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QuinteWest News THE

Proudly serving Trenton, Frankford and Area

www.insidebelleville.com

November 10, 2016 | 40 pages

NOVEMBER B

The Way Used Car Buying Should Be!

16 VW GOLF TRENDLINE 29028 Auto, 1.8 4cyl TSI, roof rack, alloys, trac ctrl, pwr seats, heat seats, AC, CD, MP3, sat radio, rev cam, Bluetooth, compass, wagon. 16,162 km

16 HYUNDAI TUCSON LTD 28983E Auto, 4cyl T-GDI, AWD, alloys, heated seats/rear seats/steering, rev camera, Bluetooth, blindspot detect, rear cross traffic alert. 22,327 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

15 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN CREW 28985 Auto, flex fuel, alloys, Stow’n’go, dual climate, rear air ctrls, heated mirrors, cruise. 38,318 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

16 FORD F450 SD LARIAT 29017 8cyl powerstroke, diesel, factory remote start, long box, leather, heated seat/mirrors, nav, park aid, sync, dual rear wheel,. 17,905 km

$21,995 $

133

bi-weekly

96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$25,995 $

157

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$21,995 $

133

13 FORD C-MAX ENERGI 28691 Factory remote start, leather, heated seats, rev camera, park aid, sync, pwr liftgate/seats, active park assist, Sony snd, Eco cruise, glass roof, auto. 41,697 km

$17,995 $

137

bi-weekly 72 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

15 NISSAN ROGUE SL $28,995 $ 28951 Auto, AWD, alloys, heated seats, lane depart warn, forward collision warn, pure drive, Bose snd, pwr liftgate, blindspot detect, cruise, rev camera, Bluetooth. 36,683 km

15 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN CREW

175

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$21,995 $

133

96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

28986 Auto, flex fuel, alloys, AC, dual climate, rear air ctrls, heated mirrors, cruise. 31,173 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$68,995 $

15 FORD F250 SD XL

$32,495 $

bi-weekly

416

bi-weekly

96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

28944 4x4, long box, flex fuel, heated mirrors, reg cab, tow/haul, trailer hitch, box liner, AC. 8,808 km!!! PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

bi-weekly

196

bi-weekly

96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

15 VW GOLF GTI 28372 Pwr roof/seat recline, push btn start, heated seats/mirrors, rev camera, Bluetooth, cruise, Fender snd, touch screen, auto, alloys. 21,432 km

14 FORD ESCAPE SE 28949 Auto, 4WD, keypad entry, eco boost, alloys, heated seats, rev camera, sync, cruise. 99,088 km

16 KIA SEDONA LX+ 28913E Auto, GDI, 8 pass, alloys, push btn start, heat seats, dual climate, rev cam, park aid, Bluetooth, cruise, pwr slide doors. 29,472 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

16 DODGE RAM 1500 LARAMIE 28837 Auto 3.0 6cyl Turbo ECO Diesel, factory remote start, crew cab, leather, heat seats/mirrors/steering, vent seats, nav, rev cam, park aid, U-connect, 4x4. 10,234 km

$26,495 $

160

16 AUDI A4 ALLROAD

$39,995 $

241

96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

28282 Panoramic roof, leather, heated seats/mirrors, Bluetooth, pwr liftgate/seats, auto, 4cyl TFSI AWD. 18,487 km

96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$16,995 $

15 JEEP PATRIOT HIGH ALTITUDE

$20,195 $

bi-weekly

114

bi-weekly 84 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$24,995 $

151

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$49,995 $

302

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

29040 Auto, 4x4, alloys, pwr roof, leather, heated seats, U-connect, cruise. 22,944 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

15 CHRYSLER T&C TOURING L 28566 Factory rem start, alloys, pwr roof/seats/liftgate/rear slide doors, leather, heat seats/steering, DVD x2 auto, nav, rev cam, cruise. 26,622 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

bi-weekly

122

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$27,995 $

169

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

15 CHEVY SILVERADO $48,995 $ HIGH COUNTRY 27949A 4x4, factory remote start, crew cab, pwr roof/seats, leather, heated/vented seats, nav, rev camera, park aid, Bluetooth, OnStar, Mylink, cross traffic alert, auto. 12,501 km

296

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

15 SMART FORTWO R 28679 Auto, tinted windows, heated seats, AC, keyless entry. 40,407 km

$7,995 $

48

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

16 HYUNDAI TUCSON LTD 28980E Auto, 4cyl T-GDI, AWD, alloys, heated seats/rear seats/steering, rev camera, Bluetooth, cruise, blindspot detect. 22,019 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

$25,995 $

157

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

16 DODGE RAM PRO- $23,995 MASTER CITY/SLT $ 28740 Alloys, heated seats/mirrors, nav, rev camera, park aid, Bluetooth, cruise, touch screen, auto 2.4, 4cyl MULTIAIR, curbside mirrors. 13,447 km

145

bi-weekly

96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

09 KUBOTA L3540

$28,900 $

22123 Front end loader with bucket, LA724, diesel, 4x4, AC, AM/FM, CD, 2 doors, 686 hours.

bi-weekly

257

60 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

Deferred payments subject to financing. All payments are based on bi-weekly payments. All 2010–2012 – 60 mths: 2013 – 72 mths, 2014 – 84 mths, 2015 - 2017 – 96 mths: P.P.S.A, License and taxes extra. EG: $10,000 + Taxes $1,300 + P.P.S.A. $65 = $11,365 financed over 60 mths at 5.9% = $117.34 Bi-Weekly with a cost of borrowing of $1,962.47 on approved credit. All cash deals are price of vehicle + taxes. Terms & rates are current at time of print. 0 Down + HST. Most 2016 & 2017 vehicles are former daily rentals. Bayview Auto is not responsible for pricing, vehicle option or mileage errors printed in this flyer. Contact dealership for more information.


2

BayviewAuto.ca 14 KIA SOUL SX 28999 Auto, 4cyl GDI, push buttons tart, alloys, leather, heated seats/ steering, rev camera, Bluetooth, cruise. 16,409 km

$18,495 $

15 TOYOTA YARIS LE

$12,995 $

15 TOYOTA YARIS LE

$12,995 $

bi-weekly

28908E Auto, AC, Bluetooth, cruise, touch screen. 58,224 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

bi-weekly

28906E Auto, AC, Bluetooth, cruise, touch screen. 53,001 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

bi-weekly

124

84 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

12 CHEVROLET CRUZE ECO

$9,995 $

28966 Manual 6spd, 4cyl ECOTEC TURBO, chrome wheels, AC, OnStar, cruise. 52,134 km

bi-weekly

13 HYUNDAI ELANTRA LTD 28407 Leather, heated seats, dual climate, Bluetooth, cruise, pwr roof/ seats, auto 2.0, 4cyl, FWD, keyless entry, alloys. 64,646 km

16 FORD FUSION SE 28486 Auto, AWD, factory remote start, alloys, leather, heated seats/ mirrors, rev camera, park aid, sync, cruise, ECO boost. 11,602 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

