Napanee Beaver Oct 10 2013

Page 1

~ SERVING LENNOX AND ADDINGTON COUNTY AND AREA SINCE 1870 ~

w w w. n a p a n e e b e ave r. c o m | T h u r s d a y , O c t o b e r 1 0 , 2 0 1 3 |

Future of Beaver Lake boat races called into question Greater Napanee

2

Firefighters feature action shots in 2014 calendar

27

Proudly Independent

Raiders extend win streak to three with win over Storm

32

Not-So-Missing Lynx

Town unwilling to take IWTs, council declares Motion gets unanimous support; joins growing group of municipalities BY ASHLEY ESPINOZA Staff Reporter

Greater Napanee council declared the municipality would be an unwilling host for industrial wind turbines, a decision which was met with applause by nearly 100 local residents during Tuesday’s council meeting. With the declaration, Greater Napanee becomes the 72nd municipality in Ontario to declare itself an unwilling host for IWTs. Local resident Susan Wright, who opposes IWTs in Greater Napanee, presented council with a petition opposing IWTs signed by 1,054 people in the municipality. “There has been widespread community support for the unwilling host motion,” she said to council on Tuesday. Each signee provided local addresses. Wright explained 80 per cent of those signed are from the southern portion of the municipality, closest to where the Gilead Power Corporation’s Dorland Wind Energy project is proposed. “This clearly demonstrates the majority of local citizens are opposed to industrial wind turbines being installed in the South Fredericksburgh and Adolphustown area,” said Wright. Another person, Joe O’Connor, also encouraged council to declare Greater Napanee unwilling hosts for IWTs.

“The power is with you. If you say you’re not a willing host, Queen’s Park will listen to this. That is really what the bottom line is,” he said. Councillor Mike Schenk, Ward 1, previously put forward a notice of motion that Greater Napanee is an unwilling host for IWTs. He amended the motion and moved it, seconded by councillor Marg Isbester, Ward 3. All councillors voted in favour of the motion, except for Ward 4 Councillor Bill Pierson, who was not present for the meeting. Schenk added rationale to his motion as to why the municipality has chosen to be unwilling hosts, which included decreasing property values, increased health risks, rise in hydro costs, flaws in the Green Energy Act, endangerment for birds, and the proposed 550 metre setback being shorter than anywhere else. Councillor Shaune Lucas, Ward 5, said the proposed location is not ideal for IWTs. “I think the turbines are an industrial application in a residential/agriculture situation. I don’t think we would put a box store in the downtown community and I don’t think we’d put a high-rise in a neighbourhood,” said Lucas. “I don’t think these are the appropriate items in the location.”

Social .................................4 INSIDE Op/Ed............................. 6/7

SEE IWTS | PAGE 26 >

Adam Prudhomme-Staff

As part of Lafarge’s 40th anniversary in Bath, the company opened their doors and invited the community to check out their facility. Members of Earth Rangers, which partners with the company, held a small animal show which included a baby Eurasian lynx. For more, see story Page 5

History.................................8 Sports................................17

Classifieds ........................20 Games/Horoscope..........23

D L

CARPENTRY & KITCHEN & BATH DESIGN 8235 COUNTY RD.2 E., NAPANEE S HO 4 (613) 354-6202 WR . 199 EE’S PAN NA

OOM

O LD E S T

EST

Real Estate..................Insert Business Directory.......Insert

I

Vol. 144 No. 41

YOUR LOCAL POOL EXPERT The Professionals with the Personal Touch

Authorized Dealer of DAWGS Footwear 130 Richmond Blvd., Napanee

613.354.4391


2 / NEWS

T H E

N A PA N E E

B E AV E R

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Stone Mills Township

Beaver Lake boat races spur community debate Local residents, race organizers urged to reach compromise on annual two-day event

BY SETH DUCHENE Editor

While most communities enjoy the buzz of economic development, the real, audible buzz created by an annual summer power boat race on Beaver Lake at Erinsville has proven to be somewhat more controversial. At its regular meeting in Centreville on Monday night, Stone Mills council heard from representatives on both sides of the debate — including race organizers and supporters, and concerned Beaver Lake residents. Over the past two council meetings, residents opposing the races and those supporting the races have forwarded petitions and letters to council to support their respective posi-

tions. While race supporters have said that the annual races provide an essential influx of tourism dollars into the community each year for local business, residents are concerned about noise, their ability to use the lake on race days and closure of the boat launch at Beaver Lake Lions Park, and camping by racers at the park. After hearing delegations on the issue, council did not take any action to either support or cancel next year’s races. However, some council members advised race organizers and concerned residents to meet face-to-face to address ongoing issues surrounding the race. “In any good debate — and this is as good as any I’ve seen in the last while — and in any good disagree-

Dependable Service...

Since 1991

Home of the Hot Leek Sausage

2. lb Bone In

WHOLE

$

99

SMOKED HAMS

3.

BONESLESS STEW

$

99 lb

BEEF

SPECIAL

3. lb

Seth DuChene-Staff

Powerboat racers speed around a turn at the western edge of the race course on Beaver Lake during this year’s event in July. ment, there are two sides. I’m going to recommend that the two sides get together and hash this out,” said Ward 2 (Sheffield) Councillor Todd Steele. “I believe 100 per cent that in every person in this room, there is a bit of compromise. If those two groups come back to this council with some kind of a brief report on what they accomplished, I would be very happy, as I’m sure every member of council would be.” “I voted ‘no’ against the races from Day 1, I supported the land owners, the cottage owners. But, in reading all the information that’s in

HOURS Mon. - Fri.9am-5:30pm Sat. 9am-4pm

111 Industrial Blvd.

LEAN HAMBURG $ 99 8.80/kg

354-9311

$

FROZEN 1 LB PACKAGES

00 79 2.OO 2.50 ml $ 2. lb Reg. or Extra Hot CEDARVALE

$

HORSERADISH SPECIAL

7.50pc

KOLBASSA

PORK LOIN CHOPS

6.15/kg

front of us, I certainly can see the other side of it. That’s why I (asked) if there was any room for negotiations,” said Ward 3 (Camden East) Councillor Doug Davison, who also recommended that communications between race organizers and lake residents be improved leading up to the races. “I’ve had five business over my period of years, and of those businesses three were in rural areas, and two happened to be in Tamworth,” said Reeve Doug Bearance. “So, I very well understand where the business community is coming from. I can also understand where you’re coming from, and your group. But, damn it, there has to be a compromise.” Bearance said that he, personally, supports the boat races. “I don’t say it lightly,” he said. “You have half of these people that I consider to friends that are opposed to it, and the other half that I consider friends, are for it. So, I’m torn. I have to make a judgement call on what I think is best for the future of the community. I believe we should get by this, because I really believe in my heart that these boat races are an asset.” George Downing, who

HAY BAY TIRE SHOP 613-354-0800 NOW OPEN 6403A County Rd. 9 Napanee Dan Ouimet dan.ouimet@live.ca

129(0%(5 LV ´6(1,25 3(7 0217+µ 1/2 price ex exam am and bag of food with each Senior Wellness Test

“The Way Car Buying Should Be”

613-968-3339

Toll free 1-866-594-2262 1 Km north of 401 Hwy. 62 Belleville

N EED C AR ...

A

11 Commercial Crt., Napanee, Ontario K7R 4A2 613 3-354-1020

OR

F INANCING ? S EE P AUL

Paul Richmond

Sales Associate prichmond@bayviewauto.ca

spoke on behalf of Beaver Lake residents opposing the races, said wasn’t sure if negotiations between the two sides would be successful. “The window should always be open for negotiations. It would be foolish to say otherwise,” he told council. But, he said, there was growing momentum among Beaver Lake residents against the races. Further, he said that there were some residents who wanted to take “stronger action” to prevent the races from happening in the future, adding that some were floating the idea of “taking back the lake” with a multiboat protest on race day. “I would hope that would never happen. That would become an embarrassment to our community, and I would not personally become involved in that. But, I must put it out there, because there is a group of people that would very quickly do that. In fairness, I should put that on the table.“ Downing said later, “after four years, it’s time for the boat people to move on. That’s the general feeling of the people that are at least in the pathway of the races.” Tanya Mezaros, the owner of the Lakeview Tavern and a supporter of the races, said that last year’s race represented three times the business she gets on her busiest weekend of

the year. “Having a business in the rural community isn’t easy. I’d like to say that we can survive solely off locals, and that everything else is just icing on the cake — but it’s not the case. We need the revenue from the locals and the seasonal tourists, and the snowbirds, and community events such as the races,” she said. She also presented council with a study done by the Land O’ Lakes Tourist Association detailing the economic spin-offs that could be created by the event for Lennox and Addington; in that study, LOLTA estimated that there could be almost $68,000 in direct spending by racers in the county on the race weekend. Mezaros said that she would be willing to sit on a joint committee between race organizers and local residents, and that she would try to reach out to local residents with improved communications in following years. Doug Overbury of the Canadian Boating Federation and one of the race organizers detailed how the power boat races function. Speaking directly to residents’ concerns, he said that camping would not be permitted at the park at future events. Further, he said that the boat launch had to be cordoned off from the general public because of insurance requirements, but added that organizers would work with local residents to allow the boat launch to be used if necessary on race day. He also said that boat traffic around the race area can be permitted as long as local boaters approach organizers to advise them so that the track area can remain safe. The races take place over Saturday and Sunday in late July at the western end of Beaver Lake, from 10 a.m. to about 5 p.m. each day. In that period, boats are racing for about a total of three hours. The municipality owns the park from which the racers launch their boats.

FLYERS IN THIS WEEK’S

Napanee Beaver  VERONA FOODLAND*  DEWE’S INDEPENDENT*  XS CARGO*  HEAR RIGHT CANADA*  HOME HARDWARE*

 TSC*  DOMINO’S*  SEARS*  LOWES*  GRAYS IDA*

*Limited Distribution


Thursday, October 10, 2013

T H E

N A PA N E E

NEWS / 3

B E AV E R

Lennox and Addington County

Reports paint stark fiscal picture for municipalities Latest in series of white papers from EOWC shows growing financial hardships across region BY SETH DUCHENE Editor

Eastern Ontario municipalities are facing an uncertain financial future. That was the message delivered by Lennox and Addington County Chief Administrative Officer Larry Keech in a report to L&A County council at its latest regular meeting. Keech was presenting the findings of the latest reports produced by the Eastern Ontario Wardens’ Caucus — and the reports paint a bleak picture of the long-term financial sustainability for the region’s municipalities. Keech touched on two of the white papers emerging from the EOWC’s landmark report last year ‘The Financial Sustainability of Local Government in Eastern Ontario’, with one on municipal affordability, and one on municipal infrastructure. White papers discussing ratepayer affordability, social housing and environmental services are pending. Keech described how eastern Ontario municipalities — including L&A and its lower-tier municipalities — were facing steadily increasing operating and capital costs, while revenues were failing to keep pace. He said that, between 2000-2011, eastern Ontario municipalities saw their operating expenditures increase 65 per cent — much faster than average household expenditures increased (about 11 per cent) and the Consumer Price Index (about 22 per cent). Keech also said that those expenses are anticipated to continue to increase. “The most significant area of pressure comes from transportation servic-

es,” he said. “Not surprisingly, the bulk of the municipalities are rural, have significant roads and bridges, and it’s estimated that there will be an increase of 76 per cent (in transportation-related expenditures) by 2020.” Other areas of concern include emergency services and social services. Keech said that the provincial government’s program of ‘uploading’ some social services costs — that is, reversing the download of some social services costs from the province to municipalities in the late 1990s and early 2000s. Keech said that municipalities have had to address those rising costs by raising property taxes and user fees — over the same 11-year period, property taxes have increased 92 per cent, and user fees and other charges have increased 110 per cent. He said that property assessment has doubled over the same period, from a total of $40 billion to just over $80 billion across eastern Ontario. However, he said that virtually all of that assessment increase has come due to property valuation increases. Additional development and growth only accounts for two per cent of the assessment increase. Further, Keech said, 90 per cent of that assessment is residential assessment — commercial and industrial assessment represents only about 10 per cent of overall assessment. Meanwhile, capital costs have continued to increase, and municipalities have struggled keeping up with infrastructure needs. In fact, the EOWC estimates that its municipalities are facing a $3.74 billion infrastructure deficit — an additional

$3.74 billion investment is needed to bring all current municipal infrastructure into good repair. The study also suggests that the deficit is continuing to rise by $150-200 million per year. “When we look at the required annual capital investment… it’s estimated that municipalities across the region should be spending approximately $686 million more per year in order to address infrastructure needs,” said Keech. “When that’s combined with the current (overall municipal) capital expenditures of about $388 million, really, the total expenditure should be around $1 billion a year.” Keech said that municipalities have three options by which they can address that deficit — increase property taxes, draw on reserve funds or go into debt. However, he said the municipalities have only enough in reserves to address one year’s worth of total infrastructure needs — about $686 million. Further, he said that municipalities don’t have the capacity to take on much more debt than they’ve already taken on. Given that municipalities collectively gather about $1.07 billion each year from property taxes and user fees — more than three-quarters of which is in turn used to pay for operating costs — property tax increases to address the infrastructure shortfall would be staggering. Keech did say that the Ontario government has established a $100 million rural infrastructure fund, which will address some of the infrastructure needs. He said that the EOWC is calling on the government to make that fund permanent. He said that munici-

palities have also called on the province to make this funding predictable and non-competitive. He said that the EOWC is also calling on the province that municipalities be compensated by the province for Crown Land within their jurisdictions, either through a sharing of the provincial revenue from these lands or in payments in lieu of taxes. “This compensation would

be in recognition of the services provided by the municipalities in building and maintaining roads and bridges and providing emergency services for these tax exempt lands,” the report says. After hearing the report, some council members expressed concern, particularly as it related to ratepayers’ ability to pay ever-increasing taxes. Further, some even sug-

gested an overhaul of how taxation works in the province. “It’s not an uplifting scenario,” said Greater Napanee DeputyReeve Roger Cole. “The system, by 2015, is going to be unsustainable — that’s what I’m reading into it. There has to be, in my mind… a diversion from land values or assessment of land values. There has to be a different form of taxation.”

NOW IS THE

TIME TO SWITCH!

100GB OF DATA/MTH2 WITH SPEEDS UP TO

10 Mbps

PLUS, SAVE $60 ON EVERY PLAN!1

Roof Rider? “More savings. Bigger allowance.” TO GET HIGH-SPEED INTERNET, CALL XPLORNET AT 1.855.333.7333 OR YOUR LOCAL DEALER BEFORE THIS OFFER ENDS!

Tyendinaga Computer Sales & Service 613.966.9522 Reztel Communications Inc. 613.384.2101

Elite Electronic Connections 613.885.2326 Mike Tudor Satellite - Lennox and Addington County 613-583-9377

CALL NOW, OFFER ENDS DECEMBER 31, 2013

1.855.333.7333 Submitted

Angela Armagost captured this picture of a great blue heron, perched on top of her husband’s car in their Switzerville Road driveway. In spite of the barking of the family dog, the bird was apparently in no rush to abandon its post.

Faster Internet. Where you live.

1

Offer ends December 31, 2013 on $10 off for the first 6 months and applies on 4G Fixed Wireless Residential platform to new customers who agree to a 1 year term commitment on any Xplornet 4G Residential package. $99 Activation fee applies on a 1 year term commitment. 2100 GB offer ends December 31, 2013 and is available on Xplornet’s “Share” and “Stream” 4G Fixed Wireless residential packages. One, two or three year term available, once chosen term ends, a new data package will need to be purchased. Connection is placed in a limited state once monthly bandwidth is exceeded. Please see Internet Traffic Management Policy on xplornet.com for details. Xplornet® is a trade-mark of Xplornet Communications Inc. © 2013 Xplornet Communications Inc. NTL FW 100GB Admat Oct 2013


4 / SOCIAL

T H E

N A PA N E E

COMMUNITY PULSE

Social Notes Birthdays, Anniversaries, Graduations, Retirements, Weddings

50th Anniversary Please join us in celebrating the

Golden Wedding Anniversary of Margaret and George Gauld at a drop-in gathering in their honour on Saturday, October 12, 2013 11am - 2pm at the home of Paul and Maureen McDonald, 7390 County Road 2, Napanee, ON Best Wishes only, please

50th Wedding Anniversary

Happy 95th Birthday

Allen and Betty Madigan

The family of

ROSS LONG

www.bellevillevw.com

would like to invite everyone to a 95th Birthday Celebration on Saturday, October 19, 2013 from 2pm - 4pm in the Lower Hall at Grace United Church, Napanee, Ontario. Your presence is your gift. 2013 Jetta TDI Auto

Candy white, comfortline, heated seats, diesel, sunroof, bluetooth, 6,000km, VW Assurance

$24,500

Sale priced at + hst + licensing

October 5, 2013

We celebrated our 50th with our family at Travel Lodge LaSalle Hotel, Kingston

OCTOBER 10 L&A SOS SOCIAL DINER At the Napanee Lions Hall, starting at noon. Hot turkey dinner catered by SOS. Entertainment by The Dunlops and Friends. Cost $10 per person. Seats and transportation must be reserved in advance by calling the SOS office at 613-354-6668. ZUMBA GOLD At the Tamworth Legion, from 9:30-10:30 a.m. MAPLE RIDGE WOMEN’S INSTITUTE Group meets at 7:30 p.m. at the Selby Community Hall. Program: Our Queen of Canada. Roll Call: recall your favourite Canadian royal event. For information call Marg at 613-354-9898. OCTOBER 11 THANKSGIVING HARVEST AND PIE SALE From 9 a.m. to noon at the Airhart Conference Room at L&A County General Hospital. Presented by LACGH Volunteer Services. Light refreshments, tea, coffee, muffins, $3. BMF BANQUET The Napanee Chapter of the Business Men’s Fellowship in Canada will host a banquet at Selby Community Hall at 6:30 p.m. Cost is $16 per person. Reservations must be in by Oct. 8. Men, ladies and youth are welcome. Guest speaker is Dr. Neil Barber. Special music by his wife Marrilyn Barber. Catered by Spuds. For tickets call Andre 613-377-6710, or Rev. John Hilliard 613352-5691, or Garfield at 613354-9235.

Inventory Reduction Sale 2011 Jetta 2.5 Highline Auto 2012 CC Highline Auto 2.0T 2009 Jetta TDI Manual

Candy white, diesel, leather, sunroof, spoiler, blue tooth, 94,000km, VWAssurance Premium

$20,900

Sale priced at + hst + licensing

www.bellevillevw.com

Moon rock silver, black leatherette, sunroof, blue tooth, 46,000km, VW Assurance

$17,900

Sale priced at + hst + licensing

www.bellevillevw.com

Thursday, October 10, 2013

B E AV E R

Light brown metallic, black leather, panoramic sunroof, 44,000km, VW Assurance

$28,900

Sale priced at + hst + licensing

Belleville Volkswagen

1•888•534•1167 North Front Street (next to Harvey’s)

www.bellevillevw.com

OCTOBER 12 COMMUNITY FREE SKATE From noon-1:30 p.m. at Strathcona Paper Center on Goodyear Rink. Donations accepted for United Way KFLA. Kids' Halloween Costume Contest, Face Painting, Family Fun Package draw. The Napanee Fire Dept. will be skating in full fire gear and so will the Napanee OPP. COMFORT FOOD SALE At St. Alban’s Church, Adolphustown, 10419 on the Loyalist Pkwy. (Hwy. 33). Chicken pot pie, assorted meat pies, cabbage rolls, soups, buns, fruit pies and more. Come visit our ‘comfort zone’ at the church rectory. Doors open at 10 a.m. sharp for this popular sale. Call 613-373-0105. OCTOBER 13 SUNDAY BREAKFAST At the Bath Legion in Millhaven, from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., everyone welcome. OCTOBER 14 GENERAL MEETING At the Tamworth Legion, starting at 7:30 p.m. All members should attend. OCTOBER 15 HERITAGE QUILTERS GUILD Meeting at 7 p.m. at the Strathcona Paper Centre. Everyone welcome. Bring your own coffee/tea mug. Monthly meetings, third Tuesday of every month September to June. 50/50 draw, fat quarter draw, show and tell of members’ quilts, community outreach, mini workshops, quilt challengers, library, speakers, come and join the fun. For more information, email info@napaneeheritagequiltersguild.com or visit our website at www.napaneeheritagequiltersguild.com.

CRISIS? Phone 354-7388

Free & Confidential

Are you having an emotional crisis? We can help. We provide 24/7 crisis response. Phone Community Crisis Services at 354-7388 or 1-800-2677877 for confidential counselling.

STINSON

354-7388

W.O.

& SON LTD.

Hickory Lane Alpacas are hosting their 4th Annual Open House and Store Opening Saturday, October 14th, 2013 From 10:00am to 4:00pm. Come and meet the alpacas, browse the store and enjoy a day in the country!

Visitors are always welcome. WeÊd all love to meet you and introduce you to the wonderful world of alpacas.

David and Deb Coles 7326 County Road 9 Napanee, Ontario 613-354-1480 hickorylane@kos.net www.hickorylanealpacas.ca

R 24 HOU Y C N E G R EME E SERVIC

FURNACE & STOVE OIL • GASOLINE • DIESEL • PROPANE

• Furnace - Air Conditioning • Water Heater Rentals • Protection Plans • Automatic Deliveries • Equal Payment Plans

We also carry a full line of: • Kendall, BradPenn & Valvoline Lubricants • Package and Bulk Motor Oil • Hydraulic Fluids - Antifreeze • Grease

STOP

IN AND SEE US OR GIVE US A CALL

613-354-7400 or 1-800-267-9714 wostinson.com 435 Milligan Lane, Napanee, Ont. K7R 3Z4


Thursday, October 10, 2013

T H E

N A PA N E E

NEWS / 5

B E AV E R

Lafarge holds open house to mark 40 years BY ADAM PRUDHOMME Staff Reporter

Adam Prudhomme-Staff

Bath’s Lafarge welcomed members of the public into their plant on Saturday as part of their 40th anniversary celebrations. Hudson Boucher had the chance to meet Rocky, the plant’s mascot.

Curious residents had the chance to get a hands-on tour of Bath’s Lafarge plant on Saturday, as the construction materials supplier opened its doors to the public. As part of its 40th anniversary in the community, Lafarge employees were on hand to offer tours, show off displays and grill up some barbecued burgers. “We realize we’re part of the community and we want to open our doors and let people in,” said Rob Cumming, environment and public affairs manager with Lafarge. “I think a lot of people wonder what’s behind the plant here, what the quarry looks like. It’s also a chance for us to show off our low carbon fuel systems. It’s still under construction, but it’s getting closer.” Once completed, they’ll be able to replace imported coal from Virginia with locally produced low carbon fuel. Cummings says the project could add about 20 jobs to the 105 that are already employed at the Bath plant. That project is just one of several that have been housed in the plant over the past four decades. From it’s early days in the 1970s, its grown to become a major part of the Bath community and a major player in the North American market. “In the last 10-12 years alone we’ve spent $100 million investing in upgrades and making the place more efficient,” said Cumming. “We’re committed to staying in this area. A lot of manufacturing has left southeastern Ontario.” “We’re on a Great Lake, so we can ship to Ohio, Michigan, all over Ontario,” he added. “It’s a great location and we’ve got really great people working for us.” It’s location on the water is what made the Hwy. 33 spot an ideal location back in 1973. While the manufacturing sector was hit hard by the downturn, they’ve manager to stay strong through the difficult time. To celebrate their 40 years the plant hosted an animal demonstration by the Earth Rangers as well as HGTV’s Bryan Baeumler, known from House of Bryan and Disaster DIY. While he met with his adult fans the kids had the chance to meet Rocky, the Lafarge mascot. All told about 1,000 guests stopped by during the day. Makers of construction materials, Lafarge’s products are used in residential, commercials, and public works projects across North America.

Hospice L&A is offering a

Bereavement Support Group

Are your grieving the loss of a loved one? You are not alone.

Release of Draft Environmental Review Report for Review and Public Open House

Napanee Generating Station

In our group sessions you will have the opportunity to share your losses in a supportive, compassionate and confidential environment. The eight week group sessions will begin on October 28th. There is no cost to participate in this program For more information please contact Melanie at 613-354-0833 or melanie@landahospice.ca

TransCanada has completed a draft Environmental Review Report (ERR) for the Napanee Generating Station project (NGS). The report will be made available for public review from October 1st to November 30th, 2013. Copies of the report and supporting documents will be available electronically at www.NapaneeGS.com and can also be viewed at the following locations: Town Hall – Town of Greater Napanee 124 John Street Napanee, ON K7R 3L4

Administration Office – Mohawks of the Bay of Quinte 13 Old York Road Tyendinaga Mohawk Territory, ON K0K 1X0

Lennox and Addington Public Library – Napanee Branch 25 River Road Napanee, ON K7R 3S6

Land Code Coordinator’s Office – Alderville First Nation 11696 2nd Line Road Alderville, ON K0K 2X0

Attention - Veterans Ex-Service Men & Women & Dependants

TransCanada’s Napanee Generating Station Project Office 113 Richmond Blvd. – Unit 4 Napanee, ON K7R 3Z8

Service Officer

The Royal Canadian Legion Ontario Command

Napanee Generating Station Open House #2 TransCanada invites the community to an informational open house to provide details of the draft ERR, including draft study results related to air quality, human and ecological health, traffic, socio-economics, terrestrial and aquatic environment, and noise. There will be informational displays and TransCanada experts in attendance to answer questions.

October 23rd, 2013 4:00 p.m. – 8:00 p.m. South Fredericksburgh Hall 2478 County Road 8 Napanee, ON K7R 3K7

If you cannot attend the event but would like to learn more, please contact us at 1.855.920.1910 or by emailing us at NGS@transcanada.com. Following the open house, informational materials including the open house posters will be posted on our project website: www.NapaneeGS.com. TransCanada looks forward to receiving any comments you may have on the draft Environmental Review Report during this review period. Please send all comments to: Christine Cinnamon TransCanada Napanee Generating Station Royal Bank Plaza 24th Floor, South Tower 200 Bay Street Toronto, ON M5J 2J1 E-mail: NGS@transcanada.com

TransCanada is committed to engaging with area residents, community organizations, and interested parties throughout the development of this project. Results of stakeholder feedback and comments on the draft Environmental Review Report will become a key part of the Final Environmental Review Report and are integral to the approval process. The Final Environmental Review Report will be released in the coming months and will be available for public review and comment for a 30-day period. We will inform you of its availability when it is released.

Will be visiting Royal Canadian Legion, Lt. Col. Harry Babcock Branch 137 26 Mill Street E, Napanee Week of October 28th, 2013

• • • •

Anyone wishing information, advise or assistance with the following:

WAR DISABILITY PENSIONS TREATMENT FOR ENTITLED VETERANS APPLICATION FOR BENEVOLENT FUND ASSISTANCE APPEALS AGAINST ADVERSE ORIGINAL APPLICATION FOR WAR VETERANS & WIDOWS ALLOWANCE Please call by October 18th Branch Secretary at 613-354-5275 for appointment


6 / OPINION & COMMENT

T H E

N A PA N E E

B E AV E R

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Opinion send letters to beaver@bellnet.ca

EDITORIAL

Energy file is short-circuiting Ontario’s embattled energy plans are having an interesting impact on Greater Napanee of late. On the same day no less, we saw this happening on two fronts. Earlier this past Tuesday, we learned that the cancellation and relocation of a couple of gas-fired power plants from Oakville and Mississauga was to cost more than $1 billion, according to Ontario Auditor-General Bonnie Lysyk. As we all know, the Oakville plant — which was already under construction when it was cancelled in the midst of the last provincial election — will now be built in Greater Napanee. A matter of a few hours later, Greater Napanee was taking an active role in another element of the province’s overall energy policy — that is, the Green Energy Act and its push for renewable energy projects like industrial wind turbines. Whether you look at the green energy piece or more traditional power generation, it’s hard not to conclude that both areas have been unmitigated disasters for the Ontario Liberal government. Let’s look at the Green Energy Act mess first. The principles behind the act, as we’ve always said, are laudable. It’s good that we are exploring renewable energy technologies and finding carbon-neutral ways to generate electricity. We also can get behind the government taking an active role in spurring on this activity — that is, subsidization. In practice, however, implementation of the Green Energy Act has been more successful in dividing rural communities, as those eager to find a new revenue stream welcome industrial wind turbines, much to the chagrin of their neighbours, whose concerns about property values and health concerns remain largely unaddressed. The result is neighbour pitted against neighbour — and in close knit rural communities, that’s tragic. While the provincial government has tried to tweak the Green Energy Act in an attempt to ameliorate some of the ongoing concerns, the controversy remains. Tuesday night, Greater Napanee council weighed in on the side of concerned residents opposed to a new project planned for the southern part of the municipality and declared Greater Napanee to be an unwilling host to IWTs. Whether this will mean wind energy projects are doomed on into the future remains to be seen, but the town is now the 72nd municipality in Ontario to make this declaration. As far as the gas plant fiasco goes, the Liberal government, by it’s own admission, says that made a “big mistake” when it decided to build the gas plants in Oakville and Mississauga. They’re even developing new rules guiding the government in the future siting of such projects as a result. However, it was crass political opportunism that led the Liberal government to cancel the plants in the middle of an election, in order to retain those Liberal-held ridings. The decision was made with little or no idea as to what those cancellations would cost. Even if we were to accept former Premier Dalton McGuinty’s claim that it’s “never too late to do the right thing” — the right thing being to cancel plants that should have never been approved in the first place — the end result is the same: $1 billion in taxpayers’ money down the drain. And while it’s wonderful news for our local economic development picture to see that gas plant being built in Greater Napanee, there’s no sugar coating the fact that process by which that plant came here was a comedy of errors, not the result of sound energy policy. If the Liberal government is ultimately toppled in the next provincial election, it will hardly be a surprise. The handling of the energy file alone is enough to make voters want to pull the plug.

Letter to the Editor

Time to revive indoor pool progress Greater Napanee Town Council will receive a report concerning aquatics from the General Manager of Infrastructure Services at their meeting on Oct. 22. I plan to be present. As I understand it, the report is primarily on an aquatics facility site location review completed by staff. It was confirmed this summer by staff that the Rotary Park location wasn’t suitable for a new indoor pool and council directed staff to complete a site location analysis. We should all be interested in what the report recommends concerning the ‘where’, but

frankly, we need to be far more concerned about the ‘when’. Our indoor pool was closed on Dec. 30, 2011, despite deputations to council and broad public support to keep it operating until a new facility was built. In the almost two years since then, the Rotary Club has continued to raise money for the future of aquatics in Greater Napanee and they contributed to the new Splash Pad that opened in July. An aquatics committee was formed comprised of members of Rotary, pool users, local business leaders and town staff and for a

JEAN MORRISON OWNER & PUBLISHER

ADVERTISING SALES REPRESENTATIVES: LISA PRESLEY, LINDA WARNER. CLASSIFIEDS SUPERVISOR: MARY NEWTON. COMPOSING STAFF: JANE WRIGHT, MARION SEDORE, SHERI LEFEBVRE. STAFF REPORTERS: ASHLEY FOLEY, ADAM PRUDHOMME.

SALES MANAGER SCOTT JOHNSTON MANAGING EDITOR SETH DUCHENE BUSINESS MANAGER DEBBIE MCCANN PRODUCTION MANAGER MICHELLE BOWES

ESTABLISHED JANUARY 1, 1870 J. Earl Morrison, Owner-Publisher, 1953-1978 Combined in 1965 with The Napanee Express (EST. 1861) and The Deseronto Post (EST. 1904)

ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE DIANE GROSE

time, we felt like we were making some progress. However, this committee has not met nor been engaged in discussion nor consulted with as a group since December 2012. Council has gone through two budget cycles, neither of which, to my knowledge, contemplated an Aquatics Futures Fund. And in that two-year period, countless children have gone without swimming lessons, or families had to travel distances to access them, adding to cost and time.

SEE TURBINES | PAGE 7 >

An independent community newspaper

THE NAPANEE BEAVER 72 DUNDAS ST. E., NAPANEE, ONT., K7R 1H9 TEL: (613) 354-6641 FAX: (613) 354-2622 E-MAIL: beaver@bellnet.ca

The entire content of The Beaver is protected by copyright. No portion thereof is to be reproduced without permission of the publisher.

Napanee Beaver - 40005335


Thursday, October 10, 2013 LETTER FROM PAGE 6 Swimming for recreation, competition and therapy takes us and our wallets to other communities, and healthy, local employment opportunities have been lost. As a taxpayer and voter, I know we can’t ignore the financial question: ‘how’. Once a site and project is defined, our community will step up with generous donations and tireless work to ensure success. The York Street arena, our hospital and the Strathcona Paper Centre are a few examples of this. There will be something tangible to work towards and to seek financial support for from senior levels of government. We need to make sure this council, and those running in the next municipal election, know that voters in Greater Napanee and surrounding municipalities are tired of waiting — we need to actively work together to get an aquatic facility built. In August 2013, Councillor Shane Grant suggested that it wasn’t clear that members of the community were on board. He said, “I mean, there isn’t a room full of people at every council meeting. 100-200 people, asking for a pool, so I don’t know what all the sweat all of a sudden is.” If that isn’t a call for action, I don’t know what is! Hope to see you on Oct. 22 at Greater Napanee Town Hall council chambers for the 7 p.m. meeting. Deb Lowry, Greater Napanee

T H E

N A PA N E E

COMMENT / 7

B E AV E R

Letter to the Editor

Wind turbines are not an exercise in ‘community building’ After attending the town council meeting last Tuesday, I was impressed with the support of stopping the building of industrial windmills in the South Shore Hay Bay area. There are a lot of questions, concerns and outright indignation on the proposed project being erected in a quiet farming and family living area. Tourism, agriculture, wildlife, costs to the town in lost revenue (property taxes), costs to all of Ontario who pay for increased hydro costs are all points brought up at this meeting, all of which are relevant and important factors for the local residents and indeed residents of all Napanee and Ontario. With the council in a position to vote to support or reject the

industrial windmills, the final decision rests with the provincial government, but our council if they decide to reject the industrial windmill, should act to prevent them or add to the costs so that in the future residents are not subsidizing this project. To this end, if the project does go forward, the town council should look to reclassify the lands these are being placed on as industrial land and have industrial land tax rates associated with the windmills, so that the rural tax rate (which was defined for agriculture usage) is not used and tax rates are accordingly increased for the land owners who choose to have these on their properties. This should be extended to all solar and

Lastly, I would like to see people stand together on the issue if they believe that these are not welcome in the area, then to use legal remedies with lawsuits against all participants, from the land owners who install these to the detriment of their neighbors loss in property values, to the corporation running them, to the provincial government who is allowing them to be built. Why should some land owners gain at the expense of others? This is not a community building exercise rather is one that will break our community into various factions, that will in the end hurt all of Napanee in some fashion.

windmill projects since these projects are in fact micro businesses or indeed industrial businesses and are not agriculture anymore. Council should also look to have specific deposits placed for each installation so that in the future these firms will not be able to declare bankruptcy and walk away from the dismantling of the windmills.There are other communities doing this, as well as putting forth larger minimum set backs of 2,000 metres, we too in Napanee can look to implement strategies to ensure that these met the requirements of world standards and not the base requirement our provincial government haphazardly set up without regard to world standards.

