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Perth Courier

December 9, 2010 • Edition 25

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Charlotte Gray will speak at Kiwanis fundraiser

IN BRIEF Mike Brown wins gold at Canada Cup Perth’s Mike Brown is showing no signs of rust since coming out of retirement this past summer. Brown won the gold medal and set a new meet record in the men’s 200metre breaststroke at the Canada Cup short course swimming competition on Sunday, Nov. 28 in Etobicoke. Brown swam a time of 2:09.75 to surpass his previous time of 2:10.78, set in 2006.

Police warning about telephone scam On Wednesday, Dec. 1, a resident of Perth called the Perth Police Service regarding a phone call they received and believed to be a scam. The call was made by a male claiming to be her grandson. He told her that his friend had won tickets to a concert in Montreal and he had rented a car for the trip. The caller claims that he has gotten into an accident with the rental vehicle and the judge will not charge him if he pays for the $4600.00 damage. The caller requested that the resident courier the money to Montreal. The resident was aware of similar calls occurring in the area and no money was sent. Police are cautioning the public not to forward any money. Anyone receiving similar calls is asked to contact the Perth Police Service at 613-267-3131.

Parking restriction reminder

Perth winter parking bylaw no.3961 came into effect on Nov. 20. It states that no person shall park a vehicle between midnight and 6 a.m. during the period from Nov. 20 to March 31 on any highway, boulevard or public parking lot under the jurisdiction of the Town of Perth. There is a public park lot exception for vehicles in designated areas that have valid parking permits (as described in the bylaw). On Dec. 3 and 4, Perth Police Service issued 95 warnings to vehicles parked on the street during the winter parking restriction hours.

INSIDE

BY ANDREW SNOOK andrew.snook@perthcourier.com Well-known and respected Canadian author Charlotte Gray has teamed up with the Kiwanis Club of Perth for Gold Rush Day at the Factory Grind (1 Sherbrooke St.) on Friday, Dec. 10. Gray will be reading from her most recent book, Gold Diggers: Striking It Rich in the Klondike, from 5 to 7 p.m., as well as speaking about her writing career. Admission for the event is free, but the Kiwanis Club of Perth will be collecting donations of used, broken or unwanted gold chains, single earrings and rings, as well as sterling silver jewelry, with or without gemstones. The money from the jewelry will go towards Kiwanis Club initiatives that help children. “I thought it was a really imaginative idea,” Gray said. “When I talked to her (Helen Gamble, president of Kiwanis Club of Perth) book club, they explained that I would be talking about my book and people would bring in their gold. I think it’s very clever. I’m happy to do it, I love Perth.” Blaine McNicol, just two weeks old, has his first visit with Santa during Gray has published several the Middleville Christmas Party on Saturday, Dec. 4. By the time Santa popular books including Nellie is back in the village on Dec. 24 or 25, Blaine will be more than twice McClung, in Penguin Canada’s as old as he was last weekend. Nevil Hunt photo series, Extraordinary Cana-

A NEW EXPERIENCE

dians. and Reluctant Genius, The Passionate Life and Inventive Mind of Alexander Graham Bell in 2006, which won the Ottawa Book Award and the Donald Creighton Award for Ontario History. Gray also wrote bestsellers, The Museum Called Canada (2004), Canada, A Portrait in Letters 1800-2000 (2003), Flint & Feather: The Life and Times of E. Pauline Johnson, Tekahionwake (2002), and Sisters in the Wilderness: The Lives of Susanna Moodie and Catharine Parr Traill (2000). Copies of Gray’s books will also be available to purchase at the event. The Kiwanis Club of Perth gives out 2,400 Terrific Kids awards in 12 schools in Smiths Falls, Lombardy, Carleton Place, Glen Tay, Lanark, Westport and Perth annually. They also support the Yak and Lanark youth centres, donate scholarships to high school students, and send teenagers to Kiwanis Leadership Camp. The Perth Kiwanis Foundation will be offering income tax receipts upon request, following professional evaluation of the raw precious metals by Howard Manufacturing Jeweller in Ottawa. For more information, contact Gamble at 613-267-4662.

Trustee is now first vice-chair BY KASSINA RYDER

kassina.ryder@perthcourier.com Bill MacPherson, the new 1st vice-chair of the Upper Canada District School Board, says when it comes to improving the way the board does business, the first step is to establish clear information. “There are a few things that I’m hoping we do better and communications is the key,” MacPherson said. “I found during the election campaign, there’s a lot of misinformation and misinterpretation out there, and my hope for the next four years is to develop a process to make

BILL MacPHERSON

sure the right information is out there.” MacPherson is a 10-year trustee for Ward 2 (Drummond-North Elmsley, Beckwith, Montague, Perth, and Tay Valley Township). He was re-elected on Oct. 25. Improving communications means making sure people have the chance to interact with school board officials and vice versa, MacPherson said. He is working on the idea of a website, or possibly even a Facebook page, to give board members and citizens a place to discuss issues. “I’m looking at a web presence,”

he said. “I have done a trustee’s newsletter in the past and I’m looking at redoing that.” MacPherson also said he plans on improving his relationship with school councils. “I’ve always felt I’ve been very active in the past with my school councils, but I’m going to try to improve upon that,” he said. Attending classrooms and seeing students first-hand is another tool MacPherson uses to gain knowledge about the classrooms in his district, which he said he plans to continue. “I am a very low-key person See ‘Trustee is now’, Pg. 3

In recognition of excellence All in the family Local musician Danny Sullivan has turned his love of music in to a family affair. 4

Hello worlds

Picture compliments of Clementine Art

The Saltos Athletics aerobics gymnastics team has five members heading to the world championships. 17

Five Lanark County residents received Awards of Excellence for outstanding contributions to the community last month. Colin and Barbara Sangster, Tony and Lynda Hendriks and Jackie Seaton were all recognized during a ceremony on Nov. 24. Seaton is the creator of Perth’s Empty Bowls Project. While he was quick to point out that there are many other people involved, he is thrilled that the award will help raise awareness about the project. “I was delighted, I must say, on account that it would help keep the momentum up for this project, especially going into our 10th anniversary year,” Seaton said. “I very much appreciated the award insofar as it helped

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Empty Bowls, it helped raise the awareness and the profile of the project and it will hopefully help us raise even more money in the future. For that I was quite grateful for the award.” Seaton was nominated by Darinka Morelli, executive director of Perth’s Youth Action Kommittee. “I cannot think of a more worthy individual than Jackie Seaton to receive the Lanark County Award of Excellence,” Morelli said in an email. “Over the past decade, Mr. Seaton has turned his energy and many talents to raise both money and awareness of hunger and poverty in this rural area. His Empty Bowls Project has highlighted the special circumstances of poverty in our community where remedies and opportunities are all too scarce. We are very grateful Jackie Seaton holds his Lanark County Award of Excellence, which was for his many contributions.” presented to him by Lanark County Warden and Perth mayor John Stephanie Gray photo See ‘In recognition’, Pg. 3 Fenik during a ceremony on Nov. 24.

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PAGE 2 - THE PERTH COURIER - December 9, 2010

COMMUNITY NEWS

Perth gets into the Christmas spirit during annual parade Kassina Ryder photos

Santa and Mrs. Claus wave to the crowd as their reindeer pull them through town. PDCI students bring out the blue to celebrate the holiday season, complete with members of the school’s football team.

Madysen Webb, 4, and Landyn Lewis, 3, wait patiently for Santa.

The elves on this float are hard at work building toys for all the nice girls and boys.

The Grinch decides not to steal Christmas this year and particpates in the Perth Santa Claus parade instead.

These Shriners Club members are full of Christmas spirit.

The guitar-playing boys on this float show the crowd how rocking out can keep you warm as they roll along Gore Street.


December 9, 2010 - THE PERTH COURIER - PAGE 3

COMMUNITY NEWS

Keeping stories alive

BY KASSINA RYDER kassina.ryder@perthcourier.com

Max Keeping speaks to a crowd at the Perth Museum on Nov. 23. Keeping was invited to speak about the importance of oral history. Kassina Ryder photo

Former CTV News anchor Max Keeping paid a visit to the Perth Museum the evening of Nov. 23 to talk about the importance of preserving the past. “Everybody is a story,” Keeping told the crowd of about 20 people. “You all have great stories to tell, even though you may not think so.” Keeping was in town to discuss the museum’s oral history project, which involves documenting stories of Perth residents in order to preserve the town’s history. “I accepted an invitation to come and find out about the collection of oral histories in Perth and to share some of my experiences,” Keeping said. “Newfoundland is an oral society and growing up as I did during the period when Canada joined Newfoundland; there was a need to capture the history that could only be told by the old guys.” Museum staff, along with community members, have been working together to compile stories of Perth’s history, beginning with the Gore Street business owners of days gone by, said Karen Rennie, heritage manager and curator of the Perth Museum. “We’ve started to collect some of the stories of people who had businesses on Gore Street and

Keeping is no stranger to the task of recording stories. As a youth working for a newspaper in Newfoundland, he had the opportunity to travel across the island listening to the tales of islanders right after Newfoundland joined Canada. In order to provide hospital service and schools, hundreds of towns were being shut down and people were moved from their homes. “That was the terrible tearing apart of a great deal of those people’s histories,” he said. At that time, many Newfoundlanders couldn’t read or write, so they relied on oral storytelling and song, just as their Irish ancestors had, Keeping said. “That was the way they told their history, they told it and they sang it,” he said. Keeping said his father taught himself to read and write, but still preferred to tell stories orally. Though he enjoyed storytelling, the presence of a recording device would render him silent. He could tell stories and recite poetry and sing, but put a tape recorder in front of him and he’d shut up, he said. When it comes to getting Perth residents to share their stories, the key is just to get people talking, Rennie said. “Sometimes you just need to get them started and they tell you all kinds of fascinating things.”

we’re looking at getting some of those stories, what the buildings were used for and that sort of thing,” she said. Rennie said, in addition to collecting stories, the project is also geared toward possibly establishing a heritage district in the downtown area. This designation would help maintain original buildings and restrict the type of development that could take place in that area. “It helps with planning and things for the future, so you can’t put a high rise in the middle (for example),” Rennie said. “We’re just in the midst of looking at how we would do that and part of that is collecting this information.” You have to go right back to the original owner and get as much detail as you can, so we’re using community members to help get some of that information. The Perth Historical Society and members of the museum board have been sharing stories, and Grade 12 students from PDCI have been interviewing community members, Rennie said. “The historical society meets here regularly and our own museum board, a lot of them have lived in Perth all their lives and have fascinating stories, so we’re starting to collect those as well,” she said. “It’s a way of documenting before all of those are lost.”

Playtime not just for kids BY KASSINA RYDER kassina.ryder@perthcourier.com The Good Shepherd Hall at St. James Anglican Church is the place to be on Thursday nights, thanks to a free playgroup for dads and kids. “We’re here pretty much every week,” said Trevor Choffe, father to one-year-old Easton. “It gives the kids a big place to play, and it gives mom a break, which is probably the biggest thing.” The Dads and Kids program started about a year ago, said creator Peter McCracken. Since then, the program has hosted anywhere from 12 to 20 dads and kids per evening. The night

begins at 5 p.m. and visitors are served a dinner around 5:30 p.m., McCracken said. Volunteer Glen Drover creates a meal for all the hungry participants. “We try and keep it healthy, but we also try to keep it simple because it’s a lot of work,” McCracken said. “We have spaghetti, fish and chips, and Glen does a really amazing shepherds pie. “For Halloween, we had spaghetti and meatballs and called it worms and eyeballs.” The group is aimed at kids from infants to six years old, but older siblings are welcome as well, McCracken said. The group’s casual structure seems to appeal to dads, he

added. “It seems with the moms, they have their weekly thing and they go every week,” he said. “With the dads, they seem to come for a month or two, then they’ll take some time off and come back later. It seems like there is always a flow of different dads coming through.” Each week, kids participate in a craft (such as last week’s finger painting), games and other activities. Basically, it gives the kids a chance to play with their dads, McCracken said. “It’s a great way for dads to help their kids play and learn and reach their developmental milestones,” he said. “That’s One-year-old Easton Choffe plays with some playdough while dad, their job at this age.” Trevor Choffe, keeps watch during the Dads and Kids playgroup at St. James Anglican Church on Nov. 30. Kassina Ryder photo

FROM THE FRONT Stories continued from Page 1

Trustee is now myself, I like to drop in and sit at the back and watch the kids do their thing, and share that with the senior administration when I’m talking to them at the board meetings,” he said. MacPherson said he also attends municipal council meetings in his region to share the board’s budget information in the spring. Communication is a two-way street, MacPherson added. “I try to keep track of what’s

happening, the biggest problem is getting school councils or schools to send you their newsletters,” he said. “I haven’t got them all yet and I’ve been asking for them for the past 10 years.” MacPherson said becoming 1st vice-chair was a personal milestone for him. “I consider that a personal achievement,” he said. “It’s just based upon of my 10 years of experience that I was able to attain that office.”

In recognition YAK DONATION Megan Schooley of Crain and Schooley Insurance, stands with potter Jackie Seaton and YAK representative Tara Cameron during a lunch held in appreciation of Schooley’s donation to Empty Bowls. The company’s donation will see a large sum of money being donated to YAK’s dinner program for youth. Ryan Holland photo

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THE TOWNSHIP OF LANARK HIGHLANDS

The Sangsters were nominated by Mary Vandenhoff for their many contributions to various community organizations, including the Lanark Health Centre and the Dignity House Hospice in Perth. Anne Thomlinson, the director of the Maberly Agricultural Society, nominated the Hendriks for

donating their time and financial donations to environmental projects. Tony was also recognized for his time as the project co-ordinator for Big Ben Park and the Lanark County Own the Podium 2010 initiative. The winners received a plaque commemorating their service.

MUNICIPAL MATTERS

All Lanark Highlands waste disposal sites will be CLOSED on Saturday Dec. 25 & Sunday, Dec. 26. Waste Sites will be OPEN instead on the following Monday: Waste Site Address Monday, Dec 27, 2010 Flower Station.................... 770 Hills of Peace Road ................................... 3 p.m. - 5 p.m. Lanark Village .................... 115 Forbes Road .............................................. 9 a.m. - 1 p.m. McDonald’s Corners .......... 800 10th Con. Dalhousie .................................. 8 a.m. - 12 p.m. Middleville .......................... 4686 Wolf Grove ............................................... 3 p.m. - 6 p.m. Robertson Lake ................. 3962 South Lavant Road .................................. 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Watson’s Corners .............. 2240 3rd Con. Dalhousie ................................. 2 p.m. - 5 p.m. Snye Road ......................... 171 Snye Road ................................................. 12 p.m. - 4 p.m.

Waste Sites will be CLOSED on New Year’s Day and open with regular Sunday hours on January 2, 2011. Curbside collection service for household waste and blue box recycling will take place as usual in Lanark Village on Friday Dec 24 and Dec 31. MCDONALD’S CORNERS REUSE CENTRE We’re short on weather-proof winter storage space - please do not bring large/bulky items until spring. This doesn’t mean you can’t ‘still give it away!’ Post a notice at the Reuse Centre with your name, phone, & description of the item you have for reuse, and we’ll do what we can to find it a home. The Lanark Era also offers FREE REUSE ADS (if no cash changes hands.) Bulky items can be disposed of at the Middleville Waste Site. SMALL ITEMS STILL ACCEPTED AT REUSE CENTRE! (Kitchen, household, clothing, music, games, books, toys, sports gear, etc.) Come and check out the Christmas ornaments and gift ideas!

NOTICE Snow Removal 2010-11 The Township of Lanark Highlands will not be responsible for damages to mailboxes, newspaper boxes or parked vehicles where the said boxes or vehicles interfere with the snowploughing of Township roads. Parking of vehicles on Township roads and village streets from 12 midnight to 7 a.m. will not be permitted from Nov. 1, 2010 to Apr. 1, 2011. The Prohibition of parking applies to the entire road right-of-way, normally 10m (33’) from the centre of the road. It is an offence under the Ontario Highway Traffic Act to push snow onto or across a Township road or street. The removal of such snow piles by the Township will be charged to the adjacent property owner. For further information contact: Township of Lanark Highlands Scott Cameron, Public Works Superintendant 75 George Street, Lanark, ON, K0G 1K0 T: 613-259-2398 ext. 239 • F: 613-259-2291 E: scameron@lanarkhighlands.ca www.lanarkhighlands.ca

Municipal Office Closure The Municipal Office will be closed for the holidays starting Monday, December 20, 2010 and will reopen on Monday, January 3, 2011.

Council Meeting Schedule: Tuesday, Dec. 14 at 2:30 p.m. – Committee of the Whole – Councillor Orientation Thursday, Dec. 16 at 7 p.m. – Zoning By-law Amendment Public Meeting Thursday, Dec. 16 – Council following Zoning By-law Amendment Public Meeting Thursday, Dec. 16 – Special Committee of the Whole –Orientation / Budget following Council Meeting

ROAD EMERGENCY PAGER 1-888-235-9711 Please call this number only in case of a road-related emergency or potential danger that requires immediate attention as responding to the pager requires the carrier to interrupt their normal activity (i.e. snowplowing, grading etc.) to find a land telephone or location where a cell phone works. General requests for information will not be provided via this number.


