;;:::r~~si;:~~; ~~. ~"::,;,:~e:.~!s • Add bike lane (or sharrows) and bike racks where poss ible • Consider relocating Village Offices & Court to forrner Health Center - Adapt existing Senior Center to include Community space • Consider tent camping on the Village Green , supported by access to restrooms at the Senior Center - Improve wayfinding signage , particularly at orientation points

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- Createa Youth Center in the Library - Install a kiosk along Main Street with visitor inrorrnation at Library or in adjacent park • Develop a Monitor Bay trail connection along Putnam Creek • Create a hand boat launch at Fishing Access point - Explore uses for vacant property purchased in front or school - Consider creating a displa of fire trucks at Station Street

MainStreetCorridorProposedImprovements Townof CrownPoint LocalWaterfrontRevitaliza tion Strategy

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22 • September 23, 2017 | The Times of Ti Sun

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Obituaries

The Times of Ti Sun | September 23, 2017 • 23

suncommunitynews.com/public-notices/obituaries

Nancy Hill Tierney TICONDEROGA | Nancy Hill Tierney, 89, of Ticonderoga passed away on Thursday, Sept. 14, 2017 at the MosesLudington Nursing Home of Ticonderoga, surrounded by her loving family. Nancy was born at the Moses-Ludington Hospital in Ticonderoga on Sept. 3, 1928, the daughter of Mary (Donovan) and Mark Bennett Hill. She was a sibling to Robert J. (Pauline) Hill, Richard D. (Nina) Hill, and Barbara Jane Hill (Robert) Kingsley. Nancy was predeceased by her parents and both brothers and one sister-in-law. In June, 1948, Nancy married Farley Patrick Tierney. Between the years of 1950 and 1979, Nancy and Farley raised their children, Colleen (Richard) Bessett, Farley Pat (Carrie) Tierney, Scott (Marjorie) Tierney, Shannon Tierney, Bridget Weaver, Kelly (Robert) Woods, Kieran (Ronald) Plouffe and Thad Tierney. One daughter, Mary, was deceased at birth. After her last child started school, Nancy went to work at the Gunning Agency. Although Nancy was a lifelong resident of Ticonderoga, she

visited many states, also visiting Canada, Ireland and Brazil. Nancy was a graduate of the Ticonderoga High School, Class of 1946, and a communicant of St. Mary’s Catholic Church of Ticonderoga. She was involved with many area and community organizations. She participated in the Forest Theater, airplane spotting during WWII, Cornell Co-op Home Demonstration, and was a member and officer of the Ticonderoga Historical Society for over 40 years. Nancy was an associate of Fort Ticonderoga, International Paper CAC member, served on the Essex County Office for the Aging Advisory Board, delivered meals on wheels and taught the osteoporosis class for 25 years. She was the leader of the Teapot gang. In her late 80s, Nancy attended several IL Volo concerts — yes, she was a groupie! She was also a fan of Star Trek and Elvis. Nancy was a real patriot and had the privilege of shaking hands with President Jimmy Carter, and she always attended the raising and lowering of the American flag on Memorial Day and Veterans Day with the Ticonderoga American Legion. She was predeceased by her husband, Farley P. Tierney, Sr. on March 13, 1997. Apart from her sister and one sister-in-law (Pauline Hill), Nancy is survived by her children and their spouses and also by her grandchildren; Molly Bessett Bechard, FP Tierney III, Sarah Tierney Kuhl, Eain Tierney, Danielle Tierney, Justin Tierney, Shya Tierney, Julia O’Connor Bair, William Panebaker, Alex Woods, Carrie Woods and Adrien Plouffe; and her great-grandchildren, David Bechard, Jr., Keegan Tierney, Conall Tierney, Lochlann Tierney, Makayla Tierney,

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TICONDEROGA | A memorial service for Helen Stanley, a former long-time resident of Ticonderoga who passed away on Feb. 27, 2017 in Burlington, Vermont, will be held at the First United Methodist Church in Ticonderoga at 1 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 30. Graveside dedication and interment will be held immediately after at Penfield Cemetery in Ironville. All who would like to attend are invited. A full obituary is available at awrichfuneralhomes.com. ■

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Tierney Bair, Konnor Bair, Nora Panebaker, Adelaide Woods, and Weslyn Woods; as well as many nieces and nephews, and wonderful friends. Relatives and friends called Tuesday, Sept. 19 at the Wilcox & Regan Funeral Home, 11 Algonkin St., Ticonderoga. A funeral service followed. The Rev. Kevin D. McEwan, Pastor of St. Mary’s Catholic Church, officiated. The rite of committal followed at the family plot of the Valley View Cemetery of Ticonderoga. In lieu of flowers, donations in Nancy’s memory may be made to the Ticonderoga Historical Society Balustrade Fund, 6 Moses Circle, Ticonderoga, NY 12883. “Yes, there are angels on earth and they work at the Moses-Ludington Nursing Home — I loved you angels.” To offer online condolences, please visit wilcoxandreganfuneralhome.com. ■

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Responsible for the careandwell beingof residentsin our84 bedskillednursingfacility,supervision of C.N.A's, medication disbursement. documentation, staffcall-ins/evaluations and communication with physicians regarding residentcare.This positionis for the 12hourEve/Nightshift. MusthaveNYSlicense,CPRcertification andupto datephysical assessment skillsanda comprehensive knowledge of nursing principles.Professional experience in geriatricnursingpreferred. SendResume andapplication to: Vicki Frasier,HR 1019Wicker Street Ticonderoga NY,12883 Phone:518-585-3715, Fax:518-585-3830, orvia emailat vfrasier@interlakeshealth.com Applications for employment areavailablefor pickupat the aboveaddressor canbecompleted on-linefromthewebsite: www.interlakeshealth.com Inter-Lakes Heathis an equalopportunityemployer.

