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HOMES EVERY WEEK! Valley News Champlain Valley
Sept. 23, 2017
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• EDITION •
pg. 4
Meet the
CANDIDATES * * for the Democratic nomination for New York’s 21st Congressional District
Photo provided
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MARTZ STEPS OUT
WILSON IN COBB TOUTS IT TO WIN IT EXPERIENCE Keene native stresses local connection
Former lawmaker emphasizes experience
By Pete DeMola
By Pete DeMola
By Pete DeMola
EDITOR
EDITOR
EDITOR
PLATTSBURGH | Two days after the election that swept President Donald Trump into office, Emily Martz went on her morning jog in Saranac Lake. She had a fleeting thought as she passed by the home of someone who
AU SABLE FORKS | It’s nine months before the primary election. But Katie Wilson, a small business owner who is seeking the Democratic nomination for New York’s 21st Congressional District, is already making
POTSDAM | A group of college students, most of them from China, sat around a table and chanted in unison, following the lead of their teacher, who was brimming with enthusiasm:
Candidate touts job creation record
» Martz Cont. on pg. 15
» Wilson Cont. on pg. 11
Keene newcomers Rural school welcomes five exchange students By Keith Lobdell STA FF W RITER
KEENE VALLEY| Around a desk in the library, Joy McCabe works with five students as the day begins at Keene Central School. These five students have traveled thousands of miles to get to class, as they are taking part in the KCS foreign exchange student program, with two students coming from Spain and one each from Brazil, Japan and Vietnam. McCabe said the students, who are enrolled as juniors, are relating well to their new surroundings and peers, joining in with different organizations a making themselves part of the community.
HAIALEN OLABARRIETA
“I like to do new things and have new experience,” said Olabarrieta, who comes to Keene from Spain. “I want to be an English teacher when I am older, and this is a chance for me to learn and explore the language more.” She said her short time in Keene has been “fantastic.” “Everyone here knows each other and I feel so comfortable here,” Olabarrieta said. “The people here are so nice and welcoming.”
GABRIEL BELISARIO
I don’t care about expensive things » Cobb Cont. on pg. 7
“I thought it would be great to go abroad and get a new experience,” said Belisario, from Brazil. “I wanted to go away from home and try something that would help my self esteem and confidence.” Belisario has also enjoyed his experience in Keene. “It is a small school and people are so nice and friendly,” he said. “All of the students here want you to be part of the group and it has been such a good experience.” » Students Cont. on pg. 2
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» Students Cont. from pg. 1
RYO KOBAYASHI
For Kobayashi, the exchange program offered a chance for him to return to the United States from Japan. “I used to live in the United States in North Carolina,” he said. “I had a great time there so I wanted to come back. I wanted to have the chance to go away from home and grow my English language skills more.” Kobayashi said he has enjoyed playing soccer and being part of the team. “They have a nice field outside to play on,” he said. “It has been a good experience here.”
KIM DOAN
“The education here is better and I wanted to have the chance to experience more of the world,” Doan said. From Vietnam, Doan said she would like to pursue higher education in the United States and felt the exchange program would
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offer a good start. “It has been great here and this is such a nice school,” she said.
JACOBO OSTOS BOLLMANN
Coming to Keene from Spain, Bollmann wanted to have a chance to experience new things as part of the program. “I want to pursue my academic career and I saw this opportunity as something that will be really beneficial to my life.” Like the others, Bollman has also enjoyed the start of the school year in Keene. “The place is so beautiful and everyone is so calm and nice, he said. “You can see they have had experience in the program and with exchange students.” ■
RIGHT: Five new exchange students have come to Keene Central School for the 2016/17 school year: Haialen Olabarrieta, Gabriel Belisario, Ryo Kobayashi, Kim Doan and Jacobo Ostos Bollman. Photo by Keith Lobdell
Summer’s sweet end celebrated at Harvest Fest Busy market, demonstrations met with success at the fairgrounds By Kim Dedam STA FF W RITER
WESTPORT | Rows of farm market tents, trucks and stands made for busy commerce, conversation and good times at Essex County fairgrounds last Saturday. The second annual Adirondack Harvest Fest drew hundreds of fairgoers to its celebration of local farmers and producers. Sections for children with corn shelling pails and playthings were settled on one side by Lakeside School, and the farm tables made three rows around fields beside Floral Hall. Organizers Heidi Sweet and Nancy Page welcomed visitors to demonstrations in the famed gabled hall, handing
out free bottles of water to stave off heat on what was a near perfect summer day a week before the first day of fall. Both were thrilled with attendance. Many producers sold all produce and products brought in for the day. From cider-making demonstrations to seed collection, the pig roast barbecue to the craft beer tent, summer seemed well celebrated by Adirondack farmers and their communities this year. ■ LEFT: Aaron Woolf, owner of the Deer’s Head Inn and Adam Hainer of Juniper Hill Farm stop and chat as the farm market stalls bustle at the Adirondack Harvest Festival. Photo by Kim Dedam
OPPOSITE TOP LEFT: Dillon Klepetar, farmer at Echo Farm, talks about harvesting and storing seeds at harvest time. His was one of many farm demonstrations held in Floral Hall during the Adirondack Harvest Fest. Photo by Kim Dedam » Adk Harvest Fest Cont. on pg. 3
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The Valley News Sun | September 23, 2017 • 3
» Adk Harvest Fest Cont. from pg. 2
ABOVE: Gwen and Fiona Johnston help little Kyla Pierce, age 1, shell corn in the Lakeside School children’s play area. Photo by Kim Dedam
ABOVE: Otis Wekin, 11, pressed apples into fresh cider at the Adirondack Harvest Festival, having just competed with Westport in the summer soccer tournament that morning.
Photo by Kim Dedam
ABOVE: Essex Farm’s proprietor and farmer Mark Kimball celebrated the harvest and the closing hour of farm market business with a plate from Dubbs BBQ’s slow roasted pig, roasted roots and loaded corn. All barbecue items were locally grown or raised, the corn from Essex Farm and veggies from Fledging Crow. The pigs were raised at Sunnyvale Farm. Photo by Kim Dedam
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Starting Sept. 30th, if you live in Ausable, Keeseville, Peru, Morrisonville, Cadyville, Saranac or Plattsburgh (12901 & 12903); be sure to look inside The Sun every week for our weekly circular.
4 • September 23, 2017 | The Valley News Sun (CV)
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Lake Placid Brewfest to showcase growth of beer biz
PHOTO CONTEST
As you enjoy your favorite brew, organizers ask you tag your photos with #WFLPFallFests and #LPBrewFest. Favorite pics will be selected and featured as the “Fall Festival Photo of the Day” on whitefacelakeplacid.com.
Craft beer industry is surging in U.S. — including here in the Adirondacks By Pete DeMola EDITOR
LAKE PLACID | It’s go time for craft beer, and lovers of suds will have plenty to celebrate at the Lake Placid Brewfest. The event returns for its sixth year on Saturday, Sept. 23 at the Olympic Center’s 1932 Rink. Dozens of vendors will participate, both local craft breweries and those from as far away as Maine, including the York-based SoMe Brewing Company. “We love it,” said David Rowland, head brewer. “It gets better every year.” Rowland has an Adirondack connection: His father once lived in Jay, and Rowland was a frequent visitor to the Olympic Village. “Really for us, it’s a great excuse to go back home and see people and share our beer,” Rowland said. Rowland will be showcasing three SoMe beers he feels will be a good representation of their seven-barrel operation: Their flagship Whoopie Pie Stout (“We didn’t bring it one year, and people got mad,” Rowland quipped), Nubble Weiss — a German-style sour wheat beer — and Apostrophe IPA, a new creation that’s gaining traction with its big fruit flavor and citrus-forward aroma. “Our M.O. has always been ‘something for everyone,’” Rowland said.
About a dozen local brewers from the North Country’s tightly-knit beer scene will also participate, including Raquette River Brewing, whose Imperial Pumpkin Ale took the People’s Choice Award last year. While the Tupper Lake-based brewery is going for a repeat, they will do so with a different invention. “We’ve got a couple of other surprises,” said Joe Hockey, owner. Business is booming in the craft beer industry — the market volume share for craft brewers has more than doubled to 12.3 percent since 2011 — and the regional scene is no different. Despite their popularity, Raquette River Brewing participates in just one event per year. “Our growth has been so rapid, we just don’t have time,” Hockey said. The brewery is in the process of their third expansion in a little over three years, from a two, to four to a 10-barrel system that will go online this month, allowing them to produce 2,000 barrels of beer annually — more than doubling their production. Beer and outdoor activities go hand-inhand, Hockey said, and the Adirondacks is primed to capitalize on the popularity of both. “There’s a huge demand for it.” Nationwide, craft beer is a $23.5 billion industry. Craft brewing and spirit production is surging in New York — the state is now home to at least 320 breweries, according to the New York State Brewers Association — due to a series of legislative and economic incentives, including the creation of the Farm Brewery License, tax credits for brewers and modernization of the state’s Alco-
holic Beverage Control Law. Promotional funding and high-profi le press — including state-sponsored beer summits and contests attended by the governor himself — hasn’t hurt. Ausable Brewing Company is also undergoing an expansion that will allow the Keeseville-based operation to boost production and expand their hours. The brewery, which hosts a popular summertime event series, nearly ran out of beer in August. “We’re brewing three or four times a week to keep up, but it’s just not enough,” said Dylan Badger, co-owner. While Badger, who operates the brewery with his brother, Dan, is still zeroing in on what to bring to the brewfest, expect an Oktoberfest and something called a Wayne Legitzky, or a pale ale in honor of “how legit” the Canadian hockey legend is. “We always try to be unique in bringing something interesting,” Badger said. The biz is indeed growing, said the brewer. But the trend will start to slow down at some point. “We’re seeing it grow at incredible rates now, and that’s going to end,” Badger said. “A lot of smart brewers need to find a place in the industry now before things start to go the other way.” Smaller breweries with loyal local followings may be better positioned to ride
out the wave than mid-sized breweries, he said. Badger envisions a scenario where mid-sized operations — companies large enough to sell in a taproom but not enough for guaranteed retail shelf space — might be squeezed into increasingly competitive skirmishes with larger microbreweries to remain sustainable and hold onto their market share. Hockey said he’s unsure of the industry’s future, but it’s evident that the trend towards buying local isn’t subsiding anytime soon. “Every 10 days, there’s another brewery opening in New York State,” Hockey said. “Is there a bubble? I don’t see it bursting anytime soon.” Lake Placid Brewfest: Saturday, Sept. 23 from 4 to 8 p.m. at the Olympic Center’s 1932 Rink. A special VIP hour opens at 3 p.m. VIP and general admission tickets can be purchased in advance by visiting whiteface. com/events/lake-placid-brewfest: $75/$55/$45 (VIP/general admission/pre-sale). The cost is $10 for designated drivers. For a complete list of breweries, visit whiteface.com/events/lake-placid-brewfest. ■ Bottom’s up! The Lake Placid Brewfest returns for its sixth year on Saturday, Sept. 23 at the Olympic Center’s 1932 Rink. Photos provided via ORDA/Whiteface Lake Placid
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The Valley News Sun | September 23, 2017 • 5
One year after blaze, 1812 Homestead rising from ashes Funds being sought for restoration of historical site By Keith Lobdell STA FF W RITER
WILLSBORO | A pair of projects in the town of Willsboro are seeking to renovate and restore the history of the region. The 1812 Homestead continues to work on rebuilding the barn and home that were destroyed in a fire over a year ago on Aug. 27, 2016. The Homestead, originally settled as a family home and in around 1813, offers a living history tour of the 130-acre facility. “Right now, about 85 percent of the barn has been done,” said Jack Swan, overseer of the homestead and Camp Poko-
MacCready, who operates the property. “We need to finish up nine or ten rows of shingles on the barn and the doors have to be built,” Swan added. While the barn nears completion, Swan said he is still working on raising funds for the for the farmhouse. “You can’t have a farm without a farmhouse,” he said. “We have to raise about $65-70,000 for the house and we are looking for ways to do that in a logical fashion,” Swan said. Having originally hoped to have the whole site restored and ready to open in the spring of 2018, Swan said they now hope to have a celebration of the barn raising and restoration of the candle shop, which was destroyed by fire two years earlier but has since been rebuilt, in the spring, when they hopefully will have begun construction of the new farmhouse. The culprits behind the blaze remain at large. “The investigation remains ongoing as state police continue to conduct interviews and process physical evidence secured following the fire,” said Jennifer Fleishman, a state police spokesman. “The information developed thus far has confirmed an accelerant was used to further the fire, but no arrests have been made to date.”
ADSIT RENOVATIONS
Located on Willsboro Point Road, the Adsit cabin is one of the oldest in America, dating back to the 1790’s as the home of Samuel Adsit, a veteran of the Revolutionary War. Willsboro Supervisor Shaun Gillilland said the town had recently completed an architectural study of the cabin and what needed to be done and will now seek funding to make the needed renovations. “A lot needs to be done,” Gillilland said. “The drainage around the site needs to be worked out, some of the wood logs need to
LEFT: The town of Willsboro is seeking funds to help restore the Adsit Cabin on Willsboro Point Road, estimating $100,000 in needed repair work. Photo by Keith Lobdell ABOVE: Work continues on a new barn at the 1812 Homestead in Willsboro after it and the farmhouse were destroyed by a fire one year ago. The 1812 Homestead was destroyed by fire on Aug. 27, 2016 and the case remains under investigation. Photo by Pete DeMola
THE FUTUREOF CARECAMPAIGN
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be replaced, the cabin is separating away from the chimney, upstairs flooring needs to be fixed and the roof needs to be secured.” Gillilland estimated work will cost around $100,000. The cabin used to be staffed by docents during the summer months, showing tourists and history buffs the cabin as well as Adsit family artifacts and furnishings, with tours now offered through the heritage society ■.