PAGE 4 - THE PERTH COURIER - December 9, 2010

COMMUNITY NEWS

Bob Spelled Backwards is a musical family affair The Sullivan clan gives new meaning to making music a family affair. Danny Sullivan and Kathy Dorner are members of the band Bob Spelled Backwards, with three of their children, Margaret Sullivan, 23, Noah Sullivan, 16, and Japhy Sullivan, 14. The family has been playing together as Bob Spelled Backwards for about a year. “Margaret got her bass last Christmas and we’ve just been experimenting with stuff with the boys,” Danny said. “Kathy and I could never get the band we wanted so we grew our own.” Danny, 52, and Kathy, 48, previously played together in a group called the Dharma Bums in Windsor, Ont. “Family dynamics add something,” Danny said. “Band dynamics can be touchy anyways, when you add the family it can be challenging, but it can be lots of fun. The nice thing for us is that our kids’ taste (in music) is similar.” Each family member has a wide array of musical talent. Danny writes songs and sings, Kathy plays guitar, autoharp, keyboards and oboe. Margaret is a singer/ songwriter and plays bass and guitar, Noah plays guitar, bass and mandolin and Japhy plays fiddle, mandolin and bass. All of the children have received music lessons from a variety of local musicians, including Joey Wright and Peter Bigras. The Sullivan family is set to perform as Bob Spelled Backwards on Jan. 22 at the MERA schoolhouse in McDonalds Corners. “We’re called Bob Spelled Backwards for a reason,” Danny said. “Some of our favourite songwriters are called Bob.

Other than the obvious ones like Bob Dylan, Bob Carpenter was another big influence on me.” Danny said the band’s influences include a variety of musicians in many musical styles. “We try not to box ourselves into a genre,” he said. “So we take things from all kinds of music and sash them together.” “Japhy brings a little blue grassy sound and Noah throws in the electric guitar if it gets too country,” Kathy said. Danny said that one of his favourite musical memories was performing as a member of the Dharma Bums. “When Kathy and I were performing as the Dharma Bums we were singing a Bob Carpenter song and there was a woman in the front row with tears streaming down her face,” he said. “To me it was a really significant moment to feel, like I made some sort of connection. This was like 15 to 20 years ago, but it sticks out in my mind. “It was an unusual reaction. Applause is one thing, but when you know you’ve had that sort of emotional connection…” he added, trailing off. Kathy’s favourite musical memory was when the family put on a house concert over the summer at their home on Meadow Lane Court near Fallbrook. “It was the first time we pulled ourselves together to do this,” she said. “There were things that we knew weren’t perfect, but at the same time it was something we could be fairly proud of and built up some sort of momentum.” All three of the younger Sullivan band members hope to have a career in the music industry, and Danny and Kathy are hoping it will help give them their starts. “In a lot of ways the band is an umbrella or a launching pad,” Danny said. “Kathy and I have been doing this for a lot of years.

They (Noah, Japhy and Margaret) For us to work at this together and pay some dues in a little have more interest in having means that they will get some easier way than if they were on long-term careers as musicians. experience, work up some chops their own.”

Bob Spelled Backwards band members practised a few songs in the Sullivan family living room on Sunday, Nov. 14. All the band members are members of the Sullivan Family. From left: Kathy Dorner, Danny Sullivan, Noah Sullivan, 16, Japhy Sullivan, 14, and Margaret Sullivan, 23. Andrew Snook photo

A poetic journey through history BY DESMOND DEVOY desmond.devoy@metroland.com A local author’s 14-year writing odyssey has resulted in a book of poems about her family’s FrenchCanadian history. “It was a labour of love. It was something I had to do,” said Claudia Coutu Radmore, a sixyear resident of Carleton Place, who called Sharbot Lake home for 20 years before that. Born and raised in Montreal, Radmore was a teacher for 40 years in Ontario, Quebec and the South Pacific. Now retired, a new academic endeavour piqued

her interest, which launched the poetry collection. In 1891, one of her ancestors compiled a family history, which was handed down to Radmore. “Those old French-Canadian names, I was fascinated with them,” she said. “I knew very little of my French-Canadian history. I had to research that.” Radmore found she enjoyed delving into the settler days of New France. “I just love it, and I keep finding new and exciting things to write about,” she said of her research experiences. In fact, the front cover of her book

boasts a map from the late 17th century of the part of what is now Quebec, where her ancestors settled. Radmore was dealing with a large sweep of history, which is partly why she chose poetry to present her story. “I find that poetry compresses. You can get a lot more emotion in a short space (with poetry),” said Radmore. “You either get a huge book…or you put it into poetry.” She tried a wide variety of styles in her book, though she admitted that some of her poems do look like prose.

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BY ANDREW SNOOK andrew.snook@perthcourier.com


December 9, 2010 - THE PERTH COURIER - PAGE 5

COMMUNITY NEWS

Perth actress wins big for the second time at festival BY KASSINA RYDER kassina.ryder@perthcourier.com When Joanna McAuley tried out for the part of an 85-year-old woman with dementia, she never imagined she would actually get the part. “I practically had a heart attack when I got the role,” McAuley said. “I really wanted to do the role justice, and I thought, ‘how am I ever going to carry this off ?’” McAuley won the Mae Carmichael Award for best actress during the Eastern Ontario

Drama League One-Act Play Festival last month. She played 85-year-old Laura Cunningham, a former actress suffering from Alzheimer’s disease, in the play The Last Act is a Solo. “This play meant a great deal to me,” McAuley said. “It was a very serious piece of drama. The play was incredibly close to my heart.” Laurel Smith was the adjudicator during the festival. She said McAuley’s portrayal of Cunningham earned her the win. “Especially in the latter half of

the play, she reached emotional depths that were very moving,” Smith said. “Also, her ability to be subtle in her depiction of the aging I was very impressed with. Those were the two particular things that struck me.” McAuley said playing an elderly woman was arduous, but the audience’s response to the play was a reward in itself. “My character was…dying and suffering from dementia so it was a very big challenge, which I took to heart,” she said. “I had a lot of really good response, so that in itself was the award.” Smith said McAuley’s attitude toward her fellow actors also contributed to her decision. “She also worked with other

actors very well,” she said. When her name was announced during the awards ceremony the day after the festival, three tables full of supporters from Perth erupted in a “deafening roar,” McAuley said. “Laurel said my name and I just closed my eyes and I couldn’t believe it,” she said. “That award went to everybody in Perth not just me.” The play wasn’t originally planned to be shown at the festival, McAuley said. Another Perth play, My Narrator, was already scheduled to perform, but a theatre group from Merrickville had to pull out of the competition so The Last Act is a Solo got in as well.

“We got in late and under the wire and not at all were we supposed to be in it,” she said. “That was phenomenal, too.” McAuley, an untrained actress, has participated in about 15 plays in Perth. The win is the second award McAuley has received for her acting. She won the Pauline Grant Award in the same festival last year for her role as Nola in the play Would You Like a Cup of Tea? While she appreciates the awards she has won, McAuley said she acts in local plays simply for the joy of performing. “The people who do community theatre do it because they love it, and I love it,” she said.

DONATION TO HOSPITAL Perth resident Joanna McAuley displays the Mae Carmichael award The Smiths Falls site of the Perth and Smiths Falls District Hospital received a donation of $10,000 from for best actress she won during the Eastern Ontario Drama League the Township of Drummond/North Elmsley on Tuesday, Nov. 30. From left: Todd Stephaniuk, Margaret One-Act Play Festival last month. Kassina Ryder photo Ashworth, Drummond/North Elmsley Township reeve Aubrey Churchill and Lise Smith. Andrew Snook photo

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Drop off your photos to: Brenda Watson, Perth Courier, 39 Gore St. E., Perth 613-267-1100 or by e-mail to brenda.watson@metroland.com or Carol Nixon, Canadian Gaze e, 53 Bridge St., Carleton Place, 613-257-1303 or by e-mail to carol.nixon@metroland.com

For ONLY $40 HST Included.

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Place your baby’s photo in the January 20 issue of the Canadian Gaze e, Perth Courier and Smiths Falls This Week. DEADLINE: Thursday, January 13, 2011

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Perth Courier Canadian Gazette Carleton Place • Almonte

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Proudly serving the communities of Carleton Place, Mississippi Mills and Beckwith since 1867

Nursing: a vocation that can change the world around you hospital stay attuned to patients’ needs, they are busy changing the world around them.

Ottawa, November 30, 2010 I spent much of my youth in rural France, surrounded by friends and neighbours whose parents were often obsessed with perpetuating traditional, often stereotypical, roles for men and women. It was not uncommon to hear “men have careers, and women have jobs, until they find a man who has a career.” That’s why I was inspired by women whose attitude said “to hell with tradition, I have a vocation, and I will turn it into a life-long career”. As it happens, I married one. My wife Amy is managing an impressive career in Canada’s public service. Through her, I’ve built family ties with two other women, my mother-in -law and my sister-inlaw, who have a different vocation. Linda and Sarah are nurses. They defy old stereotypes. In addition to caring for patients on their wards, facilitating the work of doctors and other health professionals, and enabling the

This level of commitment – though exceptional – is not entirely unusual for nurses. Three weeks ago, led by Chief Nursing Executive, Dr. Ginette Rodger, close to 400 nurses from The Ottawa Hospital celebrated a major career milestone achieved in 2010. Some completed a Master’s Degree. Some moved from a Registered Practical Nurse to a Registered Nurse role (with the additional clinical responsibilities that this entails). Others presented research to healthcare conferences in Canada and abroad. Still more obtained recognition from peers and patients for their compassionate care.

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Nicolas Ruszkowski VP, Communications Ottawa Hospital

All have one thing in common. They make the hospital a better place. The next time a doctor cures you thanks to their skills, technique, or technology, take a look around. Chances are more than a few nurses made your experience possible along the way. Nicolas Ruszkowski is VP Communications and Outreach at The Ottawa Hospital. Each week, he will share behind-the-scenes insight from the hospital. E-mail him at nruszkowski@toh.on.ca

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Nicolas Ruszkowski

Linda moved from nursing, to educating nurses, to designing programs to educate nurses, to helping schools design programs to educate nurses. She did this while raising two daughters, making a home with her husband and anchoring the family life of her 5 siblings. As if that wasn’t enough, she’s spent her retirement sitting on boards, seeing to the quality of health services.


PAGE 6 - THE PERTH COURIER - December 9, 2010

EDITORIAL OUR OPINION

New beginnings for local councils and taxpayers

A

new year (almost), a new council. Smiths Falls, Montague and other local council chambers are experiencing some turnover this new term. Some long-time council members are handing over the reins to new hands, while others are returning to their seats or moving up as leaders. As the new year approaches, resolutions are often made. With a new roster in most municipalities, many promises have been made, many focused on issues such as transparency and openness. Communication is a two-way street. Comments have been made by council hopefuls in the election race that seeing more faces in the council chambers would make a big difference. Residents want to know what is going on in their municipalities and where their tax dollars are being spent. Councils need to make sure a number of methods are used to relay messages and show what they have been up to. Newspapers, municipal and local websites, advertising at local gathering points and mail are all great ways to let people know what is happening in the council chambers. However, that is not enough. During the non-election season, galleries in council chambers often look deserted, save for a few regulars. Committee meetings are where discussions happen – it’s where the meat of the issue takes place. So why wait until you feel an issue is a problem? Municipalities are required to post council agendas three business days prior to the meetings. Agendas can be picked up at municipal offices or viewed on town/township websites at that time. Take advantage of the resources and stay up to date on municipal happenings. Better yet, municipalities offer opportunities to be part of committees who make recommendations to council. Is heritage or recreation important to you? Check out the committee and see if it’s right for you. Most importantly, be aware. Don’t be afraid to ask questions at any time of the year. Councils have promised openness and transparency – take them up on that offer.

Local Landmark In this space each week, we will feature a photo of local interest. Be the first to correctly identify the location or item in the picture by emailing editor@perthcourier.com with the subject line, “Local Landmark,” and your name will be printed in next week’s paper! Marilyn Emery correctly identified last week’s landmark as the bandstand behind the town hall. This week’s landmark is named after a flying mythical creature.

W

hen things go wrong, I tend to do what most mature adults do – I look for someone to blame. As I stood atop the extension ladder, my glove stapled to the front of my house and shattered Christmas lights below, I knew exactly who to blame – the good folks at PBS. Two hours earlier, I was in my recliner under a mountain of potato chip crumbs, TV remote in hand. Then it happened. Halftime. Goodbye NFL. Hello PBS. Normally I’m not a big fan of PBS – if groveling for money for 15 minutes out of every half-hour of programming isn’t enough reason to switch the channel, the painfully dull lineup of shows sews it up. But alas, even a blind squirrel finds an acorn now and then. At first I was drawn in by the way the movie was filmed –one glimpse told me it was from the 1960s. I had flashbacks to those old 60-second CBC spots – Hinterland, Who’s Who. But there was no wily ptarmigan or surly muskox. Only the elusive inspiration. Entitled Alone in the Wilderness, it was a story of Dick Proenneke, a man who, at the age of 51, moves to the remotest part of Alaska to live off the land. He brings a minimal number of possessions, but a wealth of creativity and knowledge. He films himself daily to let others experience his new life as it unfolds. He uses basic hand tools – many made by his own hand – to literally carve a place for himself in the wilderness. He

39 Gore Street East, Perth, ON, K7H 1H4 T: 613-267-1100 • F: 613-267-3986 • www.yourottawaregion.com Vice President & Regional Publisher Chris McWebb chris.mcwebb@metroland.com 613-221-6201

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Honourable Malcolm Cameron Member of the Baldwin-La Fontaine cabinet, leader of the Clear Grit Movement, champion of temperance and founder of the Courier.

The contents of this newspaper are protected by copyright and may be used only for your personal, non-commercial purposes. All other rights are reserved and commercial use is prohibited. Permission to republish any material must be sought from the relevant copyright owner.

Alaskan inspiration

Jason MARSHALL The Way It Is builds a log cabin, complete with hand-carved door hinges and latches. He makes his own furniture, cuts and splits countless cords of firewood and builds a stone fireplace. And the list goes on. After two hours, Dick Proenneke’s adventures had given me an injection of inspiration and energy. If he could catch his own food and build a cabin with nothing more than a toothbrush and a pine cone, then I could at least get off the couch and hang the Christmas lights. Besides, the potato chip bag was empty. I was so inspired that I had visions of climbing to the roof of my house on a ladder I would carve from a tree in my backyard, using the jawbone of a moose as a knife. However, with a shortage of moose in my neighbourhood, I decided to simply grab the aluminum ladder from my shed – but I did so without turning on the light.

Who knows what kind of danger I may have encountered in that dark garage? So with the ladder propped up against my house (a building I will refer to as my “cabin”), I was ready to show off my survival skills in the dangerous world of exterior illumination. But my resolve would soon be tested as I had to hike for what seemed like an eternity to the furthest reaches of my basement and stalk the elusive Christmas decorations. I spotted the box of lights perched on a distant shelf and using only my stealth and smarts (and a stepstool from Giant Tiger), managed to capture them singlehandedly. I reached in the box and pulled out 13 strings of lights, knotted into a ball roughly the size of a Hyundai. I was even more amazed at what Dick Proenneke had accomplished – editing out curse words. I don’t live in a barren part of Alaska, but it’s amazing how many times the F-word will echo on a cold December afternoon. Another obstacle to overcome – I couldn’t find the spare bulbs. Or the staple gun. Or the staples. But I had the motivation of Dick Proenneke in my corner. I fought on. I found the staple gun and the staples – and managed to attach my glove to the cabin. Damn you, PBS. Then I had a revelation. A vision, if you will. At that precise, gloveless moment, I knew exactly why Dick Proenneke had moved to Alaska. There are no Christmas lights where there is no electricity.

Meltdown postponed

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his time of year is a killer. Groom-boy said to me the other day, “You haven’t had your annual meltdown yet.” Unfortunately, he wasn’t kidding. It’s true, though, I haven’t. Every year in November and December all of my clients band together and give me lots of work to do. While this is, of course, a great and marvellous thing for which I am extremely grateful, it also means lots of deadlines overlap. Throw in the fact that I teach part-time at Algonquin and the end of the semester (December) brings with it copious piles of marking, and it can be a bit stressful. Most years I handle it with sheer professionalism and composure. That means I only break down sobbing at home, and usually only once. Maybe twice. Oh, and did I mention Christmas? No, I didn’t! Why? Because around here I usually don’t have time to think about it until Dec. 23, or so. (By the way, your card will be late, if it gets sent at all.) Now, I know, boo hoo hoo. This is a busy time of year for everyone. There are lots of year-end work-related projects that need to be finished, tied in with school concerts and staff parties and baking and cards and shopping and life and spending most of your weekends doing laundry so you can afford to pay your hydro bill.... Oh, wait. That last one might be a separate column for another day. Anyway, the point is, I’m not complaining. OK, I guess I am, but I mean it in the nicest way. Or something. I consider myself to be rea-

Stephanie

GRAY Past Deadline sonably organized, but I have never done well when it comes to Christmas shopping. When one considers the fact this deadline crunch of mine happens every single year and has for a good decade, you’d think I would be smart enough to plan ahead and do the bulk of my shopping by October. Same goes for Christmas cards – get on it, girlfriend! For some reason, though, I just can’t make myself do it. I think there are a few reasons for this. First, I work better under pressure. Actually, wait. It’s true that I do, but I have to say that wears a bit thin after a while. The thrill of the all-nighter to get a job done – or even just staying up to the middle of the night – lost its charm around the same time the kids started waking me up in the night. I have enough people keeping me awake – I don’t need to be strapped to my computer at all hours, too.

