WestCarleton062013

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Councillor Eli El-Chantiry Ward 5, West Carleton-March

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June 20, 2013 | 56 pages

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Puppet masters Rock the Arts presented Pirate Treasure June 15 at the Carp branch of the Ottawa Public Library. Carp natives Sarah Argue and Megan Carty brought their handmade puppet troupe to the library to entertain the afternoon crowds. Above, from left, are Carty, Emmett Pindar, 7, Hazel Pindar, 4, and Argue. Next up for Rock the Arts is a special performance at Ottawa Fringe. More information is available at www.rockthearts.ca .

NEWS

After three election wins and many scandals, he retires. – Pages 7

COMMUNITY

SHERRY HAAIMA/METROLAND

Dunrobin farmer facing slaughter charges Derek Dunn derek.dunn@metroland.com

They came out in droves to support fire fighters – Page 27

EDUCATION

St. Mike’s in Corkery celebrates We day. – Page 33

EMC news – Chapter two in a saga that pits government inspectors against home butchers began in an Ottawa courtroom last week. Dunrobin sheep farmer Anthony Scissons made a second appearance in provincial court on June 13 to face six charges levelled by Ontario’s Ministry of Natural Resources (MNR) under the Ontario Food Safety and Quality Act and Regulation 31-05 (meat). He will be fined $150,000 if found guilty. The case has generated much attention with the courtroom full of spectators, including members of Ontario Landowners Association and CarletonMississippi Mills MPP Jack

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MacLaren. Many on hand call it government encroachment on Charter rights. It started when Scissons, who legally raises and sells animals, allowed multiple people to come on his property to slaughter animals. It was around the time of Eid al-Fitr when Muslims eat meat prepared according to religious dictates. Lahcen Jouali was among those who participated. He said he could buy Halal meat at a number of butcheries in the Ottawa area, but that is not the point. “I don’t have to have a licence because it’s for personal consumption,” Jouali said. “I want my children to know how to prepare it. I want them to keep up the tradition.” However, even when one

animal is slaughtered – let alone the multiple number on an almost industrial scale that day at Scissons’ – there exists potential for health hazards. Halal butcher Abdul Wakil Za-

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Zazay said Scissons’ property is not sanitized and pointed to the lack of government inspectors as proof. See BUTCHERIES, Page 2

Truckers blockade for equality Jennifer McIntosh jennifer.mcintosh@metroland.com

EMC news - In a bid to draw attention for his private members bill, Fairness is a TwoWay Street, Carleton-Mississippi Mills MPP Jack MacLaren and a group of supporters shut down a lane of traffic on the Champlain Bridge June 13. The act – if it becomes law – would make construction projects on the Ontario side of the Ottawa River off limits to Quebec-based firms.

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zay, one of four in the region, was in the courtroom that day. He said there are too many dangers involved when government inspectors and regulations are absent.

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A similar law was enacted by the Harris government in 1999 but was repealed by the liberals in 2006. MacLaren was joined by long-time trucker Lloyd Griffith, who said having to compete with Quebec truckers who don’t pay taxes in Ontario makes it an uneven playing field. Walter Pamic, who owns an electrical services company, said it was easier to send his employees to Nicaraugua and Poland then deal with the red tape when he tried to send people to Quebec. See MACLAREN, Page 2

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MacLaren’s blockade supports ‘Fairness’ bill Continued from front

MacLaren’s bill has already gone through Barr said he would continue to champion the the first reading. He expects it to go through cause of Ontario truckers to local politicians. second reading on Sept. 12 and become law by Christmas. “We had no intention of trying to stop (Quebec truckers and contractors) up until now,� McLaren said. “This will slam the door on Quebec. Quebecers will lose jobs but we are going to protect Ontario jobs.� MacLaren thanked College Coun. Rick Chiarelli, who is attempting to introduce a motion that would bar Quebec construction companies from bidding on city jobs. Chiarelli wasn’t immediately available for comment, but he plans to bring the motion to a vote on June 26.

Ron Barr, who helped to organize the protest with MacLaren, is a spokesperson for the Greater Ottawa Trucking Association. He said many of the people he represents are having trouble making ends meet because Quebec truckers don’t pay fees to work in Ontario, making it possible for them to underbid on jobs. Barr said he and MacLaren brought along a dozen trucks as a gesture, but he could get a lot more. “Obviously I don’t want to do that, but I could have brought a 100 trucks,� he said, adding protesting truckers could shut down the city.

“We need to take care of Ontario first,� he said. - With files from Derek Dunn

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Lloyd Griffith, left, who has worked as a trucker for more than 50 years, protests what he says is unfair treatment of Ontario truckers doing hauls in Quebec. Griffith is pictured with Ron Barr, spokesperson for the Greater Ottawa Truckers Association, Jack MacLaren, MPP for Carleton-Mississippi Mills and electrical contractor Walter Pamic. The quartet tried to raise awareness of MacLaren’s private members bill Fairness is a Two-Way Street with a blockade of 12 transport trucks on the Champlain Bridge June 13.

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When it comes to his butchery, by contrast, if a drop of blood is spilled on the floor scrubbers and disinfectants are brought out. Scissons deferred comment to his legal representative, Mark Tijssen, who in late 2011 had similar charges against him dropped. After two years of pretrials, MNR chose to withdraw all four charges against him deciding there is “no reasonable prospect for conviction.� He said MNR is reviewing the regulations and wonders why they would level more charges in the meanwhile. “I had two years being hounded by these bastards. I know exactly what he is going through,� said Tijssen, a major in the Canadian Forces

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from Carlsbad Springs. “The whole law is a sham. No amount of inspection will guarantee safety.� He said even when all rules and regulations are followed, as in the case of Maple Leaf Foods, people can die with no charges laid. Why, he wonders, are charges laid when it comes to a lone farmer. The Scissons case may conclude in the same way as Tijssen’s. Evidence gathered by government agents, including photos, was done incorrectly in the Tijssen’s case. At the June 13 court appearance, Scissons asked for more information on how evidence was collected in his case. The province’s representative said it didn’t exist. The next appearance is July 8, 1:30 p.m., at a 100 Constellation Cres. courtroom.

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2 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013

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West Carleton student council presidents Brett Webster (left) and Helene Tsvirinkal dressed up as Barnie Stinson from How i Met Your Mother, and Hermione Granger from Harry Potter, for the ‘your favorite character’ day, one of the many spirit days they’ve run this year.

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EMC News- As the school year comes to an end, West Carleton Secondary School’s student council presidents reflect on their accomplishments and hopes for the future. On June 18, Brett Webster and Helen Tsvirinkal, the presidents for the 2012/2013 school year, will finish their last school day at West Carleton. As class presidents, Webster and Tsvirinkal were responsible for essentially leading the school. They planned all the spirit events, dances, assemblies, and represented the students to the administration staff. “We talk about what would be best for the students,” says Webster. When they started there year as presidents, their main goal was to raise the spirit in the school. The teacher strike during first semester meant they couldn’t do as much as they had planned, but they still managed to have some pretty good spirit inspiring activities. Some of those activities included having a bouncy castle at the school, hay bale tosses, pajama days, and gender bender days. “We tried to keep the spirit days simple, so people would actually want to do them,” says Tsvirinkal. There was some cases where there was more spirit then previous years, for example the leadership camp run by the students.

Despite the limitations the strike caused, in some ways it helped them as presidents. “We got a better relationship with the admin team, because we went straight to them. It was an interesting way to problem solve too, it gave us a challenge, made us work harder and think harder about what we had to do,” said Webster. With two presidents came more ideas, and opinions and with a close relationship it made it easy for them to get stuff done. Being in a leadership role has helped them learn what is involved behind the scenes of each project, activity and event. “It gave us an appreciation for everything that happens, that’s planned, and realised how much actually goes into it,” said Tsvirinkal. Besides the planning side of the job, it has also helped them learn how to motivate people. As they head off to Waterloo next year, the duo plan to continue to participate and hopefully find a role in student council or clubs. “It really lets you meet more people and gives you a better understanding of how the school works too.” As they ready to leave west Carleton, they hope next year’s student council president Tom Carnegie will keep up the spirit. “He has a lot of really good ideas, and he’s a great leader,” said Tsvirinkal. As some last words of advice to Carnegie for next year, Webster says, “Keep it clean, keep it simple. Don’t try to go too big too fast. And listen to the students.”

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West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013 3


NEWS

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New bylaw in effect for donation bins Jessica Cunha jessica.cunha@metroland.com

EMC news - A new bylaw came into effect to regulate clothing donation bins on June 3. Whether on public or private property, the bins must state if they are affiliated with a charity, which one it is collecting for along with the registration number, and must have a working phone number, said Kanata South Coun. Allan Hubley, who first raised the issue in 2011. Bins must also state if they are collecting for a for-profit business. “If you see a box that’s overflowing or you want to call to see what exactly they’re doing with the stuff you give them, there has to be a working number,” he said. “Most importantly, they now have to have the permission of the landowner.” Before the bylaw was put into effect, donation bins were just “showing up,” he said.

The Salvation Army and Neighbourhood Services are both charities approved by the city, said Hubley. “Because they’re local charities and they’re doing things to help our community.” Hubley added that people can now make an informed decision when donating their clothes. “Now you’ll know where your stuff is going and it’s up to you what you want to do,” he said. Bylaw officers will be checking donation bins but if people notice something that isn’t in compliance with the new bylaws, they are encouraged to call 311 and report any discrepancies, said Hubley. “I would encourage people to take a look at the sign on those boxes and make sure that they comply with the bylaws.” Hubley first raised the issue about clothing bins in 2011. At that time, the Jubilee Donations bins – especially one at Jack Charron Arena – were of particular concern, Hubley said, because

Carp firefighter to appear in court on hit and run charges Patricia Leboeuf pleboeuf@metroland.com

FILE

A new bylaw requires clothing donation bins to display information about where contributions are going and must have a working phone number. they are not emptied regularly and it’s not clear if Jubilee is a registered charity. Hubley called the phone number

listed on the box and determined that Jubilee is a storage company. With files from Laura Mueller

EMC news - A volunteer firefighter will have his day in court after being charged in a hit and run collision last fall. Trevor Clark will be in Ottawa court on Jan. 20, facing charges of impaired driving causing bodily harm; over .08 causing bodily harm and failing to remain at the scene of an accident. The incident occurred on Oct. 9 2012 on McGee Side Road when Clarke allegedly struck 44-year-old Jennifer Leonard’s bicycle and fled the scene. A broken side mirror was found nearby, which was believed to be from the vehicle involved in the collision. At around 5:30 p.m. on that same day, police arrested Clarke after receiving a call about a possible impaired driver. Officers discovered that Clarke’s vehicle was missing a side mirror, similar to the one found at the scene of the collision. The 34-year-old Carp firefighter was subsequently released until his hearing.

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4 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013


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City wants NCC to respond to bridge concerns Laura Mueller laura.mueller@metroland.com

EMC news - The idea of a new interprovincial bridge at Kettle Island took another beating during a city meeting on June 5. Around 20 residents, as well as a representative from the Montfort Hospital, lined up to tell city councillors why they think the bridge to Quebec is a bad idea. Adding commuter trafďŹ c into the Manor Park area would be dangerous and destroy those neighbourhoods, most of the speakers argued. Alain-Michel Sekula, board chairman for the Montfort Hospital, said a bridge would cause trouble for patients if it created trafďŹ c snarls on the Aviation Parkway, which ambulances used to get to the hospital. Putting thousands of cars and trucks within 10 metres of a high-caliber health facility “doesn’t hold water,â€? Sekula said. An expansion of the hospital in 2010 was de-

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More than 150 people came out to the most recent open house concerning the location of an interprovincial east end bridge on May 27, a week before the National Capital Commission submitted its report to the city’s transit commission. Three corridors were being considered, though corridor six and seven had the same entry point on the Ontario side. It was announecd that corridor five is the technically preferred option.

signed to facilitate easier access to the parkway from the hospital. The proposed bridge would connect the Rockcliffe and Aviation parkways on the Ottawa side to MontĂŠe Paiement in Gatineau. In each direction it would have two lanes for trafďŹ c, one dedicated bus lane and a multi-use path for cyclists and pedestrians. Lori Assheton-Smith of the Rockcliffe Park community association said a new bridge would be a detriment, no matter where it is located. “It doesn’t make sense for any neighbourhood in Ottawa, from an economic, transportation or public policy perspective,â€? she told the committee. Sheilagh McLean, who said she lives south of Manor Park, said the idea to build a new bridge is a “historicalâ€? idea that doesn’t make sense in the current reality.

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West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013 5


NEWS Councillor Eli El-Chantiry

Meeting promotes a walkable Kanata Town Centre Patricia Leboeuf pleboeuf@metroland.com

Ward 5 West Carleton-March SECTION OF MARCH VALLEY ROAD CLOSED On Thursday June 13, the City of Ottawa closed March Valley Road between Klondike Road and Riddell Drive, on an emergency basis due to the collapse of a culvert located approximately 100m north of Klondike Road. The site has been secured and erosion control measures have been installed to protect the water course from the washout of soil material. The road is expected to be closed until the end of July 2013 to allow for the emergency design and replacement of the culvert. Local access to March Valley Road will be maintained from Klondike Road and from Riddell Drive, but through trafďŹ c is not possible at the culvert crossing. Signed detours have been established.

OTTAWA BEACHES, OUTDOOR POOLS & SPLASH PADS OPEN FOR THE SEASON As of June 15, lifeguards have been on duty at the City’s ďŹ ve supervised (Britannia, Westboro, Mooney’s Bay, Petrie Island East Bay and Petrie Island River) every day from noon to 7pm. Ottawa Public Health will be monitoring recreational water quality seven days a week at the City of Ottawa’s supervised beaches. If high levels of bacteria are found, a ‘no swim’ advisory will be issued. Daily water quality results will be made available at ottawa.ca or by calling 613-580-6744, ext. 13219. All outdoor pools are also open for the season as well as the City’s 100 splash pads. Wading pools will be open between June 21 and June 28.

WEST NILE VIRUS CONTROL PROGRAM FOR 2013 As in previous years, Ottawa Public Health (OPH) is coordinating a mosquito control program between June 10 and October 14, 2013 to control larval mosquitoes in order to prevent their development into vectors of West Nile Virus (WNV). In addition to public awareness campaigns and treating standing surface waters where mosquitoes may breed, OPH will continue to use other types of WNV indicators such as mosquito surveillance to determine any human risk. Most people who contract West Nile virus will not exhibit any symptoms, or may experience mild illness including fever, headache, body ache, nausea, vomiting and/or rash on the chest, stomach or back. More serious symptoms can include muscle weakness, stiff neck, confusion, tremors, numbness and sudden sensitivity to light. Symptoms usually develop between two to 15 days after being bitten by an infected mosquito. Here are some helpful tips to help protect against mosquitoes: s 7EAR LIGHT COLOURED CLOTHING LONG SLEEVED SHIRTS LONG PANTS SOCKS and shoes when outdoors; s 5SE INSECT REPELLENT CONTAINING $IETHYL META TOLUAMIDE $%%4 s !VOIDING THE OUTDOORS AT DUSK AND DAWN WHEN MOSQUITOES ARE most active; s 2EPAIR REPLACE SCREENS ON WINDOWS AND DOORS TO AVOID MOSQUITOES entering your home;

For more information on City’s West Nile Virus control program visit ottawa.ca/health or call Ottawa Public Health Information at 613-580-6744.

2014 BUDGET PROCESS City Council has approved the 2014 proposed budget process and timetable to develop the City’s draft operating and capital budgets. The 2014 budget process features online and social media consultation opportunities for residents to submit their budget priorities. In addition to the online consultation and any ward consultations that may be conducted by individual Councillors, this year’s budget process offers 15 opportunities for the public to provide input at city-wide public consultation meetings and at budget meetings for standing committees, boards and commissions. Residents are encouraged to e-mail budget2014@ottawa.ca or use the Twitter hashtag #ottbudget to submit cost saving ideas and budget priorities for consideration. For further information and details on dates and locations of budget consultations, please visit ottawa.ca/ budget2014.

The 150th Annual Carp Fair is happening Sept. 26-29, 2013 6 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013

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Ottawa Valley Tours

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areas,â€? he said. “But when we own city land that is naturally wooded and relatively pristine we have the opportunity to create something more creative than to put in more stores.â€? A similar situation occurred with the land north of the Beaver Pond in Kanata, where the only solution to save it from unwanted construction required the city to purchase it. As the price tag was exorbitant, the property was put up for development, the trees were razed and the land is currently awaiting construction. A similar fate could be avoided in this case. “In this instance, we own the land,â€? said Muirhead. “It’s not the politicians who own the land. It’s not city council that owns the land. It’s taxpayers who own the land.â€? “So I want a thoughtful look at how these lands can be used creatively,â€? he added. “It’s a little gem of a wooded area, it’s not very known and I think it deserves our protection.â€? He wasn’t the only one to hold such an opinion at the public meeting and Muirhead calls for more research on what residents really want. “Do they feel the need for more stores in that particular location?â€? he said. “Would they like more just on the other side of the road along where Centrum is now? Do they think that Kanata Avenue, which is a main thoroughfare and will only grow with trafďŹ c, is really appropriate for a sort of main street idea?â€? Development should still proceed, but it should be appropriate to the area and the desire of those that live there, he said. “The city would be wise to do that instead of just see it as a tax grab,â€? said Muirhead. Another public meeting is planned for September. To stay up to date or share concerns and comments, please contact Wilkinson at Marianne.Wilkinson@ottawa.ca or visit her website at mariannewilkinson.com.

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EMC news - Kanata Avenue may soon see itself transformed into a pedestrian friendly main street. About 28 acres of the Kanata Town Centre Lands has been set aside for development and ideas on how to transform it into an active, vivacious area have been bubbling. “Let’s look at that part of Kanata Avenue and make it act like a main street where you have parking, stores that you can walk to and sidewalk cafes and that kind of thing,â€? said Kanata North Coun. Marianne Wilkinson. “It’s a hard thing to manufacture, but it can be done.â€? Plans for the lot have not been concretized, but a few were brought forth in a public meeting on June 11 at All Saints Catholic school. Theses lands were purchased in the ‘90s and the initial thought was to create a new main street through the property. That idea was later scrapped as it was not ďŹ nancially feasible and Kanata Avenue became the next best option. The vision of a walkable main street has been longstanding, even before amalgamation, but the concept plan needed to be reviewed. “What we want to do is continue to maintain the intent of the original content plan,â€? said city planner Lauren Reeves. The Kanata Town Centre will become an active, vibrant core area containing a diverse mix of uses, she said. Several reviews, studies and concepts will be created and subsequently presented over the next few months, allowing residents to have their say. “More people’s minds working on something, always ends up with better ides I ďŹ nd,â€? said Wilkinson. The road itself has to be updated and the area under review roughly includes the

stretch from Campeau Road to Katimavik Road. As construction and development continue change the face of Kanata, use of avenue will grow. TrafďŹ c will become overwhelming as an estimated 1,684 residential units, 380 hotel rooms, 101,000 square feet of commercial space and 1,367,000 square feet of ofďŹ ce space are slated to be built. To accommodate the need, Kanata Ave will be expended to four lanes. The road project is still in the beginning stages and an environmental assessment (EA) will have to be conducted before anything is concluded. “This EA is a little bit unique in that the EA process has a very ďŹ ne way of going through and looking at the needs and alternatives and solutions,â€? said Michael Flainek, of Dillon Consulting Limited. “There are lots of things we look at when we are looking at the cross-section of Kanata Avenue,â€? he added. “We want to accommodate all of those. We are going to be looking at pedestrians, cyclists, how we are going to handle transit.â€? Dillon Consulting Limited is looking into several options for the avenue. There are two main contenders. A suburban style of road is faster with separate left turning lanes, but will ultimately acts more as an arterial roadway while the slower urban style has a more downtown air. “We are looking at some of the opportunities and some of the restraints of the property,â€? said Flainek. Not everybody is pleased with the upcoming development. President of the Kanata Lakes Community Association Matt Muirhead is advocating for a “central park idea.â€? The premise of which is to keep that green space mostly intact, but to manage it so that it can become a desired destination for outdoor enthusiast. “I’m not adverse to development in the right proportions and in the right

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NEWS

Connected to your community

McGuinty resigns Ottawa South seat, quits politics thing. When he made a mistake, he would own up to it and learn from it. It takes big shoulders.” “I have enormous pride for him, and in some respects, very happy for Dalton. He can take comfort in knowing he did the best he could.”

Sabine Gibbins sabine.gibbins@metroland.com

BROTHERLY LOVE

MP David McGuinty has nothing but praise and admiration for his brother. “My reaction was one of gratitude and a sense of pride,” he said upon hearing news of his brother stepping down as MPP. Pre-K to Grade 12 Grammar

DALTON MCGUINTY

“Overall, he’s a great guy, a very good person in many respects, responsible and hardworking.” David said his brother leaves the legislature with a huge portfolio under his belt, and many projects he helped bring to fruition, including the renaming of Highway 416 to the Veterans’ Memorial Highway and the establishment of the Terry Fox Athletic Facility. When asked where McGuinty found his drive in politics, David said it was due to his character and persona, as well as the ethics and values instilled in him. “He was always trying to do his best and trying to improve through positive contributions,” he said. “That’s what kept him going for many years.” His ultimate decision to leave was a difficult one, said David. “He wants to make sure folks here are served well… His public life can be a very difficult life. It was a difficult job. You never please anybody. But he always did the right Reading Study Skills

His successor, Premier Kathleen Wynne, praised McGuinty for his years in office. “Unbowed by the challenges of his office, he always had a family anecdote, a historical reference and a charming turn-of-phrase to put things in perspective,” Wynne said in a statement. “Earlier this year, he wrote me a letter encouraging my commitment to conversations in which he quoted the Greek statesman, Pericles, who described continued discussion as an ‘indispensable preliminary to any wise action at all.’ I have always valued Dalton’s counsel and look forward to our continued discussions as I endeavour to build on his many wise actions.” Liberal supporter and South resident Clarence Montigny said he was disappointed to see McGuinty leave politics. “It’s too bad,” he said. “I thought he would have more guts, in a way, to take the heat, but he probably did the right thing when it comes down to it. He’s done a lot of good things in our community, and whenever I’ve met him, he was always a nice guy – a real family guy. Makes me proud to be a Liberal.”

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EMC News –Dalton McGuinty resigned on June 12 as MPP for Ottawa South. The former premier, who announced his resignation as Liberal leader in February had been the subject of scrutiny from the opposition due to his absence in the legislature. However, when he stepped down as premier, he maintained he would stay on as MPP for Ottawa South until the next election. “I leave politics with my idealism intact and a deep sense of gratitude for the opportunity to have served in public life,” he said in a statement. The past week had been a challenging one for the former politician, who was elected leader of the Ontario Liberal Party in 1996, before taking over the reins as premier in 2003. His office was also flooded with questions after it was discovered emails his political staffers had received were erased, according to media reports. The emails could have contained more information on the cancellations of the two gas-fired power plants, states media reports.

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Thank You!

St. Peter Celestine Church would like to thank the following business/individuals for their kind donations, which helped to make the June 1st “Dance & Auction” fundraiser a great success. Also, thank you to the parishioners for their donations and continued support. 5 Span Feed and Seed Aimi Nails & Spa, Arnprior Algonquin College Alliance Coin & Banknote Al’s Corner Store Barr’s Service Centre Bed Bath & Beyond Bonell’s Taw Kwon Do School, Kenwood Athletic Centre Bonnie Jane’s Scones Braeside Furniture Brantim Farms Country Gardens C.R. Gamble Funeral Home & Chapel Canadian Museum of Civilization Canadian War Museum Carleton Place Nurseries Carlson Wagonlit, Arnprior Carp Fair Board CCWG Livestock Supplies & Equestrian Centre Coady’s Car Care Cooligan Martial Arts Costco Crazy Horse, Kanata Curves, Arnprior Dog Gone Grooming Don’s Meat Market Doug Cavanagh, Kenwood Athletic Centre East Side Mario’s, Arnprior Fifth Avenue Jewellery/ Pat Archtreekete Frontline Paintball & Laser Tag Fulton’s

Future Shop, Kanata Giant Tiger, Arnprior Giant Tiger, Carleton Place Goldie Mohr Gongshow Good Life Fitness Greensmere Golf & Country Club Guido Patrice Your Independent Grocer Holiday Inn Kanata Home Depot, Carleton Place Home Hardware, Arnprior Jim’s Restaurant, Arnprior JMJ Gifts John & Jodi Gleeson Judith McGrath Karson Group Karters Korners Katrina Kahn, Kenwood Athletic Centre Kerry O’Keefe, Avenue Esthetics Kevin Dodds Gallery Kinburn Farm Supply Loch March Golf & Country Club Love That Barr M. Downey Excavating MacPherson Plumbing & Heating Mama Rosa’s Restaurant Mamma’s Place, Almonte Mark Cassanto “The Computer Guy” McCann’s Garage, Pakenham Mike Deans Super Food Store Mill Street Crepe Company Mississippi Meadows Honey Mississippi Veterinary Clinic Mount Pakenham

National Art Centre National Gallery of Canada Our Place in the ‘Prior Pakenham Civitan Club Pakenham General Store Pet Valu, Almonte Pilon Family Funeral Home PJ’s Restaurant Quality Inn, Arnprior Reid Gardens Rexall Drug Store, Almonte Rob Dodd, Kenwood Athletic Centre Robert Gourlay Equipment Rentals Rona, Arnprior Royal Bank, Pakenham The Ryan’s/Gail Gavan & Kyle Felhaver Scheel Furniture & Appliance Scheel Windows Scoop’s, Pakenham Staples, Carleton Place Star Set Jewelers Stittsville Shooting Range Sweetandsassy Co. TA Touchless Carwash, Arnprior Terry Knuuttila, Massage Therapy The Arnprior Book Shop The New Oak Tree The White Lilly Thomas Cavanagh Construction Trillium Tree Services Tru Country & Garden VAMOS W. Gillan Farms Ltd. Wilderness Tours

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West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013 7


OPINION

Connected to your community

EDITORIAL

A rose by any other name

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ike many fans, we’re a little disappointed after the city’s new Canadian Football League franchise announced its name as the Ottawa RedBlacks. The naming has certainly put Ottawa on the map, but not in a good way. The moment it was announced, the Internet lit up like a Christmas tree with people criticizing the choice on sports fan websites and Twitter accounts. To make matters worse, the franchise sent out a request to the media to spell out the name using all caps. One pundit on the Internet quipped, “The Ottawa REDBLACKS are apparently that one guy in high school who wants to give himself his own nickname that everyone calls him.� OK, the name Rough Riders was unavailable, as the rights are still controlled by the team’s former owner, Horn Chen. Jeff Hunt, president of Ottawa Sports and Entertainment Group, the organization responsible for bringing CFL football back to the National Capital Region, said red and black are the colours of Ottawa sport, with teams ranging from the original Rough Riders of the 1890s to the past and modern day Senators. The name is “unique, maybe even a little edgy,� said Hunt, adding it’s a brand that will stand the test of time and that fans will eventually get used to it.