16 CHEVROLET CRUZE LT 28812 4cyl ECOTEC, factory remote start, alloys, pwr roof/seats, leather, heated seats, rev cam, OnStar, cruise, Mylink, Pioneer snd, auto. 25,832 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

13 CADILLAC ATS 4C 28476 4cyl TURBO, alloys, push buttons tart, leather, heated seats, OnStar, cruise, Bose snd, auto, RWD, keyless entry. 65,386 km

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89

60 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$13,495 $

103

bi-weekly 72 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$23,995 $

145

78

96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

16 MERCEDES-BENZ $35,995 $ CLA 250 4MATIC 29009E Auto, 4cyl TURBO, AWD, alloys, pano roof, leather, heated seats, nav, rev camera, park aid, Bluetooth, cruise. 21,980 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

16 CHRYSLER 200 C 28844 Factory rem start, alloys, pano roof, push btn start, leather, heat seat/ steering, nav, rev cam, U-connect, cruise, Alpine stereo. 20,395 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

15 FIAT 500 L LOUNGE

217

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$21,995 $

133

bi-weekly

96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$9,295 $

bi-weekly

28970 Manual 6spd, 4cyl ECOTEC, keyless entry, traction ctrl, CD player, OnStar. 42,975 km

bi-weekly

129

bi-weekly

72 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

16 CHEVROLET MALIBU LT 28543E Auto 2.5, 4cyl ECOTEC, FWD, AC, OnStar, cruise, Mylink, alloys. 44,814 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

83

60 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$16,495 $

100

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

15 FIAT 500L LOUNGE 28202 Crew cab, alloys, nav, rev camera, U-connect, heated mirrors, cruise, hill start assist, mirror dimmer, auto 3.0, 6cyl, diesel. 58,568 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

bi-weekly

28784 4cyl ECOTEC, factory remote start, leather trim seats, heated seats, OnStar, cruise, auto. 62,851 km

bi-weekly

28809 Factory remote start, alloys, heated seats/mirrors, AC, U-connect, cruise. 74,391 km

bi-weekly

194

72 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$19,995 $

121

bi-weekly

96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

129

72 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$16,695 $

101

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$16,695

15 FIAT 500L LOUNGE $ 28520 4 cyl Turbo, alloys, pano roof, leather, heat seats, nav, rev cam, park aid, cruise. 20,639 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

72 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$12,495 $

bi-weekly

96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

190

bi-weekly

12 CHRYSLER 200 TOURING

28996 Auto, alloys, heated seats/ mirrors, dual climate, rev camera, Bluetooth, cruise. 91,547 km

97

96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

28968 Auto 3.6L, 6cyl, AWD, alloys, pwr roof, push btn start, leather, heated seats/steering, rev camera, park aid, OnStar, cruise, Bose snd. 35,343 km

$24,995 $

$11,995 $

bi-weekly

12 CHEVROLET CRUZE LS

$16,995 $

28684 Factory remote start, alloys, pwr roof/seats, leather, heated seats/ steering, nav, rev camera, U-connect, auto, cruise. 13,602 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

121

bi-weekly

13 CADILLAC ATS LUXURY

12 CHEVROLET MALIBU LT

$16,995 $

$17,995 $ 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

15 CHRYSLER 200 C

28129 Factory remote start, heated seats/steering, panoramic roof, rev camera, park aid, U-connect, cruise. 32,740 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

$19,995 $

$25,495 $

13 HONDA ACCORD SPORT

96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

109

28788 AWD, 3.6L, 6cyl, chrome wheels, pwr roof/seats, leather, heated seats/steering, nav, rev camera, park aid, OnStar, cruise, Bose snd, collision alert, dual climate. 46,170 km

96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$15,995 $

28130 Auto, 4cyl TURBO, panoramic roof, leather, heated seats, nav, rev camera, U-connect, cruise, alloys. 31,113 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

bi-weekly

13 CADILLAC ATS PREMIUM

78

15 CHRYSLER 200 S

101

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

16 KIA SOUL EX 28749 Auto 2.0 4cyl GDI, alloys, heat seats, rev cam, Bluetooth, cruise. 35,105 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

15 TOYOTA YARIS LE 28905E hatchback, AC, Bluetooth, cruise, touch screen, auto, hubcaps. 53,399 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

16 FORD FUSION SE 28873 AWD, factory remote start, alloys, pwr roof/seats, leather, heated seats/mirrors, rev camera, park aid, cruise, auto, sync. 22,985 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

15 CHRYSLER 200 S 28734 Factory remote start, panoramic roof, heated seats/steering, nav, rev camera, U-connect, cruise, Alpine snd, auto. 25,637 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

107

60 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$16,995 $

103

bi-weekly

96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$12,995 $

78

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$23,295 $

141

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$19,995 $

121

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

16 FORD FUSION SE 28286 Factory remote start, alloys, pwr roof/seats, leather, heated seats/ mirrors, rev camera, park aid, sync, cruise, auto, AWD. 24,718 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

16 MAZDA 3 SPORT 28863 Rev camera, Bluetooth, cruise, Skyactiv tech, touch screen, auto, 4cyl, FWD, keyless entry, hubcaps, air bags, traction ctrl. 20,633 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

16 FORD FUSION SE 28472 Factory remote start, alloys, pwr roof/seat, leather, heat seats/ mirrors, rev cam, park aid, sync, cruise, auto, AWD. 17,924 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

15 FIAT 500L LOUNGE 28383 Auto 1.4 4cyl TURBO, alloys, pano roof, leather, heat seat, nav, rev cam, park aid, U-connect, cruise. 18,484 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

111

60 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$23,995 $

145

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$16,995 $

103

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$23,995 $

145

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$16,695 $

101

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

Deferred payments subject to financing. All payments are based on bi-weekly payments. All 2010–2012 – 60 mths: 2013 – 72 mths, 2014 – 84 mths, 2015 - 2017 – 96 mths: P.P.S.A, License and taxes extra. EG: $10,000 + Taxes $1,300 + P.P.S.A. $65 = $11,365 financed over 60 mths at 5.9% = $117.34 Bi-Weekly with a cost of borrowing of $1,962.47 on approved credit. All cash deals are price of vehicle + taxes. Terms & rates are current at time of print. 0 Down + HST. Most 2016 & 2017 vehicles are former daily rentals. Bayview Auto is not responsible for pricing, vehicle option or mileage errors printed in this flyer. Contact dealership for more information.

