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Heritage, Harvest and Horse Festival at Fort Ti pg. 11

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• EDITION •

Artists see beauty of Ti

EWYORK STATE POLI C E

The Plein Art Festival was a big success By Lohr McKinstry STA FF W RITER

TICONDEROGA | Artists from all over the Northeast converged on Ticonderoga last weekend for the 4th-annual Adirondack Harvest Plein Air Festival. They painted and painted on Saturday, scenes like the Middle LaChute Falls and Mount Defiance. Jessica Fligg came from Ashland, NH to paint the Ticonderoga Community Building cupola from the LaChute River Trail. “I’m having fun,” she said. “I was attracted to the color and light, the flag flying at the building.” She said it was a great experience staying in the community, with her and her family at the Rogers’ Rock State Campground south of Ticonderoga. “It’s a great place,” Fligg said. “I’ve met some of the other artists. It’s a beautiful community.” Fligg works mostly in oils and is a juried member of the New Hampshire Art Association.

THIN GRAY LINE pg. 4

Public gets rare glimpse of state police’s K-9 unit in action pg. 5

Top cop recalls Dannemora manhunt in new memoir pg. 7

» Artists Cont. on pg. 2

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HAGUE | The couple who allegedly held up the Hague Market and shot the owner have been indicted for multiple felonies by a Warren County grand jury. Vittorio L. Campano, 26, has 12 charges against him, and his girlfriend, Christine W. Tomko, 28, both of Queensbury, has 11 counts for the April 25 holdup in which store owner James Rypkema was critically wounded. Campano was indicted for two counts of attempted murder,

MORIAH | The hydro-electric project planned for Moriah’s old iron mines is nearing regulatory approval. Albany Engineering President James Besaw Sr. notified the Town of Moriah that he expects a federal construction permit at the beginning of next year. “We are in the final stages of regulatory approval,” Besaw wrote. “We expect FERC (Federal Energy Regulatory Commission) will proceed with a final environmental assessment and the license should be issued in the first quarter of 2018.” The firm has until December to submit additional information, and

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construction would start about a year after licensing, Besaw said. “These projects have extremely long time-frames,” Besaw said. The process to develop the hydroelectric venture began in 2005. Town officials have backed the $260 million project that would use water pumped around in Old Bed and Harmony mines to output 260 megawatts, fed into a nearby 115-kilovolt high-voltage line owned by National Grid. “I’m confident it’s going to happen,” Moriah Town Supervisor Thomas Scozzafava said at a recent Town Council meeting. The Mineville Energy Storage Project would generate power by drawing water from upper to lower mines through generating turbines during high-demand periods, then pumping it back up with the same turbines acting as pumps when demand is low. Th e town owns the land where the project would be located, near the Moriah Solid Waste Transfer Station on Joyce Road. ■

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2 • September 30, 2017 | The Times of Ti Sun

» Artists Cont. from pg. 1 On Sunday, the Ti Arts Opening Reception was held at the Downtown Gallery, where visitors could meet the artists and view and purchase their works. Mariann Rapple of Ti Arts said the artists come to the area at their own expense and stay locally. “They painted along the roads, the trails and from the top of Mount Defiance,” she said. “It’s important that our community supports them, and part of the money from any sales stays in the community.” Ti Arts is a non-profit organization providing the area with free cultural arts opportunities. The festival was sponsored by Ti Arts, Fort Ticonderoga, the Cultural Arts Initiative, and the Essex County Arts Council. Artist Fred Holman of Brant Lake was painting the Middle LaChute Falls on Saturday.

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“It’s a good community event,” he said. “There’s great scenery.” He said he strolled around town looking at various locations before deciding on the falls. “You walk around and something hits you and you know what to paint,” he said. “People are very welcoming here. People have stopped to talk to me. This is a great place.” Holman prefers oils, and curates the Art in Chestertown Gallery. Anyone interested in receiving more information can email: adkharvestpleinair@gmail.com. ■ RIGHT TOP: Fred Holman decided on the Middle LaChute Falls for his painting last weekend. RIGHT BOTTOM: Artist Jessica Fligg paints the Ticonderoga Community Building cupola during the Plein Air Festival. Photos by Lohr McKinstry

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The Times of Ti Sun | September 30, 2017 • 3

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4 • September 30, 2017 | The Times of Ti Sun

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Comradery, elite units on display at state police open house

Day-long event saw law enforcement pull back curtain on aviation, special response and K-9 units By Pete DeMola EDITOR

RAY BROOK | New York State Police Troop B headquarters buzzed with activity Saturday as hundreds flocked to an open house designed to commemorate the state police’s centennial anniversary. Turning 100 is no small feat, and the law enforcement agency spared no expense: Visitors got an extensive look behind the curtain through dozens of exhibitions and demonstrations. Under cloudless skies and sizzling heat, the “Black Horse Troop’s” trademark black horses roamed the perimeter. Helicopters buzzed overhead to demonstrate rescue missions. A chopper hovered low over an administrative building and a pair of camouflage-clad troopers quickly rappelled down a cable. The helicopter circled back around, and a dummy was hoisted up. Nearby, a scuba diver immersed in a tank

waved at passersby and a group of elite troopers demonstrated defense tactics. But the most popular event was the K-9 demonstrations. A crowd of at least 300 gathered for the first of two scheduled exhibitions — including by the team who tracked down the pair of convicted murderers who escaped from Dannemora in 2015, leading authorities on a 23-day manhunt. Officials estimated 1,500 attended. “It’s really reflective of the fact that we got so much support from the people locally and that our guys and gals are so involved in the community, that they’re actually willing to come out and support us when we support them,” said Troop B Commander Major John Tibbitts, Jr. It’s the same level of support represented in the manhunt, he said. “Plus we don’t get a chance to show off a lot of the things we do or how we do it,” Tibbitts said, “and this is just a nice way to put everything we do together in one spot and one day so you can actually see everything we’ve got to offer.” Getting up close to aviation units and Special Operations Response Team (SORT) in particular, Tibbitts said, is rare for the public. “When we get SORT involved, what’s the first thing we do? ‘Everybody move back,’” Tibbitts said. “Today it’s in a safe environment. You can see exactly what they do, only

A diver waves at passerby during a live demonstration of the state police’s SCUBA Unit. Photo by Pete DeMola

there’s no threat to them.” The exhibitions were joined by historical exhibits and a “Wall of Honor” commemorating fallen troopers. Vintage cruisers and motorcycles dating back to the 1940s were on display, including a 1966 Harley Davidson. Matt Mayville of Bloomingdale is the head custodian at Saranac Lake Central School District. The state police has often held training drills at the school, and he’s gotten to know many law enforcement officials over the years. He peered at a showcase of vintage firearms, including a Thompson submachine gun. “I’m just interested in seeing the old guns they used,” Mayville said. Visitors also had the opportunity to speak with the Collision Reconstruction Unit and tour the facility’s forensics complex, where investigators detailed practices like fingerprinting, dusting for gunpowder residue, bullet trajectory, blood spatter analysis and the exhumation of human remains. Investigator Matt Rozler walked a reporter through some of the troop’s most high-profile cases, including the disappearance of June Collard, the Minerva woman who vanished in 1980. The Forensics Investigations Unit doggedly pursued the case, and a tip in 2010 eventually led investigators to apprehend her husband in Alabama, who confessed to killing her and burying her remains on their property. In another case, an informant tipped the unit off to the location of a body in the Massena area. Investigators dug through the snow-covered, frozen ground and the suspect was convicted and sent to prison for the crime. “With that kind of information, we just can’t wait,” Rezler said.

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The day-long event was also an opportunity for law enforcement officials to connect with their colleagues, and the comradery was on full display as what appeared to be hundreds of law enforcement officials and their families mingled with one another. Tibbitts estimated seven of 25 of the troop’s commanders were on site. Troop Commander John Lawless (Ret.) said he was pleased with the turnout. “It brings awareness to what we’re doing in the North Country,” Lawless said. “It shows the communities support us. It’s very important to have public support.” Lawless ran into a former colleague he hadn’t seen in 40 years. “So happy to see older retired folks,” he said. Trooper Jim Williams (Ret.) spent his career stationed in Wilmington, and was happy to be back. “We see all the guys we can,” Williams said. “It’s a real good organization in retirement.” Trooper David Blades (Ret.) strolled the grounds. “They did a real good job,” Blades said, referring to the displays and exhibits. Trooper Rex Reynolds, who is on active duty and based in Ogdensburg, said the situation can often be tense when regular folks interact with law enforcement, and it’s important to facilitate these types of events to forge a connection with the public. “We promote our professionalism and what we’re all about,” Reynolds said. ■ COVER: Visitors view the Wall of Honor at the New York State Police Troop B headquarters in Ray Brook, New York. Over 1,500 attended the centennial open house on Saturday, Sept. 24 . Photo by Pete DeMola

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The Times of Ti Sun | September 30, 2017 • 5

Public gets rare glimpse of state police’s K-9 unit in action Light-hearted demonstration wows crowd of hundreds By Pete DeMola EDITOR

RAY BROOK | Dogs are man’s best friend. They’re also deft crimefighters. A live demonstration by the New York State Police’s Troop B K-9 Unit was a smash-hit on Saturday, regaling hundreds of visitors with a rare look at their abilities at the troop’s open house. Crowds cooed at the demonstration of bloodhounds, bomb-sniffers and narcotic detection dogs. “We’re one of the largest K-9 units in the country,” said Trooper Matt Carniglia, a K-9 expert. “And we’re one of the most productive and efficient units in the country.” The unit was formed in the mid-1970s to detect explosives at the 1980 Winter Olympic Games in Lake Placid. A team of just two canines has grown to its current strength about 90. Once donated by local residents, the Belgian Malinois, German Shepherds, Labrador retrievers and bloodhounds are purchased from Europe and cost a minimum of $5,000. Carniglia likened them to Apple products. “No viruses,” he said. Each are highly specialized. “We have radically different guys who do radically dif-

ferent things,” Carniglia said. Trooper Shannon Saunders demonstrated basic obedience skills with PJ, who is three. PJ constantly looked at his handler: “What’s next bud?” said Carniglia as PJ stayed hyperattentive to Saunders and his commands. Shay has been trained as a search dog. Detection of drugs, bombs and ammunition are their “bread and butter,” and their reaction is different when each is discovered. Trooper Nathan D’Arienzo led Shay around a van, where he quickly zeroed in on contraband and alerted him by pawing at the door in what’s known as an “aggressive alert.” Bomb detection, on the other hand, requires a more “passive alert.” Shay immediately detected a suspicious item — a cooler — in a line of paint cans and lay prone. Handlers then deployed a remote-controlled robot, which moved the cooler out of harm’s way. A heavily-armored bomb expert ventured towards the item (“It’s the job no one wants,” quipped Carniglia) and opened the cooler, which revealed a teddy bear, which he gave to a young audience member. The crowd of about 300 delighted at the canines, who obediently waited with their handlers for their turn in the spotlight. Perhaps the most high-profile members of the unit are the bloodhounds that played a leading role in tracking down a pair of escaped murderers from Clinton Correctional Facility in 2015. The K-9 unit had just two bloodhound teams ahead of the escape, a specialized unit that is now doubled to four. Trooper Mike Phelps said Stanley, aged 16 months, is

well-trained to detect human scent and track older trails. “He’s the most lovable dog I’ve ever met,” said Phelps. “And he’s tracking to get a hug at the end.” Others are trained specifically for subduing suspects — including biting if necessary. Their jaws are strong enough to blow up car tires. Trainers once used bite sleeves, which ultimately led to the dogs fixating on them. But, as Carniglia pointed out, “Bad guys don’t wear bite sleeves.” At one point, a heckler in grungy-looking clothes interrupted the troopers. The handlers told him to leave, and the heckler caused a spectacle on his way out. He engaged in threatening behavior; the dogs sprung to action and the man — who turned out to be a plant — was cowering within seconds. “No bite handler wants to see their dog hurt anyone,” said Carniglia. Trainers prefer purchasing canines under the age of 1 to avoid having to break bad habits. To pay homage to troopers killed in the line of duty, each of the canines are named after fallen lawman: Stanley, for instance, was named for Trooper Stanley C. Greene, who died in a motorcycle accident in the 1930s. » K-9 Cont. on pg. 7

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6 • September 30, 2017 | The Times of Ti Sun