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DENNO GIRL Thomas Denno, Brittney Lynch and Isabella Denno of Putnam Station, announce the arrival of Madison Antonia Denno. Born August 16, 2017 at 8:05 a.m. 7 lbs 7 oz and 20 inches long. Madison joins her grandparents April and Charlie Bain of Putnam Station, Flavia Fuller of Chilson, Tom and Michele Denno of Hague, and Bill and Chrystal Scheuer of Port Henry. Isabella is overjoyed to have a new baby sister ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES

Social Security Disability? Up to $2,671/mo. (Based on paid-in amount.) FREE evaluation! Call Bill Gordon & Associates. 1-855498-6323. Mail: 2420 N St NW, Washington DC. Office: Broward Co. FL., member TX/NM Bar. Wants to purchase minerals and other oil and gas interests. Send details to P.O. Box 13557 Denver, Co. 80201

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FIREWOOD FOR SALE: Dried 6 months mixed hardwood, cut 16” long & split. Delivered to Chestertown $300 a full cord, Face Cord $115. Extra Delivery Charge beyond Chestertown. 518-494-2321.

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Living Room Set, sofa & loveseat, 2 end tables, 1 coffee table (both glass topped) and 2 lamps. Dining Room Set, round table, marble top w/4 cushioned chairs. One small coin collection. 518-586-2816.

ALL INCLUSIVE RESORT packages at Sandals, Dreams, Secrets, Riu, Barcelo, Occidental and many more. Punta Cana, Mexico, Jamaica and many of the Caribbean islands. Search available options for 2017/2018 at www.NCPtravel.com or call 877-270-7260.

Vermont Casting Defient Woodstove, good cond., $500 OBO. Kenmore Portable Dishwater, $125 OBO. 26” Travel Trailer, eveything works, $1500 OBO. 518-494-5397.

CARS/TRUCKS WANTED!!! All Make/Models 2000-2015! Any Condition. Running or Not. Competitive Offer! Free Towing! Were Nationwide! Call Now: 1-888-4162330. CASH FOR CARS: We Buy Any Condition Vehicle, 2000 and Newer. Nations Top Car Buyer! Free Towing From Anywhere! Call Now: 1-800-864-5960. CASH PAID for unexpired, sealed DIABETIC TEST STRIPS! 1 DAY PAYMENT & PREPAID shipping. HIGHEST PRICES! Call 1-888-7767771. www.Cash4DiabeticSupplies.com

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FIREWOOD Dependable Year Round Firewood Sales. Seasoned or green. Warren & Essex County HEAP Vendor. Other services available. Call today! 518-494-4077 Rocky Ridge Boat Storeage, LLC.

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WANTED TO BUY WANTS TO PURCHASE minerals and other oil & gas interests. Send details P.O. Box 13557, Denver, Co 80201 APARTMENT RENTALS PORT HENRY 1-2 BR Apartments 40 Minute Drive to jobs in Middlebury and Vergennes. Apartment Near Downtown Port Henry. Walking Distance to grocery store, pharmacy, and other stores and services. No dogs, other than service dogs. $490, plus utilities. Security Deposit. Call 518-546-7003. Ticonderoga - Mt Vista Apts - 1 / 3 bdrm available; $544 / $629 rent + utilities. Appliances,trash,snow included. NO smokers. Rental assistance may be avail; must meet eligibility requirements. 518-5844543 NYS TDD Relay Service 1800-421-1220 Handicap Accessible Equal Housing Opportunity