Wrap 2 Quinte West News - Thursday, November 10, 2016


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QuinteWest News THE

Proudly serving Trenton, Frankford and Area

www.insidebelleville.com

November 10, 2016 | 40 pages

Highway of Heroes Living Tribute celebrates anniversary in Trenton BY ERIN STEWART

Trenton – It’s been one year since the first Highway of Heroes Living Tribute tree was planted at CFB Trenton, signifying the start of the Highway of Heroes and the beginning of a major memorial project. One year later, on Friday Nov. 4, the Highway of Heroes Living Tribute organizers came back to Trenton to celebrate its one year anniversary by planting another tree beside the Afghanistan Repatriation Memorial in Bain Park as they continue to honour Canada’s fallen. The Highway of Heroes Living Tribute, a large-scale planting program, continues its goal to plant 117,000 trees to honour every single one of Canada’s fallen soldiers since Confederation along the Highway of Heroes – from Trenton to Toronto along highway 401. “The Living Tribute reminds those who travel along the highway of a great debt we owe these courageous Canadians,” said Mark Cullen, Board Chair of The Highway of Heroes Living Tribute and Canadian gardening guru. “With 3,000 trees planted on the highway so far, this initiative will also provide a myriad of environmental benefits for generations to come.” Representatives from CFB 8 Wing

Trenton, Trenton’s Royal Canadian Legion Branch 110 and local politicians joined the one-year anniversary celebration at Bain Park. With 3,00 trees planted along the highway so far, there are still another 114,000 to go within the goal timespan of five years. Off of the highway, Living Tribute has a newly announced goal of planting 2.1 million ‘service’ trees to recognize the service of Canadians who have served in wars or during times of conflict. The first 7,000 ‘service’ trees were planted during the first year. Retired Major Louise Maziarski attended the anniversary celebration at Bain Park and picked up a shovel to help plant trees. She said the Living Tribute is very close to her heart after her tour in Afghanistan. “I was fortunate enough when I was there from July 2010 to February 2011, I don’t think there was any Canadian that died during that time but it’s still very close to home so for me it’s a good way to honour them,” she said. “It’ll be an amazing tribute to any fallen soldiers really, it’s very special.” Quinte West Mayor Jim Harrison also lent a hand to help plant. Please see “Highway” on Page 2

Mark Cullen (L), Board Chair of The Highway of Heroes Living Tribute, along with representatives from CFB 8 Wing Trenton, Trenton’s Royal Canadian Legion Branch 110 and local politicians plant another tree beside the Afghanistan Repatriation Memorial in Bain Park as they continue to honour Canada’s fallen. Erin Stewart/Metroland

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Highway of Heroes Living Tribute celebrates anniversary in Trenton

see inside for details

Continued from Page 1

3 DAYS ONLY! NOVEMBER 11/12/13

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Schneiders Mini Sizzlers, Oktoberfest sausage or beef steakettes frozen 252/375 g, Lunchmate Stackers or Kits 81-132 g or Maple Leaf Top Dogs wieners 450 g selected varieties

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chicken drumsticks minimum pkg of 9, thighs

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blueberries product of Argentina, no. 1 grade 125 g

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fresh Atlantic salmon portions

boneless skinless, fresh 11.02/kg

selected varieties 113 g 0 seafood items Fresh subject to availability.

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selected varieties product of Ontario, Canada fancy grade, pineapples product of Costa Rica each or

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“We’re getting some good things done, these trees are special trees in memory of those who have given the supreme sacrifice but it’s also reflecting on those who also fought for the freedom,” said Harrison. “For us to be able to do this in recognition, that’s because of what all the people did in various wars so we can live the way we do in Canada, free and a healthy lifestyle, free spirit, enjoy life.” Harrison said he’s happy to have Living Tribute organizers back to celebrate one year. “Each year we will add to it and it will just get that much better,” he said. “We’re so lucky, so fortunate to have 8 Wing here and to be a part of this right from the start, it’s just unbelievable.” The project continues to gain support, said Cullen, and it’s important because it’s bringing life to the Highway of Heroes. “We’re bringing life to an otherwise rather benign corridor that’s there to acknowledge something that’s extremely important in our history, the sacrifice of men and

women since Confederation during times of war,” he said. Since the project kicked off one year ago, Canadians have donated almost $600,000 to bring the Highway of Heroes Living Tribute to life, including an anonymous private donation of $100,000. Cullen said all donations are tax deductible because the Living Tribute is a registered charity and all administrative costs have been prepaid so all donations go directly to tree planting. The Living Tribute has also kicked off a #150Tree campaign. With Canada’s 150th Birthday in 2017, Living Tribute has launched a campaign to help celebrate and honour fallen soldiers. People can become a Highway of Heroes Living Tribute Champion by making a $150 donation to buy a “Hero Tree” and will receive a “150Tree Kit” that includes a small tree, a t-shirt and a certificate to commemorate the donated gift to Canada. For more information, visit HOHtribute.ca.

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Campbell’s ready to serve soup or broth 540/900 mL or Habitant soup 796 mL

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selected varieties 158002

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2 Quinte West News - Thursday, November 10, 2016

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Viva Las Vegas! United Way of Quinte needs support to reach goal

Lest We Forget

122 Parks Dr., Belleville 613-966-8848

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Quinte West Mayor Jim Harrison and wife Jane Harrison enjoy a Las Vegas night out during the United Way of Quinte event at the National Air Force Museum on Saturday Nov. 5. Erin Stewart/Metroland

BY ERIN STEWART

Trenton – The United Way of Quinte brought Lady Luck to Trenton during its last fundraising event of the year. The annual Viva Las Vegas Charity Casino night took over the National Air Force Museum of Canada on Saturday Nov. 5. For $40, people could enjoy a night out and experience some of the fun Las Vegas has to offer without booking a plane ticket and while also supporting the United Way. With just under two months to go to reach the $2,115,620 campaign goal, Judi Gilbert, executive director of the United Way of Quinte, said said they are concerned because they are behind on fundraising efforts. “We haven’t been doing well and even since September we’ve been tracking about 4 per cent behind where we were last year, we’re still at that, which is cause for concern,” said Gilbert. The United Way will now be relying heavily on private donations and workplace campaigns to reach the campaign goal. The United Way of Quinte has over 250 workplace campaigns throughout Hastings and Prince Edward County, said Gilbert. Whether it’s corporate donations, payroll or special events in the workplace, last year that made up about 72 per cent of the $2.1 million campaign goal.

“It’s a big chunk of our campaign and the majority of those are still ongoing right now so we’re cautiously optimistic,” she said. “Given this event and hopefully the payroll deduction and the workplace campaigns that are going on right now that we’ll be able to hopefully get close to that.” The campaign deadline is December 31. Gilbert said the Las Vegas evening was going great. “It’s pretty high energy, we’ve got the blackjack tables, we’ve got great entertainment going on, a wonderful DJ, and a really good group of people, we’ve got an incredible silent auction table going on,” she said. Even though numbers were slightly down from last year, Gilbert said they

were still pleased with the turnout and expected more people to come out throughout the evening and purchase tickets at the door. “It’s still early too because last year I know we had a lot of folks that came closer to 10 o’clock so we’re hoping for that but given the number of folks that are here I think everyone is having a really great time,” she said. The United Way of Quinte supports thousands of families throughout Hastings and Prince Edward by financially supporting more than 75 agencies in the area. To donate or find more information on the United Way of Quinte, visit unitedwayofquinte.ca.

