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UCDSB discusses fate of 29 area schools BY JENNIFER WESTENDORP jwestendorp@metroland.com
The Board of Trustees for the Upper Canada District School Board discussed the fate of 29 schools across the region at their regular meeting on Sept. 28. “The trustees are not deciding which schools will close,” said Stephen Sliwa, UCDSB Director of Education, in a phone interview with this newspaper Tuesday morning. The schools slated for possible closure at the end of this school year include;
Oxford-On-Rideau Public School, Wolford Public School, Benson Public School, Char-Lan District High School, Glen Tay Public School, Long Sault Public School, North Elmsley Public School, Pakenham Public School, Plantagenet Public School, Rideau Centennial Public School, Rothwell-Osnabruck Secondary School and Seaway District High School. For the past decade, the UCDSB has seen declining enrollment. See Oxford page K2
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Ray Elgersma, right, looks on as Jeff Mills and Glennis Harwig do the final weigh-in for the second annual Great Veggie Grow Off last year at the Almonte Farmers’ Market. Mississippi Mills was the community that earned bragging rights. This year’s edition encompassed all of Lanark County and the final weigh-in will be done Oct. 8 at 11 a.m. at the Smiths Falls Town Hall.
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The Great Veggie Grow-Off final weigh-in will take place on Thanksgiving Saturday (Oct. 8) at 11 a.m. at the Smiths Falls Town Hall. Recognizing that many in our community struggle to provide themselves and their families with healthy food, the Great Veggie Grow-Off started two years ago by the Neighbourhood Tomato Community Garden project in northeast Lanark (Mississippi Mills, Carleton Place and Beckwith) as a way to challenge citizens to grow food to share with their local food bank. After two very successful years (2,860 lbs grown and donated in 2014 and 4,071 lbs, over two tons in 2015) this gardening challenge has gone county-wide in 2016.
The Great Veggie Grow-Off is a community challenge with “bragging rights” for the Lanark County municipality that grows the most local produce for one of the four local food banks in Lanark County. These include The Hunger Stop in Carleton Place, Smiths Falls Community Food bank, Lanark Highlands Food Pantry, and The Table in Perth. Gardeners bring produce to their local food bank where it is weighed then recorded as a donation for their community. The program kicks off each year on May 1, International Worker’s Day, to pay respect to the farmers who feed us, and our final weigh-in is held on Thanksgiving Saturday to align with the United Nations World Food Day
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The Lanark Animal Welfare Society (LAWS) launched a capital campaign to raise $500,000 for a new shelter or renovations to its existing one, during the Sept. 24 Walk Your Paws for LAWS fundraiser at the Neelin Street Community Centre in Carleton Place. Kicking off the campaign with a $5,000 donation were Cathy Taylor and Dave Lindstedt. From left: Taylor and Lindstedt present the donation to LAWS board president Kathy Hoyland and fundraising campaign representative Rob Rainer.
LAWS launches $500,000 capital campaign for new shelter, renovations to existing location BY ASHLEY KULP
akulp@metroland.com
The Lanark Animal Welfare Society (LAWS) kicked off its capital campaign for a new shelter Sept. 24 to a round of applause and a few barks. The announcement of the $500,000 campaign, was made just prior to the start of the organization’s annual Walk Your Paws for LAWS fundraiser at the Neelin Street Community Centre in Carleton Place. Board president Kathy Hoyland said issues have continually plagued the shelter for 30 years since the organization moved into the space in 1986. “For anybody that hasn’t been to the shelter, you’ll know that it’s a very old building,” she remarked. “It’s hard to heat in the winter and it’s hard to cool down in the summer. We have very expensive hydro bills, we have mould problems that keep coming back and coming back. Today, we’re launching our capital campaign for either a new shelter or massive renovations at our current location.” The one-acre parcel of land was purchased and volunteers helped build a small shelter with space to house 12 dogs and a few cats. Later on, a cat wing was added and other renovations have been made over the years to accommodate more animals. Hoyland noted the board is considering all options as they kick off the campaign. “We have a target of approximately $500,000 so I don’t know how
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Two $1,000 presentations were also made from Dr. Amanda Malloy, courtesy of the Mississippi Mills Animal Hospital and Valley Veterinary Clinic. From left: Malloy presents the cheques to LAWS board president Kathy Hoyland and fundraising campaign representative Rob Rainer. long it’s going to take us to get there, but we want to do this one right so there’s good flow and the animals are healthy and the staff are happy to come to work there,” she stated. Rob Rainer, who is volunteering his time to help with the fundraising campaign, then took over to announce three major donations, which have given the campaign an opening boost of approximately $10,000. “We’re off to a good start. We’ve got some nice contributions that have come in early,” he said. The first of those donations is from board member Cathy Taylor and treasurer Dave Linstedt who have pledged $5,000
towards the initiative. Dr. Amanda Malloy also presented two $1,000 cheques, courtesy of the Mississippi Mills Animal Hospital and Valley Veterinary Clinic. “I will help you guys with fundraising and challenge other vet clinics in the area to do the same,” Malloy commented. Board member Liz Taylor followed suit with a $1,500 donation of her own towards the cause. While the initial funds are nice, Rainer stressed “we have a long way to go.” He said over the coming year, LAWS is going to be making an effort to network with individuals, See CAMPAIGN page 4
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CAMPAIGN
From page 3
Submitted photo
Bulk Barn in Carleton Place has supported the Alzheimer Society Lanark Leeds Grenville’s Coffee Break campaign for the past five years. This year they raised $2,618 but have brought in $11,629.98 in total. Above, store manager Nicole Delorey, left, presents the funds to Alzheimer Society Lanark Leeds Grenville fund development co-ordinator, Bobbi-Jo Jarvis recently. Coffee Break is the Alzheimer Society’s major nationwide annual fundraiser where friends, co-workers and customers gather in communities across Canada to raise funds for local Alzheimer societies. Participants at these events make a donation in exchange for a cup of coffee or purchase a Coffee cut out. The money raised stays in our community to help support local programs and services. Bulk Barn in Carleton Pace sells Coffee cut outs and as an extra incentive. Anyone that purchased one was entered into a draw to win one of three gift baskets.
businesses and foundations to seek much-needed funds. Rainer indicated a team effort will be required to make the dream a reality. “We’re looking for individuals, families or businesses looking to make a sizable donation through a legacy program where we’ve talked about establishing naming rights to the building,” he explained. “So, if someone gives a large enough contribution, they would have the option to attach a name to that building, subject to the approval of the board. That could be a way for someone or a business to leave a bit of a legacy in the community.” As a supporter of LAWS and the work they do (his partner volunteers at the shelter as a cat attendant), Rainer knows just how important it is for more space.
Ashley Kulp/Metroland
Lanark Animal Welfare Society (LAWS) board member Liz Taylor, left, makes a $1,500 donation to the organization’s capital campaign to build a new shelter or renovate the existing one Sept. 24. She presented the cheque to LAWS board president Kathy Hoyland, centre, and Rob Rainer, fundraising campaign representative. “It’s cramped and certainly from an animal welfare point
of view and from staff and volunteer experience and visitor experience, the building has done what it could do for the time it’s been there, but clearly a better design would go a long way,” he stated. Impressed by the support of LAWS throughout Lanark County, he hopes that same generosity will continue as the campaign enters its early days. “Hopefully we’ll achieve our goal within about a year and not long after that, hopefully LAWS can be moving into either a brand new facility that’s more state-of-theart, better for the animals, better for the people working there, better for the visitors, or extensive renovations,” he said. In the coming months, LAWS will be unveiling more information about its capital campaign. Visit www.lanarkanimals.ca for full details.
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Tracy Kwissa, centre, leads walkers in a chant down Bridge Street in Carleton Place during the tenth anniversary of Lanark County Interval House’s Take Back the Night march Sept. 21. The evening began with guest speakers, including Catherine Cameron, whose late husband Bernard, a former Mississippi Mills councillor, was killed protecting his family at his home Feb. 11, as well as a rose ceremony vigil.
akulp@metroland.com
“...Violence against women is alive and well across this community...” Those words, spoken by Lanark County Interval House (LCIH) executive director Erin Lee at the tenth anniversary of Take Back the Night Sept. 24 at the Carleton Place Town Hall Square, has the organization expressing “outrage and sadness.” “(We) are frankly, a little fearful for our future,” Lee remarked to the more than 50 gathered for the vigil and march. “What will it take to shift this culture? What will it take to change our attitude, the attitude that plagues many, many of us in many communities?” The emotional evening began with a powerful speech by Catherine Cameron, whose husband Bernard, was killed Feb. 11 of this year, in their Almonte home while defending his family. Daughter Sarah was shot three times before the gunman, Sarah’s estranged partner, turned the gun on himself. Cameron said she was at the vigil as a victim, but “it’s about all of us.” She urged for changes to be made to end violence against women, including “the need for us to teach our young men and women how to build
healthy relationships and how to make lifelong commitments in a supportive environment with one another.” She also spoke of how important it is to eliminate rape culture in our society. “So often we say things and we hear things and we don’t speak to them. We have to change that. And I want to speak to the need for us to never have to wear these (whistles) ever again,” she stressed as her voice broke. “Change means that lives will be saved so we have to work together to change this.” Guest speaker Deb Kinder, who co-ordinates the Sex Workers Action Group and sits on the board of the Sexual Assault Centre in Kingston, expanded on the need to stop rape culture, a phrase coined by American feminists in the 1970s. Kinder also works in Lanark County through a memorandum of understanding from LCIH. “(Rape culture) is a belief that rape and other forms of sexual violence are not simply acts of isolated deviants, rather they’re seen as part of our patriarchal culture,” Kinder explained. “A culture where women, trans and gender nonconforming people are objectified and demeaned and one in which rape is encouraged, excused, condoned and covered up.
She noted rape culture is why events such as Take Back the Night are so necessary, in order to give the victim’s, not the offender’s, a voice. “Instead of being horrified that a young woman was raped while unconscious, people are horrified about how being charged with rape will negatively impact a young man’s life,” Kinder stated, referencing the case against Stanford University student Brock Turner, who received six months in jail and three years probation for raping a woman in January 2015. Turner’s father was quoted as saying punishment was a “steep price to pay for 20 minutes of action out of his 20 plus years of life.” “The impact is seen as the true problem,” she continued. “It also means the young man gets three months out of a possible 14 years in jail.” Kinder was also involved in the initial discussions to bring the Slut Walk movement to Lanark County “recognizing that maybe some education needs to be done around what Slut Walk means and what it is,” she said, encouraging guests to visit the Slut Walk Lanark County Facebook page and learn about the event, which allows women to reclaim the word, primarily used in a negative manner.
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Perth hosts hikers from across province at Hike Ontario Summit Each year, hiking associations across Ontario get together to discuss topics related to hiking trails and hiking in general. These annual summits are arranged by Hike Ontario, the province’s most valuable support resource for hiking and walking groups and pedestrian trail users. Hike Ontario acts as the voice for more than nine million hikers and walkers in Ontario. This year, the Rideau Trail Association (RTA) will be hosting the Summit in Perth, over the weekend of Sept. 30 to Oct. 2. The event is a Perth 200th anniversary sanctioned event, and this is also the 45th anniversary of the RTA. This event, consisting of workshops, dinner, and organized hikes, will appeal directly to anyone with a love for the outdoors and for hiking. To register for the event, please go to http://rideautrail. org/hikeontario2016. On Sunday, Oct. 2, a number of hikes are being offered, not only to summit attendees, but also to members of the general public, at no charge.
You are invited to come along and join us on one of these hikes. All hikes start promptly at 9 a.m. from the Perth Golf Club at the western end of Peter Street. Hikes being offered (subject to weather) include: • Perth and Tay Canal: Easy – 6 km Hike the Rideau Trail through beautiful Perth to the eastern edge of town, following the banks of the Tay River. Return through pleasant, quiet neighborhoods. • Mica Mines: Easy/Moderate – 6 km Explore the section of Rideau Trail which passes close to old mica mine pits south of Perth. • Foley Mountain: Moderate – 6 km Hike along the section of Rideau Trail from Spy Rock to the plaque commemorating the opening of the Rideau Trail in1971, returning up the colorful escarpment trails. • Frontenac Park: Moderate/Difficult – 13 km Explore the Arkon Lake Loop in spectacular Frontenac Park. • Burritts Rapids: Easy – 8 km
Hike the Rideau Trail to exquisite Stoney Steps and the Rideau Canal’s Tip-to-Tip Trail. For more information about the RTA, the Hike Ontario Summit or the above-
noted hikes, please contact RTA Central Club chair, Gill Hyland at 613-267-5756 or RTA Central Club vice-chair, Jack Tannett at 613-466-0417. Submitted by the Rideau Trail Association
Wheels of Hope Scarlet Run sets sights on cancer research Oct. 2 The Lanark & District Civitan Club will be holding their sixth annual Wheels for Hope Scarlet Run again this year on Sunday, Oct. 2. This year, we are supporting the Wheels of Hope program. This is a division of the Canadian Cancer Society which helps people manage transportation to and from their cancer treatments. One in five Canadian cancer patients cannot afford to get to their treatments. This program helps to eliminate some
stress and allows the patient to concentrate on their healing and recovering. It is not too late for anyone who is interested in running or walking this year to sign up or if you just want to help by donating to this very worthy cause, you may do so by going to https://www. events.runningroom.com/ site/?raceId=13402. There are many expenses not covered during patient’s fight with cancer and this is one way to help those who need it now.
The Carleton Place and District Community Band is pleased to present
Movie and Broadway Hits Guest Artists Artists Event Event Horizon, Horizon, Andrew Guest Andrew Simpson Simpson and and April April Norris Norris Carleton Place Town Hall Saturday October 1 at 7:30 Carleton Place Town Hall pm Saturday October 1 at 7:30 pm
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From page 5
While acknowledging women have made many strides in the past century, there is still a long way to go to achieve equality. “It’s not easy to contemplate how this will change. It’s overwhelming to consider the cultural shift necessary, but really, we an all make small steps to help make change,” she commented. “We need to stop sexualizing women...we need to teach our boys not to rape. We need to stop teaching our girls that they have the responsibility to try and prevent rape by dressing appropriately, by not walking in places or at times where they should not, or by ensuring they have too much to drink because then they’re up for grabs and they’ll know that it’s their fault.” The basis of Kinder’s message was for people to speak up when something offends them. “Stop being afraid you are going to offend someone by calling them on things when they make rape jokes, racist statements or when they’re being oppressive,” she stated. “Push yourself to speak up and not feel embarrassed. It’s your right and your responsibility to do so.”
An emotional Catherine Cameron, above, pleads for change during the tenth anniversary of Lanark County Interval House’s Take Back the Night march to end violence against women Sept. 21 at the Carleton Place Town Hall Square. Cameron’s late husband Bernard, a former Mississippi Mills councillor, was killed protecting his family at his home Feb. 11 by his daughter’s estranged partner. Right, a woman places a rose in the Mississippi River in memory of a victim of violence during the rose vigil ceremony.
Victims of violence remembered Acknowledging that the rose vigil portion of the evening can be “challenging for many,” Lee led attendees as several men and women headed for the water side of the Mississippi River to drop a rose in to remember a woman who lost her life at the hands of violence. As the drumming of the Lanark Drum Circle was heard in the back-
ground, names of women, many from Lanark County, were read, including Smiths Falls’ Heather Fraser (1985), Carleton Place’s Barbara Lancier (1994), Tammy Proulx of Franktown (1997), Almonte’s Barbara Galway (2005) – as well as the three victims of the Wilno murders, whose anniversary was marked one day later on Sept. 22 – Carol Culleton, Anastasia Kuzyk and
Ashley Kulp/Metroland violence against women in rural com- with partner agencies and communities
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Nathalie Warmerdam. Cameron also kissed a rose in memory of Bernard. “Typically we don’t do that at Take Back the Night, but if Bernard Cameron hadn’t risked his life, we would be putting in a rose for Sarah Cameron tonight,” Lee said. Prior to commencing the march down Bridge Street, Lee took some time to talk about the alarming increase in
munities and said the number one police response call continues to be domestic violence. Ignorance and excuses are “no longer acceptable,” she said. To that end, LCIH participated in four rural forums in April of this year in order to create a plan to respond to violence against women in solidarity. “We have a plan and it begins right here. It begins with each one of you doing your part,” she stressed. That initiative includes recommendations for systems to do bail reviews, a dedicated domestic violence court, accessible rural transportation solutions and placing anti-violence tools in education from junior kindergarten to high school. Lee said challenging politicians for better outcomes and collaborating
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can make “real and meaningful change.” “I remain disheartened that this level of violence can happen in a province that has taken a position on violence, but you know me, I remain determined and hopeful,” she stated. Like guest speaker Kinder before her, Lee encouraged all in attendance to speak up and speak out. “...We must be shaken. We must be outraged and we must unite, finally, and work together to make things different,” she said. “I commit, to all of you, that as long as I’m the leadership that is the ED (executive director) of Lanark County Interval House, we will remain vigilant in the fight to end all forms of violence against women and their children. Alone we are strong, but together we are unstoppable as we act as one.”
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famousforfairness.ca I Smiths Falls 613-283-3882 Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 7 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
EDITORIAL
Connected to your community
COMMENTARY
T
The value of five seconds
he arrival of autumn also signals the return of the fall seat belt campaign. OPP and municipal police services will be taking part in the annual initiative, which is scheduled to end on Oct. 7. According to the government, stats show that about 96 per cent of Ontarians buckle up on a regular basis. Seat belt use in the province has been mandatory for about 40 years now. Provincial police report that they investigated 347 collision-related deaths involving unbuckled vehicle occupants over the past five years. An OPP release states there had been 40 such deaths in 2016 as of this past weekend. Provincial police also indicate that, between 2010 and 2014, males between the ages of 25 and 34 accounted for the highest number of seat belt-related deaths; overall, about three-quarters of those who died were males. As for females, the 25-34 age range accounts for the highest number of deaths. Officers will be checking to ensure that
children who are not big enough or old enough to use a seat belt are secured in an appropriate child car seat or booster seat. There’s a lot more at stake than just a fine and demerit points when it comes to buckling up properly, law enforcement agencies and governments are emphasizing. First responders “…know that not wearing a seat belt is a game changer when it comes to your chances of surviving a crash and reducing the severity of your injuries,” an OPP release states. The evidence indicates that wearing a seat belt properly is the most effective way to reduce the risk of injury and death in a collision. As OPP Deputy Commissioner Brad Blair stated, “Every life is worth the five seconds it takes to buckle up.” So don’t be surprised by officers that are stationed at an on- or off-ramp by the 401 or in the middle of the town or on just about any public roadway in the region between now and Thanksgiving weekend.
Mother’s special powers were proven for Mary As she did every evening after the kitchen had been redded up, Mother was at the end of the kitchen table with her diaries and scrapbooks spread out before her. I was glad my sister Audrey decided she didn’t have time to spend with me going through the Eaton’s catalogue. It had just arrived in the mail and even though I could spend hours thumbing through the pages, that night I had other things on my mind. I looked around the kitchen. From where I sat at the other end of the table, I saw Father in the rocking chair as usual, with his feet up on a cushion on the oven door. The Ottawa Farm Journal was on his lap and I could see it wouldn’t be long before sleep would win out, and the paper would slip to the floor. And then his pipe would
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fall to his chest and the soft snoring would start. My sister Audrey was at the old treadle Singer sewing machine trying her best to make a blouse out of a cotton dress that had come in the hand-me-down box from Aunt Lizzie in Regina. It was important that I place everyone in the kitchen that night, because I was out to prove what my friend Velma said was, in fact, true. She said mothers had this rare talent where they could see everything going on around them, without turning their heads or raising they eyes from whatever they were doing. I had long since ruled out that Mother had eyes in the back of her head like my brother Emerson swore up and down was a fact! Having examined her head carefully on more than one oc-
it wouldn’t take long before there would be a roaring-eyed fight, like there was just about every night. Earl said Emerson was cheating. Everett yelled,
casion, I knew this was just another one of my brother’s crazy ideas. I was more inclined to believe my friend Velma, who was devoutly religious, a Lutheran, and said God have given mothers this special talent, so that they could keep everyone in line without as much as actually seeing them in action. That night, I was determined to see if Velma had her facts straight. My three brothers were playing Old Maid at the bake table and that meant trouble. I knew
Vice President & Regional Publisher Peter Bishop pbishop@metroland.com 613-283-3182, ext. 108 Director of Advertising Cheryl Hammond cheryl.hammond@metroland.com 613-221-6218 General Manager Cindy Manor cmanor@metroland.com 613-283-3182, ext. 164 Editor-in-Chief Ryland Coyne rcoyne@metroland.com Managing Editor Marla Dowdall mdowdall@metroland.com
“Ya, cheating.” And then it card back in the deck, young happened right before my eyes! man, or you’re off to bed.” She Mother didn’t look up from hadn’t as much as raised an the diary she was working on and said to Emerson, “Put that See MARY page 9
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Green Party association hosts hydro talk Oct. 1 DEAR EDITOR:
The Lanark-Frontenac-Lennox & Addington Green Party Association is starting the fall season with an interesting and topical event with energy expert Angela Bischoff, outreach director of the Ontario Clean Air Alliance this Saturday, Oct. 1. The talk, which starts at 7:30 p.m. at the Maberly Community Hall, is a fundraiser for the association, and will also include a silent auction and coffee and desserts. Bischoff will provide an engaging talk and
News Editors: Laurie Weir, Joe Morin, Ashley Kulp REPORTERS: Tara Gesner, Desmond Devoy, Jennifer Westendorp, Evelyn Harford DISTRIBUTION MANAGER: Lori Sommerdyk, 613-284-0124 ,ext. 27 CLASSIFIED/REGIONAL ROUNDUP 613-283-3182 Judy Michaelis x122 email: judy.michaelis@metroland.com Cheryl Code x133 email: cheryl.code@metroland.com Fax: 613-283-5909
Member of: Ontario Community Newspapers Association, Canadian Community, Newspapers Association, Ontario Press Council, Association of Free Community Papers
discussion on Ontario's Energy Future: Nuclear or Renewables? Ontario is at a major crossroads: Our 18 aging nuclear reactors will come to the end of their design life in the next decade. The Ontario government's long-term energy plan will extend six and rebuild 10 (two are already rebuilt) of these relics, locking us into nuclear for another four decades, endangering huge populations and spending tens of billions of our dollars.
ADVERTISING SALES: ADVERTISING SALES MANAGER Paula Inglis 613-283-3182 x169 SALES: Cheryl Johnston, Sharon Sinfield, Kevin Hoover 613-283-3182
THE DEADLINE FOR DISPLAY ADVERTISING IS MONDAY 4:30 PM
Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 8 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
See LETTER page 9 • Advertising rates and terms and conditions are according to the rate card in effect at time advertising published. • The advertiser agrees that the publisher shall not be liable for damages arising out of errors in advertisements beyond the amount charged for the space actually occupied by that portion of the advertisement in which the error occurred, whether such error is due to negligence of its servants or otherwise... and there shall be no liability for non-insertion of any advertisement beyond the amount charged for such advertisement. • The advertiser agrees that the copyright of all advertisements prepared by the Publisher be vested in the Publisher and that those advertisements cannot be reproduced without the permission of the Publisher. • The Publisher reserves the right to edit, revise or reject any advertisement.
Read us online at www.insideottawavalley.com
The Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) is warning hotel guests of yet another scam that is making its way around and involves an issue with your credit card. The Front Desk Scam is a form of phishing, where the caller will try to obtain valuable credit card information from you stating they are calling from the front desk of the hotel you are staying at and need to confirm particular details specific to your credit card. In many cases, what the caller is looking for is a confirmation of the
credit card number and the three-digit security code located on the back of the card. If this information is provided, it can allow for a credit card to be made which could be used for fraudulent purchases. The Canadian Anti – Fraud Centre (CAFC) was contacted and is aware of this scam and together, the OPP and the CAFC are suggesting that anyone who receives such a call should not provide any credit card details over the phone, but rather should attend the hotel front desk to
MARY
From page 8
eyebrow! And then she asked Audrey to get Father’s pipe off his chest because it was just about to burn a hole in his plaid shirt. And she didn’t even turn her head! Well, that tore it for me. I couldn’t wait to get to school the next day to tell Velma she was absolutely right. Mothers did have this talent for knowing what was going on without
deal with the matter. The scam is sneaky in that the scammer calls the hotel and asks to be put through to your room or they utilize an existing automated system within the hotel where they connect with you directly in an attempt to play out the scam. Often the guest is caught off guard and complies with the scammer as they imply that there is an issue involving your credit card information. The OPP is using this incident to remind the public never give out any
as much as raising an eyebrow. And they didn’t have eyes in the back of their heads either! And I started to wonder if just maybe Mother could tell what I was thinking too. That thought scared the daylights out of me and I made up my mind that whenever I was in the same room with her, I would try my utmost to have the purest of thoughts in my head. And I wondered if, when I grew up, I too would have the rare talent of
credit card information over the phone, ask for the name of someone you can speak to and if you are staying in a hotel and receive such a call, tell the caller that you will come down to the front desk in person to deal with the problem. If it turns out there is not a problem with your credit card inform the hotel manager and contact to the Canadian AntiFraud Centre by visiting their website or calling 1-888-495-8501 to report the incident. Submitted by the Ontario Provincial Police
knowing exactly what was going on around me without benefit of raising an eyebrow, just because I too, had become a mother. It was a lot to think about back then when I was six-years-old. Interested in an electronic version of Mary’s books? Go to https://www. smashwords.com and type MaryRCook for e-book purchase details, or if you would like a hard copy, please contact Mary at wick2@sympatico. ca.
LETTER
From page 8
Meanwhile, green energy will be curtailed. The Ontario Clean Air Alliance is advocating for the shutdown of all our reactors when their current lifespans expire, moving us to 100 per cent renewable grid by 2030. There are compelling, clean and doable solutions available. Come hear about them on Saturday, Oct. 1.
Are you new to the neighbourhood? Had a baby? Planning a wedding? We have free gifts and information for you. Give Welcome Wagon a call
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Doors open for the talk at 6:30 p.m. and the cost is $25 per person (tax receipts issued for a portion) or your best offering will be appreciated. Please fill a car with five or six people. We hope to see you there. For further information, contact Ormond Lee at 613-267-7584. Lanark-Frontenac-Lennox & Addington Green Party Association
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Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 9 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
Airline baggage inconsistences increasingly hard to swallow As we made our way down the jet way and approached our aircraft, staff members from the airline were checking the “carry-on” luggage of our fellow passengers and offered to stow the largest suitcases in the cargo bays underneath the plane. “We can take that and tag it if you like. It’ll be waiting for you in the sky bridge when you reach your destination,” the young fellow intoned, over and over. A number of people took him up on the offer, no doubt considering the size of their bag versus the confines of the overhead luggage racks inside the airliner. And why not! It would be stowed and returned to them as they left the plane in Halifax. So, a very nice offer from the airline, right? Great customer service, eh! Wrong! That particular gesture, as average as it may sound to some of you, immediately set off a wave of grumbling among many of the other people boarding the flight, including me. I’m referring to those of us who followed the airline’s protocol and checked our baggage at the arrival counter, as you are supposed to do. We paid for the privilege of course. Handsomely, in fact! It cost Kathleen and me $54 per bag to have our luggage checked for later pickup at Stanfield Airport outside Halifax. We would have paid slightly less had we been able to complete the online check-in process the previous day. But regular flyers will no doubt agree that online check-in is just another crater in the minefield that is airline administration today. It doesn’t always work. Computer glitches, too much activity on the airline website, or the not infrequent problem of one computer not talking to another. It’s happened to us a number of times. We simply shrug it off as one of the “hazards of flying”. On this occasion, in early August, we went with our friends to the airport the next day, completed the check-in process and paid more than we should have to check two bags through to Halifax. Still, we were pleased to get things sorted and head off on our long-planned holiday. Until we hit the jet way and saw the luggage “process” which was occurring there. That wiped the smiles off our faces! The folks who bypassed the ticket counter baggage check-in took a chance that their bags
would be deemed suitable for the gate-to-gate service I just referred to. Technically their cases should have been measured. If they were over the allowable dimensions they would have to pay the same fee we did. The reality is that we have never seen that scenario on our travels. Those who take a chance on a free ride for their baggage always seem to come up trumps. Rules ignored To us the whole thing stinks. We follow the “rules of the airline.” So why are we paying while many others, who are prepared to ignore the rules, don’t? It isn’t fair and it is time those who follow the guidelines step up and complain, loudly. Perhaps then the airlines will look at what is taking place so regularly? From my perspective most airlines are guilty of this. There’s another side to it too. Money aside, the apparent free ride for some is even more annoying for those passengers who have paid to have their luggage properly stowed. If you fly regularly, how many times do you see fellow passengers bringing large bags into the aircraft cabin? We witness this all the time. It always leaves me silently fuming. First of all many of the bags I see people bringing into the plane are huge. If a young, fit looking person has to use a handle to pull their bag behind them then they are probably too large. Airport check-in counters are now equipped with metal racks, measuring devices which passengers are urged to use to check and see if their bags are oversize. They are built to the alleged dimensions of the airlines own luggage policy. So why aren’t they being used? I rarely see people voluntarily using these measuring baskets. Why would they if they can bring their obviously large suitcase down the ramp and have airline staff stow it for them. Free of charge no less! To say this is maddening to the segment of responsible people who follow the policy and/or always check their large suitcases, is an understatement. I’m definitely not the only one who feels this way. I have talked to many passengers, mostly total strangers, who are blown away by how easy it is for people to circumvent rules which clearly are not being enforced very often. I can’t speak for every airline or airport of course. However I rarely see any luggage en-
Reflections BY JEFF MAGUIRE
forcement when I’m flying and we have been through a lot of airports in North America and Europe over the course of 26 years of regular travel. I have also brought this matter to the attention of family, friends and acquaintances that are frequent flyers. They say this is part of the “new normal” in air travel. Evidently it’s the rule, not the exception. Of course having so many people bringing large suitcases onto the plane as their “personal items” creates another significant problem. Large cases very quickly fill the overhead luggage racks. In turn people whose personal items are what I would consider normal – small carryon bags, oversize purses and camera cases – often can’t find space. They are forced to put them under the seats making already tight quarters even more confined. The same is true of jackets and sweaters which we and so many others prefer to store in the overhead compartments. If you are in the last group to enter the aircraft there is often no space left for anything you are carrying. The smaller the aircraft, the worse the problem! In turn it is maddening to have flight crew come along, just before take-off and insist that the jacket and bag I have been forced to hold on my lap must now be stowed under the seat for take-off and during landing. “Safety regulations,” they say. “Oh, so you enforce this regulation but not the one about oversized luggage,” I mumble to whoever will listen. Another thought that always occurs to me in these situations is that having all these heavy bags inside the passenger compartment doesn’t exactly enhance the safety of those inside the airplane, including me. In the event of an emergency, flying objects inside the cabin will only add to the danger. Clear advantage The advantages of what I have outlined to those who ignore the rules are pretty obvious. Not only do the offenders not pay to carry large bags on to the aircraft. They also avoid the considerable inconvenience of visiting the baggage hall after arriving at their destina-
tion and waiting, sometimes for lengthy periods, for the luggage carrousels to spring into action and their checked bags to arrive. If they arrive that is. The other obvious downside is that sometimes checked bags disap-
pear into the netherworld of “lost luggage.” Been there and done that too! Little wonder many are desperate to avoid paying for checked bags and to keep their luggage with them so they can make a fast getaway at the oth-
er end, bags safely in tow. You may have noticed something I haven’t yet commented on relative to this? The added cost of checking your suitcases before boarding the aircraft. See MAGUIRE page 20
Tooth Fairy teachings for your kids A wobbling baby tooth is a sign that the Tooth Fairy will soon be visiting. It’s also a sign for parents – that it’s time to help guide your kids through their important, first-time money activities. Baby teeth earnings are more lucrative than you might think: In 2015, young Canadians could expect an average of $3.44 for a lost tooth – a 23 per cent increase over the 2014 average of $2.80 per tooth. That’s almost $70 for a full set of first teeth.* And depending on where they live in Canada, some youngsters can expect even more. In Québec, for example, the average Tooth Fairy payout is $4 while about five per cent of lucky young Canucks will find $20 per tooth under their pillow.** Here’s how you and the Tooth Fairy can help teach your young ones some basic lessons about money: Teach kids about handling coins and currency At some point, your child will want to save, spend or invest. Start them off on the right track by having them touch and feel some coins and identify their value. Show them how money adds up – how two nickels equal a dime and five nickels equal a quarter. Get them a piggy bank and talk to them about the importance of saving for the things they want and for emergencies. Help your kids with first purchases Use the Tooth Fairy money to teach them the value of balancing wants and needs. Have them set aside money for savings and when their savings goal has been reached, reward them with a trip to the store for a small purchase. Show them how to shop for the best price and let your child complete the transaction on their own.
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Manage Your Money Make the connection between kids and cash The Tooth Fairy likely isn’t the only source of cash for your kids – cash is often a popular birthday or holiday gift – so use each “gift” to reinforce the value of saving and spending wisely. Introduce the concept of budgeting As your kids get older, have them allocate their spending in line with their need to save according to a basic budget. Bank on it Show them how adults handle money by regularly taking them to the bank and, when it’s time, have them open their own savings account. A visit from the Tooth Fairy is an ideal opening to teach your kids important money lessons. It can also serve as a reminder to you that it’s time to talk to your professional advisor about your own financial life. *The moment of Tooth: how the Tooth Fairy can teach your kids about money by Carla Hindman, Director of Financial Education, Visa Canada – Practical Money Skills, https://www.practicalmoneyskills. ca/personalfinance/practicalmoneymatters/ columns_2015/09_ToothFairy.php **Survey reveals Tooth Fairy’s going rates across Canada by Patricia Kozicka, Global News --http:// globalnews.ca/news/ 2171237/survey-reveals-toothfairys-going-rates-across-canada/ This column, written and published by Investors Group Financial Services Inc. (in Québec – a Financial Services Firm), and Investors Group Securities Inc. (in Québec, a firm in Financial Planning) presents general information only and is not a solicitation to buy or sell any investments. Contact your own advisor for specific advice about your circumstances. For more information on this topic please contact your Investors Group Consultant.
Darlene Donnelly CFP Financial Consultant (613) 264-0064 • Perth
Jane Graham CFP Financial Consultant (613) 290-7577 • Merrickville
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Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 10 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
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Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 11 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
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1-800-552-7242
email: info@ColdwellBankerPerth.com www.ColdwellBankerPerth.com
OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY OCT 1 1:00PM-2:00PM
NEW LISTING – PERTH
COUNTRY SETTING
70 BACCHUS ISLAND RD $299,000 This home was built for the family on the go. Enter into a large foyer with 3 pc bath and split up to the living, dining, kitchen area. Three bedrooms, master with walk-in closet and spacious en suite with Jacuzzi tub, double sinks and shower. Lower level has 2 large bedrooms, efficient laundry area, full sized bath and awesome entertainment room with wood fireplace, room for the pool table and cozy sitting area with walk out to backyard. Rear screened porch overlooks above ground pool and private treed yard, rolling down to the fire pit. Excellent location so close to town but feels like country living! Cathie McCabe 613-284-6263 cathie-mccabe@coldwellbanker.ca
$163,500 Starter home or downsizing, this three bedroom house in the area of Last Duel Park has numerous upgrades. New main level flooring, paint, and new shingles all in 2016. The house and yard have been cleaned up and ready for new owners. Affordable and easy to heat with wood inserted fireplace in living room that will handle the entire house. Large 12’x12’ storage shed in backyard, outdoor bbq and single attached carport with enough firewood to get you started this Fall. MLS# 1030409 Bob Ferguson 613-812-8871 bobferg@superaje.com
28 ANGLICAN CHURCH RD $349,000 Stay cool in the summer splashing in the salt water inground pool, and cozy in the winter by the family room woodstove and the fireplace in the living room. 4 bedroom, 1.5 bath low maintenance brick and vinyl home with attached insulated and heated double garage close to Perth and Smiths Falls. Spacious rooms, separate dining room with French doors, 24 foot living room, 14 foot kitchen, 23 foot family room. Many renovations over the last 10 years, baths, crisp white kitchen with loads of storage including a pantry, flooring, heating and cooling, pool, windows and doors,paved circular drive,special closet off the mud room for the kids coats and school bags,etc.Tasteful decor with wonderful sunset views over the fields.This is a great family home in a private & peaceful country setting Call or email Barbara Shepherd for a personal viewing 613-326-1361
PERTH CONDO!
NEW PRICE
WANTED - PERTH SOUTH END
900 LANARK $199,900 Large side split family home with three bedrooms upstairs and one more plus an office area on the lower level. The home is situated on a one acre private lot only minutes from Lanark Village. Upgrades include roof shingles, doors and windows, propane forced air furnace, and a new septic system just installed. The lower level has a cozy family room with woodstove. Basement level offers lots of storage and a walkout side door. Perfect for the large family and ready to move into. MLS #94093401008101 Paul Martin 613-264-0123
I have clients looking for a 3 bedroom plus “guest room” home in the quiet south end of Perth in the $300,000 price range. If you are considering selling, please contact me. Thank you. Barbara Shepherd 613 326-1361 barbara-shepherd@coldwellbanker.ca
$199,900 Ground floor two bedroom unit in Perth’s Tweedsmuir condominium. Walk out from your patio doors to the front grounds. Nice, bright unit with ceramic and engineered hardwood floors – no carpeting. Personal parking space and six appliances included with unit. Lovely multi-purpose common room with its own kitchen and bathroom. Great location close to shopping. Controlled access and intercom system. Condo fees are currently $290 per month and includes heat and water. MLS# 92103007517305 Paul Martin 264-0123
PERTH AND AREA’S NUMBER ONE SALES TEAM!
Sheri Mahon-Fournier* 613-812-1215
Andrew Rivington* 613-812-3280
Bob Ferguson* 613-812-8871
Joanne Bennell* 613-812-0505
Oral Pretty* Christian Allan* Julia Scotland** Norene Allan* Barbara Shepherd* 613-264-0123 613-207-0834 613-390-0401 613-812-0407 613-326-1361 Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 12 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
Cathie McCabe* 613-284-6263
Drea Scotland* 613-390-2373
Sales Representative* Broker** Broker of Record***
Paul Martin*** 613-264-0123
Freddie McDougall* 613-485-0621
Special Feature
PERTH MILITARY SETTLEMENT 200th ANNIVERSARY
Annual autumn studio tour has 200th anniversary focus Oct. 8-10 The Tay Valley has a history of European settlement reaching back over two hundred years which is being celebrated this year. Settlers came for many reasons but mainly to escape hardship and start a new life with more possibilities. The area has seen cycles of settlement repeated many times over with some settlers staying and raising families who remain in the area, some moving on to find work and other opportunities elsewhere, and some leaving then returning to the area where they or their family were raised. The artisans in the 23rd Perth Autumn Studio Tour represent a microcosm of these settlement patterns. Some artisans have family ties going back five or six generations, some moved to the area in more recent waves of settlement, and others were born here but moved away then returned to live and work in the Valley. In the late ’60s and ’70s, the Ottawa Valley saw people leaving the cities and looking for a slower life in an area where property was affordable. Although paid work was scarce, it was possible to live comfortably through developing a variety of skills. The next generation tended to return to urban life for education and training but many have gravitated back and are working with new and relearned skills. Brent Kirkham epitomizes the first element in this settlement pat-
Submitted photos
The annual Perth Autumn Studio Tour marks its 23rd year Oct. 8 to 10. Dozens of artists and their works will be featured in the event, including Franc van Oort, shown above at work, and the glass art of Paulus Tjiang, inset. tern. He is fifth generation Tay Valley, moved away for several years and is now back living on the family property and has developed his love for the water and canoes into a thriving business making and decorating cedar strip canoes and kayaks.