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Amercall 315-437-6173 www.fisherhouse.org ican Made. Call 855-400-0439 for up to $1500. Off. IF ADVERTISING IN ONE FREE BNE PAPER IS SMART, then advertisPUBLIC NOTICE - ESSEX SELL YOUR STRUCTURED SETing in hundreds of them is pure A PLACE FOR MOM. The nation's OF TLEMENTCOUNTY or annuityADOPTION payments for genius! Do it with just one phone largest senior living referral serLOCAL LAW CASH NOW. You don't have to call! Reach nearly 3 million vice. Contact our trusted, local exNOTICE IS payments HEREBY GIVwait for your future any consumers statewide in print -perts today! Our service is EN1-800-938-8092. that on September 5, longer! Call plus more online -- quickly and inFREE/no obligation. CALL 1-8002017, the Essex County expensively! Zoned ads start at SOCIAL Board SECURITY DISABILITY 417-0524 of Supervisors $229 for a 25-word ad. Visit us at BENEFITS.duly Unable to work? Denied adopted Local Law FUNERALS CAN BE VERY EXPENAdNetworkNY.com or call benefits? No. We 3Can or of Help! 2017, WIN a local SIVE. Can your loved ones afford 315-437-6173 Pay Nothing! Contact Bill Gordon law of the County of Esit? Protect them with Final Expense & Associates 1-800-586-7449 to sex atrepealing 2-100(b) LUNG CANCER? And 60+ Years Insurance. Call today to learn start your of application today!County the Essex Old? If So, You And Your Family more. 800-758-0417 E911 Law authorized by May Be Entitled To A SPECTRUM TRIPLE PLAY TV, InGOT KNEE PAIN? Back Pain? 6 of the County Significant Cash Award. ternet & Article Voice for $29.99/ea. 60 Shoulder Pain? Get a pain-relievCall 1-877-689-5293 To Learn Law ofspeed. the State of New MB per second No contract ing brace at little or NO cost to More. No Risk. York and its place or commitment. Wein buy your imexyou. Medicare Patients, Call Health No Money Out Of Pocket. posing isting contract up tothe $500.!wireless 1-844Hotline Now! 1-800-279-6038 592-9018communications surMANY RN POSITIONS available in charges pursuant to the your vicinity. Hospitals, authority of Tax Law correctional facilities, and 186-G. home health assessments. Great This local law provides Pay & Benefits. White Glove with a thirty cents ($.30) Placement 1-866-387-8100 Vehicle/ Bcharge oat Pickup on per* Free month #202 recruit@whiteglovecare.net ANYWHE RE communieach wireless *We Accept All Vehicles cations device in service MOBILEHELP, America's Premier Running or Not Essex County Mobile Medical Alert System. Make-A-Wish® within * Fully Tax Deductible during any part of the Whether You're Home or Away. month, as well as, an For Safety and Peace of Mind. ~*_ Northeast New York additional thirty cents No Long Term Contracts! ($.30) surcharge per reFree Brochure! Call Today! WheelsForWishes.org sale, of prepaid wire1-800-960-8653 Call: (518) tail 650-1110 less communications MOTORCYCLES WANTED Before * Car Donation Foundation d/b/a Wheels For Wishes. To learn more about our programs devices. or fimm cial i'11forma tio11,n'sit service www. wltee/sforwi'sltes.org. 1985. Running or not. Top $Cash$ PLEASE TAKE FURTHER Paid. Free appraisals! Japanese, NOTICE that this Local British, European, American. Any Law will take effect Decondition! CALL 1-315-569-8094 cember Oct. 1, 5-8 2017. 25th Annual Parade of Homes or email pictures or description to: PLEASE from TAKE FURTHER New Homes Cyclerestoration@aol.com. NOTICE that a complete '. ;ii orolla tocopy Manteo, NCNo. 3 of Local Law NEW AUTHORS WANTED! Page of 2017 is available Publishing will help you self-pubTickets $10. for inspection in the Office lish your own book. FREE author Goodall 4 Days of the Clerk of the Board submission kit! Limited offer! Banks of Outer Supervisors, 7551 Why wait? Call now: Home Builders 1-877-635-3893 CourtAssociation Street, Elizabethtown, New York 12932. OXYGEN - Anytime. Anywhere. Dated: September 6, No tanks to refill. No deliveries. rev1l!W: www.obhomebuilders.org 2017 The All-New Inogen One G4 is only Clerk PUBLIC NOTICE - ESSEX Judith A. Garrison,103603 NOTICE OF FORMATION 2.8 pounds! FAA approved! FREE info kit: 1-855-839-1738DOMESTIC LIMITED LI- COUNTY ADOPTION OF Essex County Board of Supervisors ABILITY COMPANY LOCAL LAW 217, 7551 NOTICE LEGALS IS HEREBY GIV- P.O. Box (LLC). LEGALS LEGALS LEGALS EN that on September 5, Court Street Name: Hoot Owl Lodge, Baker Street House, LLC. Articles of Organi- 2017, the Essex County Elizabethtown, NY LLC. Filed 6/1/17. Office: 12932 zation filed