Thoughts from Behind the Pressline

National discourse Political rancor continues to invade nearly every facet of life. This past weekend the NFL jumped headBy Dan Alexander long into the fracas • PUBLISHER • after President Donald Trump decided to call out the players protesting during the playing of the national anthem. Instead of seeing the protests quelled, owners, coaches, and the league opted to join the few protesting players by showing solidarity with the players. Some teams stood arm in arm. Three teams decided not to come out on the field until after the playing of the anthem. The National Anthem has been a fixture at America’s sporting events since 1862. What was once thought of as a unifying tune that served to bring the country together has now been put in a position to further divide the sides. I fear America has suffered a social breakdown, much like an insane person who argues with themselves back and forth never finding peace or rest. Without serious medical help, the patient most times cannot recover on their own and continues to regress into deeper and deeper stages. We’ve seen bitter political battles and gridlock before. Protests are nothing new. Heck, we gave birth to the nation out of a protest which is what the anthem is all about. But this constant fighting is spilling out and it’s far too deeply rooted to think this is just a phase we are going through. When our entertainment, sporting events, theater, schools, fashion, social media and even the church pulpits can’t function without politicizing their craft where do we turn for peace and comfort? Boycotts, shaming, shunning, violence, destruction and legal battles I fear are only the beginning if we can’t find common ground. We’re spending millions trying to determine if Russia interfered with our election and worrying about North Korea and Iran with nukes when we can’t even put aside our differences for a few hours to watch athletic millionaires concuss each other. The entire situation has me torn to pieces. One minute I want to cry for our country and the next I want to laugh at how foolish all this has become. At this point, I’m not sure if I’m writing a humorous column or a serious column. In the end, I guess it really doesn’t matter. If we can’t get along and we can’t agree to disagree are we locked in a perpetual state of psychosis? Doctor Phil, we need help! ■

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Opinion

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From the Editorial Board Country should resist taking hyper-partisan bait We’re whipsawing from one crisis to another, whether it’s an escalation of tensions with North Korea, the threat of large-scale deportation of young immigrants to ongoing skirmishes over healthcare and flirtations with an all-out race war. It really does seem like we’ve descended into an unhealthy sense of tribalism with no end in sight. Americans haven’t only retreated into their partisan corners, but they’ve painted themselves in. It’s evident the country is increasingly being carved into two distinct tribal war zones, each with their own value systems that they are led to believe are mutually incompatible with one another. In a sense, as U.S. Senator Ben Sasse, Republican from Nebraska, pointed out over the weekend, this is divisiveness by design. Andrew Sullivan wrote about this tribalism at length last week in an essay for New York magazine, “America Wasn’t Built for Humans,” arguing that this division has become our nation’s greatest vulnerability. Regardless of how you feel about the current occupant of the Oval Office, evidence is mounting that his combative style is having a

measurable impact on not only crystallizing a sense of entrenched partisanship, but how we view each other outside of a political lens: “And so by 2017, 41 percent of Republicans and 38 percent of Democrats said they disagreed not just with their opponents’ political views, but with their values and goals beyond politics as well,” Sullivan wrote. Just think about how dangerous it is to ascribe different values to those to which you disagree with politically: We should be able to debate our respective policies on health care, tax reform and foreign relations without being accused of un-American, for instance. A poll by Monmouth University, Sullivan noted, revealed 61 percent of President Trump’s supporters say there’s nothing he could do to make them change their minds about him. Fifty-seven percent of his opponents said the same thing. This partisan entrenchment is given flight by the concept of “whataboutism,” which the Washington Post defined as “the practice of short-circuiting an argument by asserting moral equivalency between two things that aren’t necessarily comparable.” What about emails? Benghazi? Or you said

Letters

Our prisons are no better

Of course Margaret is right (“Newcomers to the North Country?” published in the Sept. 23 edition). However, our prisons were no better. The cause of that war has been debated for many years and focuses on “self determination” and “slavery.” I think maybe Margaret should comment on the secession of California as some of the liberal extremists are trying nowadays. Does arguing against the secession classify as saving America? Bill Hubschman, Elizabethtown ■

Bolton School District should combine with Lake George

To the Editor: Bolton voters will be asked again to approve a pared-down version ($6.7 million vs $7 million) for an auditorium/music facility addition, which was previously defeated by some 30 votes. This is on top of an annual budget of $8 million. At 200 students, this amounts to $40,000 per student as much or more than » Holdup Cont. from pg. 1 first-degree robbery, four burglary charges, possession of a weapon and possession of stolen property. Tomko was indicted for attempted murder for allegedly acting in concert with Campano when he shot Rypkema, along with robbery, burglary, possession of stolen property and possession of a weapon. The shooting came during an armed robbery, with Tomko allegedly going in before Campano to scout the store.

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many colleges and private schools. Further, of the 200 students, 25 come from other school districts and pay only $1,500 to Bolton. I recommend instead that the Bolton School District combine with the Lake George School District. Keep the Bolton facility as an elementary school with grades K through 8 and have grades 9 through 12 go to Lake George High School. As it is now, Bolton combines with several other schools in sports because it has insufficient numbers for many team sports. Bolton currently has a superintendent, a principal, 32 teachers, eight semi-teachers, guidance, etc. With an enrollment of 200, this amounts to one teacher per five students. Actual class sizes vary from 10 to 20 per teacher. Classes 9 through 12 have a total of 61 students. They could easily be handled at Lake George High School and eliminate the need for a new auditorium/music facility ($6.7 million) plus reduce the annual $8 million budget by eliminating the superintendent and several teachers. In any case, I urge the voters to again reject the auditorium, music facility addition. Agostino Travaly, Bolton Landing ■

Police said they stole less than $100, and that the robbery was part of crime spree around Warren County. Tomko had posted on her Facebook page that she needed gas money for a new job. Rypkema was shot with a .22-caliber rifle in the chest and arm, using a gun previously stolen by the pair. He is back to work at the store but still has problems with his right arm from the wounds. The couple are accused of April burglaries in Lake George and Warrensburg, in which

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.

this and he said that. The Cold War era tactic is “having a moment,” the newspaper reported. It is a tactic some us have seen firsthand in China. While the nation is still shedding its Communist trappings, it remains authoritarian to its core, and this sense of “whataboutism” is used to undermine confidence in western values, including multiculturalism, freedom of speech and democracy. To see that strategy being deployed in the U.S. is extremely disheartening. This senseless refrain has, in fact, infected our entire body politic. Not even professional sports, as we learned over the weekend, is immune from this toxicity. It’s a nihilistic trainwreck amplified by around-the-clock cable news coverage, social media and our growing preference for seeking news from media outlets that reaffirm and reinforce our worldview. “Resist” may be a buzzword for the left. But it should also serve as reminder for all of us not to get sucked into the stench of contemporary U.S. politics, and that we’re being led by the nose by forces eager to exploit our penchant for decisiveness and use it to their own advantage. ■

many items, including guns, were taken from homes on Flat Rock Road, Truesdale Hill Road and Route 418. The case was postponed since their capture in April for Campano to get a mental health evaluation. He was found capable of understanding the case against him and participating in his defense. A security camera near the store recorded their car parked nearby, with distinctive stickers, and they were picked up a few days later in Queensbury. ■

A paid advertisement will be based on standard advertising rates taking into consideration size and frequency according to the current rate card at the open advertising rate. For rates, call Ashley at (518) 873-6368 x105 or email ashley@suncommunitynews.com Calendar of event entries are reserved for local charitable organizations, and events are restricted to name, time, place, price and contact information. For-profit organization events will be run with a paid advertisement. Bulletin board For-profit for 4 lines (75¢ additional lines) 1 week $9 , 3 weeks $15, 52 weeks $20/month. Not-for-profit for 4 lines (.50¢ additorial lines) 1 week $5, 3 weeks $10, 52 weeks $15/month. Advertising policies: Sun Community News & Printing, publishd by Denton Publications, Inc. disclaims all legal responsibility for errors

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The Times of Ti Sun | September 30, 2017 • 7

Top cop recalls Dannemora manhunt in new memoir “Relentless Pursuit” details littleknown facts of command center, says Major Charles Guess By Pete DeMola EDITOR

RAY BROOK | Just two years after a pair of convicted killers broke out of Clinton Correctional in a sophisticated escape plot, interest in the caper is surging. Over 1,000 people auditioned for bit parts in “Escape from Dannemora,” the Ben Stiller-helmed Showtime documentary series that’s filming now in Plattsburgh and Dannemora. Accomplice Joyce Mitchell continues to garner headlines every time she’s up for parole, including just three weeks ago. Now, the law enforcement official in charge of the manhunt has written a book detailing the hunt for David Sweat and Richard Matt. New York State Police Major Charles Guess planned a quiet retirement when he signed off in 2016. “I hadn’t really contemplated writing this book,” he told The Sun. “Frankly, it was my wife Eleanor who said to me, realistically, if you don’t write the book, somebody will. And you’re probably going to buy it and say, ‘It really didn’t happen that way.’” Sweat and Matt used smuggled tools to burrow through their cellblock, eventually emerging through a manhole outside of the maximum security prison. They alluded capture for 23 days before Matt was fatally shot by a federal agent and Sweat was captured two days later. Guess said there’s some misinformation about the event that placed northern New York squarely in the international spotlight for three weeks. “So from my point of view, I wanted to get some form of comprehensive record established that accurately portrayed the efforts of law enforcement, folks in the community, and speak specifically to the 23 days that we all suffered through in June of 2015,” Guess said. The result is “Relentless Pursuit: Inside the Escape from Dannemora: New York’s Largest Manhunt,” which is out now via Indianapolis-based publisher Dog Ear Publishing.

Ben Stiller 0

Guess, 56, said the details underpinning the death of Matt and the takedown of Sweat near the Canadian border by Trooper Jay Cook are well-known. But much of the unknown internal workings of the command post — including the Border Patrol Tactical Unit — are explored in the book for the first time. The major, who took command of Troop B just months before the manhunt and retired a year afterwards, also said he wanted to explore other aspects of his career. Those include the Sept. 11 attacks, the TWA Flight 800 aircraft crash and the search of Ralph “Bucky” Phillips, a career criminal who escaped from a western New York jail and shot three state troopers — one fatally — before he was captured five months later. Those experiences helped prepare him to take on the challenge of a lifetime. Guess said he’s serving as a technical advisor on “Escape from Dannemora.” “I’m pleasantly surprised with director Ben Stiller and his key staff members in their desire to portray this from a position of authenticity, reality and sensitivity,” he said. The affection is mutual: Stiller plugged “Relentless” on Twitter last week: “Loving working with Maj. Charles Guess on #EscapeFromDannamora,” Stiller wrote. “He led the manhunt & his book relentlesspursuittrooper.com is the best account.” Guess also has a cameo in the mini-series. Two prison employees were arrested in conjunction with the escape: Mitchell, who is serving seven years on a contraband charge, and Gene Palmer, a corrections officer who served four months in county jail after admitting to smuggling the inmates tools they used to escape the facility in a block of frozen hamburger meat provided by Mitchell. The breakout remains a raw subject in the community and Guess hopes the film can serve as a redemption for those who helped capture the duo, as well as cast law enforcement in a favorable light. “A segment of the population — corrections, for example — has been painted with a broad brush, unfairly I think,” Guess said. “In any organization when you have 30,000-plus people, and a handful of them are responsible for some of the misdeeds

(

@RedHourBen

Follow

H,e 1,ed the ma nhunt ,& his book

relentlesspursuittrooper.com is the best accou nt . 2:05 AM - 16 Sep 2017

» K-9 Cont. from pg. 5 Training, held at the Basic Handler School in Cooperstown, takes about 10 weeks for the canines and six months for handlers. All have the battle scars to prove it, said Carniglia, including a recent incident that left a handler with 14 stitches. While the canines live with their handlers, life outside of work is austere and secluded

because the state police want all affection and love associated with the job. “And that makes them crazy to work,” said Carniglia. After a long career catching bad guys, the canines are retired at eight, and have an easier retirement — including engaging simple pleasures like Frisbee. “They’re with us until the day they die.” ■

BROTHERS IN GRAY

Guess spoke to a reporter as he signed copies of the book at Troop B’s open house in Ray Brook on Saturday. Many of those waiting in line for autographed copies and photos were fellow members of law enforcement, and conversation was spiked with nostalgia as attendees swapped war stories from the manhunt. A lieutenant with the state Department of Corrections and Community Supervision who asked for anonymity because he is not authorized to speak publicly said he hoped the public would learn “a lot of positive changes resulted in what happened.” Greg Phillips, a retired corrections officer, lives in Mountain View, which became the epicenter of the search during the final days. “It’ll be interesting to read to see the truth and not the lies,” said Phillips, who called Guess “a very impressive man.” Collette LeDuc of Malone had retired as a long-time civilian state police employee before the escape. LeDuc vividly recalled the flurry of squad cars rushing by when Sweat was shot in nearby Constable, New York — but was out of the loop. “I just want to read to see behind the scenes,” LeDuc said. Thom Thorne of Malone clutched two copies of the book. Both of his parents worked in law enforcement, he said, and he has a deep respect for the state police. “It was a really professional job,” Thorne said of the manhunt. To pre-order “Relentless,” visit relentlesspursuittrooper.com. ■ New York State Police Major Charles Guess has written a book detailing his leadership of the manhunt for two convicted killers who escaped from Clinton Correctional Facility in 2015. Photo by Pete DeMola

Apples to apples...

)

Loving working wit h Maj. Char l,es Guess on #EscapeAtDannemora .

that were related to the escape, the rest of them are outstanding professionals and clearly contributed to apprehending those folks.”