Another traditional worker in wood is Scott Dobson who has honed the old skill of building cedar rail fences to an art form. Scott is one of a dwindling number of fence builders in Lanark County using the century-old styles of cedar rail
fencing and local stone. Turning the traditional necessity of using local materials and practical styles into art, Scott also makes sculptural garden elements that blend history and local culture with free-spirited form, natural beauty and an eye for the unusual. Dunn Sohn, a more recent settler in the Valley, also uses local wood and traditional styles in his unique custom-fit rocking chairs and turned bowls. Dunn even extends his love of old styles to the machinery he uses, having carefully restored lathes, saws and planes that were used for decades in other Valley workshops. Also moving to the Valley and
using traditional equipment and methods, Franc van Oort, originally from Holland, brought the skills he learned in Europe to his views of the Canadian landscape, producing limited edition etchings and watercolours of the life and landscapes of the area. A newer resident of the Valley, also originally from Europe, Nat Capitanio, is increasingly using the local landscapes in his art, bringing his new perspective on traditional subject matter. The Valley seems to draw people from all over the world and all walks of life, and while many of those born and raised in the Valley See TOUR page 16
Heritage Perth: “The Prettiest Town in Ontario” SETTLEMENT REALTY BROKERAGE
EACH OFFICE INDEPENDENTLY OWNED & OPERATED
2 Wilson Street East, Perth 613-264-0123 1-800-552-7242 email: info@ColdwellBankerPerth.com www.ColdwellBankerPerth.com
CALL PERTH AND AREA’S NUMBER ONE SALES TEAM! Sales Representative* Broker** Broker of Record***
Sheri Mahon-Fournier* 613-812-1215
Andrew Rivington* 613-812-3280
Bob Ferguson* 613-812-8871
Joanne Bennell* 613-812-0505
Barbara Shepherd* 613-326-1361
Christian Allan* 613-207-0834
Oral Pretty* 613-264-0123
Julia Scotland** 613-390-0401
Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 13 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
Norene Allan* 613-812-0407
Cathie McCabe* 613-284-6263
Drea Scotland* 613-390-2373
Paul Martin*** 613-264-0123
Celebrating 200 years with 200 events throughout the year!
October 20 to 2
3
BarnDoor Pr
2016
October Events October 8, 9, 10
Perth: A Look Back Through 200 Years Perth Autumn Studio Tour
Stories in commemoration of Perth’s 200th anniversary. This tour is a wonderful showcase for contemporary An exhibit at the Perth Museum. art and craft, and the drive to the various locations is Info: 613-267-1947 or www.perthtourism.ca beautiful with the autumn colours at their brightest. Open each day from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m. October 1 and 8 McDonald’s Corners Farmers Market Info: 613-267-5237 or www.perthstudiotour.com
Find produce, baking, meats, plants, jewellery and more October 13 to 16 on Saturday mornings from May to October at the MERA BarnDoor Productions Matinee Schoolhouse in McDonald’s Corners, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Barn Door Productions presents a matinee showing Info: http://lanarklocalflavour.ca/node/121 of Death & Taxes: The Musical, a good time musical absolutely not about Perth! Showings at the Full Circle October 1 and 8 Theatre, 26 Craig St., Perth. Perth Farmers’ Market Info: 613-267-1884 or Located at the Tay Basin (Crystal Palace), vendors www.barndoorproductions.ca. showcase wide range of produce, organic foods, baked goods and more. The market is open each Saturday from 8 a.m. until 1 p.m. Info: www.perthfarmersmarket.ca October 2
Civitan Fall Scarlet Run Lanark Village. Info: www.lanarkcivitan.com October 8, 9, 10
20th Crown and Pumpkin Tour
Artistically diverse art tour with stops in northern Lanark Highlands. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. each day. Info: 613-256-3647 or www.crownandpumpkin.com
October 15
Murphys Mica Fun Run
Fundraising 5K run in support of the Friends of Murphys Point Park at the park. Info: 613-267-5060 or www.friendsofmurphyspoint.ca October 16
Bird and Small Animal Auction
Don’t miss this unique event at the fairgrounds in McDonald’s Corners. The auction starts at 10 a.m., breakfast is at 7 a.m. Info: 613-259-3480
Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 14 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
oductions M Barn Door Pro atinee ductions prese nts a matinee of Death & Ta showing xes: The Music al, a good time absolutely not musical abo Theatre, 26 Cra ut Perth! Showings at the F ull Circle ig St., Perth. Info: 613-267 -1884 or www.barndo orproduction s.ca. October 20
Town of Pert h
Evening Perth & Distric t Historical So cie Legion at 7:30 p.m. A Blast fr ty meeting at the Perth om the past – decade journe a decade by y through Pert h ’s history. Info: 613-264 -0094 or www .perthhs.org October 20
Foodsmiths L a
dies Day
104th (New Brunswick) Regiment Photos courtesy of Amanda Toni-Cadieux
A Lanark Cou nty Interval H ouse fundraise from noon to 6 r p.m. Info: 613-267 -5409 or www .foodsmiths.c October 28 om
Beckwith Co mmunity
Join us at the Halloween P Coverall Build arty ing in Beckwit at 1319 9th Lin h Park e Beckwith, fr om 6 p.m. to 8 a Family Fun p.m. for Night that incl udes a haunte pumpkin carv d house, ing Info: 613-257-1 contest and various station activities. 539 or cmcgre g o r @ tw p .b e October 30 ckwith.on.ca
Fall Craft Sa le
Drop by McDo nald’s Corners and Craft Sale to g et your Christm visit the annual Fall as shopping sta early! rted Info: 613-259 -3480 October 31
Halloween P arty in the C Hoste
rystal Palace d by the Perth C iv it a n C lu Tay Basin. b at the Crysta l Palace, Info: www.pe rthcivitan.or g
Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 15 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
Special Feature
PERTH MILITARY SETTLEMENT 200th ANNIVERSARY At Home in Tay Valley book receives rave reviews from community “I cannot recommend this book highly enough to those who love history, Tay Valley, or an all-around great read” wrote John Pigeau in his review of At Home in Tay Valley published in the November Humm. “Fascinating stories abound in At Home in Tay Valley. Some of them, as with much of history, are unexpectedly captivating. One such story, which opens the book, is about something you might not immediately think of
when considering the history of a place: its geology. How the land was shaped certainly impacted the people who settled there and influenced how they survived, built their homes earned their livings, and put food on their tables.” At Home in Tay Valley brings the people, places and events in the history of Tay Valley Township, indeed all of Lanark County, to life. You will read about the Algonquin and about the early settlers – about why they left their home countries
to settle in this wild, vast place of trees, rocks, lakes, rivers, and swamps. At Home tells how the settlers turned forests in farmland; built schools; dammed rivers and streams to power mills; mined mica; wove textiles; made cheese; and, with the help of the original local inhabitants, the Algonquin, learned how to make maple syrup. You will also read about the 20th century arrivals: the cottagers, campers and back-to-the-landers.
Plus, At Home includes tales, special memories and stories by those who know it best – the people of Tay Valley. A true keepsake, At Home in Tay Valley is richly illustrated with maps, paintings and photographs that are stories in themselves. When asked about her reaction to the review, Kay Rogers, co-author and editor of At Home in Tay Valley, replied, “I’m thrilled by the recognition and high praise given to all the contributors who joined in this fabulous book bee.” Proceeds from the sale of At Home in Tay Valley will be directed to an annual history scholarship
TOUR
From page 13
These two historic photos come courtesy of the Perth Museum. The above depicts Dominion Day celebrations in the Tay Basin in Perth in 1867. Left, this shot is from the popular Winter Fest, in 1981. Submitted photos
may leave, some feel the need to return to a familiar landscape and way of life. Choleena DiTullio returned to her family farm, where her father had moved to in the seventies, to develop her unique art form and restore the farm to its previous functions. Choleena has developed a style of mosaic using various papers (many handmade using natural plant fibres, dyes and leaves) and acrylic gloss to create the illusion of a typical ceramic tile mosaic but deceptively light in weight. Similarly, Anaïs Fritzlan grew up in the Brooke Valley learning how to sew from her mother, one of the many people who moved to the area in the ’70s. Anaïs moved away but the draw of the lifestyle here brought her back to raise her family and develop her business. She designs and creates bags of all sorts, ranging from the extreme toughness of professional bike courier bags, to the sensual appeal of fine leather and silk purses, to the simple functional-
for a student graduating from Perth and District Collegiate Institute or from St. John Catholic High School who has demonstrated a keen interest in history and who has been accepted into an apprenticeship, college or university program. At Home in Tay Valley is available at Tay Valley Township, Lanark County, the Perth Museum, Balderson Cheese, the Book Nook, the Book Worm, the Riverguild, and the Village Green. Beautifully designed and professionally edited by Burnstown Publishing House, At Home retails for $30.
ity of reusable grocery bags and mobile phone cases. The artisans in Perth Autumn Studio Tour in many ways epitomize the history of the Tay Valley. People move to the area to find a more viable way of life, whether it is escaping hardship in the Europe of the nineteenth century or the cities of the twentieth and twentyfirst. This year, to celebrate the history and people of the Valley, the two books, “At Home in Tay Valley” edited by Kay Rogers, and “Barns” by Claudia Smith, will be for sale at Studio 1 where Claudia may also be around for signing. The landscape and people encourage a spirit of entrepreneurship and creativity, whether artistic or practical. The 23rd Perth Autumn Studio Tour, Oct. 8 to 10, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. showcases the work of people living and working in the area, coming from many places but finding satisfaction in the relative simplicity of valley life. Submitted by Rita Redner, on behalf of the studio tour
GOT YOUR CARD! Your exclusive offers are just a click away! *on selected models, see dealer for details
www.abford.com
HWY 15, SMITHS FALLS 613-283-8200 31 DUFFERIN STREET, PERTH 613267-2643
CANADIAN TIRE PERTH 45 DUFFERIN STREET, PERTH
613-267-3412
Check this feature the last Thursday of each month for events for the following month
Celebrating 200 years with 200 events throughout the year! Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 16 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
Weekend
THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 29 Sales Representative
Direct
613-862-8348 24 Lansdowne Avenue, Carleton Place 613-253-3300
Independently Owned and Operated, Brokerage
11:00am – 1:00pm 161 Sheppard Avenue
Perth
Sheila Birch 613-390-1604
1:00pm – 3:00pm 161 Sheppard Avenue
Perth
Randy Cavanagh/Jean Sharpe
6:00pm-7:00pm 2 Cedar Rd
Smiths Falls
Linda McKenna 613-485-0576
OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY OCTOBER 2, 2-4
163 Hemlock Drive Carleton Place 3+2 bedroom family home nestled in a park-like treed setting. Easy commuting to Kanata/Ottawa. MLS1028163
Sales Representative INDEPENDENTLY OWNED & OPERATED
613-253-0518
Hallmark Realty Group Brokerage
613-596-5353
250 LERA ST, SMITHS FALLS IVE CUT OW! EXENGAL BU
OPEN HOUSE
SATURDAY OCT. 01ST 1-3PM MLS#: 1028364
SOUGHT AFTER STREETSCAPE, ARTISTIC LANDSCAPING & Verandah will welcome you HOME! Captivating 3 BDR, 3 BTH Design boasts; Sparkling Hwds, Vaulted Solarium/2015, with custom stone FFP, leads to private Decking, Open Concept LVG/DIN, Fab “gourmet sized” richly appointed KIT, handsome Granite counters, Crown mouldings & Breakfast Bar, Decadent Master Suite, 10x10 Ft Walk-in Closet, “WOW” Ensuite w/ Soaker Tub & UNBELIEVABLE Walk-in Shower! Fully finished LL & Oversized Gar completes the picture. Don’t Hesitate!
$429,900
380 ANN ST, ALMONTE ED! RIC YP L NEW
OPEN HOUSE
SUNDAY OCT. 02 1-3PM ND
MLS#: 1027699
YOU WILL “FALL IN LOVE” THE MOMENT YOU ARRIVE at this 3BDR, 3BTH executive Townhome. Attention to detail can be found thruout 4 decadent levels of uptown living space. Stunning Open Con LVG/DNR/KIT, fab island w/breakfast bar, all Stainless Steel Appls Incl, gleaming hwd flrs, patio drs to cozy Deck. “WOW” MBR boasts amazing walk-in closet & 4-pc Ens. Fun-filled LL FAMRM, ample storage, Att 1-car GAR, Inside Entry, paved driveway. Move right in!
$289,900
135 MACHIN DR, DRUMMOND NORTH ELMSLEY TER WA ED ESS! D E DE ACC
MLS#: 1011959
WHAT A CONCEPT! Move into the charming Loft Style 2 BDR Guest House, recently built over the huge Garage, while you renovate the Detached 2 BDR Cottage. Guest House incl’s very cool Kitchenette, full BTH & Private Balcony! Take a dip in Mississippi Lake just steps away. Deeded Water Access adjacent this property allows you to throw in your canoe. Panoramic views of the Lake can be seen from both decks. Don’t miss this!
$279,900
338 CHESTNUT GREEN PRIVATE, RICHMOND T DUL LY ANITY! D N E U FRI OMM C
MLS#: 943002
LIVE EASY in this welcoming, well maintained, 55+ community conveniently located in the heart of Richmond. This sparkling 2BDR 2BTH “Ash” Model boasts hrds in principle rooms & large windows thruout, a fresh décor & newly installed backsplash in KIT w/convenient pantry. Living Room patio doors provide access to rear Courtyard where you can enjoy the pristine landscaping and quaint Gazebos. Expansive LL Rec Room & plenty of storage!
$184,900
www.barbaracouch.com
FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 30 11:00am – 1:00pm 161 Sheppard Avenue 1:00pm – 3:00pm 161 Sheppard Avenue
Perth
Sheila Birch 613-390-1604
Perth
Randy Cavanagh/Jean Sharpe
SATURDAY OCTOBER 1 10:00am – 1:00pm 144 Sheppard Avenue
Perth
Sheila Birch 613-390-1604
11:00am-1:00pm 26 Owlshead Rd
Munster
Linda McKenna 613-485-0676
11:30am-1:30pm 10 R10 Old Kingston Road
Lombardy
Vicki Murtough 613-253-4253
12:00pm-1:00pm 140 Sheppard Ave
Perth
Jennifer Glazier 613-812-8114
12:00pm-2:00pm 1267 Kilmarnock Rd
Smiths Falls Rural
Gerry Seguin 613-852-4313
12:30pm-1:30pm 30 Cornelia St
Smiths Falls
Joe LeBlanc 613-283-2121
1:00pm-2:00pm 75 Strickland Road
Lombardy
Francine Rever 613-285-7274
70 Bacchus Island Rd
Smiths Falls Rural
Cathie McCabe 613-284-6263
1:00pm – 2:30pm 155 Lake Drive
Near Port Elmsley
Randy Cavanagh 613-464-1000
2728 R27
Portland
John Gray 613-868-6068
1:00pm – 3:00pm 161 Sheppard Avenue
Perth
Jean Sharpe 613-464-0008
250 Lera St
Smiths Falls
Barbara Couch 613-253-0518
2:00pm-3:00pm 18 McEwen St
Smiths Falls
Joe LeBlanc 613-283-2121
$364,500.00
Louise Gour
OPEN HOUSE
SUNDAY OCTOBER 2 11:00am-12:00pm 620 Pike Lake Rte 17A
Pike Lake
Johnny Boles 613-464-3124
1:00pm-2:30pm 15 McKenzie Ave
Smiths Falls
Johnny Boles 613-464-3124
1:00pm – 3:00pm 161 Sheppard Avenue
Perth
Randy Cavanagh/Jean Sharpe
1768 3rd Con Dalhousie
Lanark
Sheila Birch 613-390-1604
380 Ann St
Almonte
Barbara Couch 613-253-0518
Carleton Place
Louise Gour 613-862-8348
2:00pm – 4:00pm 163 Hemlock Drive
Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 17 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
Call today for your Free Home Evaluation
613-489-3737 * Independently owned and operated
* VILLE
KEMPT
Osgoo
$519,900
$284,900
52 D’ARCYS WAY, KEMPTVILLE
WATER
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2014 4 Bedroom, 4 bath bungalow in prestigious Kettle Creek ML#1024532
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Beautiful starter home on extra large lot ML#1027234
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$239,000
291 R2 RIDEAU LAKES Stunning 3 bedroom, 3 bath with walk out basement ML#1024588
LT
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1750 SQ.FT.
$253,900
106 RAINA WAY,KEMPTVILLE
27 LEE AVE, SMITHS FALLS
Stunning family home with Hardwood Throughout ML#1028303
2 Bedroom, 1 Bath bungalow in popular Ferrara Meadows ML#1005477
TMENT INVES UNITY T OPPOR
FRONT
FREE upgrades
LT
NOW BUI
$271,800
IN ALMONTE Starting at
$269,900
ice NEw Pr
$439,900
10 RUSSELL ST SMITHS FALLS
522 STANLEY BROTHERS, ALMONTE
1 TODD COURT, RIDEAU LAKES
2 upper residential units ground floor commercial space ML#1022819
4 Fully finished living space levels comes with 6 brand new appliances ML#962476
Fully upgraded 3 bedroom 2 bath bungalow in like new condition ML#1024886
Our Realtors
TOWNHOME
*Sales Representatives **Broker of Record
Christine MacKay*
Andrea Geauvreau**
Karen Cinnamon*
613-327-5437
613-296-3309
613-851-7790
Call (613) 489-3838
www.parkviewhomes.info/almonte-mews
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Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 18 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
RE/MAX... DREAM WITH YOUR EYES WIDE OPEN ®
BROKERAGE
RIVERVIEW REALTY LTD. EACH OFFICE INDEPENDENTLY
OWNED AND OPERATED
www.remaxriverview.com | 61 GORE STREET EAST, PERTH 613-267-2221 | e-mail: perth@remaxriverview.com
DENOTES: *Sales Representative **Broker ***Broker of Record
REBECCA WISSLER**
613-264-9481
PIKE LAKE ROUTE 16 PIKE LAKE NEW LISTING
WATERFRONT
Approx. 121 Acres w/2 parcels, w/120 ft. of waterfrontage on Pike Lake with magnificent views. Diverse landscape, many great locations to build on. $249,000 Call Paul Gordon 613-390-2281
JOHN JONKMAN***
613-561-6464
JENNIFER GLAZIER*
613-812-8114
10 GORE ST WEST PERTH
DEMI THOMPSON*
613-264-4330
BARRIE’S SIDE ROAD NEAR PERTH
NEW PRICE
NEW PRICE
RANDY CAVANAGH*
Less than 10 min to beautiful heritage Perth! Gorgeous 56 acres on quiet side road, located in area of beautiful homes! The property consists of approximately 30 acres tillable land, the remainder being mostly mixed bush. $124,900
LANARK HIGHLANDS
TOWNHOUSES
CHRISTIE LAKE ROAD
WATERFRONT
6 bd, 4 bth bungalow with loads of space for family, friends, storage galore, workshop, lrg deck & patio areas, att. dbl gar...all on private w/f with great swimming. $549,900
Raised bungalow set on beautiful treed 3+ acres, partially fenced & gated. Modern kitchen open to dining w/dbl doors to spacious deck. Grand master w/sitting area & walk-in closet. $274,000
LANARK HIGHLANDS
PERTH
PERTH
DALHOUSIE LAKE
SHERI D’AOUST**
613-812-9344
OTTY LAKE SIDE ROAD
BIG RIDEAU LAKE
MCDONALD’S CORNERS
WATERFRONT
6+ acres Island retreat w/2 bd, 1 bth cottage, DEEDED WATER ACCESS 2 sleep cabins, storage shed, plus 50% shared Well cared for 2+1 bed raised ranch home mainland parking & garage, on the Big Rideau. w/deeded Dalhousie Lake access. Lots of energy $364,000 saving updates. $199,900
MISSISSIPPI RIVERFRONT
PERTH
NEAR PERTH
Near Snow Rd Station - 4 bd, 3 bth, beauty set 3 bd, 2 bth split level home with new kitchen, Charming 4 bd, 2 bth, 2 sty stone beauty on 1.8 acres. on 1.89 private acres with 810’ w/f. Spacious w/ ceramic throughout, attached garage. Close to Totally upgraded, remodeled bathrooms, new stone Vermont castings fireplace, grand L/L family rm, schools, amenities and hospital. $259,900 patio...classic gardens & 2 car det gar. $439,000 att. gar., aluminum & cedar dock. $529,900
KENNEBEC LAKE WATERFRONT
Stunning log home, 3 bd, 3 bth, radiant flr heat, 4 bd, 1 bth – 2.5 stry home on dead end street. handcrafted F/P, lrg master w/walkout & attached Completely reno’d, new A/C, private backyard. heated gar! Family/games rm w/private entrance or use Close to amenities and Stewart Park. $339,900 as in-law suite or space for home business. $349,900
The Foxstone 1,884 sq. ft., 2 bed 2 bath Bungalow w/basement Newly Built. $559,900 WED 9:00 – 11:00 AM Demi Klock 613-267-8366 MON – FRI 11 – 1PM Sheila Birch 613-390-1604 WED — SUN 1:00 -- 3:00 PM Randy Cavanagh 613-464-1000 or Jean Sharpe 613-464-0008
THE MEADOWS OF PERTH
DEMI KLOCK*
613-267-8366
WATERFRONT
Lovely 3 bd/2 bth bungalow central to Perth/Smiths Falls, just a few mins to Rideau Ferry beach & boat launch! Spacious 4 season sunrm open to newly reno’d kitchen overlooks in-ground pool & private backyard! $324,900
OPEN HOUSES 161 SHEPPARD AVE, PERTH THE MEADOWS OF PERTH
PAUL GORDON*
613-390-2281
Georgian stone beauty (1820) on approx 8 acres Elegant 1,545 sq. ft. 2 bd, 2 bth bungalow, w/9’ Exceptional 4000+ sq. ft. custom built home w/pond, guest bunkie, barn & sheds. 4 bd, ceilings throughout. Att. 2 car garage and beautiful 5 mins to Perth. 4+ beds, 4 baths, gorgeous pond. 2 bth home updated & totally restored to landscaping. Move-in ready home! $419,900 A must see! $589,900 maintain the character & charm. $379,000
Spectacular country home in mint condition on 200 acres, 3 bed, 3 bath home w/ spring fed pond THE MEADOWS OF PERTH 4 Bed 2.5 baths, 1 level living Something for all 3+acres just mins from Perth. Expansive ‘home as well as private cabin overlooking small lake. Now being built. Outside Units $315,900, Inside the family, Swimmable Waterfront, 6 stall Barn, office’ space inc boardroom in loft. 3 patios & $519,900 Units $299,900. 2 bd, 2 bth bungalows w/att. gar. approx 20 acres meadows and trails. $575,000 3 season veranda. $534,000 Call for Pre-sales information.
UPPER RIDEAU LAKE
613-464-0008
298 CHRISTIE LAKE ROAD NEAR PERTH
WATERFRONT
200 ACRES
NEAR RIDEAU FERRY
JEAN SHARPE*
613-464-1000
NEW PRICE
Grand 1840’s 4 bd, 4 bth home w/charm, character high ceilings & boasting 4,400 sq. ft. Sep Commercial office space & lrg carriage house comes w/this unique property. $479,000
NEAR PERTH
SHEILA BIRCH*
613-390-1604
INTERESTED IN A CAREER IN REAL ESTATE OR CHANGE OF LOCATION? CONTACT JOHN JONKMAN FOR DETAILS ON BECOMING A SUCCESSFUL SALES REPRESENTATIVE IN BEAUTIFUL HERITAGE PERTH 613-561-6464
OPEN HOUSE 144 SHEPPARD AVE, PERTH THE MEADOWS OF PERTH
SATURDAYS 10 AM - 1PM 2 bd, 2 bth bungalow with finished basement, stone fireplace, h/w flrs, granite countertop, open concept living & att. garage. $439,900 Host: Sheila Birch 613-390-1604
Charming Craftsman 3 bd, 2 bth home, recently renovated exterior, electrical, plumbing and much more. Close to downtown but still has lots of privacy. $359,900
4 bd, 2 bth bungalow on gorgeous 1.45 acre getaway w/true cottage feel...cathedral ceilings, warm wood beams & walls of windows overlooking the lake & spectacular views! $474,900
OPEN HOUSE 155 LAKE DRIVE NEAR PORT ELMSELY
OPEN HOUSE 140 SHEPPARD AVE PERTH THE MEADOWS OF PERTH
SAT OCT 1ST 10 - 12 NOON SAT OCT 1ST 1:00-2:30PM Spectacular new bungalow w beautiful LOWER RIDEAU LAKE Spacious, bright 2 bd, 1 bth mobile home on leased land in Port Elmsley Park stone/stucco/canexel exterior on landscaped lot! Luxuriously appointed, 9ft ceilings, hwd & marble mins to Perth & Smiths Falls, a great spot to retire flrs, spacious master suite, gourmet kitchen, ICF & enjoy water access. $125,900 foundation! Move-in ready! $424,900 Host: Randy Cavanagh 613-464-1000 Host: Jennifer Glazier 613-812-8114
UPPER DWYER HILL ROAD 25 ACRES
CLEAR LAKE CENTRAL FRONTENAC WATERFRONT
Versatile accommodation has 4-5 lg bds, formal Affordable lakefront! 95’ X 276’ nicely treed lot, dining, family & rec rms, study & solarium to buildings on property in need of repairs. Gravel enjoy the views of above ground salt water pool, driveway w/parking for 4. $119,000 13 horse stalls barn & fenced paddocks. $550,000
OPEN HOUSE 1768 3RD CONC., DALHOUSIE
SUN 2 OCT 1:00-3:00PM Craftsman 3 bd, 3bth home built 2008 with warm wood details throughout, a man made pond & storage shed/bunkie all set on 3.16 acres. $399,500 Host Sheila Birch: 613-390-1604
CONDOMINIUM
Small Executive style condo with upgrades - open concept, adult building. Hydro $800 yr. heat-water incl in condo fees $290 monthly. Corner unit total privacy. Walking distance to amenities of Perth. $219,000
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Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 19 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
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We want your pictures!
Photo courtesy Len Modderman
Seen here, from left to right, are David Wright, Connor Williamson, Sheila Jasiak and Rob Glas in Over The River And Through The Woods, directed by Patricia Parry. Norma Cummings and Jenifer Jasiak also star. Final performances at Perth’s Studio Theatre will take place Sept. 30, Oct. 1 and 2.
Standing ovations for Over The River And Through The Woods This weekend is a great time to re-discover how lucky we are to have such phenomenal community theatre here in Perth. Joe DiPietro’s charming, heartwarming and very funny play Over The River And Through The Woods enters its final weekend at the Studio Theatre, this Friday, Sept. 30 and Saturday, Oct. 1 at 7:30 p.m., and Sunday, Oct. 2 at 2 p.m. The story is about Nick, a young man on his way up the career ladder. When Nick lands his dream job in Seattle, he has his Italian grandparents to contend with – they can’t stand the thought of him moving so far away from family roots in New Jersey. So the four oldsters pull out all the stops
MAGUIRE
From page 10
At least now the airlines are forced to disclose “hidden costs.” Prior to the current rules taking effect passengers would turn up at the counter, delighted after purchasing what seemed like a reasonable ticket, only to discover hidden taxes and charges that often weren’t even included in the fine print of airline advertisements. Thank goodness for small mercies! What I’m really writing about this week is fairness. Equal treatment for all passengers or at least those flying economy who make up the bulk of airline customers. I realize frequent flyers and those who can afford first class seats are going to get the priority they’ve paid for. All the airlines we use now have luggage fees. That too is part of the new normal in flying and, reluctantly, I accept the fact. What I have a hard time swal-
to make him stay, including bringing a young woman into the picture. It’s a fast-paced comedy everyone will enjoy. Actors David Wright, Connor Williamson, Sheila Jasiak and Rob Glas handle the four leading roles in Over The River And Through The Woods, directed by Patricia Parry. Norma Cummings and Jenifer Jasiak also star. Tickets are $22 (cash) at The Book Nook, and $22 plus convenience fee at Shadowfax and Tickets Please. For full details please visit studiotheatreperth.com. Submitted by Paul Joyce for the Studio Theatre
lowing is that by being among the “sheep”, those passengers who follow the rules, I’m being penalized. I pay to have my suitcase checked and stored, where it is out of my control. Meanwhile the person across the aisle brings an even larger bag on board and takes too much room in the luggage rack. Or airline staff tag his/her bag and arrange to have it waiting at their destination. And at no additional cost! Flying isn’t much fun to begin with and circumstances like this make it even more aggravating. But short of a major passenger revolt I don’t see this being resolved. The real irony here is that by failing to enforce their own rules the airlines involved are missing out on a lot of potential revenue. If you have a comment or question for Jeff Maguire he can be reached by email at: jeffrey.maguire@rogers. com.
Please share your smiles and special moments with us, by sending submissions in to mdowdall@metroland.com with ‘Caught on Camera’ in the subject line. Senders must include their full name, address and a phone number for verification purposes. Addresses and phone numbers will not be published. Please also ensure parental consent has been provided for anyone appearing in your photographs who is under the age of 18.
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Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 20 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
It’s all about me really. I’m a Big because it makes me feel awesome: • To know she is making a difference in my life; • To hang out and just be a kid for a little while; • To swing in the school yard, play board games or cards, and do crafts; • To help solve the issues of the day or come up with ideas • To make them seem less stressful; and, • To know that I have someplace special I need to be each week... if only for an hour. Ours is an in-school mentoring match and thanks to my employer, Metroland Media, I am able to fit in my time with my Little during my regular working hours. It fits my crazy lifestyle, is rewarding and fun.
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Remake of classic western pure tale of good versus evil MOVIE: The Magnificent Seven STARRING: Denzel Washington, Chris Pratt, Haley Bennett, Ethan Hawke, Byung-hun Lee, Vincent D’Onofrio, Manuel Garcia-Rulfo, Martin Sensmeier and Peter Sarsgaard DIRECTOR: Antoine Fuqua RATING: 14A As western fantasies go The Magnificent Seven stands as one of the greatest films ever. A story of good versus evil set in the violence of the old west. It’s a simpler time. If someone got in your way you shot them. Simple. Bartholomew Bogue (Peter Sarsgaard) is a robber baron intent on taking the land of the good folks of Rose Creek so he can mine for gold. He’s offered to buy their land for considerably less than it’s worth, and threatens anyone who refuses. To emphasize his point he and his men burn down the church, and kill those who dare to stand in their way. After her husband is murdered by Bogue, Emma Cullen (Haley Bennett) goes to find help. She finds Sam Chisolm (Denzel Washington) a bounty hunter and lawman. At first Chisolm isn’t interested, but when he hears the name Bogue he changes his
My Take
MARK HASKINS
mind. Chisolm can’t do it alone so he recruits some hard men. The first is the gambler Josh Faraday (Chris Pratt). Next is Confederate sniper Goodnight Robicheaux (Ethan Hawke) and his partner Billy Rocks (Byunghun Lee). The outlaw Vasquez (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo) joins their band, as does the legendary Jack Horne (Vincent D’Onofrio). Last is the Comanche warrior Red Harvest (Martin Sensmeiser). They never make it clear why they decide to do it. Regardless, despite overwhelming odds, these seven men choose to stand against Bogue’s army of mercenaries. Seven warriors against a tide of evil. This is not a movie that worries about getting into the emotional motivation of its characters. This is a movie about hard men doing a hard job. This is a fight between good and evil with six shooters and rifles as the weapons of choice. It is violent and bru-
tal, but it is also heroic. There’s something very compelling when the lines between right and wrong are so clearly defined. When the shooting starts the starkness of the brutality is breathtaking. Everything happens at blinding speed yet nothing is missed. Each shot, each death, and each sacrifice is there in vivid detail. The western hero is often a solitary figure with a layer of something sad, and something dark. Each actor gives his take on that hero. Washington is the determined lawman. Pratt plays the joker. Hawke is battle scarred, and Lee is the loyal friend. D’Onofrio is the hermit, Garcia-Rulfo plays the outlaw, while Sensmeier is the noble warrior. They are tremendous. Haley Bennett portrays Emma as anything but weak. She’s fiercely strong and prepared to fight. Just as prepared to fight is Bogue. To be a western villain is to be as black as night, and Peter Sarsgaard is as dark as they come. The Magnificent Seven has the purity, simplicity and even elegance of the classic western. It’s violent and brutal, but at its heart it’s about good versus evil. Mark Haskins’ column is a regular feature.
What’s Happening at Carleton Place Terrace!
COFFEE TASTING & TREATS Join us Wednesday, October 5, 2–4pm We’re putting the coffee pot on! Your donation, in exchange for a cup of coffee and some great conversation, will help support local programs and services by the Alzheimer Society Lanark Leeds Grenville. Help us make a difference.
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Serving Businesses, Farms and Individuals 2-4 Industrial Road, Kemptville
613-258-3282
individuals. together 96 South St., Perth, Ont. 613-267-5554 Proud Supporters of Yak Youth Services
Walking across Canada to support the end of youth homlessness
Cornerstone Landing Youth Services www.cornerstonelanding.com For more information:
613-285-9292
Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 22 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
www.kelfordyouthservices.com
Executive Director: Terrilee Kelford
613-285-9292
Local Events Carleton Place September 30, 2016
Perth
October 1, 2016
North Grenville
Bean Chevrolet Buick GMC Ltd., 375 McNeely Ave, Carleton Place
Perth Farmers Market Crystal Palace on theTay Basin. Corner ofTay & Basin Streets, Perth, ON. 8 am to 1 pm, Perth Farmer’s Market Ready to work up a sweat? Make a donation to Push For Change and walk like Joe on one of our treadmills.TheTable and Perth Farmer’s Market will also be holding their Annual Chili Cook Off and Cider Pressing.You can sample and vote with a donation, then purchase a bowl of your favourite chili and wash it down with some fresh apple cider. All proceeds will go toTheTable’s Harvest Campaign, and please bring a non-perishable food donation forTheTable. Be sure to stay around until after 12 noon to hear Joe speak! Sponsors: Perth Farmer’s Market, Barnabe’s YIG Partners: UnitedWay, OPP, Cornerstone Landing,TheTable, YAKYouth Centre
October 2, 2016
Bean Chevrolet Buick GMC Ltd. is holding a barbeque to welcome Joe from 11 am – 1 pm at their dealership. The Beckwith Butcher will be preparing the food, generously donated by Bean Chevrolet Buick GMC Ltd., and Rental Village will assist with the set-up for lunch! Everyone is welcome to come, learn more about youth homelessness in our community, and hear Joe speak! He will make two presentations to students at Carleton Place High School (please note this portion is only for students) Sponsors: Bean Chevrolet Buick GMC Ltd., The Beckwith Butcher, Rental Village Partners: United Way, OPP, Cornerstone Landing
Community Event
beancars.ca
beancars. ca
Smiths Falls October 3, 2016
Smiths Falls Town Hall Beginning at 12 pm North Grenville District High School, Joe will be stopping at the 2605 Concession Rd, Smiths Falls Town Hall (77 Kemptville, ON K0G 1J0 Beckwith Street North) at noon on Monday for a brief meet & 2:00-6:00 pm greet and short presentation. Starting at 2 pm you can join Light refreshments will be Joe in a 3km walk followed by a served, donated by the Rotary life presentation from Joe in the Club of Smiths Falls. Students auditorium hall. from the Smiths Falls and Join us then at 4:30 pm District Collegiate Institute for a charity BBQ for Youth (SFDCI) Civics class will be Homelessness and have a chance joining Joe as he completes to meet Joe and his team. his walk from the Town Hall to https://www.facebook.com/ SFDCI, where he will be speaking NGYouthUp/?fref=ts to the whole school (please note Sponsors: this portion is only for students) Rotary Club, Cogeco, Steve’s YIG, Sponsors: Food Basic, B&H Grocer, Town of Smiths Falls, Grenville Mutual Insurance Smiths Falls Rotary Club Partners: Partners: North Grenville Youth Up!, United Way, OPP, OPP Cornerstone Landing
See the Pros at beancars.ca Bean Chevrolet 613-257-2432 Buick GMC Ltd. 375 McNeely Ave, Carleton Place The Town of Perth is pleased to support the Push for Change, October 1st at the Crystal Palace 80 Gore Street East Perth, ON K7H 1H9 613-267-3311 www.perth.ca
New Owne ™
The Big Cheese
Come dine in or take out or get it delivered
103 PRESCOTT STREET
KEMPTVILLE 613 258-4999
Ask us how you can make a difference in the life of a child. www.bigbrothersbigsisterslanark.ca 613-283-0570
We support po JJoe Roberts in his belief that ending yyouth homelessness is possible. pos Congratulations on your national campaign! Text BOOTSUWLC to 41010 to donate $10 towards preventing youth homelessness. Serving Lanark County & Smiths Falls Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 23 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
Neon Night for Childhood Cancer raises over $65,000!
Tara Gesner/Metroland
The third annual Neon Night for Childhood Cancer, hosted by the Canadian Cancer Society, returned to Riverside Park in Kemptville on Saturday, Sept. 24. Above, the popular knighting ceremony featured local athletes and childhood cancer survivors. Every year, close to 1,000 children under age 15 are diagnosed with cancer in Canada. Right, Kemptville residents Wenda Render, left, and Kim Wilson showed their true colours.
Above, Anastasia Joanisse, left, used glow face paint on Team Green (More Than Just Babysitting) member Sarah Duff. Above right, the Big BANG African drummers from North Grenville District High School cheer on the participants before the 5K run/walk. Far right, Breathe Dance Company in Merrickville showed its glowing support. Team members, from left: Madison Heaphy, Emma Hewitt, Madi French, Mia Firlotte and Jasmine Briss. Right, yet again, hundreds of participants turned out to raise thousands of dollars for childhood cancer research. The event featured a 5km and 2km run/walk for people of all ages. Tara Gesner/Metroland Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 23A - Thursday, September 29, 2016
Kemptville Farmers’ Market hosts most successful MarketPlates event ever BY JENNIFER WESTENDORP jwestendorp@metroland.com
This was the year to be at MarketPlates. The 7th annual event, held on Sept. 25, was a huge success. “It went really well,” said Diana Steadman, Kemptville Farmers’ Market board member. “The weather was great; it was a sunny day, with crisp fall air.” The event featured regional chefs and farmers teaming up to serve unique dishes full of local flavour. “People who have come to several MarketPlates’ felt this was the largest one to date,” said Steadman. Advance ticket sales helped jump-start the success of the event, with over 100 pre-sold tickets. “We had live music going on all afternoon,” said Steadman. “There was four different musical acts, which kept people happy. It all ties into that community spirit of peo-
ple mingling who don’t necessarily know each other.” The 14 pairings of local chefs and producers was a big hit. The partnerships ranged from restaurants like Lock 17 to individuals with small market gardens on their property. Big Sky Ranch Animal Sanctuary had a petting zoo set up for the event, to keep the kids entertained. Leeds-Grenville MPP Steve Clark opened the event with a few remarks about the importance of local foods. “He wandered around with his wife for a while, enjoying many of the sample dishes,” said Steadman. “People really liked the variety of dishes this year,” she continued. “I certainly noticed a good cultural diversity with the dishes. There was Jamaican, Belgian and Indian dishes; a good mix between savoury and sweet.” The Kemptville Farmers’ Market board thanked their generous
event sponsors, including Rekmans Automotive, B&H Grocer, Hubbard & Co. and Luce Ends Graphic Design Services, for making MarketPlates such a success this year. The farmers’ market, held every Sunday from 12 noon to 4 p.m., will be open until Oct. 30 this year. The Wednesday night markets have ended with the cooler weather and earlier sunsets. “We had only planned on running the Wednesday markets in July and August, but we saw such a decent turn-out that we decided to keep it going into September.” The KFM board is also planning a couple of Christmas markets as well this year. Looking forward into 2017, the board is already looking at expanding the farmers’ market, which continues to grow year-over-year. The Farmers market is open Oct. 30 – on Sunday. “There’s already ideas flying around for 2017,” said Steadman.
Tara Gesner/Metroland
Rekmans Automotive presented the 7th Annual MarketPlates food celebration on Sunday, Sept. 25, held at the Kemptville Farmers’ Market. The well-attended event paired local chefs with local producers, serving up unique dishes to taste. Pictured: Chef Manvirendra Singh Negi and Kanta Negi served up pakora, an Indian appetizer, to Leeds-Grenville MPP Steve Clark and wife Deanna Clark sample.