Easier said than done. Secondly, I used to put a lot of thought into Christmas gifts and try to come up with neat, creative ideas for everyone on the list – even if it was fairly close to the big day. I’m not sure when that changed. Possibly I was overcome with the feeling that everyone already has everything they need, but I also suspect my creativity waned around the same time computers and short people started keeping me up until all hours. I think at some point that section of my brain said, “Forget this noise! If she won’t let me sleep I’m going to skip town. You’re on your own, lady!” So now? Lots of gift cards. Lastly, I usually need snow to inspire me to shop early. Sometimes this isn’t a problem, but often we just don’t get the snow, so in those years no one gets presents. Ha! This year we’ve got a little snow, so I should get to it. I guess I can’t blame climate change for my disorganization. Somehow that doesn’t seem cool, anyway. In November a friend and I had occasion to do some shopping for something unrelated to Christmas, but we took the opportunity to squeeze in a little festive shopping, too. So even though I am not even remotely close to finished, I have at least started before Dec. 23. So although there is still no Christmas baking done and no cards are written, there is at least that one small victory. Maybe this means I can skip my annual meltdown this year. That’s fantastic because nobody needs to see that.


December 9, 2010 - THE PERTH COURIER - PAGE 7

OPINIONS

The best of the best in cameras and gadgets

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s 2010 draws to a close, many photo magazines are publishing their opinions on what are the best products of the year. I thought I would share what the mags are saying with my own two cents worth thrown in for good measure. Let’s start with the DSLR category. These are the largest and most flexible of all cameras due to tons of interchangeable lenses and all kinds of accessories. The Canon Rebel T2i has to be right up there, along with the EOS 60D, Nikon D7000, D3s and D3100. Pentax, often overlooked, has the excellent K-x, a reasonably-priced beginner’s DSLR. Next, according to size, comes the category without a name. These are the Micro 4/3- type models, smaller than DSLRs, but bigger than any

point-and-shoot. They all have interchangeable lenses and almost match DSLRs in quality, but without the size and weight. Some call this group ILC, which stands for ”interchangeable lens compact.” Makes sense. Panasonic’s Lumix G2 has been nominated for camera of the year. Other good choices in this category are the Olympus E-PL1 and the Sony NEX-5. An oddball category contains two unusual cameras. The Sony Alpha 55 is like a DSLR, but has a semi-transparent mirror for fast autofocus, and uses a high quality electronic viewfinder. The Ricoh GXR follows a different path altogether, having interchangeable modules rather than lenses. Definitely different and not all photo stores carry them. Moving right along to the

brother, the G12. Panasonic’s LX5 is another top performer which will accept an optional clip-on viewfinder. I hesitate to recommend the Nikon P7000 until they fix the slow RAW performance problem. Need an excellent camera to use in terrible weather, not worrying if it gets wet or dropped? The Pentax W90 is freeze-proof, can be submerged in water to six metres and taken to the beach or out in the snow without worry. It’s very small and comes in several colours. Software. If we’re serious about what comes after pressing the shutter, we need a program for organizing and tweaking our photos. Adobe Photoshop Elements 9 would be my pick for software of the year. The program is reasonably priced and

Graeme

CRABB Camera Corner advanced compact category, Canon gets the nod for its tiny but powerful S95 and its bigger

does most of what Photoshop CS5 does, as far as the typical shooter is concerned. My next article will be exclusively about Elements 9. Mac users have the very fine Apple Aperture 3, which also does a great job with video clips. I’ll wrap up with an oddball gadget that’s super inexpensive. It’s called ShutterBuddy and attaches to the front of any camera. What’s it for? Catching the attention of babies in order to photograph them. Apparently based on scientific research. Haven’t tried it, but for 15 bucks you can’t go wrong. Take all of the foregoing with a grain of salt. The best camera is the one that works for you and the one you have with you when that great photo op appears. Click!

Do you have an opinion you’d like to share? We’d love to hear about it. Email your letters to the editor to editor@perthcourier.com. Please include your name and a phone number, for verification purposes. It’s that easy!

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Show your Christmas spirit through song Come out and enjoy the long-time tradition of the Perth Citizens’ Band’s annual Christmas concert on Tuesday, Dec. 14 at 7:30 p.m. at St. James Anglican Church in Perth. The band has been performing Christmas concerts at the church since the 1920s. This year’s guests will be Perth town crier Brent McLaren and the Women of the Tay under the direction of Mary Ellen Grigor. The audience is invited to sing-a-long so make yourself heard, and fill the church with Christmas cheer! Admission is $5 per person or $10 per family. For more information, contact 613-256-4221 or visit www.perthband.ca

two-thirds of their income from farming. Nominations must be submitted by Dec. 15, 2010. The top candidates will participate in an interview and presentation process at the regional event to be held in Ajax, Ont. from March 10-12. More information about OYF can be found on the website www.oyfontario.ca. If you have questions about the nomination process, please contact Karen Daynard at kdaynard@sympatico.ca or 519-8362583.

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**0% purchase financing available on 2011 Kia Soul for up to 36 months on approved credit (OAC). 0% purchase financing available on 2010 and 2011 Kia Rio models for 84 months on approved credit (OAC). x “No Payments Until Spring 2011” (120 day payment deferral) applies to purchase financing offers on all new 2010 and 2011 Kia models on approved credit (OAC). No interest will accrue during the first 90 days of the finance contract. After this period interest starts to accrue and the purchaser will repay principal and interest monthly over the term of the contract.WWin up to $10,000 towards your purchase or lease of any new 2010/2011 Kia model. No purchase necessary. Contest open to Canadian residents with a valid driver’s license who have reached the age of majority in their province of residence. Contest closes January 3rd, 2011. Credit awards are tax-inclusive and can only be applied to the purchase or lease of new 2010 and 2011 Kia vehicles delivered out of dealer stock on or before January 3rd, 2011. All participants will receive an award consisting of a credit award in an amount varying from $500 to $10,000. Not all awards have the same odds of winning. Potential award recipients must correctly answer a skill-testing question. Other restrictions may apply, please see your Kia dealer for full contest rules. ‡Cash purchase price for 2011 Soul 1.6L MT (SO550B) is $15,679 and includes a cash credit of $2,000, delivery and destination fees of $1,650, OMVIC fee, environmental fee and air tax (where applicable) based on the Manufacturer Suggested Retail Price of $15,995. ÙCash savings vary by model and trim. All offers exclude licensing, registration, insurance, PPSA, applicable taxes and variable dealer administration fees (up to $699).+ Highway/city fuel consumption for 2011 Soul 1.6L MT (SO550B) is 6.3L (45 MPG)/7.7L (37 MPG). The actual fuel consumption of these vehicles may vary. These estimates are based on the Government of Canada’s approved criteria and testing methods. Refer to the Government of Canada publication EnerGuide Fuel Consumption Guide. ^2010 Kia Soul awarded the Top Safety Pick by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety. Visit www.iihs.org for full details. >2011 Consumer’s Digest Best Buy Award awarded to the 2011 Kia Soul and 2011 Kia Sorento. Visit www.consumersdigest.com for full details. ° The Bluetooth® word mark and logo are registered trademarks and are owned by Bluetooth SIG, Inc. Some vehicles advertised may include optional accessories or after-sale equipment and may not be exactly as shown. Information in this advertisement is believed to be accurate at the time of print. Some conditions apply to the $500 / $750, Grad Rebate Program / Kia Mobility Program. See dealer for details. Information in this advertisement is believed to be accurate at the time of print. For more information on our 5-year warranty coverage, visit kia.ca or call us at 1-877-542-2886. Offers end January 3rd, 2011. KIA is a trademark of Kia Motors Corporation.

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Nominate a young local farmer Here’s your chance to recognize someone with the title of the 2011 Ontario Outstanding Young Farmer. We are seeking people who contribute to the community, who seek new opportunities, and who generally are assets to Ontario’s agri-food industry. Anyone can nominate a young farmer/farm couple/farm partnership for the award. The eligibility requirements are simply: • Must be between the ages of 18 and 39. • Must operate a farm. • Must derive a minimum of

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Being a Habs fan growing up, a didn’t have a lot of reasons to cheer for Billy Smith, but I always thought of him as one of the greatest goalies of all time. Needless to say, I was happy to see that The Hockey News agreed with me and rated Smith one of the top 20 goaltenders of all time in its recent Top 100 players of All-Time by Position collector’s edition. I thought this would the excuse I’ve been looking for since coming to Perth to interview the New York Islanders top all-time goaltender; unfortunately when I called the Islanders franchise and requested an interview with Smith, they told me they didn’t know how to contact him anymore. So if anyone knows how I could get in contact with him for an interview, feel free to drop me a line.

the term 2011-2014. To qualify, applicants must be a Canadian citizen and a resident of the Town of Perth. Interested applicants are asked to complete and submit an “Application to Serve on a Committee of the Council of the Town of Perth,” (located on the Town’s website – www.perth.ca) to the Town Clerk, 80 Gore St. East, by December 17th, 2010. For further information please call Lauren Walton, Town Clerk, at 613-267-3311 Ext. 2239.

Town approves Free Downtown Parking for Christmas 2010 From November 27th to December 31st, 2010 the Town of Perth is providing holiday shoppers with allday free parking in the following downtown Municipal Parking Lots: Wilson Street Lot; Code’s Mill Lot; Museum Lot; Chamber of Commerce Lot and the Basin Parking Lot. Parking at street meters beyond the Downtown Core is still free with a maximum of two hours permitted on the street. A vehicle may not be re-parked on a street in the Downtown Core within a five hour period of the first parking. If visitors wish to shop for extended periods we encourage all shoppers to use the Municipal Parking Lots. The Town of Perth enforces overnight parking re-

strictions to ensure the most efficient snow removal by Environmental Services staff. Winter parking restriction signs are erected at all entrances to the Town. Bylaw #3961 (as amended) states that no person shall park a vehicle between 0001 hours (12:01am) and 0600 hours (6:00am) during the period from November 20 to March 31 inclusive upon any highway or boulevard under the jurisdiction of the Town of Perth…” and further states that “no person shall park a vehicle between the hours of 0001 hours (12:01am) and 0600 hours (6:00am) in any public parking lot except for vehicles parked in designated areas displaying valid parking permits as described in Part IV(3).” Parking lot permits may be purchased at Town Hall. Vehicles parked in contravention may be ticketed and towed.

Landfill Holiday Hours & Waste Collection Schedule The Perth Landfill Site is typically open Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Fridays from 8:00am to 4:30pm, and Saturday mornings from 8:00am to 12:00 noon. That schedule will change somewhat over the holidays, as follows. Please clip this chart and keep on hand for your reference. The Landfill Site is located at 666 Wildlife Road. Over the holiday season, residents are asked to follow the Waste Collection Schedule for their areas.

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PAGE 8 - THE PERTH COURIER - December 9, 2010

ENTERTAINMENT

The line-up for the next Perth’s Got Talent show is coming together, and it’s shaping up to be another memorable night of local entertainment. Tickets are already selling fast for the Jan. 15 show, and considering the last two shows sold out two weeks before show night, it’s wise to buy early. Paul Joyce, one of the producers of the local talent showcase, says the popularity of this show just keeps growing. “For the third edition of Perth’s Got Talent we’re putting together another incredible line up of local performers, including many young people who deserve to be seen and heard. As always, our audience will be amazed at the great talent in this area, and we’re proud to bring it to the stage of the Studio Theatre,� said Joyce. Just some of the performers who are already confirmed to appear include bluegrass recording artists Linda Grenier and Dave Tilson, a classical ensemble led by Brad Mills, dancers from the Perth School of Music, flutist Graham McVeety, singer/ storyteller Frank Morgan, young piano phenom Stephen Morgenstern, and fiddle sensation Wade Foster in an “appetite whetter� for his full-length concert on Jan. 21, which is part of the Songs From the Valley concert series. Other performers will be announced shortly. Of course, there’s still plenty of room for people to come out and audition for the show. “This is a community showcase,� said Joyce. “Just like last time, we’re expecting the auditions to turn up some undiscovered gems. It’s one of the

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aspects of the show that makes it so exciting.â€? Anyone who would like the chance to be part of this great local showcase is welcome to come to the Affordable! Studio Theatre to audition on Dec. 13. Please call ClassiďŹ ed Advertising 613-326-0218 to arrange an audition time slot. Works For You! This edition of Perth’s Got Talent will support the Studio Theatre’s “Give Our Theatre A Liftâ€? CALL campaign, which is raising funds to install an 1.877.298.8288 elevator, making the theatre more accessible to the entire community. FAX Tickets for Perth’s Got Talent are on sale now and they’ll definitely be a hot item. Tickets are $20 at 613.224.2265 The Bookworm, The Book Nook, and in person or by phone at Tickets Please (39 Foster St.), where a convenience fee applies. The phone number there is 613-485-6434.

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Sunday, Dec. 12 8 a.m. to 12 noon

By giving monthly to the Perth and District Food Bank I am helping to keep our community fed AND I get

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Visit thenightbeforethenightbeforexmas.com to pledge monthly and get your free cket! See you at the Legion on December 18th! Shelley Montreuil - Principal, OnCouRSS Web Solu ons

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Holiday Greetings


H

ave you heard? For all you lovers of traditional country music, check this out. Imagine Wade Foster, Steve Piticco and Bytown Bluegrass with Johnnie Richard and Neville Wells, each performing an evening of great country music from our musical Valley. Well, the secret’s out. Share this with all your friends. Studio Theatre and Stewart Park Festival are hosting this series, which will highlight these amazing musical talents. Foster, with his fiddling prowess, has become a household legend to anyone who’s witnessed him performing at many of the fiddle contests in the area, or more recently the release of his wonderful debut CD, Sounds Like Home. Foster has also backed Johnny Reid, Gail Gavin, Jeff Callery and Runaway Train and Ransom. He fiddles in the bands Doubleback and Urban – a Keith Urban tribute band – besides being a soughtafter studio musician. Foster’s versatility shines as he blends country, traditional, contemporary and Celtic rock. He’s been spreading his gifts, teaching fiddle locally since he was 15. We look forward to seeing him host the show on Jan. 21 at the Studio Theatre. We are blessed in this area that Piticco loves playing here. This multi-winner of the Canadian Country Guitarist of the Year, as well as many similar awards

you can get all three shows for the low price of $50, with tickets available at Tickets Please – 39 Foster St., Perth. Call 613-485-6434 or visit www.ticketsplease.ca.

In time for Christmas

Steve

TENNANT Musical Musings in Europe, has been described as playing his Telecaster guitar “like someone from another planet.” Whether with his band South Mountain or surrounded by other great players, he never ceases to amaze those who witness. On March 25, Piticco will host again at the Studio Theatre. Bytown Bluegrass from Ottawa, with Perthite Richard on fiddle and Valley favourite Wells, has been an in-demand band for more than 30 years in the Ottawa Valley. Stellar harmonies and sweet playing have taken them a long way. They will host on May 20 and are sure to light up the Studio Theatre. Here’s the best part, though. For those of you looking for Christmas gifts for your music lovers,

In this Christmas season, music often becomes an integral part of our celebrations, whether it’s carol singing, church choir special presentations, radio bombardment or special events in the area. Two such upcoming events are for all you dancers. Always a crowd favourite, Keith Glass and Twister are hosting a dance at the McDonalds Corners Agricultural Hall on Saturday, Dec. 11, at 8 p.m. Tickets are $15, with kids free. You’ll enjoy their great mix of dancin’ tunes that’ll guarantee the hall will be a-hoppin’. The Annual Night Before the Night Before – food bank fundraiser dance will be held at the Perth Legion on Saturday, Dec. 18, with Tell Mama and the Commuters providing the tunes for us dancing fools. Always a fun event, come and support a great cause. On a final note for the Christmas season, don’t forget to support your many local musicians by buying their CDs as gifts for your loved ones. On behalf of my family, we wish everyone a safe, enjoyable Christmas season. Support live music everywhere.