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1Valid onowner-occupied 1--4-family residential properties to customers with marketable (asdetermined byLenderor Lender's Attorney) title to the propertythat is to securethe loan.ADDITIONAL "NOCLOSING COST"PRODUCT DISCLOSURE: "No closingcosts"means no:origination fee/points;application fee;floodcheckfee;creditreportfee;mortgage recording fee;abstractupdate,title searchfees; appraisal fee;bankattorneyfee;lendertitle insurance fee or mortgage tax.Formortgages with lessthan20%downpayment, Private MortgageInsurance (PMI)is requiredandborroweris responsible for PMIpremiums. Otherapplicable fees/charges, includingdeed stampsor deedtransfertaxes,are not mortgage closingcostsandwill not be paidby the Bank.If borrowerselectsan attorneyto represent him/her,borroweris responsible for attorney's fee.If borrowerelectsto obtainownertitle insurance, borroweris responsible for ownertitle insurance premium. TheBankwill not payfor a surveyor anyotherexpense not specifically listedherein.Property and hazardinsurance arerequiredandarethe responsibility of the borrower. Shouldthe NoClosingCostMortgage beclosedor discharged withinthreeyearsof theorigination, theBankwill collectthethird-party closingcostsfromtheborrower thatwerewaivedwhenthe loan wasopened. Single-wide mobilehomesarenoteligiblefor a NoClosingCostMortgage. Double-wide mobilehomesareeligiblefor the NoClosingCostMortgageonlyif permanently attachedto a foundation. 2\/alidon owner-occupied 1-4-familyresidential properties to customers with marketable (asdetermined byLender or Lender's Attorney) title to the property that is to securethe loan.Minimumloan requirement of $10,000. Rateshownis for a loanwith anLTV(Loan-to-Value) ratioof 80%or lessof currentappraised valueof property securingthe accommodation lessthe balanceof the borrower's first mortgage. Example: A $10,000loanat 3.99%APRrequires60 payments of $184.12 for principalandinterest.(Thispayment doesnotincludeamounts fortaxesandinsurance. Theactualpayment may begreater.I Single-wide mobilehomesarenoteligiblefor HomeEquityLoans.Double-wide mobilehomesareeligibleonlyif permanently attachedto a foundation. APRis accurate as of 9/1/17andis subjectto changewithoutnotice.Otherterms.ratesandloanamounts 3Validon owner-occupied 1-4-familyresidentialproperties to customers with are available.Not availablefor purchase transactions. marketable (asdetermined by Lenderor Lender's Attorney)title to the propertythat is to securethe loan.The0% introductory rateis availablefor all HomeEquityLineof Creditoptions.A minimum drawof $25,000is requiredat timeof closingto qualifyfor advertised offer.After3 monthsthe rateof interestwill beadjustedto the thencurrentWall StreetJournal(WSJ)PrimeLendingrate.Therate of interestis variable,andwill adjustin accordance with changes to the WSJPrimeLendingRate,with a maximum rateof interest of 14.50%.Single-wide mobilehomesarenot eligiblefor HomeEquityLinesof Credit.Double-wide mobilehomesareeligibleonlyif 4 fixed-ratetermwith $250,000 or lessin Community permanently attachedto a foundation.Rateof 4.75%is availableat a three-year Bank,N.A.loanrelationships. APRis accurate asof 9/1/17andissubjectto change withoutnotice.Newloansonly.Musthaveanactive Community Bankbusiness checking account. All loansandlinesaresubjectto creditapproval. 105415
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6 • September 23, 2017 | The Valley News Sun (CV)
Thoughts from Behind the Pressline
Solutions are never easy
I hope we can all agree that the many issues facing our country are not easily solved. By Dan Alexander While many grow • PUBLISHER • fatigued from the constant arguing back and forth, it’s clear that conversational debate far outweighs violence driven by pent-up frustration. We understand that violence is the course of last resort and sadly the cost of settling issues in that manner takes a terrible toll on all involved, even the most innocent. Writing a column each week and touching on subjects we all grapple with is an opportunity to initiate important dialogue. Being a lightning rod for conversation, criticism and praise at the end of each week’s work demonstrates the important role a community newspaper can have in its service to the community. A major part of being a strong community newspaper is to provide a forum for open commentary. One important benefit from the columns are the many exchanges that take place as a result of the topic. What’s most encouraging is when readers engage with letters to the editor, offering their points of view, as well the many back-channel conversations that take place through letters, emails, face to face conversations in parking lots, schools, grocery stores, church or even over a few cold ones. But the truly remarkable conversations take place when readers take up the debate with other readers unbeknownst to anyone associated with the paper. It’s through these conversations that we begin to chip away at the differences that divide us and we begin to understand the issues from a different perspective. Over time, it’s how we arrive at solutions, that today seem inconceivable, but down the road make it hard to understand what all the fuss was about. We know that the fiercest opponents one minute can become the greatest of allies in the next. Many of the major issues we’ve faced, evolved over time and while our conversations are but grains of sand in the hourglass of time, it’s how we go about processing the information and the emotions to arrive at solutions that put us on the road to recovery. Most of us don’t like confrontation but the reality is, more opinions are change as a result of open and honest dialogue. Living in this great land of freedom and respecting our constitutional rights to disagree, the one thing we must always remember is to participate in the process. ■
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Publisher .......................................................Daniel E. Alexander Associate Publisher........................................................Ed Coats Operations Manager ...........................................William Coats General Manager Central ..............Daniel E. Alexander Jr. Managing Editor ...................................................... Pete DeMola General Manager North............................Ashley Alexander General Manager South ............................Scarlette Merfled
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Opinion
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From the Editorial Board
State legislature should support mausoleum moratorium It’s been 18 months since over a hundred residents packed the Plattsburgh Town Hall expressing shock, astonishment and heartbreak over the situation at the Whispering Maples Memorial Gardens. The exact sequence of events leading to the abandonment of a pair of mausoleums remains unclear, including a suspicious fire that destroyed years of records years ago. But the end result is a pair of burial grounds whose deterioration has been heartbreaking. Designed and branded as luxurious resting places, the facilities in Plattsburgh and Ellenburg were instead built using cheap materials and left to moulder since their construction in the 1980s. The roof at the Ellenburg facility has disintegrated to the extent that snowfall has dusted internal crypts. In Plattsburgh, the back of the concrete structure has never been completed, leaving warped and weather-scarred plywood to be exposed to the elements. Windows adorning the columbarium are cracked, outdoor plots have been ignored and light bulbs have burned out, among other cosmetic issues — including unpleasant odors that have left survivors aghast. Interment at the facilities was not cheap, costing thousands of dollars. Like with traditional cemeteries, the proceeds of the crypt sales were supposed to be put in a perpet-
ual care fund designed to allow for eternal upkeep of the properties. But not only have those funds disappeared, a state report determined the nonprofit which owned the facilities failed to repay loans they were permitted to withdraw from the fund. The outstanding balance for the permanent maintenance fund was $212,399 as of 2015. What happened? No one is talking, including the former owners, who local officials have said are being probed by the state attorney general’s office for their possible role in this disastrous series of events. The state has committed $2 million for repairs slated to begin this fall, and the facilities will be handed over to the respective towns once completed next year. State officials have said the situation has presented a peculiar case with few precedents. What a final indignity to the hundreds of decreased and their survivors. Our heart breaks for them. This isn’t supposed to happen in the United States — not in Plattsburgh, not in Ellenburg, not anywhere. That’s why we support the legislation proposed by our state representatives designed to prevent something like this from ever happening again in New York. State Sen. Betty Little (R-Queensbury)
Letters
Newcomers to the North Country?
To the Editor: I must have missed the influx of Southern Rebels who moved to the Adirondacks, but there’s no mistaking the displays of “Stars & Bars” flying from porch roofs and pick-up trucks. What these newcomers don’t understand is how many Adirondack men suffered and died on Southern soil to save the Union. Nelson Goff from Lewis enlisted, was captured and sent to Richmond’s notorious Libby Prison. Three years later, he staggered home broken and unable to hold a job or support his family. Two of his sons, Jeremy and Chesley, died fighting the Rebels and are still buried in Southern soil. Edward McManus from Elizabethtown survived the horrors of starvation in two southern prisons before escaping from a cattle car carrying him and thousands of other Northern soldiers to the killing fields of Georgia’s Ander-
BRIEFS
LEWIS | A presentation on Medicare by the Essex County Office for the Aging will be given Oct. 6 in the Essex County Public Safety Building on Stowersville Road from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. RSVP is required by Oct. 2. For more information or to sign up, call 518-873-3695. ■
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Sun Community News welcomes letters to the editor, preferably on topics of local interest. Letters should not exceed 300 words, and must be signed and include a telephone number for verification. Letters must be sourced in an effort to ensure claims are factual. Please keep it civil. Letters containing insults and name-calling will be rejected. Candidate endorsement and thank you notices are not accepted unless run as paid advertising. All letters run as space permits. For thank you notices, contact shannonc@suncommunitynews.com
sonville Prison. Myron Arnold of Au Sable Forks was shot in the leg by Rebels and bled to death on a road near Richmond, Virginia. Lafayette Mason, a free black man from Elizabethtown, faced worse torture when he was taken prisoner by the Rebels. Adirondack men of all colors fought in the 118th “Adirondack Regiment.” New Yorkers fought to save America and were wounded and died at the hands of Southern Rebels who supported slavery and fought under the Confederate flag. Today’s Rebels don’t seem to know they lost the war 150 years ago. They should go South where KKK and Confederate loyalists support their defeated cause. The Stars and Bars might be welcome in Dixie, but in the North Country, our ancestors fought and died for the Union. These brave men wouldn’t tolerate the flying of Rebel symbols or enemy flags in their home towns. Margaret Bartley, Elizabethtown ■
Fundraiser to support NYSEF Nordic ski programs set
Medicare presentation slated
LAKE PLACID | The New York Ski Educational Foundation (NYSEF) will be holding its annual Golf Ball Roll on Oct. 8. This event is designed to help raise funds for junior ski jumping equipment and crosscountry skate skis for athletes. Raffle tickets are now on sale in NYSEF’s office and will be sold during the Lake Placid Brewfest, Oktoberfest and Flaming Leave Festival. To purchase tickets or for more informa-
Submit letters by email to feedback@suncommunitynews.com Letters can also be sent to our offices: 14 Hand Avenue: P.O. Box 338. Elizabethtown, NY 12932 Letters and guest commentaries do not reflect the editorial opinion of the newspaper and its owners. We’re always looking for guest columnists to offer extended commentaries. Contact pete@suncommunitynews.com to learn more. Endorsement letters for announced political candidates are not accepted and are considered paid endorsements. The paid endorsement notice can be purchased in three sizes — a quick 50 words or less for $15; a 51-175 word endorsement for $ 50 or a 176-300 word endorsement for $75.
has introduced a bill that would ban freestanding mausoleums as the only form of internment at burial grounds. Mausoleums like those in Plattsburgh and Ellenburg have proven to be successful for many cemeteries when they are part of a larger financial plan and presented as an additional option for cemeteries, according to the bill language. But when a cemetery is created solely for the purpose of hosting a standalone mausoleum, local governments and other entities are exposed to financial hardship if a facility is subsequently abandoned. The legislation remains in committee, and is accompanied by companion legislation sponsored by state Assemblyman Billy Jones (D-Chateaugay). While the construction of freestanding mausoleums may no longer be the lucrative industry it was once, trends in the funeral industry are always shifting. As the earliest Baby Boomers begin to shuffle off this mortal coil, we’ve already seen shifts in burial rituals and traditions. The industry needs tighter regulation, and we strongly encourage lawmakers across the state to support this legislation. Doing so is not just a way to shield localities from financial hardship, but is also a moral imperative. ■ — Sun Community News Editorial Board
tion, contact Danielle at 518-946-7001 or email daniellel@nysef.org. ■
Saranac Lake Winter Carnival seeking volunteers
SARANAC LAKE | Members of the Saranac Lake Winter Carnival Committee are seeking volunteers to help them plan and facilitate the 10-day festival set for Feb. 2 to 11. For more information, visit saranaclakewintercarnival.com. ■
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
» Briefs Cont. on pg. 7
or omissions or typographic errors. All reasonable care is taken to prevent such errors. We will gladly correct any errors if notification is received within 48 hours of any such error. We are not responsible for photos, which will only be returned if you enclose a self-addressed envelope. Subscription rates: Local Zone $29.00 annual subscription mailed to zip codes beginning in 128 or 129. Annual Standard Mail delivery $47 annual mailed outside the 128 or 129 Local Zone. First Class Mail Subscription (sent in sealed envelope) $50 for 3 months/$85 for 6 months/$150 for an annual. $47 Annual, First Class Mail (sent in sealed envelope) $50 for 3 months / $85 for 6 months / $150 for an annual. Address corrections: Send address changes in care of this paper to P.O. Box 338, Elizabethtown, New York 12932.
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» Cobb Cont. from pg. 1
TEDRA.COBB FOR
CONGRESS
Cashmere coats, diamond rings Don’t mean a thing All I care about is love Foreign students enunciating lines from the hit musical “Chicago” probably isn’t unheard of at English as a second language classrooms across the country. But most teachers probably are not running for Congress. Meet Tedra Cobb, who is seeking the Democratic nomination for New York’s 21st Congressional District. Since 2003, Cobb has worked as a strategic planning and organizational consultant. Cobb served on the St. Lawrence County Board of Legislators from 2002-2010, representing Canton, Potsdam and Madrid, making her the only candidate in the growing primary field to have held elected office as a legislator. (A primary opponent, Ronald Kim, served as Saratoga’s public safety commissioner from 2006-09.) “I’m running first and foremost because I believe that government should be working for the people,” Cobb said. “And if it’s not, then get out of the way.” Cobb cited “affordable and portable” healthcare as one of her chief concerns, and the catalyst for her to announce her candidacy in July. “That was the first domino,” she said. But healthcare has always been a focus. Cobb, 49, served as the executive director of the St. Lawrence County Health Initiative, an agency designed to link un- and
underinsured residents to health insurance plans, from 1999 to 2003, steering the group from its inception to an organization with eight full-time staff and an annual budget of over $500,000. It was that experience that prompted her to seek a county legislator seat. “No one understood the services and needs of the community, and that really prompted me to run,” she said. Cobb cited her votes for a project labor agreement, the creation of a bipartisan government review committee and the passage of a new countywide ethics policy as highlights of her eight-year tenure. The Fairport, New York native also led the Democratic strategy to overtake the legislature from Republican leadership, resulting in a Democratic majority in 2006. It is this leadership experience — including the art of compromise, negotiation and listening — that Cobb believes makes her the most qualified candidate to defeat Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-Willsboro) in the 2018 general election. “I had to vote my authentic self,” Cobb said, on the project labor agreement. “I had to vote for what I thought was the right thing and live by that vote.” Cobb criticized Stefanik for her vote to repeal Obama’s signature healthcare law, and for holding a town hall meeting only after the vote — not before as other federal lawmakers had done. “Not only was she accountable, but she was the whip,” Cobb said. “She needs her feet held to the fire on that.” Social media is a valuable tool for engagement, said Cobb. But it must be leveraged with other forms of communication with constituents, including the elderly, many of
» Briefs Cont. from pg. 6
Event for hurricane relief, recovery efforts slated
LEWIS | A michigan and silent auction night, sponsored by the Lewis Women’s Fellowship, is set for Sept. 29 from 4 to 6 p.m. at the 1st Congregational Church of Lewis Parish Hall. The menu consists of michigans, salad, beans, chips, cookies and brownies. Cost is $7. All proceeds will support the relief and recovery efforts for recent hurricanes. For more information, call 518-873-9831. ■
Paving begins on Route 73
KEENE | Motorists are advised to watch out for three single alternating lanes on Route 73 between Marcy Field
whom may lack online access. If elected, Cobb said she will hold a town hall in all 12 of the district’s counties each year. “That’s 12 town halls. That seems to me completely doable,” Cobb said. Cobb said the U.S. needs to better prioritize funding for veterans in particular. “Every single veteran should have health care for life,” she said. “It should be nonnegotiable — that’s a principle.” And for Cobb, that’s what governing is all about — principles and core values, not party politics, including the ideological schism that has emerged in the Democratic Party since Hillary Clinton’s defeat last year by Donald Trump, a Republican. “I think sometimes the problem with Democrats and with Republicans is that they get stuck with ideology, and I try very hard not to get stuck with ideology,” Cobb said. “It is about being authentic to who we are and how to communicate that. We get into these labels, and then we start to move into ideology and away from values. That’s when we get lost.” That’s precisely why Congress is gridlocked, Cobb said. The congressional district went overwhelmingly for Trump last year — the tough-talking New Yorker won all but one county (he lost Clinton County by less than one percentage point) — while Stefanik racked up a divisive 35 point victory over her Democratic opponent. “I trust that people in this district care about the values that I care about, and if I can communicate those with people, then people will be engaged,” Cobb said.
and Lower Cascade Lake controlled by flaggers as paving work begins by the New York State Department of Transportation. Paving is expected to continue through the end of September during weekday daylight hours, weather depending. For more information, visit 511ny.org. ■
Fundraiser slated for Au Sable Forks family
AU SABLE FORKS | A pot luck and live auction is set for Oct. 14 at the American Legion Post 504 in support of efforts by residents Fred and Wanda Drake to replace their home that burned down on Sept. 4. Festivities will begin at 3 p.m. with a pot luck-style meal. A live auction will follow at 6 p.m. “Cooler of Cheer” and 50/50 raffles will be held throughout the fundraiser. Tickets cost $10 for adults and
North Country SPCA
It’s finally here! We’d like to remind you about our upcoming 4th annual Mutt Strutt fun run/ walk at the Olympic By Kathy Wilcox Oval in Lake Placid • COLUMNIST • this Sunday, Sept. 24 at 10 a.m. Our tails are positively wagging with excitement! Join us for a refreshing walk around Mirror Lake in the company of other canines and their human companions for this fundraiser event, which jointly benefits the NCSCPA and the Tri-Lakes Human Society. Pre-registration is $20. Registration at the day of the event is $25 and includes a free t-shirt (while supplies last). Registration is available at the
oval from 9-10 a.m. before the start of the walk, or online in advance at ncspca.org/events or call 873-5000. This is a great opportunity to meet other members of our community who are passionate about our furry friends, and get some great exercise,too! We hope to see you there!