Tara Gesner/Metroland
Above left, during the 7th Annual MarketPlates food celebration on Sunday, Sept. 25 in Kemptville, three-year-old Charlotte Meunier of Kemptville made friends with Shadow, a 10-year-old pony at Big Sky Ranch. Above center, Sue’s Catering offered up barbecued chicken. From left: owner Suzanne Baxter and sister Margo Castonguay. Above right, local performer George Buys entertained the crowd.
The Push for Change in Kemptville this Sunday Joe Roberts is a man with one goal in mind - ending youth homelessness. On May 1, Roberts, a former homeless youth turned successful businessman, began pushing a shopping cart across Canada to raise awareness and funds to end youth homelessness. His journey, from Newfoundland to British Columbia, will take 517 days and span 9,000 kilometers across 10 provinces and three territories. The Push for Change, as this epic undertaking has been coined, will end on Sept. 30, 2017 – a full 17
Doors Open at KDH
months after it began. On Oct. 2, Roberts will arrive in Kemptville to spread his message of hope. The Push for Change event will include a threekilometer walk with Roberts around the track at North Grenville District High School beginning at 2 p.m., a life presentation at 3 p.m. in the auditorium at NGDHS, followed by a charity barbecue for youth homelessness at 3:30 p.m. For more information, contact Craig McCormick of North Grenville Youth Up by emailing t2tgolf@ gmail.com.
The Kemptville District Hospital swung its Doors Open on Saturday, Sept. 24. Pictured, KDH staff member Leanne Widenmaier did a demonstration of how she transforms plastic milk bags into sleeping mats for patients of the Kenya Hospices and Palliative Care Association. Submitted photo
Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 23B - Thursday, September 29, 2016
Thousands of people line up for the grand opening of Cabela’s Kanata location on Sept. 22. More than 100 people camped out overnight in the parking lot. The first 250 customers through the doors received a gift card at the opening. Jessica Cunha/ Metroland
Cabela’s opening in Ottawa draws thousands BY JESSICA CUNHA
jessica.cunha@metroland.com
More than a hundred people camped out overnight in the parking lot of Cabela’s to be among the first customers through the doors on Thursday, Sept. 22. More than 1,000 people had amassed in front of the outdoor outfitters by 8 a.m. Thursday to
celebrate the store’s grand opening in Kanata. Arnprior couple Charles Glandon and Jenn NoletMasse, along with their infant son Hunter, were the first people in line for the official opening. The family settled themselves in Wednesday afternoon at 4:30 p.m. “We didn’t try to be first,” said Glandon, but they were
pretty happy to find themselves front-of-line. More than 100 people camped out in the parking lot to ensure they were among the first 250 customers to receive a gift card. Taylor Wright – Cabela’s ambassador and host of hunting show The Canadian Tradition – shot an arrow from a bow to cut the ribbon and officially open
36 HOUR
SALE
the store. Founder Mary Cabela greeted customers as they entered the building. “We’re really honoured to have it right here in Kanata,” said mayor Jim Watson, wearing a camo Cabela’s Ottawa hat. “Two hundred and fifty jobs have been created here.” Cabela’s is hosting weekend long celebrations with giveaways and activities for families.
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Kanata 8231 Campeau Dr....................................... 613-834-3343 Nepean 290 West Hunt Club Rd..................................613-228-0100 Gloucester Corner of Innes & Cyrville........................ 613-749-0001 Kingston 770 Gardiners Rd. RioCan Centre................ 613-389-0600
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With approved credit. Prior sales excluded. Featured item may not be stocked exactly as shown. Minimum down payment required for special orders and layaway purchases. Sale and offer ends October 3, 2016.
Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 24 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
Board supports tax refund effort Trustees reviewed a letter from Chair Jeff McMillan in support of Bill C-241, a private member’s bill that seeks to have the GST paid by school authorities fully refunded by the federal government. This proposed bill would amend the Excise Tax Act to increase the GST rebate rate for school authorities from 68 per cent to 100 per cent. Supporters of the bill argue that charging GST on purchases by school boards adds a layer of taxation that costs school boards millions annually, and takes needed funds away from the classroom. The letter has been sent to all area members of parliament seeking their support for the bill.
in day-school eLearning, as well as the board’s afterschool continuing education, summer school co-operative education, and Specialist High Skills Major programs. The report recommended several ways to improve course offerings including: launching a process to create a districtwide secondary timetable; listening to student feedback on course selection through the Tell Them From Me process; changing instruction in high schools to increase student engagement; more professional development for teachers of online courses; and a new Innovation, Creativity and Entrepreneurship (ICE) component for Specialist High Skills Major programs. Board receives additional capital funding The province has given the board approximately $24.15 million in additional capital funding to improve the condition of its buildings. The money, part of more than $1 billion in provincial capital funding for Ontario school boards announced in July, can be spent over the 2015-2016 and 2016-2017 school years. Superintendent of Human Resources and System Operations Jeremy Hobbs said the majority of funding will be spent on building structures such as foundations and roofs, and improvements to mechanical, electrical, sanitary and other systems that have a high requirement for replacement based on their condition. The board’s design and construction team is already preparing projects for the summer of 2017.
Secondary school programming report Superintendent of Schools Valerie Allen and Student Success Principal Frank Hummell presented a report on current programming offered in UCDSB secondary schools and ways the board is providing a number of course options to our high school students. The report, prompted by a recommendation from the board’s recent IPSOS-Reid Culture Survey, noted several trends including: an increased enrolment Supervised
Alternative
Submitted photo
North Grenville District High School student Grace Maher is sworn is as the new student trustee. To the right is director of education Stephen Sliwa.
Learning program Superintendent of Schools Tim Mills reported on the success of the Supervised Alternative Learning (SAL) Program, which was expanded last year to all schools in the board. In 2014-2015, only students registered with the TR Leger School of Adult, Alternative and Continuing Education could participate. The program provides students aged 14-17, struggling with attendance and academics, with an alternative educational experience. SAL allows students to stay involved with extra-
curricular activities at their school, while working on an individualized plan to help them earn credits toward a high school diploma or other educational or life goals. Thirty-four students were registered in the program in the 2015-2016 school year from TR Leger and six area high schools. The students earned credits through a variety of supports including day school credits, independent learning credits, alternative education and co-operative education. Submitted by the Upper Canada District School Board
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October 15-24
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A NASHVILLE COUNTRY CHRISTMAS November 21-26 $1582 There is no better way to experience a Country Music Christmas than heading to Nashville, Tennessee. From old country to new country, with shows, lights and decorations, the spirit of Christmas will have you kicking up your heels on this Country Music Celebration. Call today!
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DELIGHTFUL DESTINATIONS Shaw & Stratford Theatre DELIGHTFUL DESTINATIONS October 6-8 $754 Oktoberfest New Orleansin&Kitchener Memphis October 12-14 $549 May 6-15 $2123 Pennsylvania Amish Country October 13-16 Southern Maine$869 Coast Casino Rama & Cranberry Celebration FeaturingMay Charley in Concert 23-26Pride$836 October 15-17 $525 Branson & the Ozarks Myrtle Beach 3 Live Shows Meals June 13-20& 14$1853 October 15-23 $1630 Niagara Vintages & Culinary Syracuse, Waterloo OutletsDelights & Shopping Spree JuneWatertown 24-26 / September 9-11 November 11-13 $394 $628 North Conway Girlfriends Shopping Weekend November 11-13 $399 Royal Winter Fair November 11-13 $554 Branson Country Christmas November 12-20 $1995 Festival of Stars & Lights
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The following are highlights from the Sept. 14 meeting of the Upper Canada District School Board (UCDSB) trustees. This was their first regular meeting of the 2016-2017 school year. North Grenville District High School student Grace Maher was officially sworn in as student trustee for the 2016-2017 school year.
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New UCDSB student trustee sworn in Sept. 14
LAWS: Give your pet time to get used to their new home When introducing a new dog, cat or kitten to your other pets in your home, please give them the time to adjust and to get used to each other. To do that it is best to separate them for a while, exchange bedding so they get used to each other’s scents and have a bit of patience if it takes a little longer. Some cats or dogs are fine within a day, others might take a few days maybe even weeks Tia-Maria before they feel totally comTia-Maria was likely left befortable in their new place with hind at the campground where their new cat or dog friends. she was found. Tia-Maria is a Lately, people gave up too quickly if things did not work out returning them to LAWS which can be very traumatic for the animal and will set them back in their behaviour and trust. Paint fundraiser Oct. 2 The Paint Evening fundraising event is coming up soon and has some space left. You’re invited to break away from your typical Sunday afternoon with a potent cocktail of creativity and social connection. Guided by a local artist, you’ll spend two hours laughing with friends and other budding artists to paint your masterpiece at a popular local restaurant. You don’t have to have experience; you just have to be inspired. So put your phone on sleep and pick up a paintbrush – the afternoon is your canvas. Check our LAWS Facebook page under events, or call Janet Beath at 613-253-7399 to register. It being held on Oct. 2 from 2 to 4 p.m. at the Generations Inn in Carleton Place. The fee, which includes all materials, is $40.
This Week’s Pets better I sometimes like to hide a bit as I need private time, don’t you? If I need it, I now roll over as I discovered they give me a belly rub when I do that. I like the attention. I am about nineyears-old, have no claws on the front to destroy your furniture and would love to find my private cozy cat bed in a quiet home. I love the tent-like beds in which I can disappear and peek my head out if I want to see what’s going on. They say that I would be a very good company for an elderly person, or persons. Please give me a chance it would be a nice Thanksgiving gift to me and to you to take me home.
lovely all grey, petite female cat. Initially shy, she’s coming along nicely. Recently she was moved to be with other cats and is enjoying that too. We think she’s not much older than one year.
Softy Softy is a lovely friendly tabby girl who has been at the Natural Pet Food store in Carleton Place for a while. She’s very affectionate and playful and loves to purr loudly when she’s content. Softy has, as the name suggests, extremely soft fur and she’s about five-months-old.
Ivy Hi there, Ivy here. My previous owner had to give me up This week’s featured pets as she moved into a retirement Peek place and was not allowed to Please meet Peek, a little take me with her. When I was three-month-old girl with love- returned to LAWS it took me ly piercing eyes. She affection- a while to get used to the new ate and very playful. situation. Although I feel much
Duke Duke is a gentle friendly 3-4-year-old hound mix. He was found wandering the streets with all of his paw pads raw and bleeding. He was treated at the vet before he was brought into the shelter. Duke is a laid-back kind of
Pa r t i c i p a n t s line up to register for the annual Walk Your Paws for LAWS f u n d r a i s e r, held Saturday, Sept. 24 at the Neelin Street Community Centre in Carleton Place. Ashley Kulp/ Metroland
fella and very affectionate. He is quiet, which is usually not a trait of hounds. He does like to go for walks and roam the yard but has no off-leash recall. Actually, he doesn’t know any commands yet. After walking or roaming our fenced in yard, Duke enjoys his time inside to relax and
snooze a bit on his private dog bed. Duke is easy on and off leash. He doesn’t usually pull while being walked but, as all hounds do, likes to follow his nose as there are so many interesting smells out there. His new family needs a lot of patience with this handsome guy and you must have a fenced in yard. Duke can be uneasy around some dogs, however he did the Walk Your Paws for LAWS this past weekend and enjoyed the outing meeting many new dogs. Duke would not yet be suitable in a home with a rambunctious dog. Whether he likes cats, we’re not sure of. Having said all of that, anything
is trainable with patience, love and praise. If you think you’ll be able and willing to give this dog a new chance in life then please make an appointment with LAWS at 613-283-9308 to meet Duke. He’s well worth it and will be eagerly waiting for you to say hello. Thank you for your continued support. Follow us if you like on Facebook at www.facebook.com/ lanarkanimals, visit us online at www.lanarkanimals.ca or if you have any questions or concerns, please contact the shelter at shelter@lanarkanimals.ca or by calling 613-283-9308. LAWS is located at 253 Glenview Road in Smiths Falls.
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Look Beyond Boutique masks illness with elegance To say Linda Morin is a ‘survivor’ is merely scratching the surface. Survival was just her beginning. In a matter of three years, she eclipsed life-threatening illness and recovery, only to become a stronger, more defined and self-directed woman. The transition led to her open the Look Beyond Mastectomy Boutique at 2039 Robertson Road in Bells Corners. As much as the store caters to women who are undergoing treatment and the aftermath of a battle with cancer, it’s also a place of refuge and support, learning and understanding. A place where cancer combatants can gather strength from kindred spirit. A place where the demon within doesn’t win. Superficially, Linda has survived the surgeon’s scalpel for breast cancer, ovarian cancer and related illnesses. All the time she was unknowingly preparing herself for a new life, one where she could share her experiences and knowledge gained with others following similar paths. “Through therapy and treatment, I found the courage to look beyond, to never give up on myself.” Today she stands proud and confident, a cancer survivor and mentor to those at any stage of the journey. Her welcoming and comforting shop is a place where disease is masked with wigs, make up and accessories that enhance the physique and create an inner peace with self esteem. Clients are invited to sample a wide variety of clothing designed to disguise illness with elegance and create an image previously lost in trauma and malady. Not only does Look Beyond Mastectomy Boutique offer a wide range of clothing and accessory
Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 26 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
options, Linda has made the store into a “wellness centre” with free lectures on healing available for anyone who can benefit from the information being shared. In the month ahead, Look Beyond Mastectomy Boutique will host seminars on fighting cancer, dealing with menopause, pelvic exercises, yoga and more. “It’s all about learning to love the most amazing person of all—you!” emphasizes Linda. All classes are free of charge and take place before or after regular store hours. In October, Linda is planning a “feel good” day where participants will receive a makeover, consultation and advice on various cancer-related challenges. The event will culminate with a “cancer survivor” fashion show, for which Linda is currently seeking models. In addition to operating the Look Beyond Mastectomy Boutique, Linda Morin is a celebrated author, the first to reveal her body and the story of her road to recovery to the general public following her double mastectomy. “I knew in my heart that it was something I had to do for all women who have suffered physical and emotional pain from the consequences of cancer.” Her book ‘The Courage to Look Beyond” has become an international bestseller, offering guidance and support to countless people on similar journeys. “It’s almost unbelievable to think that a tragic illness changed my life for the better, but I am proud and happy to say it’s true.” To learn more, call Linda at 613-4224331 or online at lookbeyond.ca. Look Beyond Mastectomy Boutique is open Mon-Fri 10 am to 6 pm and Saturday 10 am to 2 pm.
Linda Morin welcomes everyone to her new shop Look Beyond Mastectomy Boutique at 2039 Robertson Road in Bells Corners.
The Look Beyond Mastectomy Boutique has a wide variety of clothing, accessories, wigs and more to help women regain their self-esteem before, during and after cancer treatment.
A wig can make a new image, as Linda Morin proves at her shop, Look Beyond Mastectomy Boutique.
Breast cancer causes and risk factors
Research into breast cancer has shown that its origins include a variety of potential causes and risk factors. Although many of them are biological and non-preventable, some others can be eliminated, prevented or controlled by changing certain lifestyle habits.
You can reduce the risk of developing breast cancer by changing some of your lifestyle habits.
Non-preventable causes The physical causes of breast cancer that have been identified are as follows: • Age (increased risk after the age of 50) • High breast density • A personal or family history of breast or ovarian cancer • Genetic mutations associated with the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes • Taking the postmenopausal hormones es trogen and progesterone • A history of benign breast disease (cysts, hyperplasia) • The early onset of menstruation or late onset of menopause
Preventable factors
On the other hand, some causes of breast cancer are closely related to personal lifestyle choices.
Here is a partial list: • Alcohol consumption • The use of oral contraceptives for several years • Physical inactivity (a sedentary lifestyle) • Excess weight and obesity in adulthood • Smoking and prolonged exposure to second hand smoke • Late pregnancy (after the age of 30) Please note that these risk factors are not all equally weighted. Get all the information you need about your particular circumstances before changing your lifestyle. It’s always a good idea to consult a health professional as well.
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What is breast cancer? Breast cancer starts in the cells of the breast. The breast tissue covers an area larger than just the breast. It extends up to the collarbone and from the armpit across to the breastbone in the centre of the chest. The breasts sit on the chest muscles that cover the ribs. Each breast is made of glands, ducts (thin tubes) and fatty tissue. Lobules are groups of glands that can produce milk. Milk flows from the lobules through a network of ducts to the nipple. The nipple is in the centre of a darker area of skin called the areola. Fatty tissue fills the spaces between the lobules and ducts and protects them. A woman’s breasts may feel different at different times of her menstrual cycle, sometimes becoming lumpy just before her period. Breast tissue also changes with age. Breast tissue in younger women is mostly made of glands and milk ducts, but older women’s breasts are made up mostly of fatty tissue. The breasts also contain lymph vessels and lymph nodes, which are part of the lymphatic system. The lymphatic system helps fight infections. Lymph vessels move lymph fluid to the lymph nodes. Lymph nodes trap bacteria, cancer cells and other harmful substances. There are groups of lymph nodes near the breast under the arm, near the collarbone and in the chest behind the breastbone. Cancer cells may start within the ducts (this is called ductal carcinoma) or in the lobules (lobular carcinoma). Ductal carcinoma is the most common type of breast cancer. The information in this section is about ductal and lobular carcinomas. Other types of cancer such as inflammatory breast cancer and Paget’s disease, behave differently and may need different treatment. For more information about other types of breast cancer, call our Cancer Information Services 1 888 939-3333 or e-mail info@cis.cancer.ca.
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Kemptville native takes part in RBC humanitarian trip to Africa BY JENNIFER WESTENDORP jwestendorp@metroland.coom
No good deed goes unnoticed. The Royal Bank of Canada awarded employees who contribute significantly to their community a trip to see firsthand the bank’s humanitarian work in Africa at the end of August. “They chose 22 of us from across the country,” explained Rachelle Brisebois, Kemptville native and former Kemptville RBC branch employee. Brisebois now works at an RBC branch in Ottawa. “We went to Maasai Mara in Kenya,” she explained. “We stayed at the WE (movement that empowers people to change the world) complex there. They hosted us, but the trip was funded by RBC.” Her colleagues that joined her on the trip had the “biggest hearts” she’s ever known. Brisebois earned her place on the trip through her volunteer work with youth. “We were given the opportunity to go into different communities and see the work RBC has done,” she said. A profound moment for Brisebois was seeing a well built by RBC and the way it has changed the lives of the
people in the community. “We met a woman who had nothing and now she runs her own business. They set-up micro-economies, called merry-go-rounds, and every one puts in say $100 each month and then one person gets the pot of money and uses it for something like setting up a business.” “WE goes in and teaches people how to earn money, creating sustainable change,” she continued. Visiting a girls’ high school was another insightful moment for Brisebois. “They start school at 5:30 a.m. and go until 10 p.m.,” she said. “The teaching facilitators told us the girls wanted to start earlier and go later than that – they were so eager to learn.” While in Maasai Mara, the RBC employees helped build a boys’ high school. “It was a nice feeling to leave your mark,” said Brisebois. RBC is a big advocate of youth, partnering with Free the Children and WE, she explained. “The stats are crazy for youth who aren’t educated, especially girls. RBC feels very strongly about women’s empowerment. The women in these communities are now making
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money and sending their daughters to school.” Seeing African tribes, who lived one way for countless generations, make such significant changes in a single decade was inspiring to Brisebois. “It was really cool to see. If these tribes can make changes, then we are inspired to make changes.” A man used to have to kill a lion to be considered a ‘warrior’ in the tribe, she explained. “Now, to be a warrior you need a degree and women can be considered warriors too. There is hope for change in the world.” Momma Jane was the name of one woman the RBC group met. “She told us the things she had been through and all the changes brought to the community by WE,” said Brisebois. “RBC built this well and we were all just in awe to be working for a company that changed everything for this community.” You don’t have to go to Africa to make changes in the world, she explained. “No one should ever be afraid to raise their hand to help. The point is you don’t have to do something big to Submitted photo make a difference; volunteer at an event, donate to a fund- Rachelle Brisebois travelled to Africa to see the good work that RBC funded projects were raiser. It doesn’t take much.” achieving.
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Oxford-On-Rideau and Wolford Public School could close at end of school year CONTINUED
From front page
“Over 10 years, we’ve seen a decline of about 7,500 students,” said Sliwa. “When we add those numbers to the number of surplus students spaces we had, that takes us up to almost 10,000 empty pupil spaces (across the board).” The trustees will decide, based on the staff report titled ‘Building for the Future: Pupil Accommodation Review,’ the direction best suited for each individual school. “We have 16 schools possibly closing, where students from those schools would be consolidated into neighbouring schools,” said Sliwa. “We have an additional 13 schools the trustees need to consider – have a dialogue about – whether to rebuild, expand or accommodate students elsewhere. All 29 schools will be discussed.” The schools included in the report are there for one of three reasons: concerns about investment required to manage the property (necessary renovations), low enrolment and no
projected student growth. The top-up funding previously provided by the Ontario Ministry of Education ceased to exist quite some time ago, so empty spaces in schools are no longer supported by provincial funding. “We are funded on a per pupil amount,” said Sliwa. The trustee discussion centered on the best use of resources. “We shouldn’t just be talking about closing schools and relocating students to partially filled schools. We should be talking about how to replicate what we recently did in Cornwall.” The UCDSB closed two small schools and built one new school to accommodate all the students in Cornwall. “The ministry encourages not operating partially filled schools,” he explained. In 2007/2008, the UCDSB trustees had a significant discussion about consolidation and re-building facilities. Jennifer Westendorp/Metroland The next opportunity, following Oxford-On-Rideau Public School provincial guidelines, to discuss cloin Oxford Mills could close by the sures and consolidation would be in end of this school year. 2021.
“We have almost 10,000 empty student spaces,” said Sliwa. “If we said that an average sized elementary school had 300 students, then that equals 33 empty elementary schools.” The UCDSB consists of 86 elementary and secondary schools. “It’s the change of demographics,” said Sliwa. “There are not as many children – families are smaller. The schools were built at a time when there was a big push to accommodate children. We are trying to respond to what is the new normal.” The 29 schools discussed represent 33 per cent of the total facilities in the UCDSB. “The board’s (trustees) intent is to be proactive,” said Sliwa. The ‘Building for the Future’ report was published on Sept. 26. It stems from a report compiled in the spring of 2016 outlining enrolment and facility conditions at all UCDSB schools. “If the board chooses not to have this discussion right now then the problem would be how to manage revenues with declining enrolment. We have in excess of 35,000 student spaces and our enrolment is 26,000.”
If the trustees decide to accept the staff report, recommending impending school closures, the next step for the board would be to engage the community. “The board has a responsibility to the community to collect information about what they value and hope for the schools,” said Sliwa. “We need to understand from a community perspective what is happening in the schools; that is really significant. We need to understand how the physical building is supporting those things. The board is taking data prepared by staff and then the next step is to reach out to the community for local knowledge and insight.” The UCDSB will look to community members for feedback prior to the final discussion set for March 2017. With regards to the potential impact on staff, collective agreements are in place with clear language about this type of scenario. “No one is deciding to close schools on Wednesday,” said Sliwa. “We are months away from the board making any kind of decision. There is a lot of discussion that needs to happen before the end point in March.”
Bishop’s Mills Doors Open turns into homecoming for once-local families It was the music that drew them together. Over 40 people attended the Bishop’s Mills Doors Open event on Saturday, from as far away as Florida and North Bay. And it turned out that some of those people attended the village’s one-room schoolhouse together back in the day. Ruth (McLelland) Boland and her husband, Dan, were visiting from North Bay on a semi-annual visit to the Bishop’s Mills Cemetery. Her grandfather, Howard McLelland, worked for Sanderson’s Cheese, drawing cheese from Bishop’s to be shipped to Montreal and beyond. Howard’s parents lived next to the Community Hall. Ray and Glen Adams grew up in Submitted photo Bishop’s Mills, playing music in the Community Hall with their parents, From left, Ruth Boland, Ray Adams, Laurel Lamothe, Glen Adams, Joyce Norman and Mildred Adams. Wills, Brenda Lee and Mildred Adams (seated).
They played for an hour entertaining visitors with traditional gospel and bluegrass music. Mildred (Nottell) Adams was born and raised in Bishop’s Mills. She and her husband, Norman, ran the General Store. Her father, Billy Nottell, ran the store in the 1930s and 40s. Laurel (Weir) Lamothe grew up on Jig Street not far away. Her parents lived in the village for many years and her mother taught Sunday School in the United Church. Joyce (Maneilly) Wills, of Smiths Falls, attended to help out at the Church Hall. Joyce is the granddaughter of Stella Maneilly, originally a Snowdon from the area. Brenda (Dool) Lee’s family grew up on Dool Road, in Bishop’s. Bill Hamblen from Brockville, was born in Bishop’s Mills, in the original Chauncey Bishop home. His father,
Don Hamblen, was the last cheese maker in Bishop’s Mills. The factory closed in 1946. Many others – including life-long local residents Mervin and Joan Robinson – dropped by the Hall during the special day. “It is very heartwarming to see the spirit of Bishop’s Mills still so evident,” said Ruth Boland. Submitted by Tom Graham
NEW PHYSICIAN ACCEPTING PATIENTS Dr. Penny McGregor is pleased to welcome
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Connected to Your Community - K2 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
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Chris Weissflog, member of Sustainable North Grenville, addresses the committee of the whole on Sept. 19.
Sustainable North Grenville asks council to abstain from Energy East debate BY JENNIFER WESTENDORP
JWESTENDORP@METROLAND.COM
Don’t vote for or against, if you lack the technical expertise to do so. That was the sentiment expressed by Sustainable North Grenville, (SNG), representative, Chris Weissflog, during a deputation to committee of the whole on Sept. 19. “We’re here tonight regarding concerns over expressions of support for the proposed Energy East pipeline project,” said Weissflog. “Before going any further, for the sake of council and the public, I would like to present an overview of the events leading to today.” Concerns first arose in June 2013, when residents heard Mayor David Gordon speak publicly about the project on CBC, he explained. “That galvanized the residents of North Grenville to act,” said Weissflog. SNG then presented council a petition with over 300 signatures that stated as follows; we urge our municipal council to oppose the pipeline until a full assessment has been made of the potential impacts on our drinking water, air and land, and associated risks to the Rideau River system. As a result of the petition, council passed a resolution that states; the Municipality of North Grenville has taken the position that it is premature to provide any substantive comments regarding this project. “Council also agreed to participate in the National Energy Board (NEB) hearings as an intervener,” said Weissflog. In Aug. 2015, the Ontario Energy Board concluded that the risks associated with the pipeline outweighed the benefits. “On Sept. 6, Mayor David Gordon, in his capacity the
North Grenville representative at County Council (United Counties of Leeds and Grenville) expressed support for the Energy East pipeline project,” said Weissflog. He posed the following questions to council and staff; in accordance with the municipal resolution outlined, how would the municipality demonstrate to North Grenville residents that the TransCanada project is both safe and beneficial to our community? How can support for the pipeline project be affirmed when it has not been demonstrated to the community and no evidence has been provided? Will Mayor Gordon retract his statement of support at County Council? “One point of clarification, for the purpose of the municipality – the purpose of seeking and receiving intervener status was to ensure the concerns brought forward in our application for intervener status were not satisfactorily addressed, then we would take the opportunity provided to us by the National Energy Board and proceed to the hearings,” said CAO Brian Carré. “That was the sole purpose of applying for intervener status.” “With regards to your second point, of when will the municipality demonstrate the project is safe and beneficial to the people of North Grenville…unfortunately sir, there is no one, that I am aware of, on staff, or on council, that has the professional qualifications to make those statements, and that’s why we would rely on the process,” he continued. “I think it’s fair to say then, since council and staff, don’t have the competency to make such decisions or analysis, then that you are not in a position to make a decision to support
or not support,” said Weissflog. “The last point; will the mayor retract his expressions of support for the Energy East project at county?” recited Gordon. “Let me start with an explanation of why I support it. To start off, the Eastern Ontario Warden’s Caucus (EOWC) and the Western Ontario Warden’s Caucus (WOWC) both have research facilities with a number of people on staff. We gave them a mandate to research Energy East and the impact on the Energy East project in Ontario. The staff came out with the resolution supporting Energy East, so you can smirk and say well the researchers on our side right off the bat supported Energy East - no they didn’t. It was their job to give us the best advice.” “When the motion came forward, I supported it,” he continued. “I believed the information. Do I think this is the safest way of transporting bitumen through Canada? Yes, because I have paranoia when it comes to rail travel. I don’t know how many containers (of oil products) go through North Grenville daily.” “In response to a few of the points here, this is a very narrow scope,” said Weissflog. “And so when you talk about the warden’s caucus, east and west – it doesn’t matter – this is democracy, it’s not top down, top up. So when we’re talking about expressing support and voting at a council – regardless of whether you vote or not – but if your voting, your vote would be from North Grenville. If the decision hadn’t been made here to support, then that wouldn’t be a democratic vote. Secondly, when it comes to the resources of the eastern and western caucuses for wardens, I don’t believe they had
anywhere near the resources as the Ontario Energy Board does and the Ontario Energy Board came to a very different conclusion.” “I’m going to come back with a proposal and bring it forward to council – you might be satisfied with the work that has proceeded - but please don’t make any statements of support for something that you don’t have the technical expertise or the knowledge in house to do so, on an issue that is outside your authority,” he concluded.
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Committee discusses rural summit agenda and closed session BY JENNIFER WESTENDORP jwestendorp@metroland.com
The following is a list of briefs from the committee of the whole meeting held on Sept. 19. Human resources policies and procedures amendments complete, recommended to council The final draft of the human resources policies and procedures, following an extensive review and numerous amendments to the document, was brought before committee on Sept. 19. “We came to committee of the whole with recommendations, as I stated, for individual policies,” said CAO Brian Carré. “But the recommendation that was carried was basically to continue on with the process and bring all of those individual policies, with the recommended changes that we brought to you, and compile that into the manual that we now have in front of you.” “What we did in our last administrative report, which is in the package today, is include the highlighted areas – the more significant changes – that relate to that policy manual,” he continued. The amendments were recommended to council. Rural summit agenda recommended to council The proposed rural summit agenda was tabled for committee’s consideration on Sept. 19. “With respect to the rural summit, members of the committee will recall that under our community strategic plan adopted in 2013, the municipality will hold a bi-annual rural workshop and the event is aimed at identifying current rural issues and opportunities and bringing residents in
North Grenville’s rural use of it. So I’m going communities together,” to say to you, citizens of said Carré. North Grenville participating in the survey, give The economic develop- us your suggestions and ment staff at the munici- come join us at the sumpality were asked to pre- mit. Help us shape the pare for the summit, based inaugural occurrence of on the direction of council. this bi-annual event.” “In preparation of the “A point of informasummit, we’ve issued a tion for Councillor Berpress release announc- tram; I recognize that the ing the event and also afternoon doesn’t include launched an online sur- a section for economic vey, which I would en- development, but just courage everyone, wheth- for clarification, the proer you’re from the rural posed presentation titled area or not, to go on our ‘teeny, tiny places’ is prewebsite (www.northgren- sented by Katie Nolan ville.ca) and submit your from the Ontario Miniscomments.” The survey try of Agriculture, Food is also available at the and Rural Affairs, is an North Grenville Munici- economic development pal Centre and the North officer and will provide Grenville Public Library, a lot of insight on how in hard copy format for small municipalities can those who lack the In- be successful and take ternet. “It’s important to grasp of the strengths note that the results of of smaller municipalithis survey will be used ties and how they can to assist in preparing the turn that around into presentations (at the sum- economic development mit) to ensure they are opportunities.”The profocusing on those prior- posed agenda was recomity areas that were iden- mended to council. tified,” said Carré. “This data will also be very imCommittee rose with portant in ongoing plan- report from closed session ning and consideration The committee rose for rural areas.” with a report, following “One question I have, a closed session meeting before some comments, held at 3:30 p.m. on Sept. relates to the afternoon 19. “I wish to advise pubpart of the program, licly that council met as which there is a possibil- committee of the whole, ity of a bus tour,” said in closed session,” said Councillor Jim Bertram. Carré. “To consider la“When I was originally bour relations regarding thinking about this, I had internal control systems, hoped we might include, and more particularly in some format, a dis- regarding our policies, cussion about economic practices and procedures. development in the rural And also, committee had areas of North Grenville a training session whereand I think there is a little by no member discussed bit of room in the morn- or otherwise dealt with ing for that.” a manner in a way that He explained this is an materially advanced the opportunity for rural resi- business or decision makdents to establish a voice. ing of the council.” “This isn’t the only The following resolutime people can do this, tion was passed by the but it is a chance,” said committee; be it resolved Bertram. “I would en- that the committee of the courage people to make whole direct the chief ad-
Sunday Mixed League HSFM – Darrell Miller - 268 HSFL – Shelley Miller - 174 HMFM – Darrell Miller - 545 HMFL –Shelley Miller - 460 Monday Mixed Team:
Team 5 – Team 8 –
Team 1 – Team 7 –
Ben Krueger - 184 Fran Brauneisen - 168 Peter Rothenburg - 474 Fran Brauneisen - 450 Team 6 – Team 4 –
Team 3 – Team 2 –
HSFM – Jordan Burley - 294 Tom Delong - 216 HSFL – Carol Armstrong - 244 Rebecca Delle Palme - 205 HMFM – Jordan Burley - 712 Tom Delong - 628 HMFL – Carol Armstrong - 620 Rebecca Delle Palme - 522 Tuesday 9:15 Senior Mixed Team: Barry McVey – 5-15 Bill Bost – 7-14 David Fielding – 7-14 Keith Crawford – 0-12
Gerald Christie – 7-11 Joan Thomson – 0-9 Gail Beattie – 0-5 Don Moorhouse – 2-4
ministrative officer to engage senior management to proceed promptly with the review of (controllership, section 224 of the Municipal Act 2001) policies, practices and procedures and submit recommended changes for the committee’s consideration.
it,” said Blake. “I don’t,” said Carré. “Having said that, the two subject matters that you brought on the floor was staff leaving and the Kemptville College. In the case of Kemptville College, we’re in negotiations and have signed an agreement on communications that these negotiations are in closed session with the province of Ontario and I can’t share those details of the negotiations. So unfortunately, that won’t help your question. With respect to staff leaving, those discussions are personnel matters – human resources matters – that I cannot and will not discuss in a public forum.” “Your last question was will you, at any time, provide us a detailed report of the costs of those two issues,” he continued. “Absolutely, it is done every year through a municipal audit and that report is public, posted, it’s all there. If your question was more along the lines of what is the outcome of your negotiations; absolutely, there will be a report when those negotiations have concluded. You’ve heard one comment made by Mayor (David) Gordon that those negotiations were suspended. That is his comment. I have nothing to add to that, nor will I comment on that. With respect to staff leaving, we have had one person leave the organization and I suspect you are also inquiring about an individual that is on extended leave (Forbes Symon, Director of Planning and Development) and again, those are human resources matters that we are not able to discuss in a public forum.”
Resident asks for public report on Kemptville College A North Grenville resident addressed the committee seeking a public report about Kemptville College. “I’m George Blake, for those of you who don’t know me,” he began. “Under the circumstances we are in, within the community, given the various gossiping – about employees leaving and taking a delay working on the farm (Kemptville College) – can you assure the residents, including me, that you will make a public report, because you’ve been in-camera (closed session) many times. Can you make a promise to me and the community that you will come up with a final report, detailing within reason, where we stand and what it has cost. Some of it is not gossip; some is fact. I hope you do, but I bet you don’t, have an idea the gossip that is going on in our small community? How concerned we are that there is not enough that’s been said. I came here to bring to your attention the feeling of the people who are paying your wages; we are not happy with the lack of knowledge.” “I take direction from council; council is who I answer to,” said Carré, lead on the Kemptville College file. “I heard in your introduction that there is a lot of gossip and I don’t doubt that.” Local resident donates “You shouldn’t doubt $10,000 to arboretum
HSFM – Bruce Button - 223 HSFL – Joan Thomson - 205 HMFM – Bill Bost - 601 HMFL – Marg Coffell - 531
Bill Bost - 214 Marg Coffell - 202 Bruce Button - 595 Joan Godfrey - 513
Tuesday – 1230 Ladies HSF – Gloria Marion - 250 HMF – Gloria Marion - 564
Wednesday Mix League HSFM – Robert Smiley - 256 HSFL – Jamie Moore - 235 HMFM – Robert Smiley - 663 HMFL – Gloria Manion - 543
David Earl - 216 Amy McGillvray - 227 Robert Hudson - 589 Barb Delaney - 539
Leona Hudson - 216 Leona Hudson - 515
Thursday Golden Kids Joan Thomson – 5-5 Keith Crawford – 5-5 Bert Turner – 5-5 Bruce Button – 4-4
Ann Mitchell – 3-3 Neil Wright – 2-2 Sean Franey – 2-2 Ron Thomson – 2-2
Tuesday 7pm “Mens Industrial League” Team: Home Hardware – 38-72 K.B.C. – 24-34 Best in the Biz – 24-58 South Ridge Sod – 20-28 Achorn Consulting – 22-56 Crown Rollers – 18-26 Clark Code Repairs – 18-50 W.K.K. – 4-12 HSF – Wayne Mann - 324 Cory Coffell - 316 HMF – Cory Coffell - 862 Wayne Mann - 786
HSFM – Neil Shepherd - 281 HSFL – Joan Godfrey - 231 HMFM – Neil Shepherd - 690 HMFL – Joan Godfrey - 584
Ken Bayley - 281 Bonna Oosterhof - 231 Carol Rennick - 224 Ken Bayley - 681 Cindy Miller - 563
Connected to Your Community - K4 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
A local resident has donated $10,000 to the municipality for the development of the arboretum at the Ferguson Forest Centre. “The municipality received a donation from a member of the community in the amount of $10,000
back in March of this year, with the request that money be used for the development for the arboretum area in the Ferguson Forest Centre,” said Mark Guy, Director of Parks, Recreation and Culture. See Community page K5
UPCOMING MEETINGS COUNCIL Tuesday, October 11 at 6:30 pm in the Council Chambers at the Municipal Centre. COMMITTEE OF THE WHOLE Monday, October 3 at 6:30 pm in the Burritts Rapids Community Hall. For agenda information, please visit the Municipal website at www.northgrenville.ca/ document-library.
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY
Seasonal Winter Maintenance - The Department of Public Works is currently accepting resumes for seasonal winter maintenance positions. Candidates must have a valid DZ licence and the ability to be on call 24 hrs a day combined with a flexibility in hours of work. For more information please contact the Public Works Clerk at 613-258-9569 ext. 133 or email cfequet@ northgrenville.on.ca. The closing date is October 21 at 4:00pm.
2016 FINAL TAX DUE DATE
A reminder that the final tax due date for all property classes is Friday, September 30th.
2016 BURN PERMITS
In accordance with By-Law 33-12, a Burn Permit is required to conduct open burning on property located outside of the urban area. Burn Permits for 2016 are available at the Municipal Office or at the Fire Hall at 259 County Rd. 44 for a fee of $15. Please contact the Fire Hall at 613-258-2438 ext. 5 for conditions prior to burning.
Thursday 7pm Mixed HSFM – Larry Gorton - 269 HSFL – Wanda - 202 HMFM – Larry Gorton - 776 HMFL – Carol Armstrong - 524
Mike COnnerty - 264 Loiuse Conway - 193 Mike Connerty - 667 Loiuse Conway - 506
Friday 10am Mixed Team: Bernie Smith – 7-16 Audrey Arcand – 7-14 Joan Godfrey – 5-12 Bruce Button – 2-11 HSFM – Dalton Gilmer - 243 HSFL – Marg Coffell - 242 HMFM – Dalton Gilmer - 586 HMFL – Marg Coffell - 621
Barry Mcvey – 5-10 Dalton Gilmer – 0-9 Mary Lou Fry – 2-7 Barb Brogan – 0-5 Barry McVey - 239 Gail Beattie - 222 Bernie Smith - 546 Joan Godfrey - 560
YBC Bowlasaures – Emerson L - 53, Narelle M - 66, Logan S - 58 PeeWee – Aaron B - 78, Chloe B - 92, 114, Zaurek M - 106, 122, Samuel R - 75, Thomas K - 92, 99, Chris S - 86 Bantam – Nathan R- 104, 171, Owen S - 134, 127, 115 Jr – Eliza B - 127, Liam B -149, Jhonus B - 170, Devon R - 141, Fiona W - 139, 148, Nik K - 131, 137, Olivia M - 205, 185, 173, Josh P - 136 Sr – Natasha J - 171, 217, Isaac T - 152, Andrew W - 156, 160, Wesley W - 160, 207, 211, Angela C - 164, Carson K - 225, 172, Gavin L - 254, 162, 173, Breanna L - 200, Kyle W - 206 See you at the lanes Nona, Darrell, Cindy and Melissa Miller.