Enjoy the sounds of the Tay choruses this weekend “O Come All Ye Joyful!” is the invitation being extended to Perth and area concert-goers this year by the Women of the Tay and the Men of the Tay. The combined choruses are presenting their annual concert of Christmas music at 2 p.m. on Sunday, Dec. 12, at St. James’ Anglican Church on Drummond Street in Perth. Music directors Mary Ellen Grigor, of the Women of the Tay, and Carl Whitehouse, of the Men of the Tay, have been rehearsing their individual choruses and the combined 65-member chorus since September, following their appointments as interim direc-

tors earlier this year. Shelley McLaren, long-time director of the men’s chorus and director of the more-recently formed women’s chorus, is taking a sabbatical year to complete a pastoral assignment with husband Brent McLaren as part of a diaconate formation program of the Catholic church. The choruses have selected and prepared Christmas music from sources at home and around the world. The music of nine countries is represented in the concert program. Special settings of several classical and folk-based favourites will be performed by the choruses, as well as

contemporary arrangements of traditional carols, spirituals and popular standards. The program will also include several surprise novelty selections. Accompanying the choruses will be pianists Pamela Newton and Valerie Leavitt. Special guests will include the St. Paul’s United Church Handbell Choir and flautist/oboist Barb Martin. As is customary with these performances, admission is without charge. A freewill offering may be made to assist with the choruses’ expenses and the church’s ministry projects. Submitted by the Women of the Tay/Men of the Tay.

cting The Conne

Link

RECEPTIONIST / CLERICAL ASSISTANT Temporary Full-Time (approximately 8 months) (Posting #CS2010-011) MANDATE: Reporting to the Deputy Clerk in the Clerk’s Department, the Receptionist/ Clerical Assistant will perform reception duties, direct public/clients appropriately and provide clerical support to the Clerk’s Department to facilitate the operation of the department, in addition to providing clerical support to the Planning Approvals, Tourism and Emergency Services Departments. For further details including qualifications and application deadline, visit our website at: www.county.lanark.on.ca Lanark County employees value; honesty, respect, communication, accountability, positive attitude, collaboration and teamwork. If you embrace these values and you meet the position qualifications as found on our website, we look forward to receiving your résumé.

LANARK COUNTY HOUSING CORPORATION The Lanark County Housing Corporation in Smiths Falls is seeking a high energy, dynamic, hard working individual to fill the following regular full-time opportunity.

DIRECTOR OF LANARK COUNTY HOUSING CORPORATION Regular Full-Time (Posting No. LHC2010-004) MANDATE: Reporting to the Chief Administrative Officer of Lanark County Housing Corporation (LCHC), the Director of Lanark County Housing Corporation ensures effective management and administration of rent geared-to-income housing consisting of 25 projects and over 530 units in Lanark County. The Director of LCHC oversees the operation of the Housing Corporation in areas of Property Management-Landlord Tenant Relationships, Property Maintenance and Development, Administration, Human Resources, including Labour Relations, Finance, Purchasing and Information Technology. For further details including qualifications and application deadline, visit our website at: www.county.lanark.on.ca

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Songs from the Valley

December 9, 2010 - THE PERTH COURIER - PAGE 9

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PAGE 10 - THE PERTH COURIER - December 9, 2010

In pursuit of that massive bull moose

BRIGGS-JUDE Outdoors

needled conifers like a station master looking down the track on a misty morning. You’re both waiting for a massive dark form to come looming out of the shrouded background. A swamp sparrow clicks a few warning notes and you tense, wondering if that was a sign. Thirty yards behind you, your companion also strains his eyes in the silence. Twenty-four hours earlier, he had been in that same location alone. His appealing calls had summoned a giant bull moose and it had come crashing down from the pine ridge with all the daintiness of a runaway Zamboni going through the end boards and seats of an -BOE 6TF 1MBOOJOH BOE 1SPKFDU .BOBHFNFOU arena. Yet, when it had come out Contact Tracy for assistance with your of the woods severances and land use planning projects. into the bog, the moose moved as quietly as if

430138-48-10

Oso Township Hall, Sharbot Lake

Admission: Donation to the Food Bank

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Thursday, Dec. 9 – 1-8 p.m. Friday, Dec. 10 – 9-8 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 11 – 9-4 p.m.

as I stood rooted in that tamarack bog. Suddenly a loud “oooough” broke the silence close behind. I swung frantically around, only to discover my companion was busy with his birch horn again. The fact I was supposed to be his backup man, yet was out in front of him in the swamp, also caused more than a little concern. And the signal, if either of us spotted that big pussy-footing moose, was the tremolo whistle of the little screech owl. However, I told him on the way in, “If I see that big chunk of a Bullwinkle coming through the thicket in such a manner that I can’t get a good shot, I’ll yell from my stand. And the next time I yell, it’ll be from the top of the nearest jack pine.”

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the thundering Niagara cataract. Now to make matters worse, the bowman could no longer see to shoot accurately as the night closed around him. For him, the hunt was over. But if the hunt was called because of darkness by the man, the moose had other ideas. For that big bull moose, the hunt had really just begun. Now he would listen with those large radar-sensitive ears, and when he heard a twig snap, he would come with all his thousand pounds of massive strength to drive that rival bull away. He would unknowingly stalk the man, as he himself had been stalked, as he sought out the cow that had called an invitation. These thoughts came back to me

Nine Lessons & Carols in the Anglican Kings College Tra Tradition dition St. James Anglican Church (Drummond & Harvey) Sunday, Dec. 19, 2010 at 7:30 p.m. St. James Liturgical Choir St. Paul’s United Church Choir Choir Directors: Brad Mills and Peter Woodwark

431778

Art

on sponges. Blinking in disbelief, the man watched its huge bleached rack brushing through the greenery towards him. The big bull grunting softly was waiting for a reply as it stopped in the shrubbery some 50 yards away. The suspense was only heightened by the failing light. The hunter knew he must have a clear side sighting at even close range, if he was to release his razor-sharp broadhead. With the lengthening shadows now dictating his actions, the man grunted the call of a rival bull into the birch horn, hoping it would bring the animal closer and out in the open. The real bull answered the challenge by sending moss and twigs flying with its swinging rack. It attacked and de-branched a nine-foot evergreen leaving it only a shredded spar. The rampaging bull closed the gap to within 35 yards behind a clump of tag alders. His heart pounding with excitement, the hunter drew his compound bow to its full measure, trying hard to get a clear shot at that massive chest. And while in some ways he may have resembled the famous Hiawatha, he told me later he felt more like the legendary Maid of the Mist, poised at the brink of

431985

T

he land of the lordly moose is, for the most part, remote country. A place where present day logging roads fade into blind ruts, gravel washouts, and broken bridges. An area of bogs and river flats, crystal lakes and pine ridges. A landscape where blueberries and cranberries often struggle on the same mossy hummocks, and the mountain ash reach up in spindled clumps for a share of the mottled sunlight. It’s a land where the blackest sights are a burnt-out stump, a squawking raven, a foraging bear, or an overcast night. In this country, with a little effort, you can have speckled trout or spruce grouse for supper, fill a camera with wildlife photos, or, using a bow and arrow, play the survival game against North America’s largest forest animal. For eight days in a long-agolumbered section of real estate north of Massey, Ont., we did just that. Dodging rain squalls, we padded over the ridges, glassed the wetlands, and watched the forest below from high tree perches. The signs were there. Huge cattle-like prints in the moss or black muck along the river bank. Scratched and torn ground marks, bark-worn and broken trees showed that moose were in the area. So each morning and evening, the long, moaning call of the cow moose echoed across the wilderness as your companion worked his birch bark horn to perfection. It’s almost too quiet in the damp tamarack bog. Water squeezes around your boots as you shift your weight from one leg to the other. You’re peering through the greenery of soft-


December 9, 2010 - THE PERTH COURIER - PAGE 11

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HUNTER SAFETY Canadian Firearms Course. Courses and exams held throughout the year. Free course if you organize a group; exams available. Wenda Cochran, 613-256WHITE CEDAR LUM- 2409. BER. Decking, fencing, all dimensions, rough HOUSES or dressed. Timbers FOR SALE and V-joints also available. Call Tom at McCann’s Forest Prod- $73,900 buys country ucts, 613-628-6199 or general store and large 10-room home. Financ613-633-3911. ing 4 1/2%. Gerry Hudson, 1-613-4491668, Sales RepresenWHOLESALERS tative, Rideau Town & Realty Ltd. Bro& TURKEY LOVERS Country kerage, 1-613-2735000.

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Charlie Brown’s Christmas Trees, open Nov. 27. Spruce and pine. Hot chocolate, treats. 12-5 p.m. daily; 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. weekends. 15855 Hwy. 7, 6km east of Perth. 613-264-8143. CHRISTMAS TREES, spruce, pruned, fresh cut when ordered for pick-up at the farm. $20. Call Erwin Cavanagh, 613-267-5111.

Cash for medium-size home on acreage for waiting client. Gerry Hudson, 1-613-4491668, Sales Representative, Rideau Town & Country Realty Ltd. Brokerage, 1-613-2735000. INDUSTRIAL COMMERCIAL SPACE

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FIREWOOD, dry, cut, split and piled between August of 2009 and March of 2010. $80 per face cord at the pile. Call Erwin Cavanagh, 613-267-5111. GERRY BLAIR & SON Dry firewood - ALL HARDWOOD. Cut, split and delivered. 613-259-2723 MIXED HARDWOOD, 8’ lengths, excellent quality, by the tandem load. We also purchase standing timber and hard or soft pulp wood; also, outdoor furnace wood available. Call 613432-2286.

MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS

Mill Music Over 700 Guitars in Stock Electronic & Acoustic Drums Keyboards Lighting P.A. Systems

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COLONEL BY. Fine adult apartments, close to County Fair Mall. 1 and 2 bedrooms, some with breakfast nook and 2 bathrooms, air conditioning, exercise room, party room, library, elevator. 613-2839650.

3 BEDROOM, well-maintained house, 1.5 bathrooms, full basement, hardwood floors, ideal for adults/ retirees. No smoking or pets, garage. Quiet, residential street, west end, close to downtown. Available Freshly renovated 2 apartment. Jan. 1. 613-928-2246. bedroom Available Dec. 1. Newly renovated 2 $775/month, utilities 613-264bedroom house. Yard included. and parking. $850/ 8143. month plus utilities. 613-264-8143. Ground-floor apartment on quiet street. 613PERTH: 3 bedroom 267-7184. house in town. Family, dining, rec room, 1 1/2 baths, garage. New Rogers Road afGas heat and hot wa- fordable housing apartter. Central air. 3 acre ment building. 1 bedlot. Stable. Available room apartments for Jan. 1/11. Call to dis- qualifying household incuss, 1-613-867-2046. come level. This is a non-smoking building. For more information, please call McLean Assoc. Property Managers at 613-264-0002. Newly renovated 1 bedroom apartment, downtown Perth. Fridge and stove included. $625/month plus hy1 bedroom apartment. dro. 613-264-0464. Downtown. $650 per month, utilities included. 613-267-6115. PERTH: 2 bedroom apartment in clean, quiet, security building. 1 BEDROOM APART- Newly renovated. MENT. Central loca- Fridge, stove, parking, tion, quiet, secure laundry facilities. building. Fridge, stove $715/month plus and water supplied. utilities. No dogs. 613No smoking, no pets. 349-9377. $600/month. 613267-2687. PERTH: 2 bedroom apartment. $680/ 2 bedroom apartment, month plus hydro. 30 located at the Old Bot- Mather Street. 613-326tling Works. $725/ 0903. month plus utilities. Laundry and parking available. 613-267- PERTH: 10 Craig St. 2 6115. bedroom apartment in quiet, clean, adult building. Fridge, stove, ASHLEY CHASE. parking and laundry inFine adult apart- cluded. $756/month ments overlooking plus utilities. Available the Tay River near immediately. 613-283downtown Perth. 5996. One and two bedrooms, some with breakfast nook and PERTH: 2 bedroom 2 bathrooms, air apartment, $795, conditioning, whirland bachelor apartpool, party room, liment, $495, parkbrary, elevator. ing included. Fresh613-267-6980. ly painted. Nonsmoking applicant only. No pets. First AVAILABLE DEC. 1. and last required. Heated one bedroom, Available immedisecond-floor apartment ately. 613-267including parking, yard 6980. and shared coin laundry facilities. $600. PERTH: Large 2 bed613-267-6315. room apartment. Central location. Fridge BACHELOR apartment. and stove provided. Fridge, stove and Heat, water and parkwater included. Laun- ing included. $780/ dry facilities and park- month. 613-264-0002. ing available. Dec. 1. 613-267-5651. PERTH: Two bedroom apartment, $680 per BACHELOR APART- month. One bedroom MENT, centrally lo- apartment, $500 per cated. Fridge, stove, month plus hydro. heat and water Clean, quiet building, supplied. No pets. seniors welcome, park$575/month. 613- ing, laundry facilities 267-2687. available. 613-9253046. CARSSRIDGE A P A R T M E N T S . SHAMROCK APARTLARGE 2 bedroom, MENTS. 1 bedroom $ 1 , 0 3 0 / m o n t h , apartment. Includes available immediate- heat. Available now. ly. In quiet, adult- $610/month. 613only security build- 264-8380. ing with laundry. Heat, hydro and cable included. 613Spacious renovated 2 283-9650. bedroom apartment in triplex. Quality building PERTH: 10 Craig St. and neighbourhood. Bachelor apartment. Gas heat. Large, private $495/month, utilities deck. New kitchen, extra. Laundry parking. flooring and paint. 4 Nice quiet, clean build- appliances. $795 plus 613-267ing. Available immedi- utilities. 4260. ately. 613-283-5996. APARTMENTS FOR RENT

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VACATION PROPERTIES

WILL PICK UP & REMOVE any unwanted cars, trucks, boats, snowmobiles, lawn tractors, snowblowers, etc. Cash paid for some. Peter, All Purpose Towing, 613797-2315, 613-5609042. www.allpurpose.4LIVING WITH OR you.ca NEAR a drinking problem? Contact Al-Anon J.C. or Al-Ateen, 613-2674848 or 613-267- LANDSCAPING & 6039.

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PERSONALS

AUCTIONS

HELP WANTED

FIREARMS AUCTION SATURDAY, Dec. 11, 9 A.M. At Switzer’s Auction Centre, 25414 Hwy. 62 South, Bancroft, Ont. From a large collection and several estates, antique, collectible commemoratives, target and hunting. Over 300 new and used rifles, shotguns, handguns, crossbows, antique rifles, muskets, pistols, knives. See our complete listing with pictures at: www. switzersauction. com and check back for regular updates. We still have room for your quality consignments in this and future sales. Paul Switzer, Auctioneer/Appraiser, 1-613-332-5581, 1800-694-2609 or email: info@swit zersauction.com

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LOVE! MONEY! LIFE! #1 psychics! 1-877478-4410. Credit cards/deposit. $3.19/ minute, 18+. 1-900783-3800. www.mys ticalconnections.ca WHERE ARE ALL THE GOOD MEN? For that matter, where are all the good women? MISTY RIVER INTRODUCTIONS has the answer. Become one of the thousands of people who have found love through us. w w w. m i s t y r i ve r i n tros.com, 613-2573531.

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PICTURES, PICTURES, PICTURES! If you have left a photograph with HANDYPERSON us within the past year and have not yet picked it up, please do so. The Perth Courier, FALL CLEAN-UP, snow removal, eavestrough 39 Gore St. E., Perth. and window cleaning, dump runs, painting, REUSE/RECYCLE carpentry, roofing. One call, we do it all. 613264-8143. OFFER: Sofa bed, mattress is in very good AFFORDcondition. 2 wing-back ROGER’S HANDYMAN chairs, suitable for cot- ABLE tage. Exercise walker. SERVICE. Reasonable rates. Indoor/outdoor 613-326-0478. jobs, painting included. OFFER: Wooden desk Call 7 a.m. - 10 p.m., and dryer. 613-264- 613-267-1183. 9000.

BUY IT. SELL IT.

DIGNITY HOUSE HOSPICE In Perth is seeking an RN or RPN for casual, on-call employment in our day hospice program. Please email résumés to: dignityhouseperth@gmail.com or fax to 1-613-6996504. Closing date for acceptance of résumés is Dec. 17, 2010.

LIVE-IN PART-TIME SUPERINTENDENT required for quiet apartment building in Perth. 613-2839650.

FIND IT.

COMING EVENTS

COIN AND STAMP SALE New location the RA CENTRE - 2451 Riverside Drive Sunday, Dec. 12, 9:30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m. Information: 613-7491847. mmacdc342@ rogers.com (Buy/ Sell).

NEEDED NOW: AZ DRIVERS & OWNER OPS. We seek professional, safety-minded drivers to join a leading international carrier with financial stability, competitive pay and benefits, great lanes, quality freight, on dry vans only. Brand new trucks available. Lease program available. Call Celadon Canada, Kitchener, 1-800-332-0518. www. celadoncanada.com

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SERVICES

PRINTING & DESIGN

OFFER: Kenmore 30” stove. Clean and working. 613-267-3547. MUSIC, DANCE INSTRUCTIONS

WORLD-CLASS DRUMMER (of Five Man Electrical Band) is now accepting students. Private lessons, limited enrolment, free consultation. Call Steve, 613831-5029. www.steve hollingworth.ca

COURSES

WELDING made fast and easy. Small evening classes, hands-on experience/learn cutting techniques/arc welding and M.I.G. T.I.G. course available. Certificate course, tax deductible. 613-4327932.