Think again!

It’s more like a Watermelon to a Grape!!! U.S.P.S CAPS Facsimile Transaction Report Date

City

Permit #

Pieces

Publication

Amount

08/30/17

ELIZABETHTOWN, NY

20

371

The Sun (subs)

$170.66

08/30/17

ELIZABETHTOWN, NY

20

316

The Sun (NC)

$48.88

08/30/17

PLATTSBURGH, NY

46

1,519

The Sun (VN)

$313.04

08/30/17

PLATTSBURGH, NY

46

5,502

The Sun (VN)

$1,268.61

08/30/17

PLATTSBURGH, NY

16

7,429

The Sun (TL)

$1,438.34

08/31/17

ELIZABETHTOWN, NY

20

4,848

The Sun (TT)

$1,114.32

08/31/17

ELIZABETHTOWN, NY

20

592

The Sun (VN)

$135.58

08/31/17

GLENS FALLS, NY

172

7,429

The Sun (AJ)

$1,687.86

08/31/17

GLENS FALLS, NY

172

2,030

The Sun (TT)

$484.87

08/31/17

PLATTSBURGH, NY

46

7,404

The Sun (BG)

$1,685.38

08/31/17

GLENS FALLS, NY

172

3,396

The Sun (NE)

$756.92

08/31/17

PLATTSBURGH, NY

46

7,925

The Sun (NC)

$1,576.63

08/31/17

PLATTSBURGH, NY

46

13,324

The Sun (BG)

09/02/17

The Sun Edition Date

62,085

$2,727.87 $13,408.96

Don’t be fooled by bogus claims. The comparison between The SUN’s United States Postal Service circulation and what others may tell you or imply is like comparing a watermelon to a grape!! We hear from customers on occasion, “X-Publication Rep says you SUN folks are full of it with your distribution numbers.” Then we show them the third party, proven facts. Frankly, we just love to compare the real, verifiable numbers, because when we do, the competition simply shrinks like a raisin! We are so confident in our weekly circulation facts, we’ll give $1,000 to any local charity for any other print media who can prove their weekly circulation comes even close to how many homes The SUN reaches in Clinton, Essex, Franklin and Warren Counties.

114,235 Readers Weekly*

(Average reader formula 1.8 readers per 63,484 audited circulation)

TH Troopers demonstrated K-9s at work on Saturday, Sept. 23 at Troop B’s open house in Ray Brook on Saturday, Sept. 23. Photo by Pete DeMola

Call 518-585-9173 to advertise in The SUN! Locally owned since 1948

Source of Data - 2016 CVC Audit & Readership Survey*

*Circulation Verification Council is an independent, third party auditing company. CVC audits and data are an unbiased source of market circulation and reader information. Neither Denton Publications nor The SUN pays CVC to perform its service.

105201


8 • September 30, 2017 | The Times of Ti Sun

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Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

Check out suncommunitynews.com/events for more events like these.

Calendar of EventsI

To list your event: contact: Kasey Rosselli at (518) 873-6368 ext. 104 or email kasey@suncommunitynews.com to list your event. Some print fees may apply.

SEP. 28

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!

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 super fun project. We’ll accept the first 12 adults who sign up for the class. The cost of this class is $40.00. An initial deposit of $20 (non- refundable) is due at registration. To reserve your spot and pay your deposit, contact Pam Lemza Putnam directly via Private Message on Facebook. Bolton Landing » Ed Sheridan presentation of his walk along El Camino de Santiago held at Town Hall; 7:00 p.m. The walk begins at Saint Jean Pied de Port, in France, and travels 500 miles through four of Spain’s 15 regions, ending at the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela in Galicia. At the July presentation, over 100 people attended.

SEP.29 - OCT. 1

Warrensburg » 37th Annual

World’s Largest Garage Sale held at Throughout the Town; All Weekend Thousand of vendors selling antiques, new items, kids toys, clothing, crafts, candles and much more. Resident’s throughout town also have their treasurers for sale. Food galore - you won’t go hungry here!! Hot dogs, sausage peppers, taco’s, gyro’s, fudge, popcorn, etc. Sponsored by the Warrensburg Chamber of Commerce more info call 518- 623-2161 or visit their website at www. warrensburgchamber. com.

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 518-4942722. 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 office and various other locations. This event coincides with the first day of the World’s Largest Garage Sale in Warrensburg. Many

SEP. 29 - SEP. 30

SEP. 30TH

Heritage, Harvest & Horse Festival held at Fort Ticonderoga

making the trek to Warrensburg find easier access by using Northway Exit 25, then traveling south on Route 9/Main Street, Chestertown. Long Lake » Hoss’s Octo-BEARFest held at Hoss’s Country Corner; 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Vendors! Live music, food, ice cream, and drinks! A benefit for Randy’s Patient Assistance Fund. For more information: 518-624-2481. Ticonderoga » Heritage, Harvest & Horse Festival held at Fort Ticonderoga; 9:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Experience the power and thunder of hooves through demos of equestrian sports and working horses; take part in family-fun activities including; sack races; and explore the splendor of the King’s Garden and the annual plant sale and harvest market. The day will not be complete without a visit to Fort Ticonderoga’s highly acclaimed Heroic Corn Maze Admission to this day-long event is included in a Fort Ticonderoga’s general admission ticket.

OCT. 1

Schroon Lake » Benefit

Motorcycle Ride held at Schroon Lake thru North Creek; 9:30 a.m. The NY-27 Chapter of the Red Knights Motorcycle Club will host a charity ride benefiting the “Burn Foundation of Central New York,” will start at the Schroon Lake firehouse on Industrial Avenue and end at the North Creek Ski Bowl. Registration begins at 9:30 am and the ride will begin at 11:00 am, traveling about 90 miles through the southern Adirondacks. Cost is $15 per bike and driver and $10 per passenger. Entertainment, food and raffles at the end of the ride. Call 518-586-4495 for more

information.

Lake George Oktoberfest & Fall Festival held at Canada Street & Shepard Park; Fri. 5:00PM 10:00PM, Sat. 12:00PM - 10:00PM & Sun.12:00PM - 5:00PM. Enjoy a beer in the Bier Garden featuring local handcrafted German-inspired Ales & Lagers from Lake George’s own Adirondack Brewery. Be sure to sample some of the authentic German Food as well! Enter a yodeling contest, muscle into a Keg Toss, compete in a RollOut-The-Barrel Race, and more! Canada Street is blocked off and transformed into a European-style street fair. Rain or shine.

Glens Falls » 25th Annual Taste

of the North Country held at Glens Falls City Park; 11:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. Sample a variety of foods from the North Country’s Best Restaurants! The participating restaurants and their offerings as well as entertainment schedules will be published in the Chronicle Newspaper. Participating restaurants are from the Glens Falls Region, as well as Lake George and surrounding towns! Food coupons are $1 each. Restaurant samples are priced in food coupons and can range from $1 to $4. North Creek » Tom Chapin Concert held at Tannery Pond Community Center; 3:00 p.m. Advanced tickets $15 at door $20. Legendary, Grammy-winning, contemporary folk artist. The younger brother of the late Harry Chapin, singer/songwriter Tom Chapin carried on his sibling’s legacy admirably. In a career that spans five decades, 25 albums, and three Grammy awards, Hudson Valley Troubadour Tom Chapin has covered an incredible amount of creative ground. tannerypondcenter.org and for tickets in advance go to brownpapertickets.com.

OCT. 7

Long Lake » Harvest Craft Fair held at Town Hall; 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Free admission. As the mountains turn to fire with the colors of fall let’s celebrate the changing of the seasons with the annual Harvest Craft Fair. Vendors will be selling hand-made crafts. Call 518-6243077 for more information.

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06 OCT.

OCT. 6

Warrensburg » Garlic Festival

held at Warrensburg Riverfront Farmers Market; 3:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m. Celebrate garlic with samplings, food contests, recipes, horticultural information, bulbs and locally grown produce, maple products.

F R I DAY

HARVEST HAM SUPPER held at

Crown Point United Methodist Church. Sit-down 5:00 pm, Takeouts 4:30pm Ham supper and homemade desserts! Adults $10, Children $5

OCT. 6 - OCT. 8

Lake George » 7th Annual

Bulletin Board

101804

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

CLASSES & WORKSHOPS

COMMUNITY OUTREACH

COMMUNITY OUTREACH

COMMUNITY OUTREACH

PUBLIC MEETINGS

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

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.

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

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 - 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

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 Alzheimer's Caregiver Support Group monthly support group for caregivers InterLakes Health, Ethan Allen Library. 4 p.m. Details: 518-564-3370. Second Tuesdays

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.

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.

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.

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 - Bingo, Ticonderoga fire house, 6:45 p.m. Doors 5 p.m. Every Thursday. CHILDREN'S PROGRAMS WESTPORT – 4-H Open House, Learn all about 4-H Come Join us Friday Oct. 20, 2017 from 6pm8pm at the 4-H Building at Essex County Fair Grounds, 3 Sisco st., Westport, NY.

TICONDEROGA - Take Control Exercise classes. Ticonderoga Armory Senior Center. 9:30 a.m. Details: 518-585-6050, Free. rsvp@logocail.net. Every Wednesday. COMMUNITY OUTREACH

CLASSES & WORKSHOPS ELIZABETHTOWN - Come Join us for a helthier you! Monday, October 16th – November 20th 1:30pm – 4pm. Free 6-session workshop hosted at: The Hand House, 8273 River Street, Elizabethtown, New York. Please call (518) 873-3170 to register and for more information. Sponsored by: Eastern Adk Helath Care Network, MHA of Essex County, and UVM Elizabethtown Community Hospital.

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 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 - American Legion Post #224 Monthly Meeting. Second Thursday

SENIORS 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

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Eye on the Arts

============~-r--=============

Arts & Entertainment

information, call 518-523-2512 or visit lakeplacidarts.org. 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. “Paterson,” a film that follows a blue-collar poet who finds wisdom in everyday life, will screen at the Whallonsburg Grange Hall on Sept. 30 at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $6 for adults, $3 for minors. For more information, contact info@cvfilms.org. 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 information, visit adirondackarts.org.

Grammy nominated singer-songwriter Maria Muldaur will perform at BluSeed Studios in Saranac Lake on Oct. 4 at 7:30 p.m. Muldaur — known for her 1974 hit “Midnight at the Oasis” By Elizabeth Izzo — has had a lengthy career in Ameri• COLUMNIST • can roots music. Doors open at 7 p.m. Tickets are $25. For more information, visit bluseedstudios.org. 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. The Whallonsburg Grange will host another installment of their lyceum lecture series “What’s the Big Idea?” on Oct. 3 at 7:30 p.m. Speaker Andy Buchanan will head this next event, titled “Why World War Two Still Matters.” Tickets are $5 per person. For more information, visit thegrangehall.info.

EXHIBITIONS

The NorthWind Fine Arts Gallery in Saranac Lake will open an exhibit featuring the works of artist Anne Hughes, known for her dedication to art created only with natural materials, throughout the month of October. An opening reception for the new exhibit, titled “Out of the Woods,” is slated for Oct. 6 at 5-7 p.m. For more information, call 518-354-1875. Glens Falls’ Hyde Collection will open a new exhibit, “A Shared Legacy: Folk Art in America,” on Oct. 8. To learn more about the exhibit, visit hydecollection.org/ exhibition/a-shared-legacy-folk-art-in-america. 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.

l

SCREENINGS

MARK YOUR CALENDAR

The Lake Placid Center for the Arts will screen “The Lost City of Z” in collaboration with the Adirondack Film Society on Sept. 29-30. Starring Sienna Miller, Tom Holland, Angus Macfadyen and Robert Pattinson, the James Gray-directed film follows the true story of a two decade search in the jungles of the Amazon by British explorer Percy Fawcett. Tickets are $10 per person. The screening starts at 7 p.m. on both days. For more

Church

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

NEWCOMB St. Barbara's Episcopal 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 t ime immediately follow ing 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

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 childhood. For more information on the exhibit, titled

Services

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 Methodist Church: 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 30, 2017 • 9

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's Place546-7254 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 Schroon Lake, New York Lake George" at Pastor's office. Installation Service Firefighters for 92Blo ckPoint 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 UnitedMethodist Church: 639

518-585-2658 1-800-PROPANE

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LEFT: The Whallonsburg Grange will host speaker Andy Buchanan on Oct. 3. Photo provided

PUTNAM

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-

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's Church Provided) Wednesday Bible Study at 6:30 p.m. Thursday Prayer Meeting 6:30 p.m.. PastorSheridan Race,32 Water Street. 585-3554. RUTLAND, VT

All SaintsAnglicanChurch"The BibleCatholic Church":42 WoodstockAve., Rutland, VT.802-7799046• www .allsaintsrutlandvt.org. Sunday Service 8:00am & 10:00am. 7-17-17 • 57560

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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.

PETROLEUM

MORIAH

ABOVE: The Lake Placid Center for the Arts will screen “The Lost City of Z” on Sept. 29-30. Pictured is Charlie Hunnam as Percy Fawcett.