Community Improvement Program expansion discussed CONTINUED
From page K4
“The arboretum area is on municipal lands, so the parks and recreation department will be working in partnership with the Ferguson Forest Centre to use these donated funds to develop that area as a recreational area for the enjoyment of the community.” Expansion of the Community Improvement Program (CIP) recommended A report was brought forth recommending the expansion of the Community Improvement Program. “This is report is being brought forward for information purposes,” said Phil Mosher, planner. “There have been requests received from the Business Improvement Area (BIA) to expand the Community Improvement Program from the Rideau-Sanders triangle, in the north of downtown, to the Prescott-Clothier
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Street sections in the south of downtown.” He explained the CIP is a capital improvement plan created to encourage investment in the downtown core of Kemptville. “Presently, there’s been three years of money that has been invested, in partnership with municipal dollars and private dollars,” said Mosher. “Approximately $60,000 each year has been invested in the RideauSanders triangle for the past three years; $20,000 of that coming from the municipality and $40,000 coming from private sponsorship. So, for every dollar the municipality is spending to direct investment in the downtown core, $2 of private money is being spent.” The request from BIA would see the fulfillment of the five-year plan, with an increase from $20,000 to $60,000 as the municipal contribution for years’ four and five of the program. Staff were directed to explore the option of expanding the CIP.
Submitted photo
Literary Follies Sneezy Waters and Vince Halfhide provide musical entertainment for the crowd gathered at the 14th annual Literary Follies event, in support of the North Grenville Public Library, on Sept. 18.
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Connected to Your Community - K5 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
A man on a mission: Canal Pursuit for Mental Health comes to Merrickville
BY JENNIFER WESTENDORP jwestendorp@metroland.com
After losing two brothers to suicide and seeing the people he loves most suffer from mood disorders, Clay Williams is a man on a mission. In 2015, he ran the inaugural Canal Pursuit for Mental Health – a 765 kilometer run that took him along the Trent Severn Canal and the Rideau Canal, passing through Smiths Falls, Merrickville and Kemptville. The 56-year-old Waterloo resident did the Canal Pursuit for Mental Health again this year to raise funds and awareness for the Mood Disorder Society of Canada. “The Mood Disorder Society of Canada connects health care providers with people suffering from mood disorders and focuses on getting rid of the stigma around depression,” said Williams, in an interview with The Kemptville Advance last year. “The reason I chose the Mood Disorder of Canada is because they want to keep people talking about depressions – things my older brothers held in.” After twelve days on the road, clocking an astounding
65 kilometers per day, Williams made it to the locks in Merrickville on Sept. 21. MerrickvilleWolford Councillor Chuck MacInnis presented Williams with a Merrickville Heritage Classic medal and a town pin. “I’ll be finishing tomorrow (Sept. 22) on Parliament Hill,” said Williams, barely winded after running from Smiths Falls to Merrickville. This year, Williams focused more on community engagement, lengthening the timeline of the run to include more stops along the route. “Last year, I ran day and night,” he explained. “It was intentionally like a race. This year, I’m focusing more on publicity – getting the word out. I did a couple group talks, one in Jones Falls and one in Seeley’s Bay.” Williams grew discouraged, as he ran from Trenton to Kingston this year. He uses an app on his phone to see how many people are tracking the Canal Pursuit for Mental Health. “Just as the day wore on, my phone wasn’t telling me there were people watching. Then, on Monday morning – a friend of a friend is a school teacher – I got into Kingston and had
about 100 kids running with me for five or six blocks. It was amazing.” Williams contacted every school along his route, asking them to get involved. He received little to no response from them, despite the current focus on mental health in education. During the Canal Pursuit for Mental Health, Williams carried with him a Canadian flag. He has asked everyone directly or indirectly impacted by mood disorders along the route to sign the flag. He invited Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to come join him at one the locks, perhaps even run part of the route with him, but again received no response. “If he meets me at one of the locks, he doesn’t even have to take off his shirt; I will,” he joked. To date, Williams has raised over $8,000 for the Mood Disorder Society of Canada this year. To donate to the Canal Pursuit for Mental Health visit http://tinyurl.com/canalpursuit2016. For more information, or to contact Williams, visit the CaJennifer Westendorp/Metroland nal Pursuit for Mental Health The Merrickville residents that ran alongside Clay Williams on Sept. 21; Andrew Moizer, Facebook page. Sally MacInnis, Susan Moizer and Williams.
Have a story idea? Contact Joe Morin at 613-283-3182 ext. 151
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SUNDAY
Regional Round-Up Almonte Friendship Luncheon, noon on Tuesday October 4, United Church social hall. Soup, sandwiches and home made dessert. Sponsored by churches in Almonte. Info Donna 613-256-1894 or Louise 613-256-7830. Euchre 4 hand, Sept. 29 @7:30 p.m. Sponsored by the Town & Country Tenants Assoc, 375 Country St. Light lunch. Contact Norma 613-256-4179. Mills’ Home Support- Almonte, Fit as a Fiddle, every Friday, 10am, Almonte United Church Hall. Transportation provided. To reserve 613-256-4700. Mills’ Home Support, Almonte. General Diners Lunch, Tuesday, October 11, 12pm, at the Mills Office, 67 Industrial Dr. Transportation. Please call Home Support 613-256-4700 Mills’ Home Support, Almonte, in Partnership with the Parkinson’s Society. Monday, 2-4pm. 67 Industrial Drive. Call Seniors Services 613-256-4700 to register. Monthly Support Group last Monday of the month. Mills’ Home Support, Almonte. Lunch Bunch at the Mills’ office, 67 Industrial. Thursday, October 6. Transportation provided. Contact Home Support at 613-256-4700 to reserve. Mills’ Home Support, Almonte, Music & Memories Lunch Program. Tuesday, October 4. Transportation provided. Entertainment “Twilight Two” Information: Home Support 613256-4700 or Jean Perry 613-257-3296. Mills’ Home Support, Almonte. Wednesday Night Cafe, Wednesday, October 12, 6pm, at the Mills Office. Transportation. Entertainment “George Chenier”. Please call Home Support 613-256-4700 Mills’ Home Support, Overnight Trip. Thursday-Friday, October 27 & 28. Pumpkin Inferno. Please call Home Support to reserve your seat on the bus 613-256-4700. Old Tyme Dance!! featuring “The Tiger Island Trio”... and Special guests. Union Hall, 1943 Wolfe Grove Road, County Road 16, Saturday, October 1, 8:00-11:00 p.m. Advanced tickets only, call Sherryl Fitzpatrick 613-854-5665, sherryl@sherrylfitzpartrick.com Ontario Early Years Centre, Kids have stress too. Wednesday, Oct. 5, 6:30-8:30pm Almonte Library, Pre-registration is necessary. 613-283-0095 ext. 300. Ontario Early Years Centre playgroup, Thursdays, Oct 6, 13, 20, 27. Naismith School, 9:00 a.m.-noon. 613-283-0095. Ontario Early Years Centre playgroup, Tuesdays, Oct 4, 11, 18, 25. Naismith School, 9:00 a.m.-noon. 613-283-0095 Ontario Early Years Centre playgroup, Wednesdays, Oct 5, 12, 19, 26. Naismith School, 9:00 a.m.-noon. 613-283-0095 Penny Rugs at the Mississippi Valley Textile Museum (MVTM). Danielle Potvin’s exhibition “A Penny Rug,” from October 4-December 10. Meet the artist at the vernissage on October 8 from to 2-4 pm. St Paul’s Almonte, Annual Harvest Supper, turkey dinner with all the trimmings, homemade pies. Friday, September 30, 4-7 p.m. at the Civitan Hall, Wolfgrove Road. Details: www. harvestsupper.ca
Any community organization based in our circulation area wishing to list an event of community interest is invited to submit a description of 25 words or less in writing. Admissions or event costs, will not be included. Deadline is Monday at 4:30 p.m. prior to publication date. This service is provided free of charge. Events will be listed no more than two weeks in advance. Write, Metroland Media, Attn: Regional Roundup, P.O. Box 158, Smiths Falls, Ont. K7A 4T1, or fax at 613-283-5909 or e-mail: jmichaelis@theemc.ca OR cheryl.code@metroland.com. Items will be edited as necessary. Please include name, address and phone number.
Breakfast- 1st and 3rd Sunday of the month. After 9 a.m. and 11:00 a.m. masses at St. Mary’s- 28 Hawthorne. Sponsor: Knight of Columbus. Carleton Place & District Horticultural Society Meeting, Wednesday, October 5. -How to make a Terrarium. St. Andrews Presbyterian Church Hall, rear of 39 Bridge St., 7:00 pm. Details: Facebook page or cphorticulture.ca Community Home Support Friday Lunch Bunch, Fridays (October 7, 21, 28) at Beckwith Township Hall, at 12 noon. Transportation available. Info/reservation: 613-253-0733. Debtors Anonymous. If you are having problems with money or debt then we can help. 6:30 Tuesdays, St. James Hall, Bell and Edmund Street. 613-216-9008. Fish Fry by Mike Mundell, Sat, Oct 1, 5-7 pm at St. Mary’s Catholic Church on Hawthorne St. Tickets at the door or call to reserve 613-257-4648, 613-253-0274 or 613-257-7806. Harvest Supper, Roast turkey and all the trimmings. St James Anglican Church, 225 Edmond St., Sunday, October 2, 6 p.m. Tickets available at Church Office. Info: 613-257-3178. iPads for Beginners, Oct. 8, 2pm. Please call the library to reserve a spot. 613-2572702 Carleton Place Public Library 101 Beckwith Street www.carletonplacelibrary.ca Lanark Drum Circle meets at the CP Museum, October 9 (the 2nd Sunday of every month) at 1:30. Learn traditional songs and teachings. Open to all, info 613-257-1014. Need to lose some weight, come and join us at TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly), a nonprofit weight loss support group. Monday evenings 5:30-7pm, Legion, 177 George St., Info: Leanne 613-253-2013. Oct. 1 -”Movie and Broadway Hits”, a concert with the Carleton Place and District Community Band and guests. 7:30, Town Hall. Info: 613-298-3953. Ontario Early Years Centre playgroup, Mondays, Oct 3, 17, 24, 31. Carambeck Community Centre, 9:30-11:30 a.m. 613-283-0095. Ontario Early Years Centre playgroup, Thursdays, Oct 6, 13, 20, 27. Arena, 9:30-11:30 a.m. 613-283-0095. Ontario Early Years Centre playgroup, Tuesdays, Oct 4, 11, 18, 25. Arena, 9:30-11:30 a.m. 613-283-0095. Ontario Early Years Centre playgroup, Wednesdays, Oct 5, 12, 19, 26. Carambeck Community Centre, 9:30-11:30 a.m. 613-2830095. Quilt Show Saturday October 1, 10 am-3 pm at Zion-Memorial United Church, 37 Franklin Street. Lunch available 11 am.-1:30 p.m. Handicap accessible.
KEMPTVILLE
Baby Talk, Wednesday, October 5, 1:30-3 p.m. *New Site* Madison Montessori Academy, 2965 County Rd 43. Baby Talk, Wednesday, September 29, 1:30-3 p.m. *New Site* Madison Montessori Academy, 2965 County Rd 43. Diabetes Education Programme, at the Kemptville Hospital Diabetes Clinic, the first Wednesday and Thursday of the month. You must register by calling (613)258-6133 Ext. 400. Info: www.kdh.on.ca Education session on Dementia, Lifestyle Bingo Tuesday, October 4, at 7 p.m. Carleton Place Arena upper hall. Elevator access Factors and Caregiver Support at St. Paul’s Presavailable. Sponsor: Carleton Place and District byterian Church, 319 Prescott St., Tues., October 4 from 7:00-9:00 pm. Civitan Club.
North Grenville Toastmasters meet 1st, 3rd Thursday every month. O’Farrell Financial Services, Boardroom (292 County Rd. 44). 7 p.m. Learn communication/leadership skills. “Pyjama Jam” Tuesdays 5-7:30 p.m. 207-215 Sanders St. Info: (613)258-2225 or 1(866)433-8933 ext 2374. The North Grenville Photography Club meets the first Wednesday of every month from 7-9. New location is The auditorium at the Municipal Centre on Hwy 44.
LANARK Civitan Old Tyme Country Talent Night Dinner & Dance. Last Friday of every month, dinner 6 p.m., music 7:30-11:30 p.m. Contact Vic (613)259-5610. Ontario Early Years Centre playgroup, Thursdays, Oct 6, 13, 20, 27. Maple Grove School, 9:30-11:30 a.m. 613-283-0095. Ontario Early Years Centre playgroup, Wednesdays, Oct 5, 12, 19, 26. Maple Grove School, 9:30-11:30 a.m. 613-283-0095. Sacred Heart’s Dinner/Jamboree Friday October 7, Foy Hall, 91 Princess St, 6 pm Dinner, Music follows. Host Alberta 613-259-2671 for info. Saturday, October 1 at 1:30 pm, Jewellery with Kathy -create and design you own necklace etc. at the Lanark Learning Centre, 67 George Street. To register, call 613-259-2207. Sunday, October 2 Drop in at the Lanark Museum 1-4 pm. Remembering Lloyd Wilson and the Music Masters. Join Lloyd and friends to play along, sing along or just enjoy. Refreshments.
MERRICKVILLE Men’s Dart League, Merrickville Legion, meet & play at 7 p.m, every Wednesday. Merrickville Legion Executive Meeting, 7pm, Oct 4. Merrickville Legion General Meeting, 7pm, Oct 11. All members asked to attend. We need your input on decisions to be made. Merrickville Legion open every Saturday noon to 4pm. Sixth Annual Merrickville’s Jazz Fest, October 13-16. Treat yourself to a weekend of exciting variety in both music and experience. Thanksgiving Dinner - Roast Turkey, served at 6pm, Oct. 7, music by Neville Wells. 7-11pm. Merrickville Legion.
PAKENHAM
PERTH 2016 Fall Rummage Sale, Thursday Sept. 29, 9-3pm, Friday Sept. 30, 9-noon. St. Paul’s United Church, 25 Gore St. West (corner of Gore & D’Arcy St) 613-267-2973 www.stpaulsuc-perth.org 23rd Perth Autumn Studio Tour, October 8-10, 10 am-5 pm, at 7 studio locations. An excellent opportunity to see the artisans’ workspace and environment. Details: www.perthstudiotour.com or call Riverguild Fine Crafts at 613-267-5237. Al-Anon Meetings. If you are living with or near a drinking problem. Every Thursday 8 p.m. St. James Anglican Church, Drummond St. 613-267-4848, 613-267-6039. Bi-monthly meeting of the Perth Co-housing Initiative will be held Thursday September 29, 6-8 pm at McMartin House. Everyone is invited. Refreshments served. Information, 613264-8590. Bridge, Perth Duplicate Bridge Club meets 7:00 p.m., Thursday, October 6 at Perth Civitan Club. For partnership contact Bert Picard 613267-5305. Community Home Support Lanark County Bereavement Support Group meets the 2nd Tuesday of each month 1-3pm at 40 Sunset Blvd, Info: 613-267-6400 Jewel’s Gently Used Clothing, 48 Wilson St. W., Ladies Night Out- Thursday, September 29, 5-7 pm. Draws, prizes, specials, food and fun. Men’s group, 1st Wednesday evening (October 5). Teens on up, All men warmly welcomed and respected. Bust isolation, build community. Details 613-267-8308. Ontario Early Years Centre infant playgroup, Thursdays Oct 6, 13, 20, 27. The Dance Studio, 1-2 p.m. 613-283-0095. Ontario Early Years Centre playgroup, Mondays, Oct 3, 17, 24, 31. Tayside Senior Centre, 9:30-noon. 613-283-0095. Ontario Early Years Centre playgroup, Thursdays Oct 6, 13, 20, 27, The Dance Studio, 9:30-noon 613-283-0095. Ontario Early Years Centre playgroup, Tuesdays Oct 4, 11, 18, 25. Taycare Senior Centre, 9:30 a.m.-noon. 613-283-0095 Ontario Early Years Centre playgroup, Wednesdays, Oct 5, 12, 19, 26. Perth Library, 10-noon. 613-283-0095. Parrot Heads of Perth will be collecting gently used footwear in support of The Shoe Bank, outside Giant Tiger, Saturday, October 1, 9:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m. Info: 613-264-1510, phop. ca or Facebook. Perth Lioness Annual apple pie sales. We are accepting orders now. Call Edna Coutts 613-267-2744. They will be ready for Thanksgiving. Perth Writers Guild is looking for new members. We meet one evening a month at the Perth Campus of Algonquin College. We welcome beginners, published authors, any writer at any stage in their development. Details, 613267-4662.
Roots, Folk, Country Concert featuring Newfoundland duo Sherman Downey and Matthew Byrne along with Mississippi Mills’ Adam Puddington Saturday October 1, 7:30 p.m. St. Andrew’s United Church, tickets: 613-7913476. Roots/folk/country concert featuring NewRURAL foundland duo Sherman Downey and Matthew Byrne along with Mississippi Mills’ Adam Puddington, Saturday, October 1, 7:30 p.m., St. An35th Anniversary LCGS, Oct. 1, 12:30drew’s United Church. Tickets: Nicholson’s in 4:00 p.m. Beckwith Townhsip Hall, Black’s Pakenham or by calling 613-791-3476. Corners. Speaker: Arlene Stafford Wilson. BBQ. Tickets contact: 613-793-6335 or online at: lanarkgenealogy.com
Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 29 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
Archives Lanark, open every Friday & Saturday, 10-3 pm, 1920 Con.7, Drummond (former Drummond Township Office near Drummond Center.)Info: 613-267-2232 or 613 256-3130. Ashton United Church UCW, Fall Luncheon, Bazaar and Bake Sale, Oct. 1st 11 am-1 pm. Homemade soup, chilli, crusty bread, muffins, cookies, tea and coffee. Everyone is welcome. Beckwith & District Friendship Club will meet October 5, Centennial Hall, Franktown, Potluck supper at 6 p.m. Musical entertainment. Inquiries 613-257-2756. Beckwith Playgroup meets Mondays and Thursdays, 9:30-11:30. Beckwith Twp Hall, Black’s Corners, (Sept.-June). Info: 613-2571539. Best Possible Start Drop-In. Parenting information and support. 1st and 3rd Monday’s each month, 9:30-11:30 a.m. Country Roads CHC, 4319 Cove Road, Portland. Info: Early Years Team, 613-272-2799 or 1-888-998-9927. Bid Euchre, Every second Monday night, Oct 3, 17 & 31, 7:00 p.m. Tatlock Community Hall. Bid euchre every Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. Montague & District Seniors Club, 658 Rosedale Rd S. (613)283-8482. Bingo, Elgin Lions Club Hall, every Thursday night, 7 p.m. Smoke free. Clayton Hall, Olde Tyme Music & Dinner, Oct 2, 2-6 p.m. supper at 5. All musicians welcome. Proceeds to Clayton Hall. Crockinole at the Middleville Township Hall, Friday September 30 at 7:30 pm. Come out and enjoy a fun night. light lunch. Dance, Saturday, October 8, 8 pm-midnight, lunch 10:30 pm, Band: Top Shelf. Lyndhurst Legion. Fall Beef Supper, Knox Presbyterian Church; All are welcome to our fundraising dinner; McDonald’s Corners Agricultural Hall; Sunday, October 2, 4-6:30 pm. General Meeting, October 13 at 7 p.m. Montague Forget-Me-Not Seniors. Info: 613283-8482. Hilltop Jamboree, Sunday, October 9, McDonald’s Corners Agricultural Hall. Doors open noon. Supper 5 p.m. Music starts at 1 p.m. Horseshoes - Toledo Horseshoe Club is hosting its annual “Turkey Shoot”, Monday October 10, 10am start, 15 games of horseshoes, 16 turkeys with other prizes. Horseshoes, Toledo Legion, every Tuesday, 7 p.m. sharp. All welcome. MacLeod Fiddlers, Scottish youth group from Glengarry, Sunday Oct 2, 11am Holy Trinity Anglican Church, Co. Rd #1 Lombardy. Light lunch. 613-283-0381 Mah jongg (American and Chinese) played Thursdays at 1:30 at the ABC Hall. Everyone Welcome, Info: Freda 613-273-2571 McDonald’s Corners Agricultural Society and the Festival of Small Halls. Friday, September 30. Buffet style Beef Dinner 6pm, music Bryson with special guest Melwood Cutlery. www.thefestivalofsmallhalls. com 613-2593480. Memorial Hymn Sing, Sunday October 2, St. George’s Anglican Church Clayton. Musical prelude with Lloyd Wilson, Tom Gardiner & Bernie Costello 10:30am, Hymn Sing 11am, lunch following. 613-256-1029. Music in the Afternoon at St Alban’s Anglican Church, Maberly. October 2, 2-4 p.m. Light refreshments. See RURAL page 44
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CLUES ACROSS 1. __ Nui, Easter Island 5. Midway between south and southeast 8. Small mark 12. Small antelope 14. Protects from weather 15. Goddess of women and marriage 16. City in Washington 18. Independent voters association 19. Bird genus 20. Train line 21. Annoy 22. Waste matter 23. 41st President 26. Type of cracker 30. Remove 31. Looked quickly 32. The habitat of wild animals 33. Type of gene 34. Humble 39. Barrels per day (abbr.) 42. Respectful compliments 44. Star Trek: The Next Generation doctor 46. Pithy remark
47. Sums up 49. Tailless amphibian 50. American Gaming Association (abbr.) 51. After seventh 56. Czech River 57. Folk band __ Iver 58. Kids ride this 59. Ancient Greek City 60. Liquefied natural gas (abbr.) 61. Net 62. Colors clothes 63. Midway between east and southeast 64. Japanese beverage CLUES DOWN 1. Island north of Guam 2. Biblical region 3. Scottish ancestor 4. Hills in northeast India 5. A way to cook by baking 6. Attacked ferociously 7. Furniture with open shelves 8. Burt Reynolds film 9. A way to examine 10. Plant of the goosefoot family 11. Job
13. Capable of being thought 17. One seeded fruit 24. Largest English dictionary (abbr.) 25. Platitudes 26. Very fast airplane 27. Pet detective Ventura 28. Resinous substance 29. Explosive 35. Purse 36. Swiss river 37. Separately managed account (abbr.) 38. Electron scanning microscope (abbr.) 40. Fable 41. Mythical monsters 42. Whale (Norwegian) 43. Domed recesses 44. Member of U.S. Navy 45. Cause to be loved 47. Expression of surprise 48. Jessica __, actress 49. Drove 52. Commands to go faster 53. Chinese dynasty 54. Military vehicle 55. Chinese Muslim
This week’s puzzle answers in next week’s issue
ARIES – Mar 21/Apr 20 Aries, certain feelings may not be easy to convey, but try to find the words this week. It’s important to let your feelings be known, and others are waiting on you to speak up. TAURUS – Apr 21/May 21 Taurus, coworkers respond favorably to a proposal you worked hard on. Allow this professional momentum to pay dividends outside of the office as well. GEMINI – May 22/Jun 21 Gemini, mixed signals lead to a bit of confusion. It’s nothing you can’t handle if you backtrack and remedy the original situation, just provide yourself ample time to set things right. CANCER – Jun 22/Jul 22 Be extra sensitive to the plights or concerns of others this week, Cancer. Some around you could benefit from some empathy and understanding. LEO – Jul 23/Aug 23 Leo, now might be a great time to take a step back and enjoy a little breathing room. Look at things from a different perspective, and you might Here’s How It Works: be amazed at your new outlook. Sudoku puzzles are formatted as a 9x9 grid, broken down into nine 3x3 boxes. To solve a sudoku, the VIRGO – Aug 24/Sept 22 numbers 1 through 9 must fill each row, column and box. Each number can appear only once in each Virgo, many things in your life are vying for your attention. It’s difficult to row, column and box. You can figure out the order in which the numbers will appear by using the numeric choose just one, but you will have to do so this week. If necessary, reach clues already provided in the boxes. The more numbers you name, the easier it gets to solve the puzzle! out to a friend for assistance. Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 32 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
LIBRA – Sept 23/Oct 23 Libra, your values and those of a loved one may clash from time to time. Some polite and intelligent discourse might be just what the doctor ordered this week. SCORPIO – Oct 24/Nov 22 Reactions come swiftly and strongly this week, Scorpio. You either love or hate something, and things may be very black and white in your world in the days ahead. SAGITTARIUS – Nov 23/Dec 21 Sagittarius, try to separate your personal life from your professional activities this week. This may require being a little more quiet and introspective than usual, but do your best. CAPRICORN – Dec 22/Jan 20 Capricorn, let your feelings be heard if you feel underappreciated by someone close to you this week. Your loved one will appreciate your honesty and welcome your insight. AQUARIUS – Jan 21/Feb 18 A meaningful conversation with the right person may occur this week, Aquarius. It could mean a step in the right direction for you and help to further your career. PISCES – Feb 19/Mar 20 Pisces, your emotions are so strong this week that you may feel alienated from those closest to you. If so, make an effort to stay connected. 0929
SOCIAL NOTES ANNIVERSARY
ANNIVERSARY
HAPPY 65th ANNIVERSARY Allan and Judy McLellan The family invite you to celebrate and have a cup of tea at their daughter’s home (next to the farm) 452 Perth Road, RR6 Smiths Falls K7A 4S7 Sunday, October 2nd 2-4 p.m. Best wishes only. Your presence is a treasured gift.
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ANNIVERSARY
ANNIVERSARY
HAPPY 50TH ANNIVERSARY October 1, 2016 Bud and Carolyn Barr A wonderful couple All our Best Wishes Betty, Barbara and Arnold, David and Louise, Ann and Gord, Family and Friends Wishing you many more!
BIRTH
BIRTH
WEDDING
WEDDING
MADISON MCDERMOTT Doug and Spring Norman would like to announce the safe arrival of their first grandchild, Madison Catherine McDermott, daughter of Amber and Matt McDermott. Madison was born on May 5, 2016, weighing 8 lbs 1 oz. The happy family lives on the Gold Coast, NORMAN-WEIMA Queensland, Australia. Doug and Spring Norman are delighted to announce the marriage of their daughter Katie, BIRTHDAY BIRTHDAY to Andrew Weima, son of Bill and Bonnie Weima of Battersea. The wedding ceremony and reception were held at Rideau Acres Campground, Kingston, on July 16, 2016. Katie and Andrew reside in their lovely home in Kingston.
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WEDDING
WEDDING
STEVENS-COLTESS WEDDING Joe and Judy Stevens are pleased to announce the marriage of their daughter, Nancy to Julian Coltess. The wedding took place in Kingston, Ontario on September 10, 2016 at Chalmers United Church. A fun filled reception followed in the Grandview Ballroom of the Delta Hotel. Nancy and Julian first met in 2012 at Spy Rock in Westport. From that day forward both the Stevens and Coltess families, as well as all their friends, knew they were destined to marry. CARD OF THANKS
CARD OF THANKS
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BIRTHDAY
BIRTHDAY ENGAGEMENT
ENGAGEMENT
Dorothy Frizell Happy 90th Birthday October 6, 2016 With love from all your family
WEIR The family of Margaret (Sullivan-Echlin) Weir would like to express a heart felt thank you to family, friends & neighbors for cards, donations, flowers visits, food and kindness. Special thanks to PCCC staff for their exceptional care of mother, Dr Moxon and Blair & Sons for all their guidance and kindness.
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HAPPY BIRTHDAY! HAPPY 60th WEDDING ANNIVERSARY October 6, 2016 Mom & Dad Clarence & Wilma Munro Love Your Family
After 42 years of working I have retired. I would like to thank all my family, friends & co-workers who were at my surprise retirement BBQ. I want to thank you all for the food, the big cake, the gifts, cards and all the well wishes. Big thanks to my grandson Jeremy & granddaughter Courtney for having the party at their home. Big thanks to my daughter Judy my son Gary, daughter-in-law Jo Ann and grandson Tyler for all the hard work in getting it all together. Thanks to my grandsons and families for coming. It is a day I will not forget. Thanks again, Mary Ronan
Share your special moments with your friends and our readers with an announcement in Social Notes.
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Jeff and Melissa Donnelly of Sharbot Lake are pleased to announce the engagement of their Oct 1 daughter, Courtney Brown, to Daniel Gordon, HAPPY 50TH BIRTHDAY KEVIN son of Don and Debbie Gordon, of Elgin. The Husband, Dad, Poppa, Granpa parents, bride and groom would like to invite love from Marlene everyone to help celebrate at their reception Jenn, Mokey, & Oakley October 1st, 2016 at the Elgin Lions Hall at 7pm. Tim, Angie, Kylee & Rilynne Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 33 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
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CARD OF THANKS
CARD OF THANKS
W. LLOYD BENNETT 1950-2016 Lloyd’s family would like to sincerely thank everyone for the love and support shown to us during this time of sudden loss. To those who sent cards, texts, emails, made memorial donations, sent food and flowers and attended the visitation and funeral, we will always remember your thoughtfulness. Thank you to the ABC Hall for generously offering the hall for the luncheon. To Robert and Angela, thank you for taking such good care of Lloyd’s horses. To Dr. Gauthier and the 2nd floor nursing staff of the GWM hospital, especially Jennifer and Lillian, we were blessed by your compassion, gentleness and care. To Stewart Blair and his staff, your professionalism and tenderness continue to be second to none, and we are so grateful for you. Thanks to Rev. Elizabeth Tucker for her calming spiritual presence. To the pall bearers, we are so honoured that you carried Lloyd to his final resting place. To the people of Zion United Church in Douglas who provided the food for the luncheon and who came all the way to Bolingbroke to serve it, your love and support meant, and mean, so very much. To the Firefighters and EFR personnel from all of the departments in Lanark County who attended the Firefighters Memorial Service and marched in tribute to Lloyd, your show of respect will never be forgotten. And to the members of the South Sherbrooke Fire Department, Lloyd was so very proud to work beside all of you through his 44 years in fire service. You were like his family, and will always be an important part of ours. Thank you for everything you have done for us. With heartfelt gratitude, Ingrid Bennett and Family.
DEATH NOTICE
DEATH NOTICE
DEATH NOTICE
Passed away surrounded by his loving family at the GWM Perth Hospital September 24, 2016 at age 71. Survived by wife Marie, daughters Tracey and Laura, sonin-law Fraser and granddaughter Fiona. Special thanks to Pastor Dan Schilke and Dr. Daniel Kruszelnicki for their dedication and compassion. Also special mention to the caring staff 2nd Floor, Palliative Care Unit. Funeral services to be held this spring, date to be confirmed. Donations if desired to: Pancreatic cancer research, Cancer Society, Palliative Care Services GWM Perth Hospital.
ANNOUNCEMENT
ANNOUNCEMENT
CLS476425_0922
Thanksgiving Holiday Deadline Change Classified deadline for October 13, 2016 issue is 3 p.m. Friday, October 7
613-283-3182 1-888-967-3237
DEATH NOTICE
DEATH NOTICE
DEATH NOTICE
CORMIER
MCLEAN
September 30, 1929 - July 6, 2016. Mary passed away peacefully on July 6, 2016 at the age of 86, surrounded by her devoted family. A Celebration of Life will be held on Friday, September 30, 2016 in the auditorium at the Old Town Hall, 14 Bridge Street in Almonte, from 3:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. with a memorial program from 4:30 p.m. - 5:00 p.m. In lieu of flowers, the family asks that donations be made to the Ottawa Heart Institute in her memory. ANNOUNCEMENT
DEATH NOTICE
Joan Elise
John Edward “Ted”
MacDOUGALL TAYLOR LAWSON Mary Louise
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ANNOUNCEMENT
DEATH NOTICE
Montreuil, Margery Doris
(July 16, 1927 - September 24, 2016) With great sorrow, the family of Margery Montreuil (nee Arthur), of Carleton Place and Mississippi Lake, advises that she passed away peacefully, with her husband and family at her side, at Fairview Manor in Almonte, on Saturday, September 24, 2016. She was in her 90th year. A loving wife, mother, grandmother and greatgrandmother, she will be sadly missed by her husband Jean Montreuil and her children and their partners, John Montreuil (Donna), Michael Montreuil (Brenda), Geoffrey Montreuil, Madelaine Tuttle (Roger), Tom Montreuil (Sharon) and Beth Ellis (Kevan). She loved and delighted in the lives and exploits of the families of her nine grandchildren – Angie (Dean Vennor), Eireann Montreuil (Dusty), Jamie Montreuil (Shawna), Alison (Jean Francois Gallant), Victoria Tuttle (David Hallam), Stephen Tuttle (Libby), Shannon Tuttle (Jesse Smith), Cody Montreuil, Hannah Ellis. She will be remembered and sorely missed by her great-grandchildren – Corbin, Gavin and Paige Vennor, Makenna Whetung, Myriam, Emma, Amy, Charlotte and Gabriella Gallant, Levi Smith. Loving “Auntie Marge” will be remembered by her many nieces and nephews and extended family and friends. Born in Ottawa in 1927, to Hilton and Margaret Arthur, Margery enjoyed a full and adventurous life, with international travels, but truly enjoyed her time with her family close by, at the summer home, on Mississippi Lake. She enjoyed a good cup of tea, classical music and her extensive collection of shamrocks, reflecting her family’s Irish heritage. Margery had enjoyed the ongoing love and company of her sister, Joan Frappier (Ian - deceased) of Temagami and Don Arthur (June) of Stittsville. She was predeceased by her parents, and her sister, Elaine Holmes (Jose) of Ottawa. The family extends their heartfelt thanks to Dr. Susie Quackenbush, Pam Murphy and the nursing staff of the AGH – Fairview Manor for their continual care and compassion throughout the past year. Visitation took place at the Alan R. Barker Funeral Home, 19 McArthur Avenue, Carleton Place, on Tuesday, September 27, 2016 from 11:00 a.m. until the funeral service in the Chapel at 1:00 p.m. Interment followed at St. James Anglican Cemetery, Carleton Place. In lieu of flowers, donations to The Arthritis Society would be appreciated. www.barkerfh.com
June 4, 1943 to September 17, 2016 Joan peacefully passed away at home, surrounded by her loving family on Saturday, September 17, 2016, age 73 years. Beloved wife of David Millotte. Loving mother of Michele Cormier (James) and Eric Cormier (Donna). Cherished grandmother of Eric Cormier Jr and Trevor Cormier. Will be sadly missed by her cousin Judi Jewinski and family, sister-inlaw Janice Devlin (Ed) and brother-in-law Gerald Millotte (Ann). Predeceased by her son Gerald Cormier, her parents Elise and Jack Talbot and in-laws Madge and Wilfred Millotte. A Memorial Mass will be held at Holy Cross Church, 505 Clothier Street West, Kemptville on Saturday, October 1, 2016 at 11 am. Followed by interment at Holy Cross Cemetery. Donations may be made to The Canadian Lung Association. Condolences/Tributes/Donations Hulse, Playfair & McGarry www.hpmcgarry.ca 613-258-2435
MOREAU, VICTOR “BIG VIC”
(Member RCL Branch 174, Arnprior) In hospital at Arnprior on Tuesday morning, September 20th, 2016; Victor Roger Moreau of Pakenham at the age of 85. Dear husband of Lucille (nee Lahaie). Dear brother of Henriette Gautier (Maurice) of France. Predeceased by his first wife, Françoise (nee Lemieux) as well as his brother, Hippolyte Moreau. Private arrangements entrusted to the care of the Pilon Family Funeral Home and Chapel Ltd., 50 John Street North, Arnprior. Interment Notre Dame des Neiges Cemetery, Masson, Quebec. Condolences/Donations www.pilonfamily.ca
Henderson Daphne Margaret (Burns) Henderson
BARR Raymond Russell “Ray” (Ret. Capt., R.C.A.F.) Peacefully, with his family at his side on Saturday morning, Sept. 24, 2016. Ray Barr of Almonte, age 84 years. Dearly loved husband and best friend of Bernadette “Bunny” Kelly. Loved and respected father of Wayne (Valerie) and Bob (Anne-Marie). Predeceased by his brothers; Donald & Gordon. Cherished grandpa to Bob, Kelly, Shawn, Tyler, Megan & Michelle. Great grandpa to Hannah & Emily. Friends were received at the C. R. GAMBLE FUNERAL HOME & CHAPEL INC. 127 Church St., Almonte, ON 613-256-3313 for visiting on Tuesday, Sept. 27th from 6 to 8 PM. Funeral Wednesday to Holy Name of Mary Church for Celebration of the Eucharist at 11 AM. Interment St. Mary’s Cemetery. Ray’s family wish to convey a very special thank-you to the medical staff at Orchard View on the Mississippi as well as the care provided by the nurses of St. Elizabeth’s Health Care and to Dr’s. Marisa Rossi & Christine Cripps for always being there. The Rosary was prayed at the funeral home on Tues. at 5:45 PM. For those who may choose to honour Ray with a memorial gift, please consider the Canadian Cancer Society. Condolences & Tributes: www.crgamble.com
C.R. Gamble Funeral Home & Chapel Inc. Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 34 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
Daphne passed away suddenly at her home on Saturday, September 24th, 2016 at the age of 81 years. She will be sadly missed by Charles, her beloved husband of almost 59 years. Daphne was the loved and cherished mother and Nana of Leslie (Jim) Armstrong and their children Kate, Tavish and Caden Armstrong; Laurie Henderson and her son David Henderson; Lynne (Terry) Barna and their children Rachel and Christian Barna; Lois (Steve) Gilmour and their children Jennifer, Alison and Joel Gilmour; Lisa (Jody) Pfaff and their children Lana (Alex) and Natalie Pfaff; Charles (Juli) Henderson and their children Marielle and Melanie Henderson, Sequoia, Maitland and Seren Heney. She will be fondly remembered by Julie Garin Henderson, Mary Lou Burns, Elizabeth Harrison, Douglas and Charity Henderson and Doug and Betty Henderson of Scotland, many nieces, nephews and dear friends. Daphne was predeceased by her siblings Ardelle (Bill) Scott, Fred Burns and Hollis (Betty) Burns Jr. Friends were received at the Blair & Son Funeral Home, 15 Gore St. West, Perth on Wednesday, September 28th, 2016 from 2:00 to 4:00 and 6:00 to 8:00 P.M. Funeral service was held in the Chapel on Thursday at 11:00 A.M. followed by a reception in the Blair & Son Family Centre. In remembrance of Daphne, contributions to the Great War Memorial Hospital Foundation or the Canadian Cancer Society would be appreciated. Blair & Son Funeral Home, Perth (613) 267-3765 to send your condolences or for further information visit www.blairandson.com
DEATH NOTICE
SMITH, Arthur James
(December 25, 1936 - September 19, 2016)
Passed away peacefully on September 19, 2016 in the Carleton Place Hospital. Art of Middleville, ON., in his 80th year. Dear husband of Janice for over 54 years. Remembered by his children Drew (Aline), Laurie (Bjorn) and Tim (Shannon). Adored “Granpa” of Rick, Dave, Sofia, Gustaf, Gabe and Jack. Survived by his siblings Laurena, Jack (Betty) and predeceased by Doug. Brother-in-law to Doug (Jean) and Marialice (Ted). Missed by his extended family as well as supportive friends and neighbours. A giant heartfelt thank-you to the medical community for their care and compassion. Donations in memory of Art may be made to the Salvation Army, Trinity United Church or charity of choice. Funeral Arrangements Entrusted Into The Care Of C. R. GAMBLE FUNERAL HOME & CHAPEL INC. 127 Church St., Almonte, ON 613-256-3313 Condolences & Tributes: www.crgamble.com
DEATH NOTICE
DEATH NOTICE
ILAN
Sharon E. (nee Thompson)
Peacefully at Smiths Falls Hospital, with her family by her side, on Monday, September 26, 2016 in her 69th year. Beloved wife of the late Brent Ilan. Loving mother of Angie Webster (Jerry), Tracy Dowdall (Dave), Tony Ilan (Karen) and Kelly Ilan (Tim). Cherished mama of Ashley (Chris), Jenna (Eddie), London (Tye), Taylor, Drew, and Kelsey. Treasured G.G. of Mason, Ava and Oliver. Dear sister of Lois Michael and Oreal Pond (Charlie). Predeceased by her parents Reta and Eldon Thompson. Fondly remembered by her many nieces, nephews, extended family and friends. Friends are invited to visit with the family at Lannin Funeral Home on Thursday, September 29 2016 from 2-4 and 6-8 pm. A Funeral Service will be held in the Chapel on Friday, September 30 2016 at 11am. As expressions of sympathy donations to Families of SMA Canada would be appreciated by the family. Online condolences available at www.lannin.ca
C.R. Gamble Funeral Home & Chapel Inc.