MORTGAGES & LOANS

$$MONEY$$. Consolidate debts, mortgages to 95%. No income, bad credit OK! Better Option Mortgage #10969. 1-800-2821169. www.mortgageontario.com

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Mortgage Solutions Purchases, consolidations, construction. Lower than bank posted rates (OAC). On-site private funds for credit issues, discharged bankrupts and BFS without proven income. Chase Financial 613-384-1301 Chase Financial o/b 835289 OntarioInc. Brokerage Licence #10876.

IS YOUR OBSESSION with food ruining your life? We can help. Overeaters Anonymous, meetings every Wednesday, 7 p.m., Perth Baptist Church, D’Arcy Street, back door. Info: Aprile, 613-2595536.

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Located at 99 B Dufferin Square – Suite 3, space is 12’ X 24’ with additional large shared reception area, lunch room, washroom, all very clean, quiet professional environment.

PUBLIC NOTICE

Sunny Spring Specials At Florida’s best beach SERVICES New Smyrna Beach. Stay a week or longer. Plan a beach wedding or family reunion. CERTIFIED MASON www.NSBFLA.com or 10 years experience, chimney re1-800-541-9621. pair and restoration, cultured stone, parging, repointing. Brick, block HEALTH & FITNESS and stone. Small/big job specialist. Free estiFATHERS’ SUPPORT mates. Work guaranand information line, teed. 613-250-0290. F.A.R.E., 613-2648143. SEND A LOAD to the IF YOU WANT TO dump, cheap. Clean up garage-sale QUIT drinking and clutter, need help, call Alcohol- leftovers or leaf and yard waste. 613-256ics Anonymous, 6134613. 284-2696.

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MORTGAGES & LOANS

FREE YOURSELF FROM DEBT, MONEY FOR ANY PURPOSE! DEBT C O N S O L I DAT I O N . First, second and third mortgages, credit lines and loans up to 90% LTV. Self-employed, mortgage or tax arrears. DON’T PAY FOR 1 YEAR PROGRAM! #10171 ONTARIO-WIDE FINANCIAL CORP. CALL 1888-307-7799. www. ontario-widefinan cial.com

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CL13935

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CL22335

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CL22023

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CL22162

MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS

INSURANCE


PAGE 12 - THE PERTH COURIER - December 9, 2010 HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

Skills Requirements: Education: High School Graduate Or Equivalent Experience Credentials (CertiďŹ cates, Courses, Licenses): Not Required Experience: Minimum 1year Experience In Similar Position Working With Heavy Equipment Languages: Speak English Work Setting: Cemetery, Landscape Maintenance Type Of Machinery: Backhoe, Tractor, Dump Truck, Heavy Duty Commercial Mower, Weed Trimmer/edger/roto-tiller, And Small Engine Equipment Position Duties: Supervise And Coordinate The Work Of Cemetery Labourers Including Cemetery Building / Road / Walkway / Maintenance Workers And Cremation Operators. Supervise And Coordinate Horticultural Maintenance Of The Properties Including Management Of Trees, Flowers And Lawns. Will Train Cemetery Labourers On Job Duties And Company Policies Including But Not Limited To Interment VeriďŹ cation. May Perform Duties Of Cemetery Labourer As Required. May Perform Additional Duties As Required For The Operation Of A Full Service Funeral And Memorial Facility Including Crematorium, Columbariums, Urn Gardens And Mausoleums On Three Properties Totalling 190 Acres (60 Acres, 120 Acres & 10 Acres). Responsible For The Coordination Of Logistics, Installation And Maintenance Of Monuments, Markers And Inscriptions With Third Party Suppliers. Work Conditions And Physical Capabilities: Repetitive Tasks, Physically Demanding, Combination Of Sitting, Standing, Walking, Bending, Crouching And Kneeling.

(DUO\ &KLOGKRRG (GXFDWRU

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6XEPLW UHVXPH E\ x 5LFKPRQG $UHD Submit resume by $XJXVW WK DW December 16th at x KRXUV SHU FDPHURQPIUF#KRWPDLO FRP cameronmfrc@hotmail.com RU )D[ WR ZHHN RQ or Fax: 613-998-9585 to )DPLO\ 2XWUHDFK 6DWXUGD\V Family Outreach &RRUGLQDWRU Coordinator x KUV

Thriving family practice ofďŹ ce looking for PART-TIME OFFICE NURSE (RPN or equivalent) Must be able to multitask in a fast-paced environment. Good communication skills essential. Responsibilities: the nurse will collect information from patients, recording medical health and history details. The nurse will take blood pressure, body temperature, respiration and heart rate, and other vital signs as needed. S/he will administer medicines and injections as prescribed by the physician, and may be present during physical examinations. The nurse will also be responsible for returning phone calls to patients, labs and insurance companies, preparing lab tests/ specimens and ďŹ lling out medical charts.

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HELP WANTED

How To Apply: Send Resume To: Pinecrest Remembrance Services Ltd. 2500 Baseline Road Ottawa, On K2c 3h9 Attention: Paul Or Fax Resume To: (613) 829-8357 CL22332

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BIRTHDAYS

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CL22387

Title: Groundskeeper Supervisor/ Cemetery Foreman (Noc: 8256) Terms Of Employment: Permanent, Full Time Salary: $18.00 To 19.50 Per Hour, 40 Hours Per Week (Increase To $19.50 Per Hour After 3 Months Service) BeneďŹ ts: Full Medical BeneďŹ ts Including Dental Package Life Insurance And Pension Contributions. Anticipated Start Date: January 17, 2011 LOCATION: Ottawa West

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Department: Advertising Department Location: Ottawa Are you looking for a fast-paced, creative and challenging work environment? Is working with energetic, passionate people focused on winning the right place for you? Metroland Media – Ottawa Region office has excellent opportunities for individual’s that are committed to building a career in sales; this is an entry level position with huge growth potential. You will be asked to produce results and devote time and effort required to consistently improve results. The candidate we seek will demonstrate exceptional abilities in... • Prospecting and closing customers with advertising sales opportunities. • Cold-calling new or non-serviced businesses in Ottawa and surrounding area. • Creative thinking style and an ability to problem-solve • Self-starter with loads of initiative who needs minimal direction • High energy and a positive attitude • Excellent verbal and written skills • Literate in computer skills including Microsoft Word, Excel • Driven for success • Excellent organizational skills

Base Salary Car Allowance Commissions Bonus incentive plan Benefits package and group RSP plan

Happy 2nd Birthday Reagy! December 7, 2010

Post Secondary Education an asset but not a pre-requisite.

The Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services seeks applicants to fill a vacancy on the Tay Valley Police Services Board The Tay Valley Police Services Board meets with the Ontario Provincial Police Detachment Commander as required to discuss policing priorities for the community.

We appreciate the interest of all applicants; however only those selected for an interview will be contacted Job Category: Sales

CL22191

Love always, Mommy & Daddy & all your family

Reagan Frizell

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Interested candidates are asked to forward their resumes to: Nancy Gour Metroland Media – Ottawa Region ngour@metroland.com

Alyssa Marguerite Bingley Dec. 8, 2010

Love, Mommy, Daddy & Aliyah

CL22391

This is a career position. You like to produce results and devote whatever time and effort is required to consistently produce improved results. Remuneration includes:

CL22408

Full-Time - Advertising Sales Representatives

You may also download a copy at

A booklet of commemorative verses is available for viewing at our ofďŹ ce to help you get through this difďŹ cult time.

Job Title:

CAREER TRAINING

www.communitynews.ca/memoriam

JOB POSTING

HAPPY 1st BIRTHDAY

BE A

Applicants should have an understanding of the role of a police services board in an Ontario Provincial Police contract location, good written and verbal communication skills, previous experience on boards or committees, experience as a community volunteer, and an awareness of local policing issues.

FACE

Residents of the Township of Tay Valley who are interested in serving on the Board may apply, quoting File Number PAS-10101, to:

AGAINST CANCER

IN THE FIGHT

Public Appointments Secretariat Room 2440, Whitney Block 99 Wellesley Street West Toronto ON M7A 1A1 Downloadable application form is available at www.pas.gov.on.ca or you may apply online.

Whether you’re looking to buy, sell, advertise, announce or recruit, the classiďŹ eds will serve you well.

Applications must be received by December 23, 2010, to be considered. Only applicants selected for an interview will be contacted.

1-877-298-8288 classiďŹ eds@yourottawaregion.com

BECAUSE CANCER IS IN YOUR COMMUNITY, SO ARE WE. Your donation is needed to fund life-saving cancer research and vital support services for people living with cancer. Please give generously when a Canadian Cancer Society volunteer knocks at your door this April.

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December 9, 2010 - THE PERTH COURIER - PAGE 13

LOOK ONLINE @ yourottawaregion.com

Call Email

613.267.1100 classifieds@yourottawaregion.com

DEADLINE: MONDAY AT 12 NOON. BIRTHDAYS

IN MEMORIAM

CARDS OF THANKS

Happy 90th Birthday

CARD OF THANKS

My heartfelt thanks to the many friends and family who sent flowers, food and cards and made memorial donations in memory of my beloved husband Bill. Your thoughtfulness will not be forgotten. A sincere thank you to the O’Dacres and staff for their expertise and support and to Rev. Grace Vaters for her touching service. My thanks to Brad Mills for his talented rendition of Bill’s musical favourites. Frances A. Batoff

CARD OF THANKS

Robert Ferguson

CL22407

Dad/Poppa/Great Poppa December 10, 2010 Love, Cynda, Sandy & family; Roberta, Brian & family; & friends

We would like to extend our deepest gratitude to everyone who played a part in Dad’s life - before, during and after his illness. Our father was loved by many. Thank you for the visits, care and concern from family, friends, nurses and clergy. Thank you for the food at home, in the hospital and at the hall, for the flowers, contributions, condolences and most of all the memories. Your embraces, compassion and understanding will continue to guide us through. With love, Patsy Rob, Trish, Breanna and Teagan Cindy, Norm and Cecilia (Benji, Jen, Willow and Leo; Andy; Sara, Josh and Marley) Dennis, Joan, Kelsey and Sam

DEATHS

ECHLIN: Gerald, Dec. 9, 2009. Heavy are our hearts today Memory brings you back once more To the time when you were with us To the happy days of yore. Sadly, deeply missed by daughter Kathy and grandsons Colin and Curtis

Breathe through a straw for

Lethbridge: In loving memory of our dear sister, sister-in-law and aunt, Ann, who passed away 10 years ago, Dec. 13, 2000. The PENNY ANGEL We find lots of pennies just lying on the ground, We believe it’s a reminder that Ann’s spirit is always around. She tosses them down from Heaven whenever we are down, It’s her way to make us smile and wipe away our frown. Always loved and remembered, Brenda, Marty and family Debbie, Jim and family Colonial and family

60 seconds.

It seems OK at first, even sort of fun. WOOLNER, THOMAS “TOM” Passed away unexpectedly, but peacefully, at the Ottawa Hospital, on Wednesday, Dec. 1, 2010, at the age of 54. Beloved husband of Jeanette Woolner (nee Ditner). Father of Jeff and Laura Woolner. Brother of John (Lisa), Kamloops, B.C. and Kathy (Lorne) Shantz, Windsor, Ont. Son of Gordon and Eileen Woolner. Tom will be greatly missed by all his family and friends. A private family gathering was held at the Henry Walser Funeral Home in Kitchener, Ont. Donations may be made online at www.henrywalser.com.

But keep going. After a few seconds your lungs begin to strain, your head aches, and your palms start to sweat. Remember, you can stop when you’ve

BIRTHDAYS

CL22421

Muriel Steele

had enough. But people with cystic fibrosis can’t.

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Theatre

Kemptville Advance - DECEMBER 09, 2010

14

Doomsday play offers environmental lesson, arts opportunity for rural kids EMMA JACKSON Emma.jackson@metroland.com

It’s not all doom and gloom for Just Kiddin Theatre in Metcalfe this week, as they prepare for their weekend performances of three doomsday-themed plays collectively known as the Gillian Trilogy. Although the topic is incredibly serious - delving into a doomsday scenario where our environmental mismanagement has left us struggling to reclaim our control of the planet - the cast of kids is still having a laugh. “In the first play, it shows how sloppy us humans are, that we’re not taking as much care as we should. But it’s written to be quite comedic and it’s got lots of interesting characters,” said Andrie Nel, who wrote and directed the trilogy for the kids-only theatre she founded in 2005. Indeed, you can barely tell that the fussy old lady running her church group or the sports-fanatic dad attempting to

discipline his wayward son are actually pre-teens, offering laugh-out-loud quips and one-liners amid an otherwise daunting theme of environmental responsibility. The second play is a little more serious, as the actors tackle the emotions of knowing you’re about to die. Sydney Miller, Nel’s eight-grade daughter, plays Clara, who is trying to convince her sister to contact her estranged children as a planet-killing meteor hurtles toward the earth with only hours until impact. “We wanted to raise the bar for the number of teenagers we have in the group, so we took a dramatic turn and let them struggle with the issue of dealing with death, and how do you deal with the fact that you know you’re going to die,” Nel explained. “It’s been neat in rehearsal as they try to reach that realm of possibility in themselves.” The third play offers a dramatic and thoughtful ending, Nel said, although she

withheld details about what’s going to happen. “The third play is an experiment. It does finally happen and the earth blows up,” she said. “It’s a fantasy-type thing, looking at the “then what?” of the doomsday theme. Are humans wiped out, do they still exist? If so, how?” She said the third play will be a visual treat for the audience, as well as a bit of an education in human nature. “This part is looking at what’s the root cause of our environmental mismanagement, and it comes down to basic human tendencies. We tend to get greedy when we have too much power and control,” she explained. Lisa Brown, the “prop master” for Just Kiddin Theatre who also has two daughters in this year’s play, said that the child actors already have such a good grasp of environmental responsibility that the audience stands to learn much more from the play. “They’re learning about the environment is so much greater than my generation, so if anything we’re probably learning more from them,” she said. “I think it’s just going to reiterate to them what could happen if we as a society don’t take better care of our carbon footprint.” Nel’s youth theatre has been attracting more and more participants from the area every year, which is why they had to create a three-part trilogy to maintain

the theatre’s policy of 15 kids per group, she said. “Our group is growing, growing, growing. We’ve had kids come from the west end of Ottawa in the past, but this time around kids have tended to be from Manotick and the other rural neighbourhoods around us.” Nel started the theatre, which runs out of the old town hall in Metcalfe, to fill a massive gap in the rural areas of Ottawa, where the opportunities for kids to participate in the arts are very limited. She said it’s particularly hard to find programming for kids with special needs, which she encourages to join the theatre. “We make a real effort to accommodate special needs kids. It’s such a wonderful place to feel included,” she said, adding that all kids need these opportunities to discover where their passions lie. “Some kids are there for fun, some discover a new found passion and some decide they want to go to Canterbury school for the arts because they love it so much. In rural Ottawa, there are not enough opportunities to do things like this, so they don’t know that it’s important to them.” The theatre will premiere its doomsday play at the Old Metcalfe Town Hall on Friday, Dec 10 at 7 p.m., with matinees on Saturday and Sunday and an evening performance on Saturday night. Tickets are $10 and can be purchased online at www. justkiddintheatre.com.

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PAGE 14 - THE PERTH COURIER - December 9, 2010

Hospital introduces ultrasound in emergency departments

BECAUSE YOUR BUSINESS IS OUR BUSINESS

WE’VE GOT YOU COVERED

The Perth and Smiths Falls District Hospital is pleased to announce the addition of ultrasound machines in both the Great War Memorial and Smiths Falls emergency departments. The implementation of ultrasound technology in the emergency departments will facilitate the diagnosis of critically ill patients and improve care by providing immediate access to bedside imaging. Imaging at the bedside is a proven diagnostic tool that will provide data to the emergency physicians. This information will assist in determining lifethreatening events and will allow the department to rapidly evaluate a number of clinical scenarios. For example, a patient who presents with abdominal pain requiring emergency treat-

ment could possibly have an abdominal aortic disorder or the patient could be on the verge of a significant cardiac event. Both medical concerns require immediate intervention. The availability of ultrasound will speed up the investigation and will also allow the unstable patient to stay in the emergency department, as opposed to leaving the department for an ultrasound. “Ultrasound has provided a huge paradigm shift in the emergency department, changing medical practice and empowering the emergency department doctor at the bedside,” said Dr. Michael Horsey, co-director of emergency at the Smiths Falls site.

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 10 6 p.m. to 11 p.m.