But that begs the question, why introduce a name that fans must “get used to�, instead of coming up with something creative, that captures the imagination of a city, and makes fans eager to get behind the team? If the franchise wanted to attract a whole new generation of fans, why pick a name that harkens back to the 20th century? Also, RedBlacks doesn’t exactly smack of creativity -- we can only imagine the process for coming up with that logo: something along the lines of “Hey, the uniforms are red and black...why not call them RedBlacks!� The name RedBlacks will probably stick, but following the example of sports cities throughout the ages, fans will inevitably invent a more palatable nickname. Something that rolls of the tongue when people cheer at Lansdowne Park -- the same way fans in other cities came up with the Habs for the Montreal Canadiens. Blue Shirts for the New York Rangers, or the Boatmen for the Toronto Argonauts. Ottawa’s fans have plenty to celebrate with the return of CFL football to Lansdowne Park starting in 2014, bringing with it all the fabulous traditions of the fall, such as tailgate parties and a touch of frostbite. Eventually we’ll learn to live with the club’s official name. As William Shakespeare once said, “A rose by any other name would smell as sweet.�

COLUMN

Neighbourhood summer events prove it’s always nicer outside

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hings that start small and comfy can get big and out of hand, particularly if they are successful. Eventually, people begin to lament the absent smallness and comfiness. You see that happening in today’s discussions about the ByWard Market. If this has happened to Westfest, a neighbourhood festival that started 10 years ago, it isn’t obvious from the little window of it I took in. Certainly it has grown considerably, attracting more visitors and presenting bigger entertainment names. But the neighbourhood feeling still survives. I walked down there on a Saturday thinking it would be a nice to grab some street lunch. Walking was my first good decision. Success breeds cars and cars breed congestion and congestion breeds ill temper. Walking avoided all that, and produced an appetite. Where there are crowds you will find people with different attitudes towards being in them. For example, some people are attracted to long line-ups, figuring that they must indicate that the food is good. Other people, instinctively go where the lineup is shortest. That would be me, finding a very nice Polish sausage from a wagon at a traditional spot

CHARLES GORDON Funny Town beside Mountain Equipment Co-op. There then followed a period of trying to remember how to walk and eat at the same time, followed by a period of trying to remember how to get mustard off a shirt. At this time of the day, a kind of happy amateurism prevailed. The big names would come later, after dark, but for now there was a feeling that it was people you knew playing the guitars and violins. Many street musicians and entertainers were highly experienced, you could tell, but there were also high school kids happily pounding out their rock chords, perhaps newly emerged from the garage. There was an enjoyable middle school stage band playing Route 66 for an appreciative crowd. One puzzling thing: of the 21 musicians in the band, only three were boys, by my count. Why is that? Don’t the guys Published weekly by:

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know how much fun it is to pick up a horn and be in the band? Just down the street is a jazz band of middle-aged men and women. You can tell they’re having fun. The spirit of amateurism is also evident in the booths, where small items are being sold, worthy causes are being promoted and demonstrations of this and that are taking place. Few of the people staffing the booths do this for a living. That means there is no such thing as a hard sell, which is refreshing. It also means that the customers are more patient than they might be in store. At a neighbourhood thing like this, you bump into people know you and stop to chat. When you think back upon those chats, you realize they have one thing in common: Nobody is complaining. How rare is that? Two people in Ottawa meet and converse and nobody complains? It must be the sausages and the proximity of ice cream. Or it may be that there are no cars around. We own the street on this day and it feels good. (Although the sensation can be a bit disorienting at intersections where cars reappear and the pedestrians and drivers have temporarily forgotten to watch out for each other.) Another puzzling thing: nobody talks

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about hockey. This is Canada and the finals are about to begin and nobody talks about hockey. Sure, the Senators are out of the playoffs, but it feels like a cultural shift that the acquaintances you meet are talking about everything but hockey. Maybe it’s just a peculiar bunch of acquaintances. Everywhere there is food – healthy food, of course, but also an infinite variety of cookies and muffins and ice cream and honey and pickles and more exotic fare, sold by people who seem to be pleased to be out of doors. People are always nicer outside, haven’t you noticed?

Editorial Policy The Ottawa East News welcomes letters to the editor. Senders must include their full name, complete address and a contact phone number. Addresses and phone numbers will not be published. We reserve the right to edit letters for space and content, both in print and online at www.yourottawaregion.com. To submit a letter to the editor, please email to theresa.fritz@metroland.com, fax to 613-224-2265 or mail to the Ottawa East News, 80 Colonnade Rd. N., Unit 4, Ottawa, ON, K2E 7L2.

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8 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013

UĂŠ `Ă›iĂ€ĂŒÂˆĂƒÂˆÂ˜}ĂŠĂ€>ĂŒiĂƒĂŠ>˜`ĂŠĂŒiĂ€Â“ĂƒĂŠ>˜`ĂŠVœ˜`ÂˆĂŒÂˆÂœÂ˜ĂƒĂŠ>Ă€iĂŠ>VVÂœĂ€`ˆ˜}ĂŠĂŒÂœĂŠ ĂŒÂ…iĂŠĂ€>ĂŒiĂŠV>Ă€`ĂŠÂˆÂ˜ĂŠivviVĂŒĂŠ>ĂŒĂŠĂŒÂˆÂ“iĂŠ>`Ă›iĂ€ĂŒÂˆĂƒÂˆÂ˜}ĂŠÂŤĂ•LÂ?ÂˆĂƒÂ…i`° UĂŠ /Â…iĂŠ>`Ă›iĂ€ĂŒÂˆĂƒiÀÊ>}Ă€iiĂƒĂŠĂŒÂ…>ĂŒĂŠĂŒÂ…iĂŠÂŤĂ•LÂ?ÂˆĂƒÂ…iĂ€ĂŠĂƒÂ…>Â?Â?ĂŠÂ˜ÂœĂŒĂŠLiĂŠÂ?ˆ>LÂ?iĂŠ vÂœĂ€ĂŠ`>“>}iĂƒĂŠ>Ă€ÂˆĂƒÂˆÂ˜}ĂŠÂœĂ•ĂŒĂŠÂœvĂŠiĂ€Ă€ÂœĂ€ĂƒĂŠÂˆÂ˜ĂŠ>`Ă›iĂ€ĂŒÂˆĂƒi“iÂ˜ĂŒĂƒĂŠLiĂžÂœÂ˜`ĂŠ ĂŒÂ…iĂŠ>Â“ÂœĂ•Â˜ĂŒĂŠVÂ…>Ă€}i`ĂŠvÂœĂ€ĂŠĂŒÂ…iĂŠĂƒÂŤ>ViĂŠ>VĂŒĂ•>Â?Â?ĂžĂŠÂœVVĂ•ÂŤÂˆi`ĂŠLĂžĂŠĂŒÂ…>ĂŒĂŠ ÂŤÂœĂ€ĂŒÂˆÂœÂ˜ĂŠÂœvĂŠĂŒÂ…iĂŠ>`Ă›iĂ€ĂŒÂˆĂƒi“iÂ˜ĂŒĂŠÂˆÂ˜ĂŠĂœÂ…ÂˆVÂ…ĂŠĂŒÂ…iĂŠiĂ€Ă€ÂœĂ€ĂŠÂœVVÕÀÀi`]ĂŠ ĂœÂ…iĂŒÂ…iĂ€ĂŠĂƒĂ•VÂ…ĂŠiĂ€Ă€ÂœĂ€ĂŠÂˆĂƒĂŠ`Ă•iĂŠĂŒÂœĂŠÂ˜i}Â?ˆ}i˜ViĂŠÂœvĂŠÂˆĂŒĂƒĂŠĂƒiÀÛ>Â˜ĂŒĂƒĂŠÂœĂ€ĂŠ ÂœĂŒÂ…iĂ€ĂœÂˆĂƒi°°°ĂŠ>˜`ĂŠĂŒÂ…iĂ€iĂŠĂƒÂ…>Â?Â?ĂŠLiĂŠÂ˜ÂœĂŠÂ?ˆ>LˆÂ?ÂˆĂŒĂžĂŠvÂœĂ€ĂŠÂ˜ÂœÂ˜Â‡ÂˆÂ˜ĂƒiĂ€ĂŒÂˆÂœÂ˜ĂŠ ÂœvĂŠ>Â˜ĂžĂŠ>`Ă›iĂ€ĂŒÂˆĂƒi“iÂ˜ĂŒĂŠLiĂžÂœÂ˜`ĂŠĂŒÂ…iĂŠ>Â“ÂœĂ•Â˜ĂŒĂŠVÂ…>Ă€}i`ĂŠvÂœĂ€ĂŠĂƒĂ•VÂ…ĂŠ >`Ă›iĂ€ĂŒÂˆĂƒi“iÂ˜ĂŒ° UĂŠ /Â…iĂŠ>`Ă›iĂ€ĂŒÂˆĂƒiÀÊ>}Ă€iiĂƒĂŠĂŒÂ…>ĂŒĂŠĂŒÂ…iĂŠVÂœÂŤĂžĂ€Âˆ}Â…ĂŒĂŠÂœvĂŠ>Â?Â?ĂŠ>`Ă›iĂ€ĂŒÂˆĂƒi“iÂ˜ĂŒĂƒĂŠ ÂŤĂ€iÂŤ>Ă€i`ĂŠLĂžĂŠĂŒÂ…iĂŠ*Ă•LÂ?ÂˆĂƒÂ…iÀÊLiĂŠĂ›iĂƒĂŒi`ĂŠÂˆÂ˜ĂŠĂŒÂ…iĂŠ*Ă•LÂ?ÂˆĂƒÂ…iÀÊ>˜`ĂŠ ĂŒÂ…>ĂŒĂŠĂŒÂ…ÂœĂƒiĂŠ>`Ă›iĂ€ĂŒÂˆĂƒi“iÂ˜ĂŒĂƒĂŠV>Â˜Â˜ÂœĂŒĂŠLiĂŠĂ€iÂŤĂ€Âœ`Ă•Vi`ĂŠĂœÂˆĂŒÂ…ÂœĂ•ĂŒĂŠĂŒÂ…iĂŠ ÂŤiĂ€Â“ÂˆĂƒĂƒÂˆÂœÂ˜ĂŠÂœvĂŠĂŒÂ…iĂŠ*Ă•LÂ?ÂˆĂƒÂ…iĂ€° UĂŠ /Â…iĂŠ*Ă•LÂ?ÂˆĂƒÂ…iÀÊÀiĂƒiÀÛiĂƒĂŠĂŒÂ…iĂŠĂ€Âˆ}Â…ĂŒĂŠĂŒÂœĂŠi`ÂˆĂŒ]ĂŠĂ€iĂ›ÂˆĂƒiĂŠÂœĂ€ĂŠĂ€iÂ?iVĂŒĂŠ >Â˜ĂžĂŠ>`Ă›iĂ€ĂŒÂˆĂƒi“iÂ˜ĂŒ°

Read us online at www.EMConline.ca www.yourottawaregion.com


OPINION

Connected to your community

No decision made to bypass West Carleton Food Bank To the editor: Carp Agricultural Society wishes to clarify details of its food bank donation made on Friday, May 31 during the Mayor’s Rural Expo and Food Aid, supporting the Ottawa Food Bank. At that event, $161,000 was officially donated to the food bank, with $8,000 of that donation coming from the Carp Agricultural Society and Concert4Carp. The monies for Carp Agricultural Society’s donation were raised during two 2012 events, namely, the Concert4Carp, held in the summer of that year at the Carp Fairgrounds, and “Toonies for Farmers,” held the Thursday night of Carp Fair. The Concert4Carp was the initiative of a group of concerned citizens wanting to do something for our farmers during the

worst drought in many decades. Proceeds from the event were given to the agricultural society to decide how best to help the farmers. The 2012 president of the society announced on radio last summer that the proceeds of the Thursday night of the upcoming Carp Fair (always a “toonie night” for charity) would also be used to support farmers, and that all funds collected would be donated to the Ottawa Food Bank, which would, in turn, purchase beef from local farmers, supplying it to individuals and families in need. At the time that these proceeds were officially earmarked for the Ottawa Food Bank, in August 2012, the West Carleton Food Bank was operating under the greater umbrella of the Ottawa

Food Bank. The West Carleton Food Bank continued to operate in coordination with the Ottawa Food Bank until April of this year, when it opted out of its relationship with the Ottawa Food Bank. No public announcement that would inform the Carp Agricultural Society and the general public of this decision to opt out was made by the West Carleton Food Bank until a couple of weeks ago, however—long past the time that these donations, totaling $8,000, were earmarked for the Ottawa Food Bank. Wendy Cox, Matt Munro Carp Fairboard co-presidents Joyce Trafford General Manager

Country knitters Being comfortable at being uncomfortable end year of giving to charities To the editor:

Members of West Carleton Country Knitters have just enjoyed a fun and delicious pot luck to celebrate our fourth successful year of knitting and crocheting for local charities, and we would like to thank all the wonderful people in our local community for making this possible through your donations of unused yarn. This year the yarn was used by us to knit and crochet for several local charities including the Young Women’s Emergency Shelter in downtown Ottawa, Granite Ridge Long Term Care Home in Stittsville, Chrysalis House for abused women in Kanata, and Norwood House Transitional Home run by the Elizabeth Fry Society. Our combined groups made a total of 713 items which included lots of hats mitts and scarves, and many other items which included no less than a record for us of 84 Afghans! We are always happy to accept donations of clean unused yarn, and new members regardless of their knitting or crocheting skills or lack thereof, will be most welcome to attend our alternate Monday afternoon get togethers when we start again in September. There will be an opportunity to meet us at the Carp Farmers Market on Sept. 14. If anyone knows of a local charity which could benefit from our work please tell us about it! We can be reached at our website through a Google search at wccknitters, or directly by phone at 613 8322611 (Paula) or at 613 839-2542 (Sue), and we look forward to hearing from you. Again, many thanks for your ongoing community support, and to this newspaper for our valuable free community ad. Paula Farmer Woodlawn

EMC lifestyle - It’s week eight of our 10-week boys group session. Time has passed by very quickly! Feel free to read the previous weeks’ articles in the blog section of my website if you have not had an opportunity to follow us on our journey here. Our English language describes the word feeling as a physical sensation. How many people do you know will do whatever it takes to avoid a physical sensation (a byproduct of feeling emotions)? I’m guessing a few. Last week I shared with readers that our group session needed to be extended in order to accommodate the emotional needs of the participants. This is what our weekly treatment program; our boys group is all about. We create a secure and safe environment in order for the boys to begin to feel their emotions; whatever they may be. When the feelings emerge we ride the wave. As mentioned in last week’s article I think emotional needs are often overlooked during our busy day to day interactions. In my professional work it is believed that if emotions are glossed over and not lived, felt or tended to; it can be detrimental to emotional development in children and youth. This then translates into adult life in a variety of ways that I will not address here as this is another topic. The act of expressing, showing or living through one’s emotions and feelings is a fundamental and primal

instinct that is being led astray in our society. Sadly this is where suffering begins; and in kids can often be overlooked as a basic need, until behavioural issues emerge. Behaviour tends to catch a lot of attention! But to focus only behaviour is to negate feelings. All the hard work and planning that goes into a therapeutic group is primed for an experience such as the one we were able to have; leaning into and leading towards the physical sensation of being comfortable being uncomfortable [yes please read that again!] is a goal we strive for! This leaning into and acknowledging the uncomfortable is known as personal growth and between the ages of 10 -13 years, big developmental growth. It is positive, healthy movement toward building an individual’s emotional resilience. Staring feelings in the face, tackling the uncomfortable physical sensation is a very vulnerable place for any individual, when this process is allowed to happen naturally without interruption it is very powerful for that person. For this week we were obviously required to spend some time debriefing our group session from last week but it was not the focus of our time together tonight. The discussion was uncomfortable [there is that word again!] for the boys but an important one to have in order to acknowledge but also build on the courage and strength it took to come back to group. Running away could have been an option but no one

did, now in reality this is exactly where the comments like “My mom made me come!” come in, however, ultimately the boys did come back to group. This is a really big deal. Next we invite a police officer to group as our last guest speaker. We also began planning our last night of group. Julie Clarke, BCYC, CYC (Cert.) is a Child and Youth Care practitioner in private practice. She is a full certified member of the Ontario Association of Child & Youth Counsellors. She helps children, youth and their families working with a proactive strengths-based approach. She has recently opened a new Carp location. Check out her new website at independentcyc.com.

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West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013 9


OPINION

Connected to your community

The blood-letting season has begun EMC lifestyle - Right now walks in the out-of-doors can be challenging. The difďŹ culty, however, lies not in the physical quality of the terrain. Instead it exists in our ability to tolerate the hordes of biting insects that so readily pay us a visit. This is reputed to be one of the worst years for encountering Black Flies and Mosquitoes. Currently I am in Algonquin Park where last evening legions of Black Flies decorated my shirt with spots of blood. Fortunately I don’t react to their bites. And I don’t blame them when under siege for I know that biting insects are all part of the natural scheme of things, and are only doing what they are programmed to do. There are several major groups of biting insects, but currently Black Flies and Mosquitoes are the dominant ones. In both groups it is solely the females that draw blood and they do so only to attain a protein boost for their eggs. How biting insects locate a donor and access its blood is a fascinating story. All biting ies use special sensors in their antennae and sometimes legs to search for carbon dioxide in the air. Animals, of course, exhale this waste product of respiration. When they locate molecules of this gas, the insects change their ight path, searching for an increasing gradient that takes them to the source. An

Michael Runtz Nature’s Way animal’s dark hair can also be a visual attractant, which is why light clothes are best worn now. As they near a host, the insects search for a water vapour gradient and head towards its source, which is the skin. After landing, Black Flies and Mosquitoes withdraw the blood of their host in very different ways. Mosquitoes use their pin-like mouthparts to penetrate the skin and enter a capillary. Blood is then sucked into the body, which swells like a clear balloon ďŹ lling with red air. Thus, Mosquito ‘bites’ are not bites but needle-like pricks. Instead of pricking you, Black Flies slice you. First they anchor themselves into your skin with a pair of serrated blades then cut through your skin with scissor-like mouthparts.

MICHAEL RUNTZ

Can you tell that the author does not use repellents? of attack. These attach to the antigens in the saliva, causing the body to release histamines, which result in the famous inammatory response – a bump. Incidentally, we usually feel the prick of a Mosquito’s mouthparts probing our skin only after they make entry. And we often do not feel Black Fly cuts until they are nearly ďŹ nished

As do Mosquitoes, Black Flies apply anticoagulants with their saliva to ensure a steady ow of liquid. That is why blood ows copiously from Black Fly slashes. The Mosquito-induced bump is a rather interesting consequence of a visit by one of those insects. The mosquito’s saliva causes our body to send antibodies to the point

feeding. That is because both include a dose of painkillers in their saliva to better the chances of making a withdrawal while remaining undetected. Biting insects treat us as blood donors. Too bad they don’t offer coffee and donuts in return! The Nature Number is 613-3872503; email is mruntz@start.ca.

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OPINION

Connected to your community

In which Ginger doth protest too much EMC lifestyle - “The sheep have that pasture nibbled down to felt,� said the Farmer one day last week. Now that our back two pasture fields have been tiled and planted, we no longer have as much grazing land for the sheep. There are two options: move them to the other side of the farm or supplement their diet with hay while the grass grows back. The latter is too expensive an option. The next day I came home from the work to find the Farmer had moved all the sheep up into the front and west fields, with the cows. “They even sound happier now,� I commented. “But what about Misty and Donkey?� The horse and her friend stood at the fence watching the festivities on the other side – and probably planning a break-in. It’s not as though there wasn’t enough food left for them, now that they had the whole pasture to themselves. But they hate feeling left out and wondered what they were missing. “Are they going to be ok over there without the Donkey?� I wondered aloud. So far this year we have only had one coyote strike, but

DIANA FISHER Accidental Farmwife one means they are watching and waiting for another easy opportunity. The Farmer muttered something like “by the time we get a strike over there, the grass will be grown back over here and I can move them again.� I went out on the back porch and stared at the sheep. I thought about Gracie, who has twins of her own plus an adopted lamb on her. Her face has become so thin and elongated I didn’t even recognize her. And I thought of my little bottle-fed lamb, only recently weaned off milk, who still comes running whenever he hears my voice. I don’t want them to get taken

by a coyote. Finally I heard a big sigh and the Farmer came over to join me. “Ok, we can move the horse and donkey over there too. But remember last time? As soon as the horse arrived, the cows found a hole in the fence and left.� Oh yeah. I forgot about that. The cows hate having the horse and donkey around. A whole herd of sheep underfoot they can handle. But as soon as you introduce a big Belgian horse and a neck-biting donkey, they feel crowded. I got busy weeding the garden while the Farmer trudged off to move the animals. Within about half an hour I knew they were in, because all I could hear was the loud protest of Ginger, bellowing repeatedly like a broken foghorn. I decided to go and have a look. The sheep were nestled down for their midday nap, almost hidden in long grass under the shade of the trees. Most of the cattle were in the barn, where they also have a mid-day nap away from the high sun and the bugs. Donkey and Misty were standing in the breezeway, reveling in the wind blowing through, cooling

their hot skin and blowing the bugs off them. They were also blocking entry to the part of the barn where the rest of the cows were sleeping. Ginger stood just outside, in the hot, wet mud, bellowing. She probably wanted to get in but she wasn’t going to risk brushing up against Misty or Donkey, for fear of getting a nip on her side. It’s really more humiliating than painful, I think. The only thing hurt is her pride. I told her she was being ridiculous and she snorted at me. Betty was resting on the far side of the barn with her calf, as if launching a passive-aggressive protest against the entire operation. By sunset, everyone had “found their corners�, as the Farmer says, and it’s been quiet ever since. It’s weird to look out the window and not see a single farm animal, however. I’m sure the neighbours can do without all the mooing but they have said before they like to have the lambs up in the front field where they can see and hear them. I’m just hoping they don’t get an up-closeand-personal visit from a certain angry cow and her calf, looking for a corner of the meadow to call their own.

Thanks for book corner support To the editor: On behalf of the Friends of the Library in Carp, I want to thank some people for our fabulous fifth birthday celebrations. Lori Fielding and the staff of the Carp branch of Ottawa Public Library hosted a great party for us, complete with cake and speeches. I want to thank city councillors Eli El-Chantiry, Marianne Wilkinson and Jan Harder for attending and accepting, along with Danielle McDonald, CEO of the Ottawa Public Library, our cheque for $30,066.32. This is the amount we raised for the library in the past five years. I’d like to thank Heather Murphy of the Friends of the Ottawa Public Library Board, as well as Jasmine Ball and Marie Peterson, staff from the Friends office, for their assistance over the past five years. The wonderful volunteers with the Friends in Carp for all their hard work and dedication. Jim, Karen, Bony, Linda, Susan, Chris, Reta, Faye, Barb, Pat, Theresa, Mary, Mich, Karen G and Naomi you are the finest. Ennio Marcantonio of the Carp Farmers’ Market donated a table and canopy to us on June 8 so we could give back to the community in the form of free cupcakes, generously donated by the Foget’s of Sobeys on March Road. Thanks to both of you. Finally to the fabulous people of Carp and West Carleton. Thank you so much for donating (and then buying) all those books and dvds in the past five years. Kirsten Smith Manager Carp Book Corner

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West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013 11


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EMC lifestyle – The coffee table book Beautiful Arnprior is by professional photographers Pat and Rosemarie Keough. Although more than 20 years old, the book has aged well and remains the definitive book on the town. Along with historic photos, landscapes and portraits, there is exactly one photo of a fisherman with his catch. It seems a bit odd; just one picture of a smiling angler in a book about a town where sport fishing plays such a central role. But there it is on page 57, a photo of Don Johnston and his prize: a 27pound muskie, caught in Chats Lake. Johnston has nabbed plenty of fish all over the valley during his 80 years on this planet. The past president of the Arnprior Fish and Game Club has pulled up lunkers from Quebec to Barry’s Bay, the latter where he belongs to a club along a road named for a West Carleton village – Carp Way. A wealth of stories and facts from days gone by, the developer holds a vivid memory of that day in September 1983 when he showed up on his friend’s doorstep in Logger’s Way with a muskie. “I had the boat on top of my old army truck,” Johnston said. “It was too nice of a day to work, so I said ‘I’m going fishing.’” Now, anyone who knows him knows that Johnston is a tough old bird. A lifetime of hard work was taking its toll, even at age 50

Beginning June 27, 2013, the Ottawa Police Service (OPS) will collect the observational recordings of the race of drivers involved in traffic stops for a two-year period. Drivers will not be asked to identify their race. The focus of the project is officer perception of driver race. Passengers are not included in the study. This project is the result of an agreement between the Ottawa Police Services Board and the Ontario Human Rights Commission (OHRC). The OHRC and the OPS believe that race-based data collection is important in ensuring bias-free policing services. The data will be provided to the OHRC at the end of the two-year collection period. It will be limited to information required for analysis. The data will not include any personal identifiers of drivers. The project will be the largest of its kind in Canada.

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DEREK DUNN Valley fish tales when he had his first heart surgery, a bypass. (His seventh is coming up.) But it wasn’t long after that first one when he took a boat to the Quebec side of the Ottawa, not far from the CN rail bridge. Bumping along the water at full blast with a bum ticker didn’t faze him. There were photos to take and fish to catch. “I was taking pictures of the Quebec side; exquisite in colour,” he said with narrowing eyes. “My line stopped and I figured it was stuck. I was looking back at the Quebec side and didn’t pay much attention. Then I noticed the line was way out in the river. That can’t be right!” Johnston managed to land the muskellunge, and brought it to Pat Keough’s nearby house. “He took a picture and the next thing I knew it was in the Arnprior book.” He has plenty of stories about back in the day when he and friends would pack their fishing gear, a frying pan and butter, maybe a block of ice and head out for the day. It could be in the Shawville direction for speckled trout. It could be the Madawaska for bass. The developer and owner of Kingdon Holdings also has a few stories from today. After his seventh time under the knife for heart

surgery, he plans to travel up Carp Way and stay at the camp for four or five days. You can’t keep nature out of the kid. BABY FISH?

Eighty-four-year-old Jean Applebee in the Pontiac has more energy than most kids half her age. She loves to talk and tell stories and, well, take a sincere interest in people. So when she overheard a couple of gentlemen talking while waiting to see the doctor at hospital, Jean couldn’t help but interject. The men were staring proudly at a couple of snapshot photos. Jean thought it peculiar since most folks these days flash photos on their phone before hitting delete. The man holding the pixs was explaining how the one is 2.5 pounds and other a healthy 7.5 “I hope their mother made out OK,” Jean said, whooping with laughter. “Turns out they were looking at a couple of trout!” Her daughter sitting on the other side bumped Jean in the arm, and said, “Your big mouth is going to get you in trouble.” Born and raised in the Maritimes, Jean spends most days watching the coming and goings at the Otter Lake municipal build-

ing. She has her indoor cat, tea and usually something baking in the oven. Life has been good and continues to be good to Jean, that much is evident. “I wave at everybody,” she says, speaking a mile a minute. “And if you are close enough I’ll give you a hug.” She enjoys reading Valley Fish Tales (obviously a wise woman) and has plenty of friends in Renfrew and elsewhere on this side of the river. Sure, life has given her some setbacks. Her “hubby” was rushed to hospital hours before their 60th anniversary party. He didn’t come out. But she seems to say Yes! to every rising sun. “From day one when we moved to the Pontiac we never felt shunned. You know there is a lot of French, but everybody has always been great to us,” she said. And who wouldn’t be, regardless of language? Jean’s liable to give them a hug. SHARE YOUR STORY

Do you have a fish story sure to entertain readers throughout the Ottawa Valley? It has to be true and it has to be short. But after that it’s up to you. Give Derek Dunn a call at 613.623.6571 or email derek.dunn@metroland. com. He’ll jot it down for an upcoming Valley Fish Tales.