DEATH NOTICE
DEATH NOTICE
MACDONALD Audrey Passed away peacefully with dignity surrounded by her loving family on September 25, 2016 Audrey (nee James) Of Clayton, ON, in her 79th year. Loving wife to the late Donnie. Cherished mother to Ken (Joyce), Darlene, Dawn Jones (Randy) and the late Jack. Survived by her daughter-in-law Judy. Proud grandmother of Johnna (Sylvain), Paisley (Mohamed), Rob (Stacey), Jason, Tyler (Samantha), Jessica and great-grandchildren Lyssa, Seth, Olivia and Zoey. Survived by her brother Ennis (Betty). Family and Friends May Visit C.R. GAMBLE FUNERAL HOME AND CHAPEL INC. 127 Church St., Almonte, ON, 613-256-3313 On Thursday, September 29, 2016 from 2-5pm and 7-9pm. Funeral Service to be held in the Chapel on Friday, September 30, 2016 at 2pm. Interment at Guthrie United Cemetery (Clayton, ON) and reception in the Clayton Hall. Donations in memory of Audrey may be made to the Heart & Stroke Foundation or Darling Township Fire Department. Condolences & Tributes: www.crgamble.com
TRIMBLE
Eileen Winnifred (neé McCracken)
The Lord called His earthly angel and her daughters’ adored Mom, Eileen, to take flight, heaven bound, at daybreak on Tuesday, August 30, 2016. Her daughters’ hearts are broken once more after losing their treasured Dad, Earl, just fifteen months ago. Eileen has joined Earl and their predeceased son, Lawrence, and daughter, Myrla, to share eternity together praising their Lord and Saviour. Eileen would have celebrated her 95th birthday on September 26th. She is greatly missed by daughters Marilyn (Leigh) Woof, Melody Buck and Maureen Trimble; granddaughter Cherish Trimble and grandsons Andrew, Stephen (Jennifer) and Mark (Janet) Woof; great grandchildren Lily, Graceanne, Hailey, Hannah, Hunter and Harper; as well as sisters-in-law Gladys (Rae) Ball and Helen (Stirling-predeceased) Trimble. Heartfelt thanks to Lynda Sinclair who, through the years, has been like a fifth daughter and Edith Duncan who has been a wonderful, faithful and trusted friend. Special thanks to the 3rd floor staff at West End Villa for their loving and gentle care and to her roommate, Joan, who kept watch over her. Visitation will be held at Arlington Woods Free Methodist Church, 225 McClellan Rd, Nepean, on Saturday, October 1st from 11 a.m. until time of service at 12:30 p.m. Donations to Arlington Woods Church, 225 McClellan Rd, Nepean, ON K2H 8N5 or Wesley Acres Church Camp, P.O. Box 330, Bloomfield, ON K0K 1G0 would be appreciated. Condolences, donations or tributes may be made at www.tubmanfuneralhomes.com.
C.R. Gamble Funeral Home & Chapel Inc. MILLS Constance Mary Peacefully surrounded by family at Rosamond Wing, Almonte General Hospital on Thursday September 22, 2016 at age 93. Beloved wife of Stanley for 66 years and cherished mother of Gregg (Ellie) of Florida, Karen (Robin) of Kingston, Jeffrey (Gillian) of Cedar Hill and Linda (Ed) of Kanata. Dearly missed by her grandchildren, Lucas, Matthew (Victoria), Meaghan (Joe), and Hannah and great grandchildren, Easton and Lachlan. Her family extends heartfelt gratitude to Dr. Matthew Tiffany and the exceptional staff of the Rosamond Wing for their kindness and care. The family received friends at the C. R. GAMBLE FUNERAL HOME & CHAPEL INC. 127 Church St., Almonte, ON on Monday, September 26th from 12:30 to 2:30 pm. A funeral service followed at St. Paul’s Anglican Church, 70 Clyde Street at 3:00 pm. Interment Auld Kirk Cemetery followed by a reception in the church hall. Connie was a loving mother, wonderful friend, and dedicated teacher. She will be remembered by many families whose children she blessed with the gift of literacy. In lieu of flowers donations to Mills Community Support would be gratefully received. Condolences & Tributes: www.crgamble.com
C.R. Gamble Funeral Home & Chapel Inc.
DEATH NOTICE
DEATH NOTICE
DEATH NOTICE
DEATH NOTICE
Clements Robert Carman C.D. Clements
Celebration of Life
for KARL KELLY Please join me and MaryKate and our family in celebrating the life of a loving Father and Grandfather, adoring Uncle, Brother and generous friend. As per Karl’s wishes we are to celebrate his life with laughter and sharing of memories, jokes and good times. “And a delicious lunch will be served!” Saturday October 1st Barnet Park, Calabogie 5179 Calabogie Road 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm Light lunch and “beverages” will be available.
Bob passed away in the Perth hospital following a stroke on Sunday September 25th, 2016 at the age of 86 years. He was the beloved husband for 65 years to Georgina (Herbert) Clements and dear brother of Norma Burns and brother-in-law of Sue Herbert. Bob was predeceased by his parents Carman Clements and Bertha Monnery and in 1977 by his son Alan. He will be sadly missed by all his nieces and nephews including Traci and Tim, Danny and Eileen and Chris. Bob joined the Royal Canadian Navy in 1948, he subsequently joined the Royal Canadian Air Force retiring in 1980. Friends were received at the Blair & Son Funeral Home, 15 Gore St., W., Perth on Tuesday September 27th, 2016 from 10:00 to 10:45 where service followed in the Chapel at 11:00 A.M. A reception in the Blair & Son Family Centre was held immediately after the service, the interment followed in Elmwood Cemetery. In remembrance, contributions to the Great War Memorial Hospital Foundation would be appreciated. Blair & Son Funeral Home, Perth (613) 267-3765 to send your condolences or for further information visit www.blairandson.com
O’NEIL
Faye Candace
Peacefully at the Smiths Falls District Hospital on Tuesday, September 27, 2016 in her 89th year. Beloved wife of the late Charles O’Neil. Devoted mother of Rhonda (Bob Sharp), Charlene (Tim Shanks), Deryl (Barry Jordan), and Kerwin (Cathy Fontyn). Dear Grandmother of 8 and great-grandmother of 9. Predeceased by her parents Alice (nee Errett) and Harry Plummer, her brother Denzil, and by her aunts Helen, Olive and Joan and uncles Jack, George and Ronald Errett. Fondly remembered by many cousins, nieces, nephews, extended family and friends. As per Faye’s wishes a private family service will take place. As expressions of sympathy donations to the Canadian Lung Association or any charity of your choice would be appreciated by the family. Funeral arrangements have been entrusted to the Lannin Funeral Home, Smiths Falls. Online condolences available at www.lannin.ca
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Begley Douglas Robert Begley
It is with great sadness our family announce Doug’s sudden passing at his residence on Monday, September 19, 2016 at the age of 55. Beloved husband and best friend for over 32 years of Sherry (Closs) Begley. Much loved father of Robbie (Sheena Lee) and Kendra (Allan White) Begley. Loved son of Bob (the late Betty) Begley and loved brother of Donnalyn (John) Murphy, Darlene (Dan) James, Fred (Alison) Begley and Bobbi (Chris) Bell. Dearly loved by his nephews and nieces; Sam and Ellie Murphy, Ryan and Ashlyn Begley and Halle, Luke and Mason Bell. Son-in-law of Clarence and Joyce Closs and brother-in-law of Brenda (Paul) Day. Sadly missed and fondly remembered by his extended family and many great friends. Family and friends may pay their respects at the Blair & Son Funeral Home, 112 Beckwith St. N., on Friday, September 23, 2016 from 2:00 to 4:00 and 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. Funeral service will be held in the Chapel on Saturday, September 24, 2016 at 11:00 a.m. Interment, Hillcrest Cemetery at a later date. For those who wish, memorial donations may be made to Jumpstart (a charitable program through Canadian Tire to help kids play sports) or the Smiths Falls Community Food Bank. Blair & Son Funeral Home, Smiths Falls (613) 283-2800 to send your condolences or for further information visit www.blairandson.com
Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 35 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING 65 Lorne St., P.O. Box 158 Smiths Falls, ON K7A 4T1
Hours Mon.-Thurs. 8 am-5 pm Fri. 8 am-4:30 pm
DEADLINE Monday 4:30 p.m. (exceptions apply due to statutory holidays)
CONTACT US TO PLACE YOUR SOCIAL NOTE OR CLASSIFIED AD
(613) 283-7936 or
1-888-WORD ADS (1-888-967-3237)
CLS473964_TF
DEATH NOTICE
DEATH NOTICE
Interment Graveside Service for Grace-Bell Cameron McIntosh (nee Kelly) (wife of the late William Edmond McIntosh) (formerly of Perth) at Clayton United Cemetery in Clayton Thursday, September 29, 2016 at 11 a.m. All friends and family welcome.
IN MEMORIAM
IN MEMORIAM
McINTOSH, Rufus – September 27, 1986. Thirty years have come and past, And still we don’t forget. For in the hearts that love you best, your memory lingers yet. Your resting place we visit, and put flowers there with care. But no one knows the heartache, as we turn and leave you there. Gone but never forgotten, Love Theresa and family
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Garvie, Douglas 2 col x 38agates McKenzie Peacefully at home, with family by his side, on Monday September 19, 2016, at the age of 64. Dear father of Michael (Jennifer) and Kristina Garvie (Anthony). Proud grandfather of Tynesha, Justis, and Alexander. Survived by his sister Dorothy “Dodie” Cathcart (Moe Desgagne). Douglas will be missed by Barbara. A memorial gathering will take place at a later date. For those who wish, a donation to the Ottawa Regional Cancer Center would be appreciated by the family. www.barkerfh.com
MAHMOUD Reema Unexpectedly in hospital at Ottawa on Tuesday, September 20, 2016. Reema Mahmoud of Blakeney, age 32 years. Dearly loved daughter of Diana Racine (Rene Larose) and Mahmoud Mahmoud. Beloved sister of Luke (Vero), Ali (Wendy), Matthew, Nathan and Mitchell. Private family only arrangements are entrusted to C. R. GAMBLE FUNERAL HOME & CHAPEL INC. 127 Church St., Almonte, ON 613-256-3313 Condolences & Tributes: www.crgamble.com
C.R. Gamble Funeral Home & Chapel Inc.
IN MEMORIAM
MARTIN, Violet Hazel – In memory of my Mom, Violet Hazel Martin 1933 – September 30, 2015. If I could write a story It would be the greatest ever told Of a kind and loving mother Who had a heart of gold If I could write a million pages But still be unable to say, Just how much I love and miss her Every single day I will remember all she taught me I’m hurt but won’t be sad Because she’ll send me down the answers And she’ll always be my mom. Love Always Susan, Cathy and Kevin
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Prytula, Michael Peacefully on Wednesday, September 21, 2016, in Lanark Lodge, Perth at the age of 76. Beloved husband to Louise Prytula nee Gervais. Dear father to Karen Prytula, Jeffery Prytula (Lyn Rimnyak), and Lori (Graydon) Arbuckle. Dearly missed grandfather of Melissa, Jenna, and Kyle. Brother of Frances Sowa. Will be missed by his nieces and nephews. Friends may visit the Alan R. Barker Funeral Home, 19 McArthur Avenue, Carleton Place on Thursday, October 6, 2016 from 2:00 p.m. until 4:00 p.m. For those who wish, donations to the Alzheimer’s Society would be appreciated by the family. www.barkerfh.com
IN MEMORIAM
Carol Jean Lennox January 14, 1942-September 25, 2015 Sadly missed by ALL 6 kids 19 grandkids 21 great-grandkids And your husband Robert Lennox Hard to believe a year has passed. Love Always, Miss You!!!
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MCLAREN, ANDREW DAVID – In loving memory of a dear son, brother and uncle, who was tragically killed 20 years ago by a drunk driver. October 1977 – September 28, 1996. Time speeds on, 20 years have passed Since death its gloom, its shadow, cast Within our home, where all seemed bright, And took from us a shining light, We miss that light, and ever will, His vacant place there is none to fill. Down here we mourn, but not in vain, For up in heaven we will meet again. Forever in our hearts, loved and missed everyday. Dad, Mom, Stephanie, Blade & Norm.
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IN MEMORIAM
IN MEMORIAM
Charlie Coe “Chief” In loving memory of a dear dad and grandpa who passed away September 27, 2011. In tears we saw you sinking, And watched you pass away, Our hearts were almost broken, We wanted you to stay. But when we saw you sleeping, So peaceful free from pain, How could we wish you back with us, To suffer that again? It broke our hearts to lose you, But you didn’t go alone, For part of us went with you, The day God took you home. Ronnie and Tammy, Jamie and Jessi, Mallory and Curtis, Charlie and Emmett
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IN MEMORIAM
BOLAND, FrancisIn loving memory of a dear husband, brother and uncle, who passed away September 26, 1999. On the 17th anniversary of his death, Loving memories never die. As years roll on, And days pass by. MCDONALD, Edith – In In our hearts a memory Loving memory of Edith is kept, McDonald Nee Mitchell, Of one we loved, and will never forget. October 2, 2014. As time goes on Sadly missed, without you, wife Wilma, And the days brothers and sisters, turn into years, John, Marg and Gale, They hold a million Ray, Mary and Dave and memories, Cathy. And a thousand Nieces, nephews and silent tears. great-nieces and To us you were nephews and their so special, families. What more is there to say, Except to wish with all our hearts, That you were here today. Ellard, Karen, Reggie and Debbie and grandchildren
COMING EVENTS
CLARENCE ROY (CR) KERFOOT September 26, 1921 – October 3, 2012. A smile for all A heart of gold The very best a world could hold Those we love don’t go away They walk beside us every day. Your loving Wife and Family
BEAMISH – In loving memory of my son and a brother Jonathan WR Beamish September 28, 2006. It’s so hard to believe it’s been 10 years since you left us all too soon. So much has changed but we know that you have been beside us all the way. Until we meet again we will hear you in the whisper of the wind and feel you in the warmth of the Sun. Someone we love has gone away And life is not the same The greatest gift that you can give Is just to speak his name We need to hear the stories And the tales of days gone past We need for you to understand These these memories must last We cannot make more memories Since he’s no longer here So when you speak of him to us It’s music to our ears. You are gone, but not forgotten With much love. Mom and Herb Jason Jamie, Stephanie And your nephews Grady and Darren
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John May 10, 1960 September 5, 1981 Son and Brother
COMING EVENTS Fall Family Fun - 6 acre corn maze (wheelchair & stroller friendly), wagon rides to the pumpkin patch, pirate pumpkin cannon shows, pig races, hill slide & more at Hugli’s Blueberry Ranch & Gift Store in Pembroke. www.blueberryranch.ca Tel: 613-638-1288
COMING EVENTS
Visit www.eternalcare.ca or call Madelyn at (613) 246-5933 COMING EVENTS
HARPER
Bob May 12, 1938 October 26, 1996 Husband, Dad and Grampa
Nothing can ever take away The love a heart holds dear Fond memories linger every day Remembrance keeps them near Fran and Family
Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 36 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
KENDALL, Hazel - In loving memory of a dear mother and grandmother who passed away October 1, 1994. May the winds of love blow softly And whisper so you hear That we still love and miss you And wish that you were here. Always remembered by daughter Lynn and grandchildren Anne and Jason
FREE INFORMATION SESSION! Pre-Planning Low Cost Funeral Arrangements Monday, October 17th, 2016 at 6pm North Grenville Public Library Kemptville – Tallman Room Topics will include: Estate Planning, Executor’s role, Commemorative options and more Advice from Daren Givoque, CDFA O’Farrell Financial and Madelyn Piehl, Funeral Director Come with questions - leave with answers and peace of mind!
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In Memory of Charlie Coe In Memory of a dear husband, father and grandfather who passed away five years ago – September 27, 2011 Though that hearty laugh is gone forever And his hand I cannot touch I still have wonderful memories of the one I loved so much His memory is my keepsake with which I’ll never part God has him in his keeping and we will always have him in our hearts. Sadly missed by Donna, Richard, Kyle, Nick and Hailey – Dawn
IN MEMORIAM
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DEATH NOTICE
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Annual Toledo Ride-AThon, Saturday Oct. 15. New start location for this year!! Civic address306 ElizabethtownKitley Line #3, Toledo, ON. See our website for directions. Watch for signs. You don’t want to miss a great day of riding through our scenic trails, enjoying a homemade chili lunch at our “chuckwagon” and a chance to take home some fabulous prizes. Tack up your horse and enjoy the ride. Registration: 10 a.m.noon. Register on-line or day of the ride. See website for details: www.saddleupintoledo.c om
CLASSIFIEDS FUNERAL SERVICES
FUNERAL SERVICES
Cremations from $1,295* To Learn more, call 613-384-3245
Kingston-Cataraqui Cremation Services by Arbor Memorial
*Includes cremation, the supervision and co-ordination of the services, documentation, local transfer of deceased and shelter, a vehicle used for administration and transferring, and MDF cremation container. Arbor Memorial Inc.
CL444073
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
FIREWOOD
100bf, dry roughcut, butternut, 10’, 12’ lengths, 7” & 8” widths $300, delivery negotiable. Also Cherry lumber. 613-612-5828
22” Yard Machine snowblower; Black and Decker walk edger; 10” skilsaw with stand; Makita 355 mm mitre saw; Ashland model 1780 bench grinder; Shindawa 5023 18” chainsaw; double bed and dresser, wood. 613-267-5992.
Business Closing
Cedar (white), quality lumber, most sizes, decking, T&G, channel rustic. Also huge bundles of cedar slabs ($45) and large bags of shavings ($35). www.scoutenwhitecedar.ca (613)283-3629.
Hard maple firewood, tractor tire chains, garden tiller, 3 pth bale spear, Husqvarna chainsaw. Toro lawn tractor. Truck tires. 613-283-8231.
Set of 4 GoodYear UltraGrip Ice winter tires, mounted on rims, size P215/60R16. Less than 2000 km, $700. Call 613-284-6366.
16’ Hardwood Firewood for sale. 613-259-2414.
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
Halloween Costumes
**2 weekends only** Oct 1,2 & 8,9 (9-4)
2005 Rockwood 26’ travel trailer for sale, good con728 Stanley Rd. dition, air, separate bedPerth room, kitchen slide-out. $7,500. Call 613-267-4463 after 5 weekdays. A COMPETITIVE PRICE ON Firewood mixed wood, STEEL ROOFING IN Cedar pickets, rails, post ready to burn. $95/face & mill logs for sale,. Call 2016 Husqvarna Z 246 STOCK - 29ga, Various or text 613-913-7958. cord. 613-258-4416. zero turn mower, $3,000, colours,soffit & fascia Briggs & Stratton Endu- Windows: REBAR, skyrance Series D-Twin 23 light sheets, custom trim. hp, 46” cut, used 20 hours, barn/door track & trolleys. warranty. Must sell, mov- Nails & Screws. ing into a condo. No taxes Storage Sheds. Come see to pay. Save yourself $900 us for a price. Levi Weber, from original price. 2126 Stone Rd., RR#2 613-327-1834 or Renfrew 613-258-2417. Alpha Male Yard Sale! You’ll be Guy stuff only! tools, hunting, camping, fishing, boating, gardening, plumbing & electrical on the stuff. Clayton Village, Oct CLASSIFIEDS 8th, 9th 10th.
This Ad Size is 3.5" by 2"
FUNERAL SERVICES
1-888-967-3237 1-888-WORD ADS Place Your Ad Online www.emcclassified.ca
LD FOR SOSALE FOR SALE
FOR SALE
Plus size women’s clothing, 5X, New/like new clothing. Fall/Winter coats, Penningtons. Excellent quality. Very reasonable. Balderson/Lanark. 613-259-5003.
Eliminate High Heating Bills! Dealership Name The Furnace Broker City, 8109 Road 38,State Godfrey, ON Phone Number 613-539-9073
All Classic Edge outdoor wood furnaces adapt easily to new or existing heating systems. It’s important that your outdoor furnace and system be properly sized and installed. See your local dealer for more information.
CentralBoiler.com
16-1501
5 Generations of firewood sales, all hardwood, cut and split. Volume discount. Outdoor furnace Truck tool box; Craftsman wood also available. electric lawn mower; bike 613-253-8006. rack for 2” receiver; heavy duty torsion hitch for 2” receiver; bathtub lift. Dry firewood in (cubic 613-283-5381. cord +) loads $300 plus tax. Phone 613-812-1777. Washer and dryer, good working condition, $250 for pair. 613-658-5504 Firewood - dry hardwood for delivery or pickup. Full Spencerville. cord $325, single $110 deWINTER TIRES ON livered - $300 & $100 for pickup. Located in Perth RIMS area. 613-267-7269 Set of (4) P235/65 R17 Extreme Winter Contact Continental Tires. Used 2 seasons, selling due Firewood 14-16” dry hardto new vehicle. excel- wood, $100/face cord with lent condition. asking local delivery in Kemptville Wayne Modler $600.00 Call : area. 613-258-3854 or 613-838-9950 613-889-6058.
©2016 Central Boiler -- Ad Number 16-1501
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MORTGAGES
MORTGAGES 1st & 2nd MORTGAGES from 2.29% 5 year VRM and 2.44% 5 year FIXED. All Credit Types Considered. Let us help you SAVE thousands on the right mortgage! Purchasing, Re-financing, Debt Consolidation, Construction, Home Renovations...CALL 1-800225-1777, www.homeguardfunding.ca (LIC #10409).
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EMPLOYMENT OPPS. HEALTH CANADA BENEFIT GROUP - Do you or someone you know suffer from a disability? Get up to $40,000 from the Canadian Government. Tollfree 1-888-511-2250 or www.canada benefit.ca/free-assessment
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PERSONALS
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STEEL BUILDINGS STEEL BUILDING SALE ...”BLOW OUT SALE ON NOW!” 21X23 $4,998 25X25 $5,996 27x27 $6,992 32X35 $9,985 42X45 $14,868. One End wall included. Pioneer Steel 1-855-2127036 www.pioneersteel.ca
FOR SALE
VACATION/TRAVEL
SAVE 15% on any of our 2017 Adventures: Northwest Passage Arctic Safari St. Lawrence Sable Island Newfoundland Circumnavigation Labrador and Greenland
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Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 37 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
Offer ends September 30, 2016 www.adventurecanada.com TOLL-FREE: 1-800 363-7566 14 Front St. S. Mississauga (TICO # 04001400)
BUSINESS OPPS. BREAST CANCER RESEARCH BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY. Brand New Launching Sept 1st across Canada. Exceptionally High Cash Income with Rewarding Lifestyle. Financing Available. Full Details CALL NOW 1-866-668-6629 Website www.vendingforhope.com. CLS710642_0929
HUNTING SUPPLIES
Firewood- Cut, split and delivered or picked up. Dry seasoned hardwood or softwood from $60/face cord. Phone Greg Knops (613)658-3358, cell (613)340-1045.
Firewood Sales. Purchase standing timber. gibbonslogging.com 613-275-1634 David Gibbons.
LOCAL FIREWOOD All hardwood
Canadian Firearm/Hunter Safety Courses. Call Dave Arbour 613-257-7489 or visit www. valleysportsmanshow.com for dates and details of courses near you.
-Cut-Split-
Winter Boat Storage. Eastern Ontario’s most affordable winter storage by a proper mechanic. From $405/season including cleaning, winterizing, oil change, storage and shrink wrapping. 613-812-1130 For sale. High powered steveday13@yahoo.ca rifle, Browning 270 with 2 boxes of shells, gun case TRAILERS / RV’S and 3x9 scope. Asking $800. 613-267-6328. 2005 Rockwood 26’ travel Hunter Safety/Canadian trailer for sale, good conFire-arms Courses and ex- dition, air, separate bedams held once a month at room, kitchen slide-out. Carp. Call Wenda Cochran $7,500. Call 613-267-4463 613-256-2409. after 5 weekdays.
free local delivery Full Cord, stove ready $330/cubic Firewood for sale, dry firewood. $200; leaf raker, hardwood, $320 a cord, $100. 613-359-5275. 613-285-1547 delivered. 613-812-9115. Hard maple and oak firewood, by the triaxle load, 8’ and 16’ lengths, also TD Logging. Tri-axle load buying standing timber. firewood logs, 18-21 singles, $1,150 plus tax, cut 613-256-4505. split firewood 90% sugar Firewood, Hardwood Firewood, 14” maple, $300 a cubic, All hardwood & 16” available. Minimum 100% soft wood $150 a Cut, split order required for delivery. cubic. 613-812-5454 or Home piling services for 613-264-5454. Visa ac- Leupold 6-1/2 -20x40 and delivered cost. cepted. matte scope in box, Leu613-259-2723 additional 613-257-5095 pold 4-1/2 -14x40 matte scope in box, Weatherby MUSIC Mark V fibermark 7mm Rem. mag. 3-1/2 -10x40 Piano Technician, Certified, Leupold scope, Weatherby with Piano Technician’s Vanguard .243 Win. 3-1/2 Guild, extensive experience -10x40 Leupold scope. All condition. with tuning, repairing and mint or rebuilding. Contact Grant 613-264-9298 613-498-9298. Pattingale at 613-284-8333, 1-877-742-6648 or 12 gauge single shotgun, www.piano4u.ca model 402 by CIL, 2 & 3/4 shot. $95. 613-492-0258
Gerry Blair & Son
CLS710917_0929
FIREWOOD FOR SALE CUT AND SPLIT Contact:
BELL’S MACHINING
613-267-1965 COMPUTER
You’ll be
LD FOR SOSALE on the
CLASSIFIEDS
COMPUTER
Staples Kemptville
Staples Carleton Place
302 Colonnade Dr. 613-258-5900
555 McNeely Ave. 613-253-2400
COMPUTER
283-3182 Toll Free
1-888-967-3237 1-888-WORD ADS HUNTING SUPPLIES
Old Wooden Duck and Fishing Decoys 613-206-6287
WANTED
FARM
My client pays cash for property in need of renovation for fall & winter works project. Gerry Hudson 1-613-449-1668. Sales Representative Rideau Town and Country Realty LTD. Brokerage.
Massey-Harris “Pony” Hydraulics, blade, plow, springtooth and row cultivator, sickle bar (needs work), manual, chains, runs well, kept inside. $2,375.00 613-359-6115
Wanted - furnace oil, will remove tank if possible. For Sale: Rough-cut cedar Call 613-479-2870. 12-6”x6”x12’; 3 pressure treated 6x6x8’; approx 60 Young family looking to rough-cut 1x6x8’ pine purchase a farm/house boards; variety of lumber: with property. May consid- cedar, pine and spruce; er land. If you are selling Animal Shelter 12’x8’x6’ or are considering it, high with roof & dutch please call 613-349-6876. door 2x4 frame & covered with 1/2” chicken wire; hay elevator. 613-269-3994 VEHICLES 613-899-2084.
CLS467537_1217
HUNTING SUPPLIES
Classifieds
- Wanted To Buy -
1986 LeBaron Chrysler convertible, 2dr, 4cyl, turbo, selling as is. $4000. 613-283-3602
HUNTING SUPPLIES
MARINE
HUNTING SUPPLIES
ATTENTION
DEER HUNTERS! CLS467966_1001
Garden Market in Smiths Falls
is cutting deer and making Sausages and Pepperettes
(Venison, moose, bear and goose)
Clean professional environment. By appointment only!
Call 613-283-4821
1999 Buick Century Ltd. 163,000 km, 4 door, etested. Will certify. $2200. 613-430-4803. 2005 Mercedes diesel smart car convertible. 127,500km. 70mi/gal, like new $3975. Also, 2000 4 door, Volvo C-70, good cond. $1625. Kingston. 613-449-1668 2013 Honda Ridgeliner, 4x4, 25,000km, $27,000. 613-492-0258 Clessic Car, 1991 Chrysler LeBaron, excellent condition, no rust, new top, brakes etc. certified, etested, sacrifice $2500. 613-492-0828
TOM’S CUSTOM
AIRLESS PAINTING Specializing in roof barn & aluminum/ vinyl siding painting *30 years experience. *Screw nailing and roof repairs. Insured and Bonded Free Estimates
(613)283-8475
Advertising serves by informing. CANADIAN ADVERTISING FOUNDATION
VEHICLES
R. Thomson Auto Sales * New Location 95 Dufferin Hwy 7 * Across from Tim Hortons, Perth
www.rthomsonauto.com
613-267-7484, cell 613-349-9418
LIVESTOCK
FOR RENT
FOR RENT
FOR RENT
FOR RENT
Annual Toledo Ride-AThon, Saturday Oct. 15. New start location for this year!! Civic address306 ElizabethtownKitley Line #3, Toledo, ON. See our website for directions. Watch for signs. You don’t want to miss a great day of riding through our scenic trails, enjoying a homemade chili lunch at our “chuckwagon” and a chance to take home some fabulous prizes. Tack up your horse and enjoy the ride. Registration: 10 a.m.noon. Register on-line or day of the ride. See website for details: www.saddleupintoledo.c om
1 Room for rent, 42 Church St West, Smiths Falls, working quiet person, all inclusive, $120/wk. 613-812-2400. 2 bedroom apartment well maintained adult building, Smiths Falls, parking, fridge, stove, heat, hydro, laundry facilities included. $950/month. Call Perry 613-284-4191 Weagle Realty Ltd. Brokerage.
Carleton Place, Seniors 50’s Plus Building. No smoking, no pets. First & last months rent $750.00 & up. 1 & 2 bedroom apartments. Senior’s 1 Month Free Discount. Call 613-863-6487 or 613-720-9860
Perth, 30 Mather, 2 bedroom apartment. Parking included, $750/month plus hydro, lower level, newly renovated with new appliances, no dogs. 613-326-0903.
McGill St. South, Smiths Falls, 3 bedroom semi-detached home, available immediately, very clean, lovely finishes, hardwood floors, large yard, private parking, utilities extra, $ 9 2 5 / m n t h . 613-283-1697.
Horseshoeing & trimming. Certified Farrier, call John 613-267-7478. Wanted to buy, horses, colts and ponies, all types. Contact Bob Perkins at 613-342-6030.
PETS Dog obedience classes. Puppy kindergarten, beginners and advanced classes located at the Perth Indoor Pool. Specializing in training your dog to be a better behaved family member. Professional instructors Jim and Judy Stewart of True Companion Dog Obedience School, serving the Perth and area communities for over 23 years. www.trainyourdog.ca. 613-264-0203.
MORTGAGES
$ MONEY $ CONSOLIDATE Debts Mortgages to 90% No income Bad credit OK!
Better Option Mortgage #10969
1-800-282-1169
Carleton Place Townhouse, end unit, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, appliances, fireplace, good landlord references & credit. No 2 bedroom apartment on pets. $1,100 + heat & hyBrockville Street, Smiths dro. 613-253-2166. Falls. $750 per month, plus electricity, upper unit, Colonel By Luxury adult no pets. 613-283-3313. apartments. Close to County Fair Mall in 2 bedroom- Carleton Smiths Falls. Air condiPlace, $785. Well main- tioning, exercise room, tained, clean, quiet apart- party room, library and ment building, secure elevator. 613-283-9650. entrance, stove, fridge, parking included, hydro extra, laundry on first Jasper, 3 bedroom mobile home for rent in floor. 613-913-3095 quiet park, washer, dry3 bedroom smoke-free er hookup addition on home, McDonald’s Corners the side, large lot, 2 car overlooking Dalhousie driveway, $950/mnth Lake. 5 appliances includ- plus utilities. Furnace ed. Open concept with updated. For appointlarge sunroom. $1100 plus ment. 613-250-8367 utilities. 613-264-0002 3 bedroom 2 bathroom Just outside of Almonte, apartment, Carleton Place. 3 bedroom bungalow, plus Rent negotiable. Available $1,400/month i m m e d i a t e l y . utilities. Available October 1st. 613-312-1419 or 613-314-8798. 613-857-0038. 3 Bedroom Duplex, outside of Smiths Falls. Large room for rent. #1300/mnth. Heat & hydro Clean and quiet house, included. Available imme- second floor, shared kitchen and bathroom, furdiately. 613-682-0097. nished. Mature, quiet and 3 bedroom, half house, on responsible person. Heat Brockville St., in Smiths and hydro included. $500; Falls, c/w private fenced 1st & last. 613-283-9135. yard. $1,600 per month, heat & hydro included. HELP WANTED References required, no pets. 613-283-3313. 3 bedroom, large home, Smiths Falls, completely renovated, new bathroom, all new flooring. Heat, hydro, water included. $1,375/month. Call Perry at Weagle Realty Ltd., Brokerage 613-284-4191. Almonte, 151 Reserve, heritage building, superintendent’s position available for reduced rent, 1 bedroom apartment, $695 plus utilities, no pets. 613-257-5711.
Almonte, Large 2 bedroom. Free parking, security, 149 Church Street, $950/month plus utilities, FINANCIAL / INCOME TAX available November 1. 613-769-6697. www.mortgageontario.com
Behind in filing your income taxes? Contact Pat Carleton Place, 1 bedat “The Only Way” room apartment, back of 613-200-0559. private home. Fridge and stove included. Gas and extra. References WANTED TO RENT hydro required. First and last month. Available NovemSingle, responsible wid- ber 1. 613-257-2602 evenower, seeking affordable, 1 ings. or 2 bedroom apartment or shared accommodation Carleton Place, 3 bedto rent in the Carleton room in older home, good Place/Perth/Lanark area. neighborhood, recently Non-smoker. No pets. renovated, fridge & stove Good references available. included. Gas & hydro exMark 613-257-0003. tra. Good references, first and last required. No pets. 1 1 7 5 / m n t h . COMMERCIAL RENT $613-257-4627. Carleton Place, 50 Bennett St, 720 sq. ft. shop/office space, overhead door, $595; 1,200 ft, shop/offices, overhead door; 1,200 ft office space, 4 offices, boardroom, kitchenette. Store 1000 ft highly visible, 56 Victoria, $975. 613-257-5711.
Carleton Place Duplex, 3 Bedroom, 1 Bathroom,4 Appliances, Garage, Quiet neighborhood, $1100 plus utilities, available Dec 1, first and last 613-257-9121.
Carleton Place, lower level, 2 bedroom plus den, quiet, clean, adult only Downtown Perth, 37 Fos- building, overlooking river, ter, store or office, park- gas heat, in-unit laundry, ing, 580 sq. ft., $750 plus $995/month plus utilities. hydro. 613-267-4935. No pets. 613-913-4133.
Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 38 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
Mobile Home. All incl. $1,100. Lombardy, 2 bdrm. Heat, hydro, water, Bell sat. TV, screened sun room, deck, yard, parking, snow removal of driveway, grass cut. Mature adults. Smoke free. Available November 1. 613-283-0636. Perth- 2 bedroom apartment $750/mth, in modern, well maintained, centrally located building. Security/intercom system, professionally maintained, laundry facilities. Parking included. Plus hydro. 613-298-2983. Perth, 2 bedroom half house, 6 km from town, available November 1, $695/month plus utilities. 613-264-8143. Perth, 3 bedroom single home, centrally located, 2-1/2 bathrooms, gas heat/hot water. Available November 1. $1,250/month plus utilities. References, first/last month required. 613-261-3614. Perth Downtown, 1 bedroom apartment, 2nd floor, November 1. $675. Water included. Coin laundry. 613-464-3336.
STORAGE
STORAGE
CL409327_TF
FIREWOOD
Smiths Falls
STOR-N-LOCK
Indoor storage of all sizes Outdoor storage also available 613-285-5507 Smiths Falls 613-264-0213 Perth
WORK WANTED
PAUL’S MASONRY
BUILDING AND REPAIRS Heritage Stone, Brick and Block Footings, Foundations, Concrete Finishing, Log Chinking and Chimney Sweeping Will go anywhere! PAUL WARRINGTON 268-2394
CL425834/tf
FIREWOOD
T.L.C.
HOME IMPROVEMENTS No job too small! Free estimates • Home Renovations • Plumbing Repairs • Painting/cleanup • Concrete work Doug Morley 257-7177
HELP WANTED
74475/111 CL450940_0626
FIREWOOD
HELP WANTED
Lanark County is seeking high energy, dynamic, professionals to fill the following opportunities in our Public Works Department. PART-TIME ON-CALL
SNOW PLOW OPERATOR/LABOURER (2 POSITIONS) (Posting No. PW2016-004)
QUALIFICATIONS: 1. Valid Ontario Class “D” licence with “Z” air brake endorsement 2. Minimum Grade 10 with 1 -2 years’ related progressive experience operating trucks. 3. Experience operating front-end loader and snow plowing with tandem truck. TEMPORARY FULL-TIME
EQUIPMENT OPERATOR (1 POSITION) (Posting No. PW2016-003) QUALIFICATIONS: 1. Valid Ontario Class “A” licence with “Z” air brake endorsement 2. Minimum Grade 12 with 1 to 2 years related progressive experience operating trucks. 3. Snow plow training, experience operating heavy equipment and snow plowing with tandem truck. Explore this rewarding opportunity and learn more about the requirements for this position, including application deadline, by visiting job opportunities on our website at: www.lanarkcounty.ca
CLS711584_0929
Room for Rent and Share House. Shared Accommodations, 1 bedroom, 2 bathrooms, Balderson. nice older house. No pets. No smoking in house. Prefer working or retired person or Algonquin student. $450 Per Month. 613-264-8253.
Room For Rent in Restored Century Home. $600/month all inclusive. Fully furnished, complete with upstairs laundry facilities. Full use of 1st floor. No smoking, no pets. Beautiful gardens and multiple decks for leisure time. Female tenant preferred. Call 613-762-0936 for an appointment. Smiths Falls, 2 bedroom plus loft house, close to downtown, $750/month, Sharbot Lake Apartments plus all utilities. Referenc- available first of next month. Call es. Call 613-283-0635. 613-253-6069.
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
FOR RENT
FOR RENT
Smiths Falls room for rent, $550/mnth. Mature adult person. Heat, hydro & cable included. Call 7am-5pm. 613-718-0550
Victoria Avenue, Smiths Falls, 2 bedroom, 2nd floor apartment, available immediately, heat included, hydro extra, fresh & clean, new windows, Smiths Falls, immaculate $750/mnth. 613-283-1697. 3 bedroom condo, Includes fridge, stove, miupper crowave, freezer, washer Westport/Newboro and dryer. Non-smoking. Rideau, 3 bedroom, winterized cottage, available SepNo pets. First and last. $950 plus hydro. tember-June 2017, John 613-583-5483. 613-342-0829.
Classifieds Get Results! HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
FOR RENT
REAL ESTATE
PERSONAL
LEGAL
LOST & FOUND
TRAVEL/VACAT/COTTG
Smiths Falls outskirts of town, 2 bedroom little house. Fridge, stove, washer, dryer. $995 + utils. Available Oct 1st. 613-284-3013
Wanted to buy: Couple looking for home with acreage in Lanark County. Ted 613-317-3793.