This week’s featured pet is Oberon
(CV)
— a Domestic Shorthair who is a really handsome fellow — and one of over 40 purr-fectly adoptable cats at our shelter currently seeking their forever homes. His sleek, midnight-colored coat will immediately catch your attention. Once you look, you’ll be mesmerized by his deep golden eyes. We believe this handsome fellow is about two years old; he’s outgrown the kittenish desire to climb your curtains (or your leg) but he still has plenty of playfulness in his personality. Oberon gets along well with everyone he has met and we feel he would be a terrific addition to almost any home. If you are looking to add a little feline love to your family, why not stop by and meet this charming guy today? We’re sure you’ll be enchanted! ■
The Valley News Sun | September 23, 2017 • 7
The field for the Democratic nomination is deep, and Cobb must emergence victorious from the pack of the five other candidates who have announced campaigns, including Patrick Nelson (Stillwater, Saratoga County), Emily Martz (Saranac Lake), Ronald Kim (Queensbury, Warren County), Dan Boyajian (Cambridge, Washington County) and Katie Wilson (Keene, Essex County). Cobb, who is married and has two college-age children, said she looks forward to hitting the road in the expansive district to meet with voters. She’ll host an event at the American Legion Post 20 Plattsburgh on Saturday, Sept. 23. In the meantime, she’ll continue to focus on consulting work and teaching her group of students in the community room at the Potsdam Public Library. Mondays are singing classes, a highlight. One of Cobb’s students this summer was a young man from Jordan. He taught her a phrase: Inshallah, which means “God willing.” “I will win the Democratic primary,” Cobb said. “Inshallah.” ■ ABOVE: Tedra Cobb, a former St. Lawrence County legislator and economic development consultant, is seeking the Democratic nomination for New York’s 21st Congressional District. Photo by Pete DeMola
LEFT: Cobb teaches English as a second language as a hobby. She’s pictured here with students at the Potsdam Public Library on July 28. Photo by Pete DeMola
$5 for children. Take out will be available. For more information, call Auction Coordinator Jordan Hart at 518-5349702 or Food Coordinator Melissa Walton 518-593-7545. ■
full-time
news clerk / designer Nationally award winning Sun Community News is seeking a full-time news clerk and paginator to join our team. Applicants must have strong editing, writing, analytical and communication skills, as well as a good working knowledge of Apple computer operating systems. Preferred candidates must also work under deadline pressure. A working knowledge of digital photography and social media is also required. In addition to helping the news team create and edit copy — including breaking news and crime coverage — chosen applicants will use copy, photographs, charts and supplied material to lay out copy and headlines as needed to construct pages that attract reader attention and assist in newsroom projects. Generous wage, paid time off, and life insurance offered. This is an opportunity to work for a 69-year-old independently owned company with an excellent business and financial reputation, that is growing and looking to enhance our reporting & design team. We are locally owned and locally committed to the continued development of our organization and the communication needs of the communities we serve. No corporate edicts, no staff furloughs, nor are decisions made from outside our local management team. We do community reporting the way it was meant to be done. Send resume to: Pete DeMola, Managing Editor, Sun Community News,
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TH E L A RG E S T SO U RC E O F CO M M U N IT Y E V E NTS I N TH E N O RTH CO U NTRY.
Calendar of Events SEP. 23
Lake Placid » Lake Placid
Brewfest held at 1932 Rink in the Olympic Center; 3:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. Lake Placid’s 6th Annual Brewfest comes to town to give you a truly unique experience. You’ll get to sample beers from across the country and talk to beer experts right in the historic 1932 Rink of the Lake Placid Olympic Center. To find tickets for this event: whiteface. com/events/lake-placid-brewfest. Keene Valley » Dinner in the Field held at Craigardan; 4:00 p.m. 9:00 p.m. First annual fall harvest benefit event celebrating the farm, the food, and the plate! There are two options for attending - come for drinks, appetizers and art - or attend the entire evening including dinner by Farmstead Catering, a gallery opening, film debut, and silent auction. All guests take home handmade pottery by artist Catherine Seidenberg.
SEP. 23RD
event. We begin with a short welcoming ceremony and guided shamanic drum journey, then open up for all to drum and chant. Bring your bright spirit, a drum or other percussion if you have one (we’ll have extras to share). No talent or skill is necessary. Plattsburgh » Champlain Valley Chorus presents Broadway Revue held at Stafford Middle School; 5:00 p.m. Champlain Valley Chorus’ fall show: Broadway…with a Twist. The “twist” is a barbershop approach to some great music from Broadway shows. Tickets for the concert are: $10 general admission, $8 students/seniors, with under 5 free. Details: champlainvalleychorus.org or by contacting Diane at 518-5696188. Morrisonville » Child Safety Seat Inspection held at Morrisonville Ambulance Station; 10:00 a.m. 1:30 p.m. This event is open to the public. Parents and legal guardians are invited to have their child’s car safety seat inspected to determine if the seat is appropriate for the child and correctly installed. The public is also invited to bring in any child car seats that are outdated, damaged or no longer of any use for recycling. Questions: Traffic Safety Specialist William Bush 518565-4397 or Sgt. Aaron Lefebvre 518-565-4779.
SEP. 23 - SEP. 24
Peru » 7th Annual Kids Fair &
Festival held at Babbie Rural & Farm Learning Museum; 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Old time games, stage coach and Thomas the Train rides, visit the animals, climb the hay mound visit the master gardener, shell some corn, gather some “eggs” milk the “cow”, raise a bale of hay. Border
Collie/Sheep herding demos & Blacksmith demos. Frosty the Cow will be here serving hot dogs, michigans, chips, drinks and ice cream. Enjoy lunch in our picnic area. Visit: babbiemuseum.org/
SEP. 24
Chazy » Frankie’s Crock Pot Cook Off held at Chazy Sacred Heart Church Hall; 4:00 p.m. - 5:30 p.m. $20 to compete - includes event apron. Cooks please pre-register. Forms available at Chazy Central Rural School main office. Questions: call/text Irene at 518-569-3569. Lake Placid » 4th Annual Mutt Strutt held at Lake Placid Oval; 9:00 a.m. 5k Fun Run/Walk to jointly benefit the NCSPCA and Tri-Lakes Humane Society. $20 registration fee includes T-shirt $25 for the day. Visit: ncspca.org/events or call 518873-5000. Upper Jay » Porter Nickerson Duo held at Recovery Lounge; 7:30 p.m. Special rare appearance in the North Country. Porter Nickerson are a duo that embody the best of what live music has to offer. $15.
SEP. 25
Lake Placid » Book Discussion
of Inventing Ethan Allen and a specialist in Vermont history. He’ll be discussing how a man who never held a commission in the Continental Army, had only one military victory in the Revolutionary War, and tried to return Vermont to the British Empire became a Vermont and American icon. Admission is $5.00, students are free. Details: www.thegrangehall. info.
SEP. 27
Saranac Lake » Little Red and
Trudeau Statue Tour held at Trudeau Institute; 10:30 a.m. Tour of one of Saranac Lake’s first cure cottages and to visit the statue of Dr. Trudeau. Meet at the sign by “Little Red,” the small red cottage on the hill. Rain or shine. $5/person, children and members of Historic Saranac Lake free.
29 SEP.
F R I DAY
COLE NAKOA & TREACHER held at
Whallonsburg Grange Hall, Essex.
held at Lake Placid Library; 7:00 p.m. All are welcome to attend the book club meeting. We will be doing a reading of Marriage of Opposites by Alice Hoffman. The group usually meets on the last Monday of each month. Details: Barbara Erickson at 518-523-8029.
Friday: 7:30 pm
SEP. 26
Essex » Fall Lyceum series, “What’s the Big Idea?” Part One held at The Whallonsburg Grange Hall; 7:30 p.m. The first lecture, “Making It Up in Vermont: Ethan Allen,” will be presented by Nick Muller, author
Bulletin Board
A Brooklyn-based trio with a powerful sound that unites folk, roots, rock & Jazz. Musicians Brad Cole, Matt Nakoa, and Robinson Treacher join forces to weave their distinct styles into a soulful performance. Tickets $12 / $5 under 18. Details: thegrangehall.info or 518-963-7777
100415
Adirondack Fungi Fest held at Paul Smith’s College VIC
Chazy » Alice T. Miners 154th Birthday Celebration held at Alice T. Miner Museum; 1:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m. Children of all ages are invited to help celebrate Alice’s 154th birthday! Play croquet and other games that were popular during Alice’s childhood in the 1860s, make a craft to take home, and enjoy some birthday cake! Paul Smith’s » Adirondack Fungi Fest held at Paul Smith’s College VIC; 9:00 a.m. - 5:00p.m. There will be several presentations, displays, mushroom forays, a juried art show and more. Admission is $5 and free for the Paul Smith’s College community and Friends of the VIC. Details and registration: paulsmiths.edu/fungifest. Peru » Halloween Pumpkin Painting and Cookie Decorating held at Rulfs Orchard; Join us for one of our 1hr cookie and pumpkin decorating sessions. Tickets are $12.95. Seats are VERY limited, just 15 per per session. sessio Choose your 1 just 15 hour - 11am or 11am hour session: session: 10am 1( -12pm. Tick1 are available in - 12pm. Tickets store store or or by t calling Amanda on on 518-643-8636. 518Parents can help their Parer chili with the cookies child an, pumpkins and without purchasing w their own tickets tr OR C can decorate their own if they u purchase a ticket p also! a Keene Valley » K Community Journey Cc and and Drum Circle held at at True Tru North Yoga; 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.1 Donations are but not are appreciated apprE necessary. is an all-ages necessary. This l
Contact Kasey Rosselli at (518) 873-6368 ext. 104 or email kasey@suncommunitynews.com to list your event.
Contact Shannon Christian at (518) 873-6368 ext. 201 or email shannonc@ suncommunitynews.com to place a listing.
REACH EVERY HOUSEHOLD IN YOUR COMMUNITY LOOKING FOR YOUR ACTIVITIES & SERVICES
BINGO
COMMUNITY OUTREACH
COMMUNITY OUTREACH
COMMUNITY OUTREACH
PUBLIC MEETINGS
PUBLIC MEETINGS
PERU - K of C or Knights of Columbus Bingo, Tuesdays @ 7:10 p.m. St. Augustines Parish Center, 3030 Main St. All welcome!
ELIZABETHTOWN – Essec County 2017 WIC Schedule at the Public Health Building January 5, Feb 2 , March 2, April 6, May 4, June 8, July 6, August 3, September 7, October 5, November 2, December 7 8:00 – 3:45pm.
LAKE PLACID – Essex County 2017 WIC Clinic Schedule at the Thomas Shipman Youth Center January 3, Feb 7, March 7, April 4, May 2, June 6, July 5, August 1, September 5, October 3, November 7, December 5 9:30-2:30pm.
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.
PLATTSBURGH – Al-Anon Adult Children Meeting every Monday at 7pm-8pm, United Methodist Church, 127 Beekmantown Street, Plattsbugh. For more information call 1-888-425-2666 or 518-5610838.
January 18, Feb 15, March 15, April 19 , May 17, June 21, July 19, August 16, September 20, October 18, November 15, December 20 10:00-5:30pm Call us to schedule an appointment or find out more information at 518-873-3560 or 518- 569-3296
January 24, Feb 28, March 28, April 25, May 23, June 27, July 25, August 22, September 26, October 24, November 28 December 19 1:30- 6pm. Call us to schedule an appointment or find out more information at 518-873-3560 or 518- 569-3296
DINNERS & SUCH
KEESEVILLE – Essex County WIC 2017 schedule at the United Methodist Church January 26, Feb 23, March 23, April 27, May 25, June 29, July 27, August 24, September 28, October 26, November 30, December 28 9:30- 2:45pm. Call us to schedule an appointment or find out more information at 518-873-3560 or 518- 569-3296
PLATTSBURGH - The Unitarian Universalist Fellowship Tuesdays, 7 p.m., Search for Meaning Discussion Group. An evening of personal growth and a chance to join others in the search for truth and meaning. This fall, the group read and explore A New Earth: Awakening to your Life's Purpose by Eckhart Tolle, author of The Power of Now. All are open to the public, free and at 4 Palmer St., unless otherwise noted.
CHAZY – Al-Anon Family Group meeting every Friday 7:30pm8:30pm, Sacred Heart Church 8 Hall Street, Chazy. For more information call 1-888-425-2666 or 518-561-0838 ELIZABETHTOWN – Al-Anon Family Group meetins every Sunday 4:00pm-5pm, Board Room in Elizabethtown Community Hospital 75 Park St., Elizabethtown. For more info call 1-888-425-2666 or 518561-0838 ESSEX – Essex Initiatives Board of Directors will host their Annual Community meeting on Thursday, September 28, 2017 from 6:308pm at Whallonsburg Grange Hall on NYS Rt. 22 south of Essex, NY. Everyone is invited. Please RSVP: essexinitiatives@gmail.com or (518) 293-2380. (regular monthly meeting following the Community Meeting, open to the public)
PORT HENRY Port Henry Knights of Columbus, bingo, 7 p.m. Every Monday TICONDEROGA - Bingo, Ticonderoga fire house, 6:45 p.m. Doors 5 p.m. Every Thursday. BOOKS ELIZABETHTOWN - The Elizabethtown Library on River Street is open M/W/F 10-5 and Sat 10-2. FREE Public WiFi and Computer Use. Copying and Faxing at a minimal fee. FREE Library Card to Checkout Books, Magazines and Movies. Bring the Family and EXPLORE YOUR LIBRARY! COMMUNITY OUTREACH AUSABLE FORKS – Essex County 2017 WIC shedule at the Amblulance Building January 4, Feb 1 , March 1, April 5, May 3, June 7, August 2, September 6, October 4, November 1, December 6, 9:30-2:30pm Call us to schedule an appointment or find out more information at 518-873-3560 or 518- 569-3296
PERU - St. Augustines Soup Kitchen, Free Delicious Meal Every Wednesday, 3030 Main St., 4:30 to 5:30 p.m.
BUY-SELL-TRADE WithTheClassifieds 1-518-873-6368 Ext.201
SARANAC LAKE – Grief Support Group First Tuesday of Each Month Saranac Lake, St. Luke's Church in the Baldwin House 12:30-1:30pm. For more information. Marie Marvull 518-743-1672 MMarvullo@hphpc.org
ROUSES POINT – Town of Champlain Republican Committee Spaghetti Super Fund Raiser, Frith day September 29 , 5pm – 8pm, American Legion Post 912, 29 Pratt Street, Rouses Point, NY 12979. Also a Silent Auction 5050 Lotto Tree. Cost $8 Children under 5 Free. Takes out Available. For more info call 518-297-2600. PUBLIC MEETINGS AU SABLE FORKS - Please take note that the regular monthly meetings of the Au Sable Forks Fire District for the year 2017, will be held on the second Tuesday of each month at 6:30 PM at the Au Sable Forks Fire Station located at 29 School Lane, Au Sable Forks, N. Y. 12912. The meetings are open to the public. CADYVILLE – Al-Anon Family Group Meeting every Sunday 7pm8pm, Wesleyan Church, 2083 Rt. 3, Cadyville, NY. For more information call 1-888-425-2666 or 518-561-0838.
LAKE PLACID – Al-Anon Family Group meeting every Monday 8pm-9pm, St. Agnes Church Basement 169 Hillcrest Avenue, Lake Placid. For more info call 1-888425-2666 or 518-561-0838 PLATTSBURGH - Celebrate Recovery Meeting every Monday, 6:00 pm, Turnpike Wesleyan Church, 2224 Military Tpke., Plattsburgh. Open to the public. N0o charge or commitment required. For more information call 518-566-8764.