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OPINION

Connected to your community

When continents collide Ole Hendrickson

Slow-motion video footage of the Ottawa Valley’s past would have captured the formation and disappearance of great mountain ranges and ice sheets, accompanied by massive earthquakes and floods, interspersed with long periods of warm, shallow seas. We have no videos, but thanks to the efforts and research of many scientists we have a pretty clear picture of the valley’s geological history. Marine bacteria ruled the Earth in the Precambrian over a billion years ago. Precursors of the continents of Africa, Europe, and South America converged on an older and smaller version of North America, creating a supercontinent called Rodinia. Continental plates crashed together and buckled upwards, forming the mighty Grenville Mountains, higher than the Himalayas. Molten rock surged from deep within the earth to fill the spaces beneath the up-thrust plates. Near the epicentre of this great collision a great upsurge of magma slowly cooled into the granite dome of the Algonquin batholith, occupying much of the current area of Algonquin Park and adjacent Renfrew County. Erosion wore away Rodinia’s great mountains and exposed their granitic roots during the next 250

million years. As the thickness and weight of the crust decreased, the remaining nubs of the mountains floated upwards on the heavier underlying molten mantle. During the late Precambrian, 750 million years

Mountain-building forces of continental collisions, combined with the erosive and depositional power of water (both ice and liquid), sculpted the present-day landscapes of the Ottawa Valley - its hills, plains, escarpments, canyons, rivers, lakes and wetlands. ago, Rodinia cracked into new continental plates. These pulled apart, leaving bits and pieces stuck onto the North American plate and increasing its size. During the break-up of the supercontinent, North America itself began to split apart in the area now occupied by the Ottawa and St. Lawrence valleys. Through a series of massive earthquakes, a great rift opened in the continent with deep cracks extending downwards 40 kilometers to the base of the Earth’s crust. As these

cracks widened, the land between them slumped downwards, leaving a “graben”: a valley with sheer escarpments on either side. Views of the northern and southern walls of the graben – the Laurentian Mountains of Quebec and the Opeongo Mountains of Ontario – are a defining feature of Renfrew County. The newly created Ottawa Valley was transforming into an ocean with Ontario and Quebec on opposite sides - just as a new ocean was appearing between the North American and Eurasian continental plates. But then the rifting stopped and the earthquakes subsided. Tranquillity followed. North America lay near the equator, drifting slowly northwards. Warm, shallow tropical seas covered the Ottawa Valley. Marine life flourished during the Ordovician Era. Fossils of trilobites, clams and mussels, snails, relatives of squids and octopi, sponges, corals, and sand dollars were deposited in the 450-million-year-old sedimentary limestone that formed over billion-year-old Precambrian rocks. These marine fossils are readily found along the Ottawa and Bonnechere Rivers today. During a more recent geological era, continental plates again converged to form another great supercontinent, Pangaea. Their collision created another mountain range - the

Appalachians – to the east of the Laurentians. Around 175 million years ago Pangaea split apart and the Atlantic Ocean re-opened, accompanied by more earthquakes and faulting in the Ottawa Valley. The geological history of the Ottawa Valley was not well understood until the 1960s. Scientists such as the Canadian John Tuzo Wilson agreed that evidence was overwhelming for seafloor spreading and collisions of continental plates. Wilson’s scientific contributions were so critical that the cycle of formation and disappearance of oceans is known as the “Wilson Cycle”. The final events in the Valley’s geological history took place during a 3-million-year ice age. For 2 million years glacial and inter-glacial periods alternated quickly, lasting about 40 thousand years each. But during the past million years the cycles lengthened to 100 thousand years. Intense cold periods created continental-scale ice sheets. The last of these, the Laurentide Ice Sheet, flowed southwest from the region of Hudson Bay. It reached the Ottawa Valley around 60,000 years ago, covering the Valley with ice to a maximum thickness of two to three kilometers. When the ice began its retreat around 20,000 years ago, its weight had greatly depressed the land surface, and it held so much water that global sea level had fallen by 70 meters. As it melted the Atlantic Ocean flooded into the lower portions of the Ottawa Valley and formed the Champlain Sea, with its rich diver-

sity of marine life. In 1977, a quarry operation in eastern Renfrew County near White Lake uncovered the skeleton of a bowhead whale. During their advance and retreat, glaciers scraped over the Ottawa Valley and the Algonquin highlands, exposing bedrock in some places, and dumping materials (“glacial till”) elsewhere. For thousands of years the upper Great Lakes and much of Canada west to the Rockies drained through the Ottawa Valley. At maximum flow the Ottawa River rivalled the Amazon in size. Water from the melting ice transported boulders, gravel, sand, and clays, carving deep channels such as the Barron River Canyon. The finest clay-sized particles were carried furthest downriver and deposited in the Champlain Sea, creating some of Renfrew County’s best farmland. Renfrew County residents live in an ancient and special place. Mountain-building forces of continental collisions, combined with the erosive and depositional power of water (both ice and liquid), sculpted the present-day landscapes of the Ottawa Valley - its hills, plains, escarpments, canyons, rivers, lakes and wetlands. Knowledge of this geologic history informs decisions to conserve our precious soils, waters, and biological resources. Ole Hendrickson is a forest ecologist and current president of the Ottawa River Institute (www.ottawariverinstitute.ca), a non-profit organization based in the Ottawa Valley.

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City council gave the green light to a two-year pilot project to allow all-terrain vehicles on city road allowances and roads in Osgoode. It’s the city’s first foray into allowing ATVs to operate on city-owned land.

613-747-7800 | www.casott.on.ca | email: ourcasquestion@casott.on.ca | facebook/twitter: OttawaCAS

Osgoode ATV network a go Blanchfield residents feel ‘betrayed’ by councillor Laura Mueller laura.mueller@metroland.com

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EMC news - As an ATV club celebrated a victory in creating the city’s first ATV trail network, people who live along the trail were livid their councillor broke a promise. Blanchfield Road resident Heather Hamilton was disappointed that city council’s final approval of the two-year pilot project did not specify that no ATVs would be allowed to drive on her street after the first year of the project. That’s a promise she felt her city councillor, Doug Thompson, made at a meeting the week before. “We’re surprised, disappointed and feel somewhat betrayed,” Hamilton said, adding that Thompson “doesn’t seem very good at living up to the commitments he made.” Thompson said he is still committed to getting ATVs off Blanchfield Road if there are problems after the first year. The city’s legal department advised him it would be better to craft an amendment that will require the agriculture and rural affairs committee – which Thompson chairs – to review the Blanchfield issue after one year. But it would be up to the committee to determine if ATVs should be banned on that road. Concerns about safety and dust on Blanchfield Road dominated the discussion when the agriculture and rural affairs committee debated the proposal on May 6. Thompson said residents “may have” felt he made a commitment to remove ATVs from Blanchfield, but reviewing it after a year is the same thing. “My commitment is still there,” Thompson said. Concerns of residents who live on Blanchfield will hold the most weight, but Thompson said he would also like the committee to consider information from the police, who will be closely monitoring the 31-kilometre ATV trail network.

It might turn out that there are no problems with ATVs on Blanchfield Road and residents might be fine with maintaining the arrangement, so the city shouldn’t “pre-dispose that it will be a failure,” Thompson said. The network includes 8.3 km on some roads, including Blanchfield, where there is no offroad road allowance the ATVs can use. Hamilton was also disappointed that a 20-km per hour speed limit discussed with the councillor was not included in the bylaw approved by city council on June 11. The pilot project will run until Nov. 30, 2015. Thompson said the speed limit will be 20 km per hour and signs will be posted, but he admitted that leaving it out of the bylaw “may have been an oversight.” Thompson said he would work to change that speed limit to ensure police can enforce it. The concerns of Blanchfield residents may not be an issue for too much longer if the Nation Valley ATV Club can secure agreements with property owners to access their land as a bypass of Blanchfield Road, Thompson said. Work is already underway to secure that alternate route, he said. The idea is to create a trail “backbone,” which would hopefully be supplemented by trails through private property over time through agreements with owners, said Kris Gough, a member of the ATV club who has taken the lead on the project. City council also approved a change in the start time that ATVs would be allowed to use the trail. Instead of hitting the trails 30 minutes before sunrise, riders will have to wait until 8 a.m. The Osgoode-Carleton Snowmobile Club will also be allowed to use the trail network in the winter months. Hamilton said the details of this pilot project are important because it is the first trail network of its kind in the City of Ottawa and the process and rules for the Osgoode network will set the stage for other trails in the city’s rural areas.


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SPORTS

Connected to your community

Axemen win two OT thrillers twice for the Axemen, with singles to Shane Davidson, Bryson Goodman and Robbie Woods. Sunday afternoon’s game was a war of attrition, with both teams playing tough, physical lacrosse. The lead changed hands several times and the Voyageurs were ahead 9-8 with thirteen seconds remaining. With their goalie on the bench, the Axemen scored with 1.5 seconds left in regulation when Kevin McKeown snatched a rebound off an improbable save by Voyageur’s goalie Vincent Talbot and stuffed the ball in the net to force OT where the Axemen used the momentum to score three more to win 12-9. Tim Bergin led the Axemen offence with four goals and three assists, McKeown scored a pair, with The Axemen won 9-8 in their first game and then 12-9 in their second game in the highly singles to Raj Wasson, Shane Davidson, Matt competitive QSLL. Firth, Curtis Singleton, Bryson Goodman and home game is Saturday June 22 versus the Lacrosse League (NLL) star Callum Crawford, Nevan Sullivan. The Axemen were set to next travel for a Kahnawake Mohawks at Merivale Arena at a graduate of the Nepean Minor Lacrosse Aspair of games in Vermont. The next Axemen 8 pm. The Mohawks’ roster features National sociation.

EMC sports - The Capital Region Axemen of the Quebec Senior Lacrosse League (QSLL) kept their home winning record a perfect 4-0 with two dramatic overtime wins versus the visiting Vermont Voyageurs in a recent weekend tournament. The Axemen won 9-8 on the Saturday and then 12-9 on the Sunday, both times using the extra ten-minute period of overtime to earn crucial home-floor wins in the highly competitive QSLL. Saturday’s game saw the Axemen jump out to a 4-0 lead in the first period. The Voyageurs tightened their defence and gradually upped their offence, drawing even at 5-5 early in the third period. The two teams were locked at 88 at the end of regulation. Axemen captain Raj Wasson scored the only goal in the ten-minute overtime to propel the Axemen to the win. Wasson, Tim Bergin and Jason Tasse each scored

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SPORTS

Connected to your community

Fifth year for Babs Harcourt Memorial Golf Tournament Patricia Leboeuf

pleboeuf@metroland.com

EMC news - It’s the rare type of woman whose memory can inspire the creation of a charity tournament, but Babs Harcourt is one of them. She may have passed away from cancer, but the Babs Harcourt Memorial Golf Tournament was created to honour her as well as raise funds to help those inflicted with the disease. She was well-known and beloved to local golfers and even after five years her memory is cherished. “She was fabulous, lots of fun,� said one of the event’s organizers Barb McNally. “She was a great athlete.� “A lot of the people today knew her,� she added. Various players recalled her outgoing personality, her smile and her skills fondly. “She was a lot of fun to be around and very competitive,� said Pat Milke. The event is in its fifth official year and is held at the Greensmere Golf and Country Club. Last year the tournament raised about $9,000 for the Lucille Broadbent Legacy Fund, which is part of the Ottawa

Regional Cancer Foundation. The organizers hope raised funds will fall in the same range once more. Over the years, they’ve managed to raise more than $40,000. All proceeds from the tournament stay within the community and go directly to help the patients that need money while undergoing treatment. With so many other charities donating to research, the organizers decided that impacting people directly was the way to go. “What we support in Ottawa are cancer patients that have financial difficulties,� said McNally. “Things like paying for their parking or whatever financial emergency they may have.� “Every single penny that we raise goes to people that need money,� she added. “It’s dear to our hearts. There is a need in the community.� The event featured an 18-hole scramble, a barbecue, a silent auction, raffles, prizes and much more. It was the perfect opportunity for golf enthusiasts to have fun while raising funds for a foundation that is desperately underfunded, said club owner Debra Griffith. “We are out here having a good time so let’s help those that aren’t,� said Milke Golfer Pat Milke takes a swing.

PATRICIA LEBOEUF/METROLAND

The Babs Harcourt Memorial Golf Tournament was held at the Greensmere Golf and Country Club on June 12. All proceeds from the tournament go to Lucille Broadbent Legacy Fund. Brenda McNally, Barb McNally, Katharine Saunders and Margo MacLaurin take a break in front of their decorated golf carts.

The golf carts get ready to leave for the 18-hole scramble. Many of them are decorated to reflect the Girl’s Night Out theme.

MINIMUM WAGE AT 35HRS/WEEK: $18,655 /YR POVERTY LINE (SINGLE) : $23,105 /YR

Ottawa has the 3rd highest rent in Canada - Canadian Mortgage Housing Corporation

INCOME GAP: -$4,450 /YR

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ONTARIO’S MINIMUM WAGE HAS BEEN FROZEN AT $10.25/HOUR SINCE 2010, EVEN AS THE COST OF LIVING HAS SOARED.

Minimum wage households healthy - Ottawa Public Health

West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013 19


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SPORTS

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Tournament winners Galetta bowlers won two game-high and one game-high at the MacHardy-Waterside Mixed Pairs bowls tournament held at Galetta Bowls on June 10. The top winners were teams from Nepean Bowls Club in Ottawa. Sue Smith and Bob Smith, left, one gamehigh winners; Flo Barclay and Rico Silvestro two game-high winners, Jennifer Dugal and John Bennett one-game winners.

BEAUTY

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Triples champs Thanks to the hard work of Galetta Bowls In-House Tournament Convener Gord Wright there was a great turn out for the Galetta Bowls in-house triples tournament on June 13. Displaying their plaque in front of the Galetta Bowls Club House is the winning team of Pat Rose, skip, left, John Stevenson, vice skip, and Jennifer Dugal, lead.

HEALTH

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Catholic school board approves next year’s operating budget EMC news - The Ottawa Catholic dents and further enhance student and staff success: School Board has approved an operat• Continued implementation of Full-Day Kindergarten; ing budget for the 2013-2014 school • Expansion of French immersion programming in year totalling $441.4 million. small schools; The Budget focuses on programs • Continued integration of technology in the school, and initiatives that directly benefit stu- classroom and workplace; • Spending related to new elementary schools in South Nepean and Cumberland. “Despite declining enrolment and significant cost pressure, the Board is pleased to have approved this budget while maintaining spending programs for 2013-2014. Our Private and secluded primary focus continues to be ensuring that each and evbackyard retreat. Comes fully equipped ery one of our students achieves success,” said Chairman with a oversized lap Mark D. Mullan. friendly inground The Board has been successful in coping with such pool, totally private from all neighbours, pressures due to: no rear neighbours a) proactive cost savings initiatives implemented over on this beauty. Inside has been extensively renovated, with new hardwood the last number of years; flooring new custom made kitchen cabinets, all new b) continued cooperation and sharing initiatives with windows and doors, fully finished recrm, new bathrooms, all updated electrical, newer roof. This home is a must see, school boards and other government agencies; exceptionally clean. 4 large bedms on the 2nd level. c) pursuit of external funding and grants; and, 37 Inuvik Cres, Katimivik, Kanata. d) a creative and innovative approach to the delivery of $419,500 services. Perfect and Clean This budget was developed with input from trustees, wonderful terrace home with nice large Catholic School Councils and various other stakeholders windows to allow for tons on natural light. and focuses on programs that will continue to nurture stuSpacious principal dent success in all our schools,” said Director of Educarooms, storage, separate pantry area tion, Julian Hanlon. in the eat in kitchen, For complete information on the 2013-2014 Board budgood size dining and living rooms, gracious master suite with a walk-in closet and a cheater door into get, go to ocsb.ca for the June 11 agenda package.

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NEWS

Connected to your community

CHEO challenged to adjust to aging youth population sabine.gibbins@metroland.com

EMC News – The Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario believes the future belongs to children, youth and the aging society. To address these growing demographics, the CHEO has designed a long-term strategic approach to better suit their needs. “The child and youth population is growing, and there’s a lot of concern about the aging society,” said CHEO’s President and CEO Alex Munter. The region’s child and youth population will grow by 20 per cent over the next two decades, said Munter, meaning there will be 70,000 more children than what there is today. In turn, the organization will have to deal with the demand for more service. The strategic approach also looks at creating shorter waiting lists for surgery and appointments with specialists and in emergency, as well as having the ability to book one’s own appointment online, getting test results explained understandable, and allowing patients the ability to access their own health information. “Today’s kids are tomorrow’s parents, caregivers, taxpayers, workers,” he said. CHEO, the largest pediatric and research centre in Eastern Ontario, is aiming to improve its focus and impact over the next 10 years, said Munter. Recently, the hospital unveiled CHEOnet, the hospital’s largest and most extensive strategic plan to date since opening its doors in 1974. The centre’s management engaged in discussions with staff, physicians, experts, partners,

and most importantly, patients and their families, to build a new plan for the hospital. “We looked ahead at what we need to do to stay ahead of the curve,” he said. While CHEO is at the leading edge of patient care and medicine, they need to find ways to preserve that momentum and live up tot hat vision, said Munter. Essentially, there are five different pillars the strategic plan will focus on: providing an exceptional patient experience, staying connected within the community and CHEO, using evidence to improve health care standards, making the best use of their assets to advance their mission, and fostering a “one team” approach. With medicine and technology rapidly evolving, the strategic plan sets out the framework for how the hospital can enter into its fifth decade prepared for the future. CONNECTING

The seven-month process for developing the strategic plan also looks at finding ways to connect with the entire community – that is, exploring the different partnerships available in the community, utilizing technology to share information within and outside the hospital’s walls, and coordinating care for children with the most complex medical needs. The plan also looks at embedding service into everything the hospital does, including creating a learning environment focused on continuous improvement, increasing the number of patients involved in clinical trials, setting specific objectives for key activities, and measuring progress so they can ensure they’re always improving.

“We are on a journey from going to really good to really great,” said Munter. But of course, part of what makes CHEO such a successful organization is due in large part to its team of health care professionals and staff. Down the road, CHEO will provide its staff with opportunities to innovate, create and make

improvements to how they do things. They’ll also provide training and support to help staff take advantage of the latest technology, some of whom are the best in the world, he added.

&

WOCRC OPEN HOUSE REPORT TO THE COMMUNITY

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NEWS

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Earn Extra Money! Bridge will cause too Keep Your Weekends Free!

many problems: residents Continued from page 5

ROUTES AVAILABLE! We’re looking for Carriers to deliver our newspaper!

TUNNEL PIQUES INTEREST

A couple of east-end councillors wondered if the idea of building a tunnel for transport trucks under the city’s downtown core should be revisited instead of looking at a new bridge. Innes Coun. Rainer Bloess called the tunnel option the “elephant in the room” that was dismissed long ago, but might now prove to be a better option. While a tunnel was deemed to be too pricey of an option and was therefore excluded from the study, the projected cost of the bridge has gone up considerably to an estimated $1.6 billion. Funding has not been approved. On the other hand, Bloess said a very rough estimate to dig a tunnel was around half a billion dollars. “In light of a massive discrepancy in the cost of tunnel and bridge … Does this not sort of give you cause to say we need to go back and look at the tunnel option or at least compare it to what we have today?” Bloess said. Beacon Hill-Cyrville Coun. Tim Tierney also spoke in support of investigating a tunnel. A representative from the NCC said the cost would assuredly be much higher when technical details and requirements are factored in, not to mention the cost of digging a deeper tunnel under the forthcoming subterranean light-rail line. At a recent public consultation, lead consultant Eric Peissel from Roche-Genivar Joint Venture and the NCC’s Fred Gaspère say a tunnel is not a viable option. “At its core, a tunnel would only serve one purpose,” Gaspère said. “The purpose is for a long-term transportation strategy.” With files from Michelle Nash

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“If I thought it was a good idea for the city, I would certainly support it, even if it meant some disadvantages for me as a person living in the general area,” she said. Transportation committee chairman Coun. Keith Egli assured everyone that the committee vote was simply to accept the information update – not to support a bridge location. Andra Waterfield agreed. She said the “1950s and 1960s thinking” behind the bridge will “destroy lives.” “We’re not having a vote on yes or no to this particular proposal,” Egli said. In addition to accepting the information, the transportation committee also voted to invite the NCC and Roche-Genivar back to city hall in the fall with specific information on how the bridge’s design “responds to community interests and concerns,” particularly regarding the number of lanes on the bridge, tunneling options, impacts on green space, impact on city infrastructure such as roads, transit connectivity and truck routes. Not everyone was opposed to the bridge. Residents of Lowertown, like Bill Campbell, support a new bridge because the city could designate it as a new route for heavy trucks and get transport trucks out of their neighbourhood. “Ottawa needs this bridge now,” he said. The Dalhousie Community Association also added its voice to the ranks of those who support a Kettle Island bridge. In a letter to the transportation committee, the group’s president, Michael Powell, wrote that the association supports any efforts to remove truck traffic from the downtown core. But he added that in order for that to happen, the city must remove King Edward Avenue and Booth Street as truck routes. “The truck problem is dire and needs an urgent solution – but this isn’t it,” Assheton-Smith

said during her presentation, adding that trucks will continue to use the shortest route, even if there is another option.


Connected to your community

ONLY1 Unit Left FOR LEASE

R0011958500

NEWS

Chernobyl aid group raises $700 from supper EMC news - Members of Ottawa Valley Aid for Chernobyl Children (OVACC) recently hosted their annual spaghetti supper at Pierce’s Corners’ Hall in North Gower. Patrons of the event were treated to homemade spaghetti, salad, 53 James Street , Arnprior and pies; they were entertained by LAST UNIT LEFT. Free rent period to qualified tenant. local band, “Grateful We’re Not Great signage and terrific high traffic location. Act now! Dead”, whose music enhanced the Call Michael at 613-724-8260 warm community atmosphere. In addition, the band made a surprise donation of $700 to the charity. R0012164073 0620 Tillie The proceeds from this event go towards OVACC’s efforts to Bastien bring to Canada children from Sales Rep. Belarus who have been affected 613.832.2079 by the Chernobyl Nuclear Disas613.612.2480 ter. This summer three children 613.270.8200 will stay for a summer visit with www.the-bastiens.com tillie@the-bastiens.com local host families. OVACC raises money throughout the year to fund DUNROBIN SHORES the expenses of an interpreter, air1,200,000 3176 TORWOOD DRIVE fare, medical insurance and visi46 ACRES tor visas. All other expenses are Spectacular view of Gatineau Hills, + 46 handled by the host families. lovely acres w/4 bedroom home, double As well as the summer respite car garage, inground pool, large barn, program, two teenaged Belarusmain floor family room, sunroom. Minutes sians, Liza and Misha, are living to marina, golf & plaza. with OVACC hosts the Greers and the Greenbergs, and attendRURAL KANATA DUNROBIN ing St. Mark’s and Mother Teresa $469,900 $179,900 EACH MLS#868421 High Schools respectively. Na2 lots to choose from tasha Burtsava, a veteran of the Beautiful 32 acres corner of 11 & 15 acre parcels. Treed at program, who, through OVACC’s Host families and members of the executive of Ottawa Valley Aid for Chernobyl Children Second Line & Murphy Side Rd. front open field at back. Open field, trees & creek fundraising efforts, received (OVACC) gratefully accepted a generous donation of $700 from local band, “Grateful We’re sight-saving surgery here in Can- Not Dead” at the charity’s annual Spaghetti Supper held April 20 in North Gower. ada several summers ago, is currently residing with the Grundys of North Gower while beginning the process of becoming a Canadian citizen. Anyone interested in making a donation to OVACC or in obBrokerage taining more information about Office 613-432-9123 613 432 9123 | Ottawa Ott 613-791-8123 613 791 8123 the group and its work is asked Pat Forrest Joanne McCallion www.PrimeValleyRealty.com to contact Tina Rudkoski at 613Broker of Record Sales Representative Dedicated, Professional, Experienced 489-3475. 613-433-6569 613-570-1341

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Sunday, June 23rd 2-4pm Just off the Green of Calabogie Highlands, open plan 3bed/2bath ground floor living home. Master Just as you cross the Springtown Bridge, as you were right the has lots of closet space, ensuite w/ Jacuzzi & shower, and patio property is directly on your left. Hydro and phone at the road. door to screened in porch. Views of the lake and full 2 car garage, Lots of trees and lots of road frontage to choose to put your full basement with rec room and hobby room. Lots of space for driveway. Please call Pat to view! $119,900 everything and everyone! MLS# 873722 $289,900

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188 Milton Stewart Ave, McNab/Braeside

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426 MAYHEW ST

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3 bed starter home on 1.62 acres. Very private with view Lovely Victorian home, 3 beds/1 bath, tastefully decorated Adult oriented neighbourhood, finished basement, rec room of Hurds Lake and 41ft of owned waterfront on your and painted in neutral colours. Updated windows & wiring, brand w/wood & stone finishings, nat.gas fireplace, 2+1 bed/3 property. MLS #866324 Call Pat to view. $197,500 new nat. gas furnace and very affordable living. MLS # 864078 bath bungalow w/main flr laundry. Call Pat to view today. Please call Pat. $159,900

MLS 854519 Please call Pat to view! $234,900

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A rare find – private waterfront lot just outside of Burnstown on the Madawaska River. With 100ft of waterfront and over 300ft deep, hydro and phone at the lot. MLS # 864810 Call Pat to

view this lot $224,900

724 FIFTH ST. 2 bedroom bungalow with updated kitchen, bathroom, shingles, central air, fenced back yard and a ramp to the front door (if needed). Excellent first time buyer’s home or investment property. Call Pat to view. MLS 875089 $129,900 0620.R0012166955

West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013 25


NEWS

Connected to your community

No such thing as can’t: Ottawa man breaking down stereotypes, plans charity

John O’Neill Sales Representative

BUS: 613-270-8200 RES: 613-832-2503 joneill@royallepage.ca

NEW LISTING

NEW LISTING

190 B Lamorie St, Arnprior Ottawa River waterfront home being sold in conjunction with 190A Lamorie Lane MLS 874274($250,000). 3 bdrms, 2 baths, dated in its decor but in good repair. Detached 20 x 21 workshop. 2 homes for the price of one. Excellent opportunity - live in one and rent the other. MLS#874275