Date: Tuesday November 15, 2016 Time: 6:30 p.m. – 8:00 p.m. Location: City of Quinte West City Hall Council Chambers 7 Creswell Drive Trenton, ON Kevin Heath, City Clerk, kevinh@quintewest.ca 613-392-2841, ext. 4490

Quinte West News - Thursday, November 10, 2016 3


‘Inspiring young leaders’ blossoming at BPS

students are interacting with their community and also seeing beyond their commuBrighton – Little people with big hearts are nity. This school year, the club will be striving aiming to make the difference in their comto help provide clean water internationally munity and beyond this year. Earlier in 2016, Brighton Public School and water filter systems for people in places (BPS) students before summer break were like Laos. “I’m proud of them,” said Goheen. striving to ensure their community memThe idea behind the club, is to encourage bers didn’t go hungry. Students were also working to do their kids while they’re young, to carry out these part, to help the Brighton Refugee Immi- projects which benefit their school, local grant Needs Group (BRING), to welcome and global communities and to have youth Brighton’s first Syrian family – the Al Re- get a taste of what that means and the differences they can make. fai’s. For what the kids have accomplished alThese students are part of the EarlyAct ready, the mayor, who also belongs to the Club. “I think one of their most successful rotary club couldn’t congratulate the group projects was their ‘Heart for Hunger’ food enough Thursday. Walas is a big supporter of the club, he drive during Valentine’s Day,” said Kelly Snyder, a BPS teacher. She helped start the said, adding kids are learning a great deal club with another teacher, Carol Peterson, about life, themselves, their community and after the Rotary Club of Brighton pur- what it means to help others. The consensus is, those skills and life lesposed the idea. The rotary club also sponsons will go a long way for the kids too. sors EarlyAct. Brighton’s club started in January, with Snyder estimates the kids brought in more than 25 students. about 1,200 items during that one drive. The rotary’s new generation co-ordinaAnd with the start of a new school year now well underway, students have more tor, Ricardo Melendro, said the kids have been “extremely motivated and active,” goals. But first, on Thursday, Nov. 3, local dig- fundraising money and food, among other nitaries, rotary members and countless oth- things. “I’m certain this school year, you will ers, joined students for the inauguration of continue to work with the same dedication the club. Students during this time also shared and passion as you have and I hope you have fun doing it too,” he told the students some of their new projects. Many, including principal John Goheen during the formal kickoff for the club. Another unique item on the student’s The EarlyAct Club, with teacher Kelly Snyder, celebrates successes with a little cake at Brighton and Mayor Mark Walas left filled with pride, after hearing of the youngsters’ am- current to-do list, they plan to start work Public School, on Thursday, Nov. 3. for a self-sustaining tower garden. bitions. Sarah Hyatt/Metroland. Vegetables would be harvested for the The Grades 4 to 8 students have already school’s breakfast program, said Snyder. taken on so many goals, said Goheen. The kids will also soon elect a president, It’s pretty remarkable, he added, these vice-president, treasurer and secretary www.krown.com/trenton for their club, as they plunge ahead with various projects. Two others in attendance for the ceremony were president for the rotary club, Victoria Parker and BRING chairman, Hugh McDonald. They too, were touched by the kids’ efforts. “It’s a wonderful thing to be able to Tables & Chairs • Bedrooms & Home Accents help someone else in this life,” McDontold the kids, as he collected a doRUTTLE BROTHERS FURNITURE ald nation for BRING from the club. SINCE 1974 Parker said she was “inspired,” to 1 mile N. of WALMART on HWY 62, Belleville • 613-969-9263 see such young leaders blossoming and www.ruttlebrothersfurniture.com learning the value of helping others.

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Quinte West News - Thursday, November 10, 2016 5


OPINION

Half the jobs are going into the abyss “The notion that Uber in London is a mosaic of 30,000 small businesses linked by a common ‘platform’ is, to our minds, faintly ridiculous,” said one of the judges on the employment Gwynne Dyer tribunal. So the tribunal ruled that Uber’s 30,000 drivers in London were actually employees, and therefore entitled to be paid the minimum wage, to be given sick pay, even to have paid holidays. Uber promptly appealed the ruling, because it would wreck its business model in the United Kingdom and, if the example spreads, worldwide. But it was only a temporary victory for workers’ rights, because just as the real jobs have been replaced by fake “freelance” jobs like Uber that strip people of their old legal protections, so the “freelance” driving gigs will soon be replaced by – no jobs at all. The first self-driving cars are already on the roads. Automation, in the form of artificial intelligence, will probably abolish almost all the driving jobs in the next twenty years. In Britain alone, that means 400,000 jobs driving big trucks and almost 300,000 licensed taxi drivers. (The jobs driving delivery vans will last a little longer.) Three-quarters of a million jobs gone, say, and nothing plausible coming down the road to replace them. Scale it up to the size of the United States, and that’s around 4 million more American jobs gone, not to foreign competition and “outsourcing” but just to technological change. It’s harder to replace drivers than bank tellers – “every ATM is the ghost of three bank tellers” – but it just takes a little longer to develop the right software. There is a message here for all the angry people who voted for Brexit in Britain, who voted for Donald Trump in the United States, who will vote for Marine Le Pen and the National Front in France next April. They are angry because the secure jobs and decent living standards they enjoyed in the latter half of the 20th century are gone. Something must be done about it, but the jobs are not coming back. If Trump wins, he will destroy the Mexican economy, cause immense collateral damage to the Canadian economy, and trigger a full-scale trade war with China, but there is still no hope that those lost jobs will ever come home again. There might be

Quinte West News

more manufacturing in the United States, but automation would still ensure that most of the old jobs were eliminated. As they will one day be eliminated in their new homes overseas too. This is a global economic transformation comparable to the industrial revolution, when entire populations went from overwhelmingly rural to overwhelmingly urban in only two generations. This time the transformation is from a full-employment economy to an economy of abundance that only requires a fraction of the population to work. A 2013 study by Oxford University economists Carl Frey and Michael Osborne concluded that 47 percent of American jobs are likely to be destroyed by automation in the next 20 years. That’s change so big and so fast that people can’t believe it’s happening, and so they prefer to focus on something like out-sourcing that might be fixed by politics. The industrial revolution was an angry, turbulent time, with urban uprisings and class warfare. We’ll be lucky if the damage this time is limited to demagogues like Donald Trump, who pander to the fear and anger of the newly displaced – and not just the displaced of the old working class, but the growing numbers of middleclass people who are also being displaced by machines. They are not “right-wing” in the traditional sense, although many have become more socially conservative and some openly racist as their panic rises. “Populist” is a much better word: they hate the changes and the “elites” who seem untouched by them, and they want their old jobs and their self-respect back. But the old jobs are not coming back, and even populist politics cannot resurrect them. Besides, most of them actually hated their jobs, from which they were only free for two weeks (the US and Japan) or at most five weeks (Europe) a year. The real task will be to find ways of providing a majority of our fellow citizens with money and self respect without those jobs. Some form of Guaranteed Minimum Income is probably the answer, but we have barely got round to asking the right question yet. This is not a disaster; it’s a process. Last time it took over a century of mass misery and occasional mass bloodshed to get through it, but at the end most people were living much longer, healthier, more interesting lives than their peasant ancestors. We should try to do it a lot better and quicker this time. Vice President & Regional Publisher Peter Bishop pbishop@metroland.com 613-283-3182 Ext. 108