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

~NTAIN

Tl PAINT

“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. ■

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10 • September 30, 2017 | The Times of Ti Sun

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Lesser brethren to be blessed

TiNADA

TiNADA offers hope and support for community

The Blessing of the Animals is at Ticonderoga Methodist Church By Lohr McKinstry STA FF W RITER

Do not let stigma get in the way of drug recovery, writes mother whose son is battling addiction

TICONDEROGA | A Blessing of the Animals will take place at the Ticonderoga First United Methodist Church on Saturday, Oct. 7 at 10 a.m. Pastor Scott Tyler will welcome all pets on the front lawn

“Addiction is a family disease,” said Pam Nolan, a Ticonderoga resident and member of the Ticonderoga Neighbors Addressing Drug Abuse (TiNADA) Coalition. The coalition is changing its focus from the facts about the problem to the solutions. The group is emphasizing the fact that there is recovery from drug dependence, much of which focuses on friends sharing their hope. “One person may use, but the whole family suffers. It’s important for our local families to know that if you or someone you love suffers from substance abuse disorder, you are not alone,” she said. “There is help out there, and with it hopes for sustained recovery.” Nolan described her own hope in the promise of recovery. “Addiction is a disease that does not discriminate, and many of us have been impacted by or know of families that have been struggling with addiction,” she said. “My son Jason has battled with addiction in the past and our family has experienced some dark times. It’s very easy to let the feeling of shame and guilt prevent you from seeking help and support, especially in a small town. “I hope that by sharing my story, I can raise awareness and shed some light on the stigma of addiction, and that someone who is on that roller coaster feeling alone and overwhelmed will reach out to a support or recovery group.” The stigma Nolan mentions can often stop those who need help the most from seeking assistance. No one starts out wanting to become addicted. However, good people can and do make bad choices. TiNADA is striving to provide the Ticonderoga community with a broader understanding of substance abuse disorder and increase awareness of the recovery and related support resources available both in and outside the local community. Ticonderoga is fortunate to have three recovery groups in addition to the local Alcoholics Anonymous meetings and other Narcotics Anonymous (NA) meetings in the area: NA for people with a drug dependency seeking recovery, Nar-Anon for family members and friends of individuals with a drug dependency, and Celebrate Recovery, a faith-based recovery group. The second of four planned gatherings designed to provide an opportunity for informal discussion about addiction around coffee and dessert is scheduled for Thursday, Oct. 5 from 6:30-7:30 p.m. at 20 Amherst Ave in Ticonderoga. “This is a casual evening of support, discussion and hope. There is no need to suffer alone and in silence, our TiNADA members want to share our experience, strength and hope,” Nolan said. Members of the greater Ticonderoga community are invited to drop in, fill a cup, grab dessert and listen to or participate in the conversations. Check The Sun each week for an update on the sessions and information, and preventionteam.org for a listing of local support and recovery group meetings. ■

The annual Blessing of the Animals at the First United Methodist Church in Ticonderoga will be held Saturday, Oct. 7 at 10 a.m. Photo provided

Museum preparing for season end Ticonderoga’s Heritage Museum is open until Columbus Day By Lohr McKinstry STA FF W RITER

TICONDEROGA | Now’s the time to visit the Ticonderoga Heritage Museum before it closes after Columbus Day. Heritage Museum Board of Trustees President Terry Smith said they’re reflecting upon the significant achievements of the summer, while, at the same time, preparing to close for the season on Columbus Day, Oct. 9. Located in the 1888 Building at the entrance to Bicentennial Park, the museum is open from May through early October. Smith said there is still time to visit on weekends and take advantage of special sales in the Adirondack Gift Shop at the museum. “As the new president of the Board of Trustees, I experienced first-hand and for the first time the Children’s Summer Workshop Series,” said Smith. “I appreciated the range of art forms the workshops offered, each one sparking imagination and encouraging curiosity. What a great summer of creative

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at the church. All attendees are asked to bring their pets on a leash or in a carrying case, Tyler said. “The Blessing of the Animals is a popular annual event and is scheduled near the feast day of St. Francis of Assisi, the patron saint of animals,” the church’s Betty Rettig said St. Francis of Assisi called animals his “lesser brethren.” Call the church office at 518-585-7995 for more information. The church is at 1045 Wicker St. in Ticonderoga. All are welcome to participate. The event is rain or shine. ■

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fun for the kids and for me. “I’d like to congratulate the staff and volunteers, the workshop leaders, teachers, parents and grandparents who made our season meaningful.” Museums nationwide are rethinking ways to reach out to their audiences, Smith said. He said the Heritage Museum is embarking upon new technologies to face the future. “Since its inception, the Heritage Museum has worked to preserve and celebrate the industrial history of Ticonderoga, primarily through exhibits and programs,” he said. “Taking a step forward, the museum is embracing new trends and technologies to tell their stories and bring the town’s rich history to life. At the same time, we are looking to engage the younger generations and sustain their interest.” Museum Trustee June Curtis said the facility is in the early stages of a new initiative, “Reflections, Fostering the Future by Projecting the Past,” a project to preserve and process “the timeworn photos from their archives into digital format creating photo collages and telling untold stories to our audiences. We have transitioned to a digital TV, have created a new slideshow and are planning additional equipment purchases to increase our technological capabilities. “Please stay tuned for news on an exciting internship program with the Ticonderoga High School,” she added. “It is important to note our gratitude to the South Lake Champlain Fund of the Vermont Community Foundation for funding in-part the Reflections project.” Although the museum closes for the season in October, much work is done throughout the winter months in preparation for the following spring, she said. “With our new initiative, exhibit maintenance, workshop planning and a major fundraiser, the Taste of Ti, on the calendar for May, the board and staff have a robust agenda ahead,” she said. ■

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It’s festival time at Fort Ticonderoga The Heritage, Harvest and Horse Festival is at the King’s Garden

ties, including horse-drawn wagon rides and heritage games; a guided tour of the historic gardens’ animals from the Adirondack Wildlife Refuge; and Adirondack beer and wine,” said Fort President Beth Hill. “You can explore the lively and colorful harvest market, get lost in the six-acre corn maze, enjoy centuries of stories from the water on a Carillon boat cruise and explore the fall splendor at Fort Ticonderoga on Lake Champlain nestled between the Adirondack and Green mountains.” The fort has goats, alpacas, working oxen and fox hunting Green Mountain Hounds coming. Some festival fall activities include face painting, creating a customized leaf book, sack races, colonial kids’ games, pumpkin painting, animal masks, natural dying, book reading in the teahouse, corn crafts and other hands-on activities. A boat cruise is at 1 and 3:30 p.m. aboard Fort Ticonderoga’s 60-foot Carillon with a special tour around the Ticonderoga Peninsula. To make a reservation, call 518-585-2821. Fort Ticonderoga’s Heroic Corn Maze will be open for visitors to explore the six-acre maze, which has a new design ■

By Lohr McKinstry STA FF W RITER

TICONDEROGA | Fort Ticonderoga will celebrate all things fall on Saturday, Sept. 30. The Heritage, Harvest and Horse Festival will be set in the midst of the King’s Garden heirloom apple trees and the Adirondack landscape. Fort Ticonderoga will be open from 9:30 a.m. until 5 p.m. The festival’s featured activities include live music; horse-drawn wagon rides; “localvore” food, including homemade jams, jellies and pies; Adirondack beer and wines; the annual vegetable, seed and plant Sale; a Harvest Market, featuring locally grown

Fort Ticonderoga is holding its Heritage, Harvest and Horse Festival this weekend. Photo provided

and handmade products, including perennials and produce, maple syrup, honey and apple products. Admission to the Heritage, Harvest and

At the end of the school day at St. Mary’s School of Ticonderoga, the U.S. flag is taken down by seventh-grader Aubrey Whitford and eighth-grader David LaPointe.

St. Mary’s School students can wait for their schoolbus in the shade of a tree on a sunny and hot afternoon. Photo provided

Photo provided

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12 • September 30, 2017 | The Times of Ti Sun

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Work on the new Port Henry Dollar General building is to be completed by Nov. 14, the company told Moriah town officials. The new store on Convent Hill (Route 9N/22) will replace a building heavily damaged by an arson fire on May 10, 2016, and later demolished Photo by Lohr McKinstry

Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

Halloween. Debbie Henry and Tom Trow are putting up this happy person in the downtown pocket park. The Funky Folks is sponsored by the the Moriah Chamber of Commerce. Photo by Lohr McKinstry

Parade went off despite rain

The Port Henry-Moriah Labor Day celebration rolled on By Lohr McKinstry STA FF W RITER

PORT HENRY | Port Henry Labor Day celebration organizers considered cancelling the annual event this year because of heavy rains but were crushed by the logistics needed. It started pouring hours before the parade on Sunday afternoon, Sept. 3, Moriah Chamber of Commerce President Cathy Sprague said at a recent chamber meeting. “There were 75 participants,” she said. “You’d have to call them all. You can’t cancel something that big.” The bands in the parade are prepared to march in the rain, she said, and some have rain gear. “The bands prepare for it (rain),” Sprague said. “There are contracts. If there was thunder and lightning, we would have postponed it, for safety, to later in the day.” Most vendors reported they did OK, not great, busi-

ness, she said. “We pulled it off,” she said. “We got though it.” She said special appreciation should go to Kellie Valentine, who dressed as Champ, the Lake Champlain monster, for the parade, and got soaked in the heavy costume. Van Slooten Harbour Marina won first place for its pirate ship float in the parade, a $100 cash prize.

The Town of Moriah, Regional Office of Sustainable Tourism, and many businesses contributed toward the celebration, including Pre-Tech Precision, Edgemont Bed-and-Breakfast and Port Henry Marina, and there were fundraisers held. The chamber raised about $7,000 for Labor Day, and after paying the bands, fireworks company and others, had $1,800 left. “We’re in good shape for next year,” Sprague said. ■

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The Times of Ti Sun | September 30, 2017 • 13

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14 • September 30, 2017 | The Times of Ti Sun

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Expanded Schroon Library to open Columbus Day weekend

Addition will more than double the size of the library By Christopher South STA FF W RITER

SCHROON LAKE | The expansion of the Schroon Lake Public Library should hopefully be completed by Columbus Day weekend, said library director Jane Bouchard. The library expansion, which comes with a $1.1 million price tag, came in conjunction with the construction of a new Schroon Lake Municipal Court on the first floor of the building. “The town is underwriting the brick and mortar portion — including the electric, finishing and heating. The library has to find the funds to furnish it,” said library board chairman Marion Weaver. Weaver said the library obtained a $100,000 State Aid for Library Construction grant for Phase I, which is a 75 percent grant, with

25 percent match by the library. The library has applied for another $150,000 grant for the second phase, which will include furnishing the library. A third phase includes the rehabilitation of the original library. Weaver said the library trustees donated $10,000 to install a wooden ceiling. The addition will include the creation of a new children’s and teen area. Bouchard said there will be a dedicated community room more programs, and more up-to-date technology in the new library. She said there would be a separate computer room where patrons will be able to plug in or use the library’s desktop computers. “The existing space will be more dedicated to adult services,” she said. Weaver said there has been talk of expanding the library since 1998. Bouchard, she said, has done an exceptional job with programs for all ages, working with the school, and running summer reading programs. The library needed more room, and the town board recognized the need for the court to expand.