PLATTSBURGH – Al-Anon Family Group Meeting every Thursday at United Methodist Church, 127 Beekman Street, Plattsburgh 7:30pm-8:30pm. For more information call 1-888-425-2666 or 518-561-0838. PLATTSBURGH – ALATEEN Meeting every Thursday at United Methodist Church, 127 Beekman Street, Plattsburgh 7:30pm8:30pm. For more information call 1-888-425-2666 or 518-561-0838. PLATTSBURGH – Caregiver Support Group open to anyone providing unpaid care to an aging family member or friend, Wednesday, September 27th 6:30pm – 7:30pm, At St. Peter's Church in Plattsburgh, NY (upper room). For more info call Nicole Durgan 518-3243881. SARANAC LAKE - Al-Anon Family Group meeting every Wednesday 7pm-8pm, Baldwin House 94 Church Street, Saranac Lake. For more information call 1-888-4252666 or 518-561-0838
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The Valley News Sun | September 23, 2017 • 9
Eye on the Arts
Arts & Entertainment
The Adirondack Lakes Center for the Arts in Blue Mountain Lake will screen “Blissville... An Investigation,” a film that works to chronicle a remote corner of Queens, on Sept. 29 at 7 p.m. For more By Elizabeth Izzo information, visit adirondackarts.org. • COLUMNIST • Ahead of Plattsburgh’s second annual pride parade on Sept. 30, a screening of “Pride” is slated for Sept. 29 at 7 p.m. in Yokum 200 on campus at SUNY Plattsburgh. “Pride,” a movie that chronicles the work of gay activists in the United Kingdom to help miners during a lengthy strike in the summer of 1984, is rated R. For more information, contact 518-564-5212. The Whallonsburg Grange will kickstart its six-part lecture series, “What’s the Big Idea,” on Sept. 26. Author Nick Muller is this season’s first presenter with a presentation about the life of Ethan Allen at 7:30 p.m. Admission is $5, free for students. For more information, visit thegrangehall.info. Plattsburgh’s Stafford Middle School will see a performance from the Champlain Valley Chorus on Sept. 23. The show, “Broadway... with a Twist,” features a barbershop tribute to music from some of Broadway’s most popular shows. The Champlain Valley Chorus of the Sweet Adelines will open the show at 5 p.m. Tickets are $10 per person, $8 for students and seniors. For more information, visit champlainvalleychorus.org. Simple Gifts will perform at North Creek’s Tannery Pond Center on Sept. 23 at 7:30 p.m. Simple Gifts is known for
Obituaries
Ralph Gordon Warren WESTPORT | Ralph Gordon Warren of Westport, beloved husband, brother, father and grandfather passed away at his home on Friday, Sept. 8, 2017. Ralph was born on July 28, 1947 to Ralph and Mary Warren in Manchester, Connecticut. A graduate of the Culinary Institute of America,
playing traditional folksongs, Irish jigs, Balkan dance music and more. Tickets are $15 per person. For more information, visit tannerypondcenter.org or call 518-251-2505. On Sept. 30, the Not Too Far From Home comedy tour will land at the Adirondack Lakes Center for the Arts in Blue Mountain Lake. Comedian Aaron David Ward and friends will take the stage at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $15 in advance, $20 at the door. For more information, visit adirondackarts.org.
EXHIBITIONS
A new exhibit featuring the work of area artists, “Viewpoint,” will open at the NCA Gallery at Shirt Factory in Glens Falls on Sept. 29. An opening reception is slated for 5-7 p.m. For more information, visit northcountryarts.org. Saranac Lake’s Adirondack Artists Guild will display an exhibit of oil paintings by artist Sandra Hildreth through Oct. 1. For more information, visit adirondackartistsguild.com. The Strand Center for the Arts in Plattsburgh opened a new exhibit featuring the works of oil painter Susan Hoffer on Sept. 1. Hoffer’s exhibit at the Strand will run through Sept. 29. Normal gallery hours are Tuesday through Friday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. For more information, visit strandcenter.org.
hood. For more information on the exhibit, titled “Colors Everywhere,” contact 518-564-0064. Soovin Kim and Gloria Chien will perform at the Saranac United Methodist Church on Oct. 8 at 3 p.m. This duo, renown locally for their skill and engaging live performances, will perform works by Charles Ives, Richard Strauss and Robert Schumann. Tickets are $15 per person, $12 for students and seniors. For more information, contact 518-293-7613. On Oct. 6, the NorthWind Fine Arts Gallery in Saranac Lake will open a new exhibit featuring the works of Anne Hughes. For more information about Hughes and the gallery’s upcoming displays, visit northwindfineartsgallery.com. ■
MARK YOUR CALENDAR
The Champlain Wine Company in downtown Plattsburgh will open a new exhibit featuring the works of local author and artist Amy Guglielmo on Oct. 6. The opening reception, which will double as a book signing, is slated for 5-8 p.m. Guglielmo’s work is colorful, lively — reminiscent of the innocence and wonder of child-
The Champlain Wine Company will open a new exhibit featuring the works of author and artist Amy Guglielmo on Oct. 6. Photo by Elizabeth Izzo
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Ralph dedicated his working life to the foodservice industry as a cook, chef, hotelier and proprietor of the College Inn in South Hadley, Massachusetts and the Westport Hotel in Westport. Ralph is survived by his wife, Rita Warren of Westport; his son Ross Warren and wife Patricia of Centreville, Virginia, with grandchildren Emily, Erin, Spencer and Maxwell; his son Ryon Warren and wife Jennifer Byrne of San Diego,
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California; his daughter Riesa Warren of Port Henry and his brother Bruce Warren and wife Margaret Cassidy of Eau Claire, Wisconsin. Donations in Ralph’s memory can be made to the Upstate New York / Vermont chapter of the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society at donate.lls.org or 1 Marcus Blvd., Suite 104, Albany, NY 12205. ■
10 • September 23, 2017 | The Valley News Sun (CV)
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» Wilson Cont. from pg. 1 the rounds and meeting with voters. Wilson, 33, sketched out the early outlines of her campaign platform last week to Adirondack Indivisible, the local chapter of the nationwide progressive activist group that mobilized last winter to resist Republican policies following President Donald Trump’s inauguration. Numerous grassroots groups have sprouted since Trump’s come-from-behind victory, and Wilson has been active in many of them — including traveling to North Dakota to participate in the protests against the Dakota Access Pipeline. “I have a renewed faith of participation in government, and I think my candidacy is a product of that,” Wilson said. Since declaring her campaign to unseat Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-Willsboro) in June, Wilson has staked her candidacy on her ability to empathize with working class voters in the rural, remote district. After all, she’s cut from the same cloth. A Keene native, Wilson traced her roots back to the 1930s when her grandparents cashed in a coin collection to purchase a farm on what was known as “The Mountain Road.” Everyone thought they were crazy. But the family persevered. “We were land rich but cash poor,” Wilson said. Wilson’s parents divorced when she was young, and she moved to Elizabethtown with her mother. After graduating from the National Sports Academy in Lake Placid, Wilson attended the University of Vermont and Sierra Nevada College on Lake Tahoe. She moved back to Keene in 2009, where she is raising her two children, ages 9 and 8. Wilson currently owns and operates the Adirondack Attic, a consignment shop. Business can be tough, she said, and she knows what it’s like to live from paycheck to paycheck. Congress contains just one member who is a single mother, Wilson said.
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But, she said, “I’m not here to talk about glass ceilings — I’m here to talk about sturdy floors.” The first-time candidate sketched out an early campaign platform to the crowd of about two dozen attendees, mostly retirees, including better health care for veterans, more local control for schools, additional resources to combat the opiate epidemic, tax relief for small businesses and a Medicare buy-in option on the Affordable Care Act exchange, an option Wilson says will serve as a bridge to universal healthcare. As Democrats at the national level are torn between how to rebuild and rebrand their party, Wilson said she is not interested in revisiting the reasons that ultimately saw Trump defeat Hillary Clinton, but would rather speak to the real issues on the ground. The candidate was unsparing in her criticism of Stefanik, who voted in favor of repealing President Barack Obama’s signature health care law in May. The replacement bill would have jeopardized Medicaid funding for nursing homes, a measure that would have left “thousands of seniors” homeless, Wilson said — including people like her father, Olympic biathlete Joe Pete Wilson, who resides in a local nursing facility. “These are real lives on the line,” she said. Stefanik “doesn’t care about the North Country the way you and I do,” Wilson said. The candidate also criticized Stefanik’s environmental record, including the lawmaker’s 2015 vote to reject Environmental Protection Agency limits for coal-fired power plants. “She voted for acid rain,” Wilson said. “You don’t come back from that.” Stefanik bucked her party in July and was one of only two New York GOP lawmakers to vote against the Ozone Standards Implementation Act of 2017, which would have delayed implementation in further reductions for smog-causing power plants. She is a member of the bipartisan Climate Solutions Caucus and the co-chair of the House Invasive Species Caucus. Stefanik also received the “Supporter of
(CV)
Nature” Award from the Nature Conservancy, and just last week, crossed party lines to vote against an amendment that would block the EPA’s methane rule. Wilson doesn’t think the pivot to a more moderate stance on green issues is sincere: “It’s her just trying to keep her seat,” Wilson said. Wilson also criticized Stefanik for her support of the 2018 House appropriations bill, which would reduce funding for family planning and reproductive health services, and accused the lawmaker of capitulating to corporate donors — including the insurance and healthcare industries. Lenny Alcivar, a Stefanik campaign spokesman, said: “Our district doesn’t need more partisan, political rhetoric. Republicans, Democrats and Independents know that Elise is not only recognized as one of the most bipartisan members of the U.S. House of Representatives, she is ranked among the most bipartisan leaders in Washington.” Stefanik wrote the largest fix to the ACA last Congress: the repeal of the auto-enrollment mandate, which was signed into law by President Obama, Alcivar said. And last week, Stefanik introduced bipartisan legislation to protect funding for community health centers in the district. But before Wilson can go head-to-head with the sophomore lawmaker, who racked up the largest point spread out of any Republican congressmember in the state in her successful reelection bid last year, Wilson must dispatch a growing Democratic primary field. Six candidates have declared so far — Patrick Nelson (Stillwater, Saratoga County), Emily Martz (Saranac Lake), Ronald Kim (Queensbury, Warren County), Dan Boyajian (Cambridge, Washington County) and Tedra Cobb (Hermon, St. Lawrence County)— and it’s largely expected the field will continue to swell. “I’m not in this game to win a primary,” Wilson said. “I’m in this game to win a general.” Key in that is short-circuiting a primary, which she estimates could cost as much $500,000.
The Valley News Sun | September 23, 2017 • 11
“With so many candidates in the field, it’s been really hard, and we’ve had to tweak our approach a bit,” Wilson said. The candidate already appears to have a sleek campaign operation replete with a finance director and public relations team, which has been issuing press releases, as well as a glossy online campaign video last week. As the field continues to shape up, Wilson wants to avoid getting stuck in “ideological litmus test type” conversations that might make good soundbites to appeal to the left but would alienate more conservative voters in next fall’s general election. For now, the candidate will continue traveling the district in an attempt to connect with voters and understand their concerns, as well as draw broad contrasts between her and Stefanik. “If I can understand their needs better than any other candidate, that’s just as good as having more money than any other candidate,” Wilson said. “My dedication is simply to getting around as much as possible and making sure that I know the differences between life in Watertown and life in Lake George.” ■ BELOW: Katie Wilson, who is seeking to unseat Rep. Elise Stefanik, addresses a group of voters at the Hollywood Theatre in Au Sable Forks on Sept. 11. Photo by Pete DeMola
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Bike the Barns returns For second year, tour brings cyclists, farmers together By Keith Lobdell STA FF W RITER
WHALLONSBURG | For the second year, a local cycling tour will showcase some of the best local agriculture has to offer. The Bike the Barns Tour, held by the
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Adirondack-North Country Association (ANCA), will take place Sunday, Oct. 1, with varying routes for cyclist covering several farms throughout the North Country region. “We are going to be capping out at 150 riders this year,” said Jake Vennie-Vollrath of ANCA. “There has been a lot of interest and support for the event this year.” The ride will also be used as a fundraiser for the FarmShare Fund, which benefits local farmers. “The fund provides help for farming initiatives and also subsidizes CSA shares,”
Vennie-Vollrath said. Farms featured on the tour will include Boquet Valley Blooms and Boquet Valley Vineyard in Essex, DaCy Meadow Farm in Westport, Juniper Hill Farm in Wadhams, North Country Creamery in Keeseville and Sunset Farm in Willsboro.
MUSIC AND FOOD FINALE
The ride will begin and end at the Whallonsburg Grange Hall, where there will be a dinner served from 4:30 until 6 p.m. with chefs Taylor Lefluer and Dillon Klepetar of
Echo Farm, along with a farm product purchase stand held by Hub on the Hill. During dinner, there will be entertainment from the band Ploughman’s Lunch. Doors will open for a community celebration at 6 p.m., with music from the band Crowfeather. For more information, visit the website adirondack.org/bikethebarns. ■ The second Bike the Barns tour will take place Sunday, Oct. 1. Photos provided
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098763
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» Martz Cont. from pg. 1
MARTZ FOR CONGRESS
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she knew voted differently: Should she engage them in discussion? “Clearly you voted differently. Would you be willing to have a conversation with me?” Martz asked. The man said no. But as winter turned into spring, she did it again — and again and again — and efforts at dialogue eventually blossomed. It’s that listening and sense of open-minded engagement that underpins Martz’s campaign for the Democratic nomination for New York’s 21st Congressional District. Regardless of how they voted, everyone wants the same thing, Martz told prospective voters at a campaign event in Plattsburgh on Sunday: Healthcare, jobs, food on the table and a way forward through higher education. For roughly an hour, Martz engaged in a back-and-forth with about a dozen voters at a downtown coffee shop. The biggest issue facing the district is the wealth gap, Martz said. “There are economic and political systems that are set up that so those who already have are able to get more, and it makes it very difficult for the have-nots to get ahead,” she said. “And what its led to is not just economic challenges, but we know it’s also starting to lead to social instability.” Martz, the deputy director of Adirondack North Country Association and a former Paul Smith’s professor, said she has a proven track record of job creation, pointing at renewable energy projects she spearheaded in Malone and Keene. She cited the Institute of Advanced Manufacturing at Clinton Community College as a model that should be emulated to foster
workforce development in the region, including vocational training for electricians and plumbers, fields that remain in high demand. Health care for veterans needs also to be bolstered, Martz said, citing a discussion on Sunday with a Navy veteran in Inlet, Hamilton County about what he felt was the most pressing issue in his life. “He said the broken promise that vets enlisted or drafted and were promised by the government that if they served, they would have benefits,” Martz said. If successful in her bid to defeat Elise Stefanik (R-Willsboro), Martz, 45, said she will bring this record of building partnerships to Congress. National Democrats in recent weeks are lining up behind the bill introduced by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) that includes a major provision written by Sen. Gillibrand (D-NY) for a Medicare buy-in Martz said she supports the measure and criticized Stefanik for her vote to repeal the Affordable Care Act in May, citing the effectiveness of the law in reducing the number of uninsured people in the district. “We know that the ACA has helped,” Martz said. “We just need to keep asking my opponent, ‘Why do you want to take something away that is providing healthcare of tens of thousands of additional people in your district? Why do you want to take away healthcare from your constituents?’” Martz likened the vote to a betrayal: “It seems like she’s using the position to bolster her own professional career and serve her party’s agenda as opposed to the people she represents,” Martz said. Lenny Alcivar, a Stefanik campaign spokesman, said: “Our district doesn’t need more partisan, political rhetoric. Republicans, Democrats and Independents know that Elise is not only recognized as one of the most bipartisan members of the U.S House of Representatives, she is ranked among the most bipartisan leaders in Washington.” Stefanik wrote the largest fi x to the ACA last Congress: the repeal of the auto-enroll-
(CV)
ment mandate, which was signed into law by President Obama, Alcivar said. The lawmaker last week, noted the spokesman, introduced bipartisan legislation to protect funding for community health centers in the district. With six challengers vying for the nomination, Martz admitted fundraising remains a challenge — “It’s the financial obligations that come with running. That’s the biggest obstacle we have,” she said — but would continue crisscrossing the district and engaging with voters. Support from young people appears strong, she said, and her campaign has been contacted by high school students asking how they can help. That involvement seems to be increasing, she said. “When we talk about young people and engagement, we need to remember that all generations have been apathetic,” she said. And as the Democratic Party licks its wounds and weighs it future following last
The Valley News Sun | September 23, 2017 • 15
year’s election upset that saw the undercard take the White House, Martz said she’ll stay focused on local issues. “I do shy away from that identity thing,” she said, indirectly referring to the criticism that Democrats ignored economic issues last fall, paving the way for Trump’s brand of economic populism. “I stay away from identity politics.” Martz, who spearheaded a coalition of grassroots progressive groups shortly after the election, said she was confident she could engage in measured discussion with voters and local government officials — even rock-ribbed Republicans. “I’m demonstrating my commitment to making this district stronger by sitting with them,” she said. “I believe, and (former House Speaker) Tip O’Neill said it best, all politics is local.” ■ BELOW: Emily Martz is seeking the Democratic nomination for New York’s 21st Congressional District. She engaged with voters Sunday, Sept. 17 at the Koffee Kat in Plattsburgh. Photo by Pete DeMola
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From the Sidelines
Beavers reach for the top The Keene boy’s and girl’s soccer teams are enjoying strong starts to their Division III By Keith Lobdell soccer seasons, • SPORTS EDITOR • as the boy’s are 4-0-0 in league and the girls 3-0- heading into the week. The Beavers scored wins of 6-0 against Johnsburg (Lucas Isham and Carter Gordon two goals, Ryo Kobayashi one goal, two assists) and 11-1 over Wells (Miles Warner, Isham with three goals each, Josh Baldwin with two). For the girl’s team, the week started with Elly Smith scoring two goals with Caitlyn Lopez and Alyssa Summo each adding one in a 4-1 win over Minerva/ Newcomb. Elly Smith scored all four of her team’s goals against Willsboro in a 4-1 win, with Katie Wilkins scoring for the Warriors.