with NY Sec- Board of Supervisors Essex Co. SSNY desig- retary of State, Septem- duly adopted Local Law (518) 873-3350 nated as agent for pro- ber 13, 2017. Purpose: No. 3 of 2017, a local TT-09/16-09/23/2017cess & shall mail to: Po law of the County of Es- 2TC-163088 to engage in any lawful Box 800, Sparta, NJ act or activity. Office: in sex repealing 2-100(b) MacDuff LLC. Filed 07871. Purpose: Gener- Essex County. Secretary of the Essex County al. of State is agent for pro- E911 Law authorized by 7/11/17. Office: Essex Co. SSNY designated as TT-09/02-10/07/2017Article 6 of the County cess against LLC and 6TC-161700 shall mail copy to P.O. Law of the State of New agent for process & Box 50, Newcomb, New York and in its place im- shall mail to: 42 Twin NOTICE TO BIDDERS Oak Rd, Short Hills, NJ posing the wireless York 12852. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIV- TT-09/23-10/28/2017communications sur- 07078. Purpose: GenerEN, that the Ticonderoga al. charges pursuant to the 6TC-163568 Historical Society will authority of Tax Law TT-09/02-10/07/2017accept sealed bids at its 6TC-161702 NOTICE OF FORMATION 186-G. Hancock House Head- OF LIMITED LIABILITY This local law provides NOTICE OF SALE quarters, 6 Moses Cir- COMPANY (LLC) with a thirty cents ($.30) cle, Ticonderoga, NY Name, ISLAND COT- per month charge on SUPREME COURT: ES12883 until 2:00 P.M. TAGE, LLC. Articles of each wireless communi- SEX COUNTY FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAGE on October 13, 2017 for Organization filed with cations device in service ASSOCIATION; Plaintiff repair of roof the Secretary of State within Essex County (s) balustrades at said Han- (SSNY) on 08/03/2017. during any part of the vs. GISELLE GIGUERE cock House Headquar- Office Location: Essex month, as well as, an A/K/A GISELLE KANALY ters. The bids will be County. The SSNY is additional thirty cents opened publicly and designated as agent of ($.30) surcharge per re- AS HEIR AT LAW AND NEXT OF KIN OF read aloud on October the LLC upon whom tail sale, of prepaid wire- WILLIAM J. KANALY 16, 2017 at 2:00 P.M. at process against it may less communications JR.; et al; Defendant(s) the Hancock House, 6 be served. SSNY shall service devices. Attorney (s) for Plaintiff Moses Circle, Ticon- mail a copy of any pro- PLEASE TAKE FURTHER (s): ROSICKI, ROSICKI deroga, NY 12883. cess to the principal NOTICE that this Local Please contact the business location of Law will take effect De- & ASSOCIATES, P.C., 2 Summit Court, Suite Ticonderoga Historical LLC: 1939 NYS Rte 74, cember 1, 2017. 301, Fishkill, New York, Society at 518-585-7868 Ticonderoga New York PLEASE TAKE FURTHER 12524, 845.897.1600 tihistory@bridge- 12883. Purpose: All law- NOTICE that a complete or Pursuant to judgment of point1.com for addition- ful activities. copy of Local Law No. 3 foreclosure and sale al information concern- TT-08/19-09/23/2017of 2017 is available for granted herein on or ing the bidding specifi- 6TC-160584 inspection in the Office about August 5, 2016, I cations or process. Miof the Clerk of the Board will sell at Public Aucnority and Women- JLBorne LLC. Filed of Supervisors, 7551 Owned Businesses are 7/12/17. Office: ESSEX Court Street, Elizabeth- tion to the highest bidder at the lobby of the Co. SSNY designated as encouraged to apply. town, New York 12932. Dated:September 13, agent for process & Dated: September 6, Essex County Courthouse. 2017 by William G. Dol- shall mail to: Laurie 2017 On October 18, 2017 at back, President, Ticon- Bertrand, 25 Union St, Judith A. Garrison, Clerk deroga Historical Soci- Brandon, VT 05733. Essex County Board of 10:00 am. Premises known as Purpose: General. ety. Supervisors 3421 BLUE RIDGE RD, TT-09/23-10/28/2017TT/NC-09/23/2017-1TCP.O. Box 217, 7551 NORTH HUDSON, NY 6TC-163708 163806 Court Street 12855 NY Section: 113.20 Block: PUBLIC NOTICE - ESSEX Elizabethtown, NOTICE OF FORMATION 12932 1 Lot: 7.000 & 8.110 DOMESTIC LIMITED LI- COUNTY ADOPTION OF (518) 873-3350 THAT CERTAIN TRACT, ABILITY COMPANY LOCAL LAW TT-09/16-09/23/2017PIECE OR PARCEL OF NOTICE IS HEREBY GIV(LLC). EN that on September 5, 2TC-163088 LAND, with the buildings Name: Hoot Owl Lodge, and improvements LLC. Articles of Organi- 2017, the Essex County thereon erected, situate, zation filed with NY Sec- Board of Supervisors lying and being in Lot retary of State, Septem- duly adopted Local Law 20, Tract West of Road ber 13, 2017. Purpose: No. 3 of 2017, a local