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ffl A view from the inside of the new addition to the Schroon Lake Public Library. The new space will include new areas for children and teens, plus a community room. The library portion is part of a $1.1 million expansion that includes a new courtroom. Photo by Christopher South She said library and court patrons often had to mingle, and lawyers had no place to speak with clients in private. As a result of the expansion, the 1,360 square foot library will get an additional 2,500 square feet of space. The Town of Schroon has fewer than 2,000 year-round residents, yet it is the fourth largest library in the Clinton-EssexFranklin Library system. The library is a great resource for lending books and electronic media, but it is also

helping people connect with the community. “Yet, the view persists of a library as a large, stationary bookmobile,” she said. She said Bouchard has obtained grants for a number of drawing and writing classes, including watercolor classes and memoir writing. Once the memoir writing class was finished a core group continued to meet. A book discussion group and knitting classes are other programs offered at the library. “We have all kinds of things available to the community,” Weaver said. ■

Schroon Library ukulele class still has openings Free ukulele class at Schroon Library draws all ages By Christopher South STA FF W RITER

SCHROON LAKE | Last year, in an effort to expand what the Schroon Lake Public Library offers library patrons, library director Jane Bouchard introduced free ukulele classes into the program schedule. The class was enough of a hit to offer it again this fall beginning Sept. 30 and running for 10 weeks through Dec. 16. Classes are scheduled for 11 a.m. on Saturdays and run about an hour. “The class is about half full right now,” Bouchard said on Sept. 21. Bouchard said last year she was thinking about what

else the library could offer to attract the public’s attention. She said she thought about offering a guitar class, but she wanted to be able to supply instruments, and guitars would be expensive. And then she hit on the idea of a ukulele class. Local musician Mark Piper, who is teaching the class, was asked to help select instruments. Piper recommended a mid-value ukulele for the beginner class. The library purchased seven ukuleles, which are signed out to the students. The library was able to purchase the ukuleles through an Essex County Arts Council Cultural Assistance Program (CAP) Grant. Bouchard said the class is open to 10 students, and some of them own their own instruments. “Some went on to purchase their own ukulele after taking the class,” Bouchard said. According to Bouchard, the library is asking patrons, ages

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10 through seniors, who sign up for the class to commit for the entire 10 weeks (no class on Oct. 21 and Nov. 25), because it is consecutive learning. If they stick with the class, the students should be able to play several songs and develop a basis for playing more. “I audited it last year and I learned quite a bit,” Bouchard said. Some of the students even continued private classes with Piper after the library class ended. Bouchard said the library has never done anything like the ukulele class before, but she is willing to try new things to promote the library. “People say the library is dying, but we are trying new programs, and this one turned out to be very popular,” she said. Bouchard said it can’t hurt that the class is free, because it offers it to absolutely everyone. “It’s part of our philosophy that we don’t charge for any of the classes,” Bouchard said. ■

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The Times of Ti Sun | September 30, 2017 • 17

Painter reflects on 50 year career Port Henry’s Maybelle Gregory is Moriah’s Artist of the Month By Lohr McKinstry STA FF W RITER

PORT HENRY | Port Henry painter Maybelle Gregory is artist of the month for October at the Moriah Chamber of Commerce. Gregory, 78, has been painting for more than 50 years. “My father always said, ‘work is exercise,’” she said. “I do mostly landscapes, some with animals. I don’t sell them, usually; I give them away to friends.” The Champlain Bridge in Crown Point is one of her favorite subjects. “We can see the bridge from my house,” she said. “We have 50 acres. We named it Gregory’s Mountain. Four of us live on the mountain, including my two sons.” She and her husband have two sons and a daughter, and many grandchildren. She graduated from SUNY-New Paltz with double majors

in art and education. Gregory works mostly in acrylics, with some watercolors. “I did Champ for my grandchildren,” she said. “I knew they’d enjoy it, and they did.” Champ, the legendary Lake Champlain monster, is believed to frequent the waters around Port Henry. Gregory was an art teacher from 1961 to 1996, when she retired. She started at Mineville High School, then moved to Moriah Central School when the new district was formed. “I had thousands of students,” she said. “Most of them remember me, because I often see them in public.” Her home has a dining room studio for her work. “We have a place in Florida, and sometimes I go out and paint there,” she said. “I don’t go out as much to paint around here.” Her granddaughter, Margo, is also an artist. “She’s very good,” Gregory said. “I’m glad it runs in the family.” Several of Gregory’s works are on display now at the chamber offices in downtown Port Henry. ■ Maybelle Gregory of Port Henry holds one of her paintings. Gregory is artist of the month at the Moriah Chamber of Commerce. Photo by Lohr McKinstry

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Putnam native dies in crash

Zachery Granger was killed when his motorcycle was hit

released at Ellis Hospital. His parents are Craig and Terri Granger of Putnam. Granger had lived in Schenectady for two years and worked at DeCrescente Distributing Co. in Mechanicville, according to his mother. He also attended Schenectady County Community College. He served six years in the service between the U.S. Air Force and the Marines, remaining stateside and piloting V-22 Osprey aircraft, Mrs. Granger said. “He was only 30, but had a wonderful life,” she said. “He flew the V-22 Osprey and also had his (private) pilot’s license. We are having full military honors for him. He was my American hero.” She said Zachery joined the U.S. Air Force and Marine Corps to pursue his love of flying. “He loved people,” Terri Granger said. “He was never mean to anybody.” ■

By Lohr McKinstry STA FF W RITER

PUTNAM | A Putnam native and military pilot died in a motorcycle crash in Glenville recently. Zachery W. Granger, 30, died in the Sunday, Sept. 18 crash at Freemans Bridge and Sunnyside roads as he headed south and a car turned left in front of him, Glenville Police said. Police said the passenger in the car had slight injuries. Hugh Rosa, 89, of Schenectady was the driver, and his wife, Marion Rosa, 87, had internal injuries and was treated and

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Motorcyclist dead in collision

Birth Announcements

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suncommunitynews.com/public-notices/birthannouncements

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MINEVILLE | A baby girl, Jenna Ryan Carpenter, was born to parents Miranda Smith and Jeremy Carpenter of Mineville on Sept. 24 at the Porter Medical Center in Middlebury, Vermont.

By Lohr McKinstry STA FF W RITER

Eleanor Marie Bartlett

NORTH HUDSON | One man was killed after two motorcycles collided head-on on the Tracy Road in North Hudson over the weekend. Paul A. Boivin, 64, of Addison, Vt. died of multiple injuries after he crossed the centerline on his 2013 KTM motorcycle and hit a 1999 Harley-Davidson motorcycle driven by Randolph W.

MINEVILLE | A baby girl, Eleanor Marie Bartlett, was born to parents Whitney Bartlett Salerno and Luke Bartlett of Mineville on Sept. 20 at the Porter Medical Center in Middlebury, Vermont.

LaPier, 48, of Mineville. LaPier was last listed in good condition at University of Vermont Medical Center in Burlington after being airlifted there by the LifeNet helicopter. Boivin was taken to University of Vermont Health Network-Elizabethtown Community Hospital, where he was pronounced dead after the 2 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 24 crash. The remote Tracy Road between Moriah and North Hudson is a popular spot for motorcyclists because of its twisty nature. State Police said Boivin had failed to negotiate a curve and crossed the center line when he hit LaPier. The Essex County Sheriff’s Department and the State Police Troop B Collision Reconstruction Unit were also at the crash site. ■

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The Times of Ti Sun | September 30, 2017 • 19

Ti man jailed for sex crimes David Taylor allegedly raped two teens By Lohr McKinstry STA FF W RITER

TICONDEROGA | A Ticonderoga man has been charged with multiple sexual offenses. David G. Taylor, 31, was arrested by Ticonderoga Town

Police for felony 2nd-degree rape, 2nd-degree criminal sexual act, 3rd-degree rape, 3rd-degree criminal sexual act, and two counts of misdemeanor endangering the welfare of a child. Police said the charges stem from multiple incidents that allegedly occurred between July 2017 and September 2017, with two teenage girls who are under the age of 16 years. Taylor was arraigned in Schroon Town Court and remanded to Essex County Jail for lack of bail. Taylor will appear in Ticonderoga Town Court at a later date. The case was handled by officers Sean Mascarenas and Mark Belden. Taylor was arrested on Sept. 16. ■

David Taylor

Charter penalized for slow broadband buildout Cable heavyweight will forego $13 million in reimbursements for failing to meet benchmarks By Pete DeMola EDITOR

ALBANY | Charter Communications will forgo $13 million in state reimbursements after failing to build out their cable network as required as part of last year’s merger with Time Warner Cable. The New York State Public Service Commission (PSC) announced the settlement last week. “In its approval of the merger, the Commission required Charter to undertake several types of investments and other activities,” said PSC Chair John B. Rhodes in a statement. “While Charter is delivering on many

of them, it failed to expand the reach of its network to unserved and underserved customers at the pace it committed. We are taking these additional steps to ensure full and complete compliance.” As part of the merger agreement that created the nation’s largest telecommunications firm, Charter was required to bring high-speed internet to 145,000 unserved households throughout the state. While Charter has reported that it has completed the first speed upgrade ahead of schedule, the provider had only extended its network to pass 15,164 of the 36,250 premises it was required to pass in the first year. The Connecticut-based provider has agreed to forgo future reimbursements if it fails to hit six-month benchmarks through May 2020. The actual amount forfeited, according to the PSC, will vary depending upon the percentage of the target missed and whether or not Charter can demonstrate it has timely

performed specific tasks. The $13 million settlement is the largest cable company financial settlement of its kind in state history and possibly the largest in the nation’s, according to the PSC. The settlement comes as the state enters the homestretch for the New NY Broadband Program, the initiative to fully wire the state with high-speed broadband by the end of 2018. The state Broadband Program Office has awarded $266 million to date — including $40 million to the North Country — as part of the effort. Investments could top $1 billion when paired with funds from the private sector. The third and final deadline for state grants was Aug. 31 and will be augmented by $170 million in federal funds allocated by the Federal Communications Commission. Since Verizon has declined to participate in the program, Charter will overbuild on

their service area to cover the remaining areas. But divining which locations in northern New York that may benefit from the expansions — including those in Clinton, Essex and Franklin counties — can be tricky because the provider does not make their service maps public, citing their proprietary nature. “We are currently engaged in an extensive and thoughtful review of areas across upstate NY that lack access to our state-of-the-art broadband, TV and voice services,” Andrew Russell, a Charter spokesman, told The Sun in April. “As part of this process, we are pleased to work with interested parties to review potential deployment opportunities and will continue to do so.” However, as part of the settlement agreement, Charter was required to develop a website to inform homeowners and businesses whether their address is included in their broadband expansion plan. Visit bldlkup.com to learn more. ■

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20 • September 30, 2017 | The Times of Ti Sun

www.suncommunitynews.com

Sports

From the Sidelines IT’S HERE. IT’S HERE! a shot that found the back of the net.

Friday night, Ticonderoga, 7:30 p.m. The rivalry game is on. Two of the top 10 By Keith Lobdell teams in Class D football • SPORTS EDITOR • will battle for bragging rights in the regular season showdown of the 10th-ranked Moriah Vikings and seventh-ranked Ticonderoga Sentinels, both 4-0 heading into the game. This will be the first Sun Community News Facebook Live game of the season, after bringing fans portions of games throughout the first half of the season. Back to the game. The Sentinels and Vikings have destroyed all others in their path through the first four weeks of the season, with the Sentinels outscoring opponents 160-41 and the Vikings holding a 157-47 edge. In fact, they are the only two teams in the positive when it comes to scoring margin. While you may be seeking some great nugget of wisdom in figuring out who is going to win, this game will come down to the same thing it comes down to anytime these two teams face off — who will control the line. Connor Anderson of Moriah is the third leading rusher in the CVAC, leading the Vikings on the ground. Meanwhile, it is the committee of Ticonderoga runners in Hayden Scuderi, Trevor Parent, Evan Graney and fullback Jevyn Granger who balance out the load, with the first three all ranked in the top 10 of league runners. When it comes to the air, Moriah holds the advantage with the duo of Dylan Trombley under center and Jerin Sargent catching, but anyone who has covered this team on a game-by-game basis (like myself — and ONLY myself) over the past three seasons knows Evan Graney can be a throwing quarterback when needed. In the end, this going to be a great game.

RIVALRY PREVIEW

Meanwhile, on the same field, the Sentinels hosted the Moriah girl’s soccer team in their second meeting of the Division II regular season — one of the few games played Sept. 25 due to extreme weather conditions affecting the area. The game was excellent, with Ticonderoga getting the better chances in the first half and Moriah controlling more of the play in the second. The Vikings got on the board first as Maddie Olcott scored on a scramble in front of the net. The Sentinels countered, as a cross from Emily Pike led to a Summer Snyder shot on net, which was deflected by Sam Hayes out into the penalty box, where Svannah LaCourse was in position to follow with

Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

The Viking scored the 2-1 win when a clearance attempt by Aubrey Smith found the foot of Stephania Zelinski, who settled the ball and shot from about 30 yards away, putting the ball over Smith’s head and into the back of the net. Last week, both teams suffered a loss at the hands of the ElizabethtownLewis/Westport Griffins, with Moriah falling, 2-0, and Ticonderoga on the short end of a 5-0 score. ■

suncommunitynews.com/sports

D-III GIRLS SOCCER

The Crown Point girl’s soccer team played level with the Keene girl’s last week, with Swade Potter scoring both goals for the Panthers in a 2-2 tie, looking like the two teams were heading for a first half tie atop the standings. However, the Schroon Lake Lady Wildcats scored a 3-1 upset of the Beavers, rallying from a 1-0 deficit as Grace Higgens scored the equalizer and Lily Slyman the game-winner, while Malena Gereau added an insurance marker late in the game. Entering the second half of the season, Crown Point holds a three point lead over Keene and four point leads over Johnsburg and Schroon Lake for the Division-III title.

Crown Point’s Alex Russell and Schroon Lake’s Micha Stout get tangled up as they try to control the ball in Division III soccer action earlier this season in Schroon Lake. More photos from this game are available at mycapture.suncommunitynews.com. Photo by Jill Lobdell

ON THE BOYS SIDE

The Wildcats were able to get goals from Gabe Gratto and Andrew Pelkey to start the second half of their game against Division III leader Keene, but did not have an answer for the Beavers offense as Keene scored a 10-2 win. Crown Point suffered a similar fate against the Beavers, falling 6-0 as Jacob Norton made 12 saves for the Panthers.