Peter McGrath, Greater Napanee

Staff Picks: How the Light Gets In anice McAvoy, Coordinator of the Library’s Yarker Branch, is a big mystery fan and one of her favourite authors is Canada’s own Louise Penny. Here’s what Janice has to say about Penny’s Inspector Gamache series and in particular her latest novel How The Light Gets In: “For mystery lovers I would like to suggest The Chief Inspector Gamache novels by Louise Penny. Penny is a New York Times and Globe and Mail bestselling author and the winner of many book awards for mystery writers. Although Inspector Gamache himself is a sophisticated urbanite

J

from Montreal, the books are set mostly in the small idyllic Quebec village of Three Pines. Penny creates characters that we get to know well and care

Catherine Coles Coles’ Notes for — the quirky villagers, the members of the investigation team and the Gamache family. “Gamache has made it to my list of favourite sleuths which includes P.D. James’ Commander Adam Dalgliesh and Colin Dexter’s Inspector Morse. His intellect and peoplereading skills enable him

to solve crimes and his compassion and integrity earn our respect. “Penny’s latest book How The Light Gets In made its debut as No. 1 on the New York Times best-seller list. While Gamache investigates another murder with ties to Three Pines he must deal with a vicious plot to end his career and maybe his life. Readers of the series will not be disappointed but I suggest that those new to the series start at the beginning; sit back and enjoy as the characters and plots develop.” All nine books in the series can be reserved at your nearest branch of the County of Lennox and

Addington Libraries.

Public

Catherine Coles is the Manager of Library Services for the County of

McAVOY Lennox and Addington Public Libraries. She can be reached at c c o l e s @ l e n n o x addington.on.ca.

Thanksgiving at a bird observatory Several decades ago during my more dexterous years, I used to spend a lot of time at Prince Edward Point banding saw-whet owls. We did our bird banding back in those days in the old lighthouse at the tip of the Point. Looking at the same lighthouse today, it’s hard to imagine that we had it all fixed up like a little cottage with cooking facilities, sleeping accommodations, and being lulled off to sleep each night to the sound of waves lapping gently onto the cobble beach. Fond memories, and I always wanted to take one of those little six-inch owls, stuff it into my pocket, and take it home with me! I can’t imagine anything in the bird world more endearing that a saw-whet owl. As we were then, we are still learning about these little nocturnal migrants, their migration patterns, numbers, and where they are going. Prince Edward Point seems to be a significant route for these migrants and if the weather conditions are right, numbers can be staggering. In 2007, Prince Edward Point made headlines when bird banders banded 1,518 saw-whets that season, the most done in a season at a single station anywhere in North America which underscores the importance of the South Shore Impor-

tant Bird Area as a migratory staging area. The public is always invited to watch the banding operation of saw-whet owls and other spring and fall migrants each year at Prince Edward Point in an effort to explain the importance of the operation. Of course, the annual Spring Birding Festival goes a long way in exposing the activities at the Point to the public. However, this year, a special Thanksgiving celebration is being planned called “Migration Matters. That weekend a series of events will be running through the entire Thanksgiving weekend, October 12, 13 & 14. On Saturday, Sunday and Monday mornings, there will be guided bird walks from the Observatory to the lighthouse. I have the pleasure of leading one of those walks on Saturday. Walks will begin at 9:00 am. Meet in the parking lot of the Observatory. The fee will be $5.00 (children under 12 free) A special banding demonstration at the Observatory will follow the walks. The demonstration will focus on how to identify birds in fall plumage. There also will be a small hospitality tent where coffee, water, and muffins/cookies will be available. An honour system donation box for coffee and treats sales will be on site. With any

Visit

Terry Sprague

Outdoor Rambles luck there will be some raptors in the area and an opportunity for guided observation. The bird observatory’s spotting scope will be set up for viewing any sightings including raptors and/or water birds. Free “Migration Matters” fridge magnets will be given to all visitors. The planned event also falls within the peak of the Northern Saw-whet Owl banding which continues all this month. Even if you are unable to take part in the special activities this coming weekend, you are welcome to come down any night between now and October 31st to watch the banding of the owls. The best time to visit is from 8:30 p.m. until 10:30 p.m., but nights must

be chosen carefully as weather conditions can dictate whether or not owls will be present. Nights with calm weather and no moon usually provides the best opportunities. The nets are not opened if the weather is too cold, windy or rainy. When I was banding sawwhet owls back in the 1980s, I always found that northwest winds and clear nights seemed to result in more owls as it was our theory that the winds helped force the owls down the peninsula, seeking an escape route to avoid migrating over open water. Those interested in coming any time this month can check ahead for a recorded message (613-476-5801). Nights can be cool down there, so dress appropriately. A warm jacket or extra layers, close-toed shoes or hiking boots, hat and gloves are a few suggestions of what you might like to bring with you. You can check ahead for a recorded message (613-476-5801). On weekends, Prince Edward Point Bird Observatory volunteers will be at the Observatory to greet visitors and answer questions. If planning on viewing the operation, be sure to dress appropriately for the cooler evenings at the Point: a warm jacket or extra layers, close-toed shoes or hiking boots, hat and gloves. The volunteers at the Obser-

www.napaneebeaver.com

vatory do caution visitors to respect the banding process. While visitors are encouraged to observe the banding operations, they ask that you please stay away from the mist nets in the net lanes. Only trained volunteers are permitted to extract birds from the nets. Visitors will be guided into the area where the owl nets are located. The banders are always willing to show the whole banding process, to answer questions and to take the time for visitors to take photos. However, there should be no talking in the banding lab unless initiated by the banders. Also, if there are a lot of birds to be processed, the welfare of the birds is a priority, and questions and requests for photographs will be responded to once there is a spare moment. If there are a lot of visitors on an evening, please make sure that everyone has an opportunity to observe the banding and to take photos. We look forward to seeing everyone at the Prince Edward Point Bird Observatory this weekend. For more information on today’s topic, please e-mail tsprague@kos.net or phone 613476-5072. For more information on nature in the Quinte area, be sure to check out www.naturestuff.net.


8 / COMMUNITY

L

O O K I N G

T H E

B

N A PA N E E

B E AV E R

Thursday, October 10, 2013

A C K

A trip through the pages of The Napanee Beaver 65 Years Ago October 13, 1948 n The Napanee Athletics baseball team found itself in a hole against Chatham in the Ontario Baseball Association finals. In Chatham, Napanee fell to the two-time defending champions by a 9-5 score in the series opener. The second game of the series, which was slated to take place in Napanee, was rained out and had to be rescheduled. Fans who arrived at the park, however, were treated to a radio broadcast of the World Series, which was the amplified over the P.A. system. n Napanee was still using too much electricity — even with daily planned power outages to the town. In a front-page advertisement in the Napanee Beaver, the Napanee Public Utilities Commission announced that the daily two-hour power outages weren’t curbing electricity usage enough, and that the town still wasn’t getting under its daily electricity usage quotas. “Unless we make a better showing this week, further interruptions, no doubt, will be necessary,” the advertisement stated.

35 Years Ago Oct. 11, 1978 n A number of Napanee area businesses were reporting that they were in the process of adding more staff, suggesting that the local economy was on an upswing. Businesses such as F. Lepper and Sons and Kelwood Industries and other firms said that they had added 115 jobs. In the case of F. Lepper, the company was in the process of expanding. “The plant here will be expanded within the next two years to meet the requirements of the second phase of development. By then we will have a staff of more than 100,” said General Manager Jack Tatum. n The Downtown Napanee Business Improvement Area was poised to institute a new levy of downtown businesses with the hope of using that money for a co-ordinated beautification effort. The levy was expected to raise about $20,000, which would in turn be used to add some new elements downtown, such as benches, planters, flags, Christmas lighting and music. The levy would cost downtown commercial property owners about $20 for every $1,000 of business assessment. That would mean about $3 per week for business owners, should they approve the measure.

Happy Thanksgiving from The Napanee Beaver

Adam Prudhomme-Staff

Honouring the military service of UEL Philip Ball, Legion Branch 137 Colour Party’s (from left) Arnold Davis, Jack Magilton and Jim Lockhart stand tall while Bill McNaught speaks.

Ex-militiaman gets long-due posthumous recognition Refurbished gravestone, official honours for Phillip Ball

BY ADAM PRUDHOMME Staff Reporter

Some 139 years after his death, Phillip Ball was given a hero’s sendoff this past Saturday at Bath’s Union Cemetery. Surrounded by great, great relatives and Royal Canadian Legion Branch 137’s Colour Party, Ball’s tombstone was re-dedicated in his honour. Once toppled and in disrepair, Ball’s tombstone was restored through funding from his living relatives. “When we were looking for his stone, we found it on the ground underneath about an inch and a half of sod,” said Bill McNaught, a descendant of Ball’s. “We didn’t know quite what to do. We were able to find the Loyalist program that partners with families to restore the stone and put it up right.” After researching the township’s Loyalist records, McNaught learned of Ball’s military history. “It ends up that Phillip was in the Militia during the troubled times of 1837 and '38, as were a lot of his friends and neighbours,” said McNaught. “They prevented the invasion of American vigilantes twice, first in February and again in November. Therefore, they preserved the independence of Canada.” It was that service that prompted the Legion to parade their Colour Party

V i s i t

Adam Prudhomme-Staff

A new plaque with a bit of history on Philip Ball was placed beside his 100 year old grave stone. through the cemetery in his honour. Not wanting to disturb the actual rock, the family added a plaque beside the stone that gave a brief history of Ball, who lived from 1803 to 1874. Sadly, for the sake of L&A history, this isn't an isolated case. Many of the other early pioneers’ tombstones are in similar shape. Most of them can’t even be read anymore, laying broken and buried on the ground. In order to preserve that history, it’s up to descendants of the families to fund their restoration. “The township is respon-

sible for four cemeteries, and there is very little money for their upkeep,” said Loyalist Township Mayor Bill Lowry. “History is literally disappearing before our eyes. The Loyalist Township will partner with any family that is interested in restoring the gravestone of a family member.” In McNaught’s case, he said it cost the family $400 to have it professionally restored — money he says that was tax deductible. As the hobby of family tree researching becomes more and more popular, there’s a renewed interest for people to learn more about their ancestors. Often

people are shocked to learn about the role their relatives played in their community. “It’s an important part of history,” added McNaught. “It wasn’t just a smooth sail from colony to country, it took a generation of dedicated people that wanted to see if they could make responsible government work here, and they did.” He’s hoping more people will follow his lead and do some research on their own family history before it’s too late. The Union Cemetery is located at 1506 Ham Rd., just north of the village of Bath.

w w w. n a p a n e e b e a v e r. c o m

CALL BRIAN RABY, C.A., Trustee in Bankruptcy To Discuss Your Options

FINANCIAL PROBLEMS?

Find it fast...

Whatshappeningin.ca

613-548-1816

Flexible Appointments Free Consultation - Personal Service

303 BAGOT ST., SUITE 1, KINGSTON


Thursday, October 10, 2013 OCTOBER 16 L&A HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY Garden club meets at 7 p.m. at the Napanee fire station at 66 Advance Ave. Guest speaker is Nicolette McGraw, who will discuss ‘Photographing your Garden.’ Everyone welcome. For information call Florence at 613-354-2002. OCTOBER 17 L&A SOS SOCIAL DINER At Odessa-Emmanuel United Church, starting at noon. Ham and scalloped potatoes dinner and entertainment by Ian Bell. Cost is $10 per person. Seats and transportation must be reserved in advance by calling the SOS office at 613354-6668. LUNCHEON At Riverside United Church in Yarker, from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Homemade soup, sandwiches, dessert, coffee and tea, $6. Take out available. For information, call 613-3771700. OCTOBER 18 CHICKEN DINNER From 5-7 p.m., chicken dinner and entertainment at St. Andrew’s By-The-Lake United Church, catered by Rent a Chef, at 1 Redden St. Roasted rosemary chicken, garden blend vegetables, rice pilaf, dinner roll, pie, beverage, $15 for adults, $12 for children 613, children under 6 eat free. Take out available. Tickets available at the church office between 9 a.m. and noon weekdays or tickets will be sold at the door. Come all. OCTOBER 18-20 ANNUAL FALL FISHING DERBY Hosted by the Deseronto Yacht Club. Tickets $10 each, cash prizes for walleye, pike and bass. Many draw prizes. Call Terry at 6 1 3 - 2 4 2 - 3 1 1 1 .

T H E

N A PA N E E

COMMUNITY PULSE receipt). For more information, call the Roblin Wesleyan Church at 613-3882518 or e-mail matt.mccullough@crossworld.org. CHRISTMAS GIFT SALE The Bath and District Lions Club is holding their annual Christmas Gift Sale in the South Fredericksburgh Community Hall (County Rd. 8 between Bath and Napanee) this year from 10 a.m. until 3 p.m. Please plan to join us for great gifts and gift ideas. Free admittance. For more information please call Al Beatty 613-352-5220 or email allanbeatty@hotmail.com. GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY The Kingston Branch of the Ontario Genealogical Society will meet in the Wilson Room of Kingston Frontenac Public Library, 130 Johnson St., at 10 a.m. Shirley-Ann Pyefinch, Director of the Ottawa Stake Family History Centre, LDS, will speak on "Utilizing Family Search.org Information Resources". Visitors always welcome. Further

www.dycboating.websitesofcanada.com. OCTOBER 19 KINGSTON HARD OF HEARING CLUB Speaker is Wendy Hartwick, fire inspector, who will discuss fire safety. At the Senior’s Centre in Kingston. From 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Assistive listening devices, accessible, refreshments. All welcome. Call 613-546-5615. YOUTH HALLOWEEN DANCE At the Bellrock Hall. Costumes are encouraged but not obligatory. Cost is $5 and the fun starts at 7 p.m. For more information, call Judy Reynolds at 613-3742036. Children under 10 must be accompanied by an adult. ST. PATRICKS’ PARISH ANNUAL HARVEST BAZAAR From 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the parish hall at 179 West St. Grand luncheon from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., price is $6 adults, $3 children 12 and under. Baked goods, crafts, silent auction, raffle tickets, country store, touch n’ take. LAND O’ LAKES CRUISERS DANCE At the Enterprise Community Hall from 8 p.m. to midnight. Tickets at the door, $25 per couple, $12.50 per single. Lunch provided. Sponsored by the Tamworth and District Lions Club. For info, call 613-3792952 or 613-358-2702. CAMBODIAN FUNDRAISER DINNER In support of Matthew and Nary McCullough and their girls, missionaries serving full time at Gateway Cafe Ministries through Crossworld Canada. Cambodian food, silent auction, local singers. Cost is $50 per person ($40 receives a tax

BEST PRICE

Smitty has been keeping customers happy for 25 years in the appliance business. This proves Smitty has the BEST PRICE, SELECTION, GUARANTEE, QUALITY & SERVICE plus same day delivery, seven days a week.

Smitty plans to be around for another 25 years. Now he has in-house financing at NO INTEREST. These are just a few of the many reasons to visit SMITTY’S for your new or used appliance purchase.

Corner of Thomas & Fourth St. 9:00am - Worship Service AA meeting Friday 8pm

GRACE UNITED CHURCH

150 Robert St., Napanee Corner of Bridge, West & Robert St. 10:30am - Worship Service 10:30am Sunday School Nursery Care provided Cable 10 Broadcast Friday, 8pm - Sunday, 12:30pm Caring Family Congregations Please join us for worship

DESERONTO PENTECOSTAL CHURCH 469 Dundas Street, Deseronto, Ontario 613-396-3841 Pastor: Rev. Howard Dudgeon Assistant Pastor Dan Rooney 10am - Sunday School Morning Worship at 10:45am Evening Service at 6:30pm Tuesday 5:30pm-Kid’s Program “Faith Weaver Friends” Wednesday 7pm - Family night. 7pm-Youth Bible Study at Pastor Dan’s Home Everyone welcome. Affiliated with PAOC.

Open Evenings & Seven Days A Week River Road - Corbyville (Just North of Corby’s)

PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH OF THE REDEEMER 155 St. George St., Deseronto Minister: Rev. James Gordon 396-3119 or 396-2347 9:15am - Church Service and Sunday School

NAPANEE STANDARD WESLEYAN CHURCH

51 Palace Road Pastors: Rev. Ivan and Anne Langdon Sunday Worship - 10:30am and 7pm Children’s Program - 10:30am Wednesday: Ladies Bible study/prayer 10:30am Bible study/prayer 7pm Thursday 4pm: Kids Club - Ages 4-12 “In essentials: unity, In non-essentials: liberty, In all things, charity (love).” Phone: 354-1924, 354-5637 Everyone welcome.

EAST CAMDEN PASTORAL CHARGE

r r r GUARA

NTEE

BES SELEC T TION BEST SERVI CE

SMITTY’S KING OF APPLIANCES

TH

DESERONTO UNITED CHURCH

NER

Starting at 6 p.m. at the Deseronto Community Centre at 51 Mechanic St. Tickets $40 per person, $75 per couple, $280 per table of eight. Advance tickets only, available at Deseronto Town Hall. Call 613-3962440, dvalentyne@deseronto.ca. All proceeds benefit the Centennial Park Revitalization Project. CHRISTMAS GIFT SALE The Verona Lions Club is holding their annual Christmas Gift Sale in the Verona Lions Hall (4505 Sands Rd. in Verona , The Verona Market ) this year from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m. Please plan to join us for

For NEW or GOOD USED Appliances

r r BE TY QUALI

SUNDAY, OCT. 13 , 2013

Minister: Rev. Frank Hamper 613-354-4373

information at www.ogs.on.ca/kingston. ROAST BEEF DINNER, SILENT AUCTION Starting at 6 p.m. at St. Mary Magdalene’s Church hall. Viewing items for auction: 10:30 a.m. until 6 p.m. Dinner tickets: in the church office 613-354-3141, adults $12, children under 12 $6. YUK YUK’S COMEDY SHOW AND DIN-

Smitty’s Warehouse Operation BEST ST

Church Services DESERONTO-NAPANEE PASTORAL CHARGE

COMMUNITY / 9

B E AV E R

613-377-6406 The United Church of Canada Rev. Elaine Kellogg Riverside United Church Yarker 9:30am: Worship Service & Sunday School Details: 613-377-6406 www.mosriv.com Moscow United Church Worship Service 7pm - Social to follow Kids Club, ages 5-12, Sat. 10am-11am

TRINITY UNITED CHURCH

25 Bridge St. E. 613-354-3858 Join us and Rev. Mark Arnill for our Celebration of Thanksgiving! 10:30am Sunday School available. Light refreshments after Service. “Give thanks to God, bless God’s name” Everyone invited and Aways Welcome! Learn more about us at www.trinitynapanee.ca

NEWBURGH-CENTREVILLE PASTORAL CHARGE The United Church of Canada 613-378-2511 Rev. Barbara Mahood 9:30am Worship Service & Sunday School at Centreville 11am Worship Service at Newburgh (3rd Sunday of each month is a Contemporary Praise Service at Newburgh) Everyone is Welcome!

TEMPLE OF PRAYER AND PRAISE

261 West St., 354-5910 (near Prince Charles School) Pastor - Rev. Stephen Lush Sun. Morning - 10:30am Worship Service SonShine Corner Ages 4-9 7pm - Wednesday Bible Study & Prayer Welcome! Come and Worship with us. Visit us online at: www.templeofprayerandpraise.org

969-0287

great gifts and gift ideas. For more information please call Al Beatty 613 352 5220 or email allanbeatty@hotmail.com. Free admittance. OCTOBER 19-20 FALL FIBRE AFFAIR Returns to the FairfieldGutzeit House in Bath from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The event features talented local artists in a variety of media: weaving, quilting, felting, art-to-wear, spinning, fibre art, hand-dyed silks and as an added interest, pottery! The Red Cow Society will provide refreshments in the historic dining room. The Fairfield-Gutzeit House is located in the wonderful

SENIORS’ CALENDAR

L&A SOS DINERS Call 354-6668 to reserve your meal, transportation. n Odessa-Emmanuel United Church on Oct. 17, starting at noon. Ham and scalloped potatoes dinner and entertainment by Ian Bell. Cost is $10 per person. Seats and transportation must be reserved in advance by calling the SOS office.

RECREATION FUN n L&A SOS and the 55 Plus Activity Centre for the fall are offering Fitness Classes: All levels including Cardio, Strength Training, Toning, Stretching, Yoga, Relaxation and Zumba Gold. Art Programs: Learn to Draw, Beginner, Intermediate and Advanced Painting, Creative Writing, Knitting, Quilting. Social Programs: Euchre, Family History, Bridge Refresher. Computer Courses: One on One Assistance for Beginners or Intermediate, (book an appointment), Skype, Facebook, EReader, Computer Level 1 You must be a member of SOS to attend. For information call 613-354-6668.

L&A SOS Offsite Activities ($2 pay-as-you-go): n Line Dancing Intermediate Mondays 10:30 a.m. (Napanee Legion) n Line Dancing Progressive Mondays 1:30 p.m. (Napanee Legion) n Line Dancing Beginner Wednesdays 10:30 a.m. (Napanee Legion) n Intermediate Tai Chi Wednesdays 10:30 a.m. (Trinity United Church) n Beginner Tai Chi Wednesdays 9:30 a.m. (Trinity United Church)

BATH-MORVEN PASTORAL CHARGE

THE SALVATION ARMY

ST. MARY MAGDALENE ANGLICAN CHURCH

CATHOLIC CHURCH

82 Richard St., Napanee Office - 354-4735 Minister: Rev. Judy MacGillivray Major Craig and Patsy Rowe Charge Office: (613) 352-5375 Email: bath.morvenuc.office@bellnet.ca SUNDAY - 10:30am Morning Worship WEDNESDAY - 12 noon Bible study Morven United Church Service 9am, Sunday School & Nursery 1st Wed. - 12 noon Ministry to Women Wed.- 4:30pm Friends Club Ages 5-11 Bath United Church 3rd Thurs. - 12:30pm 55+ Service 10:30am, Sunday School & Nursery Everyone welcome. Fellowship & refreshments after Service Everyone is Welcome! ST. PATRICK’S 137 Robinson St., Napanee K7R 2S3 613-354-3141 Priest: Rev. Richard Hetke Rev. Brother D.B. Smith SUNDAY SERVICES 8:00am Holy Communion 10:30am - Holy Communion Children’s Ministry Programs TUESDAY 6:30-8pm Youth Program “The Heard” WEDNESDAY 10am Holy Communion Visit us at www.stmarymagdalenenapanee.ca

WESTDALE PARK FREE METHODIST CHURCH

(across from the hospital) Pastor Derek Spink 7 Richmond Park Drive, Napanee 613-354-2669 www.westdaleparkfmc.ca email: info@westdaleparkfmc.ca SUNDAY 10:00am - Worship Service 11:15am - Coffee & Snacks 11:30am - Sunday School & Small Groups 6:30pm - Prayer Service

NAPANEE BAPTIST CHURCH “A Place to Belong” 291 Dundas St. W. 613-354-4563 Pastor John Stewart Sunday morning at 10:30am Family Worship Service Sunday Evening Service 7pm Chair Lift Available “Where the Bible comes to Life!”

village of Bath, 341 Main St., just 30 minutes west of Kingston and less than 20 minutes from the Odessa 401 exit. Admission is free. For more information visit us online at www.fallfibreaffair.ca. OCTOBER 20 COMMUNITY FREE SKATE From 4-5:30 p.m. at Strathcona Paper Center on Goodyear Rink. Donations accepted for United Way KFLA. Kids' Halloween Costume Contest, Face Painting, Family Fun Package draw. The Napanee Fire Dept. will be skating in full fire gear and so will the Napanee OPP. Come out and join the fun! SUNDAY BREAKFAST At the Bath Legion in Millhaven, from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., everyone welcome.

179 West Street, Napanee Rev. Mark Chochrek, Pastor Phone: 613-354-5354 Website: www.stpatsnapanee.com Saturday 5:15pm - Mass Sunday 9:00am-Mass; 10:30am-Mass

ENTERPRISE-ROBLIN UNITED CHURCH PASTORAL CHARGE Rev. Anne MacDermaid 389-5548 Enterprise -9:15am - Worship Service Roblin 11am - Worship Service and Sunday School Everyone Welcome

ROBLIN WESLEYAN CHURCH

Pastors: Bert McCutcheon, Dustin Crozier, Paul DeMerchant SUNDAY SERVICES 10:15am Sunday School 8:45am and 11am - Morning Service KidsClub - Tuesday, 6:30pm MOMENTUM Youth - Thursday 7pm OTHER MINISTRIES: Men’s, Women’s & 50+ Small Group Studies For more information 613-388-2518 www.roblinwesleyan.ca roblinw@gmail.com Find us on Facebook!

COMMUNITY CHURCH OF GOD 4734 German Rd., Petworth Pastor: Rev. Ruth Ann Paul Phone: 613-358-2824 Morning Worship - 11am Everyone is always welcome at all our Services

474 Belleville Road 613-354-1083 or 613-354-6934 Pastor: Tom Breeden Come join us in Worship Sundays 10:30am & 6:00pm Wednesday Prayer & Bible Study 7:00pm Everyone Welcome

SELBY - EMPEY HILL PASTORAL CHARGE

The United Church of Canada Minister: Rev. Jean Brown Charge Office: 613-388-2375 “Worship for all ages; Children’s activity each week” Selby: 9:45am Worship Service and Sunday School Cornerstone Kids Group Wednesdays 6:30pm All kids ages 7-11 welcome Empey Hill: 11:15am Worship Service

EVANGEL TEMPLE

(Affiliated with PAOC) 320 Bridge St. W., Napanee Pastor: Rev. Jim Somerville Sunday - 10:30am and 6:00pm Sunday School (ages 3-12) Wed. 6:00pm - BG Club - Ages 3-11 Thurs. 7:00pm: Jr. High (Grades 6 and 7) Sr. High (Ages 13-18) Small Groups 50+ Men’s & Women’s Ministry For more information, call the Church at 613-354-4281 www.evangelnapanee.com


10 / COMMUNITY

T H E

N A PA N E E

B E AV E R

Thursday, October 10, 2013

L&A to add convalescent care component BY ADAM PRUDHOMME Staff Reporter

Generous residents, an exemplary rating and a move to convalescent care were all celebrated during the Lennox and Addington County General Hospital’s donor appreciation gathering last Wednesday. All three topics were discussed before a room full of LACGH donors as board members reviewed the year that was and way is on the horizon. Prompted by the recent closure of Picton Manor Long Term Care Centre, the South East Local Health Integration Network asked the Napanee hospital to house some of the 78 beds that were at the manor. The LACGH then applied for a grant to refurbish their facility so OCTOBER 20 SUNDAY BREAKFAST At the Bath Legion in Millhaven, from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., everyone welcome. OCTOBER 21 BATH GARDENING CLUB Group will meet at 2 p.m. at St. John’s Hall in Bath. Annual general meeting with speaker Joanne Chamberlain of Willowbrook Farms, discussing the theme ‘Why Buy Local?’ Visitors always welcome. For more information visit www.bathgardeningclub.com.

they could become a convalescent care facility. They received a $100,000 grant from the Ministry of Health to begin renovations to prepare for the switch, which is expected to take place in November. “With convalescent care, our 22 designated beds will have a whole different purpose,” said LACGH CEO Wayne Coveyduck. “The type of patient that will come into those beds are typically rehab patients. People who have had a stroke, or post surgery or just going through some sort of condition that their physician feels they’re going to have a good prognosis of being rehabilitated. The maximum stay for that type of patient is 90 days. The average stay is about 37 days.” To make room for those patients, LACGH is cur-

rently transferring their Alternative Level of Care patients, which are typically those waiting for placement in a nursing home, to other facilities in the region. Coveyduck says the hospital will need to undergo an inspection later this month to determine what they’ll need to do to be equipped for the change. Additional start up costs will be determined at that time. No jobs will be lost in the switch. As for the hospital staff as a whole, they can now beam with pride after LACGH was graded one of the top hospitals in the country. “We went through an accreditation process with Accreditation Canada,” said LACGH Foundation Chair Peggy Rice. “They came in and evaluated the

hospital. They looked at the procedures that we do, how clean it is, the state of the building and our lab. We ended up with a standing of 99.3 per cent.” They will hold the exemplary title for at least the next four years, when they are subject to another examination. “We all know this is a great place,” said Rice. “When an outside group comes in, spends four days with us, asks a lot of questions and interviews lots of people and watches closely what you do and comes back with an exemplary standing, you have to feel pretty good.” Much of that success was attributed to the generous donors who help keep LACGH at the forefront of health care. So kind is the community that the hospital’s

donor recognition boards are running out of space to display their names. That’s why the hospital has purchased two digital boards that will display the names on a rotating basis. “‘In memoriam’ will have death notices and pictures of family members that will be readily accessible and visible where as we can’t do that in our old system,” said LACGH Foundation rep Robert Paul. “It also gives us the opportunity to promote what is happening at the hospital, promote new things in the campaign or even news items that are going on at the hospital.” Paul says the current board will still remain in the hallway by the hospital’s main entrance, but no names will be added after this year. Paul also offered a brief

COMMUNITY PULSE OCTOBER 23 LINE DANCING At the Tamworth Legion, from 7-9 p.m. OCTOBER 24 ZUMBA GOLD At the Tamworth Legion, from 9:30-10:30 a.m. OCTOBER 26 ‘SIMPLY THE BEST’ ADULT HALLOWEEN DANCE At Enterprise Community Hall from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.

Costume judging at 11 p.m. Please be on time. Hot buffet. Top 40, old rock, some country by DJ. Prizes for best costume, best couple, most original and most gross. Always a great time, this party rocks! Tickets at the door, $15 a dingle, $25 a couple. Call 613-3582002, 613-358-2053 or 613358-9077. Sponsored by Enterprise Community

WANTED

WELDER-FITTER Specializing in Stainless Steel 18-24 gauge. Experienced only 613-483-4331 will@yourit.info us n o B g n i ns n o g s r Si e ght p

ri e h t for

and Hall Committee. BEST CHILD AND YOUTH HALLOWEEN DANCE At Enterprise Community Hall from 5-8 p.m. From 56:30 p.m., ages 7 and under, cost $3 at the door, will include hot dog and drink, extra hot dogs $1. Smoke machines, strobe lights and cool tunes. Event for older children lasts until 8 p.m. Prizes for best costume, most original, most cute and for ages over 7 years, most gross — plus honourable mentions. Judging for younger children at 6:15 p.m., judging for older children at 7:45 p.m. Parental supervision requested. Call 613-358-9077. Sponsored by Enterprise Community and Hall Committee. BIG EUCHRE At the Bath Legion in Millhaven, registration at 11 a.m., play starts at noon. Entry fee $5 each. Bring a partner. CHURCH SUPPER Hosted by St. Alban’s Anglican Church on Amherst Island, from 5-7 p.m. at the community centre. Adults $15, children 6-12 $7,

preschoolers free. ‘A STITCH IN TIME’ BAZAAR At Trinity United Church in Napanee from 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Coffee and muffins, luncheon at 11:30 a.m. and 12:45 p.m. Adults $10, children $5 (advance tickets). Pone the church office at 613-354-3858 or Lorraine at 613-354-4167. Crafts, bake table, book sale, quilt display and much more. HOLIDAY SHOPPING TRIP TO TORONTO Bus trip to Toronto, including Samko and Miko Toy Warehouse and Vaughan Mills. Cost is $35 per person. Couch bus departs and 7 a.m. from Deseronto Community Centre at 51 Mechanic St. Advance tickets only, available at Deseronto Town Hall. Call 613-396-2440 or email dvalentyne@deseronto.ca. All proceeds benefit the Centennial Park Revitalization Project. CHRISTMAS GIFT SALE The Verona Lions Club is holding their annual Christmas Gift Sale in the Verona Lions Hall (4505 Sands Rd. ,

‘state of the union’ of sorts, telling donors where their money has gone over the last year. “We’ve committed $235,000 for equipment in the hospital,” said Paul. “Most of it is cancer care related. Going forward there are always a need for new projects and new equipment.” Also in the blueprints for this year are plans for the foundation to campaign for younger donors through social media. Though financially they’re in great shape, they need only look around the province and the cuts to other health care facilities to see how important it is to have community support. To find out more about them, visit www.web.lacgh.Napanee.o n.ca/Foundation. Verona) from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m. Please plan to join us for great gifts and gift ideas. Free admittance. For more information please call Al Beatty 613 352 5220 or email allanbeatty@hotmail.com. ‘BAROQUETOBERFEST’ Trillio presents their fifth annual Baroquetoberfest, a festival of Oktoberfest foods, to the accompaniment of German Baroque music. Sausages, ham, sauerkraut, potato salads, and more, will satisfy your Oktoberfest cravings. With music by German composers from the time of Bach, Telemann and Handel, played expertly by Trillio’s musicians on period instruments (recorders, viola da gambas, baroque oboe and bassoon, and harpsichord), it all adds up to a fun evening of music, food and friends! Reserve ahead, as seating is limited and this is a very popular event. Starts at 6:30 p.m., St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church, 130 Clergy St. East, in downtown Kingston. Tickets $40 (includes concert and food). For information and reservations, contact Heather Schreiner, Ljs2@queensu.ca, 613-6349312.