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GRANTEE

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Ann Parker and Bruce and Cora Richards

Plattsburgh

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Tera Reyell

Mooers

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Henry and Heidi Plattsburgh $12,000 54 Adirondack Drive,Cormier Ticonderoga, NY 12883 • (518) 585-6696 Arianna and Lester Culp

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Beekmantown

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$20,000

Agless Harrell

Plattsburgh

$20,000

$145,000

Michael James

Peru

$88,000

Amy Lopez

Dannemora

$87,000

Richard and Katherine Pyne

Peru

$325,000

Terry and Karen Delaney

Champlain

$100,000

Ryan Latinville

Plattsburgh

$135,000

Lord Howe Estates is affordable elderly housing property has been Kirsten Pope $229,900 built for those 62 years of age or older and/orAusable disabled individuals regardless of age. Here is a bit of what Saranac we have to offer! $60,000 Renee Drollette

1 and 2 Bedroom Apartments • Abundant Closet SpacePlattsburgh • Breathtaking views of the Tree Work Krista Professional Climber Boule Patrick Rascoe $100,000 08/30/17 w/decades of experience w/anyAdirondack Mountains • 24 Hour Emergency Maintenance • New Energy Efficient Vinyl thing from Beatrice difficultJefferson removals to 08/31/17 Serrano andLaundry Tyrell Buglione Champlain WindowsJeremias in all Units • On-Site • Community Room with fireplace &$101,500 kitchen tasteful selected pruning. Fully Reduced Price for Cable TV Hookup • Located on the grounds of Inter-Lakes Health equipped insured. Michael and Barbara Thompson Jason and Stephanie Young Beekmantown $205,000 08/31/17 &Donald Center • Senior Bus Transportation • Income Limits Do Apply! Emelianoff 518-251-3936 08/31/17 Sinda Watts Brandi Surprenant Mooers $98,000 Visit us online at www.crmrentalmgmt.com

NeedA Adam Dependable Car? 08/31/17 and Stephanie Plumb CheckOutTheClassifieds. Call1-518-585-9173 Ext.115

-

DATE

Michael and Michelle Lepone

G:r --

Essex County Transactions GRANTOR

GRANTEE

08/23/17

Patricia Deangelis

Christopher Rappell and Cynthia Martin

08/23/17

Alfred Ehrenclou and Alice Cole

Alfred Ehrenclou

08/23/17

Robert and Colleen Conrad

Jessica Hartley and David Nethaway

NOTICE OF SALE Alfred Ehrenclou Anne Smith 08/23/17 COURT: SUPREME ES- and Alice Cole SEX COUNTY FEDERAL 08/23/17 Louis and Anna Virgini John and Maureen Sammon NATIONAL MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION; Plaintiff 08/24/17 John Szot Joseph Wilson (s) vs. GISELLE GIGUERE Deutsche Bank National Trust Company 08/24/17 Edward and Patricia Allen A/K/A GISELLE KANALY AS HEIR AT LAW AND OF SALE 08/25/17 Anna Mayville and Dianne Harvish Autry MoselyNOTICE NEXT OF KIN OF SUPREME COURT: ESWILLIAM J. KANALY SEXJennifer COUNTY Thorne Christopher and Clark 08/25/17 Phebe JR.; et al; Defendant(s) NATIONSTAR MORT08/25/17 (s)Glenn Claudia Kern Bruce and Carolyn Attorney for and Plaintiff GAGE,KernLLC; Plaintiff(s) (s): ROSICKI, ROSICKI vs. MARY TEFOE; et al; Anna Whitford Diane and James Virmala &08/25/17 ASSOCIATES, P.C., 2 Defendant(s) Summit Court, Suite Attorney (s) for Plaintiff 8/28/17 VelitYork, and Joy Slaughter Richard and(s): Nicole Dietz ROSICKI, ROSICKI 301, Fishkill,John New & ASSOCIATES, P.C., 2 12524, 845.897.1600 08/28/17 David and Paul Denninger David Denninger Summit Court, Suite Pursuant to judgment of 301, Starr Fishkill, New York, foreclosure andandsale 08/28/17 Sheila John Ferebee David and Sarah 12524, 845.897.1600 granted herein on or to judgment of about August 5, and 2016, I 08/28/17 Elmer Suzanne Harper Donna andPursuant Joshua Blowers foreclosure and sale will sell at Public Auction to the Galen highest bid-et al granted 08/28/17 Wanits David and Ruth Corle herein on or der at the lobby of the about February 22, 08/28/17County Kristin Hoeh Patrick and2017, Elizabeth Purcell Essex CourtI will sell at Public house. Auction to the highest 08/29/17 and Linda Joseph andbidder Tracey Henderson On October Steven 18, 2017 at Preston at the lobby of 10:00 am. the Essex County Court08/29/17 The Butler Real Estate Co Brewster Mill Park Realty Inc County of Premises known as house, in the 3421 BLUE RIDGE RD, Essex. On October 3, 08/29/17 HUDSON, The Secretary Castlerock 2017 2017 LLC NORTH NYof Housing & Urban at 10:00 am. Development 12855 Premises known as 373 Section: 113.20 Block: WITHERBEE RD, WITH1 Lot: 7.000 & 8.110 ERBEE, NY 12998 THAT CERTAIN TRACT, Section: 86.82 Block: 1 PIECE OR PARCEL OF Lot: 5 LEGALS LEGALS LEGALS LAND, with the buildings ALL THAT PIECE OR NOTICE OF FORMATION and improvements PARCEL OF LAND, situthereon erected, situate, OF LIMITED LIABILITY ate in the Hamlet of Witherbee, Town of Molying and being in Lot COMPANY (LLC) Name, PUTNAM LAND riah, County of Essex, 20, Tract West of Road HOLDINGS, LLC. Arti- State of New York, Patent in the Town of cles of Organization filed bounded and described North Hudson, County of Essex and State of with the Secretary of as follows, Viz: Being State (SSNY) on Lot Number 104C, as New York. As more particularly de- 08/11/2017. Office Lo- shown on a Plan of Recation: Essex County. subdivision Map of scribed in the judgment The SSNY is designated of foreclosure and sale. Hamlets of Mineville & as agent of the LLC Witherbee, Sheet 2 of 4; Sold subject to all of the upon whom process terms and conditions as filed in the Office of contained in said judg- against it may be served. the County Clerk, Essex SSNY shall mail a copy ment and terms of sale. County, New York, as Essex County Map NumApproximate amount of of any process to the principal business loca- ber 1543, in Drawer judgment $83,925.70 tion of LLC: 92 Vineyard plus interest and costs. Number 12 on the 8th Road, Ticonderoga New day of January, 1957. INDEX NO. CV14-0220 Robert Maurice Kelly, York 12883. Purpose: As more particularly deAll lawful activities. Esq., Referee scribed in the judgment TT-08/26-09/30/2017of foreclosure and sale. TT-09/16-10/07/20176TC-161250 Sold subject to all of the 4TC-163157 terms and conditions NOTICE OF SALE contained in said judgSUPREME COURT: ES- ment and terms of sale. Approximate amount of SEX COUNTY NOTICE OF FORMATION $49,444.10 MORT- judgment OF OTTO ENTERPRISES NATIONSTAR plus interest and costs. GAGE, LLC; Plaintiff(s) LLC, a domestic Limited vs. MARY TEFOE; et al; INDEX NO. CV14-0689 Liability Company Hilary Diana Rogers, Defendant(s) (“LLC”). Articles of OrAttorney (s) for Plaintiff Esq., Referee ganization filed with the TT-09/02-09/23/2017Secretary of State of NY (s): ROSICKI, ROSICKI 4TC-161630 on August 8, 2017. NY & ASSOCIATES, P.C., 2 Summit Court, Suite office location: Essex TOWN OF SCHROON County. Secretary of 301, Fishkill, New York, CHANGE IN DATES FOR 12524, 845.897.1600 State is designated as TOWN BOARD MEETagent upon whom pro- Pursuant to judgment of INGS, Monday October cess against the LLC foreclosure and sale 16, 2017 at 6:00 P.M. may be served. Secre- granted herein on or Thursday, November 9, February 22, 2017 at 6:00 P.M. tary of State shall mail a about 2017, I will sell at Public copy of any process TT-09/23/2017-1TCAuction to the highest against the LLC served 163734 bidder at the lobby of upon him/her to 1073 the Essex County Court- TOWN OF TICONDEROUS Route 9, Schroon Lake, NY 12870. Pur- house, in the County of GA, NEW YORK Essex. On October 3, NOTICE OF PUBLIC pose: To engage in any HEARING lawful act or activity. Eri- 2017 at 10:00 am. PLEASE TAKE NOTICE ka Sellar Ryan, ESQ., Premises known as 373 Kelly & Sellar Ryan, WITHERBEE RD, WITH- that a public hearing will be held by the Town PLLC, 18 Gray Avenue, ERBEE, NY 12998 Board of the Town of Section: 86.82 Block: 1 Greenwich, NY 12834. Ticonderoga on October Lot: 5 TT-08/19-09/23/2017ALL THAT PIECE OR 12, 2017 at 6:00 p.m. at 6TC-160582 PARCEL OF LAND, situ- the Offices of the Town ate in the Hamlet of of Ticonderoga, 132 Witherbee, Town of Mo- Montcalm Street, Ticonriah, County of Essex, deroga, New York, to