190 A Lamorie St, Arnprior Quaint 2 bdrm bungalow on quiet cul de sac with Ottawa River view. Private setting being sold in conjunction with 190B Lamorie St - MLS 874275 ($159,900). Both properties selling as one. Paved yard, 2 car detached garage/workshop. Living room with natural gas ďŹ replace, dining room with river view. Newer windows, newer shingles, natural gas heat, central air. Excellent condition. 2 homes for the price of one. MLS#874274

$159,900

$250,000

NEW LISTING

KATE ELLIS

Kyle Humphrey wants to ditch the word “can’t� and just show the world what each individual is capable of achieving. He’s launched No Such Thing As Can’t, which can be found on Facebook. struggle for everybody. Everybody who has any kind of difference, whether it’s physical, social, mental, whatever it is, is a stigma. I would like the chance to end stigma in general if I can.� Despite the difficulties of getting NSTAC noticed, he keeps a level head and doesn’t let that discourage him. “Kyle is one of the most driven people I have ever met. He gets an idea in his head and he rolls with it, no pun intended,� said Neil Young, also a close friend and systems analyst at treasury board secretariat for Shared Services Canada. Humphrey said he has never really received any special treatment and he’s a normal guy who finds it annoying when people act otherwise. NSTAC tries to make others aware of the fact that he, along with others who have physical bar-

riers, don’t want or need any special treatment; they want to be regarded like everyone else. “People see a disabled person as different,� said Young. “Obvious reasons aside, Kyle wants to break down the stereotype. After all, he crowd surfed at the Billy Talent show during Bluesfest a few years ago, in his wheelchair.� Humphrey would like to turn NSTAC into a charity, but the process can be quite expensive. He said he hopes that if he’s accepted into the child and youth worker program at Algonquin College this fall, he will be able to organize a charity through the school. For more information on the NSTAC initiative, visit www.facebook.com/no.such.thing. as.cant or follow him on Twitter @kylejhumphrey. R0012164066

EMC news - Sometimes the word “can’t� seems more like the word “impossible.� Can’t is like a brick wall, and once you hit it, it doesn’t seem worthwhile to keep trying. Chapel Hill resident and former Algonquin student Kyle Humphrey knows what it’s like to be told that he can’t do something. Humphrey was born with spina bifida, a condition that sees the spine on the outside the body and he wasn’t expected to be able to walk, sit up or stand. He’s accomplished all three. Humphrey, 23, launched an initiative called No Such Thing As Can’t last November. Its mission is to teach people that can’t is just a mindset and to help people who face physical challenges live to their full potential. “NSTAC is a program that hopes to redefine ability and the way we interact with one another,� said Humphrey. “My hope is that one day the word ‘disabled’ will no longer be used when referring to a person.� Since birth, Humphrey had over 80 surgeries with CHEO and has Arnold-Chiari syndrome and hydrocephalus. Arnold-Chiari is a defect

that can slow the flow of spinal fluid and hydrocephalus is a build-up of fluid on the brain. But he doesn’t let any of that hold him back. “There is no ‘can’t’ in my vocabulary,� said Humphrey. During the Christmas holidays, he received seAveral bags of rubber band bracelets to help spread awareness, and there’s a Facebook page where people interested in participating in NSTAC can comment, like or share the page. Humphrey is also working on an official webpage, looking into getting NSTAC hats and shirts and writing a rap with local Ottawa artist Rishi Sood to promote the initiative. “I think it’s a great idea; those five words can actually be a really powerful phrase,� said Charles Soifer, close friend of Humphrey. Soifer said he believes people can benefit from NSTAC because those who’ve had a hard time in their lives can help each other and make others feel less alone. “I think that for me, my biggest struggle is finding people who will listen, finding people who will take the time and say ‘Yeah, we should change that, we should change our views on this,’� said Humphrey. “I think that’s the biggest 0620.R0012164063

Chelsea Brunette

Proudly serving your community for over 30 years For all your Residential, Recreational & Investment Real Estate 174 Dalkeith St, Pakenham Totally renovated 4 bdrm, 2 bath home in the picturesque Village of Pakenham. This 1.5 storey home boasts a modern kitchen, open concept living area with lge family rm with gas ďŹ replace, formal living room, 2 full baths, main oor bedroom and sunroom. The garage has been converted in to an excellent, heated, 4 season studio/ofďŹ ce. Private back yard, quiet street. MLS#874514

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Terry Stavenow 141 MacFarlane St., Pakenham 3 bedroom bungalow in the picturesque Village of Pakenham. Generously sized rooms. L shaped living room/dining room opening in to the kitchen. Full Basement. Usable space in the attic for storage - cedar closet.

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t.stavenow@bell.net

613-623-4284

$149,000

3581 John Shaw Rd, Kinburn - Century home on 50 acres, 4

bedroom. 1.5 baths. Country style kitchen,formal dining room and living roon, separate den/parlor. Lots of upgrades over the years including 200 amp service, oil furnace and tank 2003, insulation in attic 2002, septic system 1986. Hip roof barn in good condition MLS#857293 $534,900

Broker

631 Southside Way, Burnstown 83 acres with a 3 season cottage/ camp - 4 bedrooms, drilled well and septic. Open concept main level. 155’ of frontage on Norway Lake - great for a boat. Trails thruout the property. Weekend getaway, hunt camp, summer cottage - you name it - tons of potential here. 200 amp electrical service.

New Price $339,500. Ottawa River beach and boating privileges only a short walk away,3 Br. upgraded home fully finished lower level,3 bathrooms, private back yard, oversized heated garage for any home business or hobby call for all the details.

257 Campbell Dr. Excellent Value 3Br. split level easy access to Hwy#17, beautiful and private yard, many recent upgrades ,cozy Fireplace, pine floors, ceramics and bubble tub and neutral decor. Call for your private viewing today.

Custom New Home available this Fall,3Br, 2.5 Brm, 9 Foot Ceilings,Gas Fireplace and more Call Terry for all the details.

View online: ottawarealestate.org MLS# 844492

View online: ottawarealestate.org MLS# 856828

$359,000 Asking. HST INCLUDED

10 McLachlin St. 3 or 4 Br. great location, private back yard, many upgrades, 2 baths, wood fireplace, spacious master bedroom with ensuite. Tremendous Potential call Terry for details. $224,900 Asking Price.

3 Br renovated home with great location, 5 new appliances included, economical and new, Seller will consider mortgage Call Terry for your private viewing. $239,000 Asking Price

18 Elgin St. East Arnprior, good bungalow with down town location ,big back yard attached garage,sunny sitting room and more, excellent investment property. New Price $ 219,500

View online: ottawarealestate.org MLS# 856298

View online: ottawarealestae.org MLS # 862217

View online: ottawarealestate.org MLS# 844070

$299,900

12628 Lanark Rd, Calabogie Solid 5 unit building in Calabogie. Excellent location, apartments in good repair, tenants pay own heat and light. Lots of parking. Large lot - room to build storage shed or garage. 1 x 3 bdrm - 2 storey unit; 3 x 2 bdrm units; 1 x bachelor apartment. Growing area - lots of recreation close by - water, golf and skiing. MLS#861579

26 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013

$259,000

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NEWS

Connected to your community

PHOTOS BY SHERRY HAAIMA/METROLAND

Open station Station 63 firefighters Matt Baker, from left, Wayne Flieler and Steph Clarke are busy at the car wash. The firefighters of Station 63 in Constance Bay opened their doors June 15 for the annual open house. Truck tours, a barbecue, car wash, games and prizes for the kids, face painting and a raffle were all part of the fun. For more photos, see pages 28 and 29.

R0012165341

Cindy Toner

Ted Kelly

A PART OF YOUR LIFE IN THE ARNPRIOR AREA FOR 3 GENERATIONS

Broker of Record

Broker

Direct

(613) 622-5817

179 Victoria St., Arnprior ON K7S 1T9 Office: 613-296-5352 Fax: 613-622-0105

GREG TOWNLEY

Direct

Broker of Record

Brokerage

established in 1958

613-623-3906

(613) 296-5352 homes@cindytoner.com

159 John Street North, Arnprior Business: 613-623-3939 Fax: 613-623-9336

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Great 3 bedroom 2.5 bath home near the Nick Smith Centre with professionally landscaped gardens. $230,000 MLS # 862423

Great investment property downtown Arnprior, 2 storey brick, main floor office,3 bedrm apartment on 2nd level, handy storage at rear, 2 driveways lead to huge rear yard parking lot.

2 Bedrm starter bungalow, 2 enclosed porches, partially fenced backyard. Nice size living rm, very bright eat-in kitchen, full basement, 1 car garage 16x24, walk to Ottawa River, gas heat & central air.

Nice starter bungalow on nice lot, within close walk to everything, downtown, Nick-Smith Center, sports complex, shopping mall. 3 bedrm, private back yard partially fenced, storage shed, patio deck (16 x 8.06)Interior refinished, very clean and ready to move in.

MLS 858261, $219,900

MLS 874784, $165,000

MLS 834389, $137,500

Great starter home on over sized lot in central location. Eat-in kitchen with access to large backyard deck and fenced yard, 2 bedrm, large bath features soaker tub, separate shower unit, sky light provides natural light to upstairs foyer / hallway. Front & back covered veranda.

3 bedroom starter home on large just under an acre lot. Former school house with maple floors, pine walls, good sized living room, 3 piece bath, large rear family room (30x19.6) presently not heated and has a bar area.

Great starter home on a corner lot in town has huge country kitchen/dining room, oak hardwood floors. Front covered verandah and enclosed carport.

MLS 865967, $169,500

MLS 867828, $144,500

MLS 868566, $167,500

Super clean and move in ready home with awesome garage space. Excellent location. $169,900 MLS# 872944

ICE PR UCED D RE

Starter home (or one to down size to) in the centre of town 3 bedroom 2 bathroom. $155,000 MLS# 865186

4 bedroom 3 bath home with main floor family room and sun room. Premium wooded 2 acre lot. Many recent upgrades $329,900 MLS# 860040

R0012166621

LOTS & ACREAGE

Great 2 bedrm bungalow on 1 acre lot in quiet rural setting just East of Arnprior, open concept with abundance of windows, hardwood floors & ceramic floors throughout, maple kitchen, master bedrm has 4 pce ensuite featuring corner soaker tub, full basement is all partly finished with huge family rm & game rm areas.

MLS 857130, $321,500

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MLS 872935, $239,900

FIND YOUR

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West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013 27


NEWS

Connected to your community

Lucie Langlois, Serge Langlois and Tobias Riehle keep the hungry open house visitors happy.

PHOTOS BY SHERRY HAAIMA/METROLAND

No age limit at Station 63 open house The fishing pond is a busy spot. R0012168674_0620

Seven-month-old Emery Byrnes of Dunrobin makes a cute junior firefighter at Station 63’s open house.

28 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013


NEWS

Connected to your community

R0012165656

Make the

MOVE! Longfields Station in Barrhaven PHOTOS BY SHERRY HAAIMA/METROLAND

All aboard

VALLEY VALLEY VALL EY WIDE WID IDEE REAL REAL A EESTATE STAT ST ATEE BROKERAGE B BRROKKER ERAAGE www.coldwellbankervalleywide.ca

613-623-7303 6 13 623 7303

Mike & Donna Defalco Sales Rep/Broker A.S.A 613-623-2602

OTTAWA RIVER YEAR ROUND LIVING!

Too New for Pic

R0022169020

Brothers Morgan, 8, left, and Connor, 6, Aubichon of Carp get an inside look at one of the Station 63 rigs. The boys are no stranger to the fire department, their grandfather the late Michael Foley, was a long-time firefighter.

Move in condition, 2 bedroom, detached workshop/garage, easy commute to Arnprior, Renfrew or Kanata. Call Donna or Mike Defalco 613-884-7303 613-979-2601

INVESTMENT? SINGLE FAMILY HOME, tenant willing to stay, nice sized rear yard, single garage, gas, can have main floor bedroom, mls # 868945 $172,900 in town, Call Donna or Mike Defalco 613-884-7303 613-979-2601

HORSES 5.56 ACRES, barn, paddock, sand ring, 4 bedroom country style home, private setting, detached building offers many use possibilities. Mls # 865561. Call Donna or Mike Defalco 613-8847303 613-979-2601

Longfields Station will be located adjacent to the new OC Transpo station on Longfields Drive. This is sure to be a very popular site so be sure to visit us soon to reserve your choice home.

INVENTORY CLEARANCE! Huge Reductions! Townhomes priced from $330,000

OPEN HOUSE FAMILY LIVING AT ITS FINEST! OTTAWA RIVER NEAR BY , CHALLENGING GOLF COURSES, RECREATION GALORE FOR ALL AGES. Split level 4 bedroom, INGROUND POOL. MLS # 862028 Sun. June 23rd 2:30-4:00 pm Offered at 344,900.Your host 172 O’Donnell Cres., Dochart Estates Donna Defalco 613-979-2601

1ST TIME BUYERS

FAMILY HOME

3 Bedrooms plus a den, gas, wood floors , INGROUND POOL AND GENEROUS WIDE PROPERTY.Walk to ammenities, mls # 868109 $179,000 Call Donna or Mike Defalco 613-884-7303 613-979-2601

SPACIOUS SPLIT LEVEL KIDS WALK TO SCHOOL, ARENA, shopping near by , 1990 home has much to offer the growing family. MLS 875182 $281,000 Call Donna or Mike Defalco 613-884-7303 613-979-2601

LOOKING FOR LAND TO BUILD ON?

Campanale homes is proud to offer executive townhomes, condo flats, terrace homes and condo apartments (with elevators) in the brand new Barrhaven community of Longfields Station. Perfect for first time buyers, families and those looking to downsize with all amenities just outside your door.

WE HAVE LAND AND LOTS IN MCNAB TOWNSHIP. CALL MIKE OR DONNA DEFALCO 613-884-7303 613-979-2601

Sales Centre Hours Monday through Thursday 12pm-8pm Closed Friday | Weekends and Holidays 12pm-5pm Our Sales Centre is located at 641 Longfields Drive. You may also contact us at

613-440-3750 www.campanale.com www.facebook.com/CampanaleHomes *Prices and Availability subject to change without notice. E & OE West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013 29


REAL ESTATE 245 GLENWOOD CRES. SMITHS FALLS $254,900 Exceptional bungalow on quiet street, backing onto green space. Main floor living at its best!

The Fairfax Model As Built on Lot 99 CB Premium Lot Granite Gas Fireplace Central Air Sun Room

Rob Garvin Sales Representative www.robgarvin.com

Bar Top Round Corners Hardwood Ceramic Corner Tub

Brokerage

613-284-6968

613.229.7565 613.257.8080 WWW SAMKERR COM WWW.SAMKERR.COM PROVEN RESULTS… SAVINGS YOU CAN COUNT ON! DIRECT OFFICE

KARGUS Paula Hartwick Andra Bettencourt Jessica Pettigrew Darcy DeToni Clint Pettigrew Liz Kargus Sales Representative Sales Representative Broker Broker of Record Sales Representative Sales Representative

OUS

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NH OPE

OUS

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New Listing SUN 2-4, JUN 23 – 89 EVELYN POWERS PVT

New Listing SUN 2-4, JUN 23 – 95 UPMINSTER WAY

STITTSVILLE Inviting freehold townhome in private enclave awaits the professional or retiree. Stunning floor to ceiling south facing windows illuminate the modern, open concept home. Gleaming hdwd floors, modern tile, spacious kitchen, well appointed bedrooms. Fully finished lower level w/famrm & 4pce bath. $304,900

BARRHAVEN Expansive 3 bdrm semi in sought after Longfields. Over 1800sqft of living space offers the professional or young family room to enjoy. Formal living room w/gas ffpl sets the tone for graceful living. Open concept kitchen w/breakfast island, informal eating & formal dining room. Heavenly master retreat w/5pce ensuite. Finished lower level boasts famrm, 2pce, workshop, office space & more! All nestled on oversized lot. $359,900

R0072078808

R0012168804

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BROKERAGE

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SALES REPRESENTATIVE

623-6589

Real Estate Inc.

R0012168671_0620

SAMKERR

All for Only $377,900 To view this home please call

web site at www.mcewanhomes.com

EACH OFFICE IS INDEPENDENTLY OWNED AND OPERATED

613-283-2121

1935 SqFt, 3 Beds, 2 ½ Baths

Quick Close Option More Homes Available to View Visit our Model Home on Baskin Drive in Arnprior Mon - Fri 8am - 4pm, Sat & Sun 11am - 4pm or visit our

Your Choice Realty Inc.

RE/MAX METRO-CITY John Roberts Broker REALTY LTD., brokerage 613- 839-1308 or 613-832-0902 2255 Carling Avenue Ottawa, ON K2B 7Z5 www.johnwroberts.com

Incorporated since 1997

OPEN HOUSE SUN JUNE 23RD 2-4PM 109 RIVERVIEW DRIVE. ALL BRICK 3+1 BDRM BUNGALOW. LIVING ROOM WITH FIREPLACE. FENCED YARD. CLOSE TO DOWNTOWN. MLS# 869516. $299,900 CALL CLINT. 613-614-4740.

OPEN HOUSE SUN JUNE 23RD 2-4PM 36 COLONY LANE, CALABOGIE. BEAUTIFULLY REMODELED 2 STOREY HOME, DEEDED ACCESS ON CALABOGIE LAKE, CLOSE TO SKI HILL. STAINLESS STEEL APPLIANCES, SUNROOM WITH HOT TUB, GORGEOUS VIEWS, COMMUNITY TENNIS COURT AND MORE. MLS#854060. $314,900. CALL PAULA 613-858-4851.

OPEN HOUSE SUN JUNE 23RD 2-4PM 80 COLONY LANE, CALABOGIE WATERFRONT HOME ON CALABOGIE LAKE. BUILT 2002. ICF FOUNDATION. OPEN-CONCEPT LIVING ROOM & DINING AREA W/MAPLE HARDWOOD THROUGHOUT WALK-OUTS TO LARGE DECK AND SCREENED-IN PORCH. OVERSIZED GARAGE W/UPPER LEVEL. MLS#869136. $529,900. CALL ANDRA 613-204-3126.

OPEN HOUSE 2-4 PM SUN. JUNE 23RD

OPEN HOUSE 2-4 PM SUN. JUNE 23RD

117 Tall Forest Drive, Rural Carp/Kanata All brick 4 bedrm, 4 bath executive family home, 1 acre lot with inground pool & hot tub, main flr den with wet bar & famrm with fireplace, hardwd & tile flrs, renovated granite kitchen, lots of big windows, sauna in basement, newer furnace & septic. $479,900

3826 Stonecrest Rd, Woodlawn Quick and scenic 20 minute drive from Kanata takes you home to this unique 4 bedrm raised bungalow set back in the trees on 8.26 acres of pure privacy with a pond & inground pool. Comes with an Ikea kitchen, hardwd flrs, 2.5 baths, nanny suite potential, fireplace, wrap around decks, 2 car garage & more. $464,900

NEW LISTING! 19 Beamaris Drive, Nepean Highly desirable neighbourhood near Queensway Carleton Hospital & easy access to Hwys 417 & 416 & public transit! Move in condition! Huge mature lot 92’ x 105’ with carport, deck & parking for 4 cars, 2+2 bedrms, 2 full baths, 2 fireplace, granite kitchen, updated windows, roof & gas furnace! A true gem! $379,900

BUNGALOW! 163 Lion Head Drive, Pakenham Prestigious location of custom homes at Pakenham Highlands Golf Course, perfect retirement bungalow with 2 bedroom loft, ensuite bath, 2 car garage, breathtaking yard with extensive flower beds and lovely interlock walkway, gazebo, large paved laneway, 5 appliances, shingles & natural gas furnace 2012. $439,900

11 JOHN FINDLAY TERRACE.

20 WOLFF CRESCENT. GORGEOUS 3 BEDROOM, 3 BATHROOM BUNGALOW WITH LOFT. APPROX. 1991 SQ. FT. OF ELEGANT UPGRADES. MLS#860838. $405,900. CALL PAULA 613-858-4851.

3 BDRM, 3 BATH TOWNHOME ON QUIET SIDE STREET. OPEN CONCEPT. HARDWOOD AND CERAMIC FLOORS. MASTER ENSUITE. MLS#869213 $231,900 CALL CLINT. 613-614-4740.

49 EDEY STREET. LOVELY 3 BEDROOM ALL-BRICK FAMILY HOME. QUIET STREET. SHORT WALK FROM SCHOOLS, PLAYGROUNDS AND DOWNTOWN. LARGE EAT-IN KITCHEN. FAMILY ROOM W GAS FIREPLACE. NEW FURNACE, ROOF, C/A, AIR EXCHANGER, & UPDATED ELECTRICAL. DON’T MISS IT. MLS#871714. $219,900 CALL CLINT 613-614-4740.

LOTS FOR SALE

CONDO FOR SALE

Lot 66 Bayview Dr., Constance Bay 70’ x 125’ $54,900 Lot 15 Woods Rd., Constance Bay 147’ x 108’ $59,900

83 SHORT ROAD. IMMACULATE CONDITION. ESTABLISHED NEIGHBORHOOD. CENTRAL AIR. ATTACHED GARAGE. FULL UNSPOILED LOWER LEVEL. MLS#867734. $229,900. CALL LIZ TO VIEW 613-623-1053.

613-623-7834

143 Elgin St. W., Arnprior

Rock Forest Road, Dunrobin 2 acre building lot close to Ottawa River access & Eagle Creek Golf Course. $119,500

RAISED BUNGALOW

SEMIDETACHED

39 CHARBONNEAU STREET PICTURESQUE PRIVATE SETTING WITH RIVERVIEW. NUMEROUS UPDATES. MOVE-IN CONDITION. MLS#864047. $339,975. CALL LIZ TO VIEW 613-623-1053.

85 EDEY STREET, UNIT 3D TWO BEDROOM, 3RD LEVEL, FRONT CORNER VIEW OF THE NEIGHBORHOOD. SECURITY BUILDING. INCLUDES APPLIANCES. MLS#867711. $129,900. CALL LIZ TO VIEW 613-623-1053.

View all our listings at www.mincomkargusrealestate.ca FOR PROFESSIONAL SERVICE CALL OUR LOCAL AGENTS

30 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013

WATERFRONT! Birch Island, White Lake Almost 10 acre private island with 3 bedrm winterized cottage, southern exposure, mountainview & crownland on opposite shore only 1 hour from Ottawa! Cottage renovated in 1992 & has hydro, well, septic, composite wood siding, metal roof, sunrm, woodstove, bathrm, wrap-around decks, 12’ x 16’ work shed, dock with clean, deep water for swimming, fishing & boating! Act now! $525,000

Greenland Road, Dunrobin 2 acre treed lot located between Eagle Creek and the Ottawa River. $114,900 Lots on Bandys Road, McNab 2.19 acre lot $59,900 and 2.88 acre lot $74,900 only 10 minutes west of Arnprior on dead end road.

Visit www.johnwroberts.com to see more pictures and full details of all my listings!!


NEWS

Connected to your community

Rural Root Theatre help Carp Fair celebrate 150 years EMC news - The Carp Fair Board has planned a number of events to celebrate the fact that the Fair is 150 years old this year. A special family event that will be of interest to all is Fairground Follies, presented by Rural Root Theatre from Aug. 14-17. Two members of Rural Root Theatre, Helen Weeden and Ian Glen, have written this entertaining and historical play. The stories are presented as a series of vignettes, mostly factual, and all connected to the many features of the Fair over the years. Helen Weeden and Ian Glen are co-directing this project and are holding all rehearsals in the Senior’s Building on the Carp Fairgrounds. The cast is quite large and all the actors are playing at least two or more roles each. “We have quite a number of actors who are new to the stage along with seasoned Rural Root Theatre actors� says Helen “and we have also had the good fortune of recruiting actors from other theatre companies such as Lakeside Players and Kanata Theatre�. “Fairground Follies’ will be presented in the Showbarn of the Carp Fairgrounds. Helen admits “this might sound like a strange cavernous place to set up a theatre, but we will set up a stage and creatively convert this space into an attractive venue�. Nicole d’Entremont, of Rural Root Theatre is responsible for decorating the interior of Showbarn and is looking for any type of Carp Fair memorabilia that people would be willing to lend as part of the ambiance. If you have anything that you would be prepared to loan please contact Nicole at nicdentremont@gmail.com or phone 613-839-7668. Tickets for “Fairground Follies� are General Admission and cost $10 each in advance and $12 at the door. Box office opens July 8. Tickets can then be reserved and paid for on line at www.ruralroot.org or reserved by phone at RRTC Box office at 832-1070 Ext #4 .Also after July 8th tickets can be purchased at the Carp Fair Office. Show Dates are: Wednesday, Aug. 14 and Saturday Aug. 17 at 7:30 p.m. Matinee Saturday, Aug. 17 1 p.m.

SUBMITTED

Helen Weeden and Ian Glen are co-directing Fairground Follies and are holding all rehearsals in the Senior’s Building on the Carp Fairgrounds. The cast is quite large and all the actors are playing at least two or more roles each.

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Sales Centre Hours Monday - Thursday: 11am-6pm Saturday, Sunday & Holidays: 12pm-5pm West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013 31


Holitzner Homes is having a

Model Home Furniture, accessories, art and area rug

sale On Saturday June 22 from 8am to 5pm 143 Charlie’s Lane off Carp Road in Carp infant bed sets | children bed sets | queen size bed sets dining room sets | kitchen tables & chairs | coffee/end tables couches | sectionals | sunroom furniture | bar stools occasional chairs | lounge chair | area rugs | lamps paintings | office desks | credenzas | file cabinets shelving units | computer wall unit | flowers | paintings accessories & much more coming out of storage

www.holitzner.com R0012148683

32 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013

Items may not be exactly as shown.


West Carleton Review

Classifieds

COMMUNITY

Business Directory

THURSDAY JUNE 20, 2013

PATRICIA LEBOEUF/METROLAND

The hand gesture the Grade 6 students are doing isn’t gang related rather it is the official symbol of the We Day. A smaller version is held at the St Michael School in Corkery on June 12. Throughout the year, these students have volunteered, fundraised and produced change in their community. In the front row is Ashley Innes, in the next row, from left, are Madision Harrietha, Emily Perez, Riley Neil, Maeve Cavanaugh, Carley Bisson and Emily Marginson. In the row behind that are students Nathan Oram, Brennen Novak, Ryan Gomes, Brad Wilson, Ben Keogan, Emily Ritonja and Owen Barr. In the back row are Mabel Guimond, Alyssa Baird, Megan Lemoine, Aidan Butler, Ty Martin, Ryan Larkin, Ethan Splinter, Lyle Primeau, Nicholas Noonan, Elissa Chauvin and Xavier Bonato.

Corkery school hosts Mini We Day, inspires students Patricia Leboeuf pleboeuf@metroland.com

EMC news – Inspiration was the name of the game at the St Michael School in Corkery as the kids were treated to a special Mini We Day. The event was a spinoff from the world renowned We Day, a youth based event which encourages students to participates in Free the Children’s campaigns through song and speeches. The local version was organized by a handful of Corkery students who were so inspired by the National We Day in Ottawa that they felt the need to bring it home.