ON THE RUN

While the Ticonderoga cross country teams were unable to score any wins in their home meet at Fort Ticonderoga running against power teams in Saranac Lake and Saranac, Caleb Pike continued a strong season with a 10th place finish for the Sentinels, while Schroon Lake’s Ben Wisser placed fourth. Wisser and Pike were the only two runners in the top 15 not to be from the two powerhouse programs on the Red Storm and Chiefs. In the girls meet, Sierra Stacey placed eighth for the Sentinels, who also dropped contests to Saranac and Saranac Lake.

Schroon Lake’s Harley Macri gets ready to throw in the soccer ball while, behind, coach MaryLou Shaughnessy instructs her team during their home game against Indian Lake/Long Lake. More photos from this game are available at mycapture.suncommunitynews.com. Photo by Keith Lobdell

IN THE POOL

The Vikings were unable to come away with a team win against perennial Section VII power PHS is swimming this past Monday, but Lily Williams scored a win for her team in the 100 fly.

Hayden Scuderi, Evan Graney and Trevor Parent line up before the snap during a home game at Sentinel Field. The Sentinels return home this Friday to face the Moriah Vikings in a regular season rivalry renewal. Photo by Jill Lobdell

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ABOVE: Moriah’s Connor Anderson tries to wiggle out of the tackle as Jacob Gibeau tries to stay on his feet after blocking in the last home game for the Vikings. Moriah travels to Ticonderoga this Friday for the annual rivalry game, which will be broadcast live on the Sun Community News Facebook Live page.

The Times of Ti Sun | September 30, 2017 • 21

IXTRAI IXTRAI 'Pl~ce yo~r A~

Photo by Jill Lobdell

RIGHT: Moriah’s Stephania Zelinski and Ticonderoga’s Sarah Bresett try not to get tangled up in each others feet as they seek to control the ball. The Vikings scored a 2-1 win against the Sentinels in a game played at Sentinel Field. For more photos from this game and others featuring the Ticonderoga and Moriah teams, visit mycapture.suncommunitynews.com. Photo by Keith Lobdell

·. Wee Care:@~. '


22 • September 30, 2017 | The Times of Ti Sun

www.suncommunitynews.com

Obituaries

Zachery Wilhelm Granger

PUTNAM STATION | Zachery Wilhelm Granger, 30, of Schenectady and formerly Putnam Station passed away unexpectedly on Sunday, Sept. 17. Born in Ticonderoga on July 1, 1987, he is the son of Craig and Terri (Watrous) Granger. Growing up in Putnam, Zack was a tremendous example of self sacrifice, strong

Claire V. Drake

TICONDEROGA | Claire V. Drake, 67, of Ticonderoga passed away unexpectedly on Sunday, Sept. 17 at her residence. Born Feb. 23, 1950, she was the daughter of the late Leon and Ziona (Gravel) Austin. Claire most enjoyed spending time with her grandchildren and daughter, as well as spending time in the outdoors. Claire was

suncommunitynews.com/public-notices/obituaries

friendship and loyal family. Zachery served the U.S. for a total of six years, two in the U.S. Air Force and the final four in the U.S. Marines. Once he finished his service, Zack went on to college, received his private pilots license and entered the civilian workforce. From a young age, Zack enjoyed spending time with his family, being outdoors, four wheeling, hunting and riding all things that moved. Zack was the oldest of six siblings: the leader of the pack. He was a model son, brother and friend to all who knew him. He is survived by his parents, Craig and Terri Granger; two sisters, Teryn Granger and Geraldine Thierry; four brothers Craig, Karsen and Parker Granger and Lance Messier. A memorial service with military honors took place on Saturday, Sept. 23 at Peter and Ellen Smith’s at 662 Gull Bay Road in Putnam Station at noon. Relatives and friends gathered beginning at 11:00 a.m. Arrangements are under the direction of Wilcox and Regan Funeral Home in Ticonderoga. To offer online condolences, visit wilcoxandreganfuneralhome.com ■

an avid hunter with her life-mate, Douglas Porter, for many years. She was employed by the International Paper Company of Ticonderoga for over 35 years. She was pre-deceased by her parents, Ziona and Leon Austin, as well as her sister, Faith Stover, and the love of her life, Douglas Porter. Survivors include, and are not limited to, her daughter, Kelley A. Paige and her husband, William, of Ticonderoga and her two grandchildren, Anthony Barnaby and Trinity Paige, also of Ticonderoga. Relatives and friends called Saturday, Sept. 23 from 11 a.m. to noon at the Wilcox & Regan Funeral Home at 11 Algonkin St. in Ticonderoga. A funeral service followed at noon at the funeral ome. Rev. Mr. Elliott A. Shaw officiated. Interment will take place at a later date at the family plot of the South Moriah Cemetery. To offer online condolences, visit wilcoxandreganfuneralhome.com. ■

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Mary Arthur (Gunning) Stanley

CROWN POINT | Mary Arthur (Gunning) Stanley, 90, of Crown Point passed away on Thursday, Sept. 21 at Heritage Commons Residential Health Care of Ticonderoga. Born in Ticonderoga on July 2, 1927, she was the daughter of the late Walter and Helen (Arthur) Gunning. Stanley was a 1945 graduate of Ticonderoga High School. She was a lifetime Ticonderoga and Crown Point resident. Her and her husband, Joseph Stanley, owned and operated the Stanley Farm in Ticonderoga and later the Stanley Market on Mt. Hope

Terry Lee Woodward

HAGUE | Terry Lee Woodard, 61, of Hague passed away on Tuesday, Sept. 19 at the Glens Falls Hospital. Born in Ticonderoga on July 23, 1956, he was the son of the late Earl R. and Martha

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Avenue in Ticonderoga for many years. Mary was employed as a Bank Teller at the Champlain National Bank in Crown Point for many years. She was a member of the Catholic Daughters of America, Court St. Mary’s # 794 of Ticonderoga and the Benevolent & Protective Order of Elks # 1494 of Ticonderoga. She was pre-deceased by her husband of 63 years, Joseph Stanley, on June 21, 2009. She was also pre-deceased by her brother, John Gunning. Survivors include her two sons, Michael Stanley and his wife, Lisa, of Charlotte, North Carolina and Walter Stanley and his wife, Michelle, of Argyle; and one sister, Elizabeth “Jim” Bevilacqua of Saranac Lake. She is also survived by eight grandchildren, two greatgrandchildren and many nieces and nephews. Relatives and friends called Sunday, Sept. 24 from 4 to 7 p.m. at the Wilcox & Regan Funeral Home at 11 Algonkin St. in Ticonderoga. A Mass of Christian Burial was celebrated on Monday, Sept. 25 at 10 a.m. at St. Mary’s Catholic Church of Ticonderoga. The Rev. Kevin D. McEwan, pastor, officiated. The Rite of Committal followed at the family plot of St. Mary’s Parish Cemetery of Ticonderoga. To offer online condolences, visit wilcoxandreganfuneralhome.com Donations in Mary’s memory may be made to Heritage Commons Nursing Home, 1019 Wicker St., Ticonderoga, New York 12883. ■ (Hall) Woodard. Terry was a veteran of the U.S. Navy. He was employed by Windshield World of Burlington, Vermont for many years. Terry enjoyed working around the house and also spending time with his many step-grandchildren. He is survived by one sister, Frances Woodard Moffitt of Crown Point; two brothers, Raymond Woodard of Texas and John Woodard, Sr. of Ticonderoga; and several nieces and nephews. He is also survived by his companion, Marion Barnaby of Hague, and his many step-grandchildren. A graveside service will take place on Saturday, Sept. 30 at 2 p.m. at the family plot of the Mt. Hope Cemetery of Ticonderoga. Arrangements are under the direction of the Wilcox & Regan Funeral Home of Ticonderoga. To offer online condolences, visit wilcoxandreganfuneralhome.com ■

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800+ plus lots from Kattskill Bay home on Lake George to include Quality Modern & Antique Furniture and Furnishings, Antique Smalls and Collectibles, Along with Additions to Make a Well Rounded Sale. AUCTIONEER’S NOTE: A great way to finish our 2017 Auction Season with many high quality furniture and antique items in this sale. Check website for detailed listing and 100’s of photos of this auction: www.gokeysauctions.com Auction held under tents rain or shine with ample parking, seating & lunch available Terms: Cash, Check, M/C & Visa 13% Buyers Premium (3% Discount for Cash or Check) All items sold absolute w/ no minimums or reserves

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JOINOURTEAM 105574

Sale Conducted by Gokey’s Auction Service AUCTIONEER– JOHN GOKEY CES,CAGA,RMI (518) 532-9323/9156 Certified Estate Specialist

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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.

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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

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HELP WANTED LOCAL

The Times of Ti Sun | September 30, 2017 • 23

byvisitingourCareerPageat www.hcrhealth.com or emailyourresumeto:tsorce@hcrhealth.com EOE/MMinority/Female/Disability/Veteran

103528

TH COMMUNITY

NEWS 6. PRINTING PubUshlldbvD•ntonPublfflonsln~

105420


24 • September 30, 2017 | The Times of Ti Sun

www.suncommunitynews.com

Published by Denton Publications, Inc.

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4 BEDROOM HOME for sale in Lewis, NY Master bedroom on 1st floor large fenced in back yard Priced to sell at only $79,000 (518) 873-2362

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Help Wanted Town of Moriah Wastewater/Water Treatment Plant The Town of Moriah is seeking a responsible and motivated water/wastewater treatment plant operator Summary: Under the direction of the Supervisor or Lead Operator, the incumbent will perform a variety of basic tasks relevant to the day-to-day operation of the water/wastewater treatment plant facilities, processes and equipment, including process and equipment rounds, recording operations data and information, making observations and reporting on variations in operating conditions, maintaining logs and other required reports and forms, collecting samples and performing laboratory procedures and provides input for corrective actions and implements corrective actions as directed. Assist Operations in efforts to maintain efficient and cost effective facility operations while maintaining compliance with all New York State DEC and DOH Regulations and health and safety rules and requirements. Education/Equivalent: • High Schooldiplomaor equivalent,AssociatesDegree(or equivalentexperience)in Science, Environmental Science,Biology/Laboratory or relatedfield • Canbe substitutedfor TradeSchool/MilitaryServiceor TechnicalSchool • ValidNYS Driver's license • A validNY StateDOHHA-SW/GUIFiltrationPlant,Class IA WastewaterTreatmentLicenseis preferred, OR • Abilityto attendclassesrequiredandpass an examfor obtaininga validNY StateDOH DrinkingWaterand NYSDECWastewaterTreatmentlicensewith in requiredtime.

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JobRelated Responsibilities Include • Worksa scheduledshiftand will be subjectto requiredemergencycall in on a 24hr basis • Weekendsand Holidaywork is requiredand splitbetweenoperators • Underthe supervisionof Supervisoror Lead Operatormaybe requiredto performsomeof the following tasks: • Recordand Read metersfor (pumps,gauges,motorsetc.... ) in accordancewith all regulatory requirements. • Recordtank levels,sludgeblanketlevels. • Operateequipmentpertinentto assignedwork (operatora belt filterpress) • Open,closeand adjustvalvesfor tanks & pumps • Collectsamplesfor laboratoryanalysis • Receivechemicalsin bulk, drum and tote form • Adjust/ bleed pumpsas directed • Keepwater and wastewatertreatmentplants safe and clean at all times. • Inspectequipmentfor properfunctionalityand refer to maintenancemanualsfor any necessary repairs. • Maintaina log book on a dailybasis • Communicatewith Supervisoror LeadOperatoron a dailybasis of:findingsand workneededto be completed.