Champlain

$137,400

106607

-LOCATION

PRICE

North Elba

$245,000

Essex

$69,750

Keene

$52,000

Essex

$765,000

Willsboro

$97,500

Keene

$150,000

Moriah

$20,000

Moriah

$10,000

Keene

$716,000

Schroon

$294,194

Moriah

$77,000

Jay

$56,000

St. Armand Keene Crown Point

$27,500 $126,000 $35,000

Schroon

$166,000

Jay

$172,000

St. Armand

$236,750

TOWN OF TICONDERO-

North Elba YORK $50,000 GA, NEW NOTICE OF North Hudson HEARING

PUBLIC $16,600

PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that a public hearing will be held by the Town Board of the Town of Ticonderoga on October LEGALS 12, 2017 at 6:00 p.m. at the Offices of the Town of Ticonderoga, 132 Montcalm Street, Ticonderoga, New York, to discuss a proposed Local Law amending the Town of Ticonderoga Zoning Ordinance in Reference to Solar Installation in the Town. Copies of the proposed local law are available at the Town Hall, 132 Montcalm Street, Ticonderoga, New York during regular business hours. All members of the public and interested parties are permitted to appear and be heard. By order of the Town Board of the Town of Ticonderoga, New York, dated September 14, 2017. Tonya Thompson Town Clerk TT-09/23-2017-1TC163738

NOTICE OF FORMATION DOMESTIC LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY (LLC). Name: Trailhead Resort, LLC. Articles of Organization filed with NY Secretary of State, September 13, 2017. Purpose: to engage in any lawful act or activity. Office: in Essex County. Secretary of State is agent for process against LLC and shall mail copy to P.O. Box 50, Newcomb, New York 12852. TT-09/23-10/28/20176TC-163565