“We wanted to show these kids that it is very important to get involved in your community because we all need to make a difference in our world and if we all get together we can do it,” said co-organizer Emily Ritonja, along with Emily Marginson and Elissa Chauvin. It took a lot of hard work to organize and coordinate the different aspects and people involved, but ultimately the mini We Day was born. Gathered in the gym, students of all ages and grade levels watched videos and danced, sang and listened to speeches. Each of these acts was tailored to inspire and inform. “It had to come from the heart,” said Grade 6 speaker Owen

Barr. “I really wanted to talk about the people who made a difference in our class because there are so many people and you just got to fit everyone in.” Throughout the year, the Grade 6 students haven’t been idle. They’ve organized a food drive, fundraised for the Special Olympics and the Kids Help Phone as well as a danceathon. The parallel between the current students and Craig Kielburger, the cofounder of Free the Children, were apparent. Both of them started volunteering, fundraising and making a difference at a very young age. See Inspiration, Page 45


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34 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013


NEWS

Connected to your community

Drama workshop comes to Fitzroy Harbour EMC events - From July 22 to 26, Fitzroy Harbour Community Centre will host a kids Drama Week as part of their summer drop in. It will run each morning from 9-12 Monday to Friday with an evening performance on Friday evening. Drama coordinator Valerie Jorgensen is looking for volunteers interested in helping out with this event. She is looking for people who are willing to come out for a morning and provide adult supervision and/or have an area of inter-

est in theatre that they could share with children ages 9-13 (acting, stage presence, singing, directing, music, dance, sound, costumes, makeup etc.). It is not expected that everyone be in attendance at every session but the more volunteers that are available, the more we can do. Please consider sharing your time and expertise with the kids. Feel free to contact Valerie at: 613-623-4593 or valerie.jorgensen@sympatico.ca.

Join line dance flash-mob EMC events - The Town of Arnprior’s Parks and Recreation Department is including linedancing as a part of its entertainment line up at this year’s Canada Day celebration at Robert Simpson Park. Accordingly, the line dance Instructor is arranging a flash-mob to be performed not only by local groups, but also by as many other dancers as possible, who are available to join in from other areas. The ongoing resurgence of this dance-form over the past few years has now resulted in the existence of several vibrant line dance groups

in many areas of the province. The dance chosen for this performance is “Shuffle-Boogie-Soul” an extremely popular dance for flash-mobs all over the world. (If you visit YouTube and search for “Shuffle-BoogieSoul - Flash-Mobs” you will get an idea of the extensive world-wide appeal of this dance, which was choreographed less than three years ago.) To take part in this 1 p.m. event, please contact program supervisor Jay--613-623-7301 koch@arnprior.ca, or the Instructor--613-6230976 maisbrown@sympatico.ca.

Ottawa Needs You!

VOLUNTEERS

Palliative Care Volunteer Training

The Hospice Orientation Course is a prerequisite in order to be working in the Residence, Day Hospice, and Home Support programs.

Information sessions will be held on Tuesday evenings in June and August

The course will be held on four Saturdays: September 7, 14, 28 and October 5, 2013 from 9:00 am – 4:00 pm

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dŚĂŶŬ LJŽƵ ƚŽ ŽƵƌ DĂũŽƌ ^ƉŽŶƐŽƌƐ

Is This Your Time for Solar ? The Ontario Power Authority has extended the very attractive 2012 pricing for the first 1600 MicroFIT projects that apply in 2013 Apply today to hold your spot and earn returns of

8-12% “Last year we installed solar panels on our roof. The revenue we earn will add substantially to our retirement income.”

“My bank made it easy to finance because my system will pay for itself in 7 years. The revenue stream will be a big selling feature if I sell my house.”

dŚĂŶŬ LJŽƵ ƚŽ ŽƵƌ ^ƉŽŶƐŽƌƐ

613-738-2646

w w w.isolara.com

R0011951613.0307

Call us today for your free home solar assessment.

R0012156418

West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013 35


1489 Shea Road, (corner of Abbott) Stittsville, Ontario K2S 0G8

Saturday 5:00pm Sunday 9:00am & 11:00am

SUNDAY MASS TIMES Saturday: 5:00 pm Sunday: 9:00 am & 10:30 am Monsignor Joseph Muldoon, Pastor

15 Steeple Hill Cres., Nepean, ON 613-591-1135 www.stpatricks.nepean.on.ca

Parish ofďŹ ce - 613-836-8881 Fax - 613-836-8806

www.holyspiritparish.ca

R0011952442

PASTOR STEVE STEWART

1600 Stittsville Main Street, Stittsville R0011952427

St. Patrick’s FallowďŹ eld Roman Catholic Church

Sunday Services at 9:00 & 10:45 am

Nursery, Children & Youth Programs, Small Groups OfďŹ ce: 613-836-2606 Web: www.cbcstittsville.com Email us at: cbcinfo@cbcstittsville.com Direction for life's crossroads

R0011952448

HOLY SPIRIT CATHOLIC PARISH A Welcoming Community

R0011952570

R0012168810

Church Services Grace Baptist Church of Ottawa

2470 Huntley Road

Preaching the Doctrines of Grace

Sunday and weekday Bible studies see our website for times and locations

MORNING WORSHIP 10 AM

www.gracebaptistottawa.com

Children's Church and Nursery provided Youth and Small Groups during the week

GLEN CAIRN UNITED CHURCH

613-836-4756 www.gcuc.ca

Mass: Saturday at 5:00 pm Sunday at 9:00 and 11:00 am Telephone: (613) 592-1961 E-mail: ofďŹ ce@stisidorekanata.com We are a welcoming and friendly community that invites you to come and worship with us in our new church

Growing, Serving, Celebrating

The Anglican Parish of March

Rev. Karen Boivin 613-839-2155 www.stpauls-dunrobin.ca stpaulsunitedcarp@sympatico.ca R0011952374.0307

St Paul’s Dunrobin 1118 Thomas Dolan Parkway Sunday Service 11:00 am

Service and Sunday School 10:30 a.m. 3760 Carp Road Carp, ON

9:00 am: Worship Service, Nursery 11:00 am: Worship Service, Nursery Pastor Shaun Seaman Minister of Discipleship & Youth: Meghan Brown Saavedra Pastor Shaun Seaman Please join us at 110 McCurdy Drive, 836-1429, www.trinitykanata.ca

R0011952391

St John’s South March 325 Sandhill Road, Kanata Sunday Services 9:00 am & 10:30 am Sunday School 10:30 am St Mary’s North March 2574 6th Line Road, Dunrobin Sunday Service & School 9:00 am

Sunday Sunday

WELCOME to our Church St. Paul’s United Church, Carp R0011949236

R0011993801

10:00 am: Service of Worship and Sunday School Pastoral Care & Healing Service: 11:30am - last Sunday of each month

613-592-4747

ST. ISIDORE ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH 1135 March Rd., Kanata, ON. K2K 1X7 Pastor: Rev. M.M. Virgil Amirthakumar

Free Methodist Church 5660 Flewellyn Road, Stittsville 613-831-1024 email: office@chapelridge.ca www.chapelridge.ca Pastors: Ken Roth, Luke Haggett

140 Abbeyhill Dr., Kanata Rev. Brian Copeland

Christ Risen Lutheran Church

www.parishofmarch.ca

R0012159797

R0011952575

Sunday Worship 10:30 am “In Community becoming whole through the power of Jesus.�

R0011952459

A New Testament Church 465 Eagleson Road (also entrance off Palomino) 11 am Family Bible Hour (Nursery Available) Sunday School 6:30 pm Evening Bible Hour www.bridlewoodbiblechapel.ca 613-591-8514

R0012063485

BRIDLEWOOD BIBLE CHAPEL

85 Leacock Drive, Kanata

Seventh-Day Adventist Church

SATURDAY SERVICES

Sunday Worship Service 10:30am. Sunday School 9:15am. Adult Bible Class 9:30am. Rev. Louis Natzke, Pastor

R0011952770

SABBATH SCHOOL FOR ALL AGES 9:15AM WORSHIP SERVICE 11:00 AM SERVING KANATA AND STITTSVILLE PASTOR: LYLE NOTICE 85 LEACOCK DRIVE, KANATA (THE CHRIST RISEN LUTHERAN CHURCH) 613-899-9793

Office 613-592-1546 www.christrisen.com

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KANATA BAPTIST CHURCH

Pastor: Keith MacAskill

(AZELDEAN 2D s

Pastors: Jonathan Mills , Bob Davies & Doug Ward

A Biblically faithful, Gospel sharing parish in the Anglican Church in North America Services & Sunday School at 10:00 a.m. each Sunday Nursery available Mid-week Bible Studies Info: Rev. Dave Kemp, Pastor 613- 257-5490 www.eternalhopechurch.ca Come worship with us at 117 Victoria St., Carleton Place

kbc@kbc.ca

www.kbc.ca

Stittsville United Church 6255 Fernbank Road (corner of Main St. & Fernbank)

Nursery & Sunday School Available

Sunday Eucharist Eucharist Sunday

8:00 am - Said AM 3AId 9:15 am -Choral Choral Music, Sunday School & Nursery AM Music, Sunday School & Nursery AM 0RAISE -USIc, Sunday School Nursery 11:00 am - Praise Music, Sunday School& & Nursery 20 YOUNG ROAD KANAT! s www.stpaulshk.org

36 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013

Youth Group Mondays at 7:oopm R0011952468

R0011952421

10:00 a.m. – Worship Service

St. Paul's Anglican Church

Rev. Grant Dillenbeck Church: 613-836-4962 email: suchurch@primus.ca Visit our web site: www.suchurch.com

613-591-3469 www.bridlewoodnazarene.com R0012164850

3UNDAY 3ERVICE AM

2 Stonehaven Dr. at Eagleson Road R0011971789

Sunday 10:30 A.M. Worship Service Nursery provided

For all your church advertising needs email srussell @thenewsemc.ca Call: 613-688-1483


STAG & DOES

WEDDING

STAG & DOES

BUSINESS SERVICES

Steve’s Roofing 14 years Standing hay wanted, West experience, Excellent Carleton area. 613-222workmanship, 10 year 3600. written warranty, Call Steve for a free estimate FIREWOOD 613-552-9471.

Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Cameron and Dr. and Mrs. Gregory Moloney announce with joy the upcoming marriage of their children child dren dre Alicia ciaa Thomas. T h

&

CLR445646

AUCTIONS

AUCTIONS

AUCTIONS

for Elvira Powell Estate to be held @ 35 Condie St., Smiths Falls, ON K7A 2T3 on Sat., July 6/13 @ 10 am Property to be auctioned @ 11 am

CL426490_0620

REAL ESTATE ANTIQUE & HOUSEHOLD AUCTION

STAG AND DOE In Honour of Danielle Avery & Kyle Boeyen

CLR442594

The wedding will take place on Saturday, July 6, 2013 at 2:00 pm at Holy Redeemer Catholic Church, Kanata, ON.

FARM

Saturday, June 22nd, 2013 8:00p.m. At the Kinburn Community Center Tickets $5.00 at the door

Antiques for sale, visit our barn full of antiques. 3654 Hwy 29 North at Cedar Hill Road, Pakenham. Info: 613-794-5634 or 613-2568937. Bedroom suite, walnut, single poster bed with new mattress and boxspring. Lady’s dresser and night table. $375; writing desk with attached bookcase, enclosed by glass doors, walnut. $175. 613-283-6609.

AUCTIONS

BUSINESS SERVICES ACCOUNTING CHRONICLE DIAMOND AWARD WINNER 2009, 2010 & 2011 Saturn Accounting Services 613-832-4699 Carpentry, Repairs, Rec Rooms, Decks, etc. Reasonable rates, 25 years experience. 613-832-2540

FOR RENT

FOR SALE

3 bed, 1.5 baths condo for rent in Kanata, near Hazeldean Rd. $1,550 monthly + utilities. Call 613-831-5297. Almonte- Newly renovated 2 bedroom apartment, hardwood floor, oak kitchen, gas fireplace, 5 appliances. Call 613-256-3152.

One bedroom apartment at 57 John Street N, Arnprior, one block from downtown. $750/month, utilities and parking included. Available immediately. First, last and references required. 613223-5146 or dave_brown@ adbro.com

Dinner set by Royal Doulton. 8 place settings. Large meat platter and gravy boat, $175. 613-283-6609.

Firewood- Cut, split and CAREER delivered or picked up. OPPORTUNITY Dry seasoned hardwood or softwood from $50/ Part time office/personal face cord. Phone Greg Kn- Arnprior: Large 2 bdrm, assistant in Stittsville. Join ops (613)658-3358, cell ground floor, clean, ina growing airline technolo- (613)340-1045. cludes fridge, stove, parkgy company. 10-20 hours/ ing. $775.00/month plus FITNESS & week. See job description at utilities. Near downtown. tinyurl.com/liftapsjob HEALTH Mature single/couple, retirees, non-smokers. AvailCLEANING / JANITORIAL Need Help with Smoking, able now. First/last and weight, stress, anxiety, in- references required. (613) “AA� Cleaning Business somnia, chronic pain, pho- 298-0363 20 years, very professional bia, systems of parkinson’s Beautiful Apartment Carp, service, reasonable prices. & stroke. Hypnosis Works! newly renovated, adult Weekly, bi-weekly or once a insurance, 40 yrs medical building for mature quiet month. For free estimate call background. Linda Hay RN tenants, hardwood floors, BSCN Certified Hypnotist. Margaret, 613-404-4426. heat parking included. $975/ 613-836-5796 mo available immediately. lindahay@rogers.com 613-832-2928.

EDUCATION & TRAINING

Learning Chinese Mandarin Summer Camp located Richmond. Lots activities, two fully certified teachers. Have full/part time spaces available. Contact 613-601-8868.

FARM ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES

FOR RENT

TOM’S CUSTOM

AIRLESS PAINTING Specializing in roof barn & aluminum/ vinyl siding painting *30 years experience. *Screw nailing and roof repairs. Insured and Bonded Free Estimates (613)283-8475

FOR RENT 1 BDR Arnprior, quiet secure, non-smoking pet free building. A must see. $800. many extras. References. 613-296-4521

Stittsville- 3BR Townhouse. 2 Ί bath, 6 appliances, laundry room, 2 gasfireplaces. New hardwood/tile installed, freshly painted. Rent: $1300 (utilities not included)

AUCTIONS

AUCTIONS

MILK BOTTLE COLLECTION, ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES Merrickville Community Centre 106 Read St., Merrickville

Sat. June 22, 2013, 9:30 a.m. Preview 8:30-9:30 a.m.

Rare Ontario Milk Bottles, Ross Butler reprint, Walnut Secretary/bookcase c 1850, Oak Barrister cas-es, Eastlake bedroom, French Provincial Bedroom set,

AUCTIONS

AUCTIONS

Sklar Peppler Dining roomset, Pine emporium bedroom set, Retro designer leather chairs, Oil lamps,

REAL ESTATE AUCTION at 323 Clyde Forks Rd., Lanark, ON K0G 1K0 on Mon., June 24/13 @ 6 pm

Books, coins, stamps, Military, railroad and crime scene photo collection, VERY RARE CG-16 Machine Gun camera, 100’s of advertising tins Honey & Syrup, Diecast toys, Matchbox & Dinky etc, Murray 30� and

~ Calling All Investors ~ ~ Excellent Income Potential ~

Toro 46 “ Lawn tractors, 5600 watt Generator as new,

Charming brick bungalow located on quiet street in Smiths Falls, ON. Property has paved driveway w/ drive through garage. Spacious back yard w/ fenced dog run & steel garden shed. Front entrance opens into large living room leading to galley kitchen. 3 pce bath w/ new Safestep walk-in tub. Original 2 bedroom home joined to addition in dining/sitting room adding 2 large bedrooms, entrance to side deck & enclosed staircase to attic for lots of extra storage. Basement w/ 2 separate entrances easily accommodates income generating apartment featuring large eat-in kitchen, 3 pce bath, bedroom w/ large window, rec room complete w/ wet bar & gas fireplace, plus separate utility/storage room w/ laundry hook up, cold room, 200 amp service on breakers, natural gas furnace w/ baseboard backup & rented hot water tank. Home has alarm system, central air & vac. Taxes: $3,075.10+/-. For private viewing, terms & conditions, please call our office at 613-267-6027.

tion, Coca Cola collectibles Royal Doulton, crystal and

Auctioneers & Qualified Appraisers JIM & TREVOR HANDS: THE VOICES OF EXPERIENCE Phone: (613) 267-6027 or (613) 267-1335 www.jimhandsauction.com

good glass and a whole lot more. Visit our website to view 300+ photos of items in this auction @ www.colinlatreilleauctions.ca

Terms: Cash, Cheque (with photo ID), Visa, M/C and Interac

~ Selling 2 Properties as 1 ~ ~ Perfect Family Year-Round Home or Retreat ~ Property 1 - Great environment for relaxation & simple pleasures. Snuggled along the Clyde River, giving you recreational privileges to numerous lakes plus access to the K&P trail/Crown land. Providing all of the comforts of home in this 3 bedroom, 4 pce bath, oversized oak kitchen with separate dining/games area. Additional dining & TV rooms. Wrap-around screened in porch. Solid, usable, framed barn. 100 amp service on breakers. 6 yr old F/A oil furnace. Inside/outside cellar access. Recent renos incl. new windows (all but 4) & roof. On well & septic. Surveyed irregular lot size w/ 107’ frontage (+/-). Taxes $1600.00 (+/-). Property 2 - Surveyed vacant land irregular lot size w/ 146’ frontage (+/-). Taxes $240.00 (+/-). Please note, auctioning 2 properties as 1. For private viewing, terms & conditions, please call our office at 613-267-6027. CL426394_0606

Auctioneers & Qualified Appraisers JIM & TREVOR HANDS: THE VOICES OF EXPERIENCE Phone: (613) 267-6027 or (613) 267-1335 www.jimhandsauction.com

Colin Latreille Auction Services 613258-0173

FOR SALE 3 small working TVs (free), stove, $25, boys 6 drawer dresser (good condition), $15. 613-839-2456. Cedar (white), quality lumber, most sizes, decking, T&G, channel rustic. Also huge bundles of cedar slabs ($45) and large bags of shavings ($35). www.scoutenwhitecedar.ca (613)283-3629.

GARAGE SALE Almonte Antique Market, 26 Mill St. in historic downtown Almonte. 613-2561511. 36 vendors. Open daily 10-5.

HELP WANTED Full-time Auto parts dismantler required. Needs experience. Pay range $14$16/hr. Apply: Dave’s Auto Parts, Carp. Fax 613-8395590. Email: paul@davesautoparts.on.ca

Disability Products. Buy and Sell stair lifts, scooters, bath lifts, patient lifts, hospital beds, etc. Call Silver Cross Ottawa (613)231-3549.

HELP WANTED! Make $1000 weekly mailing brochures from home! No ex-perience required. Start immediately! www.themailinghub.com

FOR RENT

FOR RENT

APARTMENTS IN SECURE BUILDING s "RIGHT /NE 4WO BEDROOM UNITS WITH FRIDGE STOVE CARPETING THROUGHOUT ELEVATOR GROUND mOOR LAUNDRY ROOM BALCONIES ON ND RD mOORS WALK OUT PATIO ON GROUND mOOR FREE PARKING WITH OUTDOOR OUTLET s #ENTRAL LOCATION s .EWLY DECORATED 0LEASE RESPECTFULLY NO PETS NO SMOKERS Campbell View & Campbell Place, Robert Street, Arnprior

613-623-7207 for viewing appointment EMC Classifieds Get Results!

KANATA RENTAL

TOWNHOMES 3 Bedrooms, 2.5 Bathrooms, 5 appliances and more, located in established area, on site management ofďŹ ce, from $1445 + up Urbandale Corporation 323 Steeplechase Dr. (just off Stonehaven Dr.) Kanata, K2M 2N6 Call 613-592-0548 AUCTIONS

FIREARMS AUCTION SATURDAY JUNE 22, 10:00 AM At Switzer’s Auction Centre 25414 Highway 62, Bancroft, ON FROM SEVERAL ESTATES, COLLECTIBLE, TARGET AND HUNTING. MANY NEW AND USED, RIFLES, SHOTGUNS, HANDGUNS, ANTIQUE HAND GUNS RIFLES & SHOTGUNS CROSSBOWS, AMMUNITION, FEATURING: A WINCHESTER MODEL 1895 .405 WIN WITH PROVENANCE TO THEODORE ROOSEVLELT. www.switzersauction.com VIEW PHOTO GALLERY AT: www.proxibid.com/switzersauction CHECK BACK FOR REGULAR UPDATES.

CL423225

Terms on chattels: Cash, Cheque, Debit, Visa, M/C Catering. Be on time, not a large auction.

Toro 10hp/29 Snowblower new. Antique tool collec-

White Lake. Log house on 5 acres, 2200 sq. ft., 3 bedrooms, sunroom, wood heat with electric backup, garage parking for 1 vehicle. $1100.00 plus utilities. Available August 1, 2013. Contact: Joanne 613-2565180.

HOT TUB (SPA) Covers Best Price, Best Quality. All shapes & Colours Available. Call 1-866-652-6837. www. thecoverguy.com/newspaper STEEL BUILDINGS/METAL BUILDINGS Up to 60% OFF! 30x40, 40x60, 50x80, 60x100, 80x100 sell for balanced owed! Call 1-800457-2206 www.crownsteelbuildings.ca

WE HAVE ROOM FOR YOUR QUALITY CONSIGNMENTS IN THIS AND FUTURE SALES TERMS: Cash, Visa, Master Card, Inter-ac 10% Buyers Premium Onsite, 15% on Proxibid

Paul Switzer, Auctioneer/Appraiser s OR EMAIL INFO SWITZERSAUCTION COM

CLR433624

WEDDING

www.emcclassified.ca

CLR432803

WEDDING

CLASSIFIED

KANATA Available Immediately 3 bedroom townhouse, 1.5 baths, 2 appliances, unďŹ nished basement, one parking spot. $1058 per month plus utilities.

CLR408442

Your Community Newspaper

PHONE:

1-888-967-3237 1-888-WORD ADS

613-831-3445 613-257-8629 www.rankinterrace.com FOR RENT

Absolutely Beautiful 1&2 bedroom apartments

Secure 50’s Plus Building Carleton Place No Smoking No Pets $700.00 and up Seniors’ Discounts

Call 613-720-9860 or 613-823-1694 0425.CLR430551

West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013 37


DRIVERS WANTED AZ, DZ, 3 or 1 with airbrakes: Terrific career opportunity with outstanding growth potential to learn how to locate rail defects using nondestructive testing. Plus extensive paid travel, meal allowance, 4 weeks vacation and benefits pkg. Skills Needed - Ability to travel 6 months at a time, Apply online at www.sperryrail.com under careers. Click here to apply, keyword: Driver.

HELP WANTED HELP WANTED!!! $28.00/ HOUR. Undercover Shoppers Needed To Judge Retail And Dining Establishments. Genuine Opportunity. PT/FT. Experience Not Required. If You Can Shop - You Are Qualified! www.MyShopperJobs.com

SOon theLNewsDEMC

You’ll be

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

Meat Cutter required

Moncion’s YIG

671 River Rd., Ottawa Joe 613-822-4749

CLASSIFIEDS

Summer Student Required – IT Department We are looking to hire a summer student to work in our I.T. Department. Person must be currently enrolled or attending college/university this fall.

HELP WANTED Lone Star, Kanata, Now Hiring. Full time experienced, line cooks. Apply to: 4048 Carling Avenue. Competitive Wage. Come join the great Lone Star Atmosphere.

HUNTING SUPPLIES

MARINE

Canadian Firearm/Hunter Safety Courses. Call Dave Arbour 613-257-7489 or visit www.valleysportsmanshow.com for dates and details of courses near you.

Marine Mechanic- stop waiting 2-3 weeks for service, fast turn around. We’ll look at your boat within days. Reasonable rates, 35 years experience. 613-267-3470.

Hunter Safety/Canadian Fire-arms Courses and exMORTGAGES ams throughout the year. School Bus Drivers Want- Held once a month at Carp. $$MONEY$$ CONSOLIed. Flexible part-time, Call Wenda Cochran 613- DATE Debts Mortgages to free training, competitive 256-2409. 90% No income, Bad credit wage. Premier Bus Lines. OK! Better Option Mort-gage LIVESTOCK (613)253-8863. #10969 1-800-282-1169 Reg. purebred Hereford www.mortgageontario.com bull born Feb. 2011. Sire Harvie Tailor Made. $1600. MUSIC Up to $400 Will-O-Tree Here-fords 613CASH Daily 285-7494. World Class Drummer From Five Man ElectriFT & PT Outdoors cal Band, is accepting Spring / Summer new students for private Work lessons. Call Steve 613831-5029. www.steve-

Guys'n gals, aged 16 years +

CHRONICLE DIAMOND AWARD WINNER 2009, 2010 & 2011 SATURN ACCOUNTING SERVICES 613-832-4699

COMING EVENTS BELLEVILLE DOLL AND TEDDY BEAR Show and Sale July 14 Fish & Game Club Elmwood Dr Belleville, ON 10 am - 4 pm Proceeds: Charity, contact Bev 613-966-8095

hollingworth.ca

PropertyStarsJobs.com

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED CLR445379

LOOKING

Job Purpose: Provide support for existing in house software applications. Write SQL reports. MRP system activities.

FOR A CHANGE?

Duties: t 8SJUF NPEJGZ JOUFHSBUF BOE UFTU TPGUXBSF DPEFT t .BJOUBJO FYJTUJOH BQQMJDBUJPOT CZ NBLJOH modifications as required t *EFOUJGZ BOE DPNNVOJDBUF UFDIOJDBM QSPCMFNT process and solutions t .BJOUBJO EBUBCBTF t 0UIFS SFRVJSFE EVUJFT

COMING EVENTS

FINANCIAL / INCOME TAX

There’s Hippies Up The Line! You’ll laugh. You’ll cry. You’ll stand up and shout Hallelujah! Reserve now for Stone Fence Theatre’s new musical comedy by Ish Theilheimer and Johanna Zomers. Opens July 16, with shows in Eganville, Barry’s Bay and Killaloe. www.stonefence.ca 613628-6600- Toll-Free 1-866310-1004.

PERSONAL

Dog Sitting- Experienced retired breeder providing lots of TLC. My home. Smaller dogs only. References available. $17$20 daily Marg 613-7211530 www.lovingcaredogsitting.com

The Arnprior Chronicle-Guide idde

7# 42- /FU 9.- 5FDIOPMPHZ 94- 94% %5% 0CKFDU 0SJFOUBUFE QSPHSBNNJOH MBOHVBHFT &YDFM BT XFMM BT $SZTUBM 3FQPSU BOE IJHIFS BDUJWF SFQPSUT

80 Acres of Plowed Farmland for sale. Located Richmond/ North Gower area. $19,000. per Acre or best offer. 613-880-0494or 613-489-2001 Fairfield Heights: Beautiful, well cared for two storey semi-detached home. Three bedrooms, three bathrooms, balcony, solarium, recreation room, gazebo, garage. $329,900. Clive Pearce, Broker of Record, Guidestar Realty, Brokerage 613-226-3018 (office) 613-850-5054 (cell)4923

This position offers a base salary plus excellent commissionn plan, car allowance and a Benefits and Group RSP. R

Interested students should submit their application to Human Resources no later than Monday June 3, 2013. 0OMZ UIPTF TUVEFOUT XIP NFFU UIF BCPWF RVBMJĂśDBUJPOT will be considered. $-3

Experience the excitement of the aerospace industry in a rural setting!