Lennox & Addington Seniors Outreach wishes to thank Dan McGrath and family for choosing SOS this year for their charity of choice on behalf of their Annual Rita McDonald Memorial Golf Tournament held Sept 8 at the Amherstview Golf Course.

The Rita McDonald Memorial Golf Tournament started five years ago in memory of the McGrath’s mother who died at a very early age of cancer. The golf tournament was established to bring family members together for a fun day which turned into a fund raiser with the proceeds going to a specified charity. SOS was delighted to be chosen this year, and also extremely delighted to receive $1,200.00 to be used for our programs. This generosity is invaluable to us as it enables us to continue to service the community. On behalf of the Board, staff, and volunteers, we thank you Dan and family for organizing this event. We also thank all the listed Sponsors for your donations to making this another successful and delightful event. Sincerely, Thank You Wendy McDonald, Executive Director L&A SOS

2013 Donors List – Fifth Annual Rita McDonald Memorial Golf Tournament Wal-Mart Napanee Canadian Tire Napanee, Play it Again Sports Kingston L&A Mutual Insurance Company L&A Mutual Insurance Company - Donna Hodgson No Frills Napanee. State Farm Insurance Company - Gerry Haggerty Home Hardware Store Napanee Mark’s Work Warehouse Napanee The Waterfront River Pub Napanee TCO Agromart Ltd Napanee Agoren Self Storage & Napanee Driving Range Canadian Tire Gas Bar Napanee Boyer Peter Chev, GMC Ltd. Napanee

Loaf & Ale Napanee Napanee Rona Queen’s Pub Napanee John Hoy Welding Savage’s Home Hardware Store Odessa. Loyal Oarmen, Kingston Pringle Ford Napanee Golden Star Restaurant Amherstveiw Briar Fox Golf & Country Club Marysville Bell Canada Country Traditions Frozen Foods Napanee Total Turf Care - Gary Creighton Napanee Brian & Mavis Way Canadian Tire – Gardiners Rd Kingston


Thursday, October 10, 2013

T H E

N A PA N E E

COMMUNITY / 11

B E AV E R

COMMUNITY PULSE

All Things Apples Celebrated At The Mac House

OCTOBER 27 SUNDAY BREAKFAST At the Bath Legion in Millhaven, from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., everyone welcome. HAM SUPPER Lonsdale Women’s Institute ham supper fundraiser at the Melrose Recreation Hall. Two seatings at 4:30 p.m. and 6 p.m. Cost is $15 for adults, $5 for children six and under. Ham, scalloped potatoes, baked beans and all the trimmings, including dessert. Advance booking — for tickets call Marg 613-396-5281 or Roxanne 613-779-8280. TURKEY DINNER Newburgh United Church will be holding their annual turkey dinner from 4-6:30 p.m. Freewill offering at the door. Dine in or take out. All are welcome. OCTOBER 30 KINGSTON OLD TYME FIDDLERS Group is holding its monthly ‘Fiddling Funtasia’ at the Rideau Acres Banquet Hall. There will be music and dancing from 2-6 p.m., followed by dinner. Cost for members is $8 and for non-members $10. Please call 613-387-2852 for more information. 7,&2

1RUWK )URQW 6W 8QLW %HOOHYLOOH 21 . 3 $

ZZZ *R0F&R\ FRP

1(: <25. '(/8;( 1RY

Radio City Rockettes Christmas Spectacular, Cinderella on Broadway, tour & lunch at the MET, and more!

$WODQWLF &LW\ )DOO 6SHFLDO 2)) 1RY $Q 2]DUN &KULVWPDV LQ %UDQVRQ 1RY 1)/ %LOOV YV 1HZ <RUN -HWV 1RY *LUOV 6KRSSLQJ :DWHUORR DQG 6\UDFXVH 1RY )HVWLYDO RI /LJKWV 1LDJDUD )DOOV *HWDZD\ 'HF

REBA McENTIRE OCT 27 K-Rock Centre, Kingston Adam Prudhomme-Staff

Serving up cider the early pioneer way, Macpherson House curator Karen Price dishes out the warm drink cooked in the fireplace. As part of the Applefest celebrations, families had the chance to bake apple goodies, sample cider, make some crafts and tour the historic house.

2UODQGR )/25,'$ 'HF -DQ 0DU 1HZ <RUN &LW\ 1HZ <HDUÂśV (YH 'HF -DQ :LQWHU &ODVVLF LQ 'HWURLW /HDIV YV 5HG :LQJV 'HF -DQ 1HZ 2UOHDQV 7KH %LJ (DV\ -DQ 'D\WRQD %HDFK -DQ )HE 6W 3HWHUVEXUJ )HE 0DU 4XHEHF &LW\ :LQWHU &DUQLYDO )HE

tĹ?ĹŻĹŻ LJŽƾ Ä?Äž Ç€Ĺ?Ć?Ĺ?Ć&#x;ĹśĹ? ĨĆŒĹ?ĞŜĚĆ? ĂŜĚ ĆŒÄžĹŻÄ‚Ć&#x;ǀĞĆ? ƚŚĹ?Ć? dŚĂŜŏĆ?Ĺ?Ĺ?Ç€Ĺ?ĹśĹ?Í?͘͘ Ç Äž ŚĂǀĞ Ä‚ÄŤĹ˝ĆŒÄšÄ‚Ä?ĹŻÄž ĂŜĚ ƾŜĹ?ƋƾĞ ,Ĺ˝Ć?ƚĞĆ?Ć? Ĺ?Ĺ?ĹŒĆ?͘ KÄ?ƚŽÄ?ÄžĆŒ Ĺ?Ĺś Ć?ĆšĹ˝ĆŒÄž :ÄžÇ ÄžĹŻĹŻÄžĆŒÇ‡ Ć?ƉĞÄ?Ĺ?Ä‚ĹŻÍ™Í˜Í˜ Ç Ĺ?ƚŚ ƚŚĞ žĞŜĆ&#x;ŽŜ ŽĨ ƚŚĹ?Ć? ĂĚĚ Ä?ƾLJ ĂŜLJ ƉĹ?ÄžÄ?Äž Ĺ˝ĆŒ Ć?Ğƚ Ĺ?Ğƚ ƚŚĞ Ć?ÄžÄ?ŽŜÄš

tĹ˝ĆŒĆšĹš Ĺ?Ć?Ä?Ĺ˝Ç€ÄžĆŒĹ?ĹśĹ? ͙͘͘͘

͞ŽĨ Ć?ĂžĞ Ĺ˝ĆŒ ĹŻÄžĆ?Ć?ÄžĆŒ ǀĂůƾĞͿ

Ä‚Ćš ŚĂůĨ Ć‰ĆŒĹ?Ä?Äž

1 Medium 3-Topping Pizza and an order of Cheesy Bread

www.explorersmarket.com

Centre St

ĎŽĎł <ÄžĹŻĹŻÇ Ĺ˝Ĺ˝Äš ĆŒÄžĆ?͘ EĂƉĂŜĞĞ Tim Hortons ϲϭϯ ϯϹϰ ϹϲϰϾ DŽŜ͘ ƚŽ ^Ä‚ĆšÍ˜ Ď­ĎŹÄ‚Ĺľ-ϹƉž ÍžÇ Äž Ç Ĺ?ĹŻĹŻ Ä?Äž Ä?ĹŻĹ˝Ć?ĞĚ dŚĂŜŏĆ?Ĺ?Ĺ?Ç€Ĺ?ĹśĹ? DŽŜĚĂLJͿ >/< Θ ^, Z ŽƾĆŒ ƉĂĹ?Äž ƚŽ ƋƾĂůĹ?ĨLJ ĨŽĆŒ ŽƾĆŒ ΨϹϏÍ˜ĎŹĎŹ Ĺ?Ĺ?ĹŒ Ä?ÄžĆŒĆ&#x;ÄŽÄ?ĂƚĞ ÄšĆŒÄ‚Ç KÄ?ƚŽÄ?ÄžĆŒ Ď­Ďą

W

S

E

Hwy 401

Kingston

99

12

ORDER CODE 3076

27 Kellwood Cres

Richmond Blvd

GT

Industrial Blvd

NAPANEE DOWNTOWN

Country Traditions

Camden Rd

Belleville

N

Advance

ƚŽ Ć?ĞĞ Ć?ŽžÄž ŽĨ Ç ĹšÄ‚Ćš Ĺ?Ć? ĂǀĂĹ?ĹŻÄ‚Ä?ĹŻÄž KŜůĹ?ŜĞ ĂŜĚ Ĺ?Ĺś Ć?ĆšĹ˝ĆŒÄž

Hwy 41

ĆľĆŒĹ?ŽƾĆ?Í? ŚĞÄ?ĹŹ ŽƾĆš ŽƾĆŒ Ç ÄžÄ?Ć?Ĺ?ƚĞ

$

tÄž Ä‚ĆŒÄž Ä?ĞŚĹ?ŜĚ 'd LJŽƾ Ä?Ä‚Ĺś Ć?ĞĞ ŽƾĆŒ Ć?Ĺ?Ĺ?Ĺś ĨĆŒŽž ƚŚĞ Ď°ĎŹĎ­ Ć?ŽƾƚŚ Ć?Ĺ?ĚĞ Ä?ÄžĆšÇ ÄžÄžĹś WÄ‚ĹŻÄ‚Ä?Äž ZĚ͘ ĂŜĚ ,Ç Ç‡ Ď°Ď­ ĞdžĹ?ĆšĆ?

354-2287 NAPANEE (613) 113 Richmond Blvd., N NOW DELIVERING TO SELBY, DESERONTO AND NEWBURGH!


12 / COMMUNITY

T H E

N A PA N E E

B E AV E R

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Firefighters’ timely fundraiser hits the shelves Greater Napanee Fire Services’ calendar features number of action shots from past year

BY ADAM PRUDHOMME Staff Reporter

Packed with 12 months’ worth of captivating shots of firefighters in action, the 2014 Greater Napanee Fire Services charity calendar bucks all the clichés. Rather than depict airbrushed firefighters posing in the station, the calendar features the shots of GNFS’s Rob Hanna, taken on the scenes of real fires, accidents and community events. All proceeds from the $10 calendars go to buy Christmas presents for

kids at Frontenac, Lennox and Addington Family and Children Services and to the Lennox and Addington OSPCA. “You’re not just buying a calendar, you’re buying something for the community as well,” said Kevin Duncan, a fire prevention officer with GNFS. “Every dime that we generate goes right back into (the community). We’re very keen about that to make sure the generating costs of the calendar are all paid by the sponsors.” Canvassing for sponsors was done by GNFS’ Jeff Croke while Bonnie

BRIDGE WEST ANIMAL HOSPITAL DR. JULIE AMEY 311 Bridge Street West, Napanee 613-409-PETS (7387) bridgewest@kingston.net www.bridgewestanimalhospital.ca Your Pets...... Our Privilege

Boomhower looked after the financial side of it all. No one firefighter was solely responsible for the project — rather it was a team effort. Every single member of the department appears somewhere throughout the calendar. “You see a lot of photos where its the posed shots,” Duncan said of typical calendars. “What we tried to do this year and in the past is to stay away from those and show us at scenes and show what we do in the community. It’s firefighting, it’s not posing.” As a thank-you to their sponsors, the department is encouraging anyone who buys the calendar to consider shopping with their sponsors whenever possible. If the department is able to sell all 500 copies, they’ll raise $5,000 for the community. They’re now available at all fire stations across Greater Napanee as well as Home Hardware, Esso gas station, town hall and other municipal buildings. Duncan’s hoping by introducing them a little earlier this year they’ll be

NAPANEE FAIRGROUNDS

VEHICLE STORAGE $10 PER LINEAR FOOT PLUS HST FOR THE SEASON All vehicles in Saturday November 2nd, 2013 at 8am and vehicles out Saturday April 12th, 2014 at 8am. No Exceptions. Proof of Insurance required. First come, first served. FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT 613•354•5264

Adam Prudhomme-Staff

Greater Napanee Fire Service’s Rob Hanna (left) and Jeff Croke show off the 2014 charity calendar, which is now available at the station. able to sell a few more copies. Meanwhile, as part of Fire Prevention Week, members of the department will be teaming with Dominoes to deliver pizzas

this evening. Anyone who orders pizza tonight might just have a firefighter and truck show up at their door. The department did the same thing last year and it

was a huge hit. Fire Prevention Week continues through to Saturday. This year’s theme is raising awareness of how to prevent fires in the kitchen.

‘Chill Zone’ eyes online contest

BY ASHLEY ESPINOZA Staff Reporter

The Chill Zone has entered into a contest that could fund the centre for three years. Trish Reid, community development coordinator, said if the Chill Zone wins the Aviva Community Fund contest, the centre could

reopen and help hundreds of local youth. “We had the youth space opened for four months and had over 117 people attend, so we’re applying to the Aviva Community Fund to reopen the Chill Zone,” said Reid. “The Aviva money would give us at least three years. If we got the $150,000, that’s three years of our space open.”

The Chill Zone has applied for the largest funding budget, valued between $100,000 and $150,000. There are three other ways the Chill Zone could receive funds through the Aviva contest. “There’s a whole other youth-at-risk category and that’s up to $150,000. And every finalist receives a minimum of $5,000, so even if we are finalists (we receive funding),” said Reid. The Chill Zone has also been broker supported by McDougall Insurance, which also supported Deseronto’s Centennial Park Aviva project. Being broker supported gives the community another opportunity to win funds from the Aviva Community Fund contest. “Aviva will fund at least one idea from each prize, so technically there are four opportunities (for us) to win. There are lots of opportunities here.” She hopes the community will participate by casting votes online at www.avivacommunityfund.org/ideas/ac f16868. Her personal goal is to reach 500. By presstime the Chill Zone had 177 votes. “It doesn’t cost anyone anything to vote. There is zero cost to raise this money. This takes two seconds and there is no reason why we can’t, as a community, come together and organize this and get the 500 votes we need,” she said. “It’s all about our community supporting us. We hope we can get the votes through our community.” Reid hopes to reopen the Chill Zone in January 2014, if proper funding is acquired. Over $6,000 has been raised through community fund raisers and projects so far.


Thursday, October 10, 2013

T H E

N A PA N E E

B E AV E R

COMMUNITY / 13

NDSS student pens top story for WritersFest Jacob Wilde wins with ‘inspired’ short composition BY ASHLEY ESPINOZA Staff Reporter

A Napanee District Secondary School student felt inspired to write and, through the mentorship of a teacher, has now won a grand prize in the Kingston WritersFest contest. Jacob Wilde, Grade 12, composed a story entitled, ‘Sundays in the Fridge’ based on a free-writing assignment teacher Mitchell Skinner assigned, which inspired Wilde to write one line, which later evolved into a first-place story. “You just write for 20 minutes and the rule is that you can’t take your pen off the paper and you just get sort of a ‘bleh,’ unconscious blabbering on paper, and that’s where you can take a lot of your really creative ideas. There was one line in (my) free-write that said, ‘lemons in the ice box sentencing the peach to solitary confinement,’” he explained last week, after his story won the grand prize. That is one line in the beginning of Wilde’s story, which is a fictional tale based on fruits and vegetables. “It was a story about a society of vegetables and fruits in the fridge, and taking sort of a central role in that were the lemons,” explained Wilde, who has enjoyed writing as a hobby NAPANEE BADMINTON CLUB… At NDSS Gym 2 on Monday nights from 7:-9:30 p.m. and Thursday nights from 7-9:30 p.m. First night, Sept. 16, is free for new members. Cost is $65 per season, September to the end of May. Ages 16-plus welcome. Please bring your own racket, birdies are provided. If you are interested in joining or for further information, contact Paul Kimmett at paulkimmettres@hotmail.com.

for years. “I’ve been writing since I was very young and stories have always been fun. It’s a really fun thing to sit down with a piece of paper and make something up – to create something. I’m sort of hooked on that and no matter what I do in life, I’ll always have a pen and I’ll always be creating things,” said Wilde. Still, Wilde said he was “very surprised” to have won the Kingston WritersFest youth writing contest. “First we had a little inschool contest and I won that and I was very happy. I got a Margaret Atwoodsigned book. It was a wonderful surprise,” said Wilde, who has also entered a number of online writing competitions and has been published in a Passion Poetry magazine. One day, Wilde hopes to write his own novel. Prior to that, he hopes to hone his writing skills, especially in essay and persuasive writing forms. Wilde hopes to pursue a career as a child psychologist, but knows that he will always be a writer, no matter where his future takes him. “I don’t know what inspires me to write. All I know is that I am inspired to write,” he said.

Ashley Espinoza-Staff

Regardless of what his future life’s profession might be, NDSS student Jacob Wilde says he’ll always use writing as a creative outlet.

BARRY GRAHAM

CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT PROFESSIONAL CORPORATION

BARRY GRAHAM, HON. B.COMM, CPA, C.A. QUALITY ASSURANCE EXTENSIVE EXPERIENCE • • • •

Personal Income Tax Preparation Corporate Tax Preparation Estate Tax Preparation Business start-up advice including administrative set up and cash flow projections • Business re-structuring • Purchase and sale of a business • Bookkeeping and Payroll

NEW CLIENTS WELCOME 113 Richmond Blvd., Unit 13 613.354.8280 www.barrygraham.ca Member of National Farmers Union

“MY REAL BUSINESS IS HELPING MY CLIENTS”

FITNESS FACILITY OFFICIAL GRAND OPENING & RIBBON CUTTING October 18th, 2013 4PM- 7PM Come Take A Tour, Check Out Our Membership Rates & Talk To Our Certified Personal Trainers 310 Bridge Street West Napanee, ON K7R 0A4 Unit D02 (The Old Lenadco Building)

613.308.9558


14 / COMMUNITY

T H E

N A PA N E E

B E AV E R

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Deseronto

New equipment installed at Centennial Park Project part of larger revitalization initiative BY ASHLEY ESPINOZA Staff Reporter

Ashley Espinoza-Staff

From left are local resident Josh McNally, committee members Penny MacLean, Tracey Smith, and Lisa Brooks, Town of Deseronto Mayor Norman Clark, Deseronto staffmembers Dana Valentyne and Andy Conger, and town councillor Edgar Tumak.

New playground equipment has been installed in Deseronto’s Centennial Park, which means the first phase of the revitalization project is underway. New playground equipment was installed Sept. 23 and Dana Valentyne, economic development officer for the Town of Deseronto, said the new equipment has been very well liked. “It’s been very well used since it’s gone in. Every time when you drive by there’s a large number of kids playing on it and we’ve had a lot of positive feedback from the community about the new playground. Everyone seems very pleased with it, the design, they like the different options they have on it. We’re really pleased with the final result,” said Valentyne. “The new playground and variety of other park enhancements are a welcome addition and vital aspect of the community. A lot of planning has gone into making Centennial Park an enjoyable space for residents and visitors of all ages and interests,” explained Mayor Norman Clark, in a press release. This playground is the first of many changes Centennial Park will see in the near future, explained Valentyne. “We’re still in the fundraising stage so we’re trying to phase it out and complete various elements as funding comes in and is available,” she said. “The full budget for the project is just shy of $200,000. We’ve received $80,000 from the Community Infrastructure Improvement Fund, the town is contributing $45,000 to the project, and then

between fundraising committee activities and sponsorship, that leaves us with about $55,000 to raise. We’ve currently raised $32,000. So we’re just over halfway there and we do have a couple other funding applications pending. It’s moving really well. We’re hoping to meet our goal and maybe exceed it so we can look as some additional items,” said Valentyne. The first phase will continue through to March, 2014. This phase will include visitor amenities and landscaping features such as seating, picnic and rest areas; waste/recycle boxes, lighting fixtures, stroller/bicycle parking, additional trees and plants, waterfront development, boater amenities, shoreline restoration, and promoting public access to the waterfront. Valentyne said the community has been extremely supportive in sponsoring items for the park, including benches; however, the municipality is still looking for more support in sponsorship of picnic tables and trees. “We’ve got a plan to put between six and eight picnic tables in the park so we’re definitely looking for sponsorship on picnic tables. We also have bicycle racks as well and they all are up for sponsorship and we haven’t sold any of those yet. And we have trees, there’s a plan to put 10 new trees in the park,” said Valentyne. “The end result will be a park and a play space for all to explore and enjoy, one that enriches the quality of life for our youth, residents and visitors alike, and preserves it for future generations,” said Clark in a press release. A grand opening for the playground and the first phase will be held in May or June of 2014.

COMMUNITY PULSE

CAMBODIAN FUNDRAISER DINNER in support of Matthew & Nary McCullough and Girls (Miriam, Rachel & Rebekah) CAMBODIAN FOOD, SILENT AUCTION, LOCAL SINGERS... COST: $50 per person ($40 receives a tax receipt) In support of Missionaries, serving full time at Gateway Cafe Ministries through Crossworld Canada; an organization focused on discipleship, ‘Helping people everywhere to live and love like Jesus by imparting God’s truth through authentic relationships wherever it happens.’ Content: TRUTH, Context: RELATIONSHIPS, Classroom: LIFE

For more information contact Roblin Wesleyan Church 613.388.2518 or email matt.mccullough@crossworld.org

Others IInspiring nspiring Ot n O hers att a a

Star O St One S Sta tar

Time Ti T

OCTOBER 30 HERITAGE HARVEST DINNER Join the members of the AdolphustownFredericksburgh Heritage Society for a community roast beef dinner. Following the meal, Brian Johnson, captain of the Wolfe Islander III, will present ‘Ferry Tales from Wolfe Island’, recounting the history of the ferry link between Wolfe Island and the mainland. Arrive at South Fredericksburgh Hall, 2478 County Rd. 8, at 5:30 p.m. to view displays. Dinner to be served at 6:30 p.m. Tickets $16, in advance only, from Kathy Staples at kathystaples0@gmail.com or 613373-2877. LINE DANCING At the Tamworth Legion, from 7-9 p.m. HOSPITAL DESSERT BRIDGE At Grace United Church on Robert St. in Napanee, starting at 1 p.m. Dessert from11:30 p.m., bridge from1:30-4 p.m. Cost is $7, call Ann Lamb to reserve a table. OCTOBER 29 ‘PRESERVING YOUR GARDEN’S BOUNTY’ Tamworth/Erinsville GrassRoots Growers presents “Preserving Your Garden’s Bounty” at 7 p.m. at the Tamworth Library. Join us for a presentation by Angela Moore, local

Coordinated by: dina

NOMINATE SOMEONE TODAY! N Sponsored ored by:

gardener and food preserver, who will discuss food preservation methods. Angela and other experienced local preservers will answer your questions about canning, freezing and drying. The evening will conclude with preserve tasting and a recipe exchange. Feel free to bring your favourite preserve recipes to share with us! Admission is free and refreshments will be served. For more information contact us at: tegrass rootsgrowers@gmail.com. Or check our website at: www.tegrassrootsgrowers.weebly.com Participants are kindly requested not to wear scented products at GRG events. RETIRED WOMEN TEACHERS OF ONTARIO The Retired Women Teachers of Ontario (Belleville and area) invite all members and welcome other retired women teachers to their fall luncheon. They will meet at Emmanuel United Church, 458 Ashley St., Foxboro, at 11 a.m. Following a tenderloin lunch with all the trimmings, Lynda Rollins will share a power point presentation on education and life in the Dominican Republic. Donations will be accepted for Adopt-aChild. For more information and to reserve your place, please call 613-967-1863.


Thursday, October 10, 2013

T H E

N A PA N E E

NEWS / 15

B E AV E R

Deseronto enters into Aviva fundraising contest BY ASHLEY ESPINOZA

three-month voting process. There are three qualifying rounds and a semi-final round. They (Aviva) select 10 ideas from each level that go to a panel of judges. The judges are the ones that ultimately select which ideas will receive funding,” explained Dana Valentyne, economic development co-ordinator for the Town of Deseronto. “You can only vote once a day and you only have 15 votes that you can give out during each qualifying round. Each qualifying round is about 15 days so you have about one vote a day,” said Valentyne. Aviva Insurance is giv-

Staff Reporter

In hopes of receiving funds to revitalize the waterfront park, the Town of Deseronto is competing in the Aviva Community Fund’s online voting contest in an attempt to earn between $50,000 and $100,000 or more. The Centennial Park Revitalization Project has been fundraising for months but winning this contest would allow the project to be completed faster and with even more amenities. “Essentially it’s a

ing away $1 million to community projects across Canada. There are many ways to win some money through this project, one of which is by receiving votes, allowing the idea to progress to the next voting stage and finally to the judges. Another way of winning money is by being placed into another category of judging, under “Broker Supported” ideas. This is done when a broker votes for an idea under a company name. Deseronto and Napanee’s ideas have both been broker supported by McDougall Insurance, in

Napanee. “If you receive support from an insurance broker, then you have an additional chance to win up to $150,000 and I’m really happy to announce that Grant Insurance (a division of McDougall Insurance) in Napanee has given our project broker support, which is fantastic. I’m really thankful to Grant Insurance, they’ve been really supportive of us and we’re really pleased to receive that support. That gives us two chances to win the funding so it’s a great opportunity and we’re very appreciative,” said Valentyne.

contest is great because since each person can only vote once a day, it’s easy for people to support it. “They don’t have to commit a whole lot of time for it and make sure they’re at a computer four times a day. You don’t have to put a lot of effort into supporting this, just go on and vote once a day and that’s it,” Valentyne commented. Those who wish to can vote online for Deseronto’s Centennial Park Revitalization Project, at w w w. a v i v a c o m m u n i t y fund.org/ideas/acf17789. Winners will be announced Jan. 28, 2014.

“It gives us a leg up in the competition and now we have this other opportunity to win funding even if we aren’t necessarily selected as one of the final projects. It’s one of our many efforts to try and raise the funds that we need to complete the Centennial Park project,” she said. There are also $5,000 grants given to each qualifying idea. The first round opened Oct. 1 and will last until Oct. 14. The second round begins Oct. 21 and will last until Nov. 4. The contest will close Dec. 11. Valentyne said this

Health Centre provides diabetes cooking class

BY ASHLEY ESPINOZA

learn how to prepare healthy food on a daily basis. “The program is designed for individuals in the Lennox and Addington area living with prediabetes or diabetes. We encourage those who are interested to come out and learn how to help prevent, delay, or manage their diabetes through food. The class is designed to offer hands on learning experience where every participant is actively involved in the preparation process,”

Staff Reporter

A free educational cooking class for those with prediabetes and diabetes is coming to Napanee next month. ‘Let’s Get Cooking’ is offered in partnership by the Napanee Area Community Health Centre and the Kingston Community Health Centres. Aleris Cronk, a KCHC/NACHC dietitian, says it’s important for individuals to

she said. The group will be given three recipes to prepare together: an entrée, side dish and dessert. “During the session we discuss how the food being prepared benefits our health. We also discuss ways of altering the recipes to include other food groups, how to properly cut/prepare certain vegetables and fruit, and lastly, how to shop and cook on a budget,” explained Cronk. She encourages those who have participated in

the program before to come again, as well as those unfamiliar to the program to help broaden the foods discussed and enjoyed. “In previous classes, we had very curious individuals who requested to prepare recipes that involved tofu, bok choy, quinoa, different kinds of legumes, fish and the list goes on,” explained Cronk. Some foods the program has prepared in the past include Bengal-style fish curry, blueberry goat cheese pear

mately 20 more people are being diagnosed every hour. “The Napanee and Area Community Health Centre Diabetes education program is dedicated to assist individuals with how to live well with the disease and how to prevent or delay complications,” explained Cronk. For more information or to register, contact Cronk at the KCHC/NACHC at 613-3548937 x154.

salad and rhubarb ginger yogurt parfaits. The ‘Let’s Get Cooking’ diabetes food class is scheduled for Nov. 1, from 9:30-11:30 a.m. Cronk said the program hopes to hold monthly classes. Diabetes is a growing concern not just in the Napanee area but also across Canada. According to the Canadian Diabetes Association, there are more than nine million Canadians living with diabetes or prediabetes, and approxi-

SUNDAY BRUNCH BUFFET SUNDAY 9:30AM - 1:30PM

Pink Approach

ADULTS

$

99

9.

FRIDAY NIGHT “PRIME RIB DINNER” $ 99 PER 3 COURSES

19.

KIDS 10 AND UNDER HALF PRICE

PERSON (SENIORS RECEIVE 15% OFF)

3 COURSE

THANKSGIVING TURKEY DINNER SUNDAY AND MONDAY STARTING AT 5PM. PER PERSON

FOR SENIORS

95 12. 15. Call to make a Reservation 613-354-5247 $

Adam Prudhomme-Staff

As part of a fundraising campaign, Greater Napanee Fire Service’s Kevin Duncan (left) and Dean Martin model the light pink shirts that are now for sale at the station. All money from the sale of the $20 shirts go to fight breast cancer. The annual campaign, which is held by the International Association of Firefighters, allows each station to choose the charity they support.

95

25 Dundas Street East, Napanee

$

www.theloafandale.com

visit www.napaneebeaver.com

Thanksgiving Sale! SAVINGS UP TO 64% OFF! 20 PC CHELTON STAINLESS STEEL FLATWARE

68% OFF! 40 CM ROASTING PAN

$24.99

WITH GRILL

$24.99

70%!

64% OFF!

X-LARGE 45 CM MULTIROASTER

HURRY IN FOR BEST SELECTION. QUANTITIES LIMITED

MORE OFFERS

$89.99

70% OFF!

12 PC STEAK KNIFE & FORK SET

$29.99

IN STORE! 199 Jim Kimmett Blvd. Napanee

Home

hardware

building centre


16 / COMMUNITY

T H E

N A PA N E E

Thursday, October 10, 2013

B E AV E R

Why fall is for planting We stood in the middle of his field of sugar maples with the victim in hand. Woody roots protruded randomly from the main trunk of the young Sugar Maple; lifeless, leafless and hopeless. Absent were the young, hairy feeding roots that provide the highway for moisture and nutrition from the depths of the soil. As I explained the need for the hairy ‘primary’ roots and the vital role that they play I could see the light come on in the mind of the property owner. “Now that explains why this tree didn’t make it.” he exclaimed. Your understanding of how plants work can have a powerful effect on the success rate of your work in the garden. Fact is you should not need to get a post secondary education on plant life in order to learn what you need to know to grow plants well. What Plants Want

#1 Buy a Plant with young Roots. Fall is for planting. We

have been saying this in the business for almost 25 years now – ever since growers started producing trees, shrubs and evergreens in containers. I like planting now and generally I have more success with September and October planting than I do with spring planting. With the cool temperatures of fall the ‘top growth’ of winter-hardy woody perennials slows and hardens off. At the same time the roots are busy putting down young feeding roots – yes the same ones that the aforementioned maple tree did not have – which will provide support for substantial growth come spring.

I remind you that no woody plant has the right plant will perform well in kind of roots while shopping your garden without strong, at the nursery by pulling it healthy roots. Put another out of the pot. You don’t way, the only way that a have to yank it all the way newly planted tree, shrub, out of the pot, but far enough evergreen or rose will grow to see the extent to which they fill it. and thrive If they your garcompleteden is ly fill the after it pot or turn has develThe Green File around oped a the interisystem of roots that will support the or contour of it, you have a ‘top growth’ that we see and potential problem. Ideally you should buy wait for so anxiously after plants that fill about oneplanting. half of the pot with roots; the How Do You Know Good other one-half of course should be the soil mix. This Roots? plant needs no lessons on You will know that a how to grow. It will hit the new soil at your home running (in ‘plant speak’). Planted in early October, most fall-planted nursery stock will put down new roots before the hard frost of late November or December. That is two months away, give or take. The new root growth will benefit you in the long run as you can gain up to one year’s growth over the specimens that you plant next spring. If you cannot pull the plant out of the pot as it could be too big to do this then push your finger through the surface of the soil. If that is not possible

Mark Cullen

the chances are pretty good that the whole pot is full of roots – not a good sign. #2 Hole Prep.

#3 After Planting

Second only to buying a quality plant, is the preparation of the planting hole. That is if your goal is to get your plants growing as fast as possible. And who would plant something and hope that it did not grow? We all know the alternative, and it isn’t pretty. Dig a hole at least twice as wide as the root mass of the plant and one-and-a-half times as deep. Back fill with quality triple mix (equal parts top soil/peat/compost), place the plant in the hole and top the hole up with more triple mix. Stomp on it with the heel of your boot to get the soil in firm contact with the roots. By doing this you are sending a message to the roots that it is indeed time to find a new home and get growing. Set the plant a few centimetres above grade for proper drainage, allowing the water to drain away from the centre of the plant, not into it.

After you have planted your new woodies in the garden it is important not to let them dry out and not to kill them with more water than they can digest. As a rule I suggest that you put your finger in the soil about 4 to 5 cm deep (2 to 3 inches) and if the soil is dry it is time to water. They love nothing more than the oxygencharged, warm water from a rain barrel. As winter approaches you will have plants in the ground that will thrive next spring. You will have taken advantage of many fall discounts at nursery retailers this time of year and you will be planting in some of the most pleasant temperatures for outdoor activity in the whole year. Fall planting. You win, no matter how you look at it.

What if the plant is Potbound? I will agree that you can-

Mark Cullen appears on Canada AM every Wednesday morning at 8:40. He is spokesperson for Home Hardware Lawn and Garden. Sign up for his free monthly newsletter at www.markcullen.com.

R0012325874

I am here to clear up any confusion that you might have on the subject of ‘what plants want’. No guarantees that you will learn ALL that you need to know, but based on this information the next 8 minutes of reading will arm you with the confidence to go out into the world of plants and put them in the ground knowing that you did the best that you could. You will probably do better than most, including some of the so called professionals that I see making huge planting mistakes from time to time.

not always choose a plant with perfect roots. If you bring home some nursery stock that is pot bound or even partially pot bound be sure to pull the roots out from the circular mass that they have grown into while inside the pot. This entails using a sturdy knife or even the tip of a small trowel to get a grip on the roots and pull them out. You will do some ripping and tearing in the process and you may suffer some self doubt that you are somehow doing the plant harm. Not so. You can remove up to one-third of the roots without causing damage to the plant. Once planted with new soil firmly packed around its’ roots the plant will enjoy nothing more than a good, deep drink of water. The addition of a ‘starter’ fertilizer is a popular thing to do and I have no doubt that it helps. The usual formula of a liquid 5-15-5 with butyric acid is designed to encourage the development of roots early on.