26 • September 23, 2017 | The Times of Ti Sun

www.suncommunitynews.com

Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

COME SEE WHY EVERYONE IS TALKING ABOUT HOW

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Stk#17431, Stk#17425, Stk#17633, Stk#17633, Loaded w/Automatic, Loaded w/Automatic, Loadedw/Automatic, w/Automatic, Loaded A/C,Power 5.0 Touchscreen & Air Group, A/C,Cruise Cruise Control, A/C, Control, Display, Integrated Cruise Control, Keyless RemoteStart, Start, Remote Voice w/ Go PushCommand Button Start, Deep SinscreenGlass, Bluetooth, Aluminum DeepOne Sunscreen Glass, Touch Power Wheels, Cruise Control Aluminum Wheels and Aluminum Wheels and Windows and and much more! much more! MuchMore! More! Much MSRP $26,120 MSRP MSRP$23,915 $24,745 MSRP $24,745

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or Or Lease For fOr FOr

MSRP$35,790 $35,590 MSRP

299 259 229 269

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MSRP $28,185

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$

or or Lease Lease For For

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Or or Or Lease Lease Lease FOr For fOr

399 359 299

$$

-

42 48 48 36 mos. mos. mos.

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27,999 31 32 ,999

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Stk#17494, w/ Stk#17587, LoadedLoaded w/Leather Stk#17494, Loaded Leather Seats, DVD, Seats, DVD, Uconnect 8.4 w/2nd&3rd Row Touchscreen Display, Stow8.4n Touchscreen go, Back-Up Uconnect 8 Passenger Seating, Camera, Power Drivers Display, Nav-Capable, Seat, Uconnect 5.0, Nav-Capable, Remote Remote Start, BlindStart, Spot Integrated Blind Spot and CrossVoice Path and Cross Path Detection, Command w/Park Bluetooth, Detection, Rear Assist, Rear17” Park Assist, Back-Up Aluminum Wheels Back-Up Camera and andmuch muchmore! more Camera and Much More!

or or Or Lease Lease For For FOr fOr

MSRP MSRP$30,090 $37,780 MSRP $38,275

239 299 249

$$

42 42 mos. mos.

72 39 mos. mos.

I.\ I I' I.( ( 2017 ram 1500 express IHit/MM•W truck Quad cab 4x4 WRlll•ffl•Stk#17583,

j

New 2017 pacifica pACIfICA I)11I; 11·II; 11 New lx New2017 2017pacifica touriNG l. ToURING ·1·uut-!INC L.

Stk#17412, Loaded w/V6 Engine, 17” Aluminum Wheels, Dual Bright Exhaust, 5.0 Touchscreen Display w/Bluetooth, Back-Up Camera and much more! MSRP $30,485

% 13 , 999 20,999 0 19

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Back-Up Camera, Sirius MSRP $33,685 Radio and Much More!

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Stk#18029, Loaded

36 24 24 mos. mos.

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Stk#16404, Loaded w/Leather, w/Automatic, 17” 6.5” Navigation, my Sky Aluminum Wheels, Retractable Roof Panels, Uconnect 7” Display, 18” Polished Aluminum Apple Car Play & Wheels, Passive Keyless enter Android Auto n GoGoogle Remote and much more! Capable, Trailer PowerTowSeat, pkg.

MSRP Radio and$29,025 much more! MSRP $28,085

Or or or Lease Lease FOr For For

or Or Lease Lease For FOr

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Stk#17614, Loaded Stk#17442, Loaded w/Uconnect 7” Display, 7” Display, Powerw/Uconnect Seats, Remote Start, Power Remote Start, Apple Seat, Car Play, Google Apple Car Play, Google Android Auto Capable, Back-up Camera, Sirius Android Auto Capable, Radio and Much Back-up Camera,More! Sirius

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36 84 84 48 mos. mos. mos. mos.

or

Loaded w/Aluminum

Loaded w/6.5 w/6.5 Loaded Touchscreen Display, Display, Touchscreen

19,,999 999 $$$159 0% 20,999 19 239

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New New2016 2017fiat FIAt 500x 500 easy awd pop

,-

i

\

l

' ')

' )

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5.7 Hemi!

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.,,,w.,,,

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I ; I I I ! Y S I I :-I ! 300 New 2017 chrysler LIMI l'LIJ i\9D limited awd j

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289 299

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36 mos.

*Prices include include all allavailable availablerebates. rebates. You may qualify additional rebates & incentives. Must finance through Capital Chryslerinclude Capital *Prices you may qualify for for additional rebates & incentives. Must finance throughthrough ChryslerChrysler Capital. Capital. **Leases**Leases through Chrysler all include allrebates available and on are10,000 based miles on 10,000 miles year with down; 1sttaxes payment, taxesfees and due DMV due atsecurity inception; security deposit waived for available andrebates are based a year witha$2999 cash$2999 down;cash 1st payment, and DMV atfees inception; deposit waived for well-qualified buyers; disposition fee disposition $395; 25¢ afee mile coverage. payment forRenegade well qualified buyers is 84 months @3.99 with $2999 equivalent, taxes and DMV well-qualified buyers; $395; 25¢ aPurchase mile coverage. Jeep Lease Taxes, First Payment, and DMV Feesdown Due or at trade Inception. Lesseeplus is responsible for fees. Lessee is responsible for Maintenance and repairs. Picture for illustration only. Pacifica lease is for 5,000 miles a year. 09/23/17 8/31/17 9/29/17 Maintenance and repairs. Pictures for illustration purposes only. Pacifica lease is for 5,000 miles a year. 7/19/17 8/7/17