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Applications can be picked up at the Town of Moriah Town Hall, Monday- Friday, 8:00am-4:00pm. Please include resume and return to: Thomas R. Scozzafava, Town of Moriah Supervisor, 38 Park Place Suite 1, Port Henry, NY 12974. Deadline for applications is October 2, 2017, 4:00PM. 59852_2


will be opened and pubpersonnel, and services licly read aloud at the necessary for the perforRegular Town Board mance, according to Meeting at 6:00PM Ocspecification, of a contober 12, 2017, at the tract to be let by the EsPublished by Denton Publications, Inc. Th e Times Ti Sun | September 30, 2017 • 25 Town of www.suncommunitynews.com Moriah Courtsex CountyofBoard of Suhouse, 42 Park Place, pervisors for the transPort Henry, New York. portation of Preschool All bids Special Education ChilBNE BNE BNEsubmitted in reTREE SERVICES sponse to this notice dren from various SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY SPECTRUM TRIPLE PLAY TV, InSTOP STRUGGLING THE Tree Work Professional Climber shall be ONmarked NOTICE OF SALE School Districts to variBENEFITS. Unable to work? Denied w/decades of experience w/anySTAIRS. Give your life withOil, an ternet & Voice for $29.99/ea. 60 SEALED BIDa liftFuel SUPREME COURT ous Center Based Probenefits? We Can Help! WIN or ACORN STAIRLIFT! Call now and for thing from difficult removals to OF ESSEX MB per second speed. No contract Diesel, Kerosene gram Facilities servicing COUNTY $250. OFFPropane your stairlift Fully Pay Nothing! Contact Bill Gordon or commitment. We buy your exclearlypurchase on the tasteful selected pruning. NATIONSTAR MORT- Essex County for the & Associates at 1-800-586-7449 to equipped and FREE outside DVD & brochure! 1-844& insured. Michael isting contract up to $500.! 1-844of the envelope. 2017 - 2018 School GAGE LLC, Plaintiff start your application today! 286-0854The rack price MUST be Emelianoff 518-251-3936 AGAINST 592-9018 Year. the Mary Savage AKA Mary Sealed bids will be reWARM computed WEATHER based IS on YEAR Journal ROUND In Aruba. ofTheCommerce water is Fanny Savage, AKA Mary ceived at the Office of safe, and(OPIS) the dining is fantastic. Fanny Tremblay, et al., the Purchasing Agent, of Albany, NY Walk out weekly to the beach. 3-Bedroom rack average plus 7551 Court Street, PO Defendant(s) Essex County Transactions weeks available. a fixed Sleeps mark 8. up;$3500. price Box 217, Elizabethtown, Pursuant to a Judgment Email: carolaction@aol.com for must include delivery. York 12932 until LOCATION of Foreclosure and Sale New DATE GRANTOR GRANTEE PRICE more information. Prices will be valid for duly dated July 28, 2017 2:00 P.M. on September the period of October1, 27, 2017. I, the undersignedScott Ref-and Debra TOWN OF MORIAH 08/29/17 Albert Gebo Kinne Schroon $26,600 HOME IMPROVEMENTS 2017 through Septemeree will sell at public The bids shall be opened NOTICE OF PUBLIC read aloud Jay auction at the Lobby 30, 2018. Locations HEARING PROPOSED 08/29/17 Arthur Glay JamesofSmithpublicly and Susanand Steinhardt $140,000 Maximumber efficiency means maxithe Essex County Court- on September 27, 2017 and size tanks are on LOCAL LAW NO. 4 OF LEGAL NOTICE mum savings onofheating bills. at 2:00 P.M. at the Office Chesterfi house,Clark 7559 Kenneth Court Clark file atcertified the Town Clerks 2017 eld PURSUANT TO Central NEW Boiler $40,000 08/30/17 Susan Gilbert and Theodore OUTDOOR Street, Elizabethtown, of the Purchasing Agent, PLEASE TAKE NOTICE Office andVermont may beHeatobYORK STATE LAW,WOOD THE FURNACE. Linda M. Wolf, 7551 Keene NY, Association on NovemberAdam 01,Crofoot that the Town Board tained 802-343-7900 by calling 518TICONDEROGA FIRE $175,000of 08/30/17 Federal National Mortgage ing Alternatives 2017 at 10:00AM, Court Street, Elizabeth- the Town of Moriah, Es546-3341. COMMISSIONERS 101 Kellytown, New York 12932. sex County, New York AllGo bidders SHALL HOLD A PUBLIC Let's 08/30/17 Margot Heffernan premises known asMichael Minerva $10,000 Garage &must Yardinclude RIDDLE ROAD, Please contact the Pur- will meet at the Town of an Thru executed Non-ColluHEARING TUESDAY OC-Sale-ing TheClassifieds MINEVILLE, NY 12956. Bid Certificate TOBER 17, 2017 AT sive chasing Office at (518) Moriah Court House, Es1-518-585-9173 Ext. 115or All that certain plot piece 873-3330 for additional sex County, New York signed by the bidder 6:30 P.M. AT THE located at 42 Park Place, or parcel of land, with TICONDEROGA FIRE- one of its officers availinformation concerning the buildings and im- the bidding. Specifica- Port Henry, New York able from the Town HOUSE, 60 MONTCALM provements erected, sit- tions and standard pro- 12974, on the 12th day STREET, TICONDERO- Clerk. of October, 2017 at uate, lying and being in posals for the proposed Town of Moriah re- of Homes Oct. 5-8 GA, NY. THE BOARD OF 25thTheAnnual Parade the Town of Moriah, work may be obtained at 5:45pm for the purposes FIRE COMMISSIONERS serves the right to reject conducting Public County of Essex and the above address, or on of *Free any and all bids not con- New Homes from WILL BE ADOPTING Vehicle/BoataPickup on introducing THE BUDGET AT THIS sidered to be in the ANYWHERE : best ,Ii orolla to Manteo, NCState of New York, SEC- the Countys Website at: Hearing Local Law No. *We Accept All Vehicles MEETING. ALSO, THE interest of the Town, NOTICE OF FORMATION Tickets $10.TION 86.2, BLOCK 4, www.co.essex.ny.us.BeneJ;rin g proposed Not LOT 11. Approximate 2017orentitled A LoAll bids submitted in re- 4 ofRunning MONTHLY and to waive any techni- NOTICE TO BIDDERS DOMESTIC LIMITED LI- REGULAR Make-A-Wish® cal*Fully LawTaxtoDeductible Override the to this notice ABILITY COMPANY MEETING SCHEDULED cal or formal defect in NOTICE IS HEREBY GIV- amount of judgment sponse Tax Levy Limit Estabthe bids which is con- EN, that the Under- $229,837.87 plus inter- shall be marked (LLC). FOR OCTOBER 16, 2017 Northeast est and costs. Premises ~~lished in General Munici"SEALED BID New - PRE- York Name: Hoot Owl Lodge, AT 7:00 P.M. HAS BEEN sidered by the Town of signed, on behalf of the LLC. Articles of Organi- CHANGED TO: OCTOBER Moriah to be merely ir- Essex County Board of will be sold subject to SCHOOL TRANSPORTA- pal Law 3-c. To allow WheelsForWishes.org zation filed with NY Sec- 17, 2017 IMMEDIATELY regular, immaterial, or Supervisors, will accept provisions of filed Judg- TION" clearly on the out- the town to pass a tax Call: (518) 650-1110 for Index# that is greater than side of the envelope. All levy retary of State, Septem- FOLLOWING THE BUD- unsubstantial. sealed bids until October ment the tax levy limit calculaPLEASE TAKE FURTHER bids shall be submitted ber 13, 2017. Purpose: GET HEARING. ALL 13, 2017 at 2:00 P.M. 1015/09. 103510 103511 Reginald H. Bedell, Esq., on the bid sheets includ- tion for 2018. to engage in any lawful RESIDENTS OF THE NOTICE that the Town of for the following: affirmatively ONE (1) NEW & UN- Referee ed in the package, and PLEASE TAKE FURTHER act or activity. Office: in TICONDEROGA FIRE Moriah Gross Polowy, LLC NOTICE LEGALS that a said Pubin regard to DISTRICT ARE INVITED stated that no otherLEGALS forms shall be Essex County. USED MID SIZE SEDAN LEGALS LEGALSSecretary LEGALS LEGALS LEGALS LEGALS lic Hearing to be held at TO ATTEND. A COPY OF any contract entered into accepted. of State is agent for proSpecifications are avail- Attorney for Plaintiff Baker Street House, cess against LLC and THE TICONDEROGA pursuant to this notice, able by contacting the Dated: September 19, the time and place set 1775 Wehrle Drive, Suite LLC. Filed 6/1/17. Office: forth above, the Town without regard to race, Office of the Purchasing 2017 shall mail copy to P.O. FIRE DISTRICT BUDGET 100 Essex Co. SSNY desig- Box 50, Newcomb, New IS AVAILABLE AT THE color, sex, religion, age, Agent, Linda M. Wolf, Williamsville, NY 14221 Linda M. Wolf, CPA Board will consider this nated as agent for pro- York 12852. Local Law and hear all Purchasing Agent TOWN OF TICONDERO- national origin, disabili- Essex County Govern- TT-09/30-10/21/2017cess & shall mail to: Po ty, sexual preference or ment Center, 7551 Court 4TC-164473 TT-09/23-10/28/2017Essex County Govern- parties interested therein GA CLERKS OFFICE Box 800, Sparta, NJ concerning the same. ment Center 6TC-163568 DURING NORMAL BUSI- Vietnam Era veteran sta- Street, Elizabethtown, NOTICE OF FORMATION 07871. Purpose: Gener- IMPORTANT INFORMA- NESS HOURS. PLEASE TAKE FURTHER tus, disadvantaged and New York 12932, by OF LIMITED LIABILITY P.O. Box 217, 7551 al. NOTICE that a copy of minority or women calling 518-873-3332 or COMPANY (LLC) Court St. TION ABOUT YOUR LISA L.LAPANN TT-09/02-10/07/2017the full text of proposed TICONDEROGA FIRE owned business enter- on the Countys Website: SPECTRUM CHANNEL Name, PUTNAM LAND Elizabethtown, New York 6TC-161700 Local Law No. 4 of 2017 prises will be afforded https://www.co.esDISTRICT SECRETARY. LINEUP HOLDINGS, LLC. Arti- 12932 may be obtained upon (518) 873-3332 equal opportunity to sex.ny.us/bidders/pubCommunities Served: TT-09/30/2017-1TCcles of Organization filed CROWN POINT SELF request from the Town licbids.aspx. submit bids in response with the Secretary of TT-09/30/2017-1TCSTORAGE will sell at " Towns of: Ashland, 164380 Clerk of the Town of Mohereto. Sealed bids will be re- State Dorchester, MacDuff LLC. Filed (SSNY) on 164378 PRIVATE SALE" the con- Campton, ceived at the Office of 08/11/2017. Office Lo- SCHROON LAKE BOARD riah. Rose M. French tents of one 10x30 stor- Groton, Holderness, Lin- 7/11/17. Office: Essex the Purchasing Agent, cation: Essex County. OF FIRE COMMISSION- Dated: 9/19/17 Town Clerk age unit # 11/28 on Sat- coln, Plymouth, Rum- Co. SSNY designated as Essex County Govern- The SSNY is designated ERS WILL HOLD A PUB- Rose M. French, Town urday September ney, Thornton, Warren, agent for process & September 14, 2017 ment Center, 7551 Court as agent of the LLC LIC BUDGET HEARING Clerk TT-09/30/2017-1TCWaterville Valley, Went- shall mail to: 42 Twin 30,2017 at 8 Sharon Street, 164384 Elizabethtown, upon whom process worth, Woodstock, NH, Oak Rd, Short Hills, NJ OCTOBER 17, 2017 AT Town of Moriah Park Altona, Bangor, Bombay, 07078. Purpose: Gener- NOTICE 6:15 P.M. AT THE 38 Park Place, Suite 2 OF SALE New York 12932 until against it may be served. Crown Point, N.Y. Port Henry, NY 12974 SCHROON LAKE FIRE SUPREME COURT: ES- October 13, 2017 at SSNY shall mail a copy Commerce Park Self Brighton, Burke, Cham- al. 2:00 P.M. at which time Chateaugay, TT-09/02-10/07/2017STATION AT 28 INDUS- Telephone No. (518) SEX COUNTY FEDERAL of any process to the Storage will sell at "PRI- plain, bids will be publicly DRIVE, 546-3341 NATIONAL MORTGAGE principal business loca- TRIAL 6TC-161702 VATE SALE" the con- Chazy, Constable, Crown Point, Ellenburg, Fort NOTICE IS HEREBY GIV- ASSOCIATION; Plaintiff opened and read aloud. SCHROON LAKE, N.Y. TT-09/30/2017-1TCtion of LLC: 92 Vineyard tents of two storage All bids submitted in re- Road, Ticonderoga New ON THE PROPOSED 164383 units 1-5x10 #52 and 1- Covington, Franklin, Har- EN that the Under- (s) sponse to this notice rietstown, Malone, signed, on behalf of the vs. GISELLE GIGUERE York 12883. Purpose: 2018 BUDGET. 