D-II SOCCER UPSET
The Willsboro varsity boy’s soccer team scored the biggest win of the Northern Soccer Leagues Division-II so far this past week, posting a 3-0 shutout win over the Northern Adirondack Bobcats. It was the first division win for the Warriors, who have also gone unbeaten against Division III teams. Warren Jackson, Jared Joslyn and Stephen Liebick all scored goals, while Joseph King returned to net for the first time this season, recording seven saves in net. It ended a week against the top teams in Division II for the Warriors, as Regan Arnold made 10 saves in a 3-0 loss to Seton Catholic and another 16 saves in a 6-0 loss to Chazy. The Lady Warriors picked up a win against Indian Lake/Long Lake this week, 7-2, as Wilkins scored three goals and Rylee Pierson added two.
ROUGH WEEK ON FIELDS
It was a tough week for both the Elizabethtown-Lewis/Westport and AuSable Valley programs this past week. The Griffin boy’s teams started the week with a 1-0 setback to Seton Catholic as Carter Smith made 10 saves. In their next game against Chazy, the Griffins started Peter Vaiciulis in net for an injured Smith, making 16 saves in a 4-0 loss. Smith re-
turned for the game against Lake Placid, making 26 saves in a 3-0 loss to the Blue Bombers. Meanwhile, the Lady Griffins scored a non-divisional win over Crown Point, 6-2, as Analise Burdo scored three goals, Taylor Gough added two and LeAnna Costin one. They were not as successful within league, however, as they dropped a 2-1 overtime game to Seton Catholic with Taylor Gough scoring and Malynda Lobdell making 11 saves. They also dropped a 1-0 contest to Chazy on an early Natalie Pombrio goal as Lobdell made seven saves. For the Patriots, the week was capped as the football team fell, 41-6, to AuSable Valley. Playing without the injured Matt Pray, Chance Lapier rushed for 38 yards while Dalton McDonald had 106 passing yards. The boys soccer team dropped a 4-0 contest to Saranac Lake (Ryan Thomas two saves), while falling 5-1 to Saranac. The Lady Patriots also dropped a pair of games, with a matching 5-1 defeat to Saranac (Jenna Stanley goal) and a 3-0 loss to NAC, with Koree Stillwell making eight saves.
SILVER LINING FOR PATS
While a rough week on grass, the Patriots did score their first win on the volleyball court with a 3-2 match against Northern Adirondack. Leah Shay had six kills in the win, while Kayla Rock had five aces and Rosja Depo added six. The Patriots did drop a 3-1 match against Lake Placid earlier in the week, as Rock had five aces and four kills with Shay having six aces and four kills. The AuSable Valley boy’s cross country team went 2-1 in their meet, while the ladies finished 1-1 over the past week. Matthew Russom and Zachary Lawrence finished second and third in the boy’s race, while Lily Potthast won the individual title in the girl’s meet. For the EKMW team, Kaiden Sears had a14th place finish in the boy’s meet and Kaeli Brack led the girl’s team with a 14th place finish as both teams finished 1-1 at the event. In the pool, Allison McCormick picked up a win in the opening meet of the CVAC swimming season for the Patriots. ■
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Sports
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ABOVE: AuSable Valley’s Erykah Siegrist, left, bumps the volleyball against Lake Placid at the Saranac Volleyball Tournament Sept. 16. More photos from this event can be found at mycapture.suncommunitynews.com.
Photo by Jill Lobdell
RIGHT: Elizabethtown-Lewis/Westport’s Arlo Halloran controls the soccer ball for the Griffins. Photo by Jill Lobdell
BELOW: Willsboro’s Alexus Welch looks to get the ball outside and up the field. Photo by Jill Lobdell
OPPOSITE TOP LEFT: Keene’s Caitlyn Lopez drives a goal kick for the Keene varsity girls team as Alyssa Summo protects the net. Photo by Jill Lobdell
OPPOSITE MIDDLE LEFT: AuSable Valley’s Jenna Stanley tries to get past Saranac Lake’s Grace Clark as the two teams played in a Division I contest Sept. 18. Taylor Hackett scored a pair of goals as the Lady Patriots earned a 3-2 win over the Lady Red Storm. More photos from this game can be found at mycapture.suncommunitynews.com. Photo by Jill Lobdell
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Run into the ‘Danger Zone’ Local Ragnar team seeks to top podium STA FF W RITER
WILLSBORO | For the past year, a group of six local runners have been training to move one notch up the podium at the 2017 Ragnar Adirondacks race, set for this weekend, motivated by the medals they received last year. “I keep my medal in my mudroom, and the other day I was looking at it when it hit me,” Jay Fiegl said. “The medal reads, ‘almost first.’ It just hit me.” Fiegl, along with Cole Starkey, Matt Daley, Mike Davis, Liam Davis and team captain Sean Davis form Team Danger Zone, and homage to the popular Kenny Loggins single from the “Top Gun” soundtrack. “That song gets us going,” Sean Davis said. “Liam and I ran a half marathon together and that song would pump us up, so it became the team name. At the finish line of last year’s Ragnar, we asked the DJ to play the song as our team crossed the line.”
GETTING THE TEAM TOGETHER
While Sean and Liam had competed as brothers in several events, Sean joined a group of runners from St. Lawrence to run in a Ragnar event, which he said was inspiring. “To go non-stop like that was a cool challenge,” he said. “That whole group just got me inspired to create a team. I got my brother and dad (Mike) on board.” “Sean first talked to me and we were able to get dad on the team,” Liam said. “Then we talked about it to Jay and Cole. Then we got Matt on the team, and his first ever competition was the Ragnar race.” To help the team try to cut their time
‘ALMOST FIRST’
Last year, the team crossed the line in a record-setting pace for the Adirondack course, crossing the finish line in a time of 22:32:19.6, believing they had earned the title. “There was a team made up of members of the Harvard crew team that started an hour after us and caught up by 30 minutes, so when they came across, they were the winners,” Fiegl said.
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BOTTOM LEFT: On a training run on Willsboro Mountain, Team Danger Zone members Mike Davis, Sean Davis, Cole Starkey and Jay Fiegl train for the Ragnar Adirondack relay race, starting this Friday in Saratoga Springs and ending Saturday at the Lake Placid Horseshow grounds.
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down this year, they added Jori Wekin, who will serve as a driver for the team. “We were doing it all last year, driving and eating while trying to find time to rest,” Fiegl said. “It was just six of us in a van not really knowing what we were doing,” Mike Davis said. “I was running in the race last year and I loved doing the driving for the team,” Weekin said. “When I was not running, I was looking at the logistics and times. I enjoyed it. “The whole time, I knew Danger Zone was out there and I was thinking they were crazy being without a driver,” Weekin continued. “I’m a little crazy, too, so I think this will really work out well.” “She’s going to put us in better shape to win,” Sean said. “We lost by onehalf hour and, when you look at it, we can make a lot of that time up by having better transitions and someone who will be driving while we rest.” The 2017 Reebok Ragnar Adirondack starts Friday, Sept. 22, in Saratoga Springs, and follows a course through Warren County and into Essex County before ending at the Lake Placid Horseshow Grounds, requiring runners to compete in a relay-style race through the night and into the afternoon hours of Saturday, Sept. 23. ■
The A Team for Angela finished the course in a time of 21:58:06.0. “We thought there was a chance when we finished,” Sean said. “We exceeded expectations and I never thought we would finish second in our first year.” Fiegl said it was the Davis patriarch who set the bar high. “Mike went out and just sprinted the first five-mile section and we knew we had to go as fast as we could,” he said. “We just built off each other from there.” “When we crossed the line, we had already broken the previous course record by one half-hour,” Liam said. “We were just so focused on doing as well as the last guy did and everyone ran as hard as they could.” “That was a record for any team, six or 12-person,” Fiegl said. “It was really incredible,” Sean said. “It ranks up there with anything I have done with running. Everyone kicked it up a notch and rallied each other for each leg.”
By Keith Lobdell
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The Valley News Sun | September 23, 2017 • 17
WORSHIP IN YOUR COMMUNITY AU SABLE FORKS Holy Name Catholic Church - 14203 Rt. 9N, Au Sable Forks, 647-8225, Rev. Kris Lauzon, Pastor; Deacon John J. Ryan; Mass: Sunday 9:30 a.m. Confessions: Sunday 9-9:15 a.m. St. James’ Church - Episcopal (Anglican Catholic). Rev. Ana RiveraGeorgescu, Priest; Rev. Patti Johnson, Deacon. Holy Eucharist Sundays at 10 a.m. Phone: (518) 534-2540 or (518) 593-1838. United Methodist Church - Main Street. 647-8147. Sunday 11 a.m. Worship Service. Email: afumc1@frontiernet.net BLACK BROOK St. Matthew’s Catholic Church - 781 Silver Lake Rd., Black Brook, Rev. Kris Lauzon, Pastor; Deacon John J. Ryan; Closed. BLOOMINGDALE Pilgrim Holiness Church - 14 Oregon Plains Rd., 891-3178, Rev. Daniel Shumway - Sunday: Morning Worship 11a.m., Sunday School 10 a.m., Evening Service 6:30 p.m.; Wednesday: Prayer Service 7 p.m. CLINTONVILLE United Methodist - Rt. 9N. 834-5083. Sunday, 11 a.m. Worship Service. Pastor Rev. Joyce Bruce. ELIZABETHTOWN Church of the Good Shepherd (Episcopal) - 10 Williams Street Elizabethtown, NY 12932. (518)873-2509 goodshepherdetown@gmail. com, Sunday Holy Communion: 8 & 10:15am; Healing Prayer Service: Every Wed at Noon; Men’s Group: Every Friday 7:30am-8:45am Rev. David Sullivan. All are Welcome. LIFE Church Elizabethtown - A holistic biblical approach where healthy relationships and community come before religious ideals. Connect to Jesus and others, Engage your local community, Involve yourself in ministry. LIFE Church service Sunday 10:30 am. LIFE Groups (see webpage for local groups) . AO Cafe open Monday-Thursday 8:30am-12pm. www. adklife.church - 209 Water Street Elizabethtown - lifechurchetown@ gmail.com - (518)-412-2305 St. Elizabeth’s Catholic Church - Court Street. 873-6760. Father Francis Flynn, Mass Schedule: Saturday 4:30 p.m., Weekdays: Consult Bulletin. Thursday 10:15 a.m. Horace Nye Home. Sacrament of Reconciliation: Saturday 3:30 p.m. - 4:10 p.m. Website: wewe4.org Email: rccowe@gmail.com United Church of Christ (Congregational) - Court Street. 873-6822. Rev. Frederick C. Shaw. Worship Service: Sun. 11 a.m.; Sunday School ages 4 - grade 6. Nursery service Email: FShaw@westelcom.com ESSEX Essex Community United Methodist Church - Corner of Rt. 22 and Main St. 963-7766. Peggy Staats Pastor, Sunday Worship - 10:15 AM, Sunday School - 10:15 AM. web page: https://essexcommunitychurchny.org Foothills Baptist Church at Boquet - 2172, NY Rt. 22 in Essex. Formerly Church of the Nazarene. Wednesday Night Service at 6 p.m. Worship services are Sunday 11 a.m. & 6 p.m. Sunday school 9:45 a.m. Family Christian movies on the second Sunday of each month at 6:30 p.m., and Hymn sing on the 4th Sunday of each month at 6 p.m. Email: foothillsbapt@netzero.net St. John’s Episcopal Church - 4 Church Street. 518-963-7775. Holy Communion, Sunday 10 a.m., Community Potluck Supper, Tuesday 6 p.m., Contemporary Bible Study, Tuesdays 9:30 a.m., Bible Study, Wednesdays
5 p.m. Father Craig Hacker. Email: stjohnsessex@gmail.com St. Joseph’s Catholic Church - Rt. 22. 963-4524. Closed for the Winter. HARKNESS Harkness United Methodist Church - Corner Harkness & Hollock Hill Rds., Harkness, NY. 834-7577. Rev. Edith Poland. Worship 9:30 a.m. ediepoland@aol.com JAY First Baptist Church of Jay - Rev. Joyce Bruce, Pastor. Sunday Worship 9:30 a.m. KEENE Keene Valley Congregational Church - Main Street. 576-4711. Sunday Worship Services 10 a.m.; Sunday School 10 a.m. Choir Wednesday evening 7 p.m. and Sunday 9:15 a.m. St. Brendan’s Catholic Church - Mass Saturday at 4 p.m. & Sunday at 11:15 a.m. from first Sunday in July to Labor Day. Saturday at 4 p.m. the rest of the year. Pastor: Rev. John R. Yonkovig; Pastor. Rectory Phone 523-2200. Email: stagnesch@roadrunner.com St. Hubert’s All Souls Episcopal Church - Sunday Holy Eucharist 9 a.m. (on some Sundays, Morning Prayer), July 3 through September 4. Varying roster of priests celebrate communion each week. KEESEVILLE Front Street Fellowship - Front Street Fellowship - 1724 Front Street, Keeseville, 645-4673. Pastors Rick & Kathy Santor. Sunday: Worship Service 10 a.m. Tuesday: Ladies Coffee 9:30 a.m. Wednesday: Prayer Fellowship 6 p.m. Website: www.frontstreetfellowship.org Email: kathy@frontstreetfellowship.org Immaculate Conception Church - Rt. 9, Keeseville, 834-7100. Rev. Kris Lauzon, Pastor; Deacon John Lucero; Mass: Sunday 11:15 a.m. Confessions: Sunday after Mass.
Independent Baptist Church - Rte. 22 & Interstate 87, P.O. Box 506, Keeseville, NY. 834-9620. Sunday School 10:00 a.m., Sunday Morning Worship 11 a.m., Sunday Evening Worship 6 p.m., Prayer Meeting & Bible Study - Wednesday 7 p.m.; Youth Group Sunday 6 p.m. Website: ibck.org Email: oneillr@ibck.org Keeseville United Methodist Church - Front Street, Keeseville. 834-7577. Rev. Edith Poland. Sunday School 11:00 a.m.; Worship 11 a.m. 834-7577. Email: ediepoland@aol.com St. John the Baptist Catholic Church - Rt. 22, Keeseville, 834-7100. Rev. Kris Lauzon, Pastor; Deacon John Lucero; Mass: Saturday 4:30 p.m. Confessions: Saturday 3:45-4:15 p.m. St. Paul’s Episcopal Church - Clinton Street, Keeseville. 563-6836. Sunday Service 9 a.m. Rev. Blair Biddle. The Good Shepherd Church of the Nazarene - 124 Hill Street, Keeseville, NY. 834-9408. Pastor Richard Reese. Sunday Service 10:30 a.m. & 5:30 p.m.; Sunday School 9:30 a.m.; Tuesday Prayer Service 7 p.m.; Wednesday Bible Study 7 p.m. LEWIS First Congregational Church - Lewis, 873-6822. Rev. Frederick C. Shaw. Sunday Services 9:30 a.m.; Sunday School 10:30 a.m. Email: Fshaw@westelcom.com www.firstcongregationalchurchoflewis.com MIDDLEBURY Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Middlebury Ward) Sacrament Worship Service: Sunday 9:00am. Meetinghouse-133 Valley View, Middlebury, VT 05753. REBER Reber Methodist Church - Reber Rd., Reber. 11 a.m. Sunday mornings. Pastor Ric Feeney.