098763


www.suncommunitynews.com

Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

MSRP .................................................... $27,755 Stk#ET393 - V6,6-Speed Auto, LED 1.............................-$500 Ford Military Signal Lighting, Rear Camera, TracApps. & FirstResponder Special Dealer Discount ............................................ -$926 Lease Rate ...................................................................... 1.5% Optional Lease EndPurchase ............................... $14,378 Miles AtVear End ...................................................... 10,500 CapCostRed ............................................................. $1,925 36 Monthlease" Due Atlnception .................................................. $2,327.5D

$299ma.

The Times of Ti Sun | September 23, 2017 • 27

Stk#ET028 - Leather, Heated Power MSRP .................................................... $27,730 Seats, SYNC 3 System, Keyless Entry, Rear Ford Retail Customer Cash ................................... -$2,150 Camera, Sirius, 18"Aluminum Wheels. Ford Eco-Boost Customer Cash ............................... -$500 Ford Military & FirstResponder1. ............................ -$500 Ford Credit Bonus Customer Cash .......................... -$500 Special Dealer Discount ............................................ -$580

$24,665

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tax.title.registration extra

Stk#SET420 - EcoBoost, 6-Spd. Auto, RETAIL .................................................. $42,025 Package Discount ................................................... -$2,00D STX Package, 4x4,SYNC 3 System, Sport MSRP .................................................... $40,025 Package, 2D"Aluminum Wheels. Ford Retail Customer Cash ................................... -$1,500 Ford Retail Bonus Cash .......................................... -$1,750 Ford EcoBoost Bonus ................................................. -$30D 1.............................................-$1,000 Ford FirstResponder Special Dealer Discount ........................................ -$1,080 Offerends10/2/17

$34,395

Offerends10/2/17

Stk#ES552 - V6,Power Driver/PasMSRP .................................................... $32,085 Ford Retail Customer Cash ................................... -$4,000 senger Seats, Sirius, SYNC System, Rear Ford Retail Bonus Cash ......................................... -$1,000 Camera, Remote Start. Ford Military & FirstResponder1. ............................ -$500 Ford Credit Bonus Cash· ........................................ -$1,000 Special Dealer Discount ........................................ -$2,200

$23,385 Offerends10/2/17

SEE ALLOFOUR GREAT BUYS ATWWW.EGGLEFIELDBROS.COM Specific jobrequirements apply andallcustomers willnotqualify. ·Requires Ford Motor Credit Financing andallcustomers maynotqualify. Notresponsible fortypographical errors. photos areused forillustration purposes only

1

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7618 US Route 9, EI izabethtown, NY 12932 518-873-6551 • 800-559-6551

Homefor your Ford DLR#3160003

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ig DLR#7095376

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28 • September 23, 2017 | The Times of Ti Sun

www.suncommunitynews.com

Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

GETOUTEARLY! UPTO4 PAYMENTS OFYOUR LEASEt

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LARGE SELECTION OF PRE-OWNED VEHICLES • ALL MAKES & MODELS 2012Hyundai Elantra 71,119Miles,38 MPG,CD/MP3

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2015Dodge Journey AVP 40,817Miles,Seats7,DualZoneA/C VIN 699695

1111Wicker Street • Ticonderoga

(518) 585-2842 SALES HOURS: MON-THURS: 9:00AM-7:00PM• FRI: 9:00AM-6:00PM SAT: 9:00AM-5:00PM • SUN: CLOSED

CHRISTOPHERCHEVY

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[]]~ II~

I

FIND

Offers are separate,cannot be combined, and subject to change. Dealershipnot responsiblefor typographicalerrors. Photosfor illustrativepurpose.Offers expire 10/2/17. (1) Not availablewith special finance, leaseor some other offers. Tax,tag, title, and DMV fees due at signing. Includes all availableincentives,rebates and coupons, including owner loyalty/conquestwhere applicable. See dealer for details. (2) 39 mo. closed end lease.$1,700 down plus tax, tag, title, acquisition, and DMV fees due at signing. Must qualify and leasethrough GM Financial.Tier 1 credit. Must havecompetitive lease in household.10,000miles per year, $0.25/mile for overage.Lesseepays for excesswear.See dealerfor details. (3)Valid on select in·stock models including MY2017ChevroletTraverseand Colorado LT models. 0% APR for 72 months for qualified buyers. Monthly paymentis $13.89for every$1000 you finance.Exampledown payment: 18%. Must qualify and finance through GM Financial. Some customerswill not qualify. See dealerfor details. t For eligible current GM lessees. pricesare plustax, tag, title and dealerfees. GMFwill waive up to four (4)paymentsup to $2,000on currentleasewhen customerleasesor purchasesa new vehiclefinancedby GMF.See dealerfor programdetails.*PRH>wned


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