Interested candidates can email a resume with cover letter by Wednesday June 26th, 2013 to

Mike Tracy - Metroland Media, Ottawa Region mtracy@perfprint.ca

CANCEL YOUR TIMESHARE. No RISK program. STOP Mortgage and Maintenance payments today. 100% Money Back Guarantee. Free Consultation. Call us NOW. We can help! 1-888-356-5248

HELP WANTED

COUNTY OF RENFREW Employment Opportunities

For over 60 years, Magellan Aerospace, Haley has been producing magnesium and aluminum castings for the aerospace industry. Located in the heart of the Ottawa Valley west of Renfrew, there is an immediate opening for an

BONNECHERE MANOR Long Term Care Home Bonnechere Manor, a safe and caring community to live, work and enjoy life.

REGISTERED NURSE – FULL TIME WITH BENEFITS Competition #13-55

Accounting Supervisor Qualifications: College / University Accounting designation CA, CMA, CGA. Candidates must also have a minimum of 5 years experience in a manufacturing environment with emphasis in costing and financial analysis. Skills: Excellent written and verbal skills. Proficient in the use of software; including MS Word, PowerPoint, Excel and other spreadsheet systems. Knowledge of Crystal Reporting and Great Plains an asset. Salary commensurate with experience. We provide a comprehensive flex benefit plan along with company paid pension. We thank all applicants, but only those invited to an interview will be contacted.

Compensation: Start - $32.65 x 1 Year - $36.12 x 2 Years - $38.06 x 3 Years - $42.85 x 25 Years - $43.61 Please note, starting salary is adjusted based on proof of relevant past RN experience at the rate of one increment for every year of experience with the exception of the 25 year rate which requires 25 years of experience.

PERSONAL SUPPORT WORKER – PART TIME Competition #13-56 Qualifications: x Personal Support Worker Certificate or equivalent as per O. Reg. 79/10 of the Long-Term Care Homes Act, 2007 x Certificate – Food Safety Awareness Program recognized by a Public Health Unit x Must display departmental and position competencies of Personal Sensitivity/Empathy, Flexibility/Adaptability, Teamwork, Integrity, Communication, and Commitment & Perseverance x The ability to work any shifts, be available for short-notice call-ins and to maintain regular attendance is required Compensation: $22.87 - $23.19 per hour. No benefits. All 8-hour shifts and includes a paid lunch time. For complete job descriptions and qualifications, please see the County of Renfrew website at http://www.countyofrenfrew.on.ca/departments/human-resources/unionized-job-descriptions/

Human Resources, County of Renfrew 9 International Drive, Pembroke ON K8A 6W5 EMAIL: hrinfo@countyofrenfrew.on.ca (in MS Word or pdf format) Thank you for your interest, however, only applicants considered for an interview will be contacted. CLR446144

38 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013

Qualifications: x A Registered Nurse with a current certificate of competency from the College of Nurses of Ontario with annual mandatory licensing renewal x Must display departmental and position competencies of Personal Sensitivity/Empathy, Decisiveness, Flexibility/Adaptability, Accuracy & Thoroughness, Teamwork, Development of Self & Others x The ability to work any shifts, be available for short-notice call-ins and to maintain regular attendance is required

Please send your resume, stating applicable competition number, by 4:00 p.m., Thursday, June 27, 2013 to:

No telephone inquiries please Please forward resume to: Magellan Aerospace, Haley 634 Magnesium Road Haley, Ontario Canada K0J 1Y0 Fax: (613-432-0743) Email: jobs.haley@magellan.aero

Rent to Own any home. Specializing in Ottawa and surrounding areas. Bad credit, No credit. Ok. Deposit required, 613-262-9562 www.ottawarent2own.ca

VACATION/COTTAGES Quiet Adult Campground. All services, near Merrickville, Ontario. Rideau River, Petangue, tennis, fishing, telephone. $1,200 per season. 613-269-4664.

Didn’t get your

War Amps key tags in the mail? Order them today!

REAL ESTATE SERVICES

has an immediate opening for an advertising ve ng vertising consultant workingg out of of our Arnprior Office. e.

Skills/Qualifications: 4PGUXBSF EFWFMPQNFOU GVOEBNFOUBMT TPGUXBSF EFCVHHJOH TLJMMT TPGUXBSF EPDVNFOUBUJPO TPGUXBSF UFTUJOH TPGUXBSF NBJOUFOBODF

REAL ESTATE SERVICES

TRUE PSYCHICS For Answers CALL NOW VEHICLES 24/7 Toll-free 1-877-3423032 mobile #4486 www. Assortment of used tires, truepsychics.ca 12, 13, 14, 15 and 16.5. BEST PSYCHIC Summers, all-season and Worried? Trouble? snows. Also used car Confuse? Love Finance parts. Gord 613-257-2498. Health Problems Call free Sample. 905-346-8181 or WORK WANTED 1-877-366-9933 Certified Mason. 12 years experience. Chimney rePETS pair, restoration, parging, repointing. Brick, block $500 GERMAN and stone. Small/big job SHEPHERD PUPPIES specialist. Free estimates. Come vet checked, first shots, micro-chipped, and 613-250-0290. registered. World Cham- Send A Load to the dump, pion Bloodlines, Regular cheap. Clean up clutter, garage sale leftovers or price $900-1200, leaf and yard waste. www.lindenhof.ca 613-256-4613. 613-622-5599

CLR446170

HELP WANTED

Ali and Branden are members of the Child Amputee (CHAMP) Program

Attach a War Amps conďŹ dentially coded key tag to your key ring. It’s a safeguard for all your keys – not just car keys. If you lose your keys, The War Amps can return them to you by courier – free of charge. When you use War Amps key tags, you support the Child Amputee (CHAMP) Program. DRIVE

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HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

Job Posting Reference Number GROVE 2013-27-R

JOB SUMMARY: Metroland Media (formerly Performance Prin ng) located in Smiths Falls is accep ng resumes for the posi on of 3rd Press Helper in the Web Department.

Do you want to be a part of a vibrant, supportive team environment? Do you have a passion for supporting exemplary patient care? Then you should take advantage of this opportunity Arnprior Regional Health where we value Honesty, Accountability, Respect and Teamwork.

The ideal candidate will have: • A minimum of 1 year related experience • Be a good communicator • Be friendly and coopera ve • Have a mechanical ap tude • Have the ability to examine and evaluate detail • Assist with set-up, opera on, and maintenance of the web press as directed by the ďŹ rst press operator • Good Health and Safety ethics

Arnprior Regional Health is located in the Town of Arnprior, less than 30 minutes northwest of Ottawa. There are approximately 320 staff, 250 volunteers, and a growing number of medical staff providing exemplary care to over 30,000 residents of West Ottawa, McNab/Braeside, Arnprior and portions of Mississippi Mills. Currently we have a part-time opportunity in our Dietary department at the Grove Nursing Home as follows: Position: Status: Schedule: Department: Hourly Rate: Closing Date: Duties to Commence: Affiliation:

A n: Walter Dubas Fax (613) 283-7480 E-mail wdubas@perfprint.ca This job closes July 3rd, 2013

Cook Part-Time (0.5 FTE – 37.5 hours bi-weekly) Days/Weekends [Mixed Shifts] Dietary /Grove Nursing Home $17.20 – $19.13 (plus a percent in lieu of vacation and benefits) June 28, 2013 As soon as possible CUPE Local 2704

Qualifications: r $PPLT $FSUJĂąDBUF GSPN B SFDPHOJ[FE $PNNVOJUZ $PMMFHF 1SPHSBN PS FRVJWBMFOU r 'PPE )BOEMFS $FSUJĂąDBUF DVSSFOU GSPN UIF 1VCMJD )FBMUI *OTQFDUJPO #SBODI r 4FWFSBM ZFBST PG SFMBUFE FYQFSJFODF QSFGFSSFE MPOH UFSN DBSF FYQFSJFODF JT DPOTJEFSFE BO BTTFU r .VTU IBWF LOPXMFEHF PG CBTJD DPPLJOH NFUIPET BOE UFSNJOPMPHZ TBOJUBUJPO BOE TBGFUZ r .VTU IBWF UIF BCJMJUZ UP QMBO JNQMFNFOU BOE DPNQMFUF XPSL UBTLT JO BO PSHBOJ[FE UJNFMZ GBTIJPO r .VTU CF BCMF UP NBLF TJNQMF DBMDVMBUJPOT BOE UP XPSL DPOĂąEFOUMZ JO NFUSJD BOE JNQFSJBM measurement. r .VTU IBWF UIF QIZTJDBM DBQBCJMJUZ UP TUBOE NPTU PG UIF UJNF BOE QFSGPSN MJHIU UP NPEFSBUF XPSL

CL434066_0613

How to be considered for this opportunity: r "QQMZ JO XSJUJOH UP )VNBO 3FTPVSDFT CZ FNBJM BU DBSFFST!BSOQSJPSIFBMUI DB OP MBUFS than the posted closing date r &OTVSF ZPV RVPUF UIF +PC 1PTUJOH 3FGFSFODF /VNCFS BCPWF JO ZPVS BQQMJDBUJPO r $MFBSMZ JOEJDBUF JO ZPVS BQQMJDBUJPO IPX ZPV NFFU UIF RVBMJĂąDBUJPOT GPS UIJT QPTJUJPO

CL429315_0620

CL434424_0620

We thank all applicants, however only those selected for an interview will be contacted.

COME SHARE IN OUR SUCCESS! Imagine working with an industry leader where excellence in client sa sfac on and exper se in our niche market is the standard. DUE TO OUR CONTINUED GROWTH WE ARE LOOKING FOR

We are looking for results oriented tradespeople who have in-depth knowledge of their trade and who are capable of assuming bo om line responsibili es in the pursuit of excellence and delivery. Our environment is fast paced and results driven. Our team is energe c, intelligent and hardworking. Our company places a high value on establishing a workplace where people are challenged and respected every day. What’s In It For You

• Health and Dental BeneďŹ ts • Training and Other Tools and Resources for Success • Advancement Opportuni es • Compe ve Salary • ProďŹ t Sharing APPLY AT: salesandsupport@kilmarnock.ca or fax your resume to: 613-283-8649 no later than July 7, 2013

HELP WANTED

DICA Electronics Ltd, located in Carleton Place, is seeking QualiďŹ ed SMT Operators. Duties will include setup and operation of Automated Assembly Equipment and troubleshooting of equipment and processes. QualiďŹ cations: * Previous SMT Operation Experience * Excellent computer skills * Strong ability to read and interpret drawings * Shift work exibility * Minimum Grade 12 education Resumes should be e-mailed to careers@dica.ca, deadline for submission is July 5, 2013. Only candidates selected for interview will be contacted. CAREER OPPORTUNITY

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

Exciting career opportunities in Arnprior at GE Hitachi Nuclear Energy Canada Inc.

Industrial Millwright In this key support and setup role, you will be part of a team of certified millwrights that maintain industrial equipment, work on projects and provide input for process improvements, preventative maintenance and corrective action when required. Attention to detail and the ability to troubleshoot problems are essential skills to perform typical daily tasks, ranging from crank rebuilds to sensor adjustments and PM’s. A wide range of skills including welding, machining and operating heavy equipment are essential for the position. Steam Boiler experience would be considered an asset. The successful candidate will be required to pass a background check and physical demands test. How to apply: Please send your resume to gehnuclear.careerscanada@ge.com and note the position you are applying for in the subject line.

DICA Electronics Ltd, a Carleton Place company, is looking for a motivated and well organized Administrative Assistant for a one-year maternity leave contract. Reporting to the OfďŹ ce Manager, this role includes answering phones, general reception and administrative support. The successful candidate will possess a High School diploma and have some clerical experience. Resumes should be e-mailed to careers@dica.ca Deadline for submission is June 28. Only candidates selected for interview will be contacted.

Job Title: Department: Region:

Press Person Press – Smiths Falls Eastern Ontario

JOB SUMMARY: Metroland Media (formerly Performance Prin ng) located in Smiths Falls is accep ng resumes for the posi ons of 1st and 2nd Press Person in the Web Department. The individual must be commi ed to quality, posses good colour comprehension, be self-mo vated and be eec ve in communica on within the team environment. Have strong Health and Safety skills. Competencies, Skills and Experience COMPETENCIES: Ac on Oriented • Drive for Results • Learning on the Fly • Problem Solving • Time Management • Computer literacy • Excellent communica on and interpersonal skills • Strong organiza on skills • Ability to work in a fast-paced environment and to meet deadlines • Ability to work as a team leader Only those with “Goss/Related Equipmentâ€? experience will be considered. Interested candidates please respond to: A n: Walter Dubas Fax (613) 283-7480 E-mail wdubas@perfprint.ca

7.9.2013

This job closes July 3rd, 2013 We thank all applicants, however only those selected for an interview will be contacted. COMING EVENTS

COMING EVENTS

COMING EVENTS 0516.CLR437147

Full Time and Elect-To-Work Cer ďŹ ed Industrial Millwrights, Welders (Mild Steel and Stainless), Fi ers Minimum 5 Years’ Experience Required

HELP WANTED

Job Pos ng CLR446662

SpeciďŹ c Responsibili es: • Assist Operators where needed • Learn the paper feeding aspect of the posi on • Perform various departmental func ons • Keep area clean and hazard free • Transport ďŹ nished product to appropriate departments

Interested candidates please respond to:

HELP WANTED

CL434409_0613

Press Person Press – Smiths Falls Eastern Ontario

Job Requirements: • Commitment to quality, produc vity and appren ce program • Able to take direc ons from various press operators • Upon comple on of training, should be capable of ďŹ lling-in for 2nd press operator as required • Retrieve and prepare rolls for produc on • Good colour comprehension • Eec ve communica on within a team environment • Posi ve, pro-ac ve behaviour

HELP WANTED

ARNPRIOR & DISTRICT MEMORIAL HOSPITAL PRIMARY HEALTH CARE CENTRE THE GROVE NURSING HOME ASSISTED LIVING

Job Pos ng Job Title: Department: Region:

HELP WANTED

CL434067_0613

HELP WANTED

RIDETHERIDEAU.CA

HELP WANTED

Calling all volunteers! Canada Day in Kanata is now accepting applications for event support volunteers. From students looking for volunteer hours to seniors looking to get involved we have something for everyone! Anyone interested in helping out with a great community event should contact CanadaDayinKanata@themcdonalds.net for more information.

We thank all applicants; however, only those selected for an interview will be contacted.

West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013 39


FOR SALE

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COMING EVENTS

COMING EVENTS

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Hudson, missing from Stittsville on June 9th. She is grey and white with a grey spot under her chin and a pink nose. Please contact Lori at (613) 836-4122. CLR445146

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" 3 M ; H added revenue? Promote your comB = ??5 = 9$B B $ across Ontario right here in these 9 D > $$ G H H$ A5$ $$ C H4$ L H H$ Q5 H H$ G 9 >>4 H 9$B B $E 5$ $Q 9 = 5 Q 9E $D A 5 5 G > B # ?E ??5 = 9$B B $ $$ C E C > U, 4 ( U4 *') >>43 '4),,4 )*4*U) X E UE 999E 9 DC> $$ G HE #

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' H $ will experience a mental health issue in their lifetime > > Q >B> 1-866-531-2600 www.MentalHealthHelpline.ca >$ Z H 5$ J > > Q >B> 3 C A D [ X 9

FOR SALE BUSINESS OPPS. 000 " 3 4 5 9 ;5$ $$ 4 < 9 = > # =$ ?$! 9 # $ ! @ $ $ A > B = A C D 9 D$E 3 G ? H = >>43 '4),,4+( 4,, +E I $ J www.protectasphalt.com. ; K I K C G ? 5G C 5 E 5$ ? L H M 4 H 9$N $E ; K $C 5 H A B # ?$K 999E Q ? < $5$EC ? '4) 4*,(4 6665

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ROSEDALE TRANSPORT requires Owner Operators G 5 E E > $ ^5 ? $J C ,,* 9 ! C> H < _$ A$ C ] I ! 3 C H B G H! ? ?5? = $ cross-border experience. M 33 J 0'! ,, # 4 ; 5$ XC >> 35 > 5A$ H= $ $ > $ ?B < $ M D>= > ? $ ? M D H$

EMPLOYMENT OPPS. @ @ @ for a progressive auto/industrial $ 5 B B > E H B B > C 9 > > C < B 9 # $! G5>> A G $ H @ A 5$ $ B>5$ ? < # >> 9 C $E 5 (!,,,G $ $ > C H E Q 5 $ E E G H? ! >A E 5 C ??54 = C ; CQ # EC ?E H $5? J BBQ 5 ! ; X ,(! C ; CQ ! ;! , ,E ? >J hr@sapphireinc.net.

CAREER TRAINING I U,| @ G C A # H5 $K H C > Transcriptionists are in demand H C A # H5 $ # } A$E @ =? $ 5 H 0',, B ? QE '4),,4+((4' E 999EC $C A EC ?E admissions@canscribe.com.

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< = 5 become addicted to prescription medication? 5# ] >C Q > >B> 1-800-565-8603 www.DrugAndAlcoholHelpline.ca >$ Z H 5$ J 5# H >C Q > >B> 3 C A D [ X 9

STEEL BUILDINGS ; N ; ( , | 3 3 K , X ) ! ,X+,! +,X( ! + XU,! ,X' ,! ( , X ' , ! ) , X ' , , $ > > G A > C 9 HK >> '4),,4+ *4 ,( www.crownsteelbuildings.ca ; 4 K 4 ; | 33E , ,0 !UU)E + 0+!( ,E , + 0(!( (E + 0)!+))E +, + 0' ! ) E H 9 >> C>5H HE @ > '4),,4(()4 + E www.pioneersteel.ca

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Connect with Ontarians – extend your business reach! www.networkclassified.org 40 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013

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NEWS

Connected to your community

BOOK NOW!

Habitat for Humanity marks 20th anniversary in capital

s Jason’Landscaping

R0011972970

Land

Steph Willems

Specializing in Retaining Walls and Interlock Patio’s and Walkways Top Soil, Garden Soil, Riverstone, Multches, Gravel and Fill Bob Cat, Mini Excavator, 20 Ton Excavator, D-4 Dozer, Loader, Backhoe and TriAxel Rentals Septic Systems, Lot Clearing, Tree and Brush Removal Supply and Install Armour Stone for Retaining Walls

steph.willems@metroland.com

15 YEARS

RENFREW'S HISTORIC THEATRE R0022148124

EMC news – They started out small, but in the past two decades Habitat for HumanityNational Capital Region has steadily grown its presence and its impact on low-income families in Ottawa. The organization celebrated 20 years of challenges and successes during its annual general meeting and volunteer appreciation event, held on June 10. Formed 1993, the Ottawa-area chapter of the organization (which started in Georgia in 1976) built their ďŹ rst Habitat home on Roman Avenue in 1994, with two others on Monique Street shortly thereafter. To date, Habitat for Humanity-NCR has constructed 40 homes and renovated eight others with the help of volunteers and donated funds and materials. Two ReStore locations have also opened (1997 and 2007) in order to collect and distribute those materials. Habitat NCR is currently getting started on three new homes in Orleans. “The organization has continued to grow,â€? said Habitat NCR CEO Donna Hicks. “That speaks volumes to the kind of leadership from our board of directors and the hard work from our staff and volunteers.â€? Habitat NCR is run by a 15-member volunteer board of directors, and relies on the help of up to 3,000 volunteers of all capacities over the course of a year, said Hicks. Each home build, she added, requires 380 volunteer slots to accomplish. At eight years of service, Hicks is the longest-serving CEO in the Habitat system, which is composed of 67 afďŹ liates in Canada and has a presence in 100 countries worldwide. Because it has to collect, handle and distribute funds, ďŹ nd land, collect materials as well as manage the no-interest mortgages issued to families buying Habitat homes, the organization has to function as a bank, mortgage-lender, and builder. While that responsibility results in a huge workload, the satisfaction of seeing families in need move into their own home makes up for it. “We like what we do,â€? said Hicks, who normally works14-hour days. With much talk surrounding the growing need for affordable housing in recent years, Habitat NCR stands alone as a housing pro-

613-229-9977

FRI., JUNE 21, TO THURS. JUNE 27, 2013

MAN OF STEEL

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MAN OF STEEL Sat & Sun 1:30pm

G

MONSTER’S UNIVERSITY Sat & Sun 1:30pm

FILE

Board members and volunteers from Habitat for Humanity-National Capital Region celebrated 20 years of building and renovating affordable living spaces for families at their annual general meeting on June 10. From left, Habitat NCR board president Johannes Ziebarth, CEO Donna Hicks and Habitat for Humanity Canada CEO and president Kevin Marshman. vider in allowing families to own their own home while retaining the equity after payout – something that can greatly beneďŹ t adults and seniors. “Many of our families have low-paying jobs with no pension plan,â€? said Hicks. “This house can become part of their longterm ďŹ nancial planning.â€? The need for affordable housing isn’t relegated to urban areas. Habitat NCR has seen increasing demand from communities outside the city, recently building three new homes in Carleton Place and renovating another in Kemptville. “When we started looking at some of these outlying communities, we didn’t know how bad the need was for affordable housing,â€? said Hicks. “We’re seeing more and more requests from outlying communities.â€? Hicks said she is working on a gift of land in Arnprior, a pos-

sible gift in Richmond, and is looking forward to a planned project in Perth. Large projects like new home builds aren’t the only thing Habitat NCR does to beneďŹ t the community; increasingly they are asked to modify existing homes in order to allow occupants (often with mobility issues) to continue living there. Under its Renew It program, Habitat will perform repairs or modiďŹ cations – like adding a wheelchair ramp, a porch or ďŹ xing a roof – to keep homes livable. While Habitat NCR is growing and looking to the future, Hicks said much more work is needed to serve the community’s needs. “It’s not enough,â€? said Hicks. “We need to acquire more land, raise more money, and look at all the different ways there are to house people.â€?

R0012165223

Carp Fair

EVERY WEDNESDAY IN JULY

R0012038796

www.carp.ca | WC Food Bank - Accepting canned goods.

& ! ! ! & ! & ! & $ & ! & ! " & $ #

BINGO starts at 8:00 p.m. BBQ starts at 6:00 p.m.

CARP FAIRGROUNDS

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West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013 41


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Off-Site Tent Sale JUNE 20TH TO 22ND ON LOCATION 11AM-3PM SATURDAY JUNE 22ND

Kia is coming to Carleton Place!!! Today to Saturday un l 5pm only Under the Big Tent on Hwy 7 @ The Barons Motor Inn, Carleton Place (beside Harvey’s) 2014’s at Clear out Rates. 0% financing plus no payments for 60 days. Deals so low that Kia has asked that we don’t adver se prices!!! You need to be here to believe prices. Finance specialists on site, we’ve brought in extra representa ves to help you select the proper vehicle at the right price. Trades are welcome and we will not be under sold. If you have ever thought about buying a Kia, this is the me and this is the place.

the power to surprise • Perth Kia the power to get it done!!

42 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013


NEWS

Connected to your community

Girls Night Out raises $90,000 for hospice services

AUCTION SALE Sat. June 22/13 at 9:30am

To be held at the Cobden Arena Travel Hwy 17 to Astrolabe Rd., Astrolabe Rd to the Fairgrounds Tippet Richardson has declined the auction at this time due to the fact their clients were able to pay, which we are happy for. We do have a very good, clean, quality sale to replace it. Good furn. & household from Mrs Barnes of Arnprior, Mrs Grife of Deep River & Mrs Pearson of of Renfrew. Also some shop items from Mr Deslaurier of Renfrew incl. a Homelite chainsaw, whipper snippers, etc. Hope you can be with us. Check website for more details.

Jessica Cunha

R. T. STEWART • Cobden, ON • (613) 646-7649 • www.revelstewart.com

jessica.cunha@metroland.com

R0012166806

EMC news - The seventh-annual Girls Night Out in support of hospice services was a smashing success. More than 800 women attended the sold-out event in support of Friends of Hospice Ottawa. The soiree, held at Algonquin College on May 31, raised just under $90,000, with funds still being counted on June 4. “It’s amazing, I’m just so thrilled,� said Lisa Sullivan, executive director of Friends of Hospice. “Everyone is having fun.� Women of all ages enjoyed the evening’s festivities. Firefighters escorted everyone to their tables while entertainer George Thomas had ladies dancing on chairs, leading conga lines and vying for the bragging rights of “best table.� Linda Brown, a Richmond resident, attends the event every year with the other women in her family. “We have a really good time,� said Brown. “And it’s a good cause.�

Infant Teething Problems? Avoid giving your little precious baby harsh and potentially harmful drugs. We help you through the first couple of years with natural, effective and safe remedies!

Manuela Mueller-Code ("

# &#$ # ! ! '"%& (" !## " !(% % 307.R0011954756 R0011989361

HAHNEMANN CENTRE FOR HEILKUNST formerly Hahnemann Centre For Heilkunst

946 Mill Ridge Road, Arnprior, ON K7S 3G8 Register at 613-623-8804 Phone: 613-623-8804 by appointment only 1115.R00117475 R001175876

ALMONTE CIVITAN CLUB Check out our website at

www.almontecivitan.com

AWARENESS

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for these (and more) great upcoming events!

The funds raised during Girls Night Out – a volunteerSupport the Troops – June 22, 2013 (9am-3pm) organized event – will support the hospice’s operating costs, which account for about $1.7 million a year. Yard Sale & Family Fun Day, BBQ, Games, etc. “The awareness piece is really important,� said SulliCall 613.256.7343 Bill or Stella to book your table van, adding that without fundraisers, “We wouldn’t have the services we do.� Hall Rentals; accessible, Friends of Hospice Ottawa is a palliative care registered licensed, in-house catering charity, serving residents of Kanata, Stittsville-Goulbourn, Nepean, West Carleton, Manotick and Kars. Seating: 400, WiFi, multimedia and audio The hospice offers in-home, caregiver and bereavement systems for all your social and business needs support, as well as a day hospice, transportation, commuJESSICA CUNHA/METROLAND nity education, emergency residential care, and provides Lynn Kelly of Kanata Lakes has a grand time helping raise money for hosInfo @www.almontecivitan.ca information and referrals free of charge to terminally ill pice sevices. clients and their families. The organization recently bought Trinity Presbyterian Church on McCurdy Drive to help co-ordinate all its efforts under one roof. The sale closes in June. “We’re going to slowly start moving in,� said Sullivan. So far, around $1.6 million has been raised for the new hospice facility in south Kanata, but at least $6 million is needed to complete the project, which will include a residential wing for hospice beds. “The support we get from all of you, I know we’re going to be able to do that,� said Sullivan. For more information or to donate online, visit friendsofhospiceottawa.ca.