“If you know the whereabouts of Aidan Atkinson born on or about September 20, 1993 (22 years), please contact, Laura Purtell at: 1-855-667-2726 613-264-9991 ext 6106 or Sheena Dunham ext. 6101”.
Criminal Record? Canadian Record Suspension (Criminal pardon) seals record. American waiver allows legal entry. Why risk employment, business, travel, licensing, deportation, peace of mind? Free c o n s u l t a t i o n : 1-800-347-2540
Reward offered. Car stolen/items taken (SchoolHydro Supplies) from 10 Patterson Cres., Carleton Place, August 2016. Text info. to: 1-613-612-2727.
Cancel Your Timeshare. No Risk Program. Stop Mortgage & Maintenance Payments Today. 100% Money Back Guarantee. Free Consultation. Call Us Now. We Can Help! 1-888-356-5248
IT $ PAYS
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
Townhouse for rent. Approx. 10 km from Smiths Falls, no dogs, 2 big bedrooms, 1 and a half Bathrooms, nice backyard. Available Nov 1st. 825.00/mth plus Hydro. First and last month required 613-286-2805.
HELP WANTED
Are you a resourceful, dynamic, customer-centric person who works well in a continuous improvement environment? Do you see change as an opportunity? Do you thrive in finding solutions to problems? Then we have an employment opportunity for you.
THE EMPLOYMENT AND EDUCATION CENTRE IS SEEKING A
JOB DEVELOPER
Our Job Developers are responsible for effectively marketing to, and securing job opportunities with prospective employers in the community. Job developers will create meaningful opportunities matching client interests and abilities. Competencies required • Strong understanding of the labour market trends specifically around challenges in the rural community • Ability to establish and maintain positive relationships with existing and potential employers • Detail and task oriented with demonstrated self-management and time management skills • Ability to work effectively within a team environment • Must maintain confidentiality at all times • Will treat all individuals with equal respect and interact in a tactful, supportive professional manner • Required to follow EEC and program guidelines
Overeaters Anonymous 613-264-5158 Alcoholics Anonymous 613-284-2696.
$
Are you concerned about someone’s drinking? There is help available for you in AL-ANON/Alateen. Call 613-284-6100, 257-3138, 272-3105, 203-3713, 826-2566, 283-5038.
TO ADVERTISE!
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
The Carleton Place & District Chamber of Commerce is seeking an exceptional individual to fill the role as a permanent part time Office Assistant. This individual must be a team player, possess strong organization skills, and be able to multi – task and work with the public. Experience working in a not-for-profit environment with a Board of Directors and knowledge of Carleton Place and area would be considered as definite assets. Responsibilities include: • Manage all accounts receivable and payable including membership invoicing and collections • Payroll and cash reconciliation • Perform general bookkeeping using Quickbooks • Track sales and inventory • Manage event registrations • Website maintenance • Attend Chamber events • Interact with visitors in the Information Centre and respond to inquires • Other office duties as required
Access Taxi requires Full and Part-Time drivers for Perth and Smiths Falls
at 613-283-5555.
HELP WANTED
Office Assistant/ Book-keeper
DRIVERS REQUIRED Should be familiar with streets and surrounding roads. Top of the industry remuneration paid. Excellent supplemental income for semi-retired and retired persons. Please call Brett
Classifieds Get Results!
Please submit your resume to the attention of Jackie Kavanagh at jackie@cpchamber.com. Only those candidates selected for interviews will be contacted. Deadline for submission is Friday, October 7,2016. CLS710627_0929
Our continued growth has created new opportunities in our Brockville and Prescott facilities. We are locally owned and operated, offer a history of a stable work environment with regular working hours, flexible vacation schedules and opportunities for advancement.
ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE / PAYABLE
Northern Cables is currently recruiting for the position of Accounts Receivable/Payable for our Eastern Ontario based company. Responsibilities: *Administer accounts payable/receivable processes: *Inventory reconciliation: *General office duties: *Assist with company payroll and HR function. Candidates will possess: *Proficiency with accounting software (Visual Manufacturing / ERP experience is an asset): *Formal accounting education: *Accounting experience in a manufacturing environment.
INDUSTRIAL MAINTENANCE TECHNICIANS CLS711082/0929
Qualification Requirements • A combination of related education and experience • Previous experience with non-profit government funded organizations would be an asset • Excellent computer skills and administration abilities • Strong communication and interpersonal skills • Strong conflict resolution skills and problem solving ability • Ability to plan and organize effectively
PERSONAL
Please apply with cover letter and resume to susan@eecentre.com by Friday October 14, 2016 at 12 noon. The Employment & Education Centre believes that every person has a right to equal treatment with respect to employment without discrimination because of race, ancestry, place of origin, colour, ethnic origin, citizenship, creed, sex, sexual orientation, age, record of offences, marital status, same-sex partnership status, family status or disability.
105 Strowger Blvd. Brockville, ON
Northern Cables Inc. is currently recruiting for a licensed or registered apprentice Electrician as well as a licensed Industrial Millwright/Mechanic to support its growing business. Excellent communication skills (both verbal and written) and the ability to train and coach employees are necessary. Base wage to $61,900/yr. This position requires flexible working hours and rotating shifts.
GENERAL MACHINIST
Northern Cables Inc. is currently recruiting for a licensed or registered apprentice General Machinist to support its growing business. Machine shop experience, excellent communication skills (both verbal and written) and the ability to work with other trades are necessary. Base wage to $61,900/yr. This position requires flexible working hours.
Interested candidates are invited to submit resumes to: Northern Cables Inc. P.O. Box 1564 - 50 California Avenue Brockville, Ontario - K6V 6E6 Fax (613) 345-3147 Email: humanresources@northerncables.com Website: www.northerncables.com
Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 39 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
No phone calls please
CLS470038_0929
FOR RENT
CL433530_TF
FOR RENT
WORK WANTED
WORK WANTED
WORK WANTED
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
Appliance repairs to most makes of major appliances. Fully experienced and all service guaranteed. A&T Appliance Repairs 613-253-3557.
AAA Handyman with halfton truck. Dump hauling, wood splitting, tree removal, carpentry, eavstrough cleaning, general maintenance. Kevin 613-253-4764.
Driveway Sealing. Ed Widenmaier. 25 years experience. Free estimates. Reasonable rates. Last years prices. Commercial and residential. Owner operated. 613-267-3205.
Professional reliable moving company **16 door cube with 2 men $95 per hour **22’ cube with 2 men $120/hour **trucks come fully equipped with all blankets, dollies & moving equipment. Call or text (613)285-4224. Dan Peters Auction
Cleaners/Team Leaders for residential cleaning company based in North Gower. Mon-Fri. No evenings, No weekends. All travel paid. $ 1 2 . 0 0 - $ 1 6 . 0 0 / h r. 613-489-3993 or elitecleaning@storm.ca
Do You Have 10hrs/wk, to turn into $1500/mth using your PC and phone? Free info: www.BossFree123.com
Home Based Business. Do You Have 10hrs/wk you would like to make more productive? Work from home, online Free training www.gofree4life.com
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
E x p e r i e n c e d Electrician, Licensed & Insured available for residential/commercial work. Best Rates, Call Jim 613-799-2378 or 613-284-0895
Seamless Eavestrough, renovations, deck restoration, roadside mowing, grading, painting, roofing, line painting, cottage jacking, fencing, dump runs. 613-257-8143 or 613-264-8143.
Classifieds Get Results!
Semi-retired, all home renovations, interior & exterior, years of experience. Call Brent 613-283-6088.
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
Town of Smiths Falls Job Posting Volunteer Firefighter DEPARTMENT: Fire REPORTS TO: Fire Officer The Town of Smiths Falls Fire Department is accepting applications for the position of Volunteer Firefighter. Duties of the position include but are not limited to: A Firefighter is primarily responsible for operational preparedness and emergency response. Further, responsibility includes the safe, effective and efficient employment of tactics and tasks at emergency incidents at the direction of an Officer. A Firefighter is also responsible for conducting inspections, and delivering fire prevention education programs. QUALIFICATIONS: 1. Eighteen (18) years of age or older by application deadline. 2. Obtained their Ontario Secondary School Diploma OSSD (Grade 12) or academic equivalent diploma by the application deadline of October 14, 2016. 3. Legally entitled to work in Canada. Individuals legally entitled to work in Canada are Canadian Citizens or permanent residents and/or holders of a valid work permit by application deadline. 4. Incident Command System or Incident Management System 100. 5. Must have or be currently enrolled in an IFSAC CERTIFICATION NFPA 1001: Standard for Fire Fighter Professional Qualifications, Level I program and be willing to complete within first 3-years of employment. 6. Must have or be currently enrolled in IFSAC CERTIFICATION NFPA 472: Standard for Competence of Responders to Hazardous Materials/Weapons of Mass Destruction Incidents, Operations Level program and be willing to complete within first 3-years of employment. 7. Hold valid Ontario “DZ” class driver’s license (or equivalent), with no more than six (6) demerit points accumulated within 6 months of the employment. 8. Meet the medical standards (NFPA 1582: Standard on Comprehensive Occupational Medical Program for Fire Departments) at the time of a medical examination. 9. Possess a minimum 20/30 corrected vision with color and peripheral vision appropriate for the position of firefighter 10. Normal unaided hearing: hearing thresholds no greater than 30 decibels in each ear at 500 Hz, 1000 Hz and 2000 Hz and no significant loss in higher frequencies. 11. Be able to provide an acceptable criminal records check. If a candidate does not have the required training, the required training must be completed with the Fire Department Training Plan schedule. The candidate must complete the Volunteer Firefighter Recruitment Package. The Recruitment Package must be received at the Human Resources office before Friday October 14, 2016 at 4 pm. The Recruitment Package can be found on the Smiths Falls Fire Department website. Qualified applicants are invited to submit their resume by: Friday October 14, 2016 at 4 pm to: Lynda McKimm, Human Resources Advisor Town of Smiths Falls P.O. Box 695, Smiths Falls, Ontario, K7A 4T6 or by email to lmckimm@smithsfalls. Applications submitted directly to the Fire Chief WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED.
FAX
Classifieds Get Results!
Bell’s Machining Welding and Hydraulics requires an Industrial Equipment Painter
Experience an asset. Wages negotiable based on experience. Benefit package available Drop off resume in person to 2044 Rogers Road Or fax to 613-267-6101 or email to bellsmachining@bellnet.ca
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
VALLEY HEARTLAND
Community Futures Development Corporation
TO ADVERTISE! HELP WANTED
CLS710071_0929
Certified Mason. 12 years experience. Chimney repair, restoration, parging, repointing. Brick, block and stone. Small/big job specialist. Free estimates. A Small Job or More. 613-250-0290. Renovations/Repairs. Kitchen & Bath, Tub-toClassifieds shower conversions, grab 283-3182 bars, painting, plumbing, Toll Free flooring, tile, countertops, 1-888-967-3237 decks. 613-858-1390, 1-888-WORD ADS 613-257-7082. A Load to the dump Cheap! Clean up renovations, clutter, garage sale junk or dead trees brush. 613-899-7269.
YOUR AD 283-5909
Bell’s Machining Welding and Hydraulics requires a 3D CAD & Solid Works Technician.
CLS710915_0929
WORK WANTED
IT PAYS $
$
Experience necessary. Wages negotiable based on experience. Benefit package available. Drop off resume in person to 2044 Rogers Road, Perth, ON or fax to 613-267-6101 or email bellsmachining@bellnet.ca
Serving Lanark & North Leeds EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY Eastern Ontario Development Program (EODP) Coordinator/ Business Development Officer ( Full Time) Valley Heartland CFDC is seeking an efficient, organized, self-motivated individual to fill the position of EODP Coordinator/ Business Development Officer. Reporting to the General Manager, this individual is responsible for all aspect of the EODP program including but not limited to: promotion, delivery, administration,monitoring and reporting. This individual will also plan and coordinate workshops, promoting Valley Heartland programs including administration of online websites, social media and print advertising. Qualifications should include: • Experience in an administrative/financial services office environment • Advanced working knowledge of MS Office, internet applications and social media marketing applications • Public speaking experience Further information about this position is available on our website: www.valleycfdc.com Email letter of interest and resume to: Tina Stevens ( General Manager ), tina.stevens@valleycfdc.com Deadline to apply: October 7, 2016
CLS463792_0922
BUSINESS SERVICES
Valley Heartland thanks all those who express interest but will only contact those who are selected for an interview.
THE DI STRES S CENTRE IS MAKING A DIFFERENCE IN PEOPLE’S LIVES
THE CENTRE ISAre MAKING A DIFFERENCE LIVES you Empathetic? Do you likeDISTRESS helping people? AreIN youPEOPLE’S Non-Judgmental? Do you like helping people?
Are you Empathetic?
Here to Listen! Listen! Here to
Are you Non-Judgmental?
Here Help! Here toto Help!
Please call Bruce or Kendra to be a Phone Line Volunteer at Please call Bruce orofKendra to beLeeds a Phone and Line Volunteer at Distress Centre Lanark, Grenville
Distress Centre of Lanark, Leeds and Grenville 613-345-1290 613-345-1290
Six Volunteer Locations – Brockville – Perth – Carleton Place – Kemptville – Prescott – Gananoque Six Volunteer Locations - Brockville - Smiths Falls - Carleton Place - Kemptville - Prescott - Gananoque
Le Conseil des écoles catholiques du Centre-Est (CECCE) est à la recherche de personnes intéressées à se joindre à son équipe pour poursuivre avec passion une vision commune, axée sur la collaboration et sur l'innovation en éducation. CONCIERGES OCCASIONNELLES OU CONCIERGES OCCASIONNELS (BROCKVILLE ET MERRICKVILLE) SERVICE DES IMMOBILISATIONS Concours 148/15-16 Salaire : 15,59 $/h + 4 %
Avec 22 600 élèves fréquentant 42 écoles élémentaires, 12 écoles secondaires et son école pour adultes, le CECCE est un leader dans le domaine de l'éducation et le plus grand réseau canadien d'écoles de langue française à l'extérieur du Québec. Son territoire de plus de 35 000 km2 dans le Centre-Est de l’Ontario s'étend de Cumberland à Pembroke, jusqu’à Trenton. Les élèves du CECCE obtiennent les meilleurs résultats en province. Pour obtenir tous les détails relatifs au poste susmentionné et pour soumettre votre candidature en ligne, veuillez consulter le site Web du CECCE au www.ecolecatholique.ca/emplois. Direction des ressources humaines Téléphone : 613 744-2555 ou sans frais : 1 888 230-5131 En vertu du paragraphe 24(1) du Code des droits de la personne de l'Ontario, le CECCE a le droit de préférer, en matière d'emploi, des candidates et candidats de langue française catholiques romains.
Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 40 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
CLS469855_0929
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
Interlock Installers Required
Job Title: Department: Division:
Customer Service Rep Customer Service Metroland East/ Performance Printing
ABOUT US A subsidiary of Torstar Corporation, Metroland is one of Canada’s premier media companies. Metroland delivers up-to-the-minute vital business and community information to millions of people across Ontario. We have grown significantly in recent years in terms of audience and advertisers and we’re continuing to invest heavily in developing best-in-class talent, products and technology to accelerate our growth in the media landscape and strengthen our connection to the community. For further information, please visit www.metroland.com THE OPPORTUNITY Metroland East/Performance Printing is looking for a Customer Service Rep for our print Division. You will be working out of our Head Office, in Smiths Falls, providing front line contact for all our external and internal customers. Coordinating quotes with our print departments. This is a temporary 9 month contract. KEY ACCOUNTABILITIES • First point of contact in a customer service role, answering general phone and e-mail inquiries and providing solutions in a timely and professional manner. • Provide excellent customer service in addition to maintaining positive relationships with customers. • Accurately update and verify customer information and managing additional Excel tracking sheets and internal database. • Communicate with managers and team members as needed regarding client data and confirmation of information. • Special projects and other duties as assigned. • As part of this role, you will be required to handle credit card information. Metroland Media is a PCI compliant company, and requires people in this role to take PCI training to handle cards in a safe and compliant manner. • Plans, coordinates and monitors print projects from time order is given through to shipment of finished product . • Coordinates purchases of outside services as may be required to complete a print project • Ensures customers are kept current with status of the work in process and works to resolve manufacturing problems with both internal production staff and customer.
HELP WANTED
Medical transcription! Indemand career! Employers have work-athome positions available. Get online training you need from an employer trusted program. Visit: CareerStep.ca/AtHome or 1-844-272-7617 to start training for your work-athome career today!
CLS711051/0929
Job Posting
Minimum 3 years experience Full-time hours with above average pay Immediate Start! 613-274-0068 Send Resume to michelle.abpaving@gmail.com
HELP WANTED
LANARK COUNTY HOUSING CORPORATION Lanark County Housing Corporation is seeking a high energy, dynamic, hardworking individual to fill the following regular full-time opportunity.
Please apply on line at www.metroland.com/careers or to sonya.mcrae@metroland.com
iMEDIA NORTHSIDE / THE WOR GROUP’s SMITHS FALLS LOCATION Is excited to announce that we are growing our sales force!
Are you enthusiastic and positive, a quick thinker with a strong vocabulary - then we want you to join our team. With over 30 years in the publishing industry we are proud to work alongside our many professional clients. Our training system and highly competitive commission scale to go along with a guaranteed base salary will provide you with all the tools you need to be successful.
Call Stewart at 613-283-8524 for an interview. Check us out at www.imedianorthside.com
TENANT SERVICES & FINANCE MANAGER Regular Full-Time (Posting No. LHC2016-003) MANDATE: Reporting to the Director, the Tenant Services and Finance Manager position is responsible for the financial management and payroll for the Corporation, along with providing leadership, direction, coordination and customer service for administrative operations of LCHC.
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
Required Immediately
No experience? No problem!
Busy Renfrew Family Medical Practice seeks Full Time Medical Office Secretary Preference will be given to candidates with the following qualifications: • Prior medical office experience • Proficiency in computer and EMR skills • Well organized and detail oriented • Able to work well with all management levels, staff and clients • Ability to maintain confidentiality • Medical terminology course an asset Please send resumes to: rmg.jobposting@gmail.com by October 5th Only candidates selected for an interview will be contacted.
CLS710988_0929
Michael’s Table is a family operated restaurant located in the heart of heritage Perth. We are open seven days a week for lunch and dinner, specializing in home cooked Canadian style food.
For further details including qualifications and application deadline, visit the Lanark County website at www.lanarkcounty.ca or the Lanark County Housing Corporation website at www.lanarkcountyhousing.ca
We are currently hiring for the following positions
• Line Cook • Front House Manager If you are interested, with a passion for offering top quality food and service please submit a resume. Experience preferred, but training will be provided. Submit resumes to michaelsrestaurantperth@gmail.com
IT $ PAYS $
TO ADVERTISE!
STONERIDGE MANOR NOW HIRING
WHAT WE’RE LOOKING FOR • Post Secondary Education in any or related field. • Minimum 4+ years in Customer Service environment. Ideal printing or manufacturing business experience • Proficient with Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint and Outlook. • Strong written and verbal communication and competent listener. • Superior customer skills including having the ability to placate challenging and demanding clients. • Strong administration skills with accurately updating and maintaining information. • Capable of taking initiative and can work independently with minimal direction. • Ability to excel in a fast-paced, deadline driven and demanding environment with strong attention to detail. • Effective organizational skills, ability to manage time and prioritize tasks appropriately. • Successfully handle confidential information and use appropriate discretion.
Casual P.S.W.’s
Apply in writing to: Sarah Bradshaw, DOC Fax: 613-253-2190 Email: sarah.bradshaw@reveraliving.com
CLS463756_0922
Seeking a
Sales & Service
Licensed 310S Automotive Technician CLS463754_0915
OUR AODA COMMITMENT Metroland is committed to accessibility in employment and to ensuring equal access to employment opportunities for candidates, including persons with disabilities. In compliance with AODA, Metroland will endeavour to provide accommodation to persons with disabilities in the recruitment process upon request. If you are selected for an interview and you require accommodation due to a disability during the recruitment process, please notify the hiring manager upon scheduling your interview.
HELP WANTED
CLR710728_0929
HELP WANTED
CLS711587_0929
HELP WANTED
CLS463951_0526
HELP WANTED
- Full Time Position - Monday-Friday 8am-5pm - Valid Drivers License - Valid mechanic’s license - Wages to be negotiated based on skills & certificates. All interested applicants should send their Resume by email or fax. info@trailercountry.ca Phone: 613-267-3580 Fax: 613-267-4958 Only those candidates selected for interview will be contacted
Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 41 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
Advertising serves by informing. CANADIAN ADVERTISING FOUNDATION
Share your special moments with your friends and our readers with an announcement in Social Notes.
PHYSIOTHERAPIST, FULL TIME (contract, up to 1 year) Reporting to the Senior Physiotherapist, you will be an important member of the Hospital Rehabilitation Team with responsibility for providing assessment, treatment and education to both inpatients and outpatients in a variety of programs. Innovative ideas and commitment to high quality patient-centre care will be an asset to this position. Previous experience in a hospital setting and/ or a team environment is preferable. Applicants must be licensed to practice physiotherapy in the Province of Ontario, registered with the Ontario College of Physiotherapists, physically able to perform the demands of the position, and eligible for membership with the CPA. SOCIAL WORKER, HEALTH LINKS (Temporary, Part Time) Working as a member of the clinical team and under the direction of the Vice President, Patient Care Services, the Social Worker provides patient care consistent with the South Renfrew Health Link and RVH philosophy. The Social Worker supports patients and families to understand the plan of care by coordinating care and facilitating choice so that care is individualized according to each patient’s needs. The ideal candidate will possess a Baccalaureate or Master in Social Work and be a member of the OCSWSSW, or related professional organization. He/she must have the ability to work within a multidisciplinary team, and possess excellent communication and interpersonal skills, effective problem solving abilities and a commitment to quality. Qualified applicants are invited to submit their resumes by Friday, October 14, 2016 to hr@renfrewhosp.com or Julia Boudreau, V.P. Corporate Services, RVH, 499 Raglan Street North, Renfrew, Ontario, K7V 1P6. Only candidates selected for interview will be contacted. RVH is an equal opportunity employer, committed to meeting needs under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedom, the Ontario Human Rights Code, and the Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act. Applicants requiring accommodation can contact Human Resources at (613) 432-4851
HELP WANTED
TENDERS
TENDERS
TENDERS
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
PAVING RAKERS & LABOURERS
Looking for a way to get ahead? Learn to operate a Mini-Office Outlet from home. Free online training, flexible hours. Great income backed by 60yrs of proven s u c c e s s . www.123missionsuccess. com
Minimum 3 years experience Full-time hours with above average pay Immediate Start! 613-274-0068 Send Resume to michelle.abpaving@gmail.com Pet Groomer Wanted. Please call Christine Jennings 613-453-7063. Westport Dog Grooming Shop. PSW Nursing Attendant $19.00 per hour. Early mornings & evenings in Carleton Place. Ideal for Nursing Students, Will Train, Email resume to helpwanted63@gmail.com
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
Wesley Clover Parks is hiring equestrian grooms! We are seeking self-motivated individuals with previous horse experience. If interested please submit resumes to angela.erickson@wesleycloverparks.com
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
The Real Estate Market Is HOT! Now is the time to start your new career in real estate. We will train you to make an above average income in this exciting business. Find out more....
Kate Archer, Broker/Manager Bowes & Cocks Limited, Brokerage Office (613) 273-3187 Careers@bowesandcocks.com RealEstateCareerInfo.ca
As the cornerstone of 3M’s success in today’s increasingly complex market, innovation is reflected in the thousands of new products we make and sell. It is personified in the creativity and commitment of our employees and energizes the atmosphere of our manufacturing plants and offices located in more than 60 countries around the world. 3M operates manufacturing sites in Eastern Ontario within the communities of Perth and Brockville. We are currently looking for contract production operators to be considered for placement within these locations on short notice…
Contract Production Operators • Perth & Brockville
AUCTIONS
REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS PROFESSIONAL SERVICES FOR UPGRADES TO SMITHS FALLS WATER TREATMENT PLANT SCADA RFP# 16-PW-015
The Town of Smiths Falls is currently seeking the services of a qualified consulting firm to upgrade the existing SCADA system located in the Water Treatment Plant located at 43 Abbott Street. Electronic copies of the Request for Proposal may be obtained from the Clerk’s office by contacting Nadine Bennett (nbennett@smithsfalls.ca) or Kerry Costello (kcostello@smithsfalls.ca). Sealed proposals will be received in envelopes clearly marked as to contents by the Town Clerk at her office in the Town Hall, 77 Beckwith Street North, Smiths Falls, Ontario, until 1:00 pm local time on 19th day of October 2016 for the “Professional services for Upgrades to Smiths Falls Water Treatment Plant Scada – RFP # 16-PW-015”. For further information regarding the Request for Proposal, please contact: W. Troy Dunlop, Director of Public Works and Utilities at trdunlop@smithsfalls.ca or 613-283-4124 ext. 3305. CLS710686_0929
AUCTIONS
REAL ESTATE AUCTION
You will be a member of our manufacturing group and an active member of a flexible team of workers responsible for the daily production of quality products and continuous improvements throughout 3M Canada’s Eastern Ontario manufacturing facilities. You will operate and maintain production equipment, be responsible for material handling and production reporting, and maintain a safe work environment. You must have a high school diploma and your ability to operate a forklift is a definite asset. Using your excellent time management and strong attention to detail skills, you will work seamlessly with the rest of 3M’s manufacturing team, applying yourself to understand and exceed 3M customer expectations. Ref #PTH-MNF for Perth opportunities or Ref #BKV-MNF for Brockville opportunities These positions are contract work opportunities and will be hired through a third-party agency; candidates will not be eligible for 3M Canada benefits. To apply for these positions, please send your resume and cover letter by e-mail, quoting the specific reference number in the subject line, to:
Jobs3MBrockville@mmm.com Candidates must be legally employable in Canada to be considered for employment. For assistance with accommodation issues regarding the submission of your resume, please contact 3M Canada Human Resources. We thank all applicants in advance; however, only those under consideration will be contacted. 3M Canada is committed to Employment Equity and welcomes applications from women and men, including members of visible minorities, Aboriginal peoples, and persons with disabilities.
AUCTIONS
# 56 Hwy 511 Perth, ON K7H 3C9 on Tues., Oct. 18/16 @ 6 pm
~ Cozy Small Footprint Home ~ Ideal for two. Quite private. Surveyed & fenced property 126 ft frontage x 80 ft depth (+/-). Conc 3 Pt Lot 27 RP 27R5542 Part 1. Featuring a vinyl sided home w/ new steel roof (4 yr old). New windows throughout (’15). Living room. Eat-in kitchen (includes stove & fridge). 2 bedrooms w/ closets. 4 pce bath. Basement houses 125 amp service on breakers. New shallow well pump (’15). F/A oil furnace (new oil tank ’05). On well. New Ecoflo septic system (’13). Detached workshop w/ 100 amp sub panel. Paved drive. Established perennial beds. Taxes $900.00 (+/-). For private viewing, terms & conditions please call our office at 613-267-6027 or 613-326-0461.
Auctioneers & Qualified Appraisers JIM & TREVOR HANDS: THE VOICES OF EXPERIENCE Phone: (613) 267-6027 or (613) 326-0461 www.jimhandsauction.com
Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 42 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
HORSE,TACK & EQUIP. Consignment Auction sale, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 8th. Galetta Livestock 3340 Galetta Road. 1/2 hr.West of Kanata, 10 mins. E. Arnprior. Tack 10 a.m, Equip.noon Horses sell 2 p.m. CALL ERNIE TO C O N S I G N 612 622-1295. Everyone welcome.
FARM AUCTION
CORPORATION OF THE TOWN OF SMITHS FALLS
AUCTIONS
AUCTIONS
Saturday, October 1, 10 a.m.
12th Con. Ramsay, across from 609, 4 miles south of Almonte For Anne Fulton and Doug Fulton International 624 diesel tractor; Farmall Super C; Triple K 3 furrow plow; 15’ Packer; 252 White disc; 4 furrow plow; 16’ cultivator; “White” sprayer; harrows; NH 3 ph; Case pull combine; Allied stooker; NH 310 baler; Niemeyer rake; side del. rake; 9’ NH haybine; 3 pth mowers; 2 wagon/racks; 6’ bush hog; discs; ant. Massey seed drill; fertilizer spreader; 20’ grain auger; post hole auger; 4 row JD corn planter; steel fence posts; snow fence; platform scale; trailer; ladders; wheel barrows; tools; cast seats; farm gates; ant. skidoo; licence plates; misc advertising pcs; anvil; scaffolding; hay forks; snow blower; tiller; etc., etc. Note: Equipment in good condition and will be sold approx. 12 p.m. Property is sold! Rain or shine! Canteen. Cash or cheque!
CLS711061/0929
Employment Opportunities
HELP WANTED
Auctioneer: Frank Burns 613-267-4129 2 col x 48ag
AUCTION SALE
SAT., OCT. 1, 2016 @ 10 AM SHARP! FOR THE ESTATE OF MR. HEIN TIBBEN 479 KITLEY LINE 8 FRANKVILLE, ON We are pleased that we have been asked by the family to offer up the following items from the estate of Mr. Hein Tibbens of Frankville. This auction has an as new 2013 Dodge minivan w/only 29,580 km’s, 3.6 litre VVT engine, full load sells certified & e-tested, w/reasonable reserve. Nice stationary steam engine toy in box. Vintage Walt Disney toys w/ boxes, Beatles memorabilia, collectibles, antique & modern furniture, violin etc.… Snapper lawn tractor 23 hp, only 227 hours, Snapper 22 hp, Troy - Bilt 8 hp Kohler engine rear tine tiller, Swisher Trim-max walk behind trimmer, Noma Snow Blower soft top, work light electric start 10 hp, 29” wide auger, all equipment in excellent condition. Power/ hand tools, approx. 150 bags of Cubex wood pellets & much more! For a detailed list w/photos go to www.lmauctions.ca Auctioneer or Owner not responsible for lost, stolen, Damaged articles, Accidents day of sale. Canteen. Terms: Cash, Debit, Visa, Mastercard Photo I.D. as is. No Buyers Premium All announcements day of sale takes precedence over all printed matter. To book your sale call CLS470021_0922
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
CLS709556_0929
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
CLR711216_0929
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
AUCTIONS
AUCTIONS
AUCTIONS
AUCTION SALE
AUCTIONS
AUCTIONS
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REAL ESTATE AUCTION
MAPLE SYRUP EQUIPMENT. 2 VINTAGE SKIDOO’S. FIREARMS. HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS & ANTIQUES.
Wednesday October 12th, 2016 Auction 6:00 PM
CLS710885_0929
@ 57 Norma St. South, Arnprior, ON K7S 3B4 for Lorna Clark on Wed., Oct 12/16 @ 10 am Property to be sold @ 11 am
4 Spring St., Westport ON An outstanding historic property in the heart of Westport!
Originally the Doctor’s house, this large 2 story house with detached 2 bay garage, complete with loft apartment, and park like yard, is truly the gem of potential you’ve been searching for! Currently a posh bed & breakfast with a tasteful antique boutique! Boasting an executive style lay out of a parlor/sitting room/living room w/fireplace, dining room, eat-in kitchen w/pellet stove, laundry room with pantry, and 2 piece bathroom all on the main floor. 2 staircases. Upstairs is a large master bedroom w/ full ensuite bathroom, 3 spacious bedrooms, and a full bathroom. Ground level attractive country style screened porch, and a clean dry basement. The garage is a 2 bay, with a car port. A full size apartment w/living room, kitchen, bedroom and bathroom upstairs.
For terms, conditions and viewing contact,
Auctioneer: Jim Beere
613-326-1722
Email: jimbeereauctioneer@gmail.com
Call Today To Book Your Auction
~ Inviting Curb Appeal ~ Much-admired, recently updated red brick home on a large 80’ front. x 135’ deep lot. Plan 32 Lot 21 Reg 0.25 acres. Short stroll to park & school. Main floor features a larger 3 seasons porch. A spacious foyer has closet, hardwood flooring under rug & a welcoming turned staircase w/ twisted bannister. Living & dining rooms boast fine appointments such as hardwood flooring, architectural details & a full wall of built-in shelves & drawers. Kitchen has 3 newer appliances, stove, fridge & dishwasher. 3 pce powder room. Laundry closet c/w washer/ dryer on main level. TV/family room has access to side porch & a single car garage w/ concrete floor & remote door opener. Paved drive. 3 bedrooms w/ closets up. 4 pce bath. Plus a finished spacious, 3rd storie, pine tongue & groove loft. Shingled roof (6 yr old). Brand new natural gas furnace. Newer wiring, plumbing, double hung, tilt-in windows. Frigidaire air conditioner (3 yr old). 125 amps on breakers. Rented elec. hot water tank. Taxes $ 3,176.91 (+/-). For private viewing, terms & conditions please call our office at 613-267-6027 or 613-326-0461. Mrs. Clark, 90 years young, has made the move to retirement community living. She leaves a pleasantly clean home. A super starter home. Bring a lawnchair. Terms on Chattels; Cash or Cheque ONLY - Catering. CLS469522_0922
Auctioneers & Qualified Appraisers JIM & TREVOR HANDS: THE VOICES OF EXPERIENCE Phone: (613) 267-6027 or (613) 326-0461 www.jimhandsauction.com
3x99
REAL ESTATE AUCTION
Advertising serves by informing. CANADIAN ADVERTISING FOUNDATION
~ Affordable Solid Red Brick Bungalow ~
CLS709725_0922
REAL ESTATE AUCTION PLUS HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS
Classifieds Get Results!
AUCTIONS
from Hwy 15 @ Lombardy take Cty Rd 1 to # 189 Anglican Church Rd., Lombardy, ON K0G 1L0 on Tues., Nov. 1/16 @ 6 pm
for Archie & Jean Cameron on Mon. Oct. 10/16 @ 9 am from McDonalds Corners take Cty Rd #8 (Watsons Corners Rd) to # 4010 K0G 1M0 Mr. & Mrs. Cameron have moved into a retirement home. Featuring 2 high efficiency oil fired arches plus accessories (approx. 3 year old). Guns to be sold at 11 am. Bring a lawnchair & participate in the bidding. Terms: Cash, Cheque, Debit, Visa, M/C ~ Catering
Auctioneers & Qualified Appraisers JIM & TREVOR HANDS: THE VOICES OF EXPERIENCE Phone: (613) 267-6027 or (613) 326-0461 www.jimhandsauction.com
AUCTIONS
Carrie Hands, CAI, CPPA, Auctioneer & Appraiser Jason Hands, Auctioneer
-Real Estate Auction-
Residential/Commercial South Mountain, ON Wednesday, October 19 @ 11 a.m.
You have found peace & quiet in a rural residential area. This home has a quiet interior colour palette which creates an understated charm. Many updates throughout. The living room enjoys plentiful views through a well positioned picture window. The roomy eat-in oak kitchen has a door to the BBQing deck. 2 bedrooms w/ closets plus a master bedroom w/ walk-in closet. Connected 4 pce oak ensuite/family bathroom. Generous closet space throughout. The unfinished basement is an enormous blank canvas just waiting for your inspired ideas. Newly shingled roof (3 yr old). F/A elec. furnace. vanEE air exchanger. Newer Con-Aire pressure tank. 200 amps on breakers. Owned elec. hot water tank. Washer/ dryer hookup. On well & septic. Attached oversized 1½ car garage w/ rear man door & inside basement entry. Paved drive. Surveyed 2.1 (+/-) acres w/ 200 ft’ (+/-) road frontage. Taxes $ 2,006.00 (+/-). For private viewing, terms & conditions please call our office at 613-267-6027 or 613-326-0461. CLS710762_0929
Auctioneers & Qualified Appraisers JIM & TREVOR HANDS: THE VOICES OF EXPERIENCE Phone: (613) 267-6027 or (613) 326-0461 www.jimhandsauction.com
Classifieds get results. 283-3182 Toll-free 1-888-9673237 1-888WORD ADS
Carrie Hands, CAI, CPPA, Auctioneer & Appraiser Jason Hands, Auctioneer
-REAL ESTATE AUCTION-
House, Barn, Double Garage & Workshop on 7 acres 10041 County Rd 29, Addison, ON to be held Saturday, October 22 @ 11 a.m.
CLS476434_0922
AUCTIONS
Never judge a book by its cover! Top floor has been completely renovated to a modern designer inspired 2 bedroom apartment with a huge deck overlooking private backyard on South Nation River. Live in this fabulous apartment, rent out the renovated bachelor on main floor and choose to open a business on the other half of main floor or rent. Commercial space includes showroom, stock room, office and both front and back entrances, suitable for Chalk Paint Studio, Hair Salon, Tea Room, Retail Store, lots of potential! 200 amp service, high efficiency gas heat, single car garage, parking for 3 in back, street parking in front. Did we mention S/S fridge, stove and white stacking washer & dryer all purchased in 2015 are included? To view this property and for terms and conditions please call 1-613926-2919. Visit www.handsauction.com for photos and detailed description. CLS476435_0922
On completely fenced 7 acres this 4 bedroom, 1 bath family home has large eat-in kitchen, good sized back mud room with laundry hook up, some new windows, solid concrete foundation, propane furnace, steel roof, new eavestroughs and has a large treed private back yard. Paved drive and generous parking area leads to house, double car garage and workshop with its own electrical panel. Steel sided L-shape barn with metal roof will be yours to develop, horses, storage, the possibilities are endless. To complete this property is a fenced in dog house and yard. To view this property and for terms & conditions please. Call our office @ 613-926-2919. Visit www.handsauction.com for photos and detailed description.
5501 County Road 15, RR #2, Brockville, ON K6V 5T2 Phone: (613) 926-2919 E-mail: auction@handsauction.com www.handsauction.com
5501 County Road 15, RR #2, Brockville, ON K6V 5T2 Phone: (613) 926-2919 E-mail: auction@handsauction.com www.handsauction.com
Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 43 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
Guide to Area Telephone Exchanges
623 Arnprior 692 Manotick 256 Almonte 257-253 C. Place 258 Kemptville 259 Lanark 267-264-326 Perth 268 Maberly 269 Merrickville 273 Westport 272 Portland 275 Toledo 278 McDonald’s Corners 279 Sharbot Lake 283-284 Smiths Falls 342-345382-498 Brockville 359 Elgin 382 Gananoque 448 Chesterville 479 Ompah 489 N. Gower 624 Pakenham 774 Winchester 838 Richmond, Munster 924 Athens 926 North Augusta 928 Delta 989 South Mountain
AUCTIONS
AUCTIONS
AUCTIONS
Ottawa Nostalgia Collectible Show
LEELA HOLSTEINS DISPERSAL for John & Harry Leeflang Perth, ON
Sunday, October 2, 9-3 Nepean Sportsplex
R.H.A. 192-186-192 COWS ON PASTURE AND FED CONVENTIONAL DIET
120 tables - 60 Dealers
NOTE: This is a nice type herd with proven sires used for many years. LOTS OF FRESH COWS IN THE LAST 60 DAYS!
FAX YOUR AD 283-5909
www.antique-shows.ca Share your special moments with your friends and our readers with an announcement in Social Notes.
1-888-967-3237 1-888-WORD ADS
623 Arnprior 692 Manotick 256 Almonte 257-253 C. Place 258 Kemptville 259 Lanark 267-264-326 Perth 268 Maberly 269 Merrickville 273 Westport 272 Portland 275 Toledo 278 McDonald’s Corners 279 Sharbot Lake 283-284 Smiths Falls 342-345382-498 Brockville 359 Elgin 382 Gananoque 448 Chesterville 479 Ompah 489 N. Gower 624 Pakenham 774 Winchester 838 Richmond, Munster 924 Athens 926 North Augusta 928 Delta 989 South Mountain
AUCTIONS
AUCTIONS
Saturday October 1, raindate October 8. 7525 Roger Stevens Drive, (corner of Rideau Avenue), Smiths Falls, Housewares, plants, DVDs, records, clothing. Huge selection of books, paperbacks and hardcover on many topics. Yard/garage sale. Saturday, October 1 and Saturday, October 8. 4 Park Ave., Smiths Falls.