Your Quinte Area Denture & Hearing Specialists Specializing in: • • • •

Full & Partial Dentures Repairs, Relines and Soft Liners Implant Dentures Anti-Snoring Devices

Call:

• Full Audiometric Testing • Latest Digital Hearing Device Technology • Repairs/Batteries/Accessories • Assistive Listening Devices

Registered Authorizer for DVA, WSIB, NIHB and ADP

613-354-3535 or 613-966-7363

140 Industrial Blvd. Napanee

66 Dundas Street East Belleville

Allowing you to listen to life and smile about it too!


Sports

send your sports news and scores to adam@ napaneebeaver.com

Page 17 | Thursday, October 10, 2013

Third period explosion propels Raiders to 9-3 win over Storm Napanee runs win streak to three straight

BY ADAM PRUDHOMME Staff Reporter

Adam Prudhomme-Staff

Napanee’s Taylor Stalkie looks for an opening to go for a run during Thursday’s road game against the KCVI Blues.

Pesky punting problems cost NDSS Hawks in pigskin play Favoured Napanee falls 16-6 to KCVI Blues

BY ADAM PRUDHOMME Staff Reporter

pair of failed punts burned the NDSS Golden Hawks junior football team at Winston Churchill Field on Thursday, helping the KCVI Blues to a 16-6 victory. A blocked punt attempt on the Hawks’ seven yard line, which was recovered by the Blues, set up the first touchdown. Shortly after the Blues kicked a rouge, the Hawks again tried to clear with a punt attempt but couldn’t stop the return, which was run in for another touchdown. By the end of the first half the Blues had a comfortable 16-0 advantage. Josh Martin got the Hawks off to a strong start, going on a long run off the kick return, giving the Hawks a first down just inside Blues’ territory. The o-line couldn’t do anything with it though, fumbling on the first down and setting the stage for their offensive struggles. “We had a poor first half today,” said Hawks head coach Brian Heaton. “It was a little bit surprising, I thought we’d be a little bit more focused against a team that was kind of struggling like we were, especially coming off a positive game last week.” In the previous week the Hawks had earned a 14-14 tie with La Salle while the Blues had lost

A

37-7 to the Ernestown Eagles. Napanee was however without starting quarterback Jake Morrow, who was injured in practice. That left Hayden Ford and Matt Campbell to share the quarterback duties in Thursday’s game. Campbell hit Ford from the 10 yard line on the final play of the game to give the Hawks their six points. Napanee was able to move up the field from their own 15 yard line with a series of short passes. “The second half was a much better effort, especially on offense,” said Heaton. “In the fourth quarter we moved to pass the ball and run out a shot gun, spread the defense out with running four and five receivers and we seemed to be able to move the ball. Part of that was a necessity because both our running backs were injured and unable to finish the game.” Though they lost a game they felt they should have won, the Hawks did come away with plenty to build on heading into their bye week. If Morrow’s injury lingers, the Hawks could have an effective weapon in Campbell. More game experience will only benefit the junior player. “You need yo be able to have an effective and good passing game so that you’re not as predictable and defenses can’t key up and load up on a run,” said

Heaton. “It gives offenses more options in terms of play selection.” Aside from a defensive break down on the second punt return, the Hawks dline turned in a strong game to limit the Blues’ offense, holding them scoreless in three of four quarters. With the loss Napanee is 0-2-1 on the year. They’ll take the week off before heading to Frontenac to take on the Falcons on Oct. 17 to start the second half of the year. They’ll face Ernestown on Oct. 24 and then wrap up the season Oct. 30 at home against the Holy Cross Crusaders. Napanee will need to eliminate as many mistakes as possible as their second half schedule figures to be a tough one. NDSS’ troubles with the Blues continued into field hockey as the Hawks were shutout 5-0 on Monday. The field hockey team took on Frontenac yesterday afternoon. Results weren’t known at presstime. NDSS’ ladies’ basketball team didn’t have any better luck against KCVI, losing 38-28 to the Blues. The only success the Hawks had came on the junior volleyball court. There the Hawks swept them in three sets. It was more of the same for the seniors squad however, losing 3-1.

Showing no mercy against the struggling Deseronto Storm, the Napanee Raiders routed their opponents 9-3 Tuesday night at the SPC. Failing to deliver the knock out punch on numerous occasions in the first two periods, Napanee entered the third with a slim 4-2 lead. The Raiders finally busted through in the final frame when Jordan Cannons potted a goal against his former team at the 3:01 mark. That was enough to open the floodgates as Josh Murphy and Tyler Romain each followed up with a goal less than a minute and a half after Cannons’. The blow out was officially on at that point. “I didn’t like the way they finished the second period and they knew,” said Raiders coach Mike Hartwick. “We addressed it after the second. It was nice to see them come out in the third, not just with the goals, but the work ethic was a lot better.”

Adam Prudhomme-Staff

Napanee’s Brandon Nadeau (right) tangles with Deseronto’s Noah Sager near centre ice. Though the first period ended with the home team up 3-1, Hartwick felt his team eased off the throttle and squandered opportunities. Blade Grigg, Alex Leclerc and Cannons each

potted one, offset by Deseronto’s Jared Boomhower’s strike in the dying seconds. Boomhower would finish with a hat trick in the losing effort.

SEE RAIDERS | PAGE 18 >

Adam Prudhomme-Staff

Local hockey players and figure skaters will team up for a chance to win a nation wide competition held by CBC’s Battle of the Blades.

CBC selects Napanee skaters for Battle of the Blades competition Chance to win nation-wide voting contest

BY ADAM PRUDHOMME Staff Reporter

Camera crews from CBC’s Battle of the Blades will visit the Strathcona Paper Centre

on Oct. 26 as they search for the country’s top figure skater/hockey player pair. Producers from the hit show have selected nine centres across Canada to film

and pit together in a nationwide online competition. From there it’s up to fans to vote. SEE SKATING | PAGE 19 >


18 / SPORTS

T H E

N A PA N E E

B E AV E R

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Napanee Minor Hockey Report

Stars see plenty of Whitby Wildcats Beaver Sports

The Napanee Exit Realty Minor Bantams skated past the Kingston Canadians last week 3-1. Kingston, with a previous record of 14-1, were strong early on, but Napanee’s Alex Brady made it 1-0 in the second frame, scooping up a loose puck on the edge of the crease. Their guests converted a three-on-two rush to knot the score, but Eli Brown, in the last 16 seconds of the period, fired home a rebound to regain the lead. To seal the deal in the third, Kiel Benton beat the defenseman to the outside, and his shot somehow found the back of the net. Finn Pierce was exceptional between the posts. Saturday, the locals fell to Whitby Blue 4-0, who also led the parade to the penalty box for 20 of the 45 minutes. Sunday, in their third consecutive home game, the Exit Realty boys dominated Pickering 3-0. Michael Lloyd tipped Nelson Power’s point shot home, with Kiel Benton earning an assist. Steven Shea tallied one off his skate with help from Lloyd and Ethan Winter with eight seconds left in the second frame. Skating fouraside in the third, Brady fed Shea from behind the net to end the scoring. Finn Pierce earned the shutout for the Stars. n Meanwhile, the Bantam AE squad also faced a Whitby team Saturday night. After one period, the Stars trailed 1-0, but expe-

rienced difficulty in the second to fall 8-0 by the final buzzer. n It was a busy weekend for the L&A Mutual Napanee Minor Atom Stars, and they should be proud of their play, earning three of six possible points. They started the weekend off Friday night in Cobourg earning a point with the tying goal scored by Reid Lambert with less than a minute to play in the third. Other goals in the 33 deadlock were scored by Zach Slaven and Ben Albright with assists going to Braden Bannon, Logan Lalande and Mason Arthur. Saturday saw Stars back at home facing off against Clarington. After a defensive battle they came up short losing 1-0. The boys finished the weekend Sunday afternoon with a solid 3-0 win in Oshawa with goals scored by Quinton Pierce, Lambert and Jakob DaCosta with assists going to Lalande and Scott Collard. Goaltenders Ryan Aldridge and Nate Cinnamon shared the net all weekend playing well and earning their second shutout of the season. n Elsewhere the Spuds Major Atoms, after controlling a good portion of the play, lost a heartbreaker in Clarington on Saturday 42. Sunday, they fell 7-2 to Whitby Blue. Elliot Mundle and Cal Uens scored in the losing cause, while Ben White earned an assist. n Inundated with Whitby

ATHLETE OF THE WEEK MATT CAMPBELL

Matt Campbell is a member of the NDSS Golden Hawks junior football team. This past week he was forced to fill in at the q u a r t e r b a ck position, where he held his own in the fourth quarter. He had several connected passes late in the game, throwing a touchdown on the final play against LCVI.

teams, the Giant Tiger Minor Peewees also hosted Whitby White, but gave up a goal per period for a 3-0 loss. n It was another game, another 3-2 loss for the Napanee Boyd Electric Peewee Stars on Saturday. This time, it was the Whitby White Wildcats who edged the Stars at the SPC. After Whitby scored to take an early 1-0 lead, a pair of goals from captain Ryan Kirkpatrick gave the Stars a 2-1 lead by the midway point of the second period. The lead proved to be short-lived, however, as the Wildcats added two more before time ran out. Josh Cudd and Matt Sager assisted on the first and second Napanee goals, respectively. The Napanee peewees are back in action with a pair of road games on Thanksgiving weekend, including a Friday night matchup against the Pickering Panthers and a Saturday matinee face-off with the Lindsay Muskies. n The Napanee Country Traditions Novice A Stars landed the Lindsay Muskies Saturday afternoon in an exciting 4-2 win in Lindsay. Stars’ netminder Jacob Brown in his best and most difficult start of the season stood tall, and answered the bell when his team needed him down the stretch. Cal Uens scored three times, and backchecked his way to another strong performance. Sharp shooter Will Myers also scored. Assists went to Carter McKee, Gavin Brooks and Jack Madden. This same Novice A Stars domesticated the Whitby Wildcats (Blue) Sunday afternoon in a dominating 12-3 win at the SPC. The Stars shone early, scoring five in the first, exploded for four in the second, and backed off with just three in the third for the decisive victory. Scoring for Napanee were, Spencer Cranley (four), Uens (three), McKee (two), Ethan Sutcliffe (two), and Taylor Gilmour. Assists went to Cranley McKee, Gilmour, Uens, and Jack

Adam Prudhomme-Staff

Storm goalie Shaun Hadley turns away Kyle Murphy’s deflected shot.

RAIDERS | Early missed chances CONTINUED FROM PAGE 17 Napanee outshot the Storm 19-13 in the opening period alone, failing to score on three power-plays. Jake Falcao and Cannons traded goals in the second before the Raiders ran away with it in the third. Cullen Hinds, a call up from the Napanee Stars, finished the night with two assists in his first Junior C game. “You can’t let up, because who knows what could happen,” said Hartwick. “Not even just because of the score, but because of the possibility of injuries. You’ve got to play hard at all times.” Tensions boiled over in the third after Napanee’s Austin Boulard was called for checking from behind. Shortly after the referees sorted out the ensuing melee, Cannons scored on the power-play, igniting another brawl. When it was all said and done the Storm tallied 66 minutes worth of penalties to Napanee’s 54. Despite all the jail time racked up, the teams combined to go 2-16 on the man-advantage (1-6 for Deseronto, 1-10 for Napanee). Kyle Copeland earned the win, stopping 28 shots. Shaun Hadley took the loss, allowing all nine goals

MS 170 GA CHAIN SA

OF THE

Guardian

WEEK

IS

SPONSORED BY…

WALLACE’S 27 DUNDAS ST. E. NAPANEE, ONT.

DRUG STORE

A complete line of vitamins, minerals and Health Aids for all ages. Call Eugene Patel for further information.

354-3321

$

MSRP $249.95 with 16” bar

AN AN $85 V ALUE! VALUE!

RECEIVE A FREE WOOD-P WOOD-PRO ROTM KIT KIT WITH THE PURCHASE OF THIS SAW** SAW** **Don’t miss your chance to get the WOOD-PROTM KIT. Simply purchase any one of our chain saws between now and November 9th, 2013 and you will receive a STIHL WOOD-PROTM KIT FREE. Carrying ying Case, STIHL Heritage hat and a replacement loop of This kit includes: a WOODSMAN® Carr OILOMATIC® chain - an $85 value! Offer valid until November 29th, 2013, While supplies last.

We service what we sell!

R0 012336581

OUR ATHLETE

22995

per cent of them come from the same mistake,” said Brant. “Until the boys realize what I’m telling them about that particular mistake, when they cut down on that mistake it will cut down on the goals against.” Brant is preaching discipline for his young team, which has allowed a league leading 14 power-play goals in six games. The Jets, the second worst in that category, have given up nine. “We really get into problems when the players start taking it on themselves and start taking stupid penalties and 10 minute misconducts,” said Brant. “All of a sudden we’re down to three defenceman and one line and one spare on the bench. We’re never, ever, going to win a game that way.” Through it all, Brant is stressing that his team has to stay positive. Though they may take their lumps in the first half, he still believes they can be competitive if they stick to their game plan. Deseronto will be in tough when they host Picton tomorrow night at 7:30 p.m. From there its back to Napanee for a 7:30 p.m. rematch against Napanee at the SPC. For his two assists in his Raiders debut, Hinds is the Ontario Milk Marketing Board Raider of the week.

EXPERIENCE THE TRADITION

30.1 cc/1.3kW STARTING ST ARTING AT ONL

If you know someone who should be our Athlete of the Week, call the Beaver’s newsroom at 354-6641. Or send us a picture and a brief write-up to 72 Dundas St. E., Napanee, K7R 1H9.

on 41 shots. For Napanee it was their third straight win, moving them to 3-2 on the year. They’ll attempt to run it to four this evening when they travel to Picton to face the 4-1 Pirates. On Sunday they’re in Amherstview for a 7:30 p.m. puck drop before returning home to take on the Storm at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday. Going in the opposite direction is the Storm, who were also knocked around on the weekend with an 112 loss to the Panthers at home followed by a 10-1 drubbing in Amherstview. All told they’re 0-6 on the year. “Through this stretch, it’s all about learning,” said Storm head coach Chris Brant. “I’m teaching them a totally different game style. It’s not going to happen overnight.” On Saturday the Storm were down 9-0 before Nick Ferguson gave the home crowd anything to cheer about with a goal at the 8:53 mark of the third. Noah Sager added another late in the frame, but it was much too little, too late. On Sunday Mitch Goodfellow had the lone Storm goal, converting on the power-play in the first to make it 2-1. It was all Jets from there as they reeled off eight unanswered. They went five for nine on the power play. “Most of the goals, 90

HOME COOKED DAILY LUNCH SPECIALS $4.95 •Wednesday “OPEN MIC” with Corduroy Road •Thursday Night is Karaoke •Friday Night - DJ • Saturday - Jukebox

QUEEN’S PUB

280 John St., Napanee, Ontario (Across from the Train Station)

613-354-6007


Thursday, October 10, 2013

T H E

N A PA N E E

B E AV E R

SKATING | CBC to film local skaters’ performances CONTINUED FROM PAGE 17 “There are some pretty big centres,” said Napanee and District Skating Club’s Crystal Barkley, noting that Halifax, Vancouver and Thunder Bay are among the chosen cities. “Then little old Napanee gets picked, so that’s pretty awesome.” Even more surprising was that it was CBC who approached the club, not the other way around. “In our carnival we’ve previously done a mini Battle of the Blades and we went to (producers of the show) and asked if we could use their logo,” said Barkley. “I think because we had previously done something and got the legal okay to use their stuff, they’re now looking back to see who has done something like this in the past and come to those centres.” Much like the show, girls from the NDSC will pair with boys from Napanee District Minor Hockey as they combine strength and agility in a unique routine. A total of nine pairs will perform for local

Adam Prudhomme-Staff

Lyric Barkley and Nolan Gunter prepare for their Oct. 25 performance in Napanee. judges, two with figure skating experience and two hockey players, while the CBC records it all. The winning team will then represent the town in the online competition, which will be decided by online voting. “The footage that is taped will go online through Twitter, social

media sites like Facebook, CBC’s website, all that stuff,” explained Barkley. “That’s when it opens up for online voting.” The top nation wide vote getters will win a VIP flight and accommodations in Toronto, where they’ll attend the Nov. 17 taping of the Battle of the Blades. They’ll get to go back stage

and meet all the performers and possibly perform their routine for the live audience. Representing the skating club will be Lyric Barkley, Heather Craig, Sarah Madden, Hannah McKnight, Emma Mastin, Emily Eggleton, Ericka Edwards and Kara Fitzgerald. From the Stars will be Edmund Hetke, Ethan Courneyea, Reid Duffy, Nolan Gunter, Kyle Wales, Aiden Haller-Brady, Jake Smith, Keegan MacDonald and Kenny Paddle-Grant. All tapings will be open to the public, which get underway at 6 p.m. on Oct. 25. Admission is either a non-perishable food item for the local food bank or a cash donation, which will be donated to the winning team’s charity of choice. They’ll be given a list of local charities they can select. The taping, which will open with a group skate by the club’s senior members, will be held on the SPC’s Goodyear rink. All spectators are welcome. TransCanada has come onboard to sponsor the event.

Crunch bantams open season with 2-0 win Beaver Sports

he Napanee Bantam ‘B’ Crunch team played their season opener on Saturday in Port Perry against the North Durham Blades. The girls earned a 2-0 win with goals scored by Megan McKee and Allison Hannah. On Sunday they played their home opener against the Whitby Wolves and netted another win, 3-0, with goals by Meaghan Wright, Karley Wood-Murphy and Lily Gillingham. Sara Kennedy was solid in net, earning two shutouts. The girls play next on Saturday when they will host the Scarborough Sharks, 4:30 p.m. at the Strathcona Paper Centre. n It was a busy weekend for the Napanee Peewee ‘B’ Crunch as the regular season got underway.

T

On Saturday, the girls travelled to Lindsay to take on the Lynx and on Sunday were home to the Scarborough Sharks. The Saturday game started well as Amber Weese wristed a nice top corner shot past the Lindsay net minder. Emma Schmidt and McKenzie O’Sullivan earned assists on the Weese goal. Napanee had a number of opportunities to put the game away but failed to score again and the game ended in a 1-1 draw. Chelsea Truman got the start in net and was solid between the pipes for Napanee. Sunday was a different story as the girls filled the Scarborough net to the tune of an 8-0 win over the Sharks. Scoring for Napanee in the first period were Cailyn Barton (unassisted), Hai-

ley Treadgold (Schmidt), Schmidt (Treadgold), and Schmidt again from Rebecca Hannah. In the second period it was Weese scoring from Schmidt, and Barton unassisted. Third period goals were scored by Gabby Uens (unassisted) and Uens again from Barton. Maddy Burgess earned the shutout for the Crunch in this one. All in all, a great start for the Napanee Peewee ‘B’ Crunch in regular season play. n The Atom Crunch opened their league season with a 2-0 win against Clarington. Outplaying their opponent for much of the game the girls were unable to find the back of the net until halfway through the 3rd period when Ella Pringle was able to tuck one away behind the net-

visit www.napaneebeaver.com

Napanee District Secondary School

PARENT/GUARDIAN NIGHT Wednesday, October 16, 2013 6:30 - 8:30 p.m.

Visit our Website napaneedss.limestone.on.ca

minder, assisted by Payton Barkley. Emma Granger then found the back of an empty net with 4.1 seconds left, sealing the deal.

SPORTS / 19

PUBLIC NOTICE

To: Waterfront property owners in the vicinity of Big Clear Lake, Beaver Lake, Lonsdale Mill Pond & Bellrock Mill Pond Quinte Conservation will be conducting the annual removal of stop logs at the following structures on or after Monday, October 14, 2013.

Upper Arden Dam, Laraby Rapids Dam, Varty Lake Dam, James Lazier Dam & Bellrock Dam. Property owners upstream from these structures can expect water levels to decrease to normal Fall levels and should ensure all boats, floating docks, etc. have been removed before Monday, October 14, 2013. 613-968-3434 613-354-3312

www.quinteconservation.ca

LENNOX AND ADDINGTON COUNTY GENERAL HOSPITAL TENDER FOR WINTER MAINTENANCE Sealed tenders, clearly marked “WINTER MAINTENANCE” will be received at the Information Office (Switchboard), Lennox and Addington County General Hospital until: FRIDAY, October 18TH, 2013 AT 4:00 P.M. Tender forms will be available on Friday, September 27, 2013 from the Information Office (Switchboard), Lennox and Addington County General Hospital. Only interested parties signing in at site and picking up a Tender Form will qualify. Lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted. For further information contact Ron Ferguson, Maintenance Department at (613) 354-3301, Ext. 270. W. Coveyduck Chief Executive Officer Lennox and Addington County General Hospital 8 Richmond Park Drive Napanee, Ontario K7R 2Z4


T H E

20 / CLASSIFIEDS

Phone 354-6641 Ext 101 e-mail: beaverclass@bellnet.ca

APPLIANCES FOR SALE

KENMORE FRENCH door refrigerator, white, ice maker/water dispenser, like new, $595. Call 613-352-4187.

NEW and USED

APPLIANCES USED REFRIGERATORS

Stoves, washers, dryers, freezers, dishwashers, 3 mos. old & up. Sold with written guarantees. Fridge's $100. & up.

NEW APPLIANCES

At the lowest prices in the area. Trade-ins accepted on new appliances. Big selection to choose from.

PAYS CASH$$$

For good used appliances in working order or not but no junk please. VISA & MASTERCARD accepted. We have our own financing also. Shop at our competitors & then come see for yourself quality at low prices. Open evenings 7 days a week. We Deliver.

SMITTY’S APPLIANCES LTD. 969-0287 FARM

ASP CONTRACTORS, airless spray painting, power washing, barns, houses, factories, etc. Corn, glass and sandblasting, new steel roofs installed, roofs screwnailed and boards replaced, eavestroughs and gutter guards installed, additions and foundations. 1-800-5891375, goergewickens@hotmail.com BARN REPAIRS, steel roofs repaired or replaced, barn boards replaced, beam repairs, sliding doors, eavestroughs, screwnailing, painting, sandblasting, etc. Call John, 613-392-2569. HAY, SQUARE bales, first and second cut, oats and straw; 3 furrow plow and disc. 613-354-2406. OLD FARM wagon; 8’ 3 point hitch; 2 furrow plow; circular saw, belt driven; 2 wooden 4’ wheel spokes; 2 small 2’ wheel spokes; horse cutter; 100 gallon water trough; New Holland sickle mower, always stored inside. 613-378-2218.

FARM

HOARD’S LIVESTOCK auction every Tuesday, For marketing and trucking information, call Murray Jackson, 613-354-6713. SPRAY PAINTING, screwnailing steel roofs, 5� and 6� seamless eavestroughs, gutter guard installed or delivered, free estimates. 1-877-490-9914. SUFFOLK YEARLING ram; 3 Suffolk ram lambs, this year, for sale. Call 613-386-3134, after 4pm. WOODLOT OWNERS. We buy standing timber logs, hardwood and soft, firewood and pulp. Free evaluation and dollar estimate, over 30 years of proven service in the area. Call collect, 613-358-2370.

COMMERCIAL

CENTRALBOILER

OUTDOORFURNACES

2013 HARVEST THE SAVINGS with savings up to $750

SALE ENDS OCT. 15/13 Call for more information Your local DEALER

WOOD HEAT SOLUTIONS www.chesher.ca

R0012284761

1 LOCATION for Napanee grown beets, parsnips, carrots, turnips, four varieties of squash, red, white and Yukon Gold potatoes. 1527 Bridge Street West, Napanee. 613-396-6298. 1 MAN’S best effort, fresh vegetables, resonable prices, parsnips, beets, squash, pumpkins, orange and white, turnips, potatoes carrots, corn, 1527 Bridge Street West, Napanee. 613-396-6298. 4 HERCULES all season radial tires, 225-R75 16�, $400 or best offer. Call 613-354-5280 or 613-242-6484 ANTIQUE RENFREW farm scale, makes great coffee table, includes weights, needs work, $300 or best offer. 613-540-4447. DRY FIREWOOD, $240 cord, $120 truck load, wood processing available. 613-379-9955. DRY HARD mixed stove wood, sold by half-ton truck box full, will deliver. Call 613-358-2046. FRIDGE AND stove; Chapman Professional 4 1/2x9 pool table, excellent condition; snowblower. 613-966-5607 home; 613-3919250 cell. LARGE 25 kg bags of dry kindling wood, $15 each, 3 or more free delivery. 613-358-9381. LAWN MOWER, works good, $45. Call 613-396-1962. RIDING LAWN mower, Craftsman, automatic, 42� cut, 17.5 OHV Kohler Pro. $300 or best offer. 613379-2801. SEASONED FIREWOOD for sale. Call 613-354-2370. SOLID MAPLE dining set, 4 chairs, 2 leafs, hutch, $600 or best offer. Call 613-354-5593.

B E AV E R

Thursday, October 10, 2013

CLASSIFIEDS

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES AND INFORMATION 15 words or less - $5.99 — 12¢ each additional word. 4 weeks — $19.99 FOUND, No charge BIRTHS, MEMORIAMS, CARDS OF THANKS - $9.50 for 50 words or less. 15¢ each additional word. DEATHS AND OBITUARIES - $21.00

ARTICLES FOR SALE

N A PA N E E

FRANKFORD, ON 613.398.1611 BANCROFT, ON 613.332.1613

MOORE BROS. Water softeners, water purifiers and filtering systems. Free water test, free installation. Salt available. 613-354-5516. STATIONERY SUPPLIES. Our front office has a variety of office supplies including table paper. You can place an order with us for wedding invitations and accessories, business cards and address labels. If what you require is not in stock, we will be glad to order the item for you. The Napanee Beaver, 613-354-6641, ext. 101.

PETS

DOGGY DO’S Grooming. Professional groomer Kiley Hanna. Call 613-354-9171. OBEDIENCE CLASSES in Napanee. Professional trainer Will Robinson. Group and private lesson. Call Pet Panache, 613-354-9171.

CARS & TRUCKS

1999 FORD Windstar, as is, good condition, some work required, special price of $895 or best offer, e-test still good. 613-409-2810. CARS AND trucks wanted for scrap or recycling, we buy scrap metals, free pickup or you bring in. Dan, 613-929-7572. We also sell auto parts and tires.

COMMERCIAL FOR RENT AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY DOWNTOWN COMMERCIAL SPACE

72 Dundas Street East, Napanee 1,200 sq. ft. office which includes

3 rooms, 2 washrooms and partial kitchen. $650. MONTHLY Includes heat, utilities and air conditioning. Located on second floor with private entrance from centre hall foyer. Good location on the main street across from Tim Hortons. To view, call the Business Manager,

613-354-6641, Ext. 105

The Napanee Beaver

CAMDEN EAST, bright, attractive retail/office ground floor space in historic Bookstore Cafe limestone building, 300-1500 sq ft $290+p.m. 613-484-2818. thebookstorecafe@ca.inter.net NAPANEE, RESTAURANT, downtown, seats 15-20 people, $700 plus utilities, kitchen equipment and appliances negotiable, great (turnkey) opportunity. 613-539-4847.

OUR C L A S S I F I E D D E PA R T M E N T I S OPEN TO SERVE YOU

3 LARGE BEDROOM SEMI

Available December 2nd Downstairs kitchen, living room and bathroom. 3 bedrooms and bath upstairs. Laundry upstairs. Fridge, stove and dishwasher included. Fully fenced-in back yard. Hardwood floors throughout. Quiet neighbourhood close to downtown Napanee. $1200 plus.

CALL 613•354•4636 FOR MORE INFORMATION.

BACHELOR APARTMENT, ground level entry, yard, near old arena, available November 15th, $480 inclusive. 613-478-5808. DESERONTO ROAD, 3 bedroom house, $1,000 plus utilities, November 1st; 3 bedroom apartment, $700 plus utilities, December 1st. 613-396-5226. DESERONTO, 1 bedroom house apartment, ground floor, downtown, suitable for senior or single person, appliances, utilities included, nonsmoking, no pets, application required, $775, available December 1st, excellent unit. 613-539-4847. DESERONTO, 4 bedroom home, excellent condition, recently redecorated, large back yard, non-smoking, no pets, serious inquiries only, $1,100 plus utilities, available immediately. 613-539-4847. NAPANEE, 2 bedroom apartment, quiet adult building on river, renovated, appliances, balcony, laundry, cable or satellite, free parking, nonsmoking, first/last and references, $950 inclusive. 613-378-0675. NAPANEE, 2 bedroom, 2nd floor apartment, downtown, shared private deck, appliances included, nice unit, $900 inclusive, non-smoking, no pets, references, application required, available immediately. Call or text 613-539-4847. NAPANEE, SPACIOUS 2 bedroom apartment, in quiet well maintained six-plex, laundry facilities, ample parking, no pets, $875 includes water and heat, first/last, now available. 613-354-9127. NEWBURGH, HUGE, bright, attractive one bedroom in the historic Academy building, $825, wonderful views. 613-484-2818. jrauliuk@ca.inter.net ONE BEDROOM apartment, downtown Napanee, hardwood, sky lights, security entrance, laundry, $650 plus monthly. For viewing call Gary, 613-478-2043. ONE BEDROOM upstairs apartment, no pets/smoking, utilities included, close to downtown, available November 16th. 613-354-2435. ONE BEDROOM apartment, available November 1st, 1 mile north of Napanee, modern duplex, fridge/stove, heat and water included, plus storage shed, parking, no pets, references, $800 monthly. 613-354-3590. PERFECT FOR Seniors, 1 bedroom apartment, private entrance, parking, laundry facility available, $675 all inclusive, no smoking and no pets, first/last month’s rent required, available November 1st. 613-888-4303 or 613-354-4149.

PETERSFIELD

145 Church St. West Napanee Quiet adult security building. Two Spacious Bedrooms, Eat-in Kitchen. Living/ Dining Room. Private Laundry/Storage room. Five appliances. Sliding Patio Doors to covered terraces.

354-9444 354-9188

FOR RENT

RENOVATED 3 bedroom duplex, large private back yard, laundry, 2 car parking, Master with large closet and 2-piece, small and large bedroom upstairs, $1,000 plus all utilities, available immediately. Call Heather at Corcoran Property, 613-331-1417. THREE BEDROOM apartments, 313 Dundas Street, Deseronto, $800-$1,000, available immediately. Call 613-396-5489. TWO BEDROOM apartment with 2 bathrooms, central air and privacy balcony in secure building, parking and laundry facilities. Please call 613-352-7805 to view. TWO BEDROOM apartment, great location in Napanee, balcony, appliances, laundry, cable/satellite, quiet adult building, non-smoking, new renovation, first/last and references, $915 inclusive. 613-561-7811. TWO BEDROOM small house, centrally located, Napanee, available November 1st, references. Call 613-354-1993. TWO BEDROOM apartment, close to downtown, 2nd floor, washer/dryer, parking, no smoking/no pets policy, $700 plus heat and hydro. 613-354-2461. TWO BEDROOM apartment. Ask for Eddie, 613-354-5392. TWO BEDROOM very large renovated apartment plus den, hardwood floors, plenty of storage, outdoor patio, available immediately, $875 plus hydro, no dogs. 613-354-2265. TWO BEDROOM second floor apartment, downtown Napanee, fridge/stove, sunroom, parking and shed, $850 includes heat and hydro, first/last, references. 613-377-6223.

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

MOBILE HOMES, 12’x62’, use 4 seasons, ready to move in, new stove/fridge, furnace, also several camper trailers, will deliver. 613218-5070.

NEW PRICE PRIVATE SALE

PRINCE EDWARD COUNTY

Country brick bungalow, approx. 6kms from Picton. Approx 1400 sq.ft. 4 bedrooms (3 up, 1 down) complete with 25’x25’ attached double garage. Eat-in kitchen, L-shaped living room/dining room. 4 pce bathroom, main floor laundry with extra shower. Full partially finished basement with rec room, family room and workshop, cedar closet, electric BB heat, a/c and central vac. Good location on 1 acre lot. Paved double drive. Quick closing possible.

Price $309,000.

Call Orman Tripp 613-391-9250 cell 613-966-5607 home

LOTS & ACREAGE

2 ACRES development land, downtown Newburgh, $150,000. 613-532-3672. 50 ACRES on County Road 4, 2 miles north of Millhaven, $150,000. 613-532-3672.

WANTED

MINT AND used postage stamps, covers, post cards, coins and paper money. Call Bob, 613-967-2118.

WITNESSES WANTED!!! If you saw the vehicle accident at Centre Street and Industrial Avenue, Napanee last Thursday, October 3, 2013 at approximately 10:10am, please call Anna

613•336•2722

Please RECYCLE

e-mail: beaverclass@bellnet.ca

Combination Rates available for The Napanee Beaver, and The Picton Gazette NOTE: Report errors immediately. The Napanee Beaver will not be responsible for more than one incorrect insertion of an advertisement.

MONDAY-THURSDAY 8:30AM TO 4:30PM FRIDAY - CLOSED

FOR RENT

Fax 354-2622

CLASSIFIED COPY DEADLINE - The Napanee Beaver Social Ads - Tuesday at 12:00 noon Border Ads (including pictures) - Tuesday at 12:00 noon Word Ads - Tuesday at 12:00 noon

HELP WANTED

613-354-6641 x115

or Email: napaneedistribution@perfprint.ca

The

Napanee Beaver 72 Dundas St.E. Napanee, ON K7R 1H9 613-354-6641

DRIVER DDELIVERY ELIVER Y D RNEEDED I V E R SIMMEDIATELY NEEDED

The 1 Napanee DAY PER WEEK! DELIVERING ONLY 1 DAY PERON WEEK! ONLY .",& &953" .0/&: Beaver MAKE EXTRA MONEY!

HOWE ISLAND PHONE: 613-354-6641 X115

or Email: napaneedistribution@perfprint.ca

1)0/& Ĺą Ĺą t '"9 Ĺą Ĺą E EMPLOYMENT WANTED BUSINESS IN THE FOOD INDUSTRY WE CLEAN homes, offices, winSTILL GROWING dows and carpets, free estimates.