250 Sidney Street Belleville, ON K8P 3Z3 Phone: 613-966-2034 Fax: 613-966-8747 Published weekly by:

General Manager Seaway Gavin Beer gbeer@perfprint.ca 613-966-2034, ext 570 Editor Chris Malette chris.malette@metroland.com 613-966-2034, ext 510 Regional Managing Editor Ryland Coyne rcoyne@perfprint.ca

Let’s keep Remembrance Day in perspective Editorial by Chris Malette Tomorrow, on Nov. 11, we will fall into one of two categories. For most of you, it is hoped, you’ll take a moment out of your day to pause in silent thanks for those who made the ultimate sacrifice for our country and for all the soldiers who died in our Allied conflicts. For many, owing to the vagaries of the calendar, it’s a day off (if you’re in the civil service) and unfortunately it’s a convenient excuse for many to (woo-hoo!) have a long weekend in November. There are mandatory days off for most civil servants and this one will be a day when city hall, all government offices and federal services will stand down for the day. Oddly, the Canadian Legion is opposed to making November 11 a national holiday, a la Canada Day, despite the efforts of a Nova Scotia Member of Parliament who wants just that. Colin Fraser, MP for West Nova, said his private member’s bill, Bill C-311, would make Remembrance Day a legal holiday in the Holidays Act. The Legion, officially, takes the view that November 11 would just become another day at the cottage or on the couch if it’s marked as a stat, insisting, as this weekend will be for civil servants, anyway, “just another long weekend…” Fraser, whose own province does not mark the day as a statutory holiday, as Ontario does for Family Day, believes otherwise. “It doesn’t make it a national holiday, but elevates it to the same status as Canada Day [and Victoria Day],” the MP said. “The main purpose is to give it the recognition I think it deserves in federal legislation, but also to get the provinces and territories who don’t have it as a statutory holiday to revisit it.” So it is, then, that we will pause tomorrow at 11 a.m., stop what we’re doing, idle our pens and tools and pay silent homage to the men and women who have served our country and lost their lives in so doing. It is Remembrance Day and cenotaph ceremonies will be taking place, movingly, in all corners of the country. The other common name for this day is Armistice Day, which marks the date and time when armies stopped fighting in the First World War on November 11, 1918, at 11 a.m. (the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month). About 100,000 Canadian soldiers died in the First and Second World Wars. DISTRIBUTION MANAGER Paul Mitchell 613-966-2034 ext 508 SALES MANAGER Melissa Hudgin 613-966-2034, ext 504

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All government buildings fly the Canadian flag this day and people remember those who fought for Canada during a two-minute silence at 11 a.m. Many people wear poppies before and on Remembrance Day to show their respect and support for Canadian troops. What sets it apart – or should set Remembrance Day apart – from, say, Thanksgiving, is the gravity of the day itself. Thanksgiving Day, after all, is supposed to be for all of us to pause from our busy schedules, take a moment with friends and family around a groaning table of food and be thankful for all that we have in our lives. In reality, for most Canadians it’s another day off work, a bonanza for grocery stores which sell huge amounts of rich foods, turkeys, hams and the like and nary a thought is given to being remotely thankful for those who came before us and who made our lives of plenty possible. In that vein, our American neighbours – battered as they are on all fronts from internal, infernal bickering, gun violence and racial divide – pride themselves on being ultra-patriotic when it comes to honouring the flag and all who defend it in uniform. Yet, American veterans are some of the most poorly treated in any developed country and American companies and businesses have little compunction about running “Veterans Day sales” advertising everything from toaster ovens to minivans. Yessir, step right up, patriotic American shoppers. Between now and November 11, you can get “40% off Kenmore Hot Buys…” at Sears; or a “Veterans Day Sale! Free shipping to a local True Value store” if you order online, but only until, you guessed it – ‘Vet’s Day.’ Most of us here in Canada solemnly take a moment to remember the family member or friend who either died in the wars or who came home and served their communities and families after having done so. We will remember them. No matter where you are across Canada this week, there’s somewhere near you where our veterans are being remembered in a service, a gathering or a ceremony. Go to one, if you can. And if you’re traveling, here’s a link to find out where, online: http://www.veterans.gc.ca/eng/remembrance/get-involved/remembrance-day/events

CLASSIFIEDS 1-888-Words Ads EDITORIAL Quinte West News Erin Stewart erin.stewart@metroland.com PRODUCTION 613-966-2034

Read us online at www.InsideBelleville.com 6 Quinte West News - Thursday, November 10, 2016


Santa coming to Trenton Nov. 27 Quinte West - Santa Claus has Trenton on his busy holiday schedule for a visit on Nov. 27 at 4:30 p.m. The Santa Claus parade will leave Centennial Park at 4:30 p.m., make its way up Campbell St., and then follows Dundas St. East over the bridge and through downtown around 5 p.m. Everyone is encouraged to bring a non-perishable food item for the food bank and toy for the Kinsmen Toy Drive. Watch for the Canada Post carriers as they walk through the parade to collect your letters and deliver them directly to Santa at the North Pole! Address your Santa letter to Santa Claus, North Pole, HOH OHO Canada. Remember to include your return address! Bundle up and head out to see all the wonderful floats built by local businesses, organizations and service clubs. Listen to a selection of bands from across the region as they play some Christmas favourites for the community to enjoy. These bands are funded through the parade sponsors and by donations from local businesses, service groups and individuals.

The Quinte West Chamber of Commerce and the Santa Claus Parade Committee have been working hard to make sure the community has a great parade this year. The parade is financially supported by the Quinte West Chamber of Commerce, City of Quinte West, and the following parade sponsors: McDonalds Trenton, Quintessential Credit Union, Royal LePage ProAlliance Realty, Scotiabank, Scott’s Haulage & Excavating Ltd., Trenton Cold Storage, West End Dental Centre and Whitley Financial Services. Don’t forget to vote after the parade for the Scotiabank People’s Choice Award for your favourite float. If you would like to enter a float or make a donation, please contact the Quinte West Chamber of Commerce at 613-392-7635 or events@quintewestchamber.ca. Donations can be made to the Quinte West Chamber of Commerce at 97 Front St., Trenton, ON K8V 4N6.

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The event was recorded by a Cobourg video firm. Sharp explained in an email the organization decided it needed to have “historical video documentation about the lighthouse” and the group’s efforts to protect and preserve the historical structure. The video will include a history of the lighthouse and society as well as the pilot project set to begin in 2017, and the final phase of the restoration. It will also capture conditions inside the lighthouse “because we now know that the plaster has to come off the interior to proceed with the grouting,” Sharp said.