Classifieds
283-3182
MULTI FAMILY Garage Sale. 247 Pineridge Drive. Carleton Place. Saturday October lst. 8:00 to 2:00. Rain date Oct th
Guide to Area Telephone Exchanges
Toll Free
UNRESERVED REAL ESTATE AUCTION
Online Only Auction
@ handsauction.com Bidding Opens Wednesday, September 28 @ 12 noon Closing Wednesday, October 5 @ 12 noon Preview by appointment New and gently used antiques, household furniture, china, collectibles, etc.
Saturday, October 1. Rain date October 2. Another great sale. Antiques, collectibles, electronics, clothes, books and tons more. Scotch Line to 1st left after Mapleview Golf Course (Allan’s Side Road), then next left to 533 Ferrier Road, Perth.
Almonte Antique Market, 26 Mill St. in historic downtown Almonte. 613-256-1511. 50 vendors. Open daily 10-5.
AUCTIONS
Carrie Hands, CAI, CPPA, Auctioneer & Appraiser Jason Hands, Auctioneer
GARAGE SALE
GARAGE SALE
Multi-family, Friday, September 30 and Saturday, September 1. Antique oak sideboard, bedroom set, trunks, books... Much more. 268 Keays Rd., Balderson, 8th Line.
AUCTIONS
CLS710906_0929
CLS711047/0929
SELLING AT HUGH FAWCETT SALE ARENA Winchester, ON MONDAY OCT 3, 2016 - 12 NOON 60 REG HOLSTEINS SELL INCLUDING 1 EX, 12 V.G., 25 G.P. 5 - R&W Holsteins sell 5 – Jerseys & 1 Brown Swiss Sell
Followed by – Some good fresh consignments and open heifers. CALL TO CONSIGN! Hugh Fawcett Auctions – Winchester, ON 613-774-3363
AUCTIONS
@ 12 Maple Ave., North, Smiths Falls, ON K7A 1Z5 on Wed., Oct. 19/16 @ 6 pm
5501 County Road 15, RR #2, Brockville, ON K6V 5T2 Phone: (613) 926-2919 E-mail: auction@handsauction.com www.handsauction.com
UNRESERVED REAL ESTATE AUCTION for Whit’s Fries - to be held at # 438 Hwy 29 just south Smiths Falls, ON K7A 4S5 on Tues. Oct 4/16 @ 6 pm ~ Concession Trailer. A Real $$$$ Maker ~ The food truck business is trending & going full throttle! With low startup costs become a restaurateur & get in on the movement. Consisting of an 8’ x 28’ single axle vinyl/ steel trailer w/tongue & steel roof. Complete w/ a 10’ x 12’ lean-to plus a covered verandah. Electrically wired. 1 pce washroom. 20 gal. hot water tank. Inclusives - 3 propane Frymaster deep fryers (like new), a Fast stainless steel hood range c/w a model KP375 chemical wet suppression system (serviced 2016), 3 refrigerators (1 all fridge), 3 double sinks, upright freezer, Sharp XE-A203A cash register plus 4 picnic tables (new 2016). To be removed by Nov. 1/16. Owners retiring. For private viewing, terms & conditions please call our office at 613-267-6027 or 613-326-0461.
CLS469521_0922
Auctioneers & Qualified Appraisers JIM & TREVOR HANDS: THE VOICES OF EXPERIENCE Phone: (613) 267-6027 or (613) 326-0461 www.jimhandsauction.com
~ Become a Landlord & Turn an Established Profit ~ Property is located in the central portion of Smiths Falls just off Beckwith St., the main downtown route. Featuring a well maintained bldg w/ brick front & stucco sides & rear. Gross bldg area of 8,740 sq. ft. (+/-). The bldg is fully tenanted by Willis College (6,445 sq ft (+/-) having reception, lobby, 3 offices, 7 classrooms, cafeteria, staff lunch room, 2 main floor washrooms (men’s 6 pce & ladies 4 pce) & upper level has 2-2 pce washrooms (male & female). CrossRoads Truck Training Academy (2 classrooms) & Ambulance Station (2,295 sq ft (+/-) w/ 2 offices, lounge/kitchenette area, 2 washrooms (male & female) w/ showers, garage area, upper mezzanine. Elec. overhead (10’x22’) door to garage. Heating is gas fired hot water boiler system plus a ceiling mounted F/A, gas fired system (in ambulance garage bay) & elec. baseboard heat in ambulance offices. Electrical includes 1-200 amps, 2-100 amps & 4-60 amps. Water Sprinkler System. 3 air conditioners (1 brand new). Security alarm system. This property shows a profit. The seller has agreed to accept the highest bid without reserve, regardless of price. For private viewing, terms & conditions please call our office at 613-267-6027 or 613-326-0461.
RURAL
From page 29
Musician’s circle, Thursday evenings 7:00 p.m. ABC Hall, 3166 Bolingbroke Rd. No audience. Information call Matt Churchill 613-2739005. Ontario Early Years Centre playgroup, Tuesdays, Oct 4, 11, 18, 25. Montague, Centennial Hall, 9:30-11:30 a.m. 613-283-0095. Open Fun Darts every Sunday, no experience needed 12:45 games start promptly at 1 pm. Chairperson Penny Griffin. Everyone Welcome. RCL Branch #542, Westport 613-2733615. Rideau Mellowdears ( all male chorus) welcome new members, no auditions, each Wednesday 1:30-3:30 p.m. at Bethel United Church, Rideau Ferry Road. Information, please contact Lorne 613-264-1277, lorjan@xplornet. com Royal Canadian Legion Br#542, Westport Fun Darts 12:45 every Sunday, no experience required. Chairperson Penny Griffin 613-2733615. Shopping bus trip. Every 2nd Tuesday of the month (October 11). Leaving Portland Community Hall, 9 a.m. Info./location 613272-2676. Snow Road Snowmobile Club Breakfast October 1, 8-11 a.m., at Clubhouse, 1106 Gemmills Road. Spaghetti Night- First Friday every month, Oct 7, 5-7 p.m. Legion, Br. 231, Portland. St. Stephen’s Church Dinner and Euchre, Thursday, Oct. 6, noon, at Maberly Community Hall. Sunday October 2. Dance at Toledo Legion featuring Harry Adrain. Doors open at 1. Dancing starts at 2 followed by a hot supper at 5. Support Group for individuals whose lives have been affected by mental health issues or trauma. Wednesdays, 1-3pm in the library, Trinity Presbyterian Church, 1817 Richardson Side Road (at Huntmar), Carp The ABC Association, 10 week session, Line dancing, ABC Hall, Friday, Sept. 30, 10 a.m. And a 10 week session, Wednesday afternoons, 3p.m., October 12 Come out for laughter and good times. To register please call Rhonda at 613-885-8543. rhondaaisbitt@hotmail.ca The Rideau Lakes Horticultural Society General Meeting, Wednesday, 05 October, Portland Community Hall, 7:15 p.m. Guest speaker: Derek Steele: Lanark Wild Food Club. Topic: “Identifying Wild, Edible, Medicinal and Poisonous Plants”. Toledo Legion, Winter Horseshoes. Registration & Practice is Oct 11 & 13 from 7-8:30 pm League starts Oct 18th & 20th Horseshoe players play one night per week, either Tues or Thurs at 7:15 613-275-2154 New members always welcome
SMITHS FALLS 4 hand bid euchre, every Wednesday and Friday at 1:30 p.m. Senior’s Activity Building, 61 Cornelia St. Parking behind arena. Sponsor: Harmony Club 162. Info: (613)283-4684. 4 hand euchre, 7 p.m. 1st. Monday every month at Seniors Activity Building, 61
CLS469524_0929
Auctioneers & Qualified Appraisers JIM & TREVOR HANDS: THE VOICES OF EXPERIENCE Phone: (613) 267-6027 or (613) 326-0461 www.jimhandsauction.com
Your support helps save lives www.heartandstroke.on.ca
Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 44 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
Cornelia St. Parking behind arena. Sponsor Harmony Club 162. Info: 613-283-4684. 4 hand euchre, 7 p.m. every Thursday, at Seniors Activity Building, 61 Cornelia St. Parking behind arena. Sponsor Harmony Club 162. Info: 613-283-4684. 4 hand euchre, Wednesday, October 5, 7:00 p.m. downstairs at the Legion, Main St. Good prizes, good food. 613-284-1074. Are you a family member of someone who has serious mental illness? Free educational workshops and support services are available on Wednesday evenings. Contact LCMH 613-283-2170 email: cclark@schizophrenia.on.ca Bid Euchre 1st and 3rd Sunday every month. 1:30 p.m. Seniors Activity Building, 61 Cornelia St., parking behind arena. Sponsored by Harmony Club 162. Info 613283-4684. Carpet bowling every Thursday, 12:45 p.m. Seniors Activity Building, 61 Cornelia St. Parking behind arena. Sponsor: Harmony Club 162. Info: (613)283-4684. Contract Bridge, Hanley Hall, downstairs, Wednesday, October 5, 1 p.m. Info: 613-283-6116. Darts, Friday 8 p.m. Mixed. Legion. Darts, Tuesday, 7 p.m. Singles. Royal Canadian Legion, 7 Main St E. EA- Emotions Anonymous- 12-step organization working toward recovery from emotional difficulties (marriage, children, grief, etc). Meetings (every Tuesday)- October 4, 7 p.m. Salvation Army Church (side door). 613-283-0960. Family Fun Bingo, Sunday October 2, 1:00-4:00 p.m. at the RCAFA Hall, 44 Abbott St. N. Doors open 12:00 noon. Contact: Carol 613-284-0305. Floor Shuffle Board. 10 a.m. Every Tuesday and Wednesday. Seniors Activity Building. Parking behind arena. Beginners welcome. Sponsor: Harmony Club 162. (613)283-4684. Hear about work Victoria’s Quilts is doing and Susan Niblock share about her cancer journey, Free Methodist Church, Sept. 30, 7 p.m. Info: 613-283-5383. Monday Night Bid Euchre, Smiths Falls Legion, 7 p.m. Info 613-283-3292 Ontario Early Years Centre, 3 session workshop. Tuesday Oct 11. CROW Office, 91 Cornelia Street W, 6:30-8:30 p.m. 613283-0095 ext 300. Pre-registration. Ontario Early Years Centre playgroup, Fridays, Oct 7, 14, 21, 28. OEYC, 9-noon. 613-283-0095. Ontario Early Years Centre playgroup, Thursdays, Oct 6, 13, 20, 27. Kinsmen Building, Lower Reach Park, 9:00-noon. 613-283-0095. Ontario Early Years Centre playgroup, Tuesdays, Oct 4, 11, 18, 25. OEYC, 9:00 a.m.-12 noon. 613-283-0095. Ontario Early Years Centre playgroup, Wednesdays, Oct 5, 12, 19, 26. Trinity United Church, 9:00-noon. 613-283-0095. Research your ancestors/learn indexing, Wednesday, October 5, 2-4 pm, Family History Center inside the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 7283 Roger Stevens Dr. Contact: Lisa Trodden 613-2830711 or ltrodden@cogeco.ca Steak BBQ, Saturday October 1, 6:007:00 p.m. at the RCAFA Hall, 44 Abbott St N. For more info and reserve your tickets call 613-284-0305.
LEASE THE 2017
ESCAPE SE 4WD 201A
146 EVERY 2 WEEKS
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ENDS SEPTEMBER 30
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YOU PAY WHAT WE PAY*.
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OFFER INCLUDES $1,790 $1,7790 IN FREIGHT AND AIR TAX
FEATURES: • 1.5L ECOBOOST® ENGINE • SYNC® 3 ¤ WITH SYNC CONNECT± • REVERSE SENSING SYSTEM¥ THAT’S LIKE
73
$
A WEEK**
Submitted photo
The Merrickville Fire Department battles a blaze.
Merrickville couple loses home to blaze
Ryan, Ford of Canada, Manufacturing
BY JENNIFER WESTENDORP jwestendorp@metroland.com
Smoke alarms save lives. A Merrickville couple knows that firsthand, after escaping from their home with nothing but the clothes on their backs Monday night. The Armstrong couple, who lived at 12752 Land O’Nod Road, awoke shortly after 10 p.m. on Sept. 19 to the sound of activated smoke alarms and the smell of smoke. Their garage was completely engulfed and the fire had spread to their home. “The call came in around 10:25 p.m.,” explained Bob Foster, Fire Chief for the Merrickville Fire Department. “The flames were visible from a distance.” The MFD, along with the North Grenville Fire Service and the Augusta Fire Department, responded to the call. “The garage was fully involved upon arrival,” said Foster. “The fire started in the garage and spread to the house. The couple was alerted by the smoke alarms and that’s what saved their lives.” “They just made it out of the house in time,” he continued. There were explosions in the garage, which contained combustible materials such as propane tanks. The cause of the fire is presumed to be a battery left on the charger in the garage, although other sources could have been the cause. “There is nothing left to investigate,” commented Foster. He stressed smoke alarms can prevent scenarios such as this one from ending tragically.
PLUS, ELIGIBLE COSTCO MEMBERS RECEIVE AN ADDITIONAL
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Get your employee price at findyourford.ca or visit your Ontario Ford store. Our advertised prices include Freight, Air Tax, and PPSA (if financed or leased). Add dealer administration and registration fees of up to $799, fuel fill charge of up to $120 and applicable taxes, then drive away. Vehicle(s) may be shown with optional equipment. Dealer may sell or lease for less. Limited time offers. Offers only valid at participating dealers. Retail offers may be cancelled or changed at any time without notice. See your Ford Dealer for complete details or call the Ford Customer Relationship Centre at 1-800-565-3673. For factory orders, a customer may either take advantage of eligible raincheckable Ford retail customer promotional incentives/offers available at the time of vehicle factory order or time of vehicle delivery, but not both or combinations thereof. Retail offers not combinable with any CPA/GPC or Daily Rental incentives, the Commercial Upfit Program or the Commercial Fleet Incentive Program (CFIP). *Ford Employee Pricing (“Employee Pricing”) is available from July 1, 2016 to September 30, 2016 (the “Program Period”), on the purchase or lease of most new 2016/2017 Ford vehicles (excluding all chassis cab, stripped chassis, and cutaway body models, F-150 Raptor, F-650/F-750, Mustang Shelby® GT350/GT350R, Ford GT, and Focus RS). Employee Pricing refers to A-Plan pricing ordinarily available to Ford of Canada employees (excluding any Unifor-/CAW-negotiated programs). The new vehicle must be delivered or factory-ordered during the Program Period from your participating Ford Dealer. Employee Pricing is not combinable with CPA, GPC, CFIP, Daily Rental Allowance and A/X/Z/D/F-Plan programs. †Until September 30, 2016, lease a new 2017 Escape SE AWD 201A for up to 60 months and get 2.49% APR on approved credit (OAC) from Ford Credit Canada Limited. Not all buyers will qualify for the lowest APR payment. Lease 2017 Escape SE AWD 201A with a value of $28,605 (after $1,995 down payment or equivalent trade in and Employee Price Discount of $2,539 deducted and including freight and air tax charges of $1,790) at 2.49% APR for up to 60 months with an optional buyout of $12,261, monthly payment is $316 (the sum of twelve (12) monthly payments divided by 26 periods gives payee a bi-weekly payment of $145.70), total lease obligation is $20,995, interest cost of leasing is $2,546 or 2.49% APR. Taxes payable on full amount of purchase price after Employee Price adjustment has been deducted. Additional payments required for optional features, license, and insurance. All prices are based on Manufacturer’s Suggested Retail Price. Some conditions and mileage restriction of 80,000 km for 60 months applies. Excess kilometrage charges are 12¢ per km, plus applicable taxes. Excess kilometrage charges subject to change, see your local dealer for details. **See lease offer legal marked with † symbol for monthly and bi-weekly payment lease offer details. Comparison payments are for reference purposes only and are calculated as follows: the monthly payment is annualized (multiplied by 12) and then divided by the comparison period (26 for bi-weekly, 52 for weekly and 365 for daily). For example ($299 x 12) / 26 bi-weekly periods = $138, /52 weeks = $69, /365 days = $9.83. ¤ Features/functionality vary by vehicle/model. Don’t drive while distracted. Use voice-operated systems when possible; don’t use handheld devices while driving. Some features may be locked out while the vehicle is in motion. Not all features are compatible with all phones. Message and data rates may apply. Optional Navigation system map updates cannot be received via wi-fi and require a separate update. ±SYNC Connect is an optional feature on select 2017 MY vehicles and includes SYNC Connect service, for 5 years from the vehicle sale date as recorded by the dealer, through use of FordPass on select smartphones. Subscription fees apply after 5 years. FordPass is available to download via the App Store® or Google Play™. Message and data rates may apply. Service may be limited by mobile phone network coverage area. FordPass Terms and Privacy Policy apply. To learn more about where FordPass can take you, visit www.fordpass.ca. ¥ Driver-assist features are supplemental and do not replace the driver’s attention, judgment and need to control the vehicle. ^Offer only valid from July 1, 2016 to September 30, 2016 (the “Offer Period”), to resident Canadians with an eligible Costco membership on or before June 30, 2016. Receive $1,000 towards the purchase or lease of a new and available 2016/2017 Ford model (excluding Fiesta, Focus, C-MAX, 50th Anniversary Edition Mustang, Shelby® GT350 Mustang, Shelby® GT350R Mustang, Ford GT, F-150 Regular Cab XL 4x2, F-150 Raptor and Medium Truck) (each an “Eligible Vehicle”). Limit one (1) offer per each Eligible Vehicle purchase or lease, up to a maximum of two (2) separate Eligible Vehicle sales per Costco Membership Number. Offer is transferable to persons domiciled with an eligible Costco member. Applicable taxes calculated before CAD$1,000 offer is deducted. ® Registered trademark of Price Costco International, Inc. used under license. ©2016 Ford Motor Company of Canada, Limited. All rights reserved.
Experience the A&B Ford Difference. 230 Lombard Road Highway 15, Smiths Falls
613-283-8200
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613-267-2643
Visit us online at www.abford.com Connected to Your Community - K7 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
OPINION
I
Disappointed
t is very rare I am disappointed in my community. I can’t count on one hand the number of times it has happened. A lot of the flaws that exist in North Grenville are more character shaping than shaming, such as our tendency to circulate rumours faster than FedEx could ever dream of. That is more impressive than sad, to be honest. And a lot of the rumours are funny, so long as you take them with a grain of salt and don’t repeat them as facts, which unfortunately some people delight in doing. I am disappointed in myself, as much as the community at large. Very few people showed up to take part in the annual Terry Fox run this year. If the Douvris team hadn’t come, there would have been only a handful of people. I grew up with the image of Terry Fox, making massively profound strides along Canadian highways, and the knowledge that one person could make a huge difference in the world. He is my childhood symbol of perseverance. His contribution to cancer research was drilled into our heads as kids and I remember running alongside hundreds of people year after year. Then I got older, and stopped going, because I had ‘better’ things to do. I was too busy, too out of shape, too this, too that. Terry Fox never made excuses. He got up every morning he was able and ran his heart out for the cause he was passionate about.
I
Connected to your community
JENNIFER WESTENDORP MY OPINION What is truly disappointing though, in a community deemed countless times the ‘most generous’ around, is having to go cover the Terry Fox runs in Perth and Almonte and discovering how lackluster our event is by comparison. Almonte is a small, rural community and yet the number of participants for their Terry Fox run eclipsed ours. How is that possible? It’s been a long time – for which I am ashamed of myself – since I have been to the Terry Fox run in Kemptville. But how did it get to this point? Where did our Canadian pride and respect for a man who helped shape this nation go? Terry Fox deserves better. Kemptville can do better. Let’s not allow this to happen again. Next year’s Terry Fox run marks the 150th anniversary of this great country we call home – the country that produced men like Terry Fox. Proud, strong, passionate and resilient. I hope to see everyone in this community out for the Terry Fox run next year; honouring a man who shaped all of our own identities in some way. I will be there, rain or shine, busy or not. Are you going to keep making excuses? Or will I see you there?
Fantastic fall!
Jennifer Westendorp/Metroland
Tis’ the season for falling leaves and chilly nights. Say goodbye to the greenery while you still can.
Marking the onset of fall with a sick day
was home sick today. I slept in, under the spell of cold medication. I got up for work but by the time I dressed and brushed my teeth I was in a feverish sweat, my headache had returned and I could not breathe through my nose. So I returned to my pajamas and my bed. After a pot of herbal tea and a nap, I awoke refreshed, but weak as a kitten. Here is what I accomplished, even in that condition: I baked two loaves of zucchini/chocolate chip bread; I picked a bushel of tomatoes off my withering vines (and threatened to fall in out of dizziness); I cleaned the cats’ communal litterbox; I battled with the failing washing machine and won; I emptied and refilled the dishwasher; I removed the summer’s nail polish from my toes; I read a chapter of my book; and I wrote a chapter of my book. Oh yeah – and I wrote a column. All in all, it was a very productive sick day. It’s a good thing I was home, too, because I helped to avert disaster in the kitchen. The Farmer was home, preparing a hunters’ lunch for opening day. He had thawed goose from last season and was making a bourgui-
The Accidental Farmwife DIANA FISHER
gnon stew. Potatoes, beets and carrots from the garden were being steamed and he was roasting a huge chunk of venison. This is how the hunters clean up last year’s bounty before they head out to collect this season’s catch. He was preparing to mash potatoes when he thought to call out to me, “Hey. Any idea what this stuff is that I found in the freezer?” He stood there with a melting, dripping container of calf colostrum. We freeze some of that first milk, also known as liquid gold, so that we can feed it to any newborn calves who are failing and weak. It perks them right up and gets them on their feet. And the Farmer was about to add it to his mashed potatoes. Mmmm. Creamy. “No! That’s colostrum!” I yelled. He just gave me a look and shook
his head before firmly locking the lid back onto the container. I’m going to make sure that stuff gets labeled before it goes back in the freezer. It’s time to change summer sheets for flannels and a quilt. I put the summer quilt in the baby’s playpen for extra padding at nap time when she comes to grandma’s house. I’m airing out the sheepskins to put on the living room floor where we sit and watch Netflix. The baby has decided she loves to roll around on the soft and fluffy sheepskins. They will make a cosy spot in front of the woodstove – which we will also have to fence off so baby doesn’t get burnt. The Farmer has been busy cleaning up fallen trees so we have a stocked woodpile and we are ready for the ominous Farmers’ Almanac prediction of a nasty winter. We will get past Thanksgiving first, because we need our back porch to host 40 people for lunch. Then we will board it up and stack the wood floor to ceiling within reach of the back door. September flew by, and suddenly October is upon us. Time to put away the sundresses and sandals – but not too far away because I am optimistic that we will be heading
south in the dead of winter – and dig raucous success – it makes me proud out the boots and sweaters. to see so many people coming out to buy from local farmers. My garden hasn’t quite finished We still have a few farm-fresh yet – the severe drought we endured turkeys left so if you would like to all summer seemed to have no ill af- reserve one for Thanksgiving – just fect on the tomatoes, kale or zuc- email me. A new shipment of The chini. We have actually filled a deep Accidental Farmwife books has freezer with one bag of tomatoes a come in, so I will stock the shelves day. Our resident sauce maker will at the B&H Community Grocer, be busy – especially if he wants to Rooney Feeds and Grahame’s Bakmake room for turkeys next week. ery, where you can pick up a copy. The potatoes aren’t much bigger than the seed potatoes I planted and Fall is here – now if I can just the cucumbers are kind of boomer- make sure the Farmer doesn’t come ang-shaped from searching for water down with a huge man-cold, we will but other than that, it was a good be able to enjoy our favourite season. harvest. The Marketplates event at the dianafisher1@gmail.com Kemptville Farmers’ Market was a theaccidentalfarmwife.blogspot.com
Editorial Policy The Kemptville Advance welcomes letters to the editor. Senders must include their full name, complete address and a contact phone number. Addresses and phone numbers will not be published. We reserve the right to edit letters for space and content, both in print and online at www.insideottawavalley.com. To submit a letter to the editor, please email joe.morin@metroland.com or fax to 613-283-7480 or mail to: 65 Lorne St., P.O. Box 158, Smiths Falls, ON, K7A 4T1.
Connected to Your Community - K8 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
Former North Grenville fire chief passes away By STAFF
Tim Bond who served as Kemptville’s and then North Grenville’s fire chief has passed away. News of his passing in an Ottawa hospital was made public on Monday evening, Sept. 26. He had the special circumstance of serving as a North Grenville firefighter with his father and eventually with his son. He led the Kemptville fire department through
the amalgamation of Kemptville, Oxford-onRideau and Burritts Rapids. Bond shepherded the existing fire department into its current situation. He moved the old fire department on Reubin Street that was located in the old armoury to its new location at the new fire station on County Road 44 across from the newly built O.P.P. station. Bond retired as fire chief after nearly 40 years
in 2011 after serving 26 years as the area’s fire chief. Some of his fondest memories were of his childhood, growing up a block away from the former fire hall in the court house on Water Street. The fire station was there at the time and would remain on Water Street until 1969 when it moved over to the Kemptville Armoury. The Water Street location was established in the 1870’s.
After our Mid-Term Town Hall meeting in Pierce’s Corners this week, we’ll take a break next week from our Town Hall series for a meeting that will deal specifically with the 2017 Budget. Along with Councillors Michael Qaqish and George Darouze, I will be co-hosting a pre-budget consultation meeting on Wednesday, October 5th at the Rideauview Community Centre in Riverside South, beginning at 7:30pm. The Rideauview Community Centre is located at 4310 Shoreline Drive, just off Spratt Road. Residents may also offer budget input by sending an email directly to budget@ottawa.ca, by contacting their City Councillor or by tweeting @ottawacity using the hashtag #ottbudget. Learn more about the City’s budget process with the resources at ottawa.ca. The 2017 Budget will be tabled a City Council in November.
Fire Chief Tim Bond
Agriculture & Rural Affairs Committee
Merrickville-Wolford: Only Ontario village with Communities in Bloom top award The Village of MerrickvilleWolford received the maximum recognition of Five Blooms and the Special Mention for Heritage at Communities in Boom Ontario Luncheon and Provincial Awards Sept. 17 in Stratford, Ontario. Based on their July 29 visit, the judges recognized the village has much to offer and is a great place to live with its festivals, waterways, museums and the beautiful, thriving downtown core, which adds to the aesthetically pleasing heritage theme of the village. “The residents of MerrickvilleWolford show pride in their tidy, well-kept community,” the judges noted. “The community of artists adds another dimension to the village, where many of their works are displayed and sold.” To further enrich the village’s overall attractiveness and street appeal for the 2017 competition, the judges offered several suggestions under the six evaluation criteria of Tidiness, Environmental Action, Heritage Conservation, Urban Forestry, Landscape, and Floral Displays. “They were impressed by village and the quality and quantity of the work the Communities in Bloom Committee accomplished in the short period leading to their assessment,” said Connie Adams, who chaired the village’s Committee when the judges’ visited. “We are very pleased Merrickville-Wolford scored 82.2 per cent in the judges’ evaluation and will encourage action on their easy-to-accomplish
Our 20th Agriculture & Rural Affairs Committee meeting of this term of Council is coming up on Thursday, October 6th at 10:00am. As always, anyone who is interested in attending is welcome to come to the Council Chambers at the Ben Franklin Place. We never take too much of your time and it is a good opportunity to see your local Government at work alongside my committee colleagues Eli El-Chantiry, Allan Hubley, Stephen Blais and Vice Chair George Darouze. Agenda items for the October 6th meeting include: • Proposed Drainage Diversion to Kizell Municipal Drain (Kanata North) • Appointment of Engineer for Flowing Creek Municipal Drain (Rideau-Goulbourn) • Zoning By-Law Amendment (Surplus Farm Severance) for 2548 8th Line Road (Osgoode) • Permitted Building Heights for Accessory Buildings • Official Plan & Zoning By-Law Amendments pertaining to Coach Houses The report on Coach Houses addresses many of the concerns that were raised several months ago as they relate to the permission of coach houses in the rural area. Originally, the intent of the coach house permission was to create a policy in which a coach house would be permitted as a right as long as the property was on municipal services. Therefore, the property owner just requires a building permit. However, in the rural area, consideration has to be given to private servicing. The report addresses that and sets out the parameters for approving coach houses in the rural area. The policies are similar to that of an in-law suite addition to an existing home. The report on accessory building heights is a complementary report
Jennifer Westendorp/Metroland
The Communities in Bloom judges were given the grand tour of the Merrickville Fire Department on July 28. The judges arrived in Merrickville on July 27. The last time Merrickville participated in the CIB process, it was dubbed the ‘Jewel of the Rideau.’ The judges explained the evaluation process is not about flowers – it’s about the health and happiness of a community’s citizens. From left, Fire Chief Bob Foster, CIB judge Chris Ziemski, CIB judge Doreen Hill, Merrickville-Wolford Mayor David Nash and Merrickville Lions Club member Timothy Malloy. recommendations to improve our score next year.” Communities in Bloom is a Canadian non-profit organization
committed to fostering civic pride, of a national program, with focus environmental responsibility and on enhancing green spaces in beautification through community communities. involvement and the challenge Submitted by Michael Whittaker
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to the Coach House By-Law and only applies to Village Residential Zones. There are no recommended changes to accessory building heights outside of villages in the rural area. You can find all of the reports listed on the agenda by visiting the City of Ottawa’s website at Ottawa.ca. If you have any comments, questions or concerns, please feel free to email me at Scott.Moffatt@ottawa.ca or contact me by phone at 613-580-2491.
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Energy East reps and pipeline opponents clash in Merrickville BY JENNIFER WESTENDORP jwetendorp@metroland.com
It was a war of words. A public meeting, to determine public sentiment regarding the proposed Energy East pipeline project, was held at the Merrickville Community Centre on Sept. 21. The pipeline, if built, will run under the Rideau River just outside of Kemptville and about 30 kilometers downstream from Merrickville – a community that relies heavily on tourism stemming from the UNESCO World Heritage Site designation belonging to the Rideau Canal. Merrickville-Wolford Mayor David Nash called the meeting to provide a public forum of debate prior to casting his vote in support or against the project at county council. Representatives from TransCanada, the company proposing the pipeline project, opened the meeting with a detailed overview of the project – from projected GDP growth to the number of permanent jobs created. “As you know, it’s a 4,500 km pipeline project and its total capacity is 1.1 million barrels per day,” said Stefan Baranski, TransCanada representative. “In terms of economics, this is a major infrastructure project.” The $15.7 billion project will add a projected $55 billion to GDP growth by 2040. “In Ontario alone, we’re looking at 3,900 jobs annually during development and construction and over 1,500 permanent jobs,” said Baranski. Canada imports 736,000 barrels of oil daily from countries such as Angola, Iraq, Nigeria and Saudi Arabia, he explained. The number of rail cars carrying oil is expected to double by 2024, he added. “The rest of the presentation is about how we do this safely,” said Baranski. “And one of the things we talk a lot about is the multiple layers of safety built into the pipeline, things like building heavier walled pipes across water crossings. We talk about ways we strategically place shut-off valves all along the pipeline route to minimize any output should there ever be an unlikely incident.” Last year, TransCanada spent $1.5 billion on integrity work (preventing leaks). “It’s a significant amount of spending; we spend on average $1 billion a year,” he said. “All of our pipelines are monitored 24/7; there are
thousands of sensors built into these pipelines that communicate information every five seconds.” “All of this engineering is very important to keep the oil in the pipeline; that is what we need to do,” said Jason McFarlane, TransCanada representative. “If we didn’t do it, we wouldn’t be in business. Water is the most important thing to human life – I think we can all agree to that. There are two very important aquifers in this area; the Nepean and the Oxford.” Everything flows away from Merrickville; the pipeline is downstream from the community, he explained. “Bottom line is, it is basically not possible for any oil spill, from that pipeline, to get to these three ground water wells (that supply Merrickville),” said McFarlane. “This pipeline is a choice that Canada has to make and it really does come down to how we transport oil (pipeline versus rail),” said Baranski. “It’s not a question of leaving oil in the ground – that is just not realistic.” “So when the Energy East pipeline project was first proposed, we were approached by TransCanada and we’ve had a couple different meetings over the past few years and we continue to meet with them at different milestones, as it becomes available,” said Sommer CasgrainRobertson, Rideau Valley Conservation Authority (RVCA) general manager. “So the role we have played to date is making sure they are aware of the information that we have about our watershed. About 38 km of the pipeline travels through the Rideau River watershed; it goes across the southern end of the City of Ottawa, and we have a couple of different interests that we want to make sure that TransCanada is aware of as they do their design, and also the regulators of the Nation Energy Board (NEB) is aware of as they do their review and potential approval.” There are 32 areas in the Rideau River watershed where the proposed pipeline would cross waterways, she explained. “The biggest obviously being where it goes under the Rideau River,” said Casgrain-Robertson. Approximately 900 private wells are within one kilometer of the pipeline, within the RVCA jurisdiction. Residents on municipal water are supplied by the Nepean aquifer, whereas rural
residents draw from the Oxford aquifer – totalling approximately 10,000 people in North Grenville alone. “We understand the pipeline is about one meter, meter and a half underground, so it’s not that deep,” said Casgrain-Robertson. “So what we’re more interested in and concerned about is that shallower aquifer, which is where most of you on private wells would be drawing from.” The RVCA is trusting the NEB process, she explained. All three members of the NEB’s panel on the proposed Energy East pipeline stepped down at the beginning of this month following criticism during hearings in Montreal, which were met with protests. The allegations surrounding the panel involve private meetings with TransCanada representatives. “Our staff are not pipeline experts,” she said. “We don’t have expertise in pipeline design. So what we’re looking for is the National Energy Board is to give us assurance, and by extension you as residents, that enough safeguards have been put in place that the watershed will be appropriately protected.” “Yesterday I got a recall notice on my car,” said Ian Angus, member of Sustainable North Grenville. “And it was built by engineers who did a brilliant design and planned it thoroughly and were certain they had built a car that was going to be safe forever. It confirms what I learned in my working career in the telecommunications industry, which is there is always two sides to every network – one is the spec and the other is what is actually built – by human beings, who make mistakes, who rush through work. If pipelines were perfect, the people in Prince Albert (Sask.) would not have to close down the municipal drinking water system a few weeks ago.” “I will agree that the flow of the aquifers is away from Merrickville, but of course Mother Nature doesn’t really care about municipal boundaries, and for all of us we have friends, neighbours, relatives and acquaintances all around this area,” he continued. “And what happens in the Rideau River, even well down stream, is going to have a huge impact on the economy of Merrickville; judging by the number of boats I see going through here in the summer. If there is significant oil spill in the wetlands around here, it’s going to have a significant impact on not just tourism, but on the health of this entire part of Ontario.”
He explained the pipeline route goes from Kanata south almost to Beckett’s Landing. “Then it just north of Dilworth Road, then turns south again, goes to the conservation area for crying out loud, and then underneath the Rideau River, and into North Grenville, before heading into Dundas County.” The existing natural gas pipeline in this area is almost entirely located within wetlands, he explained. “My guess – I can’t prove this – is 50 years ago when they built the pipelines, no one was thinking about this kind of stuff and they put it in the swamp, so no farmers would complain about it crossing their land,” said Angus. “My suspicion is today you couldn’t get approval to dig a pipeline in much of that land. But it’s there. And it’s carrying natural gas, which goes up and not down. A leak in this area would go directly into the wetlands, with devastating effects on the animals, birds and plants that live there. In the spring time, it’s going to go straight into the Rideau River. If it breaks under the Rideau River, we have a catastrophe on our hands.” The Nepean aquifer is considered a very valuable resource, he explained. “So valuable that when the South Branch (Elementary School) was built in Kemptville, not long ago, the school wanted to drill a well down into the Nepean aquifer so the kids could have water that tasted half decent,” said Angus. “They were refused permission, on the grounds that the single pipe going down there was going to endanger the Nepean aquifer because it would connect the lower and upper Oxford and Nepean aquifer. If I’m reading the specs correctly, the tunnel they want to bore under the Rideau River actually intersects both of those aquifers and that is going to be a hell of a lot bigger project than one well that was turned down at South Branch school and I think we have to apply the same kind of logic.” The meeting concluded with a question and answer period, for the approximately 80 community members present. The TransCanada representatives made a follow-up presentation to County Council on Sept. 22, at which time the United Counties of Leeds and Grenville passed a resolution formally supporting the Energy East project. Nash was the only mayor to abstain from the vote.
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Girl Guides focus on reaching goals 73’s split weekend action against Bears, Braves
*Metroland distribution area. Source: BrandSpark International Survey 2016. Story credit: simcoe.com
Oxford Mills Girl Guides have dusted off their uniforms with the 2016/2017 guiding year beginning. Some of the Girl Guides like to keep busy all year round. Pyper McLaren, a first year guide, received six interest badges and her basic camper badge and recognition this past Tuesday (Sept. 20). She attended Camp Woolsey, a well-known Girl Guides of Canada camp just outside of Ottawa in Woodlawn this summer. Pyper is off to a great start this fall. Another young lady who likes to keep busy is Amanda Leang (pictured), a third year guide with Oxford Mills. Amanda has a goal and a plan to earn and receive all 82 Guide interest badges. This is a large goal to complete in three years as a guide and no one in Oxford Mills Guides has ever accomplished it. As Amanda enters her third year, her goal is gradually becoming a reality. This summer Amanda learned how to sail at the Nepean Sailing Club. She had her instructor test her knowledge and ability to meet all of the requirements of the guide sailing badge. This is the first sailing badge ever to be awarded out of the Oxford Mills guiding unit. It is with great honour that Amanda Leang received her sailing badge. This is her 62nd interest badge earned in her 82-interest badge goal.
BY BRIAN WILSON
Submitted photo
Amanda Leang has set a goal of earning all 82 interest badges with the Oxford Mills Sisterhood of Guiding. The Guiding Law challenges Amanda to use her resources wisely. Using her own resources, including her Sea Cadet Instructor’s resources to be able to learn and successfully test for her sailing interest badge is an exceptional way to meet that challenge. Amanda would love to show you her badge sash at our Mint Cookie Sales on Saturday, Oct. 1 at the Kemptville Walmart. The Oxford Mills Girl Guides look forward to seeing you in the community! Submitted by Sarah Robinson
On Friday, September 23, Kemptville travelled the Highway 43 corridor to face the Smiths Falls Bears. The teams in the Robinson Division are changing positions on a daily basis with the competition being very close. In the first period, at the 8:20 mark, Jake Gaudet scored his fifth of the year from Alex Row and Victor Tracy, to put the 73’s up 1-0. A minute and a half later, the Bears evened the score. They were also able to add one more before the end of the period to hold a 2-1 lead. The only goal of the second belonged to Kemptville. Matt Tugnutt set up Bobby Dow for the goal to make it a 2-2 game. Early in the third Neal Samanski put the 73’s ahead with a beautiful solo effort. But Smiths Falls was able to tie the game once again. The frame ended in a 3-3 tie forcing overtime. In the three-on-three overtime, Quinn Wichers and Dow set up Tugnutt who made no mistake and gave Kemptville the win at 0:11 seconds. The goal was his fifth of the season. Kemptville outshot Smiths Falls 3425. Bobby Dow was selected as first star and Quinn Wichers received the nod for third star.
Laurie Weir/Metroland
The net goes flying off the hinges in Smiths Falls Friday night, during second period action as this heated affair between the Kemptville 73’s and Smiths Falls Bears went into overtime. The visitors earned the 4-3 win just 11 seconds into the extra period.
tember 25, the Brockville Braves visited North Grenville for a 2:00 game. Nick Bissonette notched his first goal in the CCHL to put the 73’s into the lead. Alex Row and Tyson Kirkby picked up the assists. The lead was short-lived as the Braves tied the game on the power play just two minutes later. Brockville went ahead 2-1 early in the second. Kemptville thought they tied it up minutes after that, but the referee disallowed their goal for a crease violation. Feeling deflated after that, the Braves took advantage of their good fortune and banged in two Brockville takes wind out of 73’s quick ones to go to the dressing room with a 4-1 lead after two periods. The sails On a sunny Sunday afternoon, Sep- 73’s returned in the third with the nor-
mal fire, but were only able to get one back. Adam Alavi and Tyson Kirkby provided the passing that set Victor Tracy up for his fifth of the year. Nick Bissonette was selected as second star. Honorable mentions went to Tyson Kirkby and Tyler Beauparlant for a great game. The 73’s have three games this week. On Tuesday, September 27, the Hawkesbury Hawks visit Kemptville. On the weekend, Friday, September 30, the 73’s get another chance against the Braves as they travel to Brockville for a 7:30 game and on Sunday, October 2, they play the Nepean Raiders in Nepean in a 2:30 start. Feel the heat! Catch 73s fever!