PORT HENRY Lake Champlain Bible Fellowship - 6 Church St., Port Henry, NY. Pastor D. Mitchell Mullenax, 518-546-4200. Worship Service 10:30 a.m. Visit our website to see our full calendar, www.icbible.org WESTPORT Federated Church - Our worship service is at 9:00 a.m. We offer a blended contemporary and Christian service, along with Children’s Church. A nursery area is provided downstairs with a speaker to hear the Worship Service. For current church events you can check the church website at : www.westportfederatedchurch.org or call Pastor Tom at (518) 962-8293 and leave a message. St. Philip Neri Catholic Church - 6603 Main St., Father Francis Flynn, Pastor. Residence, 873-6760. Mass schedule: Sun., 8:30 a.m. Weekdays: consult bulletin. Email: rccowe@gmail.com Westport Bible Church - 24 Youngs Road. 962-8247. Pastor David Colwell. Sunday School for every age 9:30 a.m.; Sunday Morning Worship 10:30 a.m.; Sunday Evening Service 5:30 p.m.; Wednesday Night Prayer 7 p.m.; Email: westportbiblechurch@westelcom.com www.westportbiblechurch.org WILLSBORO Congregational United Church of Christ - 3799 Main Street, P.O. Box 714. Pastor Jonathan Lange. Worship and Sunday School at 9:15 a.m. Church phone number 518-963-4048. Healing Waters Church of God - Meets at Willsboro Business Center 3922 NYS Route 22, Willsboro, NY 12996. Sunday Service 10:30am, Children’s Church (Ages 3-12) Wednesday Adult Bible Study 6pm-8pm Friday Church Service 6pm-8pm Pastor Kermit Lavigne 518-321-2694 lavignewhit@aol.com St. Philip of Jesus Catholic Church - 3746 Main Street. 963-4524.
Father Francis Flynn, Sunday Mass at 10:30 a.m. Website: wewe4.org Email: rccowe@gmail.com United Methodist Church - 3731 Main Street. 963-7931. Sunday Worship Services 9 a.m.; Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Pastor Ric Feeney. After school religous education program 2:30 p.m. - 5 p.m. on Thursdays (Only when school is in session) WILMINGTON Calvary Baptist Church - Rt. 86. 518-946-2482. Sunday School for all ages 10 a.m.; Sunday Morning Service 11 a.m. www.wilmingtoncbc.com St. Margaret’s Roman Catholic Church - 5789 NYS Rt. 86, Wilmington, 647-8225, Rev. Kris Lauzon, Pastor, Deacon John J. Ryan & Pastor, Deacon John Lucero, Mass: Sunday 7:30 a.m. Confessions: Sunday 7-7:15 a.m. Whiteface Community United Methodist Church - Located at the intersection of Route 86 and Haselton Road. The Rev. Helen Beck is Pastor. The office phone is 946-7757. Sunday Worship is at 10:30 a.m. with Sunday School for children held during the morning worship. Communion is the first Sunday of each month. A coffee hour with refreshments and fellowship follows the morning service. The Riverside Thrift Shop is open Wed. & Sat. from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m. The Jay/ Wilmington Ecumenical Food Shelf is open each Thurs. from 9 a.m. until 6 p.m. In an emergency call 946-7192. Wilmington Church of the Nazarene - Wilmington Church of the Nazarene is located at 5734 Route 86. Contact Pastor Rev. Bob Hess at (518) 946-7708 or email bobhess@gmail.com. Sunday School for all ages – 9:45 a.m.; Sunday Worship and Children’s Nursery – 11 a.m.; Coffee Talk (an informal Bible Study) is hosted Tuesday and Wednesday evenings throughout the community. Contact Pastor Hess for times and locations. 9-23-17 • 57581
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18 • September 23, 2017 | The Valley News Sun (CV)
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ECH to host fall prevention clinic Event will help caretakers learn how to keep elders safe from dangerous falls. By Kim Dedam STA FF W RITER
ELIZABETHTOWN | When elders or people living with illness fall or take a sudden spill, health problems can be quite serious. Kim Coolidge, Infomatics and Nursing Manager at University of Vermont Health Network, Elizabethtown Community Hospital, explained that falls can also be life threatening. “Every 20 minutes an older adult dies from a fall in the U.S., according to data from CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention),” she said in a recent interview. ECH recently enacted new policies to help prevent patients from falling. “We actually put together a Fall Prevention Improvement Team here at the hospital,”
said Coolidge said. “It was organized by the staff, Registered Nurse Denise McLaughlin being the team leader. “What we were seeing was a majority of patients were going to the bathroom when they fell. We developed some new strategies and scheduling changes to help prevent falls in the hospital.” The training in-hospital prompted Coolidge and McLaughlin to consider outreach for the community, specifically for families, caretakers and elders aging in place. And they organized Fall Prevention Day at the hospital in cooperation with the Essex County Office for the Aging, experts at SUNY Plattsburgh’s Durable Medical Equipment loan program, Fidelis, Essex County Public Health; HCR Homecare and the ECH Physical and Occupational Therapy departments. The open screening event is scheduled for Sept. 22. Much like a health fair, there will be equipment testing for walkers and canes, along with resources for people who might need
ambulatory assistance. “We will be providing free screening tools,” Coolidge said. “Our physical therapists will be here to do some balance testing, adjustment of walkers and crutches with the possibility of looking at medications people are taking as well. We hope to help people learn to ask the appropriate questions of their primary care provider. “ Falls can happen for a variety of reasons, added ECH spokeswoman Jane Hooper. “Acute illness, medical conditions, medication, muscle weakness and more can lead to falls. Hospitals are always on the lookout for patient falls: it is something that hospitals like ECH take very seriously. The hospital always works toward a zero percent fall rate and implements procedures to help achieve that.” Opening similar screening for people in surrounding communities was a logical next step, Hooper said. “We will be here to help evaluate situations that can cause falls in a one-to-one setting that
might allow family or caregivers to implement changes. Attendees can be interviewed to assess the likelihood of falling at home, and then learn about ways to reduce that risk.” “We know that falls happen in the home,” Coolidge said. “Our emergency department can attest to numbers of patients who visit due to fall-related injuries. If we can bring information that we use in the hospital to people in the community, we hope that we can help reduce these events.” The session is free and open to caregivers, community members, anyone who may be concerned about balance issues, unsteadiness while standing or walking, or anyone who may be taking medication that may inhibit balance, Hooper said. Information and screening booths will be set up in the hospital lobby and in the ECH meeting room. Fall Prevention outreach begins on Sept. 22 at 9:30 a.m. and continues until 2 p.m. Attendance is free and open to the public. Refreshments will be served.■
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• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••••••••••••••• CONSTRUCTION WORDS FEATURES by Myles Mellor
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••• See anSwerS to our puzzleS in back of the paper •••
Boards Bricks Carpet Cement Door Glass Granite Hammer Jamb Maple Paint Quartz Rollers Skylight
Classifieds www.suncommunitynews.com
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Adirondack Slabs, Limited Liability Not validLLC. with any of other offers . must be present to redeem} Articles of(coupon Organization Company (LLC) MOBILE HOME FOR SALEfiled with the Secretary Name: ..._Ot~res~ctio!!! rna,l;PP~FC Houghton, of State of New York LLC. Articles of Organi(SSNY) on Make September zation us filedonwith the SecHOME FOR SALE in Willsboro, NY sure to follow retary of State of New 2bdrm, 2 bath mobile home,12, 1.032017 for business conducted from an of- York (SSNY) on Februacre lot $45,000 518-963-7320 fice located in Essex ary 23, 2017 Office LoCounty, NY. The SSNY cation: Essex County. BUY-SELL-TRADEis designated as the The Secretary of State for LLC events, news and : agent of the upon hasgiveaways! been designated as WithTheClassifieds Whom process against it agent of the company 1-518-873-6368 Ext.201 may be served. SSNY upon whom process shall mail a copy of any may be LEGALS served, and the LEGALS LEGALS process to the LLC at 29 Secretary of State shall NOTICE OF FORMATION Washington Street, P.O. mail a copy of any proOF LIMITED LIABILITY Box 21, Port Kent,NY cess against the compaCOMPANY (LLC) 12975. ny served upon him or Adirondack Slabs, LLC. VN-09/23-10/28/2017her to FC Houghton, LLC Articles of Organization The term of the limited 6TC-163737 filed with the Secretary liability company shall of State of New York NOTICE OF FORMATION be perpetual. (SSNY) on September of Limited Liability The purpose of the limit12, 2017 for business Company (LLC) ed liability company is to conducted from an of- Name: FC Houghton, engage in any lawful act fice located in Essex LLC. Articles of Organi- or activity for which limCounty, NY. The SSNY zation filed with the Sec- ited liability companies is designated as the retary of State of New may be organized. agent of the LLC upon York (SSNY) on Febru- VN-08/26-09/30/2017Whom process against it ary 23, 2017 Office Lo- 6TC-161391 may be served. SSNY cation: Essex County. shall mail a copy of any The Secretary of State NOTICE OF FORMATION process to the LLC at 29 has been designated as OF LIMITED LIABILITY Washington Street, P.O. agent of the company COMPANY (“LLC”) Box 21, Port Kent,NY upon whom process Hemlock Apologist, LLC. 12975. may be served, and the Articles of Organization VN-09/23-10/28/2017Secretary of State shall filed with the Secretary 6TC-163737 mail a copy of any pro- of State of New York cess against the compa- (“SSNY”) on August 1, ny served upon him or 2017 for business conher to FC Houghton, LLC ducted from an office lo-
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NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY (“LLC”) Hemlock Apologist, LLC. Articles LEGALS of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York (“SSNY”) on August 1, 2017 for business conducted from an office located in Essex County, NY. The “SSNY” is designated as agent of the “LLC” upon whom process against it may be served. “SSNY” shall mail a copy of any process to the “LLC” at 447 Hurley Road, Westport, NY 12993. VN-09/09-10/14/20176TC-162244 NOTICE BY PUBLICATION OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY Jambs 6476 Main R LLC filed articles of organization with SOS of NY on 8/30/2017. Principal office is in Essex County,
518-873-6368 x105
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY LEGALS Jambs 6476 Main R LLC filed articles of organization with SOS of NY on 8/30/2017. Principal office is in Essex County, New York. The SOS of NY is designated as agent for service of process against the LLC, and SOS shall mail a copy of process in any action or proceeding against the LLC to the LLC at 6476 Main St., Westport, NY 12993. The LLCs purpose is to engage in any lawful activity. VN-09/09-10/14/20176TC-162543
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R E AC H PEO PLE I N YO U R CO M M U N IT Y LO O K I N G F O R YO U R B US I N E S S O R S E RV I C E
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104952
APARTMENT FOR RENT
(CV)
"Don'tGetCaughtIn TheRain LLC!" CallTentsof Champlain,
• Dressers • Wishing Wells • Folding Chairs • Adirondack Chairs • Custom Work • & More
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NBRSR LLC Articles of Org. filed NY Sec. of State (SSNY) 8/21/2017. Office in Essex Co. SSNY desig. agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 1698 Front St., Keesville, NY 12944. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. VN-09/09-10/14/20176TC-162541
a domestic limited liabilty company. Art. of Org. filed with Sec'y of State of LEGALS NY (SSNY) on 9/13/2017. Office location: Essex County. SSNY is designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of such process served upon it to The Beauty Loj, LLC 2577 Main St. Lake Placid NY 12946. Purpose: To engage in any lawful activity. VN-09/23-10/28/20176TC-163562
NOTICE OF FORMATION OF The Beauty Loj, LLC a domestic limited liabilty company. Art. of Org. filed with Sec'y of State of NY (SSNY) on 9/13/2017. Office location: Essex County. SSNY is designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against
NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY (LLC) Name: Tom Duca The Essex Builder, LLC. Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on August 22, 2017 Office Location: Essex County. The SSNY
LEGALS
963-8630
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Middle Road, NOTICEWillsboro, OF FORMATION NY~ OF LIMITED LIABILITY 12996 ~ COMPANY (LLC) Name: Tom Duca The Essex Builder, LLC. Articles of Organization filed LEGALS with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on August 22, 2017 Office Location: Essex County. The SSNY is designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of any process to the LLC at: 2224 Lake Shore Road, Essex, NY 12936. VN-09/02/201710/07/2017-6TC-161524
FishingForA GoodDeal? CatchTheGreatest Bargains InThe Classifieds 1-518-873-6368 Ext.201
20 • September 23, 2017 | The Valley News Sun (CV)
www.suncommunitynews.com REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
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REALE ESTATE WANTED
BOATS
CADNET
I AM INTERESTED IN BUYING a few acres with a well and or septic system on. $5000- $7500 a acre Cash or more then a few acres seller would hold the contract for a few years. Get back to me if you have anything that I can work with I have a few options i'd like to put a mobile home or a fixer upper. Also If you no anyone also looking to sell or rent with option to buy!!! I would be interested in a 2 to 3 bedroom home/Mobile home or house Need a few acres. My email is poolboy48@icloud.com Or Cell is (401)-529-4909]
For Sale – 1990 Pen Yan 24ft inboard, outboard boat. Been shrink wrapped past 4 years. Can be seen at 45 Osawentha Drive, Lewis. Call 518-873-2017 for info. Reasonable offer will be accepted. SHOREMASTER BOAT LIFT 5000lbs, on wheels w/ canopy, $1500. 518-369-0332.
LIFELOCK Identity Theft Protection. Do not Wait! Start Guarding Your Identity Today. 3 layers of protection ? Detect, Alert, Restore. Receive 10% off ? Call for Details 1-855-399-2089 Lung Cancer? And Age 60+? You And Your Family May Be Entitled To Significant Cash Award. Call 866-428-1639 for Information. No Risk. No Money Out Of Pocket.
THESUN COMMUNITY
NEWS
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PRINTING
FEATUREDPROPERTY WESTPORT, NY 2 Merrihew Lane SPACIOUS,ELEGANTBRICK HOME AT THE HEART OF
WESTPORT Elegant, well- kept brick Federal style residence w/loads of space, charm & character, surrounded by mature trees & plantings on a roomy 1.6 acre lot in the picturesque lakeside village of Westport, NY. Large LR/DR with fireplace is perfect for entertaining! Ample kitchen w/walk-in pantry & adjacent sitting room. 6 BRs, 3 w/fireplaces. 3 full baths. Large attic over the garage/kitchen area for additional living/storage space.
NYSCAN
Make $1,000 Weekly!Paid in Advance! Mailing Brochures at Home. Easy Pleasant work. Begin ImmeAge Unimportant. diately. www.HomeBucks.US $$$$$! $1,000'S Weekly! Processing Mail! Send SASE: LISTS/CAD, Springhouse, PA 19477-0396
AIRLINE CAREERS Start Here Get trained as FAA certified Aviation Technician. Financial aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. Call AIM for free information 866-296-7094 DIVORCE $349 - Uncontested divorce papers prepared. Only one signature required. Poor person Application included if applicable. Separation agreements. Custody and support petitions. - 518-2740380 DONATE YOUR CAR to Wheels For Wishes, benefiting Make-A-Wish. We offer free towing and your donation is 100% tax deductible. Call518-650-1110 Today! OCEAN CITY, MARYLAND. Best selection of affordable rentals. Full/ partial weeks. Call for FREE brochure. Open daily. Holiday Resort Services. 1-800-638-2102. Online reservations: www.holidayoc.com. 5% base rent discountuse code NYPS17-2. Ends Oct-012017 Public Auto Auction Saturday, September 23 @9AM 300 Vehicles Expected! Cars, Trucks, SUVs & More! 298 J. Brown Dr., Williston, VT THCAuction.com 800-4746132 SAWMILLS from only $4397.00MAKE & SAVE MONEY with your own bandmill- Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship! FREE Info/DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com 1-800-578-1363 Ext.300N
Make a Connection. Real People, Flirty Chat. Meet singles right now! Call LiveLinks. Try it FREE. Call NOW: 1-888-909-9905 18+. Prescription medications for up to 85% off retail prices! STOP paying so much! $15 Off for First Time Customers. FREE Shipping. Price Match Guarantee. CALL for FREE Quote: 1-877-627-7239 or visit MailMedsplus.net/discount Social Security Disability? Up to $2,671/mo. (Based on paid-in amount.) FREE evaluation! Call Bill 1-855Gordon & Associates. 498-6323. Mail: 2420 N St NW, Washington DC. Office: Broward Co. FL., member TX/NM Bar. Wants to purchase minerals and other oil and gas interests. Send details to P.O. Box 13557 Denver, Co. 80201 ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES
HELP WANTED LOCAL Attached garage & enclosed back entry porch. Breezy side porch with vignette views of Lake Champlain ...only a 2 minute walk away! Vintage carriage barn in side yard is perfect for studio, office or additional space for your house guests! 1.6 acres; 6 bedrooms; 3 baths; 3400 sq.ft.
erties
$399,000 MLS#Rr57u6A
Lauren Murphy, Real EstateBroker/Owner
P.O. Box 351 • 7 School St.• Essex,NY12936 • 518-963-7876 • essexrealestate@westelcom.com Having an Open House?