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December 9, 2010 - THE PERTH COURIER - PAGE 15

Busy times in the halls of PDCI

Contact us at: 1702 9th Line Beckwith RR#2, Carleton Place, ON • K7C 3P2

The Minute to Win It Christmas spirit is on the activities, which were held rise at Perth and District in the cafeteria, each day Collegiate Institute as the at lunch were a lot of fun days are winding down to – for the participants and Christmas break. the audience! Matheson’s The Concert Band perteam accumulated the most formed a small gig at the victories over the course Festival of Good Cheer on of the week and won the Nov. 27. The band played a competition. selection of fun tunes and Students and staff are Christmas songs in the looking forward to the next atrium of Code’s Mill. opportunities to earn points PDCI was glad to have a for their Houses, including float entered in the Santa Ugly Sweater Day and the Claus Parade this year, which Talent Show. was held on Dec. 4. The float PDCI’s winter musical, was assembled and decorated Snow White??, is being perby a number of teachers and formed this week on Monday, students who volunteered Big Blue Tuesday, and Thursday for their time after school. The elementary school students. PDCI Concert Band members sat on the float playing lively Christmas The only public performance will be held songs, despite their frozen instruments this Sunday, Dec. 12 at 2 p.m. Admission and sheet music blowing everywhere is done by donation, and all ages are welcome. from the wind! Have a great week, Blue Devils! Members of student council were bundled up in Blue Devil football jerseys and walked alongside the float handing out candies and small gifts to the crowds at the parade. Even considering the less than ideal sub-zero temperatures, everyone had a great time spreading Christmas cheer. 431251 Thank you to everybody who REDUCED $14,100 assembled and transported the $739,000 to $724,900. Spectacular home, float, and those who participated gorgeous 1.52 acres, 341’ on Dog Lake, in prestigious Maple Hill, 20 min/Kingston. in the parade. Spacious & immaculate Victorian-style 4bdr, The first of the House com4bthr home. Fireplace, Mbdr ensuite w/Jacuzzi. petitions of this month are Large family room, wine cellar & bar, walkout to patio & hot tub. Wrap-around verandah, rear finished and the results are in. deck, large lake views. Over $500 was raised for the Janice Hastie-Waugh 613-283-5435. Angel Tree gift program this year $124,900. Enjoy Mississippi Lake without the by the students. Summit ended price! Fully equipped 3 bedroom 3 season cottage up raising the most money, with in good condition, on quiet dead-end lane. Lake view & 20’ x 150’ deeded right-of-way to the Matheson in second, Inge-Va in waterfront. Most furniture, all appliances, shed, third, McMartin taking fourth, lawn mower, wind surfer included. A great and Drummond in fifth. getaway is ready for you! The food drive was very sucJanice Hastie-Waugh 613-283-5435. cessful as well; PDCI students donated over 1,000 items of food. Summit pulled ahead to win the $99,900. 139+/- acres on Highway 15 just south of Franktown, 1/2 hr/Ottawa. Build your food drive, followed in a very country home close to the city but with enough close second place by Matheson. space to get away from it all. Great hunting

General Inquiries: 613-257-1539 or 1-800-535-4532 (613 area code)

BRYANT

# LS 5 M 557 76 # LS 5 M 446 76 # LS 2 M 296 77

LET’S MAKE CANCER HISTORY For information about cancer, services or to make a donation 1-888-939-3333 www.cancer.ca

land: mixed bush & open areas, significant wetland with high & dry areas. Jock River (creek) runs through property. Janice Hastie-Waugh 613-283-5435.

cmoyle@twp.beckwith.on.ca

SCHEDULED MEETING DATES 2010 The Meeting Dates are as follows:

Tuesday December 7th

7:00 PM

Council

Reeve Richard Kidd

Detailed agendas for meetings are available for review on the Township website at www.twp.beckwith.on.ca or at the Township Office 24 hours prior to the meeting

NOTICE OF CONTRACT TOWNSHIP OF BECKWITH CONTRACT FOR WINTER PLOW EQUIPMENT & OPERATOR

The Township of Beckwith invites quotes for winter plow equipment & operator for a 3 year term Contract 2010-09 Contract applications and specifications are available at the Municipal Office: 1702 9th Line Beckwith, Carleton Place, ON K7C 3P2 Contract applications must be submitted to the undersigned no later than: FRIDAY, DECEMBER 10TH , 2010 AT 12:00 NOON Darwin Nolan, Public Works Superintendent

EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES

Please check our website for new employment opportunities.

BECKWITH PUBLIC SKATING Sunday’s – 1:00 to 2:00 p.m. Beckwith Recreation Complex , 1319 9th Line Beckwith – Beckwith Park Official NHL Ice Surface Cost: $2.00 each EXTRA CHRISTMAS HOLIDAY SKATES Sun. Dec. 26th 1:00 – 2:00 p.m. Tues. Dec. 28th 3:30 – 4:30 p.m. Sun. Jan. 2nd 1:00 – 2:00 p.m. Tues. Jan 4th 3:30 – 4:30 p.m. SKATING PASSES Ten skating passes for only $15.00 (Value of $20.00 ~ Save $5.00.!!!) Pass booklets can be purchased at the Beckwith Township Office or on Sundays at the Public Skate. For further information, please contact the Township of Beckwith 613-2571539.

CHRISTMAS OFFICE HOURS The Beckwith Township Officewill be closed: Friday, December 24th, 2010 at noon and will re-open Monday, January 3rd, 2011 at 8:30 a.m.

431187

Julia

Public Works: 613-257-1810 or 1-800-535-4534 (613 area code)

WWW.TWP.BECKWITH.ON.CA To advertise in The Perth Courier, call 613-267-1100.

LAST EVENT FOR 2010

GLOBAL GOLD TRADER Best Western Colonel By Inn Smiths Falls, On December 10, 11, 12 Friday, Saturday & Sunday 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. WE ARE NOW BUYING: GOLD CHAINS • EARRINGS • GOLD WATCHES • BRACELETS MEDALLIONS • DENTAL GOLD • GOLD COINS • DIAMONDS BROKEN CHAINS • GOLD CHARMS • CLASS RINGS 432284


PAGE 16 - THE PERTH COURIER - December 9, 2010

3M CEO visits Perth facility

On Nov. 15 and 16, 3M plants in Perth and in Brockville hosted chairman and CEO George Buckley. Buckley reviewed the performance of each plant in eastern Ontario and also met with employees. He made some very favourable remarks about the quality, productivity and innovation he sees in 3M Canada’s manufacturing operations and outlined some of the growth plans that give him a great deal of confidence in 3M’s future. 3M is a global company with sales of more than $25 billion, operating in 85 countries. The company continues to grow by developing useful new products, and by acquiring companies that fit well with existing 3M businesses and markets. The 3M plants were built in Perth in 1980 and 1981. The plants currently employ about 250 people from the community. The company says it is intent on remaining competitive through elimination of waste, high efficiency and ongoing capital investment.

Christmas all about giving at SJCHS goal is to help provide gifts With Christmas just to children on behalf of around the corner, St. their im-prisoned parents; John Catholic High child-ren who would not School students and other-wise experience the staff are incorporating love of the holiday season. the festive tradition of Through the community generosity in our and Angel Tree, these school activities. We comchildren are exposed to menced the season with Christian values, in the our advent mass, audihopes that it will break tions for the upcoming the cycle of crime and Christmas assembly, and abuse in their lives. a holiday shopping trip, In our school, each class but most charitable of has been assigned an all is the Angel Tree angel child. As a class, fundraiser. we raise money and The Angel Tree is a purchase a gift that suits U.S.-based organization, now spread over nuSpartan Scene the child’s individual wishes. The gifts, as merous countries, that well as a letter from the supports incarcerated individuals and their families. The incarcerated parent, are then sent to

Emily

SMITH

the child on behalf of the parent. In this way we are contributing to the hope and empowerment of the community. St. John also held a Coffee House this past week. The Coffee House is an evening of musical entertainment, where students have the opportunity to share their talents with the rest of the community. Thanks to Mr. Ryan, the performers and the tech crew for an enjoyable night. Finally, the senior girls’ volleyball team started its season with an exhibition game, the results of which they were quite happy with. They are participating in a tournament in Kingston in preparation for the official season which kicks off this week. Other sports seasons to begin are the junior girls’ volleyball and the junior and senior boys’ basketball.

Ontario Shake N’ Tile, Ontario’s most trusted metal roofing specialist is looking for homes in your area that need a new roof and never want to roof again. We offer the beauty and elegance of a natural wood shake roof with the durability and unmatched performance of metal. It comes with a lifetime, transferable Warranty against: wind, rain, snow, moss, hail and tree resin. This beautiful roof is being introduced to your local market now. If you participate in our Display Home Program, we will reduce our already competitive pricing and make it worth your while to investigate the many benefits of our roof. You must book your job within 10 days of this advertisement. Low payment, 100% financing available, O.A.C.

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3M employee Andre Pugh hands over a cheque for $3,000 to Lynda Hendriks for the Perth and District Food Bank on Friday, Dec. 3. The money and food were donated by employees at the 3M plant. Andrew Snook photo


Machining, Welding & Hydraulics

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December 9, 2010 • The Perth Courier • Page 17

Local gymnasts qualify for worlds BY ANDREW SNOOK

andrew.snook@perthcourier.com Saltos Athletics is home to Perth’s new fab five. Five local gymnasts travelled to Carboriu, Brazil, and represented Canada at the Aerobic Gymnastics Pan American Championships held from Nov. 17 to 22. All five members of the Saltos aerobics gymnastics team had strong showings and qualified to represent Canada at the FIG Aerobic Gymnastics World Series in Las Vegas, NV, in July 2011. “I think it’s the largest delegation Caanda has had ever,” said Louise Miller, head coach and owner of Saltos Athletics. “And we rocked it,” added Kasey Whalen, one of the local gymnasts who qualified for the worlds in Las Vegas. Whalen, 16, finished in eighth place in Age Group 2 category (ages 15 to 17), while her teammates, Katrina Wright (10th place), Allison Tolgyesi (10th place), Kailey Sweeney (seventh place) and Andrea Reith (ninth

icans in the entire competition,” she said. “The entire competition was run in Portuguese and the secondary language was Spanish. We needed a translator.” The on-stage competition and language barrier were not the only hurdles Miller’s team had to overcome in Brazil. She said that issues with her team’s flights cost a day of training and some much needed rest. The team’s flight from Ottawa to Newark had multiple delays and eventually was cancelled and rescheduled for the following day. We missed our domestic flight in Brazil,” she said. “We arrived right at our training time on six hours of sleep. (It was) probably the best training of our lives.” Although happy with her team’s performance, Miller said Members of the Saltos Athletics aerobic gymnastic team pose in their Team Canada track suits during a practice in Perth on Wednesday, Dec. 1. The team recently competed at Aerobic Gymnastics Pan American that they the girls will need to do Championships held from Nov. 17 to 22. Andrew Snook photo a lot of preparation ahead them in the new year for the worlds in place) all qualified in the Age tatives to Brazil, with some coun- approximately 60 people to the Las Vegas. Group 1 category (ages 12 to 14). tries sending dozens of delegates. event. “They’re going to have to work Eight countries sent represen- Miller said that Argentina sent “We were the only North Amer- pretty hard, she said.

Blue Wings receive Royal treatment from Stittsville The Perth Jr. B Blue Wings were defeated by a score of 6-4 by the Stittsville Royals on Friday,

Dec. 3 at the Perth and District Community Centre (PDCC). Stittsville’s Matt Kadolph and Dave Borden led their team to the victory. Borden finished the game with six points (one goal

Blue Wings goaltender Jeremy Wright had his eye on the puck during first period action in Perth on Friday night. Despite Wright blocking 29 of 35 shots, the Wings lost 6-4 to the Stittsville Royals. Ryan Holland photo

and five assists), and Kadolph scored a hat trick. Kadolph opened the scoring just over nine minutes into the game to put his team up 1-0. Perth’s Blair Barr responded less than four minutes later to tie the game 1-1 on his 14th goal of the season, from Brett Lewandowsky and Riley Kane. The Royals regained the lead early into the second period, when Kadolph scored his second goal of the game 23 seconds into the period to go up 2-1. Stittsville added to their lead in the third period on another quick goal. Royals forward Scott Barnes scored 44 seconds into the period to give his team a twogoal lead. Perth’s Dan Weir cut the lead to 3-2 on a power-play goal less than three minutes into the game, but the Royals responded with a power-play goal of their own. Kadolph completed his hat trick just over a minute later to increase Stittsville’s lead to 4-2.

Weir had two goals (13th and on top of the Valley Division, 14th of the season) and one as- three points ahead of the Arnsist for the Blue Wings. prior Packers (14-9-2-0). Perth continued to battle back The Blue Wings’ next home in the third period, and cut the game is against the Shawville lead to 4-3 on a goal by Jared Pontiacs on Friday, Dec. 10 at the Havelock (13th of the season) PDCC. just over the seven-minute mark of the period. Unfortunately, that was as close as Friday, Dec. 10 at 7:45 p.m. Perth would come to tying Game the game. sponsored AND Stittsville by BILL FISHER ELECTRIC goaltender Josh Cooper stopped 25 of 29 shots to pick up the win, while Friday, Dec. 17 at 7:45 p.m. Perth’s Jeremy Wright Game stopped 29 of sponsored 35 shots. by Perth (16-71-0) remains

PERTH BLUE WINGS vs. SHAWVILLE PONTIACS

430840

BY ANDREW SNOOK andrew.snook@perthcourier.com

PERTH KIA

PERTH BLUE WINGS vs. OTTAWA SOUTH

At Mike Fair’s, Going the extra mile means airfare and two nights accomodations to your choice of Las Vegas, Nevada, or Orlando, or Miami Florida! And every pre-owned purchase from Mike Fair’s includes a complimentary one year CAA PLUS membership. Economy to luxury our e-tested, certified, fully reconditioned, pre-owned vehicles start at just $3,998 plus taxes. Treat yourself with a vehicle purchase and a trip for two, at your full line Ottawa Valley GM Dealer......Mike Fair’s. Stock# Year P3447 2009 P3490A 2009 P3510 2009 P3558A 2009 10269A 2008 10342A 2007 10134A 2006 10236A 2006 10290A 2006 10350A 2006

Make Cadillac Chev Cadillac Cadillac Pontiac Pontiac Buick Buick Buick Chev

Model Was $ SRX 34,988 $ AVEO 8,988 $ CTS 37,988 $ DTS 35,988 $ Grand Prix 12,988 Grand Prix $10,888 $ Allure 10,988 $ Lucerne 11,788 $ Allure 7,988 $ Colorado 14,288

Sale $

+

29,988 6,988+ $ 33,988+ $ 29,988+ $ 9,988+ $ 7,988+ $ 8,988+ $ 9,988+ $ 7,988+ $ 11,988+ $

Stock# Year P3533 2006 11016A 2005 P3472A 2005 10365A 2004 11035A 2004 P3381 2004 10076B 2003 P3467B 2003 10352B 2002 P3550A 2002

Make Model Was Sale $ $ Chev Malibu 9,988 7,488+ BuickSOLD Allure SOLD $7,988SOLD$6,988+ $ Pontiac Grand AM $7,988 5,988+ $ Pontiac Grand Prix $6,988 4,988+ $ Cadillac DTS 10,988 $7,988+ $ $ Pontiac Sunfire 6,188 4,988+ $ $ Cadillac DTS 6,988 4,988+ $ $ Cadillac Deville 8,988 6,988+ $ Pontiac Grand Prix $4,988 3,988+ $ $ Buick Lesabre 5,988 3,988+

CHEVROLET BUICK GMC CADILLAC 431453 Prices are plus HST and licence fee; recipients of trip voucher are responsible for the applicable hotel/airline taxes of $169 each and must register for the trip by April 28, 2011 and redeem the trip within two years of registering. Trip voucher only applicable on the vehicles listed above and valid until Dec 31st, 2010. See dealer for more details.

199 Lombard St., Smiths Falls, ON

famousforfairness.ca 613-283-3882


PAGE 18 - THE PERTH COURIER - December 9, 2010

K. James Energy Efficient Custom Homes & Renovations

367826

General Contractor - Kevin James Perth, Ont. Phone/Fax: 613-267-3543 www.kjamesconstruction.ca E-mail: kjam2@ripnet.com

357713

331236

372356

Construction

IN THE WRIGHT POSITION Perth Blue Wings goaltender Jeremy Wright made some big stops against the Stittsville Royals on Friday night, kicking out 29 shots, but the hometown team lost 6-4 to Stittsville.

Div. of 1382732 Ont. Inc.

Ryan Holland photo

1,891 sq. ft. 44' w x 66' d

High Score

• grand entrance • sweeping staircase • 9' ceilings

Men’s high score: Chad Hendy - 177. Ladies high score: Colleen Box, Julie Ottman - 140.

Shawn Cook, Paul Clarke, Adrian Corbett, Raymond Shanks, Rob Crogie, Rod MacMillan, Lisa Carroll, Paul Cowie, Jamie Box and Ryan Jorgenson.

Cell: 613-812-6677 Fax: 613-264-9868

277997

CARPENTRY New construction, renovations, roofing & additions

613-267-2512 RR 3, Perth, Ont

CONSTRUCTION

New Homes • Additions Roofs • Decks Renovations RR 6, Perth, Ontario

613-264-8150

JOHN ERVIN

Classic Lines

Malloch Construction

180 Scores

381819

Silver Maple

Ladies’ high finish: Laurie Majaury, 96.

Living Room: 13′ 1″ x 11′ Family Room: 12′ x 19′ 7″ Kitchen: 13′ 1″ x 10′ 4″ Nook: 10′ 6″ x 11′ 5″ Dining Room: 13′ 1″ x 10′ Garage: 20′ 5″ x 20′ Master Bedroom: 11′ 1″ x 18′ Bedroom 2: 11′ 0″ x 11′ 5″ Bedroom 3: 10′ x 12′

McKAY

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• Furnace Oil, Diesel Fuel, Gasoline, Lubricants

• Cottage Work • Roofing • Replacement Windows • Siding Paul Coutts 613-267-6585 Fax: 613-267-7869

SPECIALIZING IN RESIDENTIAL

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• Forced Air Heating & Cooling • Hydronic Radiant Floor Heating • HRV Systems for Household Ventilation • Oil-Fired Water Heaters

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Sheet Metal & Roofing 322094

Men’s high finish: Wayne Foster, 160.