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CC ALENDAR ALENDAR COMMUNITY COMMUNITY
Oct. 7 Old Time Fiddle Music & Dance, the East Osgoode Greely Old Time Music & Dance Assoc is holding it regular old time fiddle music & dance on Friday, 7 Oct 2016, 7:00 – 11:00, Greely Community Centre, 1448 Meadow Drive, Greely. We welcome all dancers, listeners & musicians. Yearly membership available. For additional information call 613 489-2697.
back! All skill levels are welcome to join us Tuesday evenings back to the players. Starts on May 4th until September 28th 2016 throughout the school year at Holy Cross School from 7:00 - 9:00 p.m. $5 for the night or $60 for the season. For more information Every Wednesday – Spencerville Malala Women’s Choir welcontact Jeff or Samantha at 613-258-1847 or samantha.rivet- comes new members who love to sing. Rehearsals on Wednesstevenson@rbc.com. days 7:00- 9:00 p.m. at Spencerville United Church. For information contact Sheila at 613-658-5290. Tuesday and Thursday mornings 9 - 11 a.m.- Open Play Pickleball in Kemptville at the tennis courts in Riverside Park. 1st and 3rd Wednesday of every month – Kemptville Legion, Nov. 12 Beginners welcome. 100 Rueben Cres. Afternoon Bingo. 1:00 - 3:00 p.m. RefreshSaturday Nov 12 , Kemptville Legion Craft Show 9 a.m. – 3 For information email kemptvillepickleball@gmail.com ments available. Everyone welcome. p.m. Vendors please call Lorena 613-258-9065 for tables Every Wednesday – North Gower Family Storytime at the Every 2nd and 4th Wednesday – Kemptville Klub 67 Euchre Every Sunday North Gower Library, 6579 Fourth Line Road, at 10:30 a.m., No every second and fourth Wednesday of the Month beginning From 1 - 4 p.m. Twice The Fun Games (200 Sanders Street registration required. 613-580-2940. September 14th, 1:15 p.m. St. John’s United Church Kemptville Unit 103) selects a game for their “Organized Play” and “Learn downstairs. Everyone welcome –$5.00. to Play” events. No experience needed. See what games are comEvery Wednesday – Kemptville North Grenville Duplicate ing up, signup for their newsletter. Do you have a game you’d Bridge Club offers free Bridge lessons for beginners at the Cheryl 2nd and 4th Wednesday of the month – Burritt’s Rapids New like to learn? Send us an email (info@twicethefungames.ca) and J. Brown Centre at 15 Sanders Street. For information call Bill Horizon Club at the Burritt’s Rapids Community Hall. they’ll schedule it for a future “Learn to Play” event. Wheeler at 613-695-7777. Come and join this active group of seniors. Meetings are 2nd and 4th Friday every Month, 6 - 10 p.m. Twice The Fun Euchre....Every Wednesday at Rideau Glen Golf Club in held the 2nd and 4th Wednesdays of each month. Watch Games. Bring your favourite game or borrow one from their li- Kemptville at 6:15 p.m., 5$ /person, 50/50 draw, all proceeds go for meeting times and programmes in your local paper. brary. All ages welcome. 2nd Monday Evening of Every Month – North Grenville Sustainable North Grenville usually meets on the 2nd Monday of every month at 6:45 for a 7:00 p.m. start at The Branch Restaurant and Texas Grill. Clothier St., Kemptville. Events vary by the month from speakers to documentary showings; workshops to outings. Please check the SNG website for details as dates, times and locations can vary: www.SustainableNorthGrenville.ca Open to everyone, no membership required. 3rd Monday of every month – Kemptville Are you a local, professional woman? Kemptville Women in Business (KWIB) typically meets for networking and business building every third Monday at 6:30 p.m. in the Community Room at Grenville Mutual Insurance, 380 Colonnade Dr, Kemptville. For more information on becoming member of this exclusive group,or to attend a meeting as our guest, please email membership@kemptvillewomeninbusiness. com or see www.kemptvillewomeninbusiness.com. 3rd Monday of every month – Kemptville North Grenville Cancer Support Group meet third Monday of every month except July, August and December. St. John’s United Church, Kemptville 2:00 p.m. Welcome to anyone requiring support and encouragement. Jennifer Westendorp/Metroland
Every Mon-Wed-Fri. – KemptvilleWalking Group meet at North Grenville Municipal Centre Early Birds: 8 a.m. Others meet at 8:30 a.m. 613-258-4487. The North Grenville Scouts held their annual Apple Day fundraiser on Sept. 24. Members of local beavers and cubs
Apple Day
Every Tuesday – Kemptville Mixed Pickup 18+Basketball is
groups were at local grocery stores in Kemptville accepting donations for apples. The funds are put towards fun activities for local kids. Pictured are members of the Oxford Mills beavers at Jonsson’s Independent.
Kemptville Mall Highway 43 West, Kemptville
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Globe-trotting French-Thai family has Perth pit-stop BY DESMOND DEVOY
desmond.devoy@metroland.com
The Cambodian licence plates were a bit of a giveaway. Around town in Perth, it’s not unusual to see licence plates from Massachusetts, Texas, and even Florida, during the summer tourist season. But one afternoon last month, a converted tourist bus pulled into a parking spot near the intersection of Harvey and Gore Street East. Inside is a Franco-Thai family “and we are travelling around the world,” said Arnaud Curtat, a native of Paris, France, during an interview on the sidewalk, standing beside the converted bus he bought in Cambodia, before he and his family set off on Feb. 16, 2015. Along with his Thai-born wife, Su, the family, rounded out by sons Lalo, 13, Luno, 10, and Milo, 9, the family had decided to sell off the family restaurant and bakery in Cambodia, and spend the next three years seeing the world. (They still own their home, which they are renting out in the interim, and, in keeping with Arnaud’s culinary background, they have named their trip The 5 Apples Around the World tour.) Curtat began his travels when he left the French capital and moved to study cooking in Strasbourg, France, right on the border with Germany. He then got a job in a hotel in Phuket, Thailand, where he met Su. The two fell in love, married, and moved to Cambodia, where he had gotten another job as a pastry chef. They settled down and started their restaurant/bakery in Siem Reap and had their three sons, who went to a small French language school nearby, the French Institute du
Desmond Devoy/Metroland
The Franco-Thai Curtat family pose beside their converted bus on Gore Street East during a pit stop in Perth. The family is made up of father Arnaud, mother Su, and sons Lalo, 13, Luno, 10, and Milo, 9. The famliy left Cambodia last year, travelling the world on a three-year trek. Aug. 18. Cambodge. (While the summer months are a little lax, the boys spend about four hours a day keeping up with their schoolwork through correspondence courses.) The family travelled through Asia, before putting their bus on a transport boat, and setting off for Melbourne,
Australia. They spent six months touring around Australia and The Outback. “Six months was enough,” said Arnaud. “It’s huge!” They returned back to Melbourne, before shipping the bus off to Los Angeles. In America, they visited the Grand Canyon, Niagara Falls, Flori-
da and New York City. “I never planned this far in advance,” joked Arnaud, though, after their Perth detour, they will be moving on to Toronto, Detroit, Chicago, and then heading back to America’s west coast. “We try to live cheap,” said Arnaud. “We cook everything inside (the bus).” Friends who have travelled the world have told him that the bus will need to be equipped as a 4X4 if they want to go to Africa, but one of his desired destinations may stand out – Iran. “Iran is very nice,” he said. “Very welcoming.” He had also wanted to visit places like Iraq and Syria, but it is “so sad there is conflict everywhere. There are good people everywhere,” he said. While Arnaud was all keyed up to travel the world, his wife needed some convincing. “For me, at the beginning, I didn’t know,” said Su, standing in the strip of grass parallel to her bus and the street, as passersby looked quizzically at the bus, emblazoned with a huge map of the world on the side, and her two youngest sons darting around, intrigued that mom and dad were being interviewed. Arnaud invited some friends who had taken to the world’s highways and byways, so that they could speak to his wife about their experiences. After speaking with them, “I can see how they live,” said Su. “They talked very nicely (about their) experience.” In time, she came around. “Yes, why not,” she said. “Let’s try.” She admitted that she, and the Thai side of her family, had reservations. “For Thai people, we don’t move
around the world,” she said. “For me, I was a little scared.” Her family was most fearful of how Su, her husband and children would be treated in America. “In America, oh, be careful,” was the reaction Su got from her family before they arrived in California. Instead, they got a rather warm reception from our southern neighbours. “Perfect. Now my mind is open to the world,” said Su. “I am open to travel.” She even admits that when the family spends a night in a hotel room, “I miss my small bed (on the bus).” After North America, they intend to hit South America, and then tackle Europe, where they will see Arnaud’s family in France. The family is unsure if they will return to Cambodia permanently, and “we look to see if we like it,” the different towns and villages and countries that they pass through, said Arnaud. “It’s fun seeing new things,” said Lalo, a polite, slightly shy young man, as his parents move off a little to give him some room during his interview. He said he misses his friends sometimes, but he is learning so much about geography, culture, and language (the family speaks Thai, French, Cambodian, and English, though Arnaud jokes that they will soon have to start boning up on their Spanish once they hit the Rio Grande River separating the United States from Mexico. Travelling in such close quarters with his family, “sometimes, it’s a bit annoying,” but, otherwise, “it’s fine,” he said, bringing everyone closer as a family. He really enjoyed New York City, the Grand Canyon and Ayers Rock (also known as Uluru to Australia’s Aborigines).
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In upcoming Mississippi Mudds’ Youth production of King Lear, this fool is no fool Usually, when someone calls you a fool, it’s not a compliment! But in the works of Shakespeare, the fools are often the wisest people in the play. So it is with this year’s Mississippi Mudds Youth Theatre production of William Shakespeare’s King Lear (which will be performed in the Carleton Place Town Hall theatre in the final two weeks of October). This Fool is King Lear’s personal jester, and his observations on life and the importance of family allow the audience to see the play from an outsider’s point of view. “My character explains this to the audience right at the start of the play,” says Emily Hogan, who plays the Fool in this year’s production. “Back in those days, kings kept a person in their castle whose job was to make the king laugh. I sing him songs, I tell him jokes, and if I’m very careful, I can even make a joke about the king, right to his face. So when King Lear starts doing foolish things, the Fool tells him so!” Natalya Lunan George, who is taking on the physically and emotionally exhausting title role of King Lear, says that the relationship between the Fool and the king is very complex and nuanced. “It’s obvious that Lear and the Fool love each other, like a father and a son. Why else would the Fool stick with Lear when everyone else has be-
Submitted photo
The MIssissippi Mudds Youth Theatre is currently preparing for its next production, their take on Shakespeare’s classic King Lear, which opens Oct. 22 at the Carleton Place Town Hall theatre. Above, Emily Hogan, left, plays the Fool, while Natalya Lunan George is in the starring role as King Lear. trayed him, when Lear has gone mad and is wandering around in the wilderness?” And, Lunan George says, “the Fool is the only one that Lear really trusts, because he knows that the Fool will never lie to him. Lear actu-
ally tells the Fool that he shouldn’t ever lie – if he does, says Lear, he’ll be whipped.” Hogan adds, “They really have a good honest relationship – and you can see that when times were better, they used to joke around
together, a lot.” King Lear is the story of a legendary king of Britain who lived in about 800 BC, formerly a great hero, now growing old and foolish. He decides to retire from the day-to-day duties of being king, and offers to turn parts of his kingdom over to the daughters who say they love him the most. His daughters Goneril and Regan flatter him, and receive their rewards, but his youngest, Cordelia, refuses to pander, and Lear angrily exiles her to France. After they receive their kingdoms, Goneril and Regan betray Lear, and throw him out into the wilderness, accompanied only by his Fool, where he goes mad. Cordelia returns to help her father, but they are both captured by the forces of Goneril and Regan. Eventually, Lear is released from prison, but Cordelia has been executed and Lear dies of grief. The Fool is left alone, to mourn his friend Lear. Lunan George brings considerable experience to the role of Lear, having previously performed in Mudds musicals and playing the role of the Duke of Verona in last year’s production of Romeo and Juliet, but says the role of Lear is a great challenge. “The character of Lear goes through some very intense emotional changes – from rage, to self-pity, to madness, and then, eventually, to innocence. It’s difficult, but it’s very satisfying,” she says.
Hogan, who has also performed in Mudds musicals and had a small part in Romeo and Juliet, is taking her first major Shakespearean role with the Fool. “It’s different than what I have done before – when I do this part, it’s not just about being funny – I also have to show all the Fool’s feelings.” The Mudds Youth Theatre is an initiative of the Mississippi Mudds of Carleton Place that has for the past seven years presented an annual production of a Shakespearean play, with teenage actors, modeled on the productions at the Stratford Festival (in the round, with minimal set, but with professional quality costumes, lighting, sound, and stagecraft) at the end of October: past productions have included Macbeth, Much Ado About Nothing, Hamlet, Othello, Midsummer Night’s Dream, and, most recently, Romeo and Juliet. This year’s Mississippi Mudds Youth Theatre production of King Lear runs at the Carleton Place Town Hall theatre, 175 Bridge Street, with evening performances (7:30 p.m.) on Friday, Oct. 21, Saturday, Oct. 22, Friday, Oct. 28, Saturday, Oct. 29 and a matinee performance at 2 p.m. on Sunday, Oct. 23. All tickets are priced at $10 and are available at Hallmark, 238 McNeely Ave, or at the door. Submitted by Mark Piper for Mississippi Mudds Youth Theatre
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Creating unique accent tables Adding a basement to your home Upcycling has become one of the biggest trends in home decor, and rightly so. Repurposing old or discarded materials is a great and easy way to create unique decorative furnishings — like accent tables — for your house. Here are a few ideas to get those creative juices flowing.
OLD IS NEW
Rustic is very trendy right now, so why not make some rural-inspired accent tables for your home? Polishing the ends of a decent-sized log or attaching a tray to an old metal milk can could produce fantastic results in very little time. Need more ideas? Try using an old wooden chair to support a flower vase or display your various knick-knacks. You could even replicate the timeless charm of a tree swing by hanging a shelf or two with some old rope.
UNTAPPED POTENTIAL
Don’t give or throw your old books away. Instead, try stacking them between two shelves to make the perfect place for the books you’re reading now. You could also convert those old milk, wine or apple crates in your garage into stylish accent tables. Simply paint and mount the boxes together to create a vintage accent suitable for modern decor.
GIVE NEW PURPOSE TO OLD OBJECTS
Old unused stools are the perfect place to put out some books or magazines. Or, you could try stacking old honeycomb clay or cement blocks to make a quick and solid table for your lamp. You can even add some tapered table legs to your grandmother’s old luggage to make an inexpensive yet unique piece of furniture. The possibilities are endless; all you need is a little bit of time and imagination!
Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 48 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
Digging down is a great way to add space and value to your home. However, when undertaking this type of renovation project, it’s always best to trust a foundation professional. They’ll build an addition or extend your existing crawl space to add an entirely new and functional basement to your home. Once the soil, foundation and weight of your home have been assessed, a structural engineer can determine the best technique to use to construct the basement. Most single-family houses can be lifted using a hydraulic system and steel piles without causing damage or cracks to the structure. This method will increase the amount of natural lighting in your basement while reducing the risk of water infiltration. Underpinning or lowering a basement might be preferable for older homes with solid masonry construction. This approach involves digging under the existing foundation while shoring up the structure using adjustable support columns to lower the floor. While in itself an impressive sight, it’s important to know that underpinning is usually more expensive than simply lifting your home. It’s important to be thorough when choosing the right licenced and experienced professional for your renovation. The foundation is the most important part of your home and any damage to it could affect its overall structural integrity. So don’t hesitate to ask for a written estimate, references and guarantees when shopping around for the best contractor.
Update your decor with elements of industrial interior design
Brighten your home with indirect LED lighting
FAVOURITE AREAS IN YOUR HOUSE Hidden light sources are the perfect lights is rarely forgiving when it
Expose raw materials, pipes and electrical wires for an industrial style.
Industrial style has taken home decor stores, showrooms and retailers by storm in recent years. Characterized by its exposed pipes and bricks, wood and metal surfaces, and vintage furniture, this trend has brought an undeniable touch of flair to our homes.
eventually converted into unique and creative living spaces. Emphasizing the use of materials from yesteryear, this trend incorporates industrial furniture, old hand-painted signs, worn couches, brick walls and ferrous metal to define its decor. In addition, building materials are exposed, windowpanes are huge, cement tiles THE BASIC ELEMENTS OF cover both the floors and the walls, INDUSTRIAL INTERIOR DESIGN and electrical wires are visible — This style replicates the utilitarian anything to reproduce that raw and look of abandoned factories that were unfinished look.
Industrial interior design typically lends itself well to living rooms and kitchens. Relax comfortably in an area outfitted with worn leather couches, iron shelving and decorative elements worthy of any respectable second-hand shop. Or prepare your meals surrounded by high metal stools, low-hanging pendant lights and big bay windows. Chances are this style will make its way to the rest of your home. Who knows, maybe you’ll finish your bathroom with exposed brick, or bare the support beams in your bedroom.
idea for any lighting design project in your home. Whether it’s under beds, along baseboards or above cabinets, flexible, indirect LED lighting strips can be installed virtually anywhere you want. These light emitting diodes are a great alternative to direct overhead lighting and they’ll provide any room with warmth and character.
Here are a few ideas to inspire you for your next lighting project. Place LED strips: SHED SOME NEW LIGHT The traditional use of direct ove head • Under beds or couches lighting can feel cold and sterile. • Under or above your cabinets What’s more, the glare from these • Under the shelves in your office • Around your deck or pool • In the cab interior of your RV
THE NUTS AND BOLTS OF INDUSTRIAL STYLE
A BEAUTIFUL GLOW
Be sure to use the right materials in your design, such as weathered wood, metals like iron, zinc and copper, as well as brick and cement in their most basic form. Lighting is another priority, so be sure to install big windows that let in a lot of natural light as well as glare-free light fixtures.
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comes to your home’s blemishes and imperfections. LED strips, on the other hand, are easily installed, use very little energy and have a very long lifespan. They’re also perfect when looking to add a calming atmosphere or creative flair to a given room.
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Unlike their compact fluorescent counterparts, LED bulbs give off a warm glow and virtually no glare. Tailored to indoor lighting, they evenly distribute the light to help bathe the room in soft and welcoming colours. This will help make the room feel bigger and will bring out any stylish architectural elements you may have.
Using rose gold in your home
The clear advantage of glass and Plexiglas
Rose gold, also known as pink gold, has gone from being a distinctive element of jewellery to one of the most sought-after decorative metals in home design. The soft and warm atmosphere it creates makes it the perfect way to add a touch of class and ele- Translucency is the new trend when it comes to gance to your home. That’s why it’s one of the most alluring and furniture and accessories adorning your home’s often-used metallic shades when it comes to interior decorating. interior. Glass and Plexiglas furnishings and decorations help establish a unique look that INSPIRING DECOR increases the value of your home. The high duraRose gold soared in popularity bility of tempered glass and the malleability of thanks to its use in some of the big- Plexiglas have made them increasingly popular gest fashion shows in the world. with designers when decorating modern spaces. This timeless hue is now being used to outfit an increasing array of dec- FOCUS ON LIGHT orative household objects: lamps, We all want to increase our home’s natural lighttrays, vases and even garbage cans. ing, but many of us tend to clutter our rooms Rose gold is also making its way with large furniture and coloured accessories. into home furnishings and wall pan- However, decorations and furnishings made elling. It pairs well with a variety from translucent materials will add elegance of materials including wood, silver and copper. to your rooms — and make them feel bigger Its graceful and gentle colour can add a hint of — while letting the sunshine in. Transparent luxury to any room.
furniture goes well with any finish, from stone to wood or stainless steel, making it an ideal accent regardless of the style you’ve chosen for your home.
AFFORDABLE AND DURABLE
Despite their fragile appearance, glass and Plexiglas furniture and adornments are extremely resilient. Whether it’s for a modern table, classic chair or even a stylish door or partition, sturdiness is a must. And with so many transparent decor options available varying in shape, size and style, you’ll have all you need to brighten your home. And if you’re working with a limited budget, keep in mind that Plexiglas is less expensive than glass but yields very similar results.
TO BE USED SPARINGLY
Rose gold’s main virtue is that it complements any decor and suits any style. However, this metal should be used as a finishing touch; only a few light traces are needed to create a refined allure. Over-using its enticing lustre with too many accessories can have the opposite effect, making your room or decor appear somewhat tawdry and inelegant.
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Why hire an interior decorator? We’re rarely short on ideas when it comes to decorating our homes. But sometimes, knowing where to start can be a little daunting. Maybe you’re looking to update your new home with a look you’ll love, refresh the style of your current house or even stage it to help it sell faster. Regardless of your needs, an interior decorator will be able to provide you with sound advice while respecting your tastes and budget.
AN ART IN ITSELF
There are no defined standards when it comes to interior decorating. Designs and trends change over time, varying from person to person and home to home. Interior decorators are skilled when it comes to blending styles and colours, and are experts at finding those decorative items that make all the difference. They also have a wealth of knowledge about the different fabrics and materials that work well together. They’ll bring a unique and modern touch to your home while adhering to your own personal preferences and tastes.
AN EYE FOR DESIGN
An interior decorator will be able to help you every step of the way as you redesign your home. They’ll analyze the different options available to you and suggest the best possible choices for your current needs. Whether it’s establishing a budget, choosing colours and materials, or following up on orders, a decorator will oversee each step in the process to ensure you’re completely satisfied with the end result.
Kitchen cabinet designs The kitchen is the heart of every home. Not only does it need to be functional, but as the hub of your family life, it also has to be visually stunning. To this effect, kitchen cabinets have moved away from the rustic and classical designs of previous years. In an effort to become more modern and sleek, cabinetry has adopted a new seamless style combining appearance and functionality. design of your kitchen to your style and needs. Melamine continues to be a popular choice for many kitchens. A MINIMALISTIC APPROACH Kitchens have become increasingly Installing solid wood cabinets will streamlined over the years. Gone are increase the value of any home, the days of raised panel doors, excess but they are more expensive than ornamentation and crown moldings. other materials such as veneer and Instead, you’ll find a more European thermoplastic. And color choices, approach emphasizing horizontal lines while often influenced by natural and an obvious absence of patterns. light, will vary depending on your Full-overlay cabinetry is brought personal taste and style. to the ceiling and flat-panel doors are outfitted with basic chrome or Consulting a renovation specialist is stainless steel hardware — anything always a good idea when looking and everything to create that sleek and to make your kitchen more modern. Their expertise and personalized unadorned look. assistance will help you select and Inspired by your tastes You’ll encounter a varied selection of install the right cabinets for your cabinets when attempting to tailor the kitchen.
Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 52 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
The revival of the home bar Cocktails are back in a big way, leading many to outfit their homes with stylish yet functional bars. Regardless if it’s in a living room, basement or even a garage, your bar will be the focal point of any social gathering. Of course, there’s no need to go overboard; a home bar that fits your tastes and budget will get the job done when entertaining friends and family.
BAR BASICS
At the very least, your bar should have a countertop to serve drinks on as well as few stools for seating. It’s also handy to have shelves to house your bottles of liquor and glassware, as well as drawers for your tools. Next, you’ll need to choose between having a wet (sink) or dry bar (no sink). Having a sink is practical for washing your glasses, but it also means you’ll have to install you bar near a waterline. A small refrigerator is a definite must-have for any proper bartender.
Outfitting your bar with a mini-fridge will allow you to keep a variety of useful items on hand, such as juices, soft drinks, beer and other bottled beverages.
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The inspired new look of ceramic tiles Ceramic tiles are the ideal choice in flooring if you’re looking for something that’s durable, easy to clean and suited to any design style. Available in a wide selection of sizes, shapes, colours, textures and patterns, ceramic tiles are the perfect complement to any room in your house. Here are three types that might make you think differently about flooring.
1. A WOODSY FEEL
Thanks to innovative, high-definition designs, ceramic flooring manufacturers can reproduce the natural look and warmth of real wood floors. Faux wood tiles closely mimic the look of hardwood flooring such as bamboo, redwood and even distressed wood. They’re perfect for rooms traditionally too humid for hardwood flooring, such as bathrooms and kitchens.
2. A SLAB OF UNDERSTATED
Three common decorating mistakes
If you’re a fan of industrial style, you’ll love ceramic tiles that replicate the look of natural stone, cement A home decorator can be a valuable or concrete floors. Certain manufacturers have even asset when it comes to decorating gone as far as adding texture to the tiles, giving them a your home. However, undertaking a remarkably raw and unfinished look. creative endeavour on your own can be extremely rewarding. Here are 3. CAPTIVATING PATTERNS three common mistakes you should Today’s ceramic tiles come in array of different designs avoid when decorating your home and patterns to please even the most eclectic and eccen- by yourself. tric of tastes. With so many varieties in colours and pat2. IT’S NOT ALL ABOUT MONEY terns, the possibilities are endless as to Price shouldn’t be the only determin1. THE BIG PICTURE Choosing the right backsplash for ing factor when it comes to decoratyour kitchen or ceramic flooring for ing your home. Equipping your bathyour bathroom can be difficult. The room with an inexpensive faucet is a motif you’ve selected looks good good way to save money. However, on its own, but not so much once brass faucets — while more expenit’s laid next to hundreds of identi- sive — will last a lot longer, regardcal tiles. A good way around this less of the quality of your water. is to print several larger images Similarly, big sales and low prices of the design you’ve chosen from are enticing when buying furniture the manufacturer’s website. Lay for your home. But making purthese copies down directly on your chases without measuring first will floor to get a better idea of how the cause you headaches down the road. overall finished product will look. Don’t forget to choose your tiles 3. LESS IS MORE according to their intended use; por- When it comes to decorating your celain is more durable than ceramic, home, keeping it simple is the way and therefore better suited for high to go. An overabundance of small Ceramic tiles are redefining the flooring industry. elements can leave traffic areas.
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Your fall gardening checklist
How to keep your vegetable garden producing through the fall ably in a hardiness zone of three, four or five. In these conditions, there are a few vegetables you might be able to keep growing past Thanksgiving if you protect them properly. If you’re on the milder West Coast, you may be able to grow certain veggies through till November, if the weather cooperates.
You meticulously tended your garden all summer, and though those long hot days have subsided, it isn’t quite yet time to hang up your gardening gloves. Here’s a list of things to do this fall that will ensure your garden is in top form come spring. • Use the fallen leaves on your property to mulch your garden or supplement your compost heap. • Before the first hard frost, bring indoors any fragile perennials or tropical plants you grow outside. Try enjoying them as houseplants for as long as you can, or, if it suits the plants, place them in a cool, dark room for their dormancy period. • Tend to your lawn by fertilizing and reseeding it. Spread seed in early and late fall. Use an aerator tool to aerate the grass, and for the last two cuttings of the season, lower your lawn mower’s blade to the lowest setting. • Set in any new fall-planted bulbs — tulips, daffodils, hyacinths, crocuses and snowdrops — before the ground freezes. These bulbs need to spend a winter in the ground in order to flower properly in the spring. Plant them in sunny areas with welldrained soil and water them thoroughly. • Prepare some anti-frost covers for your lategrowing produce. Use a tarp or individual upsidedown plastic containers. Keep in mind that some
HARDY VEGETABLES
vegetables can survive the first frost, including pumpkins, carrots, parsnips, some turnips, spinach, and cabbages. • Condition your garden soil with compost, leaves or other organic material, and if you can, till it under for early planting next spring. If soil erosion is a problem, plant a green ground cover. • Clean up your gardening tools and store them away. Wipe down your lawn mower and weed eater, and oil any moving parts. Give your hoes, spades and wheelbarrow a wipe-down with a mild bleach solution to remove any plant diseases or spores. Doing all the above will help position your garden for another great growing season come spring and allow you to rest easy over the winter months.
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If you like to talk gardening with your friends and neighbours, you’re probably hearing more about cultivating fall crops than ever before. Although gardeners in the more hardy zones south of us have always done it, the trend towards planting for a fall harvest has been creeping north in the last few years. With some careful planning and tending, you can enjoy tasty vegetables later than you might have thought possible. A successful fall growth depends on the hard frost records for your area, and the lengths you’re willing to go to in order to protect your plants from early frosts. If, like most Canadians, you live along the U.S. border corridor, you are prob-
Some veggies are naturally more resilient than others. Among the hardiest are the following: • Carrots • Cold-hardy herbs such as chives (the hardiest), French tarragon, lovage, mint and parsley • Hardy varieties of collards • Heavily mulched turnips • Lettuces and mache, in a cold frame or low tunnel, till mid to late fall • Parsnips • Savoy-type cabbages • Some leek varieties • Spinach grown in cold frames The best way to experiment is to try several varieties and see which ones survive. You could also talk to experienced gardeners and local farmers to see how they push the limits of the season.
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51 Industrial Rd., PERTH, Ont. 613-267-1752 • Fax: 613-267-1959 • 1-866-699-1799 1525 John Counter Blvd., KINGSTON, Ont. 613-544-3335 • Fax: 613-544-3304 • 1-877-544-3335 Kazabazua, QC • 819-467-2112 5552 Ste Catherine Street, ST. ISIDORE, Ont. 613-524-2079 • Fax: 613-524-2081 • 1-800-465-4927
Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 55 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
Creating your very own art studio 1. PROPER LIGHTING
The best light to work by is natural light. Of course, white fluorescent lighting will get the job done if your studio doesn’t have any windows.
2. GOOD VENTILATION
Fresh air is always a good thing, regardless of your craft. However, certain artists tend to work with products that emit harmful fumes, such as oil paints. If your studio doesn’t have any windows, make sure to have a fan or two on hand to keep the air circulating.
3. EASILY ACCESSIBLE SUPPLIES
Your tools are the agents of your creations, so take good care of them. Storage boxes, bins and cabinets are great for keeping your supplies organized and clean.
4. A COMFORTABLE SETTING
When the time comes to take a step back to muse over your handiwork, make sure you have somewhere relaxing to do it. Cozy chairs, a radio or even a coffee maker will provide you with the necessary comforts An art studio in your home is the perfect place to when you feel drained. express your creativity without having to stow away your works in progress. Regardless if it’s for painting, 5. YOUR PRIVATE GALLERY sculpting or drawing, chances are your studio will be Your studio will eventually become your art gallery. just as unique as you are. Personal preferences aside, Hooks, shelves, tables and easels are useful for hanging there are some basics that all fun and functional art or displaying your work as well as your reference photos. studios require.
Cleaning your stainless steel surfaces The sleek design of stainless steel can give any kitchen a stylish and contemporary look. The problem is, these surfaces are prone to showing fingerprints and water stains, which can sometimes be difficult to remove. However, there are a few simple steps you can take to keep your stainless steel appliances, countertops and sinks shining like new.
GIVE THEM A REGULAR CLEANING
the surface to prevent additional water stains from forming. A nylon scouring pad will come in handy to remove any food residue in sinks or on countertops. Use a mild abrasive free of chlorine and iron to eliminate light surface scratches. Deeper scratches, on the other hand, can be repaired with a good professional polishing.
WHAT NOT TO DO
Simply put, stainless steel and bleach do not mix. Using cleaning products that contain bleach can cause rust to form and the steel to corrode, so avoid them at all costs. This goes for all cleaning products that contain harsh and aggressive chemicals, such as hydrochloric acid. Salt and white vinegar can negatively affect the metal’s surface over time, so use them sparingly. Finally, avoid using metal sponges, brushes KEEP THAT SHINE Water spots can be cleaned with and scouring pads as they’ll some warm water and a clean leave unsightly scratches on your cloth. Make sure to properly dry surfaces. Although resistant and durable, time and overuse can deteriorate the condition and appearance of stainless steel. However, this metal won’t wear as a result of too much cleaning, so remove spots and smudges as soon as they appear. Routinely cleaning these surfaces will go a long way in keeping them looking great.
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21 Bridge Street, Carleton Place Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 56 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
Choosing the right dining room table Tips on puppy-proofing your home Buying a new dining table is not always as straightforward as it seems. Taste and style will be key deciding factors, but you’ll also have to consider what shape works best with your current space. Here are the three most popular shapes for tables and the advantages of each.
2. SQUARE
Square tables are usually smaller in size, which makes them ideal for more compact homes. Versatile and easy to move, they’re perfect for creating a cozier and more intimate atmosphere. You also have the luxury of either positioning the table in the middle of the room or against a wall.
3. ROUND
You might not think so, but puppies are a lot like babies. They have a ton of energy, they’re very curious and they start teething before you know it. That’s why it’s important to take precautionary measures to avoid accidents. Of course, you can’t anticipate everything, but by being proactive you’ll be able to limit mishaps and messes.
tially dangerous from their environment. Keep disinfectants, insecticides and pesticides out of reach. Remember that some houseplants and flowers, such as the ficus, rhododendron or lily, can be harmful to your dog. Either replace these with less harmful plants or consider moving them somewhere a little more secure.
PROTECT YOUR FURNITURE & ELECTRICAL
Make a point of creating a small living space for your puppy as soon as it arrives by using a crate and/or safety gates. You’ll want to give your pup enough room to go about its daily activities without necessarily giving it access to the entire house. You’ll be able to expand the area as the bond and trust between you two grows, eventually allowing your puppy to come and go as it pleases.
Puppies will use their mouths to explore their surroundings, so make sure that anything fragile or valuable is well out of reach. Protect the legs of your furniture by wrapping them in plastic. You should also cover all wires and plug sockets with outlet plugs to reduce the risk of an electrical shock.
Although less conventional, round dining tables are gaining in popularity. Modern and welcoming, they’re perfect for smaller rooms since they take up less space than the more traditional rectangular tables. One of the biggest advantages of round tables is that everyone can see each other while seated. This makes conversation much easier and tends to create a TOXIC PRODUCTS & PLANTS more friendly setting. Certain round tables can Puppies are curious by also be extended using a leaf to accommodate nature, so it’s important more guests should the need arise. to remove anything that is poten-
YOUR PUPPY’S LIVING SPACE
Welcoming and contemporary, round dining tables are gaining in popularity.
1. RECTANGULAR
Rectangular tables are without a doubt the most common choice when it comes to dining tables. They’re ideal for accommodating a large number of people and can be easily extended by inserting a leaf. Their shape also leaves more room for traffic, thereby conferring a better flow to the room.
&
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email jenmoore@storm.ca 144 Sproule Rd, RR#7 Perth (off Highway 511)
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leeann.legault@royallepage.ca
Carleton Place 613-253-3300 • Almonte 613-256-1860 Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 57 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
joannebeaton@royallepage.ca
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Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 58 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
Delivery Available Monday to Friday 9:30 to 5:30 Saturday 9:30 to 4:00 Sunday Closed
From lighting to tires and everything in between: Car Counsellor weighs in “Hello Brian, just a few observations. Recently, I thought I was being blinded by an oncoming vehicle but as it turned out it was a truck with its lights on ‘dim’. I’m not sure if they were OEM lights or aftermarket but they were certainly misaimed! That is a serious situation that could have been much worse if it had been raining, etc. Not sure if amateur light upgraders have any idea about aiming/re-aiming headlights. In Europe I remember that many vehicles have manual light adjusters on the dash so you can compensate for the number of people in the car/uneven weight distributions. But that might even be dangerous here with the drivers we have? And an acquaintance bought a used vehicle with all-wheel-drive from a dealer this past fall. Recently I noticed that there were two different tread designs. Each side had the same size tires but left and right side tires were not the same make. The tread-wear ratings were similar; traction was the same, and temperature ratings. Any thoughts on this?” Thank you for your consideration. Lorne Facey Mixing tires from different makers on the same vehicle usually doesn’t present much of a problem as long as they have the same speed and load rating and of course are the exact
same size and construction (e.g. allseason vs. winter). But different tire makers can bring slight differences in overall circumferences which can lead to difficulties in engaging and/or disengaging all-wheel drive transfer cases or causing drive-line vibrations. Your friend should try out the all-wheel drive at various speeds and conditions to be sure there aren’t any problems. If there are, simply take a piece of string or tailor’s measuring tape and check each tire’s circumference with the weight of the vehicle off the tire. Any differences over a half an inch may be the problem and should be rectified by replacing the tires. “Hi Brian, I feel that an important part of vehicle maintenance is keeping the disc brakes working with a seasonal disassembly, cleaning, and lubrication of the sliding surfaces after every winter of moisture and salt. Every vehicle we have owned has required post-salt brake service to keep things from seizing up. This is as routine as other seasonal maintenance.” Alan L I couldn’t agree more. With more and more vehicles now coming equipped with four-wheel disc brakes and open style spoke wheels, the amount of corrosion that builds up on brake calipers and rotors is astounding. The simple spring service that Alan refers to is a great way
Car Counsellor BRIAN TURNER
to get the longest life possible from brake linings and rotors while ensuring safe and predictable performance. Yahoo Canada recently released their latest study on automotive consumer trends and the results might surprise you. • More than 80 per cent of Canadians choose to purchase, compared to only 20 per cent who lease. • Auto intenders are favouring the SUV this year as vehicle of choice, compared to the Sedan last year (Desrosiers Automotive Consultants report that at the end of August, light trucks including SUVs and crossovers were outselling passenger cars by a 65 per cent/35 per cent margin year to date. • Canadians are price conscious; ultimately price is the deciding factor that leads consumers to purchase. • The role of the dealership is changing as less intenders are interested in visiting them and when they do, they are looking for more online access and visibility into pricing
Make Room for Family Adventures. Buy and Sell Locally.
and inventory. • Automotive consumers are tech savvy; one in three Canadians use their mobile device in the dealership showroom and of those, the top three activities conducted are: compare prices at other dealerships (48 per cent), review vehicle specs (31 per cent), and look up other dealership locations (28 per cent). • As emerging technologies enter the auto market, Virtual Reality (VR) could soon be part of the path to purchase, with 44 per cent of consumers saying they’d use VR to test drive a vehicle and 10 per cent saying they would use VR to replace the physical
test drive. If you have any questions, opinions, or stories on anything automotive please drop me a line, [By email to emc@perfprint.ca or directly to bjoeturner@hotmail.com listing ‘Question for the Car Counsellor’ on the subject line or by post to Record News Communications, 65 Lorne St., P.O. Box 158, Smiths Falls, ON K7A 4T1]. When using regular mail, please supply a phone number if you seek direct contact (due to volume I can’t always promise replies). Yours in service Brian Turner
Fall colours on display at Ontario parks Ontario’s provincial parks offer great opportunities to view beautiful fall colours throughout the province. The Ontario Parks Fall Colour Report shows you when colours are at their peak in provincial parks across Ontario. Different parks experience the changing colours at different times, so be sure to check the report before heading out. “Ontario’s provincial parks offer some of the best spots in the world to see the fall colours,” stated Kathryn McGarry, Minister of Natural Resources and Forestry. “I encourage you to take a trip to one of
our provincial parks this fall to experience our natural heritage and take in this spectacular change in seasons.” Many parks offer enhanced visitor experiences during the fall colour season. Some of the many events include: • Oct. 2 and 9 – Silver Queen Mine tour in Murphy’s Point “Ontario is an incredible four-season destination and fall is a perfect time for visitors, families and friends to explore our province’s many breathtaking landscapes,” said Eleanor McMahon, Minister of Tourism, Culture and Sport.
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Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 59 - Thursday, September 29, 2016
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Connected to Your Community A/CP/K/P/SF - 60 - Thursday, September 29, 2016