We’re looking for Management, Manager Trainees, Night Time Supervisors. Salary based on qualifications. Send resume to: Advertiser Box 836 c/o The Picton Gazette 267 Main St. Picton, ON K0K 2T0

LOOKING FOR persons to present to small groups and also do one-onone presentations, a car and internet necessary. Diana, 866-306-5858.

EMPLOYMENT WANTED

BICYCLE REPAIRS. For services call 613-354-2486. BRICK/STONE RESTORATION, chimney repairs, all types of masonry work. Call 613-214-3293.

JIM PORTER PLUMBING 40 YEARS EXPERIENCE NEW JOBS WANTED

• Plumbing Service Work • Pumps & Pressure Systems • Water Treatment - Sales & Service • Ultra Violet Purifiers plus Yearly Lamp Replacement - Sales & Service • Hot Water Tanks - Sales & Service

Call 613-354-6080 Cell 613-532-1120 Email jimsbiznet@yahoo.ca

RENOVATIONS, REPAIRS, carpentry, drywall, ceramic, hardwood, laminate flooring, painting, windows and doors, roofing, etc. Free estimates, John, 613-354-3671. SEWING AND alterations, home decor and drapes by Pauline. Call 613-329-4015.

Call 613-396-5258 or 613-483-5290.

BUSINESS SERVICES

WE HAVE the key to unlock locked-in pension funds, free consultation. To relieve financial stress, call 613-779-8008.

SPECIAL NOTICES

DESERONTO CWL Fall Bazaar Winners: 1st: Betty Paschkowiak, 2nd: Carolyn Fingland, 3rd: Adam Fingland, 4th: Donna Lake. DO YOU feel that your personal life is or has been deeply affected by close contact with a problem drinker? If so Al-Anon can help you. For more information call 613384-2134, 613-354-9835. FEEL YOU have a drinking problem? Help is available. Call Alcoholics Anonymous. Napanee, 613-354-9974, 613-354-4890; Deseronto, 613-396-2543.

napaneekarate.org BRIAN LOWRY kicks@kos.net PERSONALS

SEARCHING FOR any relatives of James Thomas Woodcock, born in Napanee, Ontario, a Royal Canadian Mounted Policeman for 5 years, he had a brother Arnold Woodcock who had 2 daughters. My family and I are travelling to Canada October 18th, 19th and 20th. If you can help us, please call Shirley Swift, United States, 210-670-1551.

LOST

HEARING AIDE and watch, between Shopper’s Drug Mart and Canadian Tire, Monday, October 7th. 613-354-9804.


T H E

Thursday, October 10, 2013 COMING EVENTS

ANNUAL CHRISTMAS craft sale with bake table, Saturday, November 9th, 9am-3pm, at Village Green Nursing Home in Selby. FIREARMS AND Hunter Eduation courses at Tamworth. Firearms course, October 25th, 26th; Hunter Education, November 1st, 2nd. Wild Turkey licence examinations. Call Bill, 613-335-2786.

Napanee Legion

Saturday, October 12th 8pm Live entertainment by “The Girlz� All welcome. $5 Cover for non-members “Saluting the past, welcoming the future�

CARDS OF THANKS

Words cannot express my sincere thanks to my family, friends and neighbours for all the prayers, cards, get well wishes, phone calls, gifts and fruit baskets. It was wonderful to have so many come to visit me in the hospital and since my returning home. Thanks for the excellent care I received from doctors and nurses at Lennox and Addington Hospital and to Rev. Jean Brown for your prayers and visits. To each and everyone, your kindness and thoughtfulness means so much to me as I recover from my accident. With much appreciation. Jim Bell.

MEMORIAMS

BARRETT - In loving memory of Frank, husband, father and grandfather, who passed away October 15, 2001. So many things have happened Since you were called away, So many things to share with you Had you been left to stay, Every day in some small way, Memories of you come our way, Though absent, you are ever near, Still missed, loved and always dear. Lovingly remembered, Helen, MaryFrances, Jim and Gail, Anne, Joan and Gary and their families.

MEMORIAMS

We gratefully acknowledge the generous donations made during the month of SEPTEMBER 2013 by family and friends. In Memory of:

Gifts In Memoriam

June Blackburn David O'Brien Alex Dunbar Howard O'Connor Gale Edgar Jessie Quirt Juanita Gillians Dr. Raymond J. Rahn Leona Harris Phyllis Reynolds June Hewson James Synick Brad Morrison Special remembrances have also been made in honour of: William Abbott (Oct 29, 2010) Lyle Abrams (July 25, 2013) Roy E. Asselstine (Oct 14, 1999) Rev. Morris Bailey (Oct 11, 2001) Margaret E. Clapp (Sept 26, 2012) Stanley File (July 1993) Franklin Gray (Oct 2, 2011) Alex Hagerman (Oct 15, 1983) Tieme Jonkers (Oct 1, 2011) Manley Meeks (Oct 14, 1998) Reta Parlane (March 2009) Mac Storey (Oct 25, 2002) Douglas Storring (Oct 24, 2001) Leigh Wemp ( Oct 12, 1996) Hugh Wemp (Sept 23, 2012) Donations made in memory of individuals help fund medical equipment at Lennox & Addington County General Hospital. You may arrange your donation by phone 613-354-3301 ext. 400 using Visa or MasterCard or at the Funeral Home, or mail cheque with memoriam name included along with notification address to L & A County General Hospital Foundation 8 Richmond Park Drive, Napanee, Ontario K7R 2Z4 Charitable # 890597842 RR0001

DEATHS

HAMBROOK, Harry

In Memory of

Network HEALTH

1 in 5 Canadians will experience a mental health issue in their lifetime Mental Health Helpline 1-866-531-2600 www.MentalHealthHelpline.ca $OVR Âż QG XV DW Mental Health Helpline on Facebook or @ConnexOntario on Twitter

FOR SALE

#1 HIGH SPEED INTERNET $32.95/Month Absolutely no ports are blocked Unlimited Downloading Up to 11Mbps Download & 800Kbps Upload 25'(5 72'$< $7 www.acanac.ca or &$// 72// )5(( 1-866-281-3538 SAWMILLS from only $4,897 - MAKE M O N E Y & S AV E M O N E Y w i t h your own bandmill - Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready W R V K L S ) 5 ( ( , Q I R ' 9 ' www.NorwoodSawmills.com/400OT ([W 27

VACATION/TRAVEL D I S C O V E RY TO U R S - C U B A , COSTA RICA or EL SALVADOR Unique 2 week escorted tours b a l a n c e h i s t o r y, n a t u r e a n d culture. Small groups, relaxed pace. www.thediscoverytours.ca. Brochure available. CALL Toll-Free 1-800-4170250 weekdays.

N A PA N E E

On October 6, 2013 at Kingston General Hospital, passed away peacefully, at the age of 84, sur-

rounded by family and friends. Beloved husband of 61 years to Jean. Loving father to John and Kathy (Terry). Cherished grandfather to Cora Jean. Brother to Elaine (Don) Payne of Australia and Diane (Dave) Moss of England and brother-in-law to Roy of Kingston. Fondly remembered by his nieces and nephews. A thank you to the staff on Davies 3, C.S.U. and I.C.U. for the special care that was given. The family will receive friends at Moscow United Church on Friday, October 18, 2013 from 1pm-2pm. Funeral Service to follow at 2pm. Interment at Moscow Cemetery at a later date. Memorial donations to the Napanee Humane Society or Moscow United Church would be appreciated.

B E AV E R

DEATHS

DeMARSH, Maurice

At the Village Green Nursing Home in Selby, on Thursday, October 3, 2013. Maurice Donald DeMarsh of Erinsville, at age 72. Beloved husband of Bernice (nee Kidd) and loving father of Anthony (Kellie) of Stirling; Don (Alison) of Erinsville; Darlene Payne-DeMarsh (Peter) of Kingston and Sister Lisa DeMarsh of Zephyr. Grandfather of Meridith, Shawna, Isabelle, Kyle, Meranda, Jessica and the late Ian. Brother of Andy (Carol Anne) of Plainfield; Ray (Lorna) of Tweed; Dianne DeMarsh of Guelph; Barbara Rushlow (Doug) of Belleville and the late Edna, Alex and Eugene (Audrey of Belleville). The family received friends at the Hannah Funeral Home in Tamworth on Friday, October 4th from 2pm-4pm and 7pm9pm. Mass of Christian Burial was held at the Church of the Assumption in Erinsville on Saturday, October 5th at 11am. Interment Assumption Cemetery. Memorial donations made to the Assumption Church Building Fund or the Village Green Nursing Home (Palliative Care) would be appreciated by the family. Online condolences at www.hannahfuneralhome.com

HARTWICK, Bernie

At the Kingston General Hospital, with his loving family by his side, on Sunday, October 6, 2013, at the age of 59. Beloved husband of Nellie (nee McNish) and cherished father of Michael McNish (Melissa), Angela Young (Gary) and Natasha Hartwick. Adored grandpa of Matt, Sarah, Jase, Tyson, Connor and the late Amber. Dear brother of Kate, Ellen (Lionel), Barb (Trevor), Wayne, Perry and Debbie. Predeceased by his parents Lorne and Barbara, his brother Steven and by his sister Judy. Fondly remembered by his many nieces and nephews and their families. Visitation will be held at the Wartman Funeral Home “Napanee Chapel� on Thursday, October 10, 2013 from 7pm-9pm. There will be no Funeral Service. Donations by cheque to the Cancer Society will be remembered with appreciation by the family. Two locations to serve you.

448 Camden Rd. at Newburgh Rd., Napanee, K7R 1G1 - 613-354-3722

980 Collins Bay Rd. at Taylor-Kidd Blvd., Kingston, K7M 5H2 - 613-634-3722

DEATHS

WOODS, Maysel Kathleen “Babe� (nee Hart)

At the Lennox and Addington County General Hospital, after a brief illness, on Sunday, October 6, 2013. Beloved wife of the late Lyall Woods. Loving mother of Tom Woods (Jocelyne) of Barrie; Elleda Ingman of Pickering; Bonita Clancy (Ron) of Kingston; Trudi Armstrong (John) of Georgetown and Ed Woods (Christine) of Napanee. Cherished grandmother of Steven, Jason, Megan, Carla, Liam, Jacob, Michael, Kaitlyn and Zachary and 12 great-grandchildren. Predeceased by her sisters, Mildred Bottomly, Mabel Webster, Myrtle Hart, Muriel O’Connor and Marie Harrington and brothers, Manley, Morvel, Merle and Milford Hart. Fondly remembered by many nieces and nephews. The family received friends at the Wartman Funeral Home “Napanee Chapel� on Tuesday from 2pm4pm and 7pm-9pm. Funeral Service was held in the Chapel on Wednesday, October 9, 2013 at 11am. Private Interment in Bethany Cemetery. Donations by cheque to the Lennox and Addington County General Hospital Foundation or the Heart & Stroke Foundation would be appreciated by the family. Two locations to serve you.

ADVERTISING

PERSONALS

LOOKING FOR NEW BUSINESS and added revenue? Promote your company in Community Newspapers across Ontario right here in these Network Classified Ads or in business card-sized ads in hundreds of well-read newspapers. Let us show you how. Ask about our referral program. Ontario Community Newspapers Association. Contact Carol at 905-639-5718 or Toll-Free 1-800-387-7982 ext. 229. www.networkclassified.org

ARE YOU TIRED of investing in relationships that never seem to go anywhere? MISTY RIVER INTRODUCTIONS has people interested in finding partners for life. Ontario’s traditional matchmaker. CALL (613)2573531, www.mistyriverintros.com.

FINANCIAL SERVICES

Want to talk to someone about gambling problems? Ontario Problem Gambling Helpline 1-888-230-3505 www.ProblemGamblingHelpline.ca $OVR Âż QG XV DW Ontario Problem Gambling Helpline on Facebook or @ConnexOntario on Twitter

EMPLOYMENT OPPS. JOURNEYMAN AUTOMOTIVE Service Technician(s) in Hanna Alberta. Hanna Chrysler Ltd. o ff e r s c o m p e t i t i v e w a g e s f r o m $30/hour, negotiable depending on experience. Bright, modern shop. Full-time permanent with benefits. Friendly town just 2 hours from major urban centres. More info DW KDQQDFKU\VOHU FD )D[ (PDLO FKU\VOHU#WHOXVSODQHW net.

WANTED OLD DUCK DECOYS - Collector/ Researcher Looking for Wooden Duck Decoys. Interested in Buying, Photographing and Learning about their origin. FREE Appraisals, Confidential, No Hassle. CALL 613-376-6723 or &HOO :$ 1 7 ( ' 2 / ' 7 8 % ( $ 8 ' , 2 EQUIPMENT. 40 years or older. Amplifiers, Stereo, Recording and Theatre Sound Equipment. Hammond organs. Any condition, no floor model consoles. Call Toll-Free 1-800-9470393 / 519-853-2157.

MORTGAGES

DATING SERVICE. Long-term/shortterm relationships, free to try! 1-877297-9883. Talk with single ladies. Call #7878 or 1-888-534-6984. Talk now! 1-866-311-9640 or #5015. Meet local single ladies. 1-877-804-5381. (18+) TRUE PSYCHICS! For Answers call now 24/7 Toll Free 1-877-342 0RELOH KWWS ZZZ WUXH psychics.ca.

SERVICES

LEEMAN, Gerald Burliegh

Former Alcan Employee At Arbour Heights Long Term Care Centre on Saturday, October 5, 2013, in his 69th year, beloved husband of Susan (nee Jelley). Loving father of Bill Litchfield (Donna) and Amy Litchfield (Andrew). Predeceased by his parents Robert and Gertrude Leeman and by his sisters, Patti Hurst, Vonnie O’Connell and Karen Snyder. Survived by his sister Cheryl Campbell (Gary). Treasured brother-in-law of John O’Connell, Carol Clifford (Wayne), John Jelley (Cheryl), Michael Jelley, Lynn Moore (John), Albert Jelley (Colleen) Debbie Van Luven (Gary) and Darlene Daniels (Keith). Fondly remembered by many nieces, nephews, great-nieces and nephews and extended family and friends. The family will receive friends at the Wartman Funeral Home “Napanee Chapel� on Friday, October 11th from 10:30am-12:30pm. Funeral Service to follow in the Chapel at 12:30pm. Interment Newburgh Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, donations by cheque to the Huntington Society Canada or a charity of your choice will be remembered with appreciation by the family. Two locations to serve you.

448 Camden Rd. at Newburgh Rd., Napanee, K7R 1G1 - 613-354-3722

980 Collins Bay Rd. at Taylor-Kidd Blvd., Kingston, K7M 5H2 - 613-634-3722

SMITH, Marie Evelyn (nee Hewitt)

980 Collins Bay Rd. at Taylor-Kidd Blvd., Kingston, K7M 5H2 - 613-634-3722

Rest in Peace

For more information contact your local newspaper. AUTOMOTIVE

DEATHS

448 Camden Rd. at Newburgh Rd., Napanee, K7R 1G1 - 613-354-3722

ADVERTISE ACROSS ONTARIO OR ACROSS THE COUNTRY!

GUARANTEED APPROVAL DRIVE AWAY TODAY! We lend money to everyone. Fast approvals, best interest rates. Over 500 vehicles sale priced for immediate delivery OAC. 1-877-796-0514. www.yourapprovedonline.com.

CLASSIFIEDS / 21

DRIVERS WANTED

Westcan /RFDWHG WKURXJKRXW :HVWHUQ &DQDGD LV Recruiting Experienced TRUCK DRIVERS to drive on a Seasonal, Rotational or Full-Time Basis for our busy Fall and Winter seasons Travel to and from the location of employment provided APPLY ONLINE AT:

www.westcanbulk.ca Under the Join Our Team Link

At the Kingston General Hospital on Friday, October 4, 2013, in her 78th year, predeceased by her husband Lorne Smith. Loving mother of Randy Hewitt (Shaunda), Glenice Morton (Doug), Sharon Rendell (Rick), Deanna Watters, Lorna Berndt and Lori-Anne Benjamin (Ken). Sadly missed by her 14 grandchildren and many great-grandchildren. Marie will be remembered fondly by her many extended family members and friends. The family received friends at the Wartman Funeral Home “Napanee Chapel� on Monday from 2pm-4pm and 7pm-9pm. Funeral Service was held in the Chapel on Tuesday, October 8, 2013 at 11am. Interment Sillsville Cemetery. Donations by cheque to the Heart & Stroke Foundation or the Ontario Lung Association will be remembered with appreciation by the family. Two locations to serve you.

CALL 1.888.WBT.HIRE (1.888.928.4473) AS SEEN ON TV... NEED A MORTGAGE Home Equity Loan, Better Rate? Bad Credit, Self-Employed, Bankrupt? Been Turned Down? Facing Foreclosure Power of Sale? CALL US NOW TOLL-FREE: 1-877-733-4424 (Live Operator 24/7) And Speak To A Licensed Mortgage Agent MMAmortgages.com specializes in: Residential, Commercial, Rural Agriculture, Farms, & Land Mortgages )RU 0RUH ,QIRUPDWLRQ 9LVLW www.MMAmortgages.com (Lic#12126) $$$ 1st, 2nd, 3rd MORTGAGES Debt Consolidation, Refinancing, R e n o v a t i o n s , Ta x A r r e a r s , n o CMHC fees. $50K you pay $208.33/month (OAC). No income, bad credit, power of sale stopped!! BETTER OPTION MORTGAGES, CALL TODAY Toll-Free 1-800-282-1169, www.mortgageontario.com (LIC# 10969).

Have you become addicted to prescription medication? Drug & Alcohol Helpline 1-800-565-8603 www.DrugAndAlcoholHelpline.ca $OVR Âż QG XV DW Drug and Alcohol Helpline on Facebook or @ConnexOntario on Twitter

STEEL BUILDINGS STEEL BUILDING - THE GREAT SUPER SALE! 20X20 $4,070. 25X26 $4,879. 30X32 $6,695. 32X40 $8,374. 35X38 $9,540. 40X50 $12,900. One end wall included. Pioneer Steel 1-800-668-5422. www.pioneersteel.ca STEEL BUILDINGS/METAL BUILDINGS 60% OFF! 20x28, 30x40, 40x62, 45x90, 50x120, 60x150, 80x100 sell for balance owed! Call 1-800-457-2206 www.crownsteelbuildings.ca

ANNOUNCEMENTS Do you know a young star who is making a difference? Nominate them for the 2013 Junior Citizen Award. Nomination forms at www.ocna.org/juniorcitizen, from this newspaper, or call 905-639-8720 ext 221.

Connect with Ontarians – extend your business reach! www.networkclassified.org

WESTCAN will be hosting a series of Open Houses in Ontario from October 17-19. CONFIRMED ARE: October 17, 2013: - London Husky, Hwy 401 Exit 195 & Hwy 74, 10am-2pm - Brantford Esso Truck Stop, 11 Sinclair Blvd, 6-9pm October 18, 2013: - Kitchener Petro-Pass, 120 Conestoga College BV, 10am-2pm. October 19, 2013: - Pickering Flying J, Hwy 401 Exit 399 (Brock Road), 10am-2pm More details to follow regarding additional locations LAIDLAW CARRIERS VAN DIVISION requires experienced AZ licensed drivers to run the U.S. Premium mileage rate. Home weekly. New equipment. Also hiring Owner Operators. 1-800-263-8267

COMING EVENTS G r o w M a r i j u a n a C o m m e r c i a l l y. Canadian Commercial Production Licensing Convention October 26th & 27th. Toronto Airport, Marriot Hotel. www.greenlineacademy.com. Tickets 1-855-860-8611 or 250-870-1882.

448 Camden Rd. at Newburgh Rd., Napanee, K7R 1G1 - 613-354-3722

980 Collins Bay Rd. at Taylor-Kidd Blvd., Kingston, K7M 5H2 - 613-634-3722

Rest in Peace


T H E

22 / CLASSIFIEDS

N A PA N E E

B E AV E R

Thursday, October 10, 2013

OVER 1 CIRC4,600

HUGE GARAGE SALE Saturday October 12th Sunday October 13th 9am - 5pm 3194 County Rd 14, Enterprise Tables available. Call 613-358-9035 Small animals welcome.

ULA TION

GARAGE

MULTI-FAMILY GARAGE SALE

Saturday October 12th Starting at 9am 144 County Road 8 Napanee

Saturday October 12th 8am - 12pm R AIN DATE: Sunday October 13th 8am - 12pm 4999 County Rd. 9 North Shore, Hay Bay

SALE

(across from the Golf Course) Furniture, household items, lawnmowers, lamps, and much more

The Napanee Beaver

locally owned and operated newspaper

Washer, dryer, antiques, sporting goods, camping, tools, jewellery, garden art. Something for Everyone.

AUCTIONS

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12TH

10:00am - Equipment Sale Selby livestock & Auctions Centre 11 Pleasant Drive, Selby, Ontario 613-354-6260 Already consignment: McCormick W4 tractor, 2002 F 250 Truck 4x4 crew cab 155 km new tires new battery, 2007 16’ Corn Pro Gooseneck stock trailer, 499 NH haybine,62 hp very clean Case 685 International 4x4 tractor, 8NFord tractor & chains, George White 200 gallon tank sprayer, 2008 10 tn Corn pro float trailer, 2000 GMC pickup truck ext. cap, & snow plow,1989 GMC 1 tn truck with flatbed & snowplow,1985 Crysler conv, 1997 5x10 utility trailer, Honda X3100 dirt bike, fence post, 6’ grain auger,1998 1tn 4x4 duel wheel diesel truck, seed drill, grain auger, bush hog, backhoe bucket, street sweeper, bobcat float, landscape trailer, 24’1990 4 horse slant trailer with sleeping quarters, 2 Ritchie heated water bowls, Fordson grader, double auger snowblower,4 furrow plow, 2 new rubber maid water tanks, farm scales, NH 489 Haybine portable mechanical beam scale platform size 17x24 capacity 300 kg,heavy duty beam scale 2000 lb capacity platform size 25” x 32,Berkel commercial slicer 12” stainless knife built in sharpener, portable Toledo dial scale 800 lb capacity 18’x27”platform,medium duty meat grinder110 v. Many more items not listed. CONSIGNMENTS WElCOME Auctioneer: Tom Harrison 613-379-1006 Bert Nibourg 613-536-9157 Sales Barn 613-354-6260 www.selbyauctions.ca

MONDAY, OCTOBER 14TH

AT 10:30 AM ROSS ANTIQUES AND COllECTIBlES AUCTION DAVID AND MARY lOU ROSS 252 REDNERSVIllE ROAD COUNTY ROAD 3, BEllEVIllE, ONT. 1 mile WEST of Belleville Bay Bridge on REDNERSVIllE Road Antique step back cupboard with upper glass doors, 3 drawers and solid lower doors, antique walnut extension table, Victorian walnut sideboard with carved backsplash, antique mahogany extension dining table, antique dining chairs, antique mahogany china cabinet with curved glass front and leaded door,Wurlitzer walnut cased apartment size piano, antique walnut trimmed sofa, antique butlers table, walnut gate leg table, antique walnut vanity and stool, antique pine drop leaf table, Antique spool side table, antique work table, antique blanket box, antique maple chest of drawers, antique oak book shelves with lower drawers, antique pine lift top desk, antique pine slant top desk with upper book shelves, antique pine dough box, antique oak roll top desk -30″‘antique arrow back rocker, antique oak sideboard, antique oak and iron 10 ft church pew, floral occasional chairs, exotic wood executives desk , wrought iron queen size bed, Danish style leather chesterfield, dinnerware- Mandarin ; English Country dinnerware, oil lamps, pressed glass pieces, various size area carpets, antique bridge lamp, copper pieces, oak cased pearl handle fish set, vintage 35 mm camera, MahJong game, wrought iron patio table and chairs, YARD EQUIPMENT Yard Machine 10 hp snow blower- new; Honda 6.5 hp power lawn mower, Campbell Hausfield air compressor, Echo straight shaft weed eater, Craftsman 6.5 hp power lawn mower, 4000 watt portable generator, AgriFab lawn sweeper, 2 wheel garden trailer, Mastercraft tool chest, chain blocks, shop vac, power, hand and garden tools, numerous other articles. TERMS- CASH OR CHEQUE OWNER & AUCTIONEER NOT RESPONSIBlE FOR ACCIDENT OR INJURY DAY OF SAlE SUllIVAN AUCTIONEERS Plainfield 613-477-2082 www.sullivanauctions.com for photos

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 16TH

Boat Auction 10:00am 1413 County Road #2, Wellington. Corner of County Rd #1 and #2 at 4-way stop. Prince Edward County. Under the storage and leans act a 34ft Cruiser Hakuna Matata license # 51E-3989 to be sold as is. For more information call 613-393-1732 www.koopmansauctionservices.com Always accepting good clean consignment for upcoming sales. We also conduct Estates and Commercial sales on site. For your entire auction needs, call Auctioneer: Gerald Koopmans 613-393-1732.

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 16TH

AT 5:00 P.M. AUCTION SAlE DOUG JARREll SAlES ARENA, BEllEVIllE Samsung refrigerator/freezer on bottom (ex), dining room suite consisting of round table/1 leaf, 4 cane back cushioned chairs & matching china cabinet, rocker recliner (excellent), a large qty. of antiques including fold down secretary with leaded glass doors, dove tailed box, Victorian hall table, 2 primitive 2 drawer cupboards, child’s school desk, old pedal car, 3 drawer dresser/ mirror, old bee cupboard, painted wicker fernery, child’s rocker, child’s doll carriage, brass wood box, lanterns, wardrobe, captain’s chair, a number of old steel wheels, butter bowl, Aladdin lamp, old prints & frames, child’s sled, qty. of good costume jewelry, enamel ware, glass & china, old bottles, metal coke sign, old tins, CNR door push bar, beam tongs, brass fire extinguishers, old crocks & finger jugs, shoe last & many more antique smalls far too many to list. See my web site for detailed list & photos. AUCTIONEERS: DOUG JARREll & BEN TREVERTON 613-969-1033 www.dougjarrellauctions.com

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17

AT 6:30PM VIEWING 5:00PM AUCTION - 2179 COUNTY ROAD #17, MIlDORD FAIR GROUNDS, MIlFORD, ONT. lOTS OF GlASSWARES & COllECIBlES ANTIQUES - Duncan Phyfe dropleaf table, sideboard, mirrors and several other pieces. HOUSEHOlD - Lazy Boy chairs, Lazy Boy chesterfield, cherry wood table, Spanish heater, chesterfield, chairs, love seat, Ducan Phyfe sideboard dressers, earth crocks, RCA 24” TV, 2 flat screen TVs, misc. prints, pictures, sofa bed, king size bed, queen size bed and double bed, washer and dryer. Fishing stuff: new fishing rods most with reels, life jackets, portable ice-fishing huts, food slicer, meat grinder. Tools: misc. hand tools, bench grinder, drill press 8”, wrenches, etc. LIST IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE. AUCTIONEER - WAYNE A. MYATT, AAO MEMBER Terms: Cash or Cheques only! HST charged on all purchases! Auctioneer and owners are not responsible for lost of stolen items. Refreshments will be available MYATT’S AUCTION SERVICE 613-476-7214 1-877-238-6566 Always taking good clean consigments! Visit our website at www.waynemyattauctions.com Email me at wmyatt@xplornet.ca

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18TH

Estate sale of Barney Bakker plus Consignment Sale 6:30pm Viewing 5:00pm 662 Cty. Rd. #12 3.5 kms southwest of Bloomfield at Koopmans Auction Centre Estate consists of furniture mainly imported from Holland, Antiques and collectibles, antique clocks, gas powered walk behind rototiller, garden dump trailer, hand and power tools, tandem axle 2 horse trailer, weathervane, plus many more items to be unpacked. Check website for more details and pictures. www.koopmansauctionservices.com Always accepting good clean consignment for upcoming sales. We also conduct Estates and Commercial sales on site. For your entire auction needs, call Auctioneer: Gerald Koopmans 613-393-1732.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19TH

Stock Reduction Sale for Evans lumber 10:00am Sale to be held at Evans lumber Main St. Picton in back lot. Large quantity of lumber in various lengths & sizes, steel roofing, large quantity of asphalt shingles, pressure treated lumber, doors, siding, hard wood & laminate flooring, plus other building related items. Quantity of vinyl shutters and large quantity of wooden pallet. Items to be sold in, as is condition with no warranty. Cash and carry. Delivery can be arranged on larger purchases Debit available. Store open as normal. See website for updates! www.koopmansauctionservices.com Always accepting good clean consignment for upcoming sales. We also conduct Estates and Commercial sales on site. For your entire auction needs, call Auctioneer: Gerald Koopmans 613-393-1732.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18TH

AT 10:30 AM AUCTION SAlE - ESTATE OF BOB HIlBORN 67 CRESSY- BAYSIDE ROAD, R.R.#4 PICTON PRINCE EDWARD COUNTY 5 miles EAST of Picton on Highway 33 (loyalist Parkway) and turn onto lake On The Mountain Road (County Road 7) for 10 miles and turn EAST onto Cressy – Bayside Road. EQUIPMENT, TOOlS AND RECREATIONAl- John Deere 5420 4 wd diesel tractor with JD 541 front end loader with material bucket, cab-670 hrs- like new; John Deere 2210 diesel compact utility tractor with ROPS, 3 point hitch, PTO- 295 hrs; John Deere diesel 6 wheel Gator with dump box-370 hrs; John Deere LX4 3 point hitch 4 ft rotary mower, 8 ft Walker Bay sail boat, Clear Water Design NuNu kayak, Escape “Electric Glider” paddle boat, Mariner 3.3 hp outboard motor, Johnson 6 hp outboard motor, batter powered lake weed mower, Snow Flite 10.5 hp snow blower, Honda power lawn mower, John Deere garden trailer, John Deere straight shaft weed eater, Alpaca shearing table, Gray multi drawer tool chest, quantity of hand and power tools, WIC electric straw shredder, WIC gas powered floor sweeper, rechargeable tools, garden tools, small Honda water pump, Featherlite step ladders, 2 new garage door openers, Campbell Hausfield air compressor, Men’s & ladies bikes, shop vac, jack stands, Horizon electric treadmill, HOUSEHOlD CONTENTS – SEll AT 10:30 AM- Hickory and White double pedestal dark finish extension dining table with 8 chairs; Hickory and White 4 glass door breakfront china cabinet, Sligh mahogany cased long case clock with triple brass weights, Gibbard solid cherry bedroom furniture in Canadian Legacy including King Size bed, gentle mans chiffonier, bed side tables, chest on chest, dresser; Gibbard cherry bookcase, Gibbard cherry corner glass front china cabinet, Gibbard cherry 2 poster Queen size bed, Gibbard 4 drawer silver ware chest with Queen Anne legs, Gibbard Chippendale style 3 drawer side tables, Gibbard cherry nest of tables, Gibbard coffee table, Gibbard hall table and mirror, Gibbard “Brigadier” 6 piece bedroom suite including queen size bed, ARTWORK including 20″ x 24″ oil on canvas “British Fleet at Sea”, original Robert James Callaghan oil, Original Pierre Houet, East Coast prints, artist proofs; several Steifel table and floor lamps, walnut tea wagon, Barrymore living room furniture including chesterfield and chair, wing chair, leather reclining chair; walnut tea wagon, Sony 32″ flat screen TV, Bose Wave stereo system, AE surround sound system, students violin, Yamaha electric keyboard, Vogel arm chairs, various sized area carpets, quantity of Stuart crystal, Limoge vases, set of Minton china dinnerware, Royal Standard dinnerware, Susie Cooper dinnerware, Swaroski crystal, Beswick horse, model of 7 mast sailing ship, Kitchen Aid counter top mixer, kitchenware’s, Kelvinator refrigerator, heist freezer, patio furniture, numerous other articles. TERMS- CASH OR CHEQUE OWNER & AUCTIONEER NOT RESPONSIBlE FOR ACCIDENT OR INJURY DAY OF SAlE SUllIVAN AUCTIONEERS Plainfield 613-477-2082 www.sullivanauctions.com for photos

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19TH

AT 10:00 A.M. FAll CONSIGNMENT AUCTION DOUG JARREll SAlES ARENA, BEllEVIllE Early consignments include a David Brown 995 2wd diesel tractor with Frey model 8020N loader including bucket, material forks, bale spear & pulley, Allis Chalmers model “B” gas tractor restored & running nicely, John Deere model 1240 4 row narrow corn planter with insecticide boxes, New Holland 185 tandem axle manure spreader with top beater and end gate, tandem axle trailer model CDT-3T with hydraulic dump (in new condition), Belt driven buzz saw including drive belt, Honda 250 SX ATC 3 wheeler 5 speed with reverse, Dynamark Plus 8 H.P. 26 inch snow blower, new livestock mineral feeders, new stock water tanks, “T” bar fence stakes, cedar fence posts, electric fence supplies, round bale feeder, a regular assortment of hand power tools, Makita 10” sliding compound mitre saw on bench, scroll saw, air compressor, electrical supplies, qty. of new truck inventory and numerous other pieces. Consignments are still being accepted to this sale. To consign contact Ben at 613-242-4131 or Doug at 613-969-1033 See my web site for list and photos of early consignments. AUCTIONEERS: DOUG JARREll & BEN TREVERTON 613-969-1033 www.dougjarrellauctions.com


Thursday, October 10, 2013

A L L CLUES ACROSS

1. Most favorables 7. 23rd Greek letter 10. Rated higher 12. Immature herring 13. Malignant skin neoplasm 14. Orange-red spinel 15. Hunted beings 16. Be obedient to 17. Excavate with a shovel 18. = to 100 cauris 19. Lose hold of 21. Highest card

T H E

N A PA N E E

F U N

GAMES / 23

B E AV E R

A N D

G A M E S

We e k l y C r o s s w o rd

22. Western Union message 27. The “Show Me” state 28. Early photo process 33. A public promotion 34. A group of statues 36. A single thing 37. Ireland 38. A raised speaking platform 39. Leavened bread 40. Farm animal shelter 41. Oral polio vaccine

LAST WEEK’S SOLVED

44. Chinese fine silk silver 45. Chocolate-colored acidic pulp pod 48. ____ off 49. Hagiographa 50. Manuscripts, abbr. 51. Over the sea CLUES DOWN

1. Stare impertinently 2. Address a deity 3. Converts hide into leather 4. Matrimonial response 5. 13th Hebrew letter 6. Dentist’s organization 7. Fleshy fungus caps 8. Kill violently 9. License & passport 10. Refereed 11. Arbor framework 12. Luxuriant dark brown fur 14. Group purchasing protest 17. Insecticide 18. An island group of the S Pacific 20. A wooden hole plug 23. A purine base found in DNA and RNA 24. Spanish park

25. Atomic #18 26. Married woman 29. And, Latin 30. Cantonese dialect 31. Causing physical hurt 32. Short trips or tasks

LIBRA (Sept 23/Oct 23) You could get caught up in a social whirlwind this week, Libra. Keep your feet on the ground or you may be swept away in all of the energy. SCORPIO (Oct 24/Nov 22) Staying connected to your feelings is empowering, Scorpio. Even if others don’t feel exactly the same way that you do, they may go along with plans to make you happy. SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23/Dec 21) Sagittarius, indulgent behavior won’t pay off in the long run. Moderation works best, and you’ll be glad you didn’t overindulge after the fact. CAPRICORN (Dec 22/Jan 20) Capricorn, work and family responsibilities have put you under a lot of pressure recently. You could be in need of a respite, even if that break is brief. AQUARIUS (Jan 21/Feb 18) Aquarius, it’s quite possible you will not get much done this week, as you may be too busy encouraging others rather than focusing on your own needs. PISCES (Feb 19/Mar 20) Compassion is your speciality, Pisces. Others appreciate your warm nature, so accept their gratitude and affection.