613-267-6115

381936

1) RVM Reno - 94 2) Andy Brown Carpentry - 90 3) Roosteraunt - 88 4) Midland Electric - 84 5) Denoco - 61 6) Wizards - 61 7) Ace Towing – 60 8) Ray’s Handyman – 57 9) Mahon Pools and Spas - 56 10) Sharks - 54 11) McKay Sheet Metal – 49 12) Prime Time – 49 13) Bullshots - 48 14) Just Lucky - 48 15) Excalibur - 46 16) Wild Ones - 45 17) Banner Boys - 43 18)Hal’s Pals - 37 19) Perth P.C. - 34 20) Mr. Gas - 31 21) Valley Pools – 30 22) Lanark Lightning - 28 23) K and K Cab - 27 24) Legion - 24

Call Darwin Code www.codeconstruction.ca

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PROPERTY MANAGEMENT

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Legion Industrial Dart League Dec. 1 results Standings

New Homes • Commercial Buildings • Renovations • Equipment Rentals • Septic Installations

More home & cottage plans are available at Perth Home Hardware Building Centre

613-259-5766

Our technology makes us the most trusted source of community news and information. Since its invention in 1439, the printing press has continued to evolve alongside the needs of those who read the printed word. News and information needed to get out faster and with a greater degree of accuracy. We continue to invest in our systems, methods, and techniques to address the ever-changing needs of our readers and advertisers. We’re growing with you!

PROUD PUBLISHER OF YOUR: Perth Courier, Renfrew Mercury, Carleton Place / Almonte Canadian-Gazette, Arnprior Chronicle-Guide, West Carleton Review, Kanata Kourier-Standard, Stittsville News, Barrhaven-Ottawa South This Week, Smiths Falls This Week, Kemptville Advance, Ottawa This Week East, West, South, Central, and Nepean editions. 429335


December 9, 2010 - THE PERTH COURIER - PAGE 19

Community calendar To advertise a non-profit community event, e-mail events@perthcourier.com and we would be happy to include it in the Community Bulletin Board as space allows.

Entertainment will follow. Donations to the food bank are appreciated. Deadline for tickets is Dec. 7 and can be purchased at the Royal Canadian Legion Branch 244.

Thursday, Dec. 9

Wednesday, Dec. 15

The Holidays Are Coming Have your carpets and furniture professionally cleaned

• The Perth Bible Hour will take place from 7 to 8 • The Get W.I.T.H. It indoor walking program will p.m. at The Stewart School’s library. Everyone is take place from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. at the Maple Grove welcome to attend. For more information, contact Public School in Lanark. Murray McLeod at 613-267-3012. Thursday, Dec. 16 • The Active Seniors Koalition (ASK) will host line • The Perth Bible Hour will take place from 7 to 8 dancing at the Middleville Community Centre at 11 p.m. at The Stewart School’s library. Everyone is a.m. For more information, call 613-259-5447. • The Active Seniors Koalition (ASK) will host a welcome to attend. For more information, contact shuffleboard event at Watsons Corners Hall Murray McLeod at 613-267-3012. at 11 a.m. Bring a brown bag lunch. For more • The Active Seniors Koalition (ASK) will host a shuffleboard event at Watsons Corners Hall information, call 613-259-5447. • The fourth annual Christmas Lights Ceremony at 11 a.m. Bring a brown bag lunch. For more will take place from 6 to 7:30 p.m. at Pretty Goods, information, call 613-259-5447. (George Street, village of Lanark). There will be Friday, Dec. 17 musical entertainment and hot chocolate. Ad• The Royal Canadian Legion Branch 395 in Lanark mission is free. The event is in support of the Lanark will host its monthly euchre party at 7:30 p.m. There Highlands Youth Centre. For more information, will be prizes and a light lunch. contact 613-259-2012.

Saturday, Dec. 18 • The Royal Canadian Legion Branch 395 in Lanark will host its monthly birthday party. Entertainment will begin at 2 p.m. All musicians are welcome. Light lunch will be served. • The 19th annual the Night before the Night before Christmas fundraising dance, in support of the Perth and District Food Bank (PDFB), will take place at 7:30 p.m. at the Royal Canadian Legion Hall (26 Beckwith St.). Tell Mama and The Commuters will be performing. Admission is $25, or $20 with a food donation. • The Christmas Celtic Jam will take place from 1 to 4 p.m. at the Middleville Community Centre (4203 Wolf Grove Rd., Lanark). For more information, contact 613-256-5474.

• McDonalds Corners Agricultural Hall will play host to musical band Twister at 8 p.m. Kids under 16 are free. Tickets are $15. • The Single Parenting Support Group will meet from 1 to 4 p.m. at 30 Bennett St. in Carleton Place. There will be free child care, but you must call to register at 613-259-2182. • St. Paul’s United Church (25 Gore St. W) will host Christmas Mysteries (A BarnDoor Productions) at 7:30 p.m. Admission is $20 for adults and $12 for students and children. Half of the proceeds will go towards St. Paul’s United Church. For more information, contact 613-267-1884.

All Major Drug Plans Accepted Prescription Services 20% Seniors’ Discount last Tuesday of the Month

St. John Parish Cemetery

Be sure to mark your calendar for next year’s PDCF Christmas Gala, November 25, 2011 www.pdcf.ca

St. John Parish Cemetery (on behalf of the R.C.E.C of the Diocese of Kingston) has submitted by-laws to the Registrar of the Cemeteries Act (Revised). Any interested parties may contact Ann Buchanan, 613-264-2929 for information, or to make copies. These by-laws are subject to the approval of the Registrar, Cemeteries Act (Revised).

Apropos • Barnabe’s Your Independent Grocer Nancy Berthiaume, Smiths Falls • Brown Shoe Company Brownlee’s Metro • Elizabeth Interiors, Smiths Falls Factory Grind Café • Gemmells Flowers Limited Hillside Gardens • Home Furniture Ivan Hodgins, Royal LePage • Kelly’s Flowers and Fine Things Ltd. Brent and Shelley McLaren • Sinclair Florists Stone Cellar Restaurant • Sunflower Bake Shop The Brown Shoe Company • The Perth Museum The Blossom Shop, Carleton Place • Tivoli Florist, Ottawa

Fax: 613-267-2008 OWNED AND OPERATED

www.royallepage.ca www.royallepageperth.com

431751

33 Wilson Street West, Perth

Saturday, Dec. 11 1 - 2:30 p.m. 20 Grant St. – $152,900. Randy Cavanagh www.perthreal estateguy.ca **Broker *Sales Representatives

Where we Believe, Belong, Become Rev. Lewis Massarelli 10:00 a.m. Morning worship 160 Wayside Dr., RR 6, Perth, ON Church: 613-267-3295 See Web page for details of programs - www.gtpcperth.com

OPEN HOUSES Saturday, Dec. 11 11 - 12:30 p.m. 9 Welland St. Perth, $209,900 Randy Cavanagh www.perthreal estateguy.ca

431254

St. Paul’s United Church

Glad Tidings Pentecostal Church

First Baptist Church 17 D’Arcy Street, Perth • 613-267-2023 Seeking, Serving & Sharing Our Saviour Minister: Rev. Frank Morgan, B.A., B.D.

Advent 3 – Sunday, Dec. 12 10:30 a.m. Morning Worship. Rev. Frank Morgan. Sermon: “Remember His Mercy” (Luke 1: 46-46). All welcome. Nursery care provided. Wednesday, Dec. 15 7:00 Bible Study & Prayer Next Community Dinner Saturday, Jan. 29, 2011, 4:30 p.m. - 6 p.m.

429925

429975

Office: 613-267-2435 Toll Free: 866-361-2435

Drummond & Harvey Street 613-267-1163 • www.superaje.com/~stjamesperth All are welcome to come be with us at St. James Anglican Church Please join us! December 12: Third Sunday of Advent: 8:00 a.m. (Said Eucharist) and 10:00 a.m. (Choral Eucharist) Saturday, Dec. 11: 4:30 - 6 p.m.: Community Dinner (accessible from Beckwith) Thursday, Dec. 16: 5:30 - 7:00 p.m.: Messy Church for young families Friday, Dec. 17: 5:30 p.m.: Skater Church Sunday, Dec. 19: 10 a.m.: Contemporary Eucharist with Christmas Pageant Sunday, Dec. 19: 7:30 p.m.: Nine Lessons and Carols Christmas Eve: 4:30 p.m.: Family Eucahrist with Blessing of the Creche Christmas Eve: 9 p.m. Early Midnight: Choral Eucharist Christmas Day: 10 a.m. Eucharist with Carols Note: Christmas Eve at St. Augustines: 7 p.m. (Cty. Rd. 10 Richardson)

COME AND JOIN US AT:

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Mike Lee and Ivan Hodgins, Royal LePage Pauline Aunger Realty Barbara Shepherd, Coldwell Banker Settlement Realty Kim Mays, RE/MAX Realty Solutions Ltd. Rebecca Wissler, RE/MAX Riverview Realty Ltd. Paul Sentesy, Sentwood Mercer Ltd. Pierre Viau and Kevin Morrow, DKP Construction Ltd. The Nick of Time Artisan Show

Worship Services Sunday, Dec. 12 9:00 - 9:55 a.m., N.I.N.E Worship (Nursery & Children’s Church available.) Advent Series: Merry Christmas? Part 2: “A Scandalous Teen Pregnancy”by Pastor Phil Hamilton 10:00 a.m. Coffee Fellowship 11:00 a.m. Traditional Worship “The Word Became Flesh” by Rev. Alan Adams

St. James The Apostle Anglican Church

Advertisers:

WOODWARK & STEVENS PROFESSIONAL CORPORATION Barristers & Solicitors 8 Gore St. W., Perth, ON, K7H 2L6 Solicitors for the Estate Trustee

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Sunday, Dec. 12 11:00 a.m. - Worship service and Sunday school multi-age program. Nursery available. Coffee hour Friday mornings 10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. Please check the website for info on youth group, Bible studies and other ministries, www.standrewsperth.com. Audio loop system • 613-267-2481 A warm welcome to all!

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Supporters:

144 Gore St. E., Perth www.asburyfmperth.com Everyone is welcome!

Drummond & North Sts. Minister: Rev. Marilyn Savage; Organist: Ann Savage

Donations accepted. Need a ride? 613-267-2023

25 Gore Street West Rev. Alan P. Boyd, M.A,, Th.M. Director of Music: Brad Mills, B.Mus., A.R.C.C.O

Sunday, Dec. 12 10:00 a.m. Morning Worship Next Community Dinner Saturday, Dec. 18 4:30 to 6:00 p.m. 613-267-2973 www.stpauls-uc-perth.org

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Notice to Creditors and Others

Exciting Asbury Free Methodist Church

St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church

MABERLY GOSPEL HALL

“...Christ died for our sins according to the scriptures...” 1 Corinthians 15:3 Sunday Meetings 9:30 a.m. Breaking of Bread 11:15 a.m. Sunday School 7:00 p.m. Gospel Meeting Wednesdays - 7:30 p.m. Prayer Meeting and Bible Study Thursdays, 7 p.m. Perth Bible Hour in the Stewart School library. For transportation, call 613-267-3012 or 268-2616

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Thank You!

Gale Real Estate

We particularly want to thank the following Corporate and Private Sponsors and Donors: Allan Chartered Accountants McIntosh Perry Consulting Engineering Bryce Bell Wolfe Springs Golf & Waterfront Resort Jim Noble-RBC Dominion Securities Judy Dempsey of The Hungry Planet Roger Sands-Arranel Studio John & Rhonda Stewart Tay River Reflections Mike Fair Chevrolet Buick GMC Cadillac Ltd. Stone Cellar Restaurant The Shipwreck at Rideau Ferry Bistro 54 Italiano Maximilian Dining Lounge Michael’s Table Fiddleheads Judy Hands-Hands Auction Foodsmiths Joanne’s Hairstyling-Joanne Finnegan Sharon Davidson-PPAC Apropos Burns Jewellers Code’s Mill on the Park Brian Perkin & Lake 88

Hours: Weekdays 9 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Located beside the GWM Hospital 39 Drummond Street West, PERTH 613-267-2110

• The Perth Citizens’ Band will perform its annual 431534 Christmas Concert on Tuesday Dec. 14 at 7:30 p.m. at St. James Anglican Church (12 Harvey St.). This year’s guests will be Town Crier Brent McLaren, and the Women of the Tay under the direction of CFUW Perth & District Mary Ellen Grigor. One highlight Fifth Annual Heritage Perth will be the performance of Christmas House Tour Canadian Patrol composed 100 years ago by Capt. John Slatter of the 48th Highlanders Regiment. Admission is $5 per person or CFUW Perth & District thanks our House Tour $10 for a family at the door. For Sponsors, Supporters and Advertisers: further information, contact the Sponsors: band website www.perthband.ca Allan Chartered Accountant Professional Corporation or phone 613-256-4221. BMO Financial Group Perth • The Riverview Seniors X-mas Chiropractic Care & Longevity Centre, Dr. Kathy Wickens dinner will take place at noon. Dr. C. Cordick, Perth Family Health Centre • Costello & Company Monuments Crain and Schooley Insurance Brokers • Don McAdoo Construction Limited Crains Construction Ltd. • Edward Jones Michael P. Reid, Barrister & Solicitor • Nephin and Winter Chartered Accountants Dr. Kathrine Stolee • Tackaberry Sand & Stone Ltd. TD Bank, Perth • Dr. J.L. Walsh

In the Estate of CLARENCE WILLIAM ANGST, deceased. All persons having claims against the Estate of the above-named deceased, late of the Town of Perth, in the County of Lanark, who died on the 23rd day of September, 2010, are required to file proof of same with the undersigned on or before the 17th day of January, 2011. After that date the Estate will be distributed having regard only to the claims of which the undersigned shall then have had notice. DATED at Perth, this 26th day of November, 2010.

We wish to extend a sincere Thank You to everyone who attended, sponsored, and donated items or participated in the auction at our CHRISTMAS GALA held on Friday, November 26th, 2010. Community based support for local programs is critical and, in these challenging economic times, we truly appreciate your support which will allow us to continue providing much needed assistance in our community.

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Tuesday, Dec. 14

from The Perth and District Community Foundation

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Monday, Dec. 13 • The Royal Canadian Legion Branch 244 in Perth will host carpet bowling at 1 p.m. New bowlers are welcome. • The Get W.I.T.H. It indoor walking program will take place from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. at the Maple Grove Public School in Lanark. • The regular monthly meeting of the Prostate Cancer Support Group will take place at 2 p.m. at the Lanark, Leeds and Grenville Cancer Society office at Dufferin Square in Perth.

Thank You

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Sunday, Dec. 12 • St. James Anglican Church, Perth, will host its Celebration of Christmas music by the Women of the Tay and the Men of the Tay at 2 p.m. • The Trinity United Church in Hopetown will host the Hallelujah Gospel Chorus from Ottawa at 7 p.m. The chorus will perform a celebration of Christmas through gospel music and congregational carol singing. Refreshments will be provided. The event is a freewill offering. For more information, contact Margaret at 613-259-5050.

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Saturday, Dec. 11

Monday, Dec. 20 • The Royal Canadian Legion Branch 244 in Perth will host carpet bowling at 1 p.m. New bowlers are welcome.

“FIND US FAST” in Perth and Smiths Falls Large Print Phone Books

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Friday, Dec. 10 • Kiwanis Gold Rush Day will feature author Charlotte Gray, who will be at Factory Grind (1 Sherbrooke St.) from 5 to 7 p.m. to read from her most recent book, Gold Diggers, Striking It Rich in the Klondike. Perth Kiwanis is requesting donations of broken gold chains, single earrings, old wedding rings, sterling silver and gemstone jewelry. Tax receipts will be available and funds raised will support Kiwanis activities for children and youth in the community and third world countries. Klondike Chili will be on the menu. For more information, contact 613-267-4662. • St. Paul’s United Church (25 Gore St. W) will host Christmas Mysteries (A BarnDoor Productions) at 7:30 p.m. Admission is $20 for adults and $12 for students and children. Half of the proceeds will go towards St. Paul’s United Church. For more information, contact 613-267-1884.

Call for Free In-home Estimate Always a Senior Citizens’ Discount


PAGE 20 - THE PERTH COURIER - December 9, 2010

LOOKING BACK 25 years ago

Fun galore was had by all at Santa Claus parade cartoon program. Cyril Sneer and Bert Raccoon will be riding on the Shaw’s float in the parade. Twenty-three floats have been registered for the parade by local merchants, fire departments, social organizations and other individuals, and a troop of majorettes, the Carleton Place High Steppers, will add a little swing to the parade.