PORT KENT, NY•$289,000 • MLS# 160821
KEESEVILLE, NY•$106,91111 • MLS# 158209
PORT KENT CONTEMPORARY 5bd,3bahome w/ breathtaking views. Completely updated bycurrent owner.
CEDAR COURT RANCH - 4bd,1baRanch justa shortwalkfromKeeseville Elementary. Manyupdates completed bythisowner.
SueAnnCarter,RealEstateBroker/Owner ~ (518) 834-7608• sueannrealtor@yahoo.com ~
SueAnnCarter,RealEstateBroker/Owner a (518) 834-7608• sueannrealtor@yahoo.com
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ANNEPORTER.COM
WESTPORT, NY•$285,000
ELIZABETHTOWN, NY•$149,91111 • MLS #160911
4BR/2BA, w/La~e Champlain view, covered porch, basement, attached garage, back yard barn w/attached greenhouse. New windows, roof, vinylsiding. Town water &sewer.
104WATER ST:Large 4BR/2BA family home. Freshly painted, newflooring, newfurnace, large garage/barn w/loft,paved driveway, enclosed back porch, more!
SandraGoodroe,RealEstateBroker (518) 962-8313• bradamant@juno.com
42COUNTY RTE 8:3BR/1.5BA renovated home on1.7ac. ismove-in ready. Hardwood floors throughout, wrap-around porch, 2-car garage w/loft,walking distance to town.
ChristineBenedict,RealEstateSalesperson ChristineBenedict,RealEstateSalesperson (518)593-0533• Christine@whitbeckassociates.com (518)593-0533• Christine@whitbeckassociates.com
HART APPLE FARMS, LLC IS SEEKING Seasonal Apple Packers for 6:30am-3:00pm shift, 20-40 per week. Duties to include removing blemished apples from coveryer belt, packing apples into bags or cartons, lifting up to 50lbs onto the converyer belt, taping & stacking cartons on to pallets, cleaning lunch room, work area, & restroom at the end of the day. Other misc. duties as needed. Apply in person 2301 State Rte. 22, Peru, NY or Call 518-8346007.
FOR SALE C ustom HO-scale modelrailroad locomotives& rollingstock. D&H,CSX(tonamea few) Conrail, Contact RICHIE ERIKSEN
LATHAM.NY
FOR SALE
HARVESTERS WANTED Harvesters needed for 13th, 14th, 15th Oct 2017, Four Maples Vineyard and Winery in Champlain. Competitive wages, breakfast and lunch provided. Please call 518298-9463 leave message or email info@4maplesvineyard.com.
Frigidaire Dishwasher $25; GE Electric Stove $25, both good condition. Call 518-873-2253
CADNET
HEALTH & FITNESS
A PLACE FOR MOM. The nation's largest senior living referral service. Contact our trusted, local experts today! Our service is FREE/no obligation. CALL 1-844722-7993 ADVERTISE to 10 Million Homes across the USA! Place your ad in over 140 community newspapers, with circulation totaling over 10 million homes. Contact Independent Free Papers of America IFPA at danielleburnett-ifpa@live.com or visit our website cadnetads.com for more information. CARS/TRUCKS WANTED!!! All Makes/Models 2000-2016! Any Condition. Running or Not. Top $$$ Paid! Free Towing! We're Nationwide! Call Now: 1-888-9851806 CASH PAID- up to $25/Box for unexpired, sealed DIABETIC TEST STRIPS. 1-DAYPAYMENT.1-800371-1136 GOT AN OLDER CAR, VAN OR SUV? Do the humane thing. Donate it to the Humane Society. Call 1-855-558-3509 HughesNet: Gen4 satellite internet is ultra fast and secure. Plans as low as $39.99 in select areas. Call 1-855-440-4911 now to get a $50 Gift Card!
Attention Viagra users: Generic 100 mg blue pills or Generic 20 mg yellow pills. Get 45 plus 5 free $99 + S/H. Guaranteed, no prescription necessary. Call 844-8487463
RETIRED FISHERMAN'S 2- TACKLE boxes w/ 159 lures ; Also Under water Aquaview camera $300 for both. Call 518-561-2132.
PAID TO SHRINK YOUR GUT? Free membership shows how its possible: Just go to "7MinuteHealth.com" to learn more NOW! LOGGING
PRECISION TREE SERVICE 518-942-6545 FishingForA GoodDeal? CatchThe Greatest BargainsIn The Classifieds 1-518-873-6368 Ext.201
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ELIZABETHTOWN, NY•$145,000 • MLS #R153045A 54WATER ST:4BR/2BA. hardwood floors, lg.kitchen w/attached deck, fireplace, lg.yard,3-cargarage w/ storage, enclosed &winterized porch, lg.basement.
WESTPORT, NY• $259,000 • MLS #R160369A 52CHAMPlAIN AVE-Village Victorian w/80ft frontage on Lake Champlain. 3BR/2BA, hardwood floors, deck, wraparound porch, walking distance totownamenities.
WESTPORT, NY• $299,01111 FIRM • MLS #155946 214FT. ONLAKE CHAMPLAIN -Atedge ofvillage on1.67 ac.w/5BR, 3BA, heated indoor pool(16x 30)w/exercise room &hottub,cathedral ceilings, lakeside decking.
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Published by Denton Publications, Inc. LOGGING
PURCHASING STANDING TIMBER Paying $ or % on all species of timber clean forestry and references available call 518-5349739 Erick.
WANTS TO PURCHASE minerals and other oil & gas interests. Send details P.O. Box 13557, Denver, Co 80201
KITTEN FREE TO A GOOD HOME, Call 518-310-1399
LEWIS 1 bedroom apartment, no pets, no smoking $500/mo. Utilities included. Security deposit & references. Call 518-873-6805.
FCPNY Stop OVERPAYING for your prescriptions! SAVE! Call our licensed Canadian and International pharmacy, compare prices and get $25.00 OFF your first prescription! CALL 1-844-520-6712 Promo Code CDC201725
Do You Owe $10K+ in IRS Tax Debt?? Take 60 seconds for a FREE Consultation to end IRS collections. Call NOW 1-800-2141903
NANI 25 DRIVER TRAINEES NEEDED NOW! Earn $1000 per week! Paid CDL Training! STEVENS TRANSPORT COVERS ALL COSTS! 1877-209-1309 drive4stevens.com
Donate Your Car to Veterans Today! Help and Support our Veterans. Fast - FREE pick up. 100% tax deductible. Call 1-800-245-0398
AIRLINE MECHANIC TRAINING Get FAA certification to work for airlines. Financial Aid if qualified. Job placement assistance. Housing assistance. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance 888-686-1704
-
FCPNY A PLACE FOR MOM. The nation's largest senior living referral service. Contact our trusted, local experts today! Our service is FREE/no obligation. CALL 1-800-553-4101
Dish Network-Satellite Television Services. Now Over 190 channels for ONLY $49.99/mo! HBO-FREE for one year, FREE Installation, FREE Streaming, FREE HD. Add Internet for $14.95 a month. 1-800718-1593
APARTMENT RENTALS
DATE
NANI Make a Connection. Real People, Flirty Chat. Meet singles right now! Call LiveLinks. Try it FREE. Call NOW: Call 1-877-737-9447 18+
DENTAL INSURANCE. Call Physicians Mutual Insurance Company for details. NOT just a discount plan, REAL coverage for 350 procedures. 888-623-3036 or http://www.dental50plus.com/58 Ad# 6118
CATS
ALL INCLUSIVE RESORT packages at Sandals, Dreams, Secrets, Riu, Barcelo, Occidental and many more. Punta Cana, Mexico, Jamaica and many of the Caribbean islands. Search available options for 2017/2018 at www.NCPtravel.com or call 877-270-7260.
NANI
CASH PAID for unexpired, sealed DIABETIC TEST STRIPS! 1 DAY PAYMENT & PREPAID shipping. HIGHEST PRICES! Call 1-888-7767771. www.Cash4DiabeticSupplies.com
WANTED TO BUY used Mobile Homes 14x70, 518-569-0890 after 5pm.
HERO MILES - to find out more about how you can help our service members, veterans and their families in their time of need, visit the Fisher House website at www.fisherhouse.org Lung Cancer? And 60+ Years Old? If So, You And Your Family May Be Entitled To A Significant Cash Award. Call 877-648-6308 To Learn More. No Risk. No Money Out Of Pocket.
NEW AUTHORS WANTED! Page Publishing will help you self-publish your own book. FREE author submission kit! Limited offer! Why wait? Call now: 866-951-7214 OXYGEN - Anytime. Anywhere. No tanks to refill. No deliveries. The All-New Inogen One G4 is only 2.8 pounds! FAA approved! FREE info kit: 844-558-7482 SENIOR LIVING referral service, A PLACE FOR MOM. The nation's largest FREE, no obligation senior living referral service. Contact our trusted local experts today! 1800-217-3942 Social Security Disability? Up to $2,671/mo. (Based on paid-in amount.) FREE evaluation! Call Bill Gordon & Associates. 1- 855-3766502. Mail: 2420 N St NW, Washington DC. Office: Broward Co. FL., member TX/NM Bar. VIAGRA & CIALIS! 60 pills for $99. 100 pills for $150 FREE shipping. NO prescriptions needed. Money back guaranteed! 1-888278-6168 VIAGRA 100MG and CIALIS 20mg! 50 Pills + 10 FREE. SPECIAL $99.00 100% guaranteed. FREE Shipping! 24/7 CALL: 1-888868-9758 Hablamos Espanol. WANTED OLD JAPANESE MOTORCYCLES KAWASAKI Z1-900 (1972-75), KZ900, KZ1000 (19761982), Z1R, KZ 1000MK2 (1979,80), W1-650, H1-500 (1969-72), H2-750 (1972-1975), S1-250, S2-350, S3-400, KH250, KH400, SUZUKI-GS400, GT380, HONDA-CB750K (1969-1976), CBX1000 (1979,80) CASH!! 1800-772-1142 1-310-721-0726 usa@classicrunners.com
NeedA Dependable Car? CheckOutTheClassifieds. Call1-518-873-6368 Ext.201
Clinton County Transactions
GRANTOR
GRANTEE
-LOCATION
PRICE
Plattsburgh
$296,900
Mooers
$104,000
08/25/17
Kathleen Maksimow
Ann Parker and Bruce and Cora Richards
08/28/17
Thomas Norris
Tera Reyell
08/28/17
ACJ Development LLC
Henry and Heidi Cormier
08/28/17
JPMorgan Chase Bank
Arianna and Lester Culp
Dannemora
$10,200
08/28/17
Bank of New York Mellon
Loughan Properties LLC
Plattsburgh
$50,000
08/28/17
US Bank Trust
Jeff Latinville
Beekmantown
08/29/17
Gerald Menard
Kevin Linsley
Plattsburgh
$20,000
08/29/17
Frederick and Alice Mark
Agless Harrell
Plattsburgh
$20,000
08/29/17
Gillian Richards
Michael James
Peru
$88,000
08/29/17
Nathan and Stephanie Couture
Amy Lopez
Dannemora
08/29/17
Richard and Deborah Lajti
Richard and Katherine Pyne
Peru
$325,000
08/29/17
Edward and Beverly Bechard
Terry and Karen Delaney
Champlain
$100,000
08/29/17
Mousseau Properties
Ryan Latinville
Plattsburgh
$135,000
08/30/17
Alexander Gibson
Kirsten Pope
Ausable
$229,900
08/30/17
James and Constance Miller
Renee Drollette
Saranac
08/30/17
Krista Boule
Patrick Rascoe
Plattsburgh
$100,000
08/31/17
Beatrice Jefferson
Jeremias Serrano and Tyrell Buglione
Champlain
$101,500 $205,000
Plattsburgh
$12,000
$145,000
$87,000
$60,000
08/31/17
Donald and Barbara Thompson
Jason and Stephanie Young
Beekmantown
08/31/17
Sinda Watts
Brandi Surprenant
Mooers
$98,000
08/31/17
Adam and Stephanie Plumb
Michael and Michelle Lepone
Champlain
$137,400
-
Essex County Transactions
DATE
The Valley News Sun | September 23, 2017 • 21
CARS/TRUCKS WANTED!!! All Make/Models 2000-2015! Any Condition. Running or Not. Competitive Offer! Free Towing! Were Nationwide! Call Now: 1-888-4162330. CASH FOR CARS: We Buy Any Condition Vehicle, 2000 and Newer. Nations Top Car Buyer! Free Towing From Anywhere! Call Now: 1-800-864-5960.
WANTED TO BUY
(CV)
GRANTOR
GRANTEE
-LOCATION
PRICE
North Elba
$245,000
08/23/17
Patricia Deangelis
Christopher Rappell and Cynthia Martin
08/23/17
Alfred Ehrenclou and Alice Cole
Alfred Ehrenclou
08/23/17
Robert and Colleen Conrad
Jessica Hartley and David Nethaway
Keene
$52,000
08/23/17
Alfred Ehrenclou and Alice Cole
Anne Smith
Essex
$765,000
08/23/17
Louis and Anna Virgini
John and Maureen Sammon
Willsboro
08/24/17
John Szot
Joseph Wilson
Keene
$150,000
08/24/17
Edward and Patricia Allen
Deutsche Bank National Trust Company
Moriah
$20,000
08/25/17
Anna Mayville and Dianne Harvish
Autry Mosely
Moriah
$10,000
08/25/17
Phebe Thorne
Christopher and Jennifer Clark
Keene
$716,000
Essex
$69,750
$97,500
08/25/17
Glenn and Claudia Kern
Bruce and Carolyn Kern
Schroon
$294,194
08/25/17
Anna Whitford
Diane and James Virmala
Moriah
$77,000
8/28/17
John Velit and Joy Slaughter
Richard and Nicole Dietz
Jay
$56,000
08/28/17
David and Paul Denninger
David Denninger
St. Armand
$27,500
08/28/17
Sheila and John Ferebee
David and Sarah Starr
Keene
08/28/17
Elmer and Suzanne Harper
Donna and Joshua Blowers
Crown Point
08/28/17
Galen Wanits et al
David and Ruth Corle
Schroon
08/28/17
Kristin Hoeh
Patrick and Elizabeth Purcell
Jay
$172,000
08/29/17
Steven and Linda Preston
Joseph and Tracey Henderson
St. Armand
$236,750
08/29/17
The Butler Real Estate Co
Brewster Mill Park Realty Inc
North Elba
$50,000
08/29/17
The Secretary of Housing & Urban Development
Castlerock 2017 LLC
North Hudson
$16,600
$126,000 $35,000 $166,000
AVIATION Grads work with JetBlue, Boeing, Delta and othersstart here with hands on training for FAA certification. Financial aid if qualified. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance 1-866-296-7094 BUYING FRESH GINSENG for Over 50 years. Monday and Thursday 6:00-8:00 PM or by appointment. Markets are stable, High-quality up, Poor quality down. Please Don t wash! Bruce Phetteplace 1-607-334-4942. CARS/TRUCKS WANTED!!! We buy 2000-2015 Cars/Trucks, Running or Not! Nationwide Free Pickup! Call 1-888-416-2208 DENTAL INSURANCE. Call Physicians Mutual Insurance Company for details. NOT just a discount plan, REAL coverage for 350 procedures. 855-434-9221 or http://www.dental50plus.com/44
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FULL-COLOR VINYL BANNER COMPLETE WITHHEMMING &GROMMETS!