43. Create social or emotional ties 44. Opposite of LTM 45. Icahn’s airline 46. Air Reserve base (abbr.) 47. Russian manned space station

s u d o k u

H O R O S C O P E S

ARIES (Mar 21/Apr 20) Aries, patience is a virtue you possess, and you must make the most of your patient nature this week. Keep this in mind when dealing with family and coworkers. TAURUS (Apr 21/May 21) Taurus, keep things in perspective and you will have your cake and eat it, too. You can coolly handle tough situations, and that ability serves you well this week. GEMINI (May 22/Jun 21) Your imagination is working overtime this week, Gemini. Channel that creative energy and get started on a project you have long been considering. CANCER (Jun 22/Jul 22) Cancer, you will be very content for the next few weeks. Enjoy these good times and invite those closest to you to enjoy them as well. LEO (Jul 23/Aug 23) Leo, your heightened sense of focus on a particular task has left you wondering how to proceed in another area of life. You may want to seek the advice of others. VIRGO (Aug 24/Sept 22) Virgo, you may be tempted to throw caution to the wind. While that may make for a memorable experience, it may not prove wise over the long haul.

35. Small craving 36. Paddled 38. Leuciscus leuciscus’ 40. Parting phrases: good-____ 41. Figure skater Yuka 42. Opera song

by krazydad.com

5 4 2 3

5

7 3

8 4

1 6

1

7

2 4

9 3

6 9

2

3 6 6 9

LAST WEEK’S ANSWER Sudoku #6 5 1 6 7 8 3 9 4 2 7 4 9 2 5 1 8 6 3 3 8 2 9 6 4 1 7 5 4 9 1 8 3 7 2 5 6 8 3 5 6 4 2 7 1 9 2 6 7 5 1 9 3 8 4 9 5 4 3 7 8 6 2 1 1 7 3 4 2 6 5 9 8 6 2 8 1 9 5 4 3 7

© 2008 KrazyDad.com

DO THE MATH. TISE IN THE NEWSPAPER. ADVERTISE APER.

NADbank, ComBase: Adults 18+, printt and online


24 / COMMUNITY

T H E

N A PA N E E

B E AV E R

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Local band set to make 100th appearance Corduroy Road plans to celebrate streak with special performance at Queen’s Pub

BY ASHLEY ESPINOZA Staff Reporter

PE 300 RM G ON B TH

Local band Corduroy Road will play its 100th show at the Queen’s Pub next week, and the group plans to hold a special event later this month to celebrate the accomplishment. In the past two years, the band has only missed two Wednesdays, explained Grant Gazley, main vocalist and founder of the band. “The average for just an amateur band playing is

about 20 times a year,” he said, explaining they play over 50 times a year. The band is made up of Gazley, playing rhythm and guitar, Ron Charles on drums, Charles King on lead guitar and fiddle, and Tyler King on base guitar. Each member also contributes vocally. Though the band performs together at special events, they are best known as being an open mic band at the Queen’s Pub on Wednesday nights. “We go in as the backup

band and then we have entertainers come to play with us,” said Gazley, explaining it’s a great opportunity for new musicians to learn to play in front of a live audience and for the band to perform for hours on a weekly basis. “If you’re a musician, it’s nice to go in and play with a band. Instead of just taking your guitar and sitting and playing, it’s with a whole band to back you up,” said Charles. “Wednesday nights have turned out to be a real

ADSL HIGHSPEED INTERNET

Sign up during the month of Sept. for up to 6mb dsl

Your first 6 months for only $37.99/mo 1 year term required

Higher speed services also available at equal savings. Call for details. No Home Phone! No Problem, dry loop services available. Call for details.

113 Richmond Blvd. Napanee 613.354.1857 www.mycandohome.ca

nice evening. The crowd that comes out enjoys what we do.” Though the band all works well together, Charles said they would be nothing without Gazley. “This guy is so talented, he can do 40s songs, he does gospel, he does classic country, newer country, and he does 50s and 60s rock and roll. There’s such a wide variety of what he can do that he pleases everyone in the crowd,” said Charles. Gazley said they now

have a regular crowd in at the Queen’s Pub on Wednesday evenings – an older crowd that enjoys the music and the atmosphere. “It’s become a place to go Wednesday nights. It’s a win-win because it gives us a place to play live music and it’s good for the establishment, they get a crowd in there Wednesday night that they would not get,” said Gazley. “It gives somebody something for people to do on a Wednesday evening. And especially for that age

group, there really isn’t anything happening in Napanee or a place they can go to feel comfortable. They’re not going to go to a younger persons bar and sit and listen to rock music or a deejay or something like that.” Those interested in performing with the band will get three songs, all backed up with the band playing and singing backup. Corduroy Road performs at the Queen’s Pub Wednesday evenings, from 7:30-10:30 p.m.

COMMUNITY PULSE SHARING CENTRE The Sharing Centre at Emmanuel United Church Odessa (63 Factory St. behind the Royal Bank) now has fall clothing available. Our ongoing special will be children’s and teen clothes for $2 a bag — adult clothes for $5 a bag. Many other items at great prices, so come in and check out what we have to offer. Our hours are Tuesday and Wednesday, 10 a.m.-3 p.m., Thursday 6-8 p.m. For information call 613-3867125. ‘BREAKAWAY’ Grade 6-8 Club begins Oct. 22, 6:30-8 p.m., and runs each Tuesday for six weeks until Tues. Nov. 26 at Westdale Park Free Methodist Church, 7 Richmond Park Drive (across from L&A Hospital). Fun activities, games, Bible lessons, discussion and snacks! Call the church 613-354-2669. SHOUT SISTER CHOIR Kingston Afternoon Shout Sister Choir

welcomes all new members. We do not audition and learn our music by ear. Our repertoire is fresh and fun. All levels of singers welcome. Practices are from 1-3 p.m. on Wednesdays at Unitarian Place, 206 Concession St. in Kingston. Visit www.shoutsisterchoir.ca. LOYALIST JUNIOR TENNIS CLUB Group welcomes all boys and girls from 18 years old and under. Group meets at the Bath tennis courts every Saturday. For more information, contact Deborah Walker at 613-352-1071 or walkers4@me.com, or Al Beatty at 613-352-5220 or email allanbeatty@hotmail.com. ‘WALK FOR INNER HEALTH’ Free to everyone. Group meets Mondays and Thursdays every week at 10 a.m. at the Inner Health Studio, 15 Market Sq., followed by a one-hour walk by the waterfront.

The Ag & Rural Update is an electronic bulletin that is produced weekly by staff at the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture & Food, (OMAF), Brighton Resource Centre. It is distributed free to subscribers. Not all of the information used in this farm calendar is supplied by the electronic bulletin.

Oct 10 - Prince Edward Federation of Agriculture Monthly Director Meeting, 7:30-10pm, OPP Office Boardroom, County Rd. 1, (Schoharie Road), Picton, ON. All Welcome! Contact Patti Stacey at 613-476-3842 or email princeedwardfarmers@gmail.com

Nov 14 - Prince Edward Federation of Agriculture Monthly Director Meeting, 7:30-10pm, OPP Office Boardroom, County Rd. 1, (Schoharie Road), Picton, ON. All Welcome! Contact Patti Stacey at 613-476-3842 or email princeedwardfarmers@gmail.com

Dec 12 - Prince Edward Federation of Agriculture Monthly Director Meeting, 7:30-10pm, OPP Office Boardroom, County Rd. 1, (Schoharie Road), Picton, ON. All Welcome! Contact Patti Stacey at 613-476-3842 or email princeedwardfarmers@gmail.com

PIERCY’S FARM MARKET

NAPANEE COUNTRY DEPOT

Your Produce Supplier

Nov 8-9 - The Essentials of Ecological Agriculture in Kingston! Kingston-Frontenac Library: Central Branch, Kingston. Contact EFAO Office: 519-822-8606 or email info@efao.ca. Cost for EFAO members is $140; non members $200. A two day foundational session bringing a practical and comprehensive introduction to the principles of ecological agriculture. More details at https://efao.ca/

9715A County Rd 2, East of Deseronto

Dec 3 - Eastern Ontario Local Food Conference: Innovation Driving Local Food, Ambassador Hotel and Conference Centre, 1550 Princess St, Kingston, ON. A conference designed to facilitate stronger relationships among local food groups, challenge obstacles to growth as well as provide technical information on key topics. Details and a full agenda will be forthcoming over the next few months. We look forward to your presence and participation! For more information, call 613-475-4908 or e-mail peter.coughler@ontario.ca.

Dec 3 - Eastern Ontario Local Food Conference: Innovation Driving Local Food, Ambassador Hotel and Conference Centre, 1550 Princess St, Kingston, ON. A conference designed to facilitate stronger relationships among local food groups, challenge obstacles to growth as well as provide technical information on key topics. Details and a full agenda will be forthcoming over the next few months. We look forward to your presence and participation! For more information, call 613-475-4908 or e-mail peter.coughler@ontario.ca.

613-396-3596 • Pumpkins • Gourds • Squash • Broccoli • Corn • Carrots • Beets • Cucumbers • Potatoes • Apples • Herbs • Spanish Onions • Cabbage • Beans • Dill • Honey • Sweet and Hot Peppers Business Hours:

Mon - Sat 8:00am-7:00pm Sun - 10:30am-5:00pm

Peter Oetelaar

The Cold Weather is Coming!

YOUR FARM STORE AND MORE!

Buy your WOOD PELLETS!

Business Hours - Monday to Friday 8:00 to 5:00 Saturday 8:00 to Noon WE ACCEPT - Visa, Debit, Mastercard

76 East Street, Napanee 613-354-9733 Fax 613-354-0651

1527 Bridge St. West Napanee (613)-396-6298


Thursday, October 10, 2013

T H E

N A PA N E E

COMMUNITY / 25

B E AV E R

Behind Bars For A Good Cause

Air Conditioning & Heating

IMPRESSIVE FEAATURE TURES AND BENEFITS: GOODMAN BRAND GMH95 5 ÂŽ

MULLTI-SPEED GAS FURNACE

‡ Two-Stage Gas V Valv alve ‡ Corrosion-Resistant Vent Blower ‡ Auto-Comfort Mode for (QKDQFHG 'HKXPLGLÀFDWLRQ ‡ Run--Tested at Factory Prior to Shipment ‡ (IÀFLHQW 4XLHW 0XOWL 6 6SHHG Circulator Motor

R0012097383

spring meadow orchards

Pick Your Own Apples

Macs, Cortlands, Lobos, Royal Galas, Tolman Sweets, Snows, Honeycrisps, Empires, Spartans, Red Delicious, Ida Reds, Russets, Spys

READY-PICKED FRESH VEGETABLES un for

Submitted

On Saturday, the Napanee Animal Shelter held a fundraising ‘jail and bail’, with the support of many local officials, agencies and community members. Above (from left) are guard Brandon Tisdale (from Napanee Sea Cadets), guard Joe Tisdale (from Quinte Detention Centre), judge Shona Turriff, L&A OSPCA Branch Manager Judy O’Brien, prisoner Debra McCoy (from TD Bank), guard Carol French and guard Karin Bos (both from QDC). Through the event, $6,500 was raised to help spay and neuter shelter animals.

F ole the wh ! l i fam y

Onions, Squash, Pears, Pumpkins and Much More.... Apple Cider Donuts & Pony Rides (Weekends) Open 7 days a week

#10143 Hwy 33, Adolphustown www.springmeadoworchards.ca

613-373-9313

Greater Napanee

Council urged to lower speed limit on Gerow Rd. BY ASHLEY ESPINOZA Staff Reporter

Greater Napanee council received a petition signed by 25 residents in support of reducing the speed limit on Gerow Road from 80 kilometres an hour to 40 km/h. Ed Alexander presented the petition at last Tuesday’s council meeting, stating the road “has become extremely dangerous.� He said the road is used by small children and horseback riders and fears someone will get hurt or killed by people speeding. “When I say that road is becoming dangerous, I’m not putting icing on the cake. It is becoming dangerous and I’m afraid there is going to be dire results,� he said. “Somebody’s going to get killed.� He said he has had “several close calls,� while on his horses on that road. “People don’t care,� he stated to council. “We asked the police to help keep us

safe but we have to give them the tools to do it. And the tools they’re asking for is a 40 (kilometre) limit on that road, posted at both ends.� Alexander also requested that a yellow ‘Child at Play’ sign be posted. “I would ask council to have a really, really hard look at this,� he said, urging council to significantly reduce the speed limit. Ward 3 Councillor Marg Isbester represents Gerow Road. She said she has received many complaints regarding speeding on that road. “I’d certainly like to see it lowered as much as we can and I know there has to be work done on it first, but I’ve had several calls from people out there to say just how fast it’s been,� she said. Mayor Gord Schermerhorn instructed staff to bring the bylaw forward at the next council meeting for consideration in reducing the speed limit on Gerow Road. “I agree with Ed, we want to keep it safe,� said Schermerhorn.

visit www.napaneebeaver.com

54 County Rd. 8, Centre St. South Napanee

613-354-2900

BUSINESS HOURS: 7am to 11pm 9am to 9pm Sunday & Holidays

NOW SERVING FRITOU FRIED CHICKEN AT ITS FINEST

THANKSGIVING WEEKEND MENU 1. Traditional Roast Turkey 2. Maple glazed Ham 3. Shrimp or Chicken Stir Fry 4. grilled Basa Filet 5. 1/2 Rack BBQ Back Ribs (Full Rack $24.95) YOUR DINNER INCLUDES: garden or Caesar Salad; Choice of Soup; EntrĂŠe (one of the above 5 choices); Potatoes, Rice Pilaf or Pasta; assorted grilled or Steamed veggies; Homemade Dessert; Coffee or Tea $ 95 + Tax

19.

DIETER BOEHME performing Saturday, October 26th

HALLOWEEN DROP-IN‌ Face-painting and photos from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Oct. 30 at Serendipity Studios. Bring your wee pumpkins in their costumes for our fifth annual Halloween Drop-In Photos. No appointments necessary. Portion of each session is donated in memory of Gavin Gennevasen to LARC for ‘Touch the Trucks.’ Cost is $10 for one pose, $15 for three poses (good for siblings). On Oct. 31, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., face painting by DJ Wright Entertainment at Serendipity Studios. First come first serve, each full face costs $6, with a portion going towards ‘Touch the Trucks.’

DINNER: 6:00 pm SHOW: 7:00 - 9:00 pm Extensive Buffet Menu: Includes Soups, Salads, EntrĂŠes, Desserts & Coffee/Tea

$

29.95 incl. taxes

RESERvE EaRly - lIMITED SEaTINg

Call Ahead for Best Results


26 / NEWS

T H E

N A PA N E E

B E AV E R

Thursday, October 10, 2013

100 Miles Of Music

READ SOME LITTLE KNOWN FACTS ABOUT FIRST N L&A COUNTY! ITIO ED Get your copy of Lennox and Addington Book at one of the following locations for only $29.95 taxes included.

The Napanee Beaver 613-354-6641 County of L&A Museum, Napanee The Picton Gazette 613-476-3201 Roblin Gas Bar, Roblin Heritage Point Antiques & Gifts, Bath Novel Idea, Kingston Chit Chat Cafe, Napanee Marlene’s Mayhew Jewellers, Napanee The O’Connor House, Deseronto Published Wilton Cheese Factory, Odessa In Canada McCormick’s Country Store, Camden East Bergeron Estate Winery & Cider Co., Adolphustown The Old Conway General Store, 8682 Loyalist Pkwy Allan Macpherson House, Napanee

Written by Orland French Published by Mrs. Jean Morrison and The Napanee Beaver

ADOPT A NEW BEST FRIEND

IWTS | Outstanding concerns for mayor

LOST & FOUND

For adoption info, please call 354-2492 or stop in at 156 Richmond Blvd. Napanee, The L&A Branch of the Humane Society. Visit our web site at www.lennoxaddington_ontariospca.ca

Snoopy is a year old Beagle/Terrier/ Boston mix. She would love to be in a home with lots of energy! URGENTLY NEEDED...

IAMS food, bleach, dish soap, XL garbage bags, non latex gloves (M&L), To View Our Pets, visit our website www.lennoxaddington.ontariospca.ca

Paulmac’s Pet Food Plus Pets

Advertisement sponsored by:

Now carrying all PERFORMATRIN products. Over 100 new food items & lower prices on Pro Plan, Natural Balance, Wellness, Nutro and many more.

Napanee Mall

Adam Prudhomme-Staff

Kim Pollard and her jazz band hit the stage of Doghouse Studios on Tuesday night in support of the Napanee District Community Foundation. All money raised from ‘100 Miles of Music’, which also featured an auction, will go into the NDCF’s coffers, and will help fund various community projects.

613-354-7564

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

If you know the owner of these animals, please contact (613) 354-2492 or stop in at 156 Richmond Blvd. Closed Monday, Open Tuesday - Saturday 10am - 4pm, Open Sunday 10am - 3pm

COLLECTING RECYCLABLE ALUMINUM Why not help out the Shelter and lighten up your recycle bin at the same time? We are always accepting aluminum pop cans, aluminum pet food cans, aluminum pie plates, and even aluminum foil. All of these items must be rinsed out. They can be dropped off just inside the door at the Shelter, 156 Richmond Blvd., Napanee.

EVERY LITTLE BIT HELPS!

Visit our website www.lennoxaddington.ontariospca.ca

Advertisement sponsored by:

Mayor Gord Schermerhorn said numerous resolutions regarding health effects reportedly related to IWTs have been received by Lennox and Addington County council from other municipalities that do have turbines, which led him not to support IWTs in Greater Napanee. “I wrote a letter to the province talking about the health effects. So I will support the motion because of those reasons. Certainly if there is a chance of those health factors, I do not want that to happen to our residents. “There are people that will say there are no health effects, but you can’t tell me that all these municipalities that have them are sending resolutions out to all municipalities across the province asking for some support if there isn’t some health effects. So I will support the motion,” said Schermerhorn. Gilead Power Corporation has proposed a wind turbine operation called the Dorland Wind Energy Facility in the former Township of South Fredericksburgh. The proposed project area would be spread over approximately 10,000 hectares of privately-owned land. “We are disappointed with this development and determined to ensure we continue to keep the lines of communication open with the residents and the Town of Greater Napanee,” said Gilead Power Project Manager Paul Ernsting when contacted by e-mail by the Beaver yesterday morning.

BUS TRIP… Fundraiser for the L&A District Women’s Institute on Nov. 23. Comedy Every Christmas Story Ever Told at the Whitby Courthouse Theatre. Dinner at the Mandarin Restaurant in Oshawa. Matinee at 2 p.m. Bus leaves from Flying J at 11 a.m., return by 9 p.m. Cost is $95 per person, includes show, bus and all you can eat dinner buffet. Call Valerie Smith at 613354-1115 to reserve your seat.

visit www.napaneebeaver.com


Thursday, October 10, 2013

T H E

N A PA N E E

COMMUNITY / 27

B E AV E R

Tips and tricks for Thanksgiving decorating As October is here, it begins the busiest entertaining season of the year. Thanksgiving starts off the holiday season. While the holidays are popular for decorating your home, what about decorating your tabletop? As your family and friends gather around your table in gratitude and celebration, delight them with a table that is carefully and thoughtfully dressed. Gourds and small pumpkins are cute and thematic, really inexpensive, and they don’t take up a lot of space. Consider using them as whimsical and colorful favors to put at each plate setting. Using stencils or free hand, paint each guest’s name on his or her pumpkin in a pretty script, or pin a little place setting card to the top or front of each one. As a bonus, guests can then take this Thanksgiving table decoration homea great way to remember the day! You can use autumn leaves as table decorations for Thanksgiving in several great ways. One is as a Thanksgiving place setting card. To make a natural autumn leaf place card, simply wax each of your pressed leaves. Then glue a name

tag on each. If you’ve never waxed leaves it’s very easy. Place a single leaf inside a folded piece of wax paper (wax side to the leaf). Using an iron on low setting, move the iron back and forth over the paper. You’ll see the wax melt onto the leaf. Gently open the paper and release the leaf. Let it cool and you’re done! You can also use these pretty waxed autumn leaves around the base of some candles for a simple but elegant centerpiece. You can also randomly distribute some pretty autumn leaves around the table for an understated, windblown look. Pinecones are another gift from nature, and a great idea for Thanksgiving décor for your table. Paint the tips of the pinecones with a hue that compliments your dining room’s overall theme, or use warm autumn colours for a Thanksgiving theme. Wrap a little ribbon around the middle and add a heavy paper name tag (use a hand stamp to stamp each name tag with a cute little turkey!) if you’d like to have the pinecones as place settings. Otherwise you can simply add a few pinecones to your “au natu-

Merola Tahamtan

Design Time ral” centerpiece arrangement. Natural fibers are the perfect table décor for Thanksgiving. You can use a bit of raffia to tie around a cloth napkin at each place-setting. Use a bamboo or other natural-fiber table runner, or use natural fiber placemats. I’ve even seen people pile moss or peat down the middle of a table for a beautiful, natural, and earthy-looking table decoration for Thanksgiving. Simple but pretty! A cornucopia is a very traditional image when you think of table decorations for Thanksgiving. They make wonderful

WE’RE ALL SMILES

centerpieces! You can fill a cornucopia with apples, nuts in the shell, or even appetizers like mini eggrolls. Don’t forget to surround the cornucopia with some waxed autumn leaves to complete the look. You can find sprigs of wheat readily in the craft department of any good sized department store. Mingle the wheat with a bundle of fresh flowers for a fall look, use it to surround a centerpiece, or add it as a garnish. Even tie a little bundle of cut-off wheat with a ribbon, add a nametag, and use it as a place setting card for Thanksgiving. Now with making your adult table decorative, don’t forget about the children. Minimal prep work will ensure small guests stay happily entertained while the adults enjoy conversation and a peaceful meal nearby. Feathered headdress place markers and Thanksgiving-themed crafts can make a kids’ table colourful and playful. Cover the table in brown craft paper to provide a place for creative minds and idle hands to colour doodle or play games. Simply roll out craft paper and securely tape it under the table’s

edges. Bonus: This durable surface protects your tabletop and makes cleaning up spills and crumbs a snap. Inspired by the story of the first Thanksgiving, Indian headdresses can be customized with each child’s name as a creative way to mark their seat. They can be made ahead of time by the hostess or children who are old enough to use a glue gun. Centerpieces for a kids’ table shouldn’t be fussy; they’ll need to withstand possible spills and roughhousing so opt for heavy vessels like ironstone pitchers and small mixing bowls. Fill them with mums, pumpkins, acorn squash or gourds and embellish further with raffia, ribbons and feathers. Craft projects are a great way to entertain and encourage creativity, but the dining table shouldn’t be cluttered with paints and glue sticks. Instead, stock the table with an assortment of colourful beads, leather cording and feathers so the kids can create a necklace or bracelet to wear with their headdress. Fill jelly jars or juice glasses with crayons so kids can colour the brown paper tablecloth as well as

fun Thanksgiving paper crafts and printables. Children can also be encouraged to write a list of things they are thankful for. Making a special kids’ table is all about the little things. Pay attention to the scale, practicality and playfulness of the centerpiece and each place setting. Your pint-sized guests should feel relaxed to be themselves and have a great time. Have fun decorating your tabletop, and use your own personal touches to make your table and Thanksgiving truly unique and special. Express your gratitude for all the good that life has showered upon you through your decorations. Use natural elements rather than manufactured ones. Help save Mother Nature as you thank her. Merola Tahamtan is an Interior Stylist in Home & Business Design, Home Staging, Painting, Colour Consultation, Organization and Window Treatments. You can reach her at 613561-0244 or merolatahamtandesigns@live.ca, follow her on Twitter @MerolaDesigns or visit her at her office in the Lenadco Building.

Fall into a great rate! 1.25% 0RQWK 6SHFLDO

)$ / / 6 $9 , 1 * 6 & ( 5 7 , ) , & $7 (

It takes 17 muscles to smile, but only 1 Denturist...

Wayne Martins DD

NAPANEE DENTURE CLINIC • Full Dentures • Partial Dentures

A.P.R.subject Rates subject to change A.P.R. Rates to change withoutwithout notice. Availble October 1, 2013 - November 1,notice. 2013. Availble October 1, 2013 2013. Ask in- November branch for 1, details.

),1$1&,$/ 3/$11,1* 6$9,1* 62/87,216 6,03/(

• Implant Dentures • Repairs and Relines

613.354.1031

51 Centre St. S., Napanee

ĂĂă :CIG: (IG::I # c (613) 354-6678

Visit www.napaneebeaver.com


28 / ADVERTISING

T H E

N A P A N E E

B E AV E R

Thursday, October 10, 2013


Lennox & Addington, East Hastings

Showcase of Homes Thursday, October 10, 2013 / RE 1

OPEN HOUSE

OPEN HOUSE

SAT. OCT. 12TH 1-3PM

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12TH 1-3PM

404 STANLEY AVE. DESERONTO - $209,000 MLS 13607781 • Updated Bungalow on Generous Sized Lot • Beautiful Kitchen with Granite Countertops • Attached Garage

1670 DOYLE ROAD, BATH Doyle Rd from County Rd 4 or County Rd 7 to 1670 1540 sq.ft., 4 bdrms, 3 baths, 7 appliances. $339,900. MLS 13608129 Call Robert Storring, Broker, Direct 613-379-2903

Call Michele Heaney, Sales Rep, at 613-583-7253 or Peg Campbelton, Sales Rep, at 613-449-4200

44 Industrial Blvd. Napanee LANTHORN REAL ESTATE LTD., BROKERAGE INDEPENDENTLY OWNED AND OPERATED 613-354-4347

OPEN HOUSE SAT. OCT 12TH•2-4PM

175 ROBERT STREET, NAPANEE 4 bedroom 2 storey semi detached home on quiet street with a spacious yard fenced on 3 sides. This home features separate living, dining room, main floor laundry and in last 8 yrs has had new gas furnace, windows, roof, siding, front porch off kitchen and central air for those summer days. Asking $159,900. (L70 MLS 13607259

Call Paul Wagar, Sales Representative, 613-484-1603

112A Industrial Blvd, Napanee 613-354-3550

NEW LISTING

RE/MAX Realty Concepts Corp., Brokerage

113 JESSUP LANE Located in the picturesque Village of Bath sits this 3 bedroom bungalow. A former model home built by Geertsma. This home offers many upgrades including hardwood and ceramic flooring, maple kitchen cabinets, built-in speakers in the living and dining rooms, ensuite in master bedroom, and more. Plus the basement is fully insulated and ready to be finished! Call today for a private viewing. $329,900. (EX3289) MLS 13606785

Real Estate Brokerage

OPEN HOUSE SAT. OCT. 12TH 10AM-12PM

OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY, OCT. 12TH 11-1PM 434 DUNDAS ST. DESERONTO

1 ½ storey home has higher ceiling height on the second floor, lots of extra storage and ‘bonus’ areas. Recent upgrades that include an energy efficient furnace, gas water heater and newer roof. Original hardwood floors have been refinished; newer carpeting and central air. Attached garage is large enough for a workshop and full unfinished basement with walkout to the back yard. Two laneways, one of which gives access to the backyard means no moving vehicles. No need to purchase appliances as this home comes with stove, fridge, washer, dryer and dishwasher .$144,900. MLS 13606792

Call Kelly McMurter, Sales Rep.

Re/Max Finest Realty Inc., Brokerage

613-929-7355

9 Commercial Court Napanee 613-354-5435

QUICK POSSESSION

439 BRADY ROAD, SELBY - A HORSE LOVER’S DELIGHT. Large all on one level 4 bedroom, 2 bath open concept bungalow. Extensive renovations: wiring, insulation, roof, windows, heating system, new kitchen, bath, flooring, and more. Hardwood floors through with oversize kitchen with lots of cabinetry, dining room and living room with 3 season sunroom. Master bedroom has a big walk-in closet, walkout to your own private deck and a new country decor ensuite with a soaker tub. Oversize double car garage/workshop. Barn features 3 box stalls, separate work and tack area, hay storage, horse run in area. Full fenced paddock and pasture area with riding ring. All of this on 50 acres. $299,900. Call Cindy Haggerty, Broker, at 613-540-2116 or Kevin Haggerty, Sales Rep, at 613-539-2120

EXIT REALTY ACCELERATION

Re/Max Finest Realty Inc., Brokerage

Wade Mitchell, Broker of Record/Owner Cell 613-539-1433 32 Industrial Blvd.,Napanee Office: 613-354-4800

Independently Owned & Operated

9 Commercial Court Napanee 613-354-5435

0. $239,00

7 CENTRE ST., UNIT 303 Exquisite interior design highlights this one-of-a-kind penthouse condo on Napanee's waterfront. Overlooking the harbour and steps from boardwalk to the historic falls. Walk to downtown amenities including nicely opened boutiques and sidewalk cafés or a stroll through the waterfront park. 24 hours notice for all showings. A must see home!!! $239,000. MLS (EX3217) 13604865

Call Wayne Elder, Sales Rep Cell 613-536-8897

EXIT REALTY ACCELERATION Real Estate Brokerage

32 Industrial Blvd.,Napanee Office: 613-354-4800

Independently Owned & Operated

354 CHURCH, BATH

179 FIRST AVENUE, NAPANEE 3 Bedroom side split with attached garage with rec room. Home features f.a.g. heating, central air, hardwood floors. Rear yard has 14' x 25' deck with above ground pool and very private. Well landscaped. $214,900. (L61) MLS 13606672

Greg Wagar, Broker of Record, 613-541-9781

112A Industrial Blvd, Napanee 613-354-3550

2823 COUNTY RD 9 (RIVER ROAD) This stunning 4 bedroom ranch bungalow sits back from the road on a beautifully landscaped property. Spacious front entrance leads to the formal living / dining room and then to the back of the house with view to the outside there is family room, laundry, and large kitchen/sitting room with woodstove which leads out to a magnificent flagstone patio. Master bedroom has sitting area, woodstove, 4 piece ensuite and terrace doors to patio. Asking $349,900. (L15) MLS 13601642

Cathy Conrad, Broker, 613-484-2636

112A Industrial Blvd, Napanee 613-354-3550

Looking for a great home? Located in historic Bath, this fantastic home has main level slate flooring that is not only stunningly beautiful, it’s pet friendly too! Spacious and bright kitchen, two of the four bedrooms boast their own ensuite bath perfect for a teen or elderly parent! Finished basement is bright and welcoming. Tons of room. The outdoor space-it even has its own volleyball court! Listed at $299,900. MLS 13604529

EXIT REALTY ACCELERATION Real Estate Brokerage

Call Johanne Brunner, Sales Rep Cell 613-484-4743 32 Industrial Blvd.,Napanee Office: 613-354-4800

Independently Owned & Operated

New bungalow with double car garage within a one minute walk to the boat ramp and the world renowned fishing on the Bay of Quinte. This open concept bungalow features a large island in the kitchen, spacious bathroom with a jacuzzi tub for two. Lower level is completely finished with large rec room, bathroom, and a third bedroom.$279,000. (EX3191) MLS 13603971

Call Kelly Percival, Sales Rep., Cell 613-583-1659

EXIT REALTY ACCELERATION Real Estate Brokerage

32 Industrial Blvd.,Napanee Office: 613-354-4800

Independently Owned & Operated


RE2 / REAL ESTATE

T H E

N A PA N E E

B E AV E R

Thursday, October 10, 2013

112A Industrial Blvd., Napanee, ON OFFICE 613-354-3550 TOLL FREE 1-866-461-0631 See our listings at www.wagarmyatt.com SATURDAY, OCT. 12TH, 10AM-12PM

OPEN HOUSE

Greg Wagar

Broker of Record

613-541-9781

Patsy Rhines

Sales Representative

613-331-0536

Host: Paul Wagar, Sales Rep

10 CEDAR STREET 2 Bedroom mobile home with attached 2 car garage Asking $139,900. (L47) MLS 13605298

Paul Wagar

Sales Representative

613-484-1603

21 UNITED STREET, SELBY Neat and tidy 3 bedroom Asking $179,000. (L44) MLS 13605023

NEW PRICE

Tanya Myatt Mosier

Sales Representative

613-532-0330

Marlene McGrath

Sales Representative

613-849-3264

Rick Gerow

Sales Representative

613-329-9546

Marten D. Lewis

Sales Representative

613-539-9852

NEW LISTING

690 PINE GROVE ROAD 2 Bedroom home with 20 x 40 barn on 5 acres. Asking $245,900. (L80) MLS 13608474

701 PALACE ROAD, NAPANEE Backs onto the Napanee River. Master suite has a fireplace. Asking $485,000. (L62) MLS 13606786

NEW LISTING

997 PINE GROVE ROAD 2 Bedrooms, eat-in kitchen, separate dining room, large fully fenced yard, workshop. Asking $169,900. (L79) MLS 13608380