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Trenton church remembers our fallen Dear Editor, With Remembrance Day upon us, I wish to mention the many Military Memorials at St. George’s Anglican Church and Cemetery in Trenton. We have a beautiful War Memorial stained glass window which is a rare thing in churches in Canada. It was installed in 1921 and depicts soldiers in battle. In the churchyard we have a raised cross shaped memorial flowerbed to honour those who died at Afghanistan or were affected by being there. There are military flags in the church as well as Honor Rolls.

In the cemetery is an area for the military fallen called the War Graves Area, under the War Graves Commission, with 29 graves with military gravestones. Beside it is a memorial stone for the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan with two memorial benches. These are a few of the military memorials in our very old church and cemetery. We welcome visitors to the church this Remembrance Day. Peter Kellett Trenton


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Quinte West News - Thursday, November 10, 2016 9


Speed limits under review in Quinte West

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Quinte West Mayor Jim Harrison during the council meeting on Monday Nov. 7. Erin Stewart/Metroland

Notice of Special Council Meeting City Of Quinte West A Special Meeting of Council has been scheduled to be held on Monday, November 14th, 2016 to have discussions related to the 2017 Municipal Capital Budget. This meeting will commence at 6:00 p.m. and will be held in the Council Chambers. City Hall 7 Creswell Drive PO Box 490 Trenton, ON K8V 5R6 kevinh@quintewest.ca Tel: 613-392-2841

BY ERIN STEWART

Trenton – Quinte West is reviewing two speed limits on Highway 2 and is seeking public input. The 200-metre stretch from Wallbridge-Loyalist Road to the Quinte Conservation is under review, with the request to reduce the speed from 80 km/h to 60 km/h. The speed limit on Highway 2 from 2nd Dug Hill Road to McMaster Road, roughly 1.7 kilometres, is also under review with the request to reduce the speed from 80 km/h to 60 km/h. The City adapted a new speed limit review protocol before the summer and under that new protocol the City now advertises for public input in relation to speed limit changes.

“We’re looking for the public’s comments by November 16,” said Chris Angelo, director of public works and environmental services. “There was a request sent in to the city asking for the reduction and we’re following the protocol that was approved by council in terms of getting public input now.” The policy approved by council indicates that 85 per cent of the people who live on the street must want the speed limit changed in order to conduct a review. Since these two requests came in earlier in the year before the protocol was adapted they are being carried forward but going forward all requests to change the speed limit will be done strictly folloring the protocol. Visit quintewest.ca to comment on the speed limit review.

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Drought conditions continue and could stay throughout winter BY ERIN STEWART

Quinte West – Although rainfall across the Trent River valley has been near average throughout October, drought conditions still continue across the region and could remain throughout the winter. A Level 2 Low Water Condition remains for most of the watershed region, an area stretching from Grafton to Quinte West and from Lake Ontario to Rice Lake, while Level 3 Low Water Conditions remain for the Township of Stirling-Rawdon and the Municipality of Centre Hastings, as of November 1. “Stream flows and groundwater levels have definitely improved in response to a couple of days of continuous rain at the end of October,” said Janet Noyes, Water Resources Manager at Lower Trent Conservation. “However, total rainfall for the past

7 months is only 68% of normal so we still need considerable rain before winter to recharge water levels.” With low precipitation since April, there has not been enough precipitation to totally recharge the ground water, leaving many wells with low levels or dry. For people living on wells, if there isn’t enough rainfall to replenish the ground water before the ground freezes, the drought will continue throughout the winter and possibly into next spring, said Noyes. “If we get to freeze up and it (ground water) hasn’t fully recharged, it hasn’t infiltrated either through stream flow or infiltrated through the ground and the soil, then the ground water levels could stay quite low,” giving the potential for some wells to be dry throughout winter, said Noyes. The Lower Trent Conservation is recommending that people on wells come up with some kind of additional water storage at their home. Noyes said there are many people who have cisterns, underground storage tanks, which she said are probably the most permanent solution and typically the priciest.

This map shows the areas affected by drought and near-drought conditions. Source – Lower Trent Conservation

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Other storage recommendations include temporary storage outside with a storage tank but it is not a solution for the winter because the water would freeze. Some people also have additional storage inside their house where their well pumps water into an inside storage unit. “Those are options for people and basically that has to be done through a licensed plumber,” she said. “Conserve all you can and if you are in an area that you’re seeing some effects from the drought I would recommend you look at some other storage types.” Some people do get truckloads of water and put it down their wells but Noyes said this can be ineffective and temporary. A lot of the time this just ends up recharging the aquifer, as the water isn’t staying in the well. When asked if people on wells should be worried about a drought through the winter at this point, Noyes said, “They should be cognisant of the situation and be prepared.” Anyone experiencing hardships as a result of the dry conditions is encouraged to contact Lower Trent Conservation at 613394-4829 or information@ltc.on.ca to help with tracking the impacts of the low water conditions. Everyone is still encouraged to reduce water use where possible. For the Townships of Stirling-Rawdon and Centre Hastings, residents in these level 3 areas are asked to reduce water use by 50 per cent. Under the level 2 conditions, residents,

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Trenton – Brenda Ingram found it hard to hold back tears Monday evening. Ingram, and the family members of the three councillors who died while in office, watched as Quinte West Mayor Jim Harrison unveiled the memorial council plaque to commemorate members of Quinte West council who have died while in office. “I do have a few tears, it’s a very sentimental emotional thing,” said Brenda Ingram, wife of Roy Ingram, at the plaque unveiling. Ingram described the black granite plaque as “beautiful,” adding she is excited for her daughter to see it the next time she comes home to visit. “I’m so proud of my husband and I’m really really grateful that the council had this tribute to him, it’s wonderful to be recognized when you’re in a position where you’re trying to do the best for your

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community,” she said. “It’s nice to know afterwards that people still remember.” “The City of Quinte West gratefully acknowledges those members of council who sadly left us too soon. Their call to public service Brenda Ingram cried tears of joy seeing her late huswill long remain an inspiraband Roy Ingram commemorated on the newly untion to all.” These are the words writ- veiled memorial council plaque, commemorating ten on the black granite members of Quinte West council who have died while plaque now hanging in the in office. Erin Stewart/Metroland Quinte West City Hall with Roy Ingram, Doreen Reid a feel for what was happening, what was and Doug Whitney comgoing on in various parts of our city,” said memorated on the plaque to date. Quinte West Mayor Jim Harrison said Harrison. “Those are the kinds of things that, as he looks back on fond memories of Ina mayor, are very close to my heart and a gram, Reid and Whitney. “From my perspective, they were al- very important part of being a represenways on time, always did their homework, tative of all the various people in various always were welcome here and always had parts of our community.”