10x15 #43 on Saturday TOWN OF MORIAH SPEJared Whitley, Chairper- CIAL MEETING A/K/A GISELLE KANALY shall be marked SEALED All lawful activities. September 30,2017 at Moira, Mooers, Moriah, Town of Moriah, Essex BID MID SIZE SEDAN North Elba, Santa Clara, son AS HEIR AT LAW AND TT-08/26-09/30/201724 Commerce Drive County, New York, will The Town of Moriah clearly on the outside of 6TC-161250 Schroon, St. Armand, accept sealed bids Fuel NEXT OF KIN OF BOARD OF FIRE COM- Town Board has called a Ticonderoga N.Y. the envelope. All bids Ticonderoga, Tupper MISSIONERS WILLIAM J. KANALY TT-09/30/2017-1TCREQUEST FOR BIDS Oil, Diesel, Kerosene and Special Meeting for Lake, Waverly, Westville, Propane. All bids shall JR.; et al; Defendant(s) shall be submitted on NOTICE IS HEREBY GIV- TT-09/30/2017-1TC164469 Tuesday, October 3, the bid sheets included NY; Villages of: BrushAttorney (s) for Plaintiff EN, that the Under- 164386 be received at the Town 2017 at 6:00pm at the NOTICE OF FORMATION (s): ROSICKI, ROSICKI in the package, and no TOWN OF TICONDERO- Town of Moriah Town signed, on behalf of the OF LIMITED LIABILITY ton, Burke, Champlain, of Moriah Town Clerks other forms shall be acChateaugay, Lake Placid, Essex County Board of GA, NEW YORK Office, 38 Park Place, & ASSOCIATES, P.C., 2 Hall, 38 Park Place, Port COMPANY (LLC) cepted. Supervisors, will accept NOTICE OF PUBLIC Henry, NY for the Town Name: enjoythelife, Malone, Port Henry, Port Henry, New York, Summit Court, Suite Dated: September 25, sealed bids furnishing all HEARING 12974 by 4:00PM on 301, Fishkill, New York, Clerk to submit the TenLLC. Articles of Organi- Rouses Point, Saranac 2017 12524, 845.897.1600 vehicles, equipment, PLEASE TAKE NOTICE tative Budget to the zation filed with Secre- Lake, Tupper Lake, NY October 12, 2017 and Linda M. Wolf, CPA that a public hearing will Town Board and any personnel, and services tary of State of New Effective on or after Oc- will be opened and pub- Pursuant to judgment of Purchasing Agent foreclosure and sale necessary for the perfor- be held by the Town other business to come York (SSNY) on tober 30, 2017, Sports- licly read aloud at the granted herein on or Essex County Govern- mance, according to Board of the Town of before the board. 09/19/2017. Office loca- man Channel program- Regular Town Board specification, of a con- Ticonderoga on October TT-09/30/2017-1TCMeeting at 6:00PM Oc- about August 5, 2016, I ment Center tion: Essex County. ming will no longer be tract to be let by the Es- 12, 2017 at 6:00 p.m. at tober 12, 2017, at the will sell at Public Auc- 7551 Court Street 164382 SSNY has been desig- available on Spectrum TV on Sports Pass chan- Town of Moriah Court- tion to the highest bid- Elizabethtown, New York sex County Board of Su- the Offices of the Town nated as agent of the TOWN OF SCHROON 12932 nel 409. der at the lobby of the of Ticonderoga, 132 pervisors house, 42 Park Place, for the transLLC upon whom proFor a complete lineup, Essex County Court- (518) 873-3332 Montcalm Street, Ticon- BUDGET WORK SHOP portation of Preschool Port Henry, New York. cess against it may be TT-09/30/2017-1TCAll bids submitted in re- house. Special Education Chil- deroga, New York, for DATES; served. SSNY shall mail visit On October 18, 2017 at 164502 the purpose of consider- SEPTEMBER 28, 2017 dren sponse to this notice from various a copy of process to: spectrum.com/channels. To view this notice on- shall 10:00 am. NOTICE OF SALE School Districts to vari- ing a local law to over- (2-4 P.M.) (THURSDAY) be marked The LLC c/o PO Box visit SEALED BID Fuel Oil, Premises known as SUPREME COURT ous Center Based Pro- ride the tax levy limit es819, Saratoga Springs, line, tablished in General Mu- OCTOBER 5, 2017 (9 gram Facilities servicing Diesel, Kerosene and 3421 BLUE RIDGE RD, COUNTY OF ESSEX NY 12866. Purpose of spectrum.net/program11 A.M.) (THURSDAY) mingnotices. NORTH HUDSON, NY NATIONSTAR nicipal Law section 3-c. MORT- Essex County for the Propane clearly on the LLC: any lawful activity. TT-09/30/2017-1TC12855 GAGE LLC, Plaintiff 2017 - 2018 School By order of the Town outside of the envelope. TT-09/30-11/04/2017163968 Board of the Town of OCTOBER 12, 2017 (2-4 Year. The rack price MUST be Section: 113.20 Block: AGAINST 6TC-164471 1 Lot: 7.000 & 8.110 JLBorne LLC. Filed Sealed bids will be re- Ticonderoga, New York, P.M.) (THURSDAY) Mary Savage AKA Mary computed based on the FOREST DALE CEME- 7/12/17. Office: ESSEX Journal of Commerce THAT CERTAIN TRACT, Fanny Savage, AKA Mary ceived at the Office of dated September 21, OCTOBER 16, 2017 (4-6 TERY ASSOCIATION AN- Co. SSNY designated as (OPIS) of Albany, NY PIECE OR PARCEL OF Fanny Tremblay, et al., the Purchasing Agent, 2017. P.M.) (MONDAY) NUAL MEETING LAND, with the buildings agent for process & weekly rack average plus Defendant(s) 7551 Court Street, PO Tonya Thompson The Annual Meeting of shall mail to: Laurie and improvements Town Clerk Box 217, Elizabethtown, a fixed mark up; price Pursuant to a Judgment OCTOBER 24, 2017 (2-4 the Lot owners of the Bertrand, 25 Union St, must include delivery. thereon erected, situate, of Foreclosure and Sale New York 12932 until TT-09/30/2017-1TCP.M.) (TUESDAY) Forest Dale Cemetery Brandon, VT 05733. Prices will be valid for lying and being in Lot duly dated July 28, 2017 2:00 P.M. on September 164381 will be held @ 9:00A.M. 20, Tract West of Road Purpose: General. I, the undersigned Ref- 27, 2017. the period of October1, TOWN OF MORIAH on Wednesday, October TT-09/23-10/28/2017eree will sell at public The bids shall be opened 2017 through Septem- Patent in the Town of NOTICE OF PUBLIC OCTOBER 31, 2017 (2-4 18th at Crown Point Fire North Hudson, County 6TC-163708 auction at the Lobby of publicly and read aloud ber 30, 2018. Locations HEARING PROPOSED P.M.) (TUESDAY) IF NEEDED Department, Crown LOCAL LAW NO. 4 OF and size of tanks are on of Essex and State of the Essex County Court- on September 27, 2017 LEGAL NOTICE TT-09/30/2017-1TCPoint. New York. house, 2017 7559 Court at 2:00 P.M. at the Office file at the Town Clerks PURSUANT TO NEW 164385 At this Meeting, the Office and may be ob- As more particularly de- Street, Elizabethtown, of the Purchasing Agent, PLEASE TAKE NOTICE YORK STATE LAW, THE Board of Directors will TICONDEROGA NY, on November 01, Linda M. Wolf, 7551 that the Town Board of NOTICE OF FORMATION FIRE tained by calling 518- scribed in the judgment act on all business to COMMISSIONERS of foreclosure and sale. 2017 546-3341. at 10:00AM, Court Street, Elizabeth- the Town of Moriah, Es- DOMESTIC LIMITED LIcome before the Board, SHALL HOLD A PUBLIC All bidders must include Sold subject to all of the premises known as 101 town, New York 12932. sex County, New York ABILITY COMPANY adopt a 2017 Budget, re- HEARING TUESDAY OC- an executed Non-Collu- terms and conditions RIDDLE ROAD, Please contact the Pur- will meet at the Town of (LLC). port on overall mainte- TOBER 17, 2017 AT sive contained in said judg- MINEVILLE, NY 12956. chasing Office at (518) Moriah Court House, Es- Name: Trailhead Resort, Bid Certificate nance, and answer 6:30 P.M. All that certain plot piece 873-3330 for additional sex County, New York AT THE signed by the bidder or ment and terms of sale. LLC. Articles of Organiquestions pertaining to TICONDEROGA located at 42 Park Place, zation filed with NY Secinformation concerning FIRE- one of its officers avail- Approximate amount of or parcel of land, with the cemetery. judgment $83,925.70 the buildings and im- the bidding. Specifica- Port Henry, New York HOUSE, 60 MONTCALM able from the Town retary of State, SeptemOnly lot owners can vote plus interest and costs. provements erected, sit- tions and standard pro- 12974, on the 12th day STREET, TICONDERO- Clerk. ber 13, 2017. Purpose: but all interested parties of October, 2017 at to engage in any lawful GA, NY. THE BOARD OF The Town of Moriah re- INDEX NO. CV14-0220 uate, lying and being in posals for the proposed are invited to attend. Robert Maurice Kelly, the Town of Moriah, work may be obtained at 5:45pm for the purposes FIRE COMMISSIONERS serves the right to reject act or activity. Office: in TT-09/30-10/14/2017County of Essex and the above address, or on of conducting a Public WILL BE ADOPTING any and all bids not con- Esq., Referee Essex County. Secretary 3TC-164379 TT-09/16-10/07/2017State of New York, SEC- the Countys Website at: Hearing on introducing THE BUDGET AT THIS sidered to be in the best of State is agent for pro4TC-163157 proposed Local Law No. cess against LLC and TION 86.2, BLOCK 4, www.co.essex.ny.us. MEETING. ALSO, THE interest of the Town, NOTICE OF FORMATION LOT 11. Approximate All bids submitted in re- 4 of 2017 entitled A Lo- shall mail copy to P.O. DOMESTIC LIMITED LI- REGULAR MONTHLY and to waive any techni- NOTICE TO BIDDERS cal Law to Override the Box 50, Newcomb, New ABILITY COMPANY MEETING SCHEDULED cal or formal defect in NOTICE IS HEREBY GIV- amount of judgment sponse to this notice Tax Levy Limit Estab- York 12852. (LLC). the bids which is con- EN, that the Under- $229,837.87 plus inter- shall be marked FOR OCTOBER 16, 2017 est and costs. Premises "SEALED BID - PRE- lished in General Munici- TT-09/23-10/28/2017Name: Hoot Owl Lodge, AT 7:00 P.M. HAS BEEN sidered by the Town of signed, on behalf of the LLC. Articles of Organi- CHANGED TO: OCTOBER Moriah to be merely ir- Essex County Board of will be sold subject to SCHOOL TRANSPORTA- pal Law 3-c. To allow 6TC-163565 zation filed with NY Sec- 17, 2017 IMMEDIATELY regular, immaterial, or Supervisors, will accept provisions of filed Judg- TION" clearly on the out- the town to pass a tax retary of State, Septem- FOLLOWING THE BUD- unsubstantial. sealed bids until October ment side of the envelope. All levy that is greater than for Index# Fishing ForA GoodDeal? ber 13, 2017. Purpose: GET HEARING. ALL PLEASE TAKE FURTHER bids shall be submitted the tax levy limit calcula13, 2017 at 2:00 P.M. 1015/09. Catch TheGreatest to engage in any lawful on the bid sheets includ- tion for 2018. Reginald H. Bedell, Esq., RESIDENTS OF THE NOTICE that the Town of for the following: Bargains InThe act or activity. Office: in TICONDEROGA ed in the package, and PLEASE TAKE FURTHER affirmatively ONE (1) NEW & UN- Referee FIRE Moriah Classifieds Essex County. Secretary no other forms shall be NOTICE that a said PubUSED MID SIZE SEDAN Gross Polowy, LLC DISTRICT ARE INVITED stated that in regard to 1-518-585-9173 Ext.115 of State is agent for pro- TO ATTEND. A COPY OF any contract entered into accepted. lic Hearing to be held at Specifications are avail- Attorney for Plaintiff cess against LLC and THE TICONDEROGA pursuant to this notice, able by contacting the Dated: September 19, the time and place set 1775 Wehrle Drive, Suite shall mail copy to P.O. FIRE DISTRICT BUDGET without regard to race, Office of the Purchasing 2017 forth above, the Town 100 Box 50, Newcomb, New IS AVAILABLE AT THE color, sex, religion, age, Agent, Linda M. Wolf, Williamsville, NY 14221 Linda M. Wolf, CPA Board will consider this York 12852. TOWN OF TICONDERO- national origin, disabili- Essex County Govern- TT-09/30-10/21/2017Purchasing Agent Local Law and hear all

-

--

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The Times of Ti Sun | September 30, 2017 • 27

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28 • September 30, 2017 | The Times of Ti Sun

www.suncommunitynews.com

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Offers are separate, cannot be combined, and subject to change. Dealershipnot responsiblefor typographical errors. Photos for illustrative purpose. Offers expire 10/2/17. (1) Not availablewith special finance, lease or some other offers. Tax, tag, title, and DMV fees due at signing. Includes all available incentives, rebates and coupons, including owner loyalty/conquest where 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 lease through GM Financial.Tier 1 credit. Must have competitive lease in household. 10,000 miles per year, $0.25/mile for overage. Lessee pays for excess wear. See dealer for details. (3)Valid on select in-stock models including MY2017 Chevrolet Traverseand Colorado LT models. 0% APR for 72 months for qualified buyers. Monthly payment is $13.89 for every $1000 you finance. Exampledown payment: 18%. Must qualify and finance through GM Financial. Some customers will not qualify. See dealer for details. t For eligible current GM lessees. GMFwill waive up to four (4)paymentsup to $2,000on currentleasewhen customerleasesor purchasesa new vehiclefinancedby GMF.See dealerfor programdetails.*Pre-ownedprices are plus tax, tag, title and dealerfees.


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