Children’s Summer Programs & Day Camps - 2013

Children’s programs: July and August,

Diefenbunker: Canada’s Cold War Museum

4 % $ 4

Children’s programs: July and August,

Summer Day Camps: Daily, July and August

Bytown Museum

) * 6

July and August, Thursday evenings, 5 pm Goulbourn Museum

!" # $ % % % ' + - . * %

% &

All year

Summer Day Camps: Daily, July and August

Watson’s Mill ' ( ) * Children’s programs: July and August,

! / # %

and Museum

Mini Wheats Camp: Daily, July and August

Children’s Summer Drama Camp: The Wizard of Osgoode, August 13-23

Choose your adventure at " #

# 67

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West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013 43


THIS WEEKEND

Free Eve nt!

Saturday, June 22, 2013 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Schedule of Events

2:00 - 3:00 p.m. Tai Chi Demonstration/ Activity

Location TBA For kids ages 10 and under, this 500m and 1km race is guaranteed to get little hearts racing!

Workshop Tent on Main St. Taoist TaiChi Society

Stage on Main St.

y ndl Frie s Kid tivitie Ac

10:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. Bike Rodeo Parking lot Main St. Bring your bike for a tune-up, helmet check and a cruise to learn road safety for bicycles!

Text HLF to 84748 Scan the QRCode on your smart phone or visit:

www.healthysmithsfalls.ca

Who's up for a race?

9:00 a.m. Little Thing Running Thing

10:00 a.m. Opening Ceremonies

For more information:

2:30 - 3:00 p.m. 10 Guidelines for Optimal Heath Seminar Seminar Tent on Main St. Katie Westrate, Naturopath

3:00 p.m. Restorative Health Seminar Seminar Tent on Main St. Flexibility: Your Health, Fitness & Quality of Life

The Healthy Living Festival will be running a race in conjunction with the Spring Fling Running Thing. A 1 km and 500 m race called the Little Thing Running Thing, open to children 10 and under. Race begins at 9 a.m. For more information on the race route please visit: www.sfrunningthing.com

Get an amazing workout from these certified instructors! Cardio Move-a-Thon Instructors

Zumba for All Ages Workshop Tent on Main St Clotilde MacCosham

Warm-Up Melanie Gardner, IFBB PRO

Stage on Main St.

3:30 - 4:30 p.m. Seminar Topic TBA

10:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. Cardio- Move - a - Thon

Seminar Tent on Main St

Core Training Pat Woodcock, Former CFL player Founder of Elite Performance Academy

10:15 a.m. Healthy Living Ambassador Award

Stage on Main St.

1:00 - 2:00 p.m. Intro to Piloxing Workshop Workshop Tent on Main St. Caroline Foster, Cardio Fit 4 Life

Shoppers Drug Mart Seminar Seminar Tent on Main St. Living with Diabetes

4:00 - 5:00 p.m. Yoga for Everyone Workshop Workshop Tent on Main St. Yoga and Wellness Studio .

All Day Activities Face Painting and Balloon Animals Buskers - Fire Juggler! Vendors and Food Beckwith St.

1:30 p.m. Gym Stars Gymnastics Demonstration Stage on Main St.

Rock Climbing Wall Zendragon Obstacle Course Bouncy Castle and Kids Obstacle Course Main St.

Athletic Performance Angelina Armstrong-Mann, Professional Trainer Standing Core Training Lindsay Taillefer, Professional Trainer Heritage Fitness Athletic Training Jamie Collins, Professional Athlete Zumba Orlando Perez, Zumba Fitness Instructor Cardio Workout Train N' Transform, Professional Trainer

2:00 - 2:30 p.m. Healthy Digestion - Healthy Body Seminar

Cardio Kickboxing Caroline Foster, Cardio Fit 4 Life

Seminar Tent on Main St. Marie O’Neil (HN), Modern Thymes

Cross Fit Darlene MacLachlan, Yoga & Wellness

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Yoga Carolyn Sutherland, Orange Tree Yoga Stretching Robert Rodine, Restorative Health To register a team or individual for the Heart & Stroke Cardio Move-a-Thon please visit www.fitforheart.ca or contact Amy at 613-283-4124 ext.1114.

Diamond Sponsors Bronze Sponsors Platinum Sponsors

Gold Sponsors Smiths Falls

44 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013

Festival Friend

Canadian Tire The Garden Market Dominion Lending Centre Restorative Health Mike Fair Chevrolet Buick GMC Cadillac Ltd. Zendragon Martial Arts & Fitness


NEWS

Inspiration starts in the young

Connected to your community

PATRICIA LEBOEUF/METROLAND

The Mini We Day Dancers encourage the whole school to get up and dance. Dancing is just one way of inspiring the kids into creating positive change while having fun.

Continued from Page 33

“The younger generations are the ones who will leave a mark in the early stage,” said Owen. “So to get them inspired and in action is a young age is a great thing to do.” “They are the ones who make a difference,” he added. Rob Dekker from Kid’s Help Phone was there to receive the funds the students raised, totaling $425.75. He was grateful and overwhelmed by the fact that such young kids could organize such an event and raise so much money. “I see my future and the future of our community in this room,” said Dekker, addressing the crowd on June 12. With such a long list of charitable actions under their collective belts, the students are leaving a legacy for the younger ones, a foundation for them to built on and expand. “Never forget this school is full of great kids,” said Owen. “With a little bit of effort, we can all be agents of change.”

Grade 6 students Lyle Primeau, Aidan Butler,Ryan Larkin, Ethan Splinter and Owen Barr present a cheque to Rob Dekker for $425.75 to be used for the Kids Help Phone.

Are You Looking for a Family Physician In Our Community? The Arnprior and District Family Health Team in collaboration with Island View Retirement Suites will be hosting a Registration Session with Health Care Connect

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 19 @ 7PM

GAME NIGHT PROUDLY SPONSORED BY

for ANY person in the community who currently does not have a Family Physician. Date: Wednesday June 26, 2013 Time: 200- 6:00 pm Location: Island View Retirement Suites (30 Jack Crescent, Arnprior)

SATURDAY, JUNE 22 @ 7PM

VS

What is Health Care Connect? Health Care Connect helps Ontarians who are without a family physician to find one.

GAME NIGHT PROUDLY SPONSORED BY

FIRST 100 FANS RECEIVE A FREE SLICE COUPON FROM PIZZA PIZZA

ADULTS: $12 | YOUTH/SENIOR: $5

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Please bring your valid Ontario Health Card with you.

West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013 45


SENIORS

Connected to your community

Quite a process to ensure flour bags were recyclable Mary Cook’s Memories MARY COOK

EMC lifestyle - Going into Renfrew to the grist mill with Mother was always a treat for me. I marvelled at how she bartered for a good price on the flour bags, and how she always seemed to come out with a good bargain. The bags were piled willy-nilly in a heap in a corner and if we went early on a Saturday morning, before too many people beat us to it, the selection was at its best. Mother would take off one at a time, examine it closely, and either toss it aside, or put it in a pile by me. My job was to take the bag and fold it into a square so that it, with the others she picked, would fit nicely in the clothes hamper we brought from the farm. There would be no Saturday-night house party that week! My sister Audrey, Mother and I would spend the evening getting the bags ready for the Monday washing. There would be seams to rip out, and those that needed it were cut open with the scissors so that they would lay flat. Of course, they still carried the remnants of the flour they once held, and by the time we had worked our way through the laundry basket of bags, we were covered from head to toe. Even our hair was flecked with flour. But since it was Saturday night anyway, our weekly bath and head wash would take care of that. Before they could be made use of, the flour bags had to be

washed twice. On Monday morning, they were washed separate from the rest of the laundry, and hung over the fence to dry. That washing was to get rid of the flour dust. The next stage was one I detested, and I tried to keep my distance. Mother bought big glass bottles of javel water from Briscoes General Store. Using a big square tub, the bags were soaked for the better part of a day in a mixture of water and javel. This was supposed to take out the bright printing that came with every flour bag, but sadly, it never quite did the job. It wasn’t unusual for me to wear bloomers made out of the bags, with “Pride of the Valley” still quite visible across my seat! Then the bags had their second washing. If it was a sunny day, they were spread out on the grass outside in the hope the hot rays of the sun would further diminish the vivid printing on every bag. Although everyone I knew in Northcote made use of flour and sugar bags, older girls like my sister Audrey would never admit their underwear once came from Five Roses Flour. Happy was the day when Audrey was finally wearing store bought bloomers from Renfrew. But alas, as long as I went to the Northcote School, my lot in life was flour bag underwear! The best bags, once they had been washed, were laid out flat, and the very best of them became sheets. It took four bags to make one sheet, and I was off the farm before I found out that sheets didn’t come with a seam down the middle and one going cross wards! Working around the printed words was a challenge for Mother. She made sure that the best pinny aprons were free of print, and pillow cases, sometimes after being bleached three or four times, were ready for embroidering by Audrey and me. I thought my sister was very clever indeed. She made beautiful cross-stitching, which I never did seem

to be able to master. French knots were another specialty of my talented sister Audrey, and ‘company’ tea towels were festooned with lovely embroidery work, which I was quick to point out to whatever guest happened to be helping us red up the kitchen. The aprons Mother made out of flower bags were enormous. They had long tails to tie at the back, and when I had to wear one to churn for butter, it covered me from chin to my ankles, and lay in a heap around my feet on the floor. A coat hook at the back kitchen door held many aprons. These were always fresh as a daisy, ironed, and spanking white. As soon as Mother heard someone come in the lane, she ripped off the apron she was wearing, even if she had just put it on that morning, and reached for one off the hook. Heaven forbid that she should be caught with a spot on an apron in front of company, even if it was just another farmer coming to have a chat with Father! Rick rack braid went on collars of flour-bag blouses to take away the look of where they had come from. The bags had many uses, and the price was just right for those Depression years. And what was known many years later as recycling was just another way of surviving those days when there was no money for frivolities. Although just about everyone at the Northcote School wore flour-bag underwear, with a few exceptions like my little friend Joyce and bad Marguirite, there were times when I wished there was a better way of getting rid of the hateful dyed printing on just about every pair of bloomers I wore. The answer came one morning when I was dressing for school. I mistakenly put the bloomers on backwards. The printing was still there, but it was less likely to be seen in a game of tag or ball if my skirt accidentally flew up. Ever after I went to the Northcote School with my flour-bag underwear on backwards, and no one was the wiser!

Don’t miss out! Saturday, June 22

8 a.m. – 3 p.m. Celebrity Pancake Breakfast 8 a.m. – 10 a.m. B*A*S*H* Tent

Enter in store for a chance to win a grill-tastic BBQ Bash for 20 of your closest friends and family.

(Bear Ambulatory Surgical Hospital — to repair teddy bears)

BBQ Bash Prize Package:

Build a Buddy! Create your own Teddy Bear

Stage Show

Black Olive Grill with accessories

Enjoy live entertainment

Have fun with Olympians

Farm Boy™ fresh food for 20 people

The Canadian Olympic Committee presents fun and games with some Canadian Olympic athletes

Grilling services from Pistol Packin’ Piggies

Tons of Fun Tours of the Residence

Craft beer from Muskoka Brewery

Rideau Hall 1 Sussex Drive

Carnival Time Clowns, carnival rides and games

(Governor General’s Residence)

Stop by Farm Boy™ Signature Centre this Sunday, June 23th from 11 am to 1 pm to sample the smoky goodness of our fresh made kebabs.

Free Admission No parking on site. Free parking will be available at the National Research Council of Canada, 100 Sussex Drive from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. Park & ride shuttles will start at 7:30 a.m. The last shuttle leaving the park & ride will be at 2:15 p.m. The last shuttle from Rideau Hall back to the parking lot leaves at 3:15.

46 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013

0613.R0012151126

Canadian Forces Health Services

BBQ Bash date is July 28th, 2013.

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$

5,000 value!


FOOD

Connected to your community

Strawberry oat quick bread

Strawberry oat quick bread is a taste of summer EMC lifestyle - Make one or two of these freezer friendly loaves to have on hand during winter months. The recipe can be easily doubled. One bite will take you back to summer with the taste of avourful Ontario strawberries. Preparation Time: 15 minutes Baking Time: 1 hour Makes 1 loaf (15 slices) Ingredients • 2-1/2 cups (625 mL) halved Ontario Strawberries, about 1 lb/500 g • 1 cup (250 mL) granulated sugar • 3/4 cup (175 mL) buttermilk • 2 tbsp (25 mL) fresh lemon juice • 3 Ontario Eggs • 1 tsp (5 mL) vanilla • 2-1/2 cups (625 mL) all-purpose our • 1 cup (250 mL) rolled oats • 1 tbsp (15 mL) grated fresh lemon rind

• 1 tsp (5 mL) each baking powder and baking soda • 1/2 tsp (2 mL) salt • Icing sugar Preparation instructions Lightly butter and our a 9 x 5-inch (2 L) loaf pan. In food processor, pulse 2 cups (500 mL) of the strawberries, until slightly chunky and jam-like in consistency. Add sugar, buttermilk, lemon juice, eggs and vanilla; process until smooth. In large bowl, whisk together our, oats, lemon rind, baking powder, baking soda and salt. Make a well in centre of dry ingredients. Add strawberry mixture, folding to combine just until no specks of our remain, about 3 minutes. (Do not over work the mixture.) Finely chop remaining strawberries; fold into batter. Spread into prepared pan, smoothing top. Bake in 350˚F (180˚C) oven for 1 hour or until tester inserted in centre comes out clean. Transfer to rack; let cool for 30 minutes. Run knife around inside of pan to loosen; invert loaf into hands. Place right side up on rack and cool completely. (Make-ahead: Wrap in plastic wrap and store at room temperature for up to 3 days or overwrap and freeze for up to 1 month.) Dust with icing sugar before serving. Another Healthy Option: Substitute 1/2 cup (125 mL) wheat bran for the oats. Nutritional information One serving ( 1 slice): • Protein: 5 grams • Fat: 2 grams • Carbohydrates: 37 grams • Calories: 180 • Fibre 2 grams • Sodium: 200 mg

. !341$!7 4.% 6% 6),, "% #/5%1).' /41 #/--4.)37 6)3(

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Congratulations!

beer-washed artisan

Gunn’s Hill Beau's Abbey Style Cheese

CONTEST WINNERS

Gunn’s Hill artisan cheesemakers from Woodstock have paired with Beau’s Brewery from Vankleek Hill to create an original beer washed farmstead cheese. The organic

Fres

OnthaFrromio

dark amber ale adds a hoppy, aromatic twist to this rich, creamy cheese. Only available at Farm Boy™, pick up some today.

$500 Farm Boy™ Gift Card Debbie Peters of Ottawa

5

$

1 year Greco Gym Membership Jim Lynn of Ottawa Revivelife Healthy Makeover Debra Prefontaine of Cornwall

49 /100 g

product of Canada

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West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013 47


OPINION

Connected to your community

Down means down until you leave the house SHARON HOBSON Paws for Thought

EMC news - “But he does it at home!â€? Ah, the wail of the frustrated dog owner. Just as the robin’s song heralds the arrival of spring, the owner’s lament signals the start of the second or third lesson of obedience classes. People arrive at class, confident that their dog is going to be brilliant at the various exercises because they practiced them every day, at home. But usually what happens is when the instructor says, “everyone ask their dog to lie downâ€?, their dog looks at them like they’ve never heard the word before and have no idea what it means. This is followed by echoes of “Down. ‌ Down! ‌ DOWN! ‌â€? with the owners getting more frustrated and the dogs getting more confused. Just as tourists have to learn that repeating English words louder and more slowly does not help get their meaning across to the Italian fruit seller in Rome, owners have to learn that loudly repeating a command to their dog does not help him understand it. The problem is not that the dog doesn’t understand the word,

but that he doesn’t understand the word when the owner is not standing directly in front of him, with his left hand behind his back, in the living room next to the coffee table. In other words, he doesn’t understand the word except under the exact same circumstances that he has heard it all week. The problem is that dogs do not generalize. A command such as “down� needs to be practiced in many different environments, with the owner in different body positions, before the dog understands that the word means the same thing, every time, everywhere. Once the dog understands that, he then has to learn that he has to comply with the command even when there are distractions around. And distractions for a dog can be anything from a bug crawling along the ground to fun Uncle Bobby coming in the front door. Teaching dogs to ignore things in the environment is part of what is called “proofing�. We teach a dog to lie down on command, but then we “proof� his understanding of the command by presenting him with gradually stronger distractions and rewarding him for ignoring them. Only when your dog will lie down on command in the living room, in the yard, in the driveway, and in front of a coffee shop, and stay in that position while ignoring all the smells, the cars going by, and the children playing on a skateboard, can we say that the dog is truly trained to “down� on command. Unfortunately, many people come to obedience classes claiming that their dogs already know how to sit or lie down when told, and conversations often sound like the following:

Instructor (me): “Okay, now we’re going to teach the dogs to lie down, and we’re going to start by using a hand signal.â€? Owner: “My dog already knows how to do that.â€? Instructor: “That’s great. Let me see.â€? Owner: “Down.â€? Dog gives owner an astonished look (“Are you talking to me‌?â€?) “Down.â€? Dog looks around the training hall. (“Maybe she’s talking to that guy over there‌â€?.) “Down ‌ down ‌ DOWN!â€? Dog starts sniffing the ground. Instructor: “Okay. So he doesn’t really understand what you’re asking for. Plus you’re giving him a verbal command and I really would like you to use a hand signal. We’ll add the verbal command later.â€? Owner: “But this is how I taught him. And he does it at home.â€? Instructor: “Okaaayy. But he’s not doing it here. So that means he doesn’t yet understand the command.â€? Owner: “He does! He does it at home. I think he’s just not feeling well right now.â€? It can often take quite a bit of convincing to get an owner to go through the steps of teaching a command properly, so that the dog really does understand it, and will do it under almost any circumstances. It is the instructor’s job to explain how this is done, and why, so that the owner is not frustrated, and the dog can learn. Then they both go home happy and the following week the owner can say, “He does it everywhere I ask!â€? Sharon Hobson is a certified dog trainer and owner of Hotdiggity Dog Training in West Carleton, and can be reached at www.hotdiggitydogtraining.ca.

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Pet Adoptions

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LILY, D/S/H SPAYED FEMALE, 2 YEARS OLD

We would love for you to meet WRIGLEY

!

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(0& *&3 4 %: :

Walkathon!

Sunday June 23rd Robert Simpson Park All are welcome!

Arnprior Humane Society 490 Didak Drive 613-623-0916 Arnprior Humane Society has many other companion animals available for adoption. Featured animals are adopted quickly! Website: http://www.arnpriorhumanesociety.ca %MAIL DISTRICT SPCA BELLNET CA s

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This handsome little guy is Wrigley! Wrigley is a very friendly boy, that would love to ďŹ nd his forever home. He is a young, neutered male Orange tabby. Wrigley is affectionate and loves attention, he gets along with other cats and likes children. He will make some lucky family a wonderful companion!

! $ ! # $ $ ! ! # " ! ! $ ! $ " # " $ ! ! " $ " # $ ! " # % # " & $ " ! " ! # # $ ! ! $

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PANINI, D/S/H BUDDY #4315 ROTTWEILER MIX NEUTERED MALE, Neutered male103 MONTHS years oldOLD

MIRANDA, D/S/H SPAYED FEMALE, 2 YEARS OLD

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Will pay up to $300.00 for cars, trucks or vans. Looking to get rid of the old washing machine, dryer, stove, fridge, lawn mower, snow blower or any metal lying around.

FULLY LICENSED AUTOMOTIVE RECYCLER FORAUTOMOTIVE 30 + YEARS FULLY LICENSED RECYCLER

FOR 30 + YEARS

CALL ED’S

www.edsautoparts.ca FOR 30 + YEARS

R0011951645

Give us a call 613-715-2345

CASH ON PICK UP

www.edsautoparts.ca www.edsautoparts.ca

613-836-4082 DAN BURNETT

TRUCKS AND VAN’S

613-623-6619

r

BASEMENTS

AUTOMOTIVE

FREE PICKUP

s r

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2ICHARD 2ENAUD

Rent from someone local and trusted.

R0012139048

www.brucemechanical.com

3339 Farmview Road Kinburn, Ontario K0A 2H0

, 1

R0011952675

613-623-3060 613-832-7823

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We rent water heaters!

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Service and Maintenance to all brands of heating and air conditioning equipment Book your Spring A/C tune up NOW.

APPLIANCE & REFRIGERATION

Gilles Renaud Heating Ltd. /IL s 'AS s 0ROPANE

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PAINTING BASEMENTS

BUILDERS Gord Currie - 25 years experience

www.betterbasementsltd.com

613-229-3711

$ % '%&#! " &% Unit 500, 130 Industrial Ave. Carleton Place * + *

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Carbonated Cleaning - Amazing Results!

$199 Whole-House Carpet Cleaning* 2-for-1 Area Rug Cleaning $75 Sofa Cleaning *call for details

www.quickdry.ca

613-695-7705

Quality Renovations Rec Rooms, Bathroom, Barbezebos and more

'SFF &TUJNBUFT r "MM XPSL JT HVBSBOUFFE

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Lo ca l B u s i n e s s

613-623-8723 quality-renovations.com

CEILING FANS

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613.836.8037

L&L Builders

28 Years Experience

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better basements

OVER 100 FANS ON DISPLAY MOST MODELS IN STOCK EXPERT ADVICE 107 COLONNADE RD. N. NEAR PRINCE OF WALES Tues - Fri 10am-5:30pm Sat 10am-3pm

www.northernfan.com 0502.R0012062869

DONALD BANES CLEANING SPECIALISTS LTD. Donald Banes, President

• Carpet and Upholstery Cleaning • Commercial/Residential • Flood Clean-up

R.R. 2, Arnprior 613-623-4786

Cell 613-447-4786

West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013 49


G%%&'&+-%,($%+'%

Connecting People and Businesses!

(613) 226-3308

DECKS

DECKS

DECKS

PERKINS

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613-858-5043

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>Â?Â?ĂŠ >ÀÞÊ>ĂŒĂŠĂŠ 613-225-9183ĂŠ , ĂŠ -/ / -

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613-761-0671

DECKSCAPES

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KANATA DRYWALL & RENOVATIONS

The Trades Family

Summer Specials on Fences, Decks, Interlock & Landscaping

WINDOWS* ENTRANCE SYSTEMS* PATIO AND STORM DOORS*

Masonry, Vinyl Siding, Stucco, RooďŹ ng

DRYWALL

! " # # "#" ! EAVESTROUGH

Call Chris (613)839-5571 or (613)724-7376 chris9charlebois@hotmail.com

ENGINES

EAVESTROUGH

B0OK YOUR LAWNMOWERS

Waterways

c Farland Tile & Drywall

ROOFING 613-623-9010

Free Estimates Fully Insured Workmanship Guaranteed

R0011982189

FENCES

IRELAND’S SMALL ENGINES SALES & SERVICE

DIAMONDVIEW FENCE & LANDSCAPE CO.

LAWNMOWERS AND LAWN TRACTORS AVAILABLE NOW

UĂŠ i˜ViĂŠÂˆÂ˜ĂƒĂŒ>Â?Â?>ĂŒÂˆÂœÂ˜ UĂŠ,iÂŤ>ÂˆĂ€ĂŠĂŒÂœĂŠ>Â?Â?ĂŠĂŒĂžÂŤiĂƒĂŠĂŠ ĂŠ ÂœvĂŠvi˜ViĂƒĂŠEĂŠ`iVÂŽĂƒ

Call Ron

HOME IMPROVEMENT

“Evening & Weekend Service�

10% Spring Discount R0011950095

50 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013

6 L L L E L ] L

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0404.R0012003459

HANDYMAN PLUS

Experienced Carpenters, & Trades people

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R0012063894

Finish basements, Build kitchens, Bathrooms, Decks All home renovations including:

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KANATA RESIDENTIAL REPAIRS SINCE 1995

Golden Years

HOME IMPROVEMENTS RENOVATIONS

Home Maintenance & Repairs

Installations/Repairs Including: Toilets • Taps Walls • Ceilings & Stipple

(613) 894-1813

HOME IMPROVEMENT

HOME IMPROVEMENT

Home Services

HANDYMAN

613-724-1079

diamondviewfence@yahoo.ca 613-839-2685

MasterTrades

462214

R0011982701 R0011315164

MR. FIX ALL

WE ALSO OFFER TOPSOIL/SAND/GRAVELS/MULCHES /LAWN SEEDING/SODDING/STONEWORK

(613)836-6344 (613)295-7937 R0012062454.0502

Locally Owned and Operated by B. Sullivan, Arnprior

HANDYMAN

R0012068706

ENGINES

KEVIN CONEY

613-623-9973

Jeff : 613 - 858 - 3010

Pick-Up and Delivery Available

R0012121249

61 Campbell Drive ARNPRIOR

0321.R0011977831

Ceramic, Marble, & Porcelain Tiles Suspended and Texture Ceilings Installations And Repairs

Siding SofďŹ t/Facia RooďŹ ng

MURRAY SWAINE R0011950175

Complete Bathroom, Basement & Kitchen Renovations

SEAMLESS EAVESTROUGHING

SEAMLESS EAVESTROUGHING

YOUR DRYWALL SPECIALIST

613-858-4949

Quality Workmanship Guaranteed! WE WILL MATCH ALL QUOTES LESS ANOTHER 10% DISCOUNT!

www.ruscomfg.com

Licensed & Insured Russel (613)614-6800 russelsmith@rogers.com Seniors Discounts

44

s $RYWALL s 0LUMBING "ATHROOMS s 4APING s #USTOM "ASEMENTS s 3TIPPLED #EILING s &RAMING #ARPENTRY 2EPAIRS s 2EPAIRS OF !LL +INDS s 0AINTING s .EW !DDITIONS 'ARAGES

R0011950567

% && $ $ '

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YEARS

Over 25 years Experience

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$ $ # $ " $ ! ! $ $ $ ! $

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CONCRETE

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CONCRETE

We also a do Roof Shingling with lifetime Warranty on Sh Shingles and 5 year warranty on workmanship.

613-733-6336 Website – www.Brennan-brothers.com We

UĂŠ >ÀiÂ˜ĂŒĂ€ĂžĂŠ UĂŠ ÂˆĂŒVÂ…iÂ˜Ă‰ >ĂŒÂ…ĂŠ/ˆÂ?ˆ˜} UĂŠ*>ÂˆÂ˜ĂŒÂˆÂ˜}ĂŠ

UĂŠ >Ă•Â?Žˆ˜} UĂŠ Ă€ĂžĂœ>Â?Â?ĂŠ UĂŠ Â?ÂœÂœĂ€ÂˆÂ˜}

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UĂŠ Ă€iiĂŠ ĂƒĂŒÂˆÂ“>ĂŒiĂƒĂŠUĂŠ iĂƒĂŒĂŠ,>ĂŒiĂƒĂŠUĂŠ-iÂ˜ÂˆÂœĂ€ĂŠ ÂˆĂƒVÂœĂ•Â˜ĂŒĂƒ

613-566-7077


R0012168078/0620

Connecting People and Businesses! HOME IMPROVEMENT

Blitz

613-836-6888

CUSTOM RENOVATIONS

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HOME INSULATION R0011950273 1013.367796

R0012062601

**j.c.interlock@gmail.com**

R0012039084-0418

Retaining Walls, Walkways, Patios, Steps, Landscaping, etc‌ Specialized in Repairs!