187 MARILYN AVE. NAPANEE Excellent 3 bedroom family home with all the extras. Asking $255,900. (L72) MLS 13607389

IMMEDIATE POSSESSION

290 SIMCOE STREET 3 bedrooms, All brick New Gas furnace Asking $215,900. (L74) MLS 13607846

753 DESERONTO ROAD

Corner of County Rd 1 West (502) and Deseronto Road. 18 Acre Horse Farm 3 bedrooms, 2 ½ baths. Only 2 minutes from the 401! Asking $399,900. (L78) MLS 13608050

Barry Brummel

Sales Representative

613-484-0933

Bob Rae

NEW LISTING

88 GROVE ST., NEWBURGH 3 Bedroom bungalow with 300` of waterfront on the Napanee River. Asking $254,900. (L51) MLS 13605485

92 MILL ST. W., NAPANEE Pre-Inspected, 3 bedroom, 1 bath home Asking $159,900. (L77) MLS 13608029

1694 COUNTY RD 9 3 + 1 bedroom home with in-law suite. Move in ready for only $369,900. (L60) MLS 13606513

2913 COUNTY ROAD 9 #C

(at the 3 points in the road take the middle lane down to water)

LONG REACH COTTAGE modern, open concept 2 bedroom with Bunkie $239,900. (L76) MLS 13607959

363 PALACE ROAD, NAPANEE 3 bedrooms, 3 baths Asking $264,900. (L36) MLS 13604574

2823 COUNTY RD 9 (RIVER ROAD) 4 Bedroom ranch bungalow. Master bedroom has 4 piece ensuite. Asking $349,900. (L15) MLS 13601642

195 RRIZZELL ROAD, STONE MILLS 2,100 sq. ft. home features 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths. Asking $299,000. (L65) MLS 13607007

5991 COUNTY RD 41 2 storey home in the Village of Erinsville Asking $145,000. (L10) MLS 13606128

595 ARBOUR CRESCENT, KINGSTON Eat-in kitchen, separate dining room, large main bath, central air. 3 piece bath with Jacuzzi tub in basement. Asking $259,900. (L71) MLS13607261

1600 FRONT ROAD AMHERST ISLAND Approximately 5 acres of land boasting 419.60 feet of shoreline. Asking $179,000. (L55) MLS 13605569

54 PATS LANE, SOPHIASBURGH, PRINCE EDWARD Two bedroom bungalow with water frontage on the Long Reach. Double detached garage and shed. Asking $309,000. (L50) MLS 13607969

Sales Representative

613-561-0907

Sue Rankin

Sales Representative

613-536-8589

Cathy Conrad Broker

613-484-2636

NEW PRICE

121 CENTRE ST., DESERONTO 1 1/2 storey, 4 bedroom home Asking $115,900. (L49) MLS 13608476

NEW PRICE

NEW PRICE

2019 COUNTY ROAD 9 1.85 acre lot with 283 feet of water frontage, inground pool. The 1500 sq. ft. split level offers extra large bedrooms, eat-in kitchen, attached garage. Asking $333,000. (L56) MLS 13605708

185 JOHNSON SIDE ROAD, NAPANEE 3 Bedroom, 2 Storey Brick Home! Extra large bedrooms, 1 ½ bathrooms. Listed at $319,900. (L69) MLS 13607233 WWW.185JOHNSONSIDEROAD.COM

3483 BIG CREEK ST., NAPANEE 4 Bedrooms, 2 full baths, 3 stall horse barn with water and hydro. Asking $285,000. (L73) MLS 13607666

4180 KING ST VERONA 3 bedrooms open concept Meadow wood Mobile Home Park. Asking $89,900. (L75) MLS 13607863

182 ACRES - CRAIGEN RD With over 1700 feet of road frontagest. Asking $124,900. (L27) MLS 13603528


T H E

Thursday, October 10, 2013

N A PA N E E

25 MARKET SQUARE $139,900.

EXIT REALTY ACCELERATION REAL ESTATE BROKERAGE, INDEPENDENTLY OWNED AND OPERATED

JOHN CURRAN Sales Representative

Cell 613-328-1767

3 CEDAR ST. $99,900. Retirement living at its best in this seniors’ park. Nice 9’x20’ deck just off sunroom addition. Bright open concept, large master bedroom, 2 bedrooms, kitchen with ample cupboards, appliances included. On water and sewer. (EX3113) MLS 13601800

Great investment, retail and multi-residence. This is a great buy for someone looking to buy a retail building with 2 apts upstairs plus potential for more! (EX3337) MLS 13608111

10 TESKEY RD. $289,900. High on a hill looking down on the world. Listen to the

347 GINGER ST. $219,900. quiet. Secluded privacy. Away from the world. Large masImmaculate, totally finished. In-ground pool, deck, at- ter bedroom looking down on great room. 2 other bedtached garage. Finished basement. You will not be rooms on 1st floor, main floor laundry. Attached two car disappointed. Call Bill. (EX3276) MLS 13606524 garage. (EX3300) MLS 13607609

Excellent 25 acre parcel of land with many possible uses. Small insulated office 16’x12’ with 100 amp service, woodstove and attached garage/storage 11’x23’, all with aluminum siding and metal roof. Additional outbuilding made with 3 45 foot trailers in U shape with good metal roof over opening supported by trusses. Concrete slab at rear 12’x45’, also covered. This property is subject to HST. Possible vendor take back at good rate available. All chattels on the property are available for negotiated sale. List is available. $129,000. MLS 13608012

Lanthorn Real Estate Ltd., Brokerage* Independently Owned and Operated

613-354-4347

I can help with any of your real estate needs.

Email: john.curran@century21.ca Website: johncurranrealestate.com

REAL ESTATE / RE3

NEW LISTING

®

32 Industrial Blvd, Napanee Phone (613)354-4800 www.exitnapanee.ca CELL 540-4375 BILL MARTIN Sales Rep. bmartin@exitnapanee.ca

B E AV E R

61 ACRES PALACE ROAD This unique parcel is right in town with municipal services directly across the street. 1883 ft. street frontage provides tremendous potential for residential development. Included is a 4 bedroom century limestone home and a 48’x60’ post and beam barn in good condition. This is a beautiful elevated setting with great views over the town and is fully surveyed. Call for details. MLS 13600044 $499,900.

D LD OL SO S

VYAS VILLA CONDO Beautifully renovated condo in Vyas Villa, along the shores of the Napanee River, within easy walking distance of downtown shopping and the waterfront parks. Updates include granite countertops in kitchen and baths, crown mouldings, kitchen cabinet replacement, newer windows and exterior doors, newer flooring and updated energy efficient baseboard heaters. This unit is in move-in condition and shows like new. MLS 13602380 $175,900.

1006 BETHEL ROAD COUNTRY 2 STOREY This beautiful family home is well kept and ready to move into. This 8 year old home has 4 bedrooms and three baths. Features include formal living and dining rooms, main floor family room, eat in kitchen with lots of cupboard space and upper level laundry area. Wood floors throughout the main level, a gas fireplace and a high dry unfinished basement with a walkout complete the home. Sitting on 4.31 acres makes this the perfect country home just looking for a family to move into it. MLS 13607758 $309,900.

Broker

See at www.storringrealestate.on.ca

17 ACRE COUNTRY PROPERTY - Located just north of Gull Lake and Sheffield Lake and is the first property south of 3110. Well treed Canadian Shield property with lots of rocks and trails and a large beaver pond. This property also has a deeded right of way for access to Sheffield Lake just a couple minutes away. MLS 13606525 $47,900.

D LD OL SO S

Robert Storring 613-354-4347 (office) 613-379-2903 (direct)

VACANT LAND

247 ACRES - 247 acres of typical Canadian Shield property. Some ponds, bush, open space, trees and some sand and gravel deposits. Great hunting and an ideal spot for ATV trails. Also has deeded access to Sheffield Lake. MLS 13607244 $159,900.

DOWNTOWN DESERONTO Very nice 1½ storey home in the heart of Deseronto. Located just north of Dundas St. so it is an easy walk to the downtown area. Large kitchen with eat in area, Main Floor Laundry area, 2 generous size bedrooms on the upper level and a large back yard make this a great starter home. MLS 13602510 $89,900.

VACANT LAND DRIVE IN ROAD - Very desirable 27 Acre lot, backing on to the 401 and with 645 ft of frontage on Drive In Road. This property has two gates and a drilled well. There is a Hydro easement on the property. The Seller has no information on the well and has never used it. $119,900. MLS: 13607566

3.79 ACRES ON BUTTERMILK FALLS RD. Very nice building lot about 15 minutes from town and 401. Easy commute to Napanee or Belleville. Very nice road with upscale homes in the area. Level lot and partially treed. Dug well with return rate of approximately 16 gals. a minute according to report. MLS 136000043 $37,900.

Dave Pinnell Jr. Sales Representative

L ANTHORN REAL ESTATE LTD., BROKERAGE INDEPENDENTLY OWNED & OPERATED

CELL 613-328-7213 dave.pinnelljr@century21.ca

www.davepinnell.ca www.80raglanstreet.com

www.385churchst.com - 3 plus 1 bedroom - 1 bath - Recent new windows and roof Asking $264,900. MLS 13606379

JUST MOVE IN! Updated kitchen, nice size living/dining rms, main floor laundry & half bath, family room with doors to deck, 3 bdrms LOOKING FOR OFFERS! & bath with jacuzzi tub and separate shower on 2nd floor. Affordable home features large living room, updated eat-in Single garage, paved drive, large corner lot close to playkitchen with doors to back deck and main floor laundry ground & ballpark complete the picture. Call now, a super /2pc bath. 2 bedrooms & full bath up stairs and family room buy at $179,900. MLS 13604677 See www.villagefamilyor 3 bdrm in the lower level. $89,900.mls 13607702 home.com

NEW PRICE

MUST SEE

www.8700countyroad2.com

www.377countyroad15.com - 3 plus 2 bedroom - 2 full baths - Over 2 acres with pool - 10 years old Offered For Sale at $279,900. MLS 13606865

CENTURY BRICK

Large principal rooms, updated windows, furnace, roof, gas A TREMENDOUS BUY! fireplace. Separate dining for those family gatherings & up- Good 3 bedroom bungalow in village setting. Walk to dated eat in kitchen. Master has ensuite with jacuzzi tub. Beaver Lake, separate school up the street, woodstove to Patio doors to large deck with hard top gazebo. Heated in- help with heating. Full basement waits your finishing

INTERESTED IN ADVERTISING IN OUR REAL ESTATE SECTION? Call or email me for rates today! MICHELLE BOWES Production Manager The Napanee Beaver/The Picton Gazette 613-354-6641 ext 113 chimelle123@gmail.com

-3 bedroom, 1 bath -large corner in town lot -newer windows,roof, furnace MLS 13607428 Asking $229,900

BRING ME AN OFFER

www.19-bawn-road.com

- 3 beds, 2 baths - Extensively renovated and upgraded - Approx. 65 acres with barn and garage - Waterfront on Salmon River Call Dave for Details. Asking $399,900.

- Executive 4 bedroom, all brick home - 2 full baths, 2 part - Inground pool - Creek to Napanee River Asking $419,900. MLS 13607060 Call Dave for details.

www.163dundasstreet.com MUST SEE

- 3 bedroom - 1 bath - Many renovations - Large lot - Double detached garage Asking $154,000. MLS 13606515

VACANT LAND

- 8 plus acres with waterfront on Racoon Lake. Call for details. MLS #13603606 Offered for sale $54,900. - 4 plus acres waterfront on Little Creek Street. REDUCED TO $42,900. Call Dave for details. MLS 13607983

613-354-4347

L ANTHORN REAL ESTATE LTD., BROKERAGE Independently Owned and Operated Off:

For more photos, check out the web addresses with each listing!


RE4 / REAL ESTATE

T H E

MIKE GORDON

Sales Representative OFFICE

613-354-4800 CELL

613-329-4266 info@exitnapanee.ca

LIST

N A PA N E E

EXIT REALTY ACCELERATION Real Estate Brokerage - Independently Owned & Operated 113 Richmond Blvd., Napanee

www.exitnapanee.ca

...

T O DAY

EXIT

REDUCED

52 COUNTY RD. 18 Century home situated on 1 acre parcel. Very private and well treed. This home boasts hardwood throughout, large eat-in kitchen, main floor laundry, completely updated. Well decorated home with lots of character. $249,900. (EX3132) MLS 13606992

233 CROSS ST., DESERONTO 3+1 bedroom bungalow in a quiet neighbourhood of town. Carpet-free, open concept, attached garage with entry to home, paved drive, patio door to rear deck. F.A.G. heat, central air and more. $179,900. (EX3247) MLS 13605550

This 2 bedroom, 1 bath, modernized four season cottage is surrounded by trees and a spectacular view with 120’ of supreme Bay of Quinte shoreline. Interlocking patio leads to seawall and 60’ dock to hot spot for bass, walleye, pike, etc. Property is meticulously maintained and boasts gleaming laminate floors, electric fireplace, loads of closets, open concept kitchen and living room, granite top in bathroom, new appliances, large shed. New steel boat lift added in ‘09 for larger boats for your family pleasure. $274,900. (EX3172) MLS 12603351 www.paradiseonbayofquinte.com

331 PALACE RD. 2 bedroom bungalow, large living room and extra large eat-in kitchen. Main floor laundry. Extra large town lot. Roof, furnace and windows updated. Being sold “as is.” New roof 2003, new furnace 2004, windows 2009. $109,000. (EX3126) MLS 13602204

B E AV E R

NEW PRICE

2289 MORVEN CRES. Enjoy country living on quiet Morven Cres. just minutes from Napanee and easy access to 401 and Kingston. Beautifully maintained bungalow with 1980 sq. ft. of living space and full unfinished basement. Hardwood floors, sunken living room with stone fireplace. Open concept overlooking inground pool in back yard. Many upgrades. Shows immaculate! $299,900. (EX3294) MLS 13606981

Thursday, October 10, 2013

WAYNE ELDER

Sales Representative OFFICE

613-354-4800 CELL

613-536-8897

welder@exitnapanee.ca

T O M O R R OW !

OPEN HOUSE SAT. 2-4 OPEN HOUSE SAT. 11-1 Immaculate bungalow with majestic views and vivid colours from the decks & gazebo of Little Clear Lake. Professionally designed and built, this very private setting offers crown land bordering the property. Stream running through and fully serviced trailer in the woods accessible by a foot bridge for weekend guests. New furnace, heated garage with workshop and den and bar. Minutes to Hwy 7 and Sharbot Lake. Call for the numerous upgrades. $264,900 EX3342 MLS 13608203

NEW LISTING

164 MILL ST., DESERONTO 141 BRIDGE ST. E. Older 3 bedroom home in Deseronto. Well kept home with nice decor and updates. Fully 3 bedroom Victorian brick home located across fenced rear yard. All appliances are included from park. Updated windows, roof, furnace, in asking price. $119,000. (EX3124) MLS central air, and rear yard is fenced. $184,900. (EX3328) MLS 13608094 13602043

7 CENTRE ST., UNIT 303 Exquisite interior design highlights this one-of-a-kind penthouse condo on Napanee's waterfront. Overlooking the harbour and steps from boardwalk to the historic falls. Walk to downtown amenities including nicely opened boutiques and sidewalk cafés or a stroll through the waterfront park. 24 hours notice for all showings. A must see home!!! $239,000. MLS (EX3217) 13604865

48 DUNDAS Exquisitely decorated and renovated downtown Victorian. Built-in appliances, high efficiency natural gas with central air, natural gas fireplace, formal dining room, large deck. All within walking distance of rejuvenated downtown Napanee. You must see the charm this home offers! $199,000. (EX3343) MLS 13608229

Secluded cottage on 4 acres, deeded access and view of Sheffield Lake. Includes appliances and some furniture. Fishing and privacy. Immediate possession to enjoy the rest of the summer. Needs some upgrading. $135,000. (EX3257) MLS 13605793

PRIME VACANT LOTS AND LAND BUILDING LOTS . VACANT $14,900 YOUNGS RD., STONE MILLS - Secluded, VACANT wooded building lot, private. Taxes to be asBUILDING LOT LAND

LAND

COUNTY RD. 8 2 lots for $59,900. (EX3129) 6 acres $169,900. (EX3131)

INVESTMENT PROPERTY Approved for 48 lots. $379,000. (EX3131)

1265 OLD MACKENZIE RD. - Ideal recreational property for hunting, fishing, fourwheeling or ski-dooing, or a new home. Ample amount of level shoreline on Princess Lake. Nice hardwood ridge. Well treed property fronts on both sides of road. 46 kms from Bancroft. $99,900. (EX2966) MLS 12606953

Ideal recreational property for hunting, fishing, four wheeling or ski-dooing or a new home. Ample amount of level shoreline on Princess Lake. Nice hardwood ridge. Well treed property fronts on both sides of road. 46 kms from Bancroft. $99,900. (EX3311) MLS 13607388

sessed. Vendor will quote on septic and foundation, insulation. $24,900. (EX3133) MLS 13602403

CEDARSTONE RD. - Excellent cleared and level building lot close to Tamworth. Drilled well with well record at 6 G.P.M. Taxes to be assessed. Vendor able to prepare quote for foundation, septic system or additional fill if required. $24,900. (EX3134) MLS 13602404

Excellent level building lot with view of Hay Bay and boat launch. Levelled and great recreation property for your home. $15,000. (EX3277)

SOLD

9 YOUNGS RD., ERINSVILLE Secluded building lot 15 minutes from Napanee. Privacy plus, drilled well, small barn and A-frame structure on the lot. Want a hideaway? Existing house on the lot is being removed. $14,900. (EX3244) MLS 13605476

5 4 LARGE LOTS STILL AVAILABLE!

CHOOSE YOUR LOT AND MODEL TWO AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY SALES OFFICE 613-354-7474 CELL 416-576-4473 Mon - Thurs - Builder on-site for showings

Kanvers Way, Napanee (Bridge Street West to Angus, to Beverly, to Kanvers Way)

10 Models to Choose From

Many sizes to suit your needs OPEN HOUSE Saturday & Sunday 1-4pm Bungalows & 2 Storeys on 50’ Lots Information: 613.354.1441

NEW SEMIS & BUNGALOWS READY NOW!! From 1200 - 1310 sq.ft. Starting at $225,000.

BEVERLY ST.

E IMMEDIAT N IO S S E S POS ! AVAILABLE

Full 7 year TARION Warranty

SOL D 50’ SIN GLE SEM IS

COME IN AND SEE OUR FINISHED MODELS

LOT 5 - Model 1530 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, large 3 car garage. Many upgrades including hardwood flooring, ceramic tile, oak stairs.

LOT 12 - Model 1380 1380 SF 2 bdrm, 2 bath, ideal home for downsizing, mn flr laun, step-in shower, many upgrades, hdwd, ceramic, no rear neighbours $279,900 HST Incl.


T H E

Thursday, October 10, 2013

LIST

N A PA N E E

...

T O DAY

B E AV E R

EXIT

WADE MITCHELL

T O M O R R OW !

GEORGE MITCHELL

BROKER OF RECORD/OWNER OFFICE: 354-4800 HOME: 354-1520 CELL: 539-1433

email: wmitchell@exitnapanee.ca

REAL ESTATE BROKERAGE INDEPENDENTLY OWNED AND OPERATED

32 Industrial Blvd, Napanee, Ontario K7R 4B7 Phone (613)354-4800 Fax (613)354-4804 www.exitnapanee.ca

145 MCGILL ST. 4 BEDROOM, 2.5 BATH POSSIBLE 1 BEDROOM SELF-CONTAINED IN-LAW SUITE $279,900. (EX3330) MLS 13607975

57 ELLIOTS LANE 4 BEDROOM,1 BATH $224,900. (EX3331) MLS 13607994

285 DUNDAS STREET W. 4 BEDROOM, 1 BATH $297,000. (EX3334) MLS 13608020

542 BRIDGE ST. W. 5+1 BEDROOM, 4 BATH $499,900. (EX3297) MLS 13607005

NEW LISTING

9 CENTRE ST., UNIT 103 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH $199,900. (EX3345) MLS 13608258

99 HICKORY LANE 4 BEDROOM, 2 BATH $1,200,000. (EX3175) MLS 13603703

SOLD

256 DUNDAS STREET W. 4 BEDROOM, 2.5 BATH $219,900. (EX3201) MLS 13604301

220 BRANT ST. 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH $143,900. (EX3347) MLS 13608289

34 ALFRED ST. 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH $269,000. (EX3221) MLS 13604981

144 MILL ST. 1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH $174,900. (EX3281) MLS 13606622

22 EDGEWOOD DR. 4 BEDROOM, 2.5 BATH $369,900. (EX3321) MLS 13607787

47 BROCK ST., NEWBURGH 2+1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH $169,000. (EX3349) MLS 13608314

321 DUNDAS ST. W. 4 BEDROOM, 2 BATH $289,900. (EX3285) MLS 13606684

64 RIVER RD. 4 BEDROOM, 2.5 BATH $274,900. (EX3252) MLS 13605674

124 COLLEGE ST., DESERONTO 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH $149,900. (EX3309) MLS 13607370

17 PARKVIEW HILL 3+1 BEDROOM, 2 BATH $289,900. (EX3299) MLS 13607013

17 SOUTHWOOD CRES. 3 BEDROOM, 3 BATH $289,900. (EX3292) MLS 13606961

COMMERCIAL/LEASE

NEW LISTING

COMMERCIAL

Looking to be your own boss? Here is a perfect business!! Golf driving range including all equipment. Includes 8 inside stations and 10 grass outside stations with irrigation plow and 9 hole mini putt. $199,900. (EX3312) MLS 13607414 VACANT LAND

COMMERCIAL

24 ADVANCE AVE.

email:gmitchell@exitnapanee.ca

NEW LISTING

VACANT LAND

VACANT LAND

Newly created building lot on Plumb Road with new drilled well with 15 GPM. Very private to build your dream home. Sloping lot to allow a walkout basement. Buyer must enter into an agreement to begin construction within one year of closing. $49,900. (EX3229) MLS 13605284 PRISTINE SHORELINE - SHERMAN’S POINT ROAD - Build your dream home on this 100’ waterfront x 300’ cleared level lot. Nestled within the cedars on the shores of Long Reach. $175,000. (EX3049) MLS 13600288

NEW PRICE

6355 COUNTY RD. 41 2 BEDROOM, 1.5 BATH $189,900. (EX3340) MLS 13608162

1503 SOUTH SHORE RD. 2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH $239,000. (EX3087) MLS 13607036

4291 COUNTY RD. 8 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH $289,900. (EX3125) MLS 13602117

18 WATER ST. E. 1 BEDROOM, 1.5 BATH $279,900. (EX3319) MLS 13607632

120 COLLEGE ST., DESERONTO 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH $149,900. (EX3308) MLS 13607364

8061 COUNTY RD. 2 4 BEDROOM, 1.5 BATH $399,900. (EX3303) MLS 13607278

WATERFRONT

SOLD

7685 COUNTY RD. 2 3 BEDROOM, 1.5 BATH $499,000. (EX3213) MLS 13604785

29 HARTWOOD CRES. 4+1 BEDROOM, 3.5 BATH $399,900. (EX3260) MLS 13605881

56 SLASH RD. 3 BEDROOM, 1.5 BATH $263,000. (E3314) MLS 13607474

124 ROBINSON ST. 3 BEDROOM, 3 BATH $335,000. (EX3251) MLS 13605646

218 BRANT ST. 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH $143,900. (EX3348) MLS 13608299

113 JESSUP LANE 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH $329,900. (EX3289) MLS 13606785

NEW

NEW PRICE

50

ACRE CHRISTMAS TREE FARM

NEW LISTING

6 rental units, three 12’ overhead doors, 16 clear feet ceiling span. Separate furnance, separate hydro. New owner can set up own shop with shipping and receiving. Needing 24 hour notice for showing on the rented units. Call for more details. $579,000. (EX3323) MLS 13607841

COMMERCIAL

OFFICE: 354-4800 CELL: 541-9152

COMMERCIAL

455 CENTRE ST. PRICE OPEN TO OFFERS Location, location, location! Prime commercial site Combine business and pleasure! Love Golf? How located on Centre Street North across from the Excellent Main Street location, next to Tim Hortons. about a golf cart rental business showing excellent Napanee Mall and right beside Petro Canada. 1400 Featuring 4900 sq. ft. building in good condition, 3 bay returns. Over 1500 tournament carts booked last sq. ft. Butler building features 2 entrances off Centre doors. Asking $299,900. Must be sold! Open for year. (EX3170) MLS 13603483 Street. $599,900. (EX3271) MLS 13606321 offers. (EX3041) MLS 13600031

82 acres on Shermans Point with 332 feet of prime waterfront. Build your dream waterfront home on the secluded wooded lot at the very end of the road. Good possibilities of developing the remaining acreage with 4560 feet of Town Road frontage. Pick your spot to build your Zoned rural with a tiny bit of E.P. GST is applicable. NEW LISTING Attention!! dream home on this picture perfect $399,900. (EX3256) MLS 13605733 19 acre estate size property located just minutes north of Napanee. Enjoy nature at its best. You will have lots Great building lot with lots of privacy. Just minutes of privacy. Entrance driveway is in. Good wells have from town. $49,900. (EX3045) MLS 13600234 been obtained on neighbouring lots. Vendor can assist with financing. $59,500. (EX3310) MLS 13607382 ATTENTION!! Pick your spot to build your dream home on this picture perfect 19 acre building lot locatIf you like wide open spaces, this building lot is per- ed just minutes north of Napanee. Enjoy nature at its fect for you. Build you dream home on this very nice, best. You will have lots of privacy. Entrance driveway level lot and have space to roam. New well with lots is in. Good wells have been obtained on neighbouring of water. Taxes to be assessed. $49,900. (EX3044) lots. $59,500. (EX3068) MLS 13601045 MLS 13600215

Road. 8 Acres of prime NEW LISTING Vanluven commercial land. Services at lot line. Located just off 41 Highway on Vanluven Rd. (EX3317) MLS 13607574

SALES REPRESENTATIVE

EXIT REALTY ACCELERATION

NEW LISTING

NEW LISTING

REAL ESTATE / RE5

VACANT LAND

82 ACRES on Shermans Point with 332 feet of prime waterfront. Build your dream waterfront home on the secluded wooded lot at the very end of the road. Good possibilities of developing the remaining acreage with 4560 feet of Town Road frontage. Zoned rural with a tiny bit of E.P. GST is applicable. $399,900. (EX3256) MLS 13605733 EXCELLENT BUILDING LOT located on Robert Street just north of Graham Street. 50` x 106`. Level lot. $46,900 (EX2545) MLS 11605554

8 ACRES of prime commercial land. Services at lot line. Located just off 41 Highway on VanLuven Excellent building lot on Plumb Road. Very private set- Road. $240,000. MLS 12603946 ting, new drilled well with 8 GPM. Sloping lot ideal for walkout basement. Buyer must enter into an agree- BUILD YOUR DREAM HOME on this 200’ by 4 acre ment with sellers to begin construction within one year prime waterfront lot on Hay Bay. Sandy shoreline, level lot. $159,900. (EX3184) MLS 13604084 of closing. $49,900. (EX3230) MLS 13605289

COMMERCIAL

17-125 EAST There are 2 buildings on the subject property; the sales office (35x24) 840 sq. ft., the garage is 1190 sq. ft. with two bay doors, used to be a service station. The property is accessible from Adelphi and East St. Excellent development property. Must be sold. Open for offers. $199,000. (EX3039) MLS 13600028

VACANT LAND

County Rd. 8, South Shore Rd. 225 acres of vacant land. Featuring approximately 80 acres of mixed wood, some work land, the remainder pasture. $350,000. (EX3243) MLS 13605449 Excellent building lot. Very private 1.43 acres. Rail fence around the property. Close to Tamworth and Beaver Lake. Located on Green Road. $19,900. (EX3240) MLS 13605426 BUILD YOUR DREAM HOME on this 200’ by 4 acre prime waterfront lot on Hay Bay. Sandy shoreline, level lot. $169,900. (EX3185) MLS 13604098 PETWORTH RD. - Build your dream home on this 3.43 acre lot with a drilled well already on the property. $59,900. (EX3142) MLS 13602636 FITCHETT RD. Great building lot on hardtop country road but only minutes from town. Beautifully treed backdrop to build your home on! $44,900. (EX3313) MLS 13607453

VACANT LAND

Prime waterfront lot only 10 minutes from Napanee. Excellent drilled well, level waterfront, many trees have been planted. A beautiful location for your new home. $224,900. (EX3233) MLS 13605375 Good building lot close to public school, water, sewer, hydro, natural gas runs by property. No development fee required by municipality. Taxes are estimated. $19,900. (EX3147) MLS 13602703

BUILD YOU OWN DREAM HOME on this beautiful 63 acre parcel. Approx. 30 acres of workable and 13 acres of cedar, pine, and spruce. Remaining is brush. $99,900. (EX3179) MLS 13603821 GOOD 2 ACRE PARCEL of industrial land cleared and ready to build on. Water and sewer at the front of the property. Call for more details. $82,900. (EX2019) MLS 10601646


T H E

RE6 / REAL ESTATE

N A PA N E E

B E AV E R

Stunning Stone Home, Mint Condition With Exposed Beams, Wide Plank Original Pine Flooring, All Large Rooms With Original Large Baseboards, Crown Moldings, Dining Room Large Enough To Sit The Whole Family For Thansgiving Dinner. Master Bedroom Features His And Hers Closets, Skylights And Ensuite, Main Bath Features Claw Foot Tub, Glassed In Seperate Shower. Two Propane Fireplaces, Many Built In Cabinets. Updated Wiring, Plumbing, Heating, Steel Roof Central Air & Vac. The Man In The Family Will Love The Detached Triple Car Garage With 1000 Ft. Loft Above Would Make An Excellent Games Room. This Would Make A Great Place For A Home Based Business. Call Kelly To View Today!! $294,000. MLS 13606972

CHARACTER GALORE! NEW PRICE

EXIT REALTY ACCELERATION Real Estate Brokerage Independently Owned & Operated

113 Richmond Blvd., Napanee email: kellyp@exitnapanee.ca

MINT HOME ON THE WATER

KELLY PERCIVAL Sales Representative

OFFICE 613-354-4800 CELL 613-583-1659

Wow is what you will say when you walk through the door of this mint home on the water. The exterior of this home is like a high end resort with the new inground pool with lighting, the hot tub, the massive entertaining decks all overlooking the lake and total privacy, plus a detached double car garage to store your boat for the winter. The interior of this 4 year old home features open concept kitchen and family room, granite counters, huge master bedroom with ensuite and in floor heating, fully finished lower level with walkout to large patio.This home is ICF from ground to roof which makes it very economical to heat. Only 20 minutes to Kingston. $405,000. MLS 13605161

OPEN HOUSE SUN. OCT. 20 12-2PM

Character galore in this amazing house on the beautiful Bay of Quinte. Interior features 10 foot ceilings, hardwood floors, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, separate sitting room, large sun room, office with separate side entrance would make a great spot for your home business, great waterfront is prime walley fishing or a 20 minute boat ride to Picton for lunch. Exterior has stunning landscaping, a double car garage which is heated & air conditioned. Only 15 minutes to all amenities. $329,000. (EX3270) MLS 13606306

Great duplex with seperate meters. One 3 bedroom unit, one 2 bedroom unit. Newer flooring, freshly painted. Live on one side and let the other side pay your mortgage for you! MLS 13603423 $123,000.

OFFICE 354-4800 CELL 453-0486 email: ssharpe@exitnapanee.ca

NEW PRICE

Wow what a view!! Sit on your deck and feel like your at a resort but you are actually right in town. Interior features 5 bedrooms, ensuite and walk in closet in master bedrooms, as well as a large deck off your master bed overlooking the water. Lower level is completely finished with patio doors to lower level deck and has potential for an in-law suite. Two garages, one upper garage with entrance to the upper level of the home and one lower garage with entrance to lower level. Call Kelly to view this waterfront bungalow today. $276,000. (EX3219) MLS 13604941

1

ST

SHARON SHARPE Sales Representative

Well maintained and recently updated, this home, with double detached garage, is situated on 114 acres and backs onto a creek. 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths, gas heat, finished basement. Call Sharon for further details. $239,900. (EX3211) MLS 13604752

AWESOME VIEWS!

LOOKING FOR A “SHARPE” AGENT” CALL SHARON

2250 ENRIGHT RD. - HOBBY FARM POTENTIAL This beautiful home is situated on 15 acres with spring fed pond. Great for horses!! Gorgeous kitchen and dining open concept is wonderful for entertaining. Vaulted ceilings, huge master bedroom with 4 piece ensuite, lovely 3 season sunroom overlooking open fields, heated and cooled garage...The list goes on. Check out the virtual tour. Asking $424,900. (EX3339) MLS 13608136 VIRTUAL TOUR: http://www.obeo.com/826102

1507 THRASHER RD. $239,900.

New bungalow with double car garage within a one minute walk to the boat ramp and the world renowned fishing on the Bay of Quinte. This open concept bungalow features a large island in the kitchen, spacious bathroom with a jacuzzi tub for two. Lower level is completely finished with large rec room, bathroom, and a third bedroom.$279,000. (EX3191) MLS 13603971

DUPLEX

Start living the dream in this 4 bedroom year round waterfront home. Interior features ensuite bath, 4 bedrooms (one on the main floor), open concept, propane fireplace for those cooler winter nights when you finish ice fishing or skating on the amazing North Shore Hay Bay. Sit on your large deck and watch the herons & ducks while you sip your morning coffee or fish right from your dock where walleye are awaiting. Large boathouse with approval in place to build on top of it. Your own private boat launch & boat lift included. Call Kelly to start living your dream today! $334,000. MLS 13604680

NEW LISTING

1 MINUTE FROM BOAT LAUNCH

BAY OF QUINTE WATERFRONT

DREAMING OF WATERFRONT?