MAXIMUM EFFICIENCY. EXTRAORDINARY performance. Central Boiler certified Classic Edge OUTDOOR WOOD FURNACE. Adirondack Hardware Call Dennis today 518-834-4600. Ext. 6
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DONATE YOUR CAR Wheels For Wishes
*Free Vehicle/Boat Pickup ANYWHERE *We Accept All Vehicles Runningor Not
B, n,;; ,;ng
Make-A-Wish® *Fully Tax Deductible ~*_Northeast New York WheelsForWishes.org
Call: (518) 650-1110 * Car
Donation Foundation d/b/a Wheels For Wishes. To learn more about our programs or financial i'llformation, n'sit H'H'H'.H•heelsforH•ishes.org.
part-time
customer service representative
IF ADVERTISING IN ONE FREE PAPER IS SMART, then advertising in hundreds of them is pure genius! Do it with just one phone call! Reach nearly 3 million consumers statewide in print -plus more online -- quickly and inexpensively! Zoned ads start at $229 for a 25-word ad. Visit us at AdNetworkNY.com or call 315-437-6173 LUNG CANCER? And 60+ Years Old? If So, You And Your Family May Be Entitled To A Significant Cash Award. Call 1-877-689-5293 To Learn More. No Risk. No Money Out Of Pocket.
The Sun is looking for an organized and dependable person with attention to details and good communication skills. The right candidate must posses strong spelling and grammar skills, be computer savvy and a team player. This position is based in our Elizabethtown office. To apply for the position email your resume to: ashley@suncommunitynews.com
TH
MANY RN POSITIONS available in your vicinity. Hospitals, correctional facilities, and home health assessments. Great Pay & Benefits. White Glove Placement 1-866-387-8100 #202 recruit@whiteglovecare.net
SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY? Up to $2,671/mo. (Based on paidin amount.) FREE evaluation! Call Bill Gordon & Associates. 1-800-919-8208. Mail: 2420 N St NW, Washington DC. Office: Broward Co. FL., member TX/NM Bar.
FULL-COLOR 6'x2.5'
VINYLBANNERS
HOME IMPROVEMENTS
DONATE YOUR CAR TO CHARITY. Receive maximum value of write off for your taxes.Running or not! All conditions accepted. Free pickup. Call for details. 1-855-587-1166 Got Knee Pain? Back Pain? Shoulder Pain? Get a pain-relieving brace at little or NO cost to you. Medicare Patients Call Health Hotline Now! 1- 855-439-2862
NEW AUTHORS WANTED! Page Publishing will help you self-publish your own book. FREE author submission kit! Limited offer! Why wait? Call now: 1-877-635-3893 OXYGEN - Anytime. Anywhere. No tanks to refill. No deliveries. The All-New Inogen One G4 is only 2.8 pounds! FAA approved! FREE info kit: 1-855-839-1738
GREAT PRICE!
VACATION HOME, CAMP OR LAND FOR SALE OR RENT? Advertise with us! We connect you with nearly 3-million consumers (plus more online!) with a statewide classified ad. Advertise your property for just $489 for a 25-word ad, zoned ads start at $229. Visit AdNetworkNY.com or call 315-437-6173
DISH TV. 190 channels. $49.99/mo. for 24 mos. Ask About Exclusive Dish Features like Sling® and the Hopper®. PLUS HighSpeed Internet, $14.95/mo. (Availability and Restrictions apply.) TV for Less, Not Less TV! 1-855-891-5734 Do You Owe $10K+ in IRS Tax Debt?? Take 60 seconds for a FREE Consultation to end IRS collections. Call now! 800-508-2824
MOBILEHELP, America's Premier Mobile Medical Alert System. Whether You're Home or Away. For Safety and Peace of Mind. No Long Term Contracts! Free Brochure! Call Today! 1-800-960-8653 MOTORCYCLES WANTED Before 1985. Running or not. Top $Cash$ Paid. Free appraisals! Japanese, British, European, American. Any condition! CALL 1-315-569-8094 or email pictures or description to: Cyclerestoration@aol.com.
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COMMUNITY
UN NEWS
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PublishedbyDentonPublicationslnc.
105420
HCR Home Care is currently hiring in the North Country!
Home Health Aides • Personal Care Aides Certified Nursing Assistants Why work for HCR: - Leader in home health care for nearly 40 years - Competitive pay and benefits - Continuing education and training - State of the Art technology - Mileage reimbursement - Employee Owned company JOIN OUR TEAM by visiting our Career Page at www.hcrhealth.com or email your resume to: tsorce@hcrhealth.com EOE/AA Minority/Female/Disability/Veteran
103524
HIRING
CaseManager,CNA/HHA, LPNFloor Manager
Call Email
I
Doug at (518) 817-9108 ext. 403 jobs@champlainassistedliving.com 105345
22 • September 23, 2017 | The Valley News Sun (CV)
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
GETOUTEARLY! UPTO4 PAYMENTS OFYOUR LEASEt
2016CHEVY CAMARO CONVERTIBLE
2017CHEVY SILVERADO DBL CAB LT
s10,000 OFF
ALLSTAR
111
EDITION
---~
STOCK#161039 VIN180238 MSRP:$41,690
STOCK#1n097 VIN291346 MSRP:$45,645
2017CHEVYCRUZELT
HATCHBACK
LEAIEFOR=
*251Mo.< 2
l
MSRP $41,i!20 DISCOUNT ••••••••••••••• $1,733 REB.&Tf $1!,000
LARGE SELECTION OF PRE-OWNED VEHICLES • ALL MAKES & MODELS 2012Hyundai Elantra 71,119Miles,38 MPG,CD/MP3
VIN 134135
2012KiaOptima LX 56,791Miles, 35 MPG,Bluetooth VIN 082024
2010Mitsubishi Outlander SE 2012Nissan Altima2.5SL 70,220Miles,AWD,OneOwner,Sunroof 53,757 Miles, 32 MPG,Leather,Nav. VIN 015426 VIN 512627
2015Dodge Journey AVP 40,817Miles,Seats7,DualZoneA/C VIN 699695
1111Wicker Street • Ticonderoga
(518) 585-2842 SALES HOURS: MON-THURS: 9:00AM-7:00PM• FRI: 9:00AM-6:00PM SAT: 9:00AM-5:00PM • SUN: CLOSED
CHRISTOPHERCHEVY
.COM
[]]~ II~
I
FIND
Offers are separate,cannot be combined, and subject to change. Dealershipnot responsiblefor typographicalerrors. Photosfor illustrativepurpose.Offers expire 10/2/17. (1) Not availablewith special finance, leaseor some other offers. Tax,tag, title, and DMV fees due at signing. Includes all availableincentives,rebates and coupons, including owner loyalty/conquestwhere applicable. See dealer for details. (2) 39 mo. closed end lease.$1,700 down plus tax, tag, title, acquisition, and DMV fees due at signing. Must qualify and leasethrough GM Financial.Tier 1 credit. Must havecompetitive lease in household.10,000miles per year, $0.25/mile for overage.Lesseepays for excesswear.See dealerfor details. (3)Valid on select in·stock models including MY2017ChevroletTraverseand Colorado LT models. 0% APR for 72 months for qualified buyers. Monthly paymentis $13.89for every$1000 you finance.Exampledown payment: 18%. Must qualify and finance through GM Financial. Some customerswill not qualify. See dealerfor details. t For eligible current GM lessees. pricesare plustax, tag, title and dealerfees. GMFwill waive up to four (4)paymentsup to $2,000on currentleasewhen customerleasesor purchasesa new vehiclefinancedby GMF.See dealerfor programdetails.*PRH>wned
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
MSRP .................................................... $27,755 Stk#ET393 - V6,6-Speed Auto, LED 1.............................-$500 Ford Military Signal Lighting, Rear Camera, TracApps. & FirstResponder Special Dealer Discount ............................................ -$926 Lease Rate ...................................................................... 1.5% Optional Lease EndPurchase ............................... $14,378 Miles AtVear End ...................................................... 10,500 CapCostRed ............................................................. $1,925 36 Monthlease" Due Atlnception .................................................. $2,327.5D
$299ma.
(CV)
The Valley News Sun | September 23, 2017 • 23
Stk#ET028 - Leather, Heated Power MSRP .................................................... $27,730 Seats, SYNC 3 System, Keyless Entry, Rear Ford Retail Customer Cash ................................... -$2,150 Camera, Sirius, 18"Aluminum Wheels. Ford Eco-Boost Customer Cash ............................... -$500 Ford Military & FirstResponder1. ............................ -$500 Ford Credit Bonus Customer Cash .......................... -$500 Special Dealer Discount ............................................ -$580
$24,665
Offerends10/2/17
tax.title.registration extra
Stk#SET420 - EcoBoost, 6-Spd. Auto, RETAIL .................................................. $42,025 Package Discount ................................................... -$2,00D STX Package, 4x4,SYNC 3 System, Sport MSRP .................................................... $40,025 Package, 2D"Aluminum Wheels. Ford Retail Customer Cash ................................... -$1,500 Ford Retail Bonus Cash .......................................... -$1,750 Ford EcoBoost Bonus ................................................. -$30D 1.............................................-$1,000 Ford FirstResponder Special Dealer Discount ........................................ -$1,080 Offerends10/2/17
$34,395
Offerends10/2/17
Stk#ES552 - V6,Power Driver/PasMSRP .................................................... $32,085 Ford Retail Customer Cash ................................... -$4,000 senger Seats, Sirius, SYNC System, Rear Ford Retail Bonus Cash ......................................... -$1,000 Camera, Remote Start. Ford Military & FirstResponder1. ............................ -$500 Ford Credit Bonus Cash· ........................................ -$1,000 Special Dealer Discount ........................................ -$2,200
$23,385 Offerends10/2/17
SEE ALLOFOUR GREAT BUYS ATWWW.EGGLEFIELDBROS.COM Specific jobrequirements apply andallcustomers willnotqualify. ·Requires Ford Motor Credit Financing andallcustomers maynotqualify. Notresponsible fortypographical errors. photos areused forillustration purposes only
1
~ ~
7618 US Route 9, EI izabethtown, NY 12932 518-873-6551 • 800-559-6551
Homefor your Ford DLR#3160003
Since 1910
ig DLR#7095376
eaks Ford EGGLEFIELD
BROS.
INC.
1190 NYS Route 86, Ray Brook, NY 12977 518-891-5560
Sales • Service • Parts www.e111etieldbros.com Rentals
105119
24 • September 23, 2017 | The Valley News Sun (CV)
www.suncommunitynews.com
Published by Denton Publications, Inc.
-
CHRYSLER
JeeP. RAIMI
SUMMER
CLEARANCE EVENT
~
2018 JEEP COMPASS
~ 2017 RAM 1500
<C
SPORT 4X4
~
MSRP............................................................................. $25,030 Consumer Cash.............................................................. -$500 SamsClubRebate......................................................... -$500 Non-PrimeBonusCash............................................ -$1,000
SALE PRICE
•23,030
CREW CAB EXPRESS 4X4
MSRP.......................................... $43,895 BCRetailConsumer Cash.....-$2,750 Non-PrimeRet.BonusCash..-$1,500 ChryslerCapitalBonus............. -$500 2017BonusCash....................... -$1,000
SALE PRICE
*MSRPisthe Manufacture(s Suggested RetailPrice(MSRP) of thevehicle.It doesnot includeanytaxes, feesor othercharges.Pricingandavailabilitymayvarybasedon a varietyof factors,includingoptions, dealerspecials,fees,andfinancingqualifications. ConsultAdirondack Autofor actualpriceandcomplete details.Vehiclesshownmayhaveoptionalequipmentat additionalcost.Theestimatedsellingprice that appearsafter calculatingdealeroffersis for informational purposesonly.Youmaynot qualifyfor the offers,incentives,discounts,or financing.Offers,incentives,discounts,or financingare subjectto expirationandotherrestrictions.Seedealerfor qualifications and completedetails.Consumers must qualifyfor all rebatesand incentives.SamsClubrebateavailableto currentSamsClubmembers who havebeena member forat least30dayspriorto purchase. Non-prime BonusCashavailableto consumers with lessthan a 620 Ficoscorethat are listedas the primarybuyeron the contract.Offervalid until 10/02/2017.
2017Ret.BonusCash.............. -$1,000 NortheastTruckRegional Retail Conquest Bonus ........................ -$1,000 PowerDaysRet.BonusCash-$1,000
$35,145
*MSRPisthe Manufacturer's Suggested RetailPrice(MSRP) of thevehicle.It doesnotincludeanytaxes,feesor othercharges. Pricingandavailability mayvarybasedona varietyof factors,includingoptions,dealerspecials, fees,andfinancingqualifications. ConsultAdirondack Autofor actualprice andcompletedetails.Vehiclesshownmayhaveoptionalequipment at additionalcost.Theestimatedsellingpricethat appearsafter calculating dealeroffersisfor informational purposes only.Youmaynotqualifyfor theoffers,incentives, discounts, orfinancing.Offers,incentives, discounts, or financingaresubjectto expirationandotherrestrictions. Seedealerfor qualifications andcompletedetails.Consumers mustqualifyfor all rebates andincentives. ChryslerCapitalbonuscashavailablewith approvalof financingthroughChryslercapital.NortheastTruckRegional conquestcash offerseligibleconsumers a cashallowance whentheytrade-inaneligiblevehicle(listedbelow)for theretailpurchase (TypeSale1 or B)of aneligible vehicleto customers residingin the BusinessCenterboundaries below.NOTE: LEASE TURN-IN VEHICLES 00 NOTQUALIFY FORPARTICIPATION IN THISPROGRAM. Thetrade-invehiclemustbe oneof the vehicleslistedbelowandmusthavebeentitled for a minimumof 30 daysto qualifyfor this program. SamsClubrebateavailableto currentSamsClubmembers whohavebeena memberfor at least30dayspriorto purchase. Non-prime BonusCashavailabletoconsumers with lessthana 620Ficoscorethat arelistedasthe primarybuyeronthe contract.Offervaliduntil 10/02/2017.
STOP IN AND SEE US! Terrific Rebates Offered • Trade-ins Welcome (tax and title extra) Thefastlaneforsmallbusiness.
(518) 873-6386
l:UMl/ltiJ ~ LINK]
DEALER #3160005 FirstTimeVisitors, plugin to yourGPS
CourtStreet• Elizabethtown. NY
"7440 US Route 9 • Elizabethtown, NY 12932"
Locatedjust1/4milesouthof CobbleHill GolfCourseonRoute9 in Elizabethtown.
andwe'llgreetyouat thedoor!
Not responsiblefor typographicalerrors. Photosusedfor illustrationpurposesonly. 103520
� � CHECK OUT THESE D EALS � � 2015 RAM 2500 TRADESMAN
2013 NISSAN TITAN PICKUP
2014 DODGE CHALLENGER SRT8
Stock #AA556A
Stock #AA592A2
Stock #AA262A1
8 cyl., 4WD, Auto, 46,507 mi.
8 cyl., 4WD, Auto, 25,607 mi.
8 cyl., RWD, Manual, 56,551 mi.
$30,490
$31,090
$27,499
2014 RAM 1500 TRADESMAN/EXPRESS
2014 JEEP WRANGLER UNLIMITED SPORT
2015 JEEP PATRIOT LATITUDE
Stock #AA522A
Stock #AA615A
Stock #AA178A
8 cyl., 4WD, Auto, 47,985 mi.
6 cyl., 4WD, Auto, 39,417 mi.
4 cyl., 4WD, Auto, 35,892 mi.
$23,499
$27,499
$16,499
------ MUST MENTION THIS ADVERTISEMENT TO RECEIVE THE SPECIAL PRICING LISTED ------
And Many More To Choose From! Stop In, Call, Look At Our Inventory On Our Website adirondackauto.com FIRST Come, FIRST Served!
OUR PREOWNED LOT CHANGES DAILY - DON’T MISS OUT, VISIT US TODAY!
STOP IN AND SEE US! Terrific Rebates Offered • Trade-ins Welcome (tax and title extra) The fast lane for small business.
(518) 873-6386
www.adirondackauto.com
*Tax, title and registration not included.
Located just 1/4 mile south of Cobble Hill Golf Course on Route 9 in Elizabethtown. • Photos are for illustration purposes only • DEALER #3160005
103521
Court Street • Elizabethtown, NY
First Time Visitors, plug in to your GPS “7440 US Route 9, Elizabethtown, NY 12932” and we’ll greet you at the door!