Council bound by core lease The town is locked into a lease agreement with National Grocers concerning the downtown-core land and must continue bargaining in good faith with the firm or face possible legal action. That’s what new councillors were told at a closed-door meeting held following last week’s regular meeting of town council, during which incoming councillors were briefed on the core plans. A second closed-door meeting

was held at town hall on Monday night. “It’s a fait accompli,” said Mayor Lowell Yorke on Tuesday when asked about the lease and the food store proposal for the core area. Yorke was expected to ask council on Tuesday night to hold an open house for the public on the core plan on Dec. 17, 18 and 19, with a public meeting on Dec. 19. If the town wants to collect nearly $500,000 in grant and loan monies from the province, a site plan for the land has to be completed by the end of the year. At the private meeting with new councillors last week, accountant Howard Allan went over the lease agreement and said it appears to be a good deal for the town, informed sources reported. Chairman of the Perth Business Area Improvement Committee (BIA), John Willson, attended the private meeting and says he has no problems with the lease.

50 years ago

T.V. Lally tops the polls

P

erth’s 1961 town council will have only one change as a result of Monday’s civic election: Coun. Eldon Perrin will be replaced by Arthur Daines. Perrin polled 463, while Daines polled 690 votes. Total ballots registered were 1,193, an increase of 363 over the total of 830 registered last year. Most votes went to Coun. T.V. Lally, who chalked up a total of 870. Results were as follows: Daines, 690 votes; Echlin, 732 votes; Frizell, 536 votes; Lally, 870 votes; Lynn, 772 votes; Nixon, 679 votes; Perrin, 463 votes; Richmond, 427 votes.

District results North Elmsley: For council, William T. Moore, Ferguson McVeety, Raymond Poole and Herbert Fisher were elected to council. Harry Burns was defeated with 211 votes. John Poole and Howard Churchill were elected school trustees. Defeated were Gordon Bell, Henry DeSalvo, John McCormick and Garrit Leeflang. Westport: Orval Thake was defeated in his bid as reeve of Westport by J.O. Forrester by only nine votes. Forrester polled 153 votes to Thake’s 144. Elected to council were W.J. Thake, G.W. Sully, E.A. McGregor and W.J. Carty. Isodore Gervais was the only unsuccessful candidate. Palmerston: The reeve, Alex Trombley, and all councillors were re-elected by acclamation at Thursday’s nomination. Elected to school board were two new members, Mr. A. MacDonald, Canonto, and Mrs. Elmer Gemmill, Snow Road. Smiths Falls: Arnold Gough will be the new mayor of Smiths Falls, succeeding former school principal E.V. Dyke. Mr. Dyke did not seek re-election in Monday’s voting. Three councillors were elected in each of the town’s three wards. Results, ward by ward, are as follows. Dufferin Ward: elected, E.R. Brennan, Dr. W.J.T. Hewitt and J.W. Coombs. Defeated: A.P. Greene and Fred Crease. Rideau Ward: elected, R.J. Beach, W.H. Code and Murray A.

Tye. Defeated, A.J. Clarke and Hy Fund. Elgin Ward: elected, W.H. Thompson, Dr. A.B. Murphy and B.J. Stranberg. Defeated, H.W. Stanzell and A.D. Roachfort. The elections in Lanark village for councillors will be held on Friday, Dec. 9.

Parade popularity continues to grow Favoured with ideal balmy weather, the 16th annual Santa Claus parade, sponsored by the Perth Lions Club, held on Saturday afternoon, was viewed by the largest crowd of spectators to journey to Perth in the past 10 years. Many came from Smiths Falls, Carleton Place, Almonte, Sharbot Lake, Tichborne, Lanark, Kingston, Ottawa and Brockville to witness the parade, which is growing in popularity from year to year, and is said to be the biggest and best event of this nature between Toronto and Ottawa. With 30 floats and five bands in the parade, there was not a moment when the air was not full of musical notes. When the parade arrived at the bandstand at the rear of the town hall, thousands of children flocked around the stand, eagerly awaiting a handout of candy from Santa and Mrs. Claus.

Mild temperatures result in late-season flowers Mr. Harold Moss of RR 5, Perth, brought a bunch of dandelions to the Courier which he picked on the lawn at his home on Monday. A resident of Wilson Street picked some pansies this week. The mild weather this fall has created a record in eastern Canada.

BORN Devlin - At Ottawa Civic Hospital, on Nov. 30, 1960, to Capt. and Mrs. Eric Devlin, a son. Dusharm - At the GWM Hospital, on Dec. 2, 1960, to Mr. and Mrs. Everton Dusharm of Sharbot Lake, a daughter. Kirkham - At the GWM Hospital, on Dec. 2, 1960, to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kirkham of Perth, a son. McKinnon - At the GWM Hos-

pital, on Dec. 2, 1960, to Mr. and Mrs. Vernon McKinnon of Lavant, a son. Truelove - At the GWM Hospital, on Nov. 30, 1960, to Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Truelove of RR 2, Maberly, a son.

DIED

He said, however, that he was under the impression there would be a public meeting before the town locked itself into a lease agreement with National Grocers. “The BIA always approved the concept of some type of anchor store in the downtown core,” said Willson.

Shoe employees nervous Some employees at Brown Shoe in Perth are concerned about their future with the company following the move by the federal government to discontinue shoe import quotas. In an unofficial survey of plant employees on Monday afternoon, workers were reluctant to have their names mentioned because of their jobs, but were willing to talk about the quota situation. Workers most concerned about their future were part-time employees at the plant. The majority of full-time workers felt their jobs would remain intact and displayed confidence in the company. “The way I see it, the plant has gone through some pretty tough times before and come through, so I’m not really concerned,” said one woman. “I hope it doesn’t affect us. I’m only here part time and I want to be on full time, I need the job,” commented another worker. Still other employes were unaware of the lifting of import restrictions and were not familiar with the situation facing Canadian shoe manufacturers. The restriction on imported men’s shoes was dropped Dec. 1, while quotas on women’s and children’s shoes are slated to be phased out over the next three years.

Scott Brander of RR 6, Perth, a son, John Raymond. Gordon - On Nov. 16, 1985, to Barry and Tammy (nee Kidd) Gordon, a son, Matthew Robert. Lee - At Kingston General Hospital, on Nov. 20, 1985, to John and Erlene Lee, a son, Douglas John. McParland - On Nov. 16, 1985, to Richard and Dawn (nee Dulmage) McParland, a son, Dustin Richard Scott. Milotte - To Bob and Helen Milotte, a daughter, Ashley Elizabeth. Murphy - At Kingston General Hospital, on Nov. 27, 1985, to Tom and Karen Murphy, a daughter, Samantha Elizabeth. Sullivan - At the GWM Hospital, on Nov. 18, 1985, to Terry and Barb Sullivan of Perth, a daughter, Rianne Elizabeth. Winter - On Nov. 7, 1985, to Bob and Laurie Winter, a daughter, Chelsea Ray.

DIED

Boal - In hospital, Almonte, on Saturday, Nov. 23, 1985, Clarence Boal of Cedar Hill, aged 72 years, loved husband of Marion Keays. Henrietta - In hospital, Toronto, on Wednesday, Nov. 27, 1985, Eleanor Henrietta, dear sister of Mrs. Cathryn Hart of Ottawa. McInnes - At Lanark Lodge, on Wednesday, Nov. 27, 1985, Margaret Ellen Horne, in her 91st year, wife of the late Robert McInnes. Silk - In Wiarton, on Wednesday, Nov. 27, 1985, Elsie May Frizzell, beloved wife of the late James Silk, Toronto. Smith - In hospital, Perth, on Wednesday, Nov. 27, 1985, Laura M. Mallette, in her 67th year, wife of the late Carson Smith.

Arnott - At Clyde Hall Nursing Home, Lanark, on Friday, Dec. 2, 1960, Isobella Jamieson, in her 86th year, beloved wife of the late Andrew Douglas Arnott. BORN Cooper - At the GWM Hospital, The preceding was excerpted Brander At the GWM Hospital, from the front page of the Dec. 4, on Friday, Nov. 25, 1960, James L. Cooper, in his 82nd year, beloved on Nov. 19, 1985, to Mr. and Mrs. 1985 issue of The Perth Courier. husband of Evelyn Cawley. Scott - At her residence, on Friday, Dec. 2, 1960, Margaret Pearl Horricks, in her 64th year, beloved wife of John Scott. Sloan - At Wiseman’s Private Hospital, Perth, on Monday, Nov. 28, 1960, Margaret Ann Sloan, in her 86th year, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sloan. Stanton - Haydon Stanton, C o n s e r v a t ive MP for Leeds since 1953, passed away at Kingston early Thursday morning. Thompson - In Lanark Township, on Monday, Nov. 28, 1960, Isobella Jane Stewart, in her 88th year, beloved wife of the late Alexander Thompson. The preceding was originally published in The Perth Courier of Dec. 4, 1985 as the “25 years ago” news. 431908

2011 Brides Distributed Thursday, Feb. 17 as a special section to the Canadian Gazette, Kemptville Advance, Perth Courier and Smiths Falls This Week. ENGAGEMENT/WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENT picture in full colour plus 50 words: $40plus HST • Submission Deadline: Friday, Jan. 14, 2011

WEDDINGS/ENGAGEMENTS: Almonte and Carleton Place: Perth and Smiths Falls: Carol Nixon 613-257-1303 Brenda Watson 613-267-1100 E-mail: carol.nixon@metroland.com E-mail: brenda.watson@metroland.com Kemptville/Ottawa South and Winchester: Cathy Farrell 613-258-3451 • E-mail: cathy.farrell@metroland.com

BUSINESS ADVERTISING: Almonte & Carleton Place: Jamie Rae-Gomes 613-257-1303 E-mail: jgomes@metroland.com Carla Sheedy 613-257-1303 E-mail: csheedy@metroland.com

Perth: Georgina Rushworth 613-267-1100 E-mail: georgina.rushworth@metroland.com Gord Cowie 613-267-1100 E-mail: gord.cowie@metroland.com

Smiths Falls: Kim Perkins 613-283-6222 E-mail: kim.perkins@metroland.com

Kemptville, Ottawa South and Winchester: Drew Headrick 613-258-3451 E-mail: drew.headrick@metroland.com Jennifer Hindorff 613-258-3451 E-mail: jennifer.hindorff@metroland.com

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R

accoons, anteaters, bands, clowns and floats will be heralding the arrival of St. Nick in the Santa Claus parade on Saturday afternoon. The theme of this year’s parade is “A Night Before Christmas.” Spectators can catch a glimpse of the 23 floats and four bands in the parade by stationing themselves along Sunset Boulevard, Wilson and Foster streets, Gore Street and Halton Street as the parade winds through town, following the same route used in previous years. Parade viewers should find a spot on the street by 1:30 p.m. The parade begins half an hour early this year, and parade marshal Cheryl Moss will ensure that floats begin moving out of the Brown Shoe parking lot by 1:30 p.m. A special attraction in the parade is the appearance of two characters from The Raccoons


December 9, 2010 - THE PERTH COURIER - PAGE 21

Time is running out to buy CHEO tickets you are in on the final draws is to call the Dream Line at 613722-KIDS or 1-877-562-KIDS, or by ordering online at www.dream ofalifetime.ca Ticket buyers have until Fri-day, Dec. 17 at midnight to call and get in on thousands of amazing prizes, including

the $1.7-million grand prize package which in-cludes the fully furnished, fully landscaped Minto Dream Home; $100,000 cash; a 2011 Buick En-clave from Myers Automotive Group; housecleaning for a year from The Maids Home Services; $5,000 in groceries from Farm Boy; a

year of golf at Loch March; and moving services from Fred Guy Moving and Storage. Dec. 17 will also be the last day that the public can view the incredible Minto Dream Home, which has been receiving glowing reviews from the thousands who have visited the home at 860

Don’t go too far out of your way... for great selection, shop locally

McManus Rd. in Ottawa. Operators are standing by 24/7 to take ticket orders, so we are encouraging everyone to order immediately to avoid disappointment. Tickets are $100 each or three for $250. Story submitted by CHEO.

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As the final deadline to purchase Dream of a Lifetime Lottery tickets approaches, the CHEO Foundation wants to remind ticket buyers that last year’s lottery was a sell-out, and that people who want to buy should call today to avoid disappointment. The easiest ways to ensure that

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PAGE 22 - THE PERTH COURIER - December 9, 2010

OPP warn county residents to be wary of water-testing phone scam Police have issued a warning about a scam involving water testing in the Lanark County area. According to police, complaints have been received by the Lanark County detachment of the Ontario Provincial Police, as well as township offices in

the townships of Montague and Lanark Highlands. The general pattern is that a resident receives a telephone call asking if they want their water tested, usually at no cost. In some cases, the caller indicates that they are either from the local township or operating on the

for only $4,000. Police say it does not appear that anyone has parted with any money at this point. Police are encouraging anyone who suspects that any businessoriented phone call is not legitimate to err on the side of caution.

township’s behalf. If the resident says, “yes,” police say that someone arrives at the home often as quickly as within 20 minutes, to perform the test. Without fail, it appears that there is an issue with the quality of the water and the resident is offered the “proper” filter system

“If you have doubts about a caller, your best defence is to simply hang up. It’s not rude – it’s smart,” state the OPP on its website. Anyone with information is asked to contact the OPP at 1-888310-1122 or use the Crime Stoppers Line at 1-800-222-8477.

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AN EDUCATION IN HISTORY The Perth Rotary Club made a $1,700 donation to the Perth Museum’s Historical Education Program for elementary school students on Nov. 27. Museum curator Karen Rennie stands in front of Shelley McLaren and Father Christmas, Brent McLaren, while a costumed Kevin Gray stands on the right. On stairs, Scarlett Herrington, William Herrington, Holly Herrington, Alice Herrington, Leah Craig, Faith Marsh, Malcolm MacDonald, Liam Turner, Jake Bingley, Alana Dean, Jeff Dean, Cara Dean, Caitlyn Dean, Sydney Dube, Makayla Hopper, Sam McNamee, Jake Bingley, Corbett Marsh, Max McNamee, Tate Boyle, Grace Barnabe, Lili Hansen and Hannah Bain. Kassina Ryder photo

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$199,000 - Cute 2 storey brick home sitting on 5 newly surveyed acres, fieldstone fireplace, HE propane furnace 2009, central air, electrical panel wired for generator (included), two-storey barn with 32’ x 17’ loft, close to schools and downtown Lanark. MLS#772817. Call Oral Pretty, 613-264-0123

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OUT OF TOWN

OUT OF TOWN

REDUCED - $168,000 - 398 Anglican Church Rd. Directions: West on Hwy. 7 approx. 13 km, right on Anglican Church Rd. A very lovely setting, set back from the main road on a beautiful treed 1.5 Ac property. A perfect 3 bedrm for a young family providing a great yard for the kids to play. Att. 16 X 24 garage plus separate workshop building16 x 27, plus a 20x50 ft barn that would be great for all kinds of hobbies & activities. House is in good condition with a brand new septic system being installed, oil furnace installed 2007. Country-sized eat-in kit. With additional pantry storage in the back foyer/mudroom area, 4 windows & door allow all kinds of natural light to flow into the spacious living room addition. Dining rm has original wainscotting and tin ceiling (currently used as main floor fam rm), 2 bathrms take care of the morning rush & laundry is located on the main level, good basement, enclosed porch. MLS# 091191602005300. Sheri Mahon-Fournier, 613-812-1215

Spotless bungalow handy to Hwy. 7 in the quaint village of Maberly across from the Fall River. 2 bedrooms plus office or 3rd bedroom on the lower level. Cosy rec room, detached garage, private. Lots new! $164,900. MLS#776366. Call Barbara Shepherd, Cell 613-326-1361

$149,000 - Affordable 4 br, 2 bath home in Lanark Village, large open dining/living room, eat-in kitchen, gorgeous wood trim, doors, wainscotting andbanister, sunroom, wraparound verandah, main-floor laundry and 3 pc bathroom, new furnace in ’06. MLS#769994. Call Oral Pretty, 613-264-0123

$239,000 - Great solid 3+1 br bungalow on 2.23 rivate acres, spotless kitchen with plenty of counter space overlooking large sunken family room, large front deck and patio area, numerous recent upgrades, gorgeous lot on a quiet country sideroad. MLS#772740. Call Oral Pretty, 613-264-0123

ACREAGE

23 Acres - Off Station Rd. on Stones Rd. $24,500 7.5 Acres - On County Rd. #8 near Watsons Crs. $34,900 27 Acres - On Upper 4th Conc. of Bathurst. $65,000 Call Joanne Bennell for more details, 613-264-0505 * Sales Representative

** Broker

*** Broker of Record

427611

507 DALHOUSIE CONCESSION 9A - $229,000 If you’re looking for land, trees, privacy, water, perennial gardens, garage and a delightful cozy home - look no further. This sweet 7 acre property has a delightful 3 bedroom home with upstairs loft, two lower bedrooms, vaulted ceilings, pine floors, cozy woodstove with lovely stone surround, main floor 4 pc bath and laundry in a private surrounding on Barber Lake, 20 minutes to Perth. CALL or EMAIL Julia Scotland 613-328-3635 julia-scotland@ coldwellbanker.ca

IN TOWN


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