2250 ENRIGHT RD. $424,900.

232 CROSS ST. $182,900. NEW PRICE

Great family home with 4 bedrooms and room for the whole family. The full finished basement provides 4th bedroom, rec room, den/family room plus 3 piece bath. Great inlaw suite possibilities. Beautifully decked 21’ above-ground pool. 1 1/2 detached garage with concrete drive. Asking $182,900. (EX3279) MLS 13606551

64 COLLEGE ST. $137,900. Well maintained 3 bedroom with gas heat, newer windows and furnace. New front deck, 2 driveways, detached garage. Main floor laundry. Huge yard situated only a stone-throw away from waterfront park, boat launch and recreation facilities. All appliances included. $137,900. (EX3287) MLS 13606743

Independently Owned & Operated

32 Industrial Blvd., Napanee www.exitnapanee.ca

Excellent all brick, 3 bedroom home with possible 4th in basement. Hardwood throughout main level. 2 baths, gas heat, beautifully finished basement with new gas fireplace 2012, two-tier deck 12x20 with pergola, central air, beautifully landscaped, roof approximately 5yrs old. (EX3325) MLS 13607890

188 CENTRE ST. $199,900.

SOLD

NEW

EXIT REALTY ACCELERATION REAL ESTATE BROKERAGE

18 SUNSET CRES. $239,900.

SOLD

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Nicely kept one owner home with 2 baths, central air, bright eat in kitchen with an abundance of cupboards, garden doors to patio and beautifully landscaped yard. Double paved drive, main floor laundry, finished basement. A must be seen! (EX3318)

362 MAIN ST. $189,900. Approximately 1600 sq.ft. of beautiful retail space presently rented for $1300 inclusive. Two 1 bedroom apartments rented for $1350 inclusive. Total gross rents $2650/month. Retail space is separately metered for hydro and heat. Lot size 38x132. $189,900. (EX3333) MLS 13608006


T H E

Thursday, October 10, 2013

N A PA N E E

B E AV E R

26B Richmond Blvd. Napanee

BROKERAGE

Office: 613-354-4213

142 COUNTY ROAD 8, NAPANEE

A must see in Napanee! Move right in to this 3 bedroom, 1 bathroom home with modern upgrades including new kitchen and upgraded bathroom on the upper level. Oversized town lot located right across the road from the Napanee Golf Course. Attractively priced at $239,900. MLS 13606302

Minutes from downtown Napanee, this spacious 2 storey home has a lot of character! 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, with an eat-in kitchen as well as a separate dining room. Large detached garage/storage shed. Walking distance to all amenities! FALL in love with this century brick home! Priced at $229,900. MLS 13608471

200 ROBERT ST. Don’t miss out on seeing this vibrant, 3 level, Victorian style home with many modern upgrades including roof (2011), both bathrooms (2010), windows (2008) and updated flooring, to name a few. Original tin ceilings in dining room, tin panelling in the kitchen, and custom etched glass windows just add to the character of this unique home. Located on a quiet street close to all amenities, this 2000 sq. ft. 3 bedroom, 1.5 bathroom house is the perfect place for your next home. All of this with a fully fenced back yard and a detached garage. Priced at $224,900. MLS 13607139 13729 HIGHWAY 41, CLOYNE Don’t miss out on this 2,300 sq. ft. country home sitting on approximately 80 acres just north of the Village of Northbrook. Included in this 5 bedroom is a large eat-in kitchen, main floor laundry, and an abundance of storage space. ALSO, a separate rental unit with 2 bedrooms, 1 bathroom located on the property as well offers many possibilities for potential buyers. Lot has a quiet creek running through it and also backs onto Hunter’s Creek Golf Course. A must see! $189,900. MLS 13606996

1049 LITTLE POND RD.

FARM LAKE Don’t miss out on this lovely waterfront lot on Farm Lake in the heart of the Land-O-Lakes. Extremely private setting with 790 feet of natural water frontage. Many excellent building locations and potential for severances. Priced at $169,900. MLS 13607003

Very private setting on 14.33 acres which includes a separate, already severed, 10.75 acre lot with an abundance of hardwood and maple trees, and also includes a separate 10’x14’ log cabin great for hunting or a weekend get-away! This 1,600 sq.ft. home includes many features some of which include pine flooring, wood ceilings, open concept kitchen/living room area, covered front porch, and detached workshop. Easy commute to Napanee or Tweed! Priced at $249,900. MLS 13606295

1523 LAKE RD. Don’t miss your chance to see this 1,185 sq. ft. home situated on 1.63 acres in Enterprise! Close to all amenities, this town is the perfect place for growing families or a quiet place to retire! Features of this 3 bedroom bungalow include a 1 car attached garage and an extra large detached garage (great for extra storage), main floor laundry room, full basement with an abundance of storage, and a large private lot with a quiet creek running along the property. A gardeners’ dream! Priced at $168,000. MLS 13606394

25 ROGERS RD. Excellent hobby farm located in a quiet rural setting with approximately 50 acres. This 3 bedroom home with 2,400 sq. ft. (approx.) has updated kitchen cupboards, tin ceilings in the kitchen, an updated bathroom, vinyl windows, pine floors, central air, and a metal roof. The house is located on top of a hill which provides wonderful views of the surrounding farm which has a mix of fields, pasture land and bush. An excellent setting to start your new, backto-nature life! Priced at $239,900. MLS 13606492

118 EAST ST., NAPANEE Just steps away from downtown Napanee, this all brick home offers an ideal location close to all amenities. Great family home with 3 bedrooms and 2 bathrooms, plenty of storage/closet space. Large detached garage with loft plus detached office/workshop for home business. Asking $199,900. MLS 13604672

Brokerage, Independently Owned and Operated

Duaine Presley Sales Representative

384-5500 office 561-4953 home

Perfect recreation property with year round access located south of Kaladar on 41 Hwy. 50+ acre parcel of paradise has been used for a hunting camp for many years but would also be perfect for family activities year round including skiing, hiking, ski-dooing, skating and more. Property has lake size ponds, pine groves, beautiful rugged Canadian Shield terrain plus a 20 x 32 maintenance free cabin, plus hundreds of acres of crown land. Perfect fishing, hunting and family recreation property. $89,900. MLS 12608592

Affordable 2 bedroom bungalow with full lower level with walk-out to lake side that could be transformed into a beautiful rec room. This property is located in the heart of hunting and fishing country. A perfect affordable get away, starter or retirement home. $79,900. MLS 12602807

Affordable 4 season get-a-way or full time residence with year round easy access, right in the middle of vacation, hunting and fishing country, and just minutes to the beautiful Mazinaw lake. Call for details. $69,500. MLS 13604506

3 bedroom home located at 201 Water Street Napanee has been totally remodeled inside and out and is now in like new condition and ready and waiting for the arrival of its new owners. Updates including new siding, all doors and windows, drywall and insulation, plumbing and electrical, kitchen cabinets and front porch. Outside has been completely landscaped, plus has new stamped concrete sidewalks and patio. Call for more details. $189,900. MLS 13607920

New Price!

3 bedroom home in the country... Located on a large, close to a one acre lot. This home has a large country style kitchen, attached garage and workshop. Could be transformed into the perfect family home. Great location just 5 minutes from Hwy #401 and Napanee. $109,900. MLS 13604346

3 bedroom one and half storey home on close to a one acre lot about 20 minutes from Kingston. Home has had a new addition about 8 years ago and has some newer windows and washroom updates. Very spacious with large dining and living rooms, perfect for the growing family. Outside there is lots of yard space with 24' x 12' workshop and 9' x 14' +/- storage shed, plus a fenced dog run. $149,900. MLS 12603310 Four bedroom 2 storey home in the village of Enterprise. Features a good size eat-in kitchen with separate dining room and living room with patio doors in both rooms, 4 bedrooms on second floor. this well kept home is in very good condition and has had all doors and windows, plus oil tank and well pump, replaced in the past few years. There is also a car and a half attached garage with new garage door and a large deck on back side of the house. $159,900. MLS 13603708

Priceion! Re duct

MUST SEE COUNTRY HOME AND A CABIN! 200 LUFFMAN RD.

Remarkable home set on quiet Tawny Lake among perennial gardens. This ranch bungalow offers spacious studio/family room/office with a sunroom and deck overlooking the waterfront. Attached garage, 2 driveways and a greenhouse. Rec room, oak floors, many upgrades, large closets including cedar. 3+1 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms. Near all conveniences including medical centres, schools, shops, and the library. $209,900. MLS 13604870

SUTTON GROUPMASTERS REALTY INC., BROKERAGE

Two bedroom bungalow, 10 minutes from Napanee and 401. Very affordable home in move-in condition. Perfect starter home or retirement home. Call for details. $119,900. MLS 13604641

BROKER OF RECORD - 613-453-4347

SALES REP - 613-453-4292

Located in a quiet area in town, this home has a lot to offer! New kitchen, updated windows, and new 1 storey addition on the back which includes a large bedroom (or potential family room), and a 3-piece bathroom. Features include; main level laundry, large, fenced back yard, close to schools and all amenities. A must see for all buyers! $169,900. MLS 13608412

123 RICHARD ST. Your search is over. Excellent family home in heart of Napanee. This home features 3 or 4 bedrooms with 3 full bathrooms. The kitchen has been totally renovated and overlooks the lovely landscaped back yard. Hardwood flooring throughout. Quiet street within walking distance to downtown, schools, churches, etc. Priced at $199,900. Call for your viewing today. MLS 13607391

BILL MCCUTCHEON

ELISHA MCCUTCHEON

54 ANN ST.

REAL ESTATE / RE7

New ! Li sting

Income property with 3 bedroom bungalow, totally renovated, top to bottom. This home has had too many reno`s to mention in this ad, but is now in like new condition. Also included is a large two storey 2 unit building with 2-3 bedroom apartments. The main floor apartment is ready for rent. Great income opportunity...all this on 6+ acre lot. $211,900. MLS 13608315

3 bedroom, 1 1/2 storey farm home with 6+/- acres of land, large barn and several out buildings. located on a quiet country road just minutes outside the village of tamworth. if you have been looking for that special place out in the country this could be it. call today. $159,900. MLS 13606977

53 plus acres of prime future development land in Greater Napanee. Across road from hospital and right next to new residential development on Beverley Street. MLS 11600934 $649,000.

VACANT LAND

One and a half storey century home sitting on 46 +/- acres of beautiful Canadian Shield property. A perfect property for hunting, fishing or roaming. Lots of trails and firewood. $139,900. MLS 13604038

GREAT ESCAPE PROPERTY - 83+/- acres of Canadian Shield property. In the middle of hunting and fishing country. On paved road with hydro and telephone service. Lots of room to roam. $69,900. MLS 13604047

PERFECT FOR HUNTERS. 46+/- acres of beautiful Canadian Shield property on paved road with hydro and telephone service. Right in the middle of hunting and fishing country that also abutts crown land. Great get away! $59,900. MLS 13604046


T H E

RE8 / REAL ESTATE

OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY, OCT. 12 • 1-3PM 38 Springbrook Drive, Camden East

N A P A N E E

B E A V E R

RE/MAX Realty Concepts Corp., Brokerage

Thursday, October 10, 2013 www.1160Road506.com

v v v NEW LISTING v v v * 3 Bedrooms & 3 Baths * Custom built home * Custom built cabinets w/granite counters * $449,900

CINDY HAGGERTY

* 2+1 Bedroom & 3 Baths * Open Concept * Large Covered Deck * $249,900

www.448DundasStW.com

Broker of Record

www.4316CountyRd9.com

cell:

613-540-2116

* 2 Bedrooms & 2.5 Baths * Executive Waterfront on Napanee River

KEVIN HAGGERTY Sales Rep

* Fully Finished Lower Level

cell:

613-539-2120

* $312,500

v v v NEW LISTING v v v

TERRA HAGGERTY

www.173RichardSt.com

v v v NEW LISTING v v v * 4 Bedrooms & 2 Baths * 2 Acres w/Views of Hay Bay * 2 Bedroom In-Law Suite * $239,000

www.231DundasSt.com

Sales Rep

NEW PRICE

cell:

613-583-5629

v v v NEW LISTING v v v * 2+1 Bedrooms & 1 Bath * Updated Kitchen * Located on a quiet side street * $169,900 www.335CountyRd9.com NEW PRICE

H Hagge rty www.cindyhaggerty.com

** Each Office Is Independently Owned and Operated

www.866CountyRd15.com

* 11 Bedrooms & 7 Baths * Large Residential Home * Double Car Detached Garage * $359,900

www.WhiteLakeRd.com

www.1401WhitesRd.com

www.2447CShawenegogln.com

NEW PRICE

* 3 Bedrooms & 2 Baths * Newly Renovated w/walkout basement * Close to Town * $287,000

* 2+1 Bedrooms & 2 Baths * Licensed Dog Kennel on 15+ Acres * 3 Season Sunroom * $324,900

* 88 Acre Retreat * 4 Bedrooms, 1 Bath Cabin * Close to Denbigh * $139,900

* 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths * 147’ Waterfront on Big Gull Lake * Cathedral Ceiling and Stone Fireplace * $379,900

* 3+1 Bedrooms & 1 Bath * Waterfront home & Year round access * Pristine Clear Deep lake * $429,900

www.64JohnsonSt.com

www.81ButternutRd.com

www.442TownlineRd.com

www.40MooreAve.com

www.1947PalaceRd.com

* 4 Bedrooms & 3.5 Baths * 28.6 Acres * Custom Built ICF Cape Cod w/In Law Suite * $489,900

* 3 Bedrooms & 1 Bath * Newly Renovated Throughout * Large Mature Lot with Deck & Pool * $158,900

* 4 Bedrooms & 1 Bath * Original Woodwork throughout * Large Country Kitchen * $229,900

* 3 Bedrooms & 1 Bath * Newly renovated Kitchen * Double Car - Carport * $195,000

* 3 Bedrooms & 1.5 Baths * Custom Built Log Home on 38 Acres * Open Concept Living Area * $319,500

www.888CountyRd8.com

www.107BeverlySt.com

www.1176CountyRd14.com

www.5776CountyRd8.com

www.48BFlanniganRd.com

* 4+1 Bedrooms & 4.5 Baths * 90+Acres * Stunning Patio w/Inground Pool * $749,900

* 3+1 Bedroom & 3 Bath * Sunroom * Beautiful Landscaped Yard * $329,900

* 3 Bedrooms & 2 Baths * Vaulted Ceiling in Livingroom with Fireplace * 2 Acre Private Treed Lot * $319,900

* 4 Bedrooms & 1 Bath * 30 GPM Well * Open Concept Kitchen w/Oak Cupboards *$119,900

* Waterfront lot on Calpin Lake * Privacy Retreat * 2 Sleeping Cabins * $135,000

www.248BayshoreRd.com

www.113036Hwy7.com

www.115BridgeStw.com

www.76GrahamSt.com

www.4CedarSt.com

* 4 Bedrooms & 2 Baths * Custom Kitchen * 4 exits to Oversized Deck * $549,900

* 2 Bedrooms & 1 Bath * Hardwood Floors & Newer Windows * Attached Garage & Separate Workshop * $104,900

* 4 Bedrooms & 1.5 Baths * Stately Century Home * Gorgeous Custom Kitchen * Large Carriage House * $399,900

* 3 Bedrooms & 1.5 Baths * Eat-in Kitchen & Separate Dining Room * Across from the School & Park * $149,900

* 2 Bedrooms & 1 Bath * Sunroom * Detached Workshop * $99,900


T H E

Thursday, October 10, 2013

N A PA N E E

B E AV E R

REAL ESTATE / RE9

Now Serving the Greater Kingston Area In an effort to better serve the Greater Kingston Area, RE/MAX Finest Realty and RE/MAX Realty Concepts have teamed up under new ownership.

Cindy Haggerty Broker of Record

Shannon McCaffrey Broker-Owner

Commercial 9 Commer cial Court Napanee 613.354.5435

851 Norwest Rd Kingston 613.389.7777

222 Wellington Wellington St Kingston 613.389.7777

101 William William Henderson Dr Amherstview 613.777.8317

49 Princess St Kingston 613.544.3325

Blackburn 821 Blackbur n News Kingston 613.766.7650

MICHELE HEANEY

PEG CAMPBELTON

Cell michele.heaney@gmail.com

Cell peg.campbelton@gmail.com

Sales Representative

Sales Representative

613-583-7253

Like us on Facebook facebook.com/Home4Us

www.home4us.ca

$209,000. MLS 13607781

OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY, OCT 12TH 1-3PM

$295,000. MLS 13608452

W NE

613-449-4200

Follow us on Twitter @home4usca

Call for a Free Market Evaluation $249,900. MLS 13608441

W NE

W NE

404 STANLEY AVE., DESERONTO

$117,000. MLS 13608467

• Updated Bungalow on Generous Sized Lot • Beautiful Kitchen with Granite Countertop • Attached Garage

208 PERCH COVE ROAD

175 -316 HAIG RD BELLEVILLE

• 5 + Treed Acres • 3 + 1 Bedrooms 2.5 Baths • Attached Garage

• Level Waterfront with Dock • 2 Bedroom Cottage with Bunkie • Private Treed Lot

• 2 Bedroom Condo • Enjoy the view from the Balcony • Close to Hospital, Waterfront & Shopping

$149,900. MLS 13606132

$399,999. MLS 13607589

$339,000. MLS 13607433

DUPLEX

1650 CENTREVILLE ROAD

$245,900.

MLS 13608166

WATERFRONT

243 PEARL STREET, NAPANEE

Re/Max Finest Realty Inc., Brokerage 9 Commercial Court, Napanee 101 William Henderson Drive Unit 1 ** Each Office Is Independently Owned and Operated.

* Not intended to solicit properties already listed.

1087 HUGHES LANDING RD.

• Duplex • 1 - 2 bdrm Unit 1 - 1+1 bdrm unit • Nice Lot and Location

466 DUNDAS STREET, NAPANEE • Custom Home • ICF Construction • Beautiful Patio/Deck Area

• Beautiful Skootamatta Lake • Over 600ft of Waterfront • Private Setting

• Custom Kitchen with Granite Countertops • 2 Full Baths • Detached Garage

$189,500. MLS 13601539

$169,900. MLS 13607392

$137,900. MLS 13606712

$439,000. MLS 13603889

233 THOMAS STREET, DESERONTO

PRE-INSPECTED

144 DUNDAS STREET W, NAPANEE • Large Yard • Gas Fireplace • Move In Ready

VACANT LAND :

3996 COLEBROOK RD., HARROWSMITH • Loads of Character • Lots of Storage & Space • Large Treed Yard & Country Garden

149 ROBLIN RD., ROBLIN

7387 COUNTY RD. 9

• Attached Garage • 2 Full Baths • Deck

• Beautifully Restored Century Home • 5 Bedrooms • Attached Garage

$10,000. MLS 13604726 - FRANKLIN STREET, MARLBANK • Level Building Lot • Small Village Setting

$35,000. MLS 13603827 - 1725 COUNTY 27 • Level Building Lot • 2 Acres • Excellent Well


The Inspectors Corner

T H E

RE10 / REAL ESTATE

N A PA N E E

B E AV E R

Wayne Fulton is a local home inspector and can be reached at 613-354-9547

wfulton@fultonhomeinspections.com

KENAL ENALTY E TY WINN I

Barristers, Solicitors & Notaries Public

P.O. Box 116, Napanee, Ontario K7R 3L4 Telephone: 613-354-6900 Facsimile: 613-354-0881 P.O. P .O. Box 1116, 16, Napanee, Ontario, K7R 3L4 Jay Winn jay@kenaltywinn.com T elephone: 613-354-6900 Facsimile: 613-354-0881 Telephone: Lindsay Kenalty lindsay@kenaltywinn.com

BUYING? SELLING? RE-FINANCING? CALL US

Window Replacement

The installation of new windows is one of the more major upgrades popular with homeowners. The reason for upgrading a home's windows can be strictly for cosmetic reasons, to reduce a home's energy consumption, or both. One thing that is certain is that applying a new window style and one of the new frame colours available can dramatically change your home's overall appearance. New windows are also a popular pre-sale upgrade, and for good reason – buyers love to see ‘new windows' noted in the features of homes they are considering. Plus, the new energy-saving technology incorporated into new windows can save a lot of money on

FEATURE HOME OF THE WEEK

Thursday, October 10, 2013

heating and air conditioning costs. One thing to consider when buying windows, whether you plan to install them yourself or have that taken care of by professionals, is whether to get simple ‘inserts' or go with a ‘full-frame' approach. Going the insert method means leaving the old frame in, applying a new window unit that is slightly smaller than the opening and trim. Many companies that offer replacement window installation will suggest you go with inserts because they contract the installation part out and it is easier to find installers to do this simpler method. With the full-frame method, you remove the old frame and size the window to fit into the ‘rough opening'. Depending on the age of your home and framing method employed, this can mean a significant increase in window size. For example, by enlarging a 61 x 122 cm (2 x 4 ft) window by just 5 cm (2 in) on all sides you will increase the opening by more than 25%! Another benefit of the full-frame method is that by removing the entire old frame, you can check the integrity of the wood around the opening, as windows are often a source of persistent leaks that can cause hidden damage. Plus, you can ensure a proper seal around the new window and apply spray foam in any small openings for optimal insulation. The full-frame replacement does make installation of new window casing mandatory, but the finished look is less bulky than with inserts, and new casing is often something that homeowners replace regardless of which installation method they choose. So if you are considering new windows for your home, be sure to get at least three quotes for both the insert and full-frame methods to see which is right for you. The extra cost may well be worth it.

JOHN PEDRI, Real Estate Broker/REALTOR®

Shoreline Realty Corp., Brokerage 200-92 Lakeshore Rd., East, Mississauga ON L5G 4S2 Tel: 905-891-3300 or 416-806-6035 jpedri@rogers.com

30 ACRES PLUS 7000 SQ. FT. FACTORY

MUST BE SOLD ASKING $490K P

©Copyright Select Home Designs. All rights reserved

FOR ALL First Floor: 1,292 sq. ft. Second Floor: 1,189 sq. ft. Total: 2,481 sq. ft. Bonus Space: 343 sq. ft.

30 acres flat corner property, 3acres zoned industrial, commercial. 27 acres zoned rural residential. Factory and oversize garage are concrete block construction, 2 drive-in doors, 13 ft. ceiling clearance, set up for manufacturing, storage and packaging facilities, some offices, administration, meeting room and staff facility. Plenty of power and outside storage. Will suit a variety of uses. About 8 minutes east of downtown Picton.

Alternate Layout

$318,900

$219,000

Second Floor

Plan No. SHSW00774

COUNTRY KITCHEN

Step inside this graceful country home to be welcomed into a layout that emphasizes gathering spaces. To the left of the foyer waits S thehearth-warmed living room, while a study (or dining room, if you choose) offers a quiet zone on the right. Ahead, the kitchen — highly functional with a long island — opens to the hearth and family rooms, both topped by a decorative beamed ceiling. All four bedrooms restupstairs, including the roomy master suite with its dual-sink private

Re/Max Finest Realty Inc., Brokerage

CHERYL FURLONG S R Independently Owned and Operated

9 Commercial Court Napanee ALES

EPRESENTATIVE

Direct 613-217-3330 Email: cherylfurlong07@aol.com Website: www.cherylfurlong.com

bathroom. A bonus room on this level invites expansion.

To see more details on this plan, visit and enter the plan number above. Use advanced search features to browse thousands of other home designs, including bungalow, two-storey, multi-level, and cottage country homes. Order blueprints online or call 1-800-663-6739 for more information on how to order and modify plans.

©Copyright SELECT HOME DESIGNS www.selectfloorplans.ca/dfl

Don't miss another opportunity to celebrate in this home for all lifestyles: room for friends & families in this 3+2 BR, 3 BTH, 2 LA bungalow with oversize rec. rm w/gas fp, wrap deck with hot-tub & bbq connection. Paved drive w/curbs to park all your cars and a 1 1/2 st. gar. w/elect., & heat. Many upgrades in last 10 years. A gem to see! Flexible closing. MLS® 13606599

Ready to retire or just starting out! This two years young, open concept bungalow is country, twenty min. to 401/Napanee, and has all your daily needs, incl. recreation only minutes away. Two BR up plus lower level with second BTH, to finish to suit you, Gardiners, a clean palate awaits! Walk the country lanes, launch your boat just down the road. Make this your dream come true! MLS® 13603878

L MONK CHERYpre sentative

ProAlliance Realty, Brokerage Independently Owned and Operated

1060 COUNTY ROAD 14, STONE MILLS Make an offer on this little slice of heaven just 15 minutes north of Hwy. 401! Well kept older home with 2 bedrooms on main level and 3 bedrooms upstairs. Open concept living room/kitchen/dining room with step-out from patio doors to deck to enjoy the water view of Salmon River! Home offers main floor laundry and bath. Come take a peek and enjoy the peacefulness and serenity! Seller is motivated! Asking $149,900. MLS13604539

Sales Re i Woods Drive, 640 Cataraqu K7P 2Y5 Kingston, ON

office 613-384-1200 cell 613-328-2088

COMMERCIAL 1085 COUNTY ROAD 41, GREATER NAPANEE Commercial property just 5 minutes north of Hwy. 401 on County Road 41 (Hwy. 41). Prime location, this property offers well-built brick home with attached garage and detached 2 bay garage. Large paved parking lot with tons of potential. Home offers hardwood floors, newer windows and partially finished basement. Asking $379,900. MLS 13605319

VACANT LAND

VACANT LAND

NUGENT ROAD, STONE MILLS Great location just 15 minutes north of Hwy. 401. 100 acre parcel of vacant land. Property offers mixture of crops, pasture and wooded lot. Great area to build your dream home. Good commute to Kingston, Napanee, Belleville. Asking $129,900. MLS 13604131

LOT 1, COUNTY ROAD 14, STONE MILLS Build your dream home on this beautiful 2.5 Acre treed building lot located on well-maintained road just minutes from village setting. Lot offers mixture of trees with level terrain. Great well and water in area. Just a short drive (20 minutes) north of Hwy. 401, between Kingston and Napanee. $45,000. MLS 13603918


T H E

Thursday, October 10, 2013

N A P A N E E

B E AV E R

REAL ESTATE / RE11

H•O•M•E Shopping List In the market for a new home? Do some comparison shopping! Make copies of this Shopping List record and take one with you when you go to shop a prospective home. It will enable you to look back and compare features, helping you to make a better buy! Date__________________

Condition/Special Features_______________________________

Address of home_______________________ Age_____________

_____________________________________________________

Name & Phone of Owner_________________________________

Closet Space { } adequate

Name & Phone of Broker_________________________________

Basement: { } finished

Style of Home__________________________________________

Laundry Room: Size__________ appliances__________________

Size of Lot____________________ Total Sq. Feet_____________

Air Conditioning:

Asking Price__________________ Down Payment____________

{ } central { } individual

Monthly Payment_______________________________________

Type of Heating ________________________________________

Type of Utilities_______________ Est. Cost per Month_________

Extras/special Features (pool, wet bar, fireplaces, etc.)

Other Costs___________________________________________

_____________________________________________________

Garage { } 1 car

_____________________________________________________

{ } 2 Car

{ } Carport

{ } inadequate

{ }ample

{ } unfinished size:_______________

Which rooms? ________________

Condition/Type of Roof__________________________________

_____________________________________________________

Living Room: Size________________ Flooring_______________

Back/Front Yard Description ______________________________

Kitchen: Size____________________ Flooring_______________

_____________________________________________________

Appliances/Condition___________________________________

_____________________________________________________

_____________________________________________________

Distance from

Dining Room: Size________________ Flooring_______________

Work_____________Shopping___________School____________

Family Room { } yes

Size___________________

Neighbourhood Rating___________________________________

# of Bedrooms & Sizes _________________________________

Overall Rating of Home & Property_________________________

{ } no

This Handy Checklist Appears Courtesy of

# of Bathrooms _______________________________________

_____________________________________________________

72 Dundas St. East, Napanee 613-354-6641


T H E

RE12 / LOCAL SERVICES

RENOVATIONS PLUS

N A PA N E E

WATER SYSTEMS

A.C.A. Renovations

B E AV E R

WINDOW CLEANING

BRAD’S

FREE ESTIMATES

WINDOW CLEANING

Your Local Source for....

Indoor/Outdoor Renovations We do it all.... Ceramic Tile Kitchens & Baths Outdoor Masonry Sidewalks & Curbs Fences & Decks & More!

Antonio Almeida

Office: 613-354-4780 Cell: 613-561-5154

AUTOMOTIVE

Burley Muffler & Alignment Centre EXHAUST - ALIGNMENTS •MAJOR & MINOR REPAIRS •BRAKES - TUNE-UPS SAFETY INSPECTIONS •AIR CONDITIONING

354-6251 141 INDUSTRIAL BLVD. NAPANEE

CLEANING SERVICES

U-Fill reverse osmosis bottled water UV systems & replacement lamps Water softeners

Water coolers

18 Richmond Blvd. Napanee 613-354-9700 CONSTRUCTION

BURNETTS

PLUMBING & BUILDING SERVICE Residential & Commercial, New Construction & Repairs, Pressure Systems & Hot Water Tanks, Pipe Thawing, Water Softener, Drain Cleaning & Repairs, Total Bathroom Renovations, Excavation & Backfilling Services

Fully Licensed & Insured

Napanee, Ontario 613•354•0146 cell 613•214•9677

613-377-6648 or 1-877-345-8495

INSTALLATION

Owner/Operator Jerry McCann

Insured & Licensed Tel 613-354-5512 Cell 613-572-5071

4003 County Rd. 9 Napanee, Ontario K7R 3K8

Silver Construction

Licensed & insured Specializing in home renovations kitchens, bathrooms, floors, decks. New Construction homes, garages, etc. plus home inspections Call Earl

613-396-2666

613-354-2418 OFFICE 613-561-5483 mjdavis@davisplumbing.ca

PLUMBING

McCann Heating & Cooling CONSTRUCTION

• NEW HOMES & RENOVATIONS • CERTIFIED BACKFLOW PREVENTOR TESTING • VIDEO SEWER INSPECTION • DRAIN RODDING & REPAIRS • RESIDENTIAL • COMMERCIAL • INDUSTRIAL SERVICE

PLUMBING

Since 1972 / Kingston Lic #24 RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL INSTALLATION & SERVICE WATER HEATERS • UV LIGHTS DRAIN CLEANING • PIPE THAWING MYERS PRESSURE SYSTEMS SOFTENERS & IRON FILTERS VIDEO SEWER INSPECTION HEATING: NATURAL GAS & OIL FORCED AIR, BOILERS & HYDRONIC FLOOR

SEPTIC SERVICE

SUTCLIFFE SEPTIC SERVICE (Septic Tank Pumping Service)

Call Brad

613-379-5085

ACCOUNTING & TAX SERVICES

BOTTOM LINE ACCOUNTING AND TAX SERVICES April Stoness, HBComm, CGA & Heather Shetler, BComm, (Queens) 10 - 2 Dairy Avenue PO Box 161 Napanee, ON K7R 3M3

Lic. #P169

Lalande Plumbing

Residential Installation & Service • Water Treatment • Water Heaters • Pumps Fully Licensed & Insured

Morgan Lalande 613-770-6979

lalandeplumbing@gmail.com

UPHOLSTERY

Heating & Air Conditioning

Residential • Commercial • Auto & Marine

• Residential • Commercial • Service • Installation COMBUSTION ANALYZING

613-893-2169 Robert Boudeau one-shot@live.com 227B Drive In Road Napanee, ON K7R 3L1 TSSA CERTIFIED

LAWN CARE

Lawn Care Professionals & LCP Landscaping

(Beside Winter Trailer Sales)

Ken Kellar Mon - Fri 8:00a.m. - 5:00p.m. After Hour Appts 613-572-1853 sharpes1945@hotmail.com PROPANE SUPPLIER

PROPANE

Walkways & Patios Hydro-seeding Grass Cutting Bobcat Service Organic Fertilizer Bin Rentals

NEW LOCATION

305 DUNDAS STREET WEST

Bulk Topsoils & Mulches

613-388-2588 Toll free 1-877-844-0936

LCP@Landscaping.ca

DRYWALL

Murray Drywall Installation at its best

• Tape and Texture at your request • Hand trowled ceilings Over 30 years experience

Call Rick Murray 388-1067 Napanee FINANCIAL

$ NOW TILL PAYDAY

SERVING: Residential • Commercial • Industrial • Agricultural • Bulk Markets • Small cylinder exchange program

1-877-544-3335 613-544-3335

24 Hour Unit #1 - 1525 Emergency John Counter Blvd. Service

TREE SERVICE

Pringle’s Tree Service

613-354-6983 Ken Sutcliffe, Owner

105 John St., Napanee

613-354-0762

CARPENTRY

RON MOORE Repairs & Renovations

For all your new buildings or renovation projects

AIR CONDITIONING

GARAGE DOORS

613-354-3640 613-539-3885

True The Money Jar Comfort

• Payday Advances • Disability & Pension • Cheque Cashing • Prepaid Mastercards Available • Western Union Agent • New Phone Connections REASONABLE RATES • NO HIDDEN FEES!

Kingston

Fully Insured Trimming & Tree Removal Free Estimates Dry Hardwood For Sale CeCIl & Mary ann PrIngle NAPANEE

HEATING AND COOLING

37 Johnson Sideroad Napanee, K7R 3L1

Tel: 613.308.9404 Fax: 613.308.9401 aprilbla@cogeco.net

HEATING & COOLING

DAVIS PLUMBING LTD.

613-354-9223

HEATING & COOLING

SALES & SERVICE

PLUMBING

Serving Kingston, Napanee and surrounding area

Office & Industrial Cleaner

25 Years Experience FREE Estimate

FOR A FREE ESTIMATE

Reverse osmosis systems

Brian J. Henhawke

Henhawke’s Cleaning Services

Professional Window and Eavestrough Cleaning Reasonable Rates

Thursday, October 10, 2013

613-354-0025 1-800-901-6407 731A County Rd. #9 RR3 Napanee K7R 3K8 37 Years Experience Guaranteed Workmanship

354-5613

30 Years Experience Licenced Carpenter free estimates

WILCON

GARAGE DOORS Residential & Commercial Sales • Service Installation

Repairs to all makes of doors and garage door openers

Locally Owned & Operated Serving Greater Napanee & Area for 30 Years

613-354-2400 Cell 613-532-2422


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.