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Trenton High Tigers win COSSA gold

G-Hawks trade two for Sekelyk BY ERIN STEWART

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The Trenton High Tigers’ senior girls rugby team won COSSA gold over the Bayside Secondary School She Devils on Thursday Nov. 3, at Bayside. The Tigers won 21-7, a comeback after the She Devils beat them the previous week to become Bay of Quinte champs.

Trenton – The Trenton Golden Hawks have acquired Chris Sekelyk from North York in exchange for forward Ture Linden and defenseman Ryan Radisa. The 20 year old played in his first home game against Pickering on Friday Nov. 4, and said he is excited about his new opportunity. “The opportunity here is huge, I love it Chris Sekelyk, #27, during his time with the here, I love the fans, it’s a great place to be North York Rangers. (Photo by Andy Corneau/OJHL Images) in my books,” he said. “I wasn’t expecting it but I knew it was a huge opportunity so reason we got him, we got him because he’s a I’m trying to make the most of it.” quality hockey player.” Sekelyk said he knows how well the team played last year and is hoping to do even bet9 G-Hawks selected for Eastern Canada ter this season. Cup “We’re looking to go on another run again this year obviously so we’ll hope for the In other Golden Hawks news, nine G-Hawks best,” he said. have been chosen to play in the Eastern CanCoach Jerome Dupont said he thinks Sekeada Cup. lyk will be a valuable addition to the team. Chosen players are: Louis DiMatteo, An“We feel he gives us an element of sanddrew Cordssen-David, Lucas Brown, Michael paper, which we think is needed, especially Silveri, Liam Morgan, Chris Janzen, Josh Alin our building, and he’s obviously got good lan, Dawson Baker and Chris Sekelyk. hands, good finish and he can make plays like The Eastern Canada Cup All-Star Chalon the Cordssen-David goal that he set up so lenge was created as a competitive alternative we’re happy that he’s here,” he said. to the annual league All-Star Game and deSekelyk also has a left shot, something buted in 2011. that was missing from the team’s line-up said The challenge originally included the CaDupont. nadian Junior Hockey League’s centrally “We had too many right shots and he fills located Junior “A” loops from the Central a void to some extent but that’s not really the Canada Hockey League, Northern Ontario Junior Hockey League, HOME DELIVERY Ontario Junior Hockey League and Ligue de Hockey Junior AAA du • Beer & Liquour Quebec but now also includes the • Grocery Orders Maritime Hockey League. • Fast Food This year’s challenge will be host• Restaurant Deliveries ed for the second time by the CCHL • Pharmacy Deliveries in Cornwall from November 16-18. • Corner Store Pick-Up & Deliveries


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Trenton – The Trenton Golden Hawks’ second game against the Pickering Panthers was a very different game than the first time to two teams faced off. Unlike the G-Hawks 14-3 blowout over the panthers in September, the Hawks faced an improved team and struggled to pull out a 4-3 win at home on Friday Nov. 4. The Panthers came out unexpectedly strong and scored the first two goals of the game in the first period. Davis Kuksis scored the first goal five minutes into the period, assisted by Anthony Stavrou. Stavrou scored the second goal short handed 13 minutes into the first, assisted by Steven Elliot and Jarrett Meyer. The Trenton Golden Hawks picked up the pace and came back strong in the second period with three goals scored by Jordan Chard, Austin Tonkovich and Andrew Cordssen-David. Connor Quinn and Austin Bottrell picked up one assist each and Chris Sekelyk and Jeremy Pullara each contributed two. Liam Morgan scored the Hawks’ last goal of the night 29 seconds into the third, unassisted, bringing the score to 4-2. The Panthers closed the gap with their third goal, scored unassisted by Stavrou with three minutes left in the game, but were unable to get through Trenton’s defence to force overtime. Trenton’s Cordssen-David got the first star of the game for contributing the Hawks third goal of the game to take the lead over the Panthers. “It was a lucky goal, it changed the momentum of the game, we needed a big goal to boost our spirits

and I think it did,” he said. Cordssen-David said the team didn’t play their best game and definitely didn’t expect the Panthers to come out strong and score the first goal of the game. “It was definitely a shock today when that team came out strong so it was a surprise for the whole team but we picked up our game Trenton Golden Hawks’ Liam Morgan tries to dive for the puck to score on an open net in the final throughout the game,” he minutes of the G-Hawks vs. Pickering Panthers game on Friday Nov. 4. Erin Stewart/Metroland said. “We persevered, we worked hard and we got the job done.” Coach Jerome Dupont said the Hawks played an average game and need to improve their fitness level. “I think we’ve got to get in better shape, I thought we didn’t sustain our effort for 60 minutes after a tough game last night and that shouldn’t be the case,” he said. “The good thing is we came back, we found a way, so that’s the positive.” TRENTON The Hawks now sit at second in the East Division, behind Cobourg, with a 16-3-1 record. Coming up, the Trenton Golden Hawks will play two home games. The Buffalo Jr. Sabres will come to town on Thursday Nov. 10 at 7:30 p.m. and then the Newmarket Hurricanes will play in Trenton on Friday Nov. 11 at GH023 7:30 p.m.

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Deferred payments subject to financing. All payments are based on bi-weekly payments. All 2010–2012 – 60 mths: 2013 – 72 mths, 2014 – 84 mths, 2015 - 2017 – 96 mths: P.P.S.A, License and taxes extra. EG: $10,000 + Taxes $1,300 + P.P.S.A. $65 = $11,365 financed over 60 mths at 5.9% = $117.34 Bi-Weekly with a cost of borrowing of $1,962.47 on approved credit. All cash deals are price of vehicle + taxes. Terms & rates are current at time of print. 0 Down + HST. Most 2016 & 2017 vehicles are former daily rentals. Bayview Auto is not responsible for pricing, vehicle option or mileage errors printed in this flyer. Contact dealership for more information.

Quinte West News - Thursday, November 10, 2016 Wrap 3


4

BayviewAuto.ca 12 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN SE

$13,995 $

28959A Auto, flex fuel, Stow’n’go, AC, dual climate, rear air ctrls, heated mirrors, cruise. 88,155 km

bi-weekly

15 CHRYSLER T&C LTD 27915 Factory remote start, auto, stow’n’go, heat seats/mirrors/steer, DVD, nav, rev camera, U-connect, pwr liftgate/doors/roof/seats. 26,316 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

16 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN CREW 28393 Alloys, Stow’n’Go, heated seats/mirrors, rev camera, cruise, u-connect, auto. 28,258 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

124

15 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN CREW

60 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

28916 Auto, flex fuel, alloys, leather, Stow’n’go, heated seats, dual climate, rear air ctrls, nav, rev camera, cruise, pwr liftgate. 42,695 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

$29,995 $

15 CHRYSLER T&C LTD

181

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$24,695 $

149

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

28509 Factory remote start, leather, stow’n’go, heated seats/rear seats/ mirrors, DVD(2), nav, rev camera, park aid, U-connect, pwr liftgate/doors/ seats, auto, cruise. 19,959 km