A+ Accredited

Toll Free 1-855-843-1592 www.insultech.ca

613-263-7621

LANDSCAPING

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ARLEN GAYLORD PERTH, ONT. 613-267-0066

R0012139062

LANDSCAPING

CHARMING SPRINGS LANDSCAPING

STONE SPECIALISTS IN:

SPECIALIZING IN INTERLOCK REPAIRS!!

UĂŠ Ă€ÂˆĂ›iĂœ>ĂžĂƒĂŠEĂŠ ÂœĂ€`iĂ€Ăƒ UĂŠ >Ă€`iÂ˜ĂŠÂ‡ĂŠ,iĂŒ>ˆ˜ˆ˜}ĂŠ UĂŠ-ĂŒiÂŤĂƒĂŠEĂŠ >˜`ˆ˜}Ăƒ Walls UĂŠ*>ĂŒÂˆÂœĂƒĂŠÂ‡ĂŠ,i}Ă•Â?>ÀÊ UĂŠ7>Â?ÂŽĂœ>ĂžĂƒĂŠ­Ă›>Ă€ÂˆÂœĂ•ĂƒÂŽ EĂŠ,>ÂˆĂƒi`ĂŠ UĂŠ Â?ÂœĂœiĂ€Li`ĂƒĂŠÂ‡ĂŠ-…ÀÕLĂƒ

Affordable Prices and Free Estimates Walkways, Driveways, Steps, Retaining Walls, and Patios.

Relevelling - Re-laying existing stones

Will assist in interlock installation process for clients installing themselves

Estimates 613-219-3940

Call 613-413-3489 or 613-258-1956

FULLY INSURED COMPANY

LANDSCAPING

LANDSCAPING

Residential & Commercial Properties Servicing Barrhaven, Kanata & Stittsville

1-3 yds of Garden Soil, Topsoil, Stone, Mulch & Riverstone

Landscape & Interlock Services FREE ESTIMATES

3PRING &ALL #LEAN UP s 'RASS #UTTING s (EDGE 4RIMMING 0ROPERTY -AINTENANCE s 3OD 2EMOVAL 2EPLACEMENT Fence, Deck Repair & Painting

Tim Steel Ent. 0502.R0012060790

"UZZCUTS HOTMAIL COM s

Lawn: Cutting - Fertilizing - Aerating Seeding - Top Dressing - New Sod

GRUB DAMAGE repair soil & sod installation interlocking stone driveways retaining & garden walls interlock repair patios & steps

613-226-8858

Cell: (613)978-3443

LANDSCAPING

LANDSCAPING

SMALL LOAD DELIVERIES BobCat For Hire

PROPERTY MAINTENANCE Book now for your spring cleanup, weekly lawn mowing, small interlock jobs/repairs, delivery of small loads and much more!

613-838-3715 % -C)NTYRE

0509.R0012073469

GARDEN SOIL & TOP SOIL

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Landscape Construction

“Weekly lawn mowing *starting from $99 a month 5% pre-payment discount for the season�

Call NOW 613-831-7183 or e-mail: shawnbaker@rogers.com http://shawnspropertymaintenance.com

Tel: 613-832-2961

' &

LANDSCAPING

Rick Peplinski Owner

Custom Interlock Specialist, New Topsoil & Sod Installation Paving Stones, Walkways & Patio’s Retaining Walls, Bobcat & Mini Excavation

R0012022462

!! %$ ## &# "$! % "

Everlasting Landscaping

~ FREE CONSULTATION ~

(serving the greater Ottawa area (Stittsville, Kanata, Carp, Richmond)

LANDSCAPING

613.622.5657 Rod Ellis 86 Rivers Road McNab Braeside Ontario

Glenn Tripp

Visit us on Facebook Free Estimates rick.chris@bell.net 613-858-8437 613-623-2223

R0012019152

We will pick up and remove leftovers & ďŹ ll removal from your landscaping projects.

- ()& " ($# $&! - '($& ( $# '$#&, - * &' "$ !' - ($# ""' & %" ' - "!+ ,' ( $' ( # # ""' - & # ' # " #( # - +#' - $# ' ( & & #' - & !' - &$% &(, #( # #

25 Years

LANDSCAPING

SHAWN’S

* based on a 50x100 size lot

Landscaping: Interlock Pavers - Patio Stones Retaining Walls - Decks - Sheds - Fencing etc.

R0012012040 R0021359076 R0011359076

GOT GRUBS?

• • • • • •

Tree & Shrub: Pruning - Removal - Planting Hedge Trimming - Bed Design & Installation

(613)623-9410

LANDSCAPING

SOD SPECIAL! k in Boo and E HST N U J the Save ee Fr tes ma Esti

Complete Service Including:

R0012093317-0516

LANDSCAPING

613-880-1422 & 613-838-5344

Lawn/Tree Landscape Maintenance Limited

R0011561700

‘WEE LOADS’ R0012143807-0606

BUZZ CUTS INC. 2243731 Ontario Inc.

R0012131039-0606

RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL

- & ,QWHUORFN Free Estimates

613-843-1592

INTERLOCK

Free Estimates

Custom Home Specialists

YED

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UĂŠ/Â…iÀ“>Â?ĂŠ >Ă€Ă€ÂˆiĂ€ UĂŠ VÂœ >ĂŒĂŒĂƒ

$ %% &' ( ) * ' * *

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613-878-6144

UĂŠ-ÂŤĂ€>ÞÊ Âœ>“ UĂŠ ĂŒĂŒÂˆVĂŠ1ÂŤ}Ă€>`iĂƒ

0418.R0012028314

UĂŠ-Â…i`Ăƒ UĂŠ-Ă•Â˜Ă€ÂœÂœÂ“Ăƒ UĂŠ ÂœÂ?`ˆ˜}Ăƒ UĂŠ Ă€ĂžĂœ>Â?Â?

r /FX )PNF r 3FOPWBUJPOT r "EEJUJPOT r 4VOSPPNT r #BUISPPNT r #BTFNFOUT

COMFORT ZONE INSULATION

0509.R0012080556

UĂŠ >ĂŒÂ…Ă€ÂœÂœÂ“Ăƒ UĂŠ >Ăƒi“iÂ˜ĂŒĂƒ UĂŠ Â?ÂœÂœĂ€ÂˆÂ˜} UĂŠ iVÂŽĂƒ

HOME INSULATION

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R0012154849-0613

HOME IMPROVEMENT

r (SBTT DVUUJOH BOE USJNNJOH r 4PE BOE SFQBJS r 5SFF IFEHF USJNNJOH BOE JOTUBMMBUJPO r (BSEFO CFE DPOTUSVDUJPO BOE NBJOUFOBODF r %FDPSBUJWF TUPOF BOE JOUFSMPDL SFQBJS

Sean or Angie Willis

willisland@storm.ca - 613-838-9334 SERVING YOU AND YOUR COMMUNITY FOR OVER 25 YEARS West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013 51


G%%&'&+-%.%$%+'%

Connecting People and Businesses! PAINTING

MASONRY

Dupuis R0011954819

613-831-0303 0502.R0012060830

Sodding • Interlock • Pavers • Concrete Overlay • Decks • Fences • Retaining Walls • Tree & Shrub Trimming

Masonry & Concrete Finishing

www.mccoycontracting.ca

G%%&&.)-,-'$%(%,

PAINTING

ABdec Painting

PAINTING Master Painters

15% Spring Discount

PLUMBING

UÊ Interior and exterior painting UÊ Drywall and Handyman Services UÊ Free estimates and great prices UÊ Fully insured UÊ Winner of Kanata’s Readers’ Choice Award NOW ACCEPTING VISA AND MASTERCARD

613-733-6336 Website – www.Brennan-brothers.com

www.axcellpainting.com

PLUMBING

Serving Kanata since 1993

RENOVATIONS

599-4556 abdec@rogers.com

ROOFING %*(%#G%%&'&'+*'&

R0011950118

s &REE 7RITTEN %STIMATES s .O #HARGE FOR -INOR 0REPARATION s &REE 5PGRADE TO @,IFEMASTER 4OP ,INE 0AINT

20 years experience, Interior/Exterior,

2 year warranty on workmanship FREE ESTIMATES

R0012048914 R0012063905

/ , ",ĂŠEĂŠ 8/ , ",ĂŠUĂŠÂŁnĂŠ9Ă€Ăƒ°ĂŠ 8* , ĂŠUĂŠ+1 /9ĂŠ7", - *ĂŠ Ă“ĂŠ9,ĂŠ 1 , / ĂŠUĂŠ" ĂŠ/ tĂŠ" ĂŠ 1 /tĂŠUĂŠ-/ ** ĂŠ, * ,-ĂŠUĂŠ , --ĂŠ-*, 9

FOR ALL YOUR PAINTING AND DRYWALL NEEDS

SCOTT: 613-612-9727 hunts-painting@rogers.com

PAINTING

West: ROB 613-762-5577 East: CHRIS 613-276-2848

HUNT’S Painting

Free Estimates

154 Pine Grove Road Arnprior

613-623-7267

PAINTING

Worry Free Guarantee

Free Estimates

Pat Dupuis

Bringing Homes to life!

ÂŹ

R0021952713

CONSUMER ALERT!

JJIM IM SSWA SWALM WALM M

Are You Fed Up With Your Plumbing Leaks And Slow Drains?

DAN HEBERT

Safari Plumbing Ltd. The White Glove Plumber™ 613-224-6335

Arnprior ON 613-623-5555

Kitchens, Baths, Windows, Doors & More‌ 0307.R0011950223

s 3PECIALIZED IN $ETAIL 0LUMBING s .EW #ONSTRUCTION 2EPAIR s #ROSS #ONNECTION #ONTROL 3PECIALIST s 2ENOVATIONS s &REE %STIMATES

Home Repairs & Renovations

ROOFING

R0012099052

Before you decide to call any plumber, make sure you know the facts. Find out what most plumbers hope you never find out! Avoid the 6 Costly Mistakes people make every day when choosing a plumber. Call our 24 hour pre-recorded Consumer Awareness Message at 1-800-820-7281.

613-296-1073 jhswa50@gmail.com

ING

20 Years experience - 10 Year Workmanship Guarantee

-iÂ˜ÂˆÂœĂ€ĂŠEĂŠ Ă€ÂœĂ•ÂŤĂŠ ÂˆĂƒVÂœĂ•Â˜ĂŒĂƒ FREE upgrade to Architectural Shingles We will Beat any Reasonable Estimate

+&''3&: ."35*/ r ĹŹ ĹŹ r martinjeffrey@rogers.com

ROOFING

ROOFING

ESTABLISHED 1955

Septic Systems

r "TQIBMU 4IJOHMFT r $IJNOFZ 3FQBJST r 4PĂŽU 'BTDJB r 4JEJOH r &BWFTUSPVHIJOH

FREE ESTIMATES

s %XCAVATION s 2OCK 7ALLS s ,OT #LEARING s !GGREGATES

R0021995631

613-623-2123 | 613-728-8689 | 613-286-8496

0307. R0011950477

52 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013

Quality Workmanship Fully Insured • Free Estimates Written Guarantee on 15 Years E of VE TH Y Labour

R SA N EVE O T S D H SIGNEACT R T CON

30 YEARS EXPERIENCE

613-277-9713

ROOFING Metal or Asphalt Re-RooďŹ ng, Roof & Chimney Repair, Facia, SofďŹ t & Siding & Renovations

Duncan Campbell Licensed Carpenter 613-880-3788 campbell.carpenter@gmail.com

TREE SERVICES

Fulcher’s EST. 1975

Dennis Schnob RooďŹ ng Ltd.

ROOFING

B0404.R0012010310

Residential Shingle Specialist UĂŠ+Ă•>Â?ÂˆĂŒĂžĂŠ7ÂœĂ€ÂŽÂ“>Â˜ĂƒÂ…ÂˆÂŤĂŠUĂŠ Ă•Â?Â?ÞÊ Â˜ĂƒĂ•Ă€i`ĂŠUĂŠ Ă€iiĂŠ ĂƒĂŒÂˆÂ“>ĂŒiĂƒĂŠ UĂŠ,iÂŤ>ÂˆĂ€ĂƒĂŠ7iÂ?Vœ“iĂŠUĂŠ7Ă€ÂˆĂŒĂŒiÂ˜ĂŠ Ă•>Ă€>Â˜ĂŒii

FREE Estimates New Roofs/Re-roofs • Repairs Skylights • Fully Insured Email: superiorrooďŹ ng@live.ca

BH ROOFING Residential Shingle Specialist 0314.R0011956619

JM

ROOFING

BOO >˜Vˆ˜}ĂŠ Ă›>ˆÂ?> FOR K NO LÂ?i SPR W

Proudly Serving Ottawa West

613.223.5314

“From Stained Floors to Stained Glass�

ROOFING ˆ˜

R0011982734-0321

631 DAVID MANCHESTER ROAD Carp, ON

Brick, Block, Stonework Block Foundations ÂŹ Chimney Repairs ÂŹ Basement Floors ÂŹ Garage Floors ÂŹ Steps & Walkways ÂŹ Cultured Stone ÂŹ

R0031120309

MASONRY

R0012051149

LANDSCAPING

s 2OCK (AMMER s 3CREENED 4OPSOIL s %QUIPMENT 2ENTAL s &LOATING

613-649-2716

M. J. Enright Tree Services Tree Dismantling & Removal Lot Clearing Brushing Chipping Hydro Line Right Away Clearing Firewood – Buy Standing Timber

FULLY INSURED – FREE ESTIMATES Since 1985 enrightlog@live.com

Office: 613.649.2544

Cell: 613.433.1340


NEWS

Connected to your community

MARGARET GIBSON/SUBMITTED

West Carleton Seniors Council in generous mood Above, the West Carleton Seniors Council presents $500 to the Western Ottawa Community Resource Centre at a Diners Club gathering at the Kinburn Community Centre. Council treasurer Barbara Paul gives the cheque to WOCRC’s Colleen Caldwell. Among those in the crowd are Diners Club volunteers Solar Oum, Iva Duncan, Mary Shoup, Noreen Murphy and Peter Fischer.

The West Carleton food bank receives a timely boost of $1,500 from the West Carleton Seniors Council. Taking part in the presentation, from left, are food bank volunteers Marion Cox and West Carleton Food Bank volunteers Leila Graham, left, and Marion Cox stock the Leila Graham, seniors council treasurer Barbara Paul and president Margaret Gibson. The Seshelves at the Carp quarters. The food bank especially needs cereal, soups, soda niors Council, which represents seniors’ groups in Fitzroy, Constance Bay (Sandhills), Kinburn crackers, cookies, salmon, apple juice and is always looking for more volunteers. and Huntley, noted that the food bank is in need of support with donations down this year.

Get your coupon at Save.ca/savingsmadedelicious

facebook.com/savedotca

is a division of

West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013 53


Local events and happenings over the coming weeks — free to non-profit organizations Fax: 613-623-7518, E-mail: theresa.fritz@metroland.com The community calendar is a free public service for non-profit groups. Notices appear as space permits. Please submit your information at least two weeks prior to the event and include a daytime contact name and phone number for us to reach you for clarification.

CARP July 3 At the Carp library is “Creating concrete mushrooms for an outdoor display” at the branch. Ages 6-12. Wednesday from 2 to 3 p.m.

July 30 Drop into the Carp library for storytelling with Tante Caroline. Ages 4-8, on Tuesday, from 2 to 2:50 p.m.

Aug. 14-17 Mark your calendar as an opportunity to come and learn more about the Carp Fair, one of the oldest community fairs in the country. This year Carp Fair is celebrating 150 years and to mark this milestone Rural Root Theatre offers Fairground Follies. Many of the stories are based on local research and interviews with several Carp Fair families, the local historical society, as well as the Carp library. We

are working with the Carp Fair Board on this collaboration. Fairground Follies is presented in the Show Barn on the Carp Fair Grounds - evenings at 7 p.m., plus 1 p.m. matinee on the Saturday. Details at www.ruralroot.org or www.carpfair.ca.

Aug. 17 ARTstravaganza is Saturday, at the Carp Fairgrounds in the big field, 3790 Carp Rd. For more information contact Lis Allison, 613.832.2156 or lis@pine-ridge.ca or visit westcarletonartssociety.ca where you’ll find more details

Aug. 21 Rag and Bone Puppet Theatre presents Felicity Falls at the Carp library on Wednesday from 10:30-11:25 a.m.

ONGOING Every Thursday in May is Euchre Night at the Anglican Parish Hall, beside the fairgrounds at St. James Church. Six hand, starting at 7:30 p.m., refreshments to follow. Every Thursday until May 30 the Carp branch of the Ottawa Public Library is offering storytime, 10:15 a.m. and 2 p.m. (30 min). Drop in for stories, rhymes and more.

CONSTANCE BAY

FUTURE SHOP CORRECTION NOTICE NEWSPAPER RETRACTION FOR THE FUTURE SHOP JUNE 14 CORPORATE FLYER Please be advised that the Olympus TG-830 iHS 16.0 Megapixel Digital Camera (WebCode: 10239997) advertised in the June 14 flyer, Wrap 4, may not be in stock due to an inventory delay. Stock is expected to arrive later in the week. The $199.99 promotional price will be honoured until June 20, 2013. Customers may take rainchecks for the duration of the regular flyer period. We sincerely apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused our valued customers.

WA N T E D ! Junior “B” Hockey Players

July 13 Cowguy: Comedy, juggling, plate-spinning, magic and acrobatics at the Bay library, Saturday, from 1:30-2:15 p.m.

July 12-14 The tradition continues with Bay Days July 12-14, beginning with a Seniors’ Boat Ride July 12. Saturday features a fish derby, walkride bike-a-thon, poker run, and a kids’ activity centre with the Cow Guy juggler. Saturday evening the community centre will jump to the lively music of Salsa Night, featuring the Latin Breeze Band and the Venezuelan Folklore Dance Group “Churun Meru”. A special dinner themed to the occasion will also be served. Sunday, July 14 will be Beach Day with activities taking place on the Point beach.

June 22

July 27

Rag and Bone Puppet Theatre presents Felicity Falls at the library on Saturday from 1:30-2:25 p.m. An atom ball tournament takes place at the community centre.

Duffers will be out in droves to compete in the annual Bay Days Golf Tournament. Tee off will be at noon at the Copperdale Golf Club on Dunrobin Road, followed by an awards banquet at the Community Centre. See cbbca.ca for more.

June 29

August 10

At the library is Recycled Rock with Junkyard Symphony, Saturday from 1:302:30 p.m.

Anglers will be dropping a line in the fishing derby on Saturday. And if the catch doesn’t measure up to a meal, the day will end with a big barbecue at the community centre. See cbbca.ca for more.

July 1

R0012165861_0620

The NEW Perth Blue Wings Junior “B” Hockey Club seeks five (5) elite hockey players for their 2013-14 Eastern Ontario Junior B Hockey League Team. You MUST be highly coachable, physically fit, MENTALLY tough and born between 1993-1997 (16-20 years old) to qualify. ONLY those seriously committed to competing for an EOJHL Championship need apply. Application Deadline: Wednesday, June 28th, 2013. For a FREE detailed information Kit, sent by First Class Mail, on your request, email Michael McLean at: Michael@PerthBlueWings.com or visit www.NEWBlueWings.com and leave your full mailing address. PerthBlueWings.com

judging about 3:30. Then to the legion for awards, entertainment and dinner: steak barbecue ($10), music by Gilles Arsenault. Three categories of awards: large boat, small boat, sailboat. The theme is “MASH” in honor of the 60th anniversary of the Korean War. If you need more info, call the branch 832-2082 or Arleen 8322495. See you on the water.

There is no parade around the Bay this year, but the flotilla is back so decorate up your boat and join in. Register at the government dock on Buckhams Bay at 1 p.m., leave for McLaren’s Landing about 1:30, arriving back at the dock for

54 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013

August 24-25 Anglers Bay Days will wind up with a ladies softball tournament coupled with a lawn tractor pull. A lobster dinner is planned to be followed by dancing to the popular rock music of the Stephen Thomas Band. The evening may also feature gaming tables in a

casino format though details are still being completed for the event. Sunday will feature Extreme Sports events on the grounds of the community centre.

ONGOING West Carleton Legion Branch 616 events: Every Monday: Cribbage at 2 p.m. Feel free to come down to the branch for a few fun hands. Every Wednesday BINGO: Kitchen opens from 5 to 7 p.m. for a pre-Bingo meal. BINGO at 7:15 p.m. Every Thursday: Carpet bowling at 1 p.m. Every Friday: Cribbage at 2 p.m. Every Friday: TGIF Dinner at 5:30 p.m.; entertainment by Ben Wilson at 6:30. Branch 616 Royal Canadian Legion invites you to their weekly TGIF Dinner. All welcome, community members please join us!

and a barbecue lunch in addition to many exciting contributions of our members. We also have our famous pies for sale. Again this year, added to the many treasures contributed by members, there will be a special section - yards of yarn goods and other sewing and crafting items. Come and enjoy.

July 2-mid August

CORKERY DUNROBIN

The Come Anytime - Leave Anytime Drop In Day Camp for kids 9-13. Once again kids are welcome to join activities being at the Fitzroy Harbour Community Centre during the summer vacation. This drop in day camp is operated by the Fitzroy Harbour Community Association will run eight weeks during weekdays from 9 a.m. – noon and 1 p.m – 3 p.m. There is no cost for participation, however kids must be members of the FHCA (family membership is $20). Attendance is not taken and kids are free to come and go as they please.

June 28

July 4

For parents with West Carleton Secondary high school graduating students, please be sure to keep Friday afternoon open on your schedule so that you can attend the commencement, honouring our graduating Class of 2013. The commencement ceremony is the school’s celebration for our graduating students and we are looking forward to hosting a memorable event for our students and their families. As has been the case for several years now, parents should note that with the large graduating class the number of guests for each graduate will be limited to a maximum of two. See more at westcarletonss.ocdsb.ca.

The Concerts in the Park series at Fitzroy Provincial Park has a youth fundraising barbecue at 6 p.m., with free entertainment from 7 to 8:30. First up is The Fabulous Flashbax. On July 11 is Local Traffic. On July 18 is The Stephen Thomas Band. On July 25 is Ambush with special opening performance by Jordan McIntosh.

FITZROY

July 13

June 22 At the Fitzroy library is Little Ray’s Reptile Zoo on Saturday, from 10:30-11:30 a.m. There is a Strawberry Social at St. George’s Anglican Church from 1-3 p.m. $5 per person. Rain or shine. On Saturday from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m at St Andrew’s United Church is the Fitzroy Harbour Annual Yard Sale, 184 Carleton St. Coffee and muffins

July 11-13 The Harbour Days 2013 runs from Thursday to Sunday. Planning is well underway. A detailed flyer will be distributed throughout the community later in June with the full schedule; it will also be at www.fitzroyharbour.com. At the library is Cowguy: Comedy, juggling, plate-spinning, magic and acrobatics on Saturday, from 11 to 11:45 a.m.

July 22-26 Fitzroy Harbour Community Centre hosts a kids Drama Week as part of their summer drop in. It will run each morning from 9-12 Monday to Friday with an evening performance on Friday evening. Valerie Jorgensen, Drama Coordinator, is look-

ing for volunteers. Contact her at: 613-623-4593 or valerie.jorgensen@sympatico.ca.

GALETTA June (all month) Galetta Bowls Club welcomes anyone age 9 - 90 to come out and give lawn bowling a try on Monday, Tuesday and Thursday evenings at 6:15 pm and Friday mornings at 9:45 am. No equipment necessary. Instruction provided. Wear flat-soled shoes. 119 Darwin Street beside the Galetta Community Association. Contact 613-622-1586. www.trybowls.ca.

KINBURN August 23-25 The fourth annual Swampfest features live music from country to bluegrass, activities for kids from all ages, including heritage displays and local vendors. It is a major fundraising event for the Kinburn Community Association.

MARCH June 23 Women from the Parish of March invite you to their next soup mission for Chrysalis House, a home for abused women and their children. The next soup making session is on Sunday 4 to 8 p.m. at St. John’s Anglican Church, Kanata. Cost is $10 to cover the costs of a communal light meal. To sign up, or for more information, contact Jennie St-Martin at soupmission@ gmail.com or 613.686.5771.

ARNPRIOR June 23 On Sunday is the Arnprior and District Humane Society’s Walk in the Park walkathon at Robert Simpson Park 10 a.m. Help raise money for our furry friends! Participate with or without a canine companion. 2 and 5 km walks available or just come out, show your support and enjoy the day, the animals and the Bark Barbeque. Pledge forms available at the shelter on Didak Drive, Pet Valu Arnprior and Renfrew, or www.arnpriorhumanesociety.ca For more information call 613.623.0916.


49. Stated an inquiry 56. Laid-back California county 57. Fearless and daring 58. Sound after its source has stopped 59. Blackboard rock 60. A domed or vaulted recess 61. Six (Spanish) 62. French city 63. Herringlike clupeid fish 64. Oriental sauce CLUES DOWN 1. Requests 2. Spoken in the Dali region of Yunnan 3. Up to the time of 4. Common ankle injury 5. Tedium 6. 9th Greek letter 7. Abnormal closed body sac 8. One who obtains pleasure from other’s pain 9. Long narrative heroic poem 10. Possessed by force 11. Autonomic nervous system 13. Treats with contempt 15. Bears

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CLUES ACROSS 1. __ Dhabi, Arabian capital 4. Invests in little enterprises 8. Stalk of a moss capsule 12. Beach material 14. Maneuver in a game 15. A castrated male chicken 16. Write bad checks 17. Sewer inhabitants 18. Farewell (Spanish) 19. Player makes 3 goals in one game 22. Greek rainbow goddess 23. Tax collector 24. Make unhappy 27. Hygienic 32. Double-reed instrument 33. Beetle Bailey’s dog 34. Fee, ___, foe, fum 35. One dish meal 38. Goatlike antelope 40. Consumed food 41. Peels 42. Emerald Isle 43. Duties helpful to others 45. Fragments of cloth 47. Frozen water 48. Spanish river

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Eady Realty, Inc. Brokerage

29 Raglan St. S., Renfrew, ON K7V 1P8

RENFREW AND AREA LISTINGS

Dennis Yakaback Real Estate Broker

Cell 432-0041 www.century21.ca/eadyrealty

1758 MCLEAN DRIVE $429,900

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Located 1/2 way between Renfrew & Arnprior. This 3 bedroom, 2 bath home offers 100 acres of playground. Large 2-car garage with workshop. Additional garage for tractor. Beautiful gardens, lovingly maintained. Call Dennis Yakaback: 613-432-0041 West Carleton Review EMC - Thursday, June 20, 2013 55


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