16 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN CREW 28728 Alloys, stow’n’go, heated seats/mirrors/steering, dual climate, rear air ctrls, rev camera, U-connect, cruise. 18,405 km

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$23,995 $

145

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$30,495 $

184

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$24,695 $

149

16 KIA SEDONA LX 28910E 8 passenger, 6cyl GDI, alloys, heated seats, rev camera, park aid, Bluetooth, cruise, touch screen, auto, dual climate, rear air ctrls. 58,083 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

16 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN CREW 28394 Stow’n’go, heated seats/ mirrors/steering, dual climate, rear air ctrls, rev camera, U-connect, cruise, auto, hill start assist. 25,508 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

16 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN CREW

$21,995 $

133

bi-weekly

96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$24,695 $

149

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$24,695 $

149

96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

28395 Sto’n’Go, heated seats/mirrors/ steering, rev cam, U-connect, cruise, alloys, auto. 23,134 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$39,995 $

14 DODGE RAM 1500 ST

$32,995 $

bi-weekly

bi-weekly

PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

16 DODGE RAM 1500 SPORT 28501 8cyl HEMI, crew cab, short box, pwr roof/seats, heat seats/ mirrors/steer, nav, u-connect, cruise, tow/haul mode, 4x4. 9,822 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

15 NISSAN FRONTIER SV 28354E, 4X4, Crew cab, short box, AC, cruise, auto, 6cyl, box liner, alloys, hill descent ctrl. 15,217 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

$42,995 $

260

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$27,495 $

166

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

15 DODGE RAM 1500 LARAMIE 26286 Auto, 4 dr, 8 cyl, 4x4, HEMI, factory remote start, crew cab, box liner, trailer hitch, chrome wheels, leather, U-connect. 29,456 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

16 NISSAN FRONTIER SV 28758 4x4, quad cab, alloys, AC, Bluetooth, cruise, hill descent ctrl, auto, 6cyl, keyless entry, short box, box liner. 22,338 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

241

222

96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

28656 Auto, 6cyl Turbo Eco Diesel, 4x4, crew cab, short box, AC, rev camera, heated mirrors, cruise, tow/ haul, trailer hitch, box liner. 49,083 km

84 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$28,195 $

16 DODGE RAM 1500 SPORT

$39,495 $

bi-weekly

170

bi-weekly

96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

28879 Auto 5.7, 8cyl HEMI, 4x4, crew cab, short box, trailer hitch, box liner, alloys, leather trim seats, rev camera, U-connect, cruise. 19,352 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

bi-weekly

238

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

16 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN SXT 28729 Alloys, stow’n’go, dual climate, rear air ctrls, DVD, rev camera, U-connect, cruise, aut, heated mirrors. 29,359 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

16 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN CREW 28391 Stow’n’go, heated seats/ mirrors/steering, rev camera, U-connect, cruise, auto, 6cyl, FWD, flex fuel, alloys, pwr seats. 27,365 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

15 CHRYSLER T&C TOURING L 28384 Factory remote start, alloys, pwr roof/seats/liftgate/sliding doors, leather, heated seats/steer/mirrors, DVD blueray x2, cruise. 27,543 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

15 CHEVROLET COLORADO Z71 28849 Step bars, alloys, leather trim seats, heat seat, rev cam, Bluetooth, OnStar, cruise, 4x4. 40,967 km

15 DODGE RAM 1500 LARAMIE 28895 Auto 3.0L, 6cyl, ECO Diesel 4x4, crew cab, pwr roof, leather, heated seats/rear seats/steering, vent seats, rev camera. 39,748 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

$25,995 $

157

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$24,695 $

149

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$27,995 $

169

bi-weekly

96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$36,495 $

220

bi-weekly

84 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$44,995 $

272

bi-weekly

96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

15 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN SXT 28781 Flex fuel, Sto’n’Go, U-connect, cruise, auto, dual climate, rear air ctrl. 44,709 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

16 KIA SEDONA LX+ 28912E 8 pass, alloys, push btn start, heat seats, rev cam, park aid, Bluetooth, cruise, pwr rear doors, auto, sat radio. 29,424 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

15 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN CREW 28467 Alloys, stow’n’go, dual climate, rear air ctrls, heated mirrors, cruise, auto. 35,535 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

$20,995 $

127

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$24,995 $

151

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$22,495 $

136

bi-weekly 96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

14 DODGE RAM 3500 $54,995 LARAMIE LONG HORN $ 28133 Auto 6.7 8cyl Cummins Turbo Diesel, dual rear wheels, cargo cam, factory remote start, heat seats/ mirrors/steering, nav, rev cam, park aid, chrome wheels. 97,773 km

16 FORD F150 28977E Auto, crew cab, long box, flex fuel, alloys, rev camera, Bluetooth, cruise, trailer backup assist. 17,631 km PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL

369

bi-weekly 84 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

$33,995 $

205

bi-weekly

96 mths @ 5.9% 0 DOWN + HST

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Deferred payments subject to financing. All payments are based on bi-weekly payments. All 2010–2012 – 60 mths: 2013 – 72 mths, 2014 – 84 mths, 2015 - 2017 – 96 mths: P.P.S.A, License and taxes extra. EG: $10,000 + Taxes $1,300 + P.P.S.A. $65 = $11,365 financed over 60 mths at 5.9% = $117.34 Bi-Weekly with a cost of borrowing of $1,962.47 on approved credit. All cash deals are price of vehicle + taxes. Terms & rates are current at time of print. 0 Down + HST. Most 2016 & 2017 vehicles are former daily rentals. Bayview Auto is not responsible for pricing, vehicle option or mileage errors printed in this flyer. Contact dealership for more information.

Wrap 4 Quinte West News - Thursday, November 10, 2016


Connected

2ND SECTION

TO YOUR COMMUNITY

www.insidebelleville.com

Fixed Fur Life sets stellar new milestone to save cats ployees. All funds donated go directly to pay Madoc and Tweed, she indicated. Because of the large volume of cats forever Operating without a shelter, the organiza- turning up in the community, the same cannot Fixed Fur Life is helping solve the cat over- veterinary expenses to assist the animals in our tion exists with the cooperation of the above be said for cats. Until all of these animals, inpopulation problem in Quinte and just recent- community.” Veterinary expenses are defined by Dar- listed facilities and takes in both cats and dogs. cluding household pets, are spayed and neuly set an amazing milestone. “The dogs we take in find homes imme- tered, the problem can continue to grow. In their efforts to spay, neuter and assist lene as spaying, neutering, vaccinations and For now, Fixed Fur Life and their dedicated people with cat or dog problems, this pro-ac- medical emergencies. The organizations reach diately, as we have a long list of approved tive organization has reached a milestone of extends to Prince Edward County, Trenton, homes,” she said. “When a dog is in need, the volunteers are just concerned with meeting the next goal of helping 30,000 cats and dogs. 20,000 cats and dogs in the Quinte area spayed, Belleville, Brighton, Deseronto, Marmora, perfect home is not far behind.” To do that, they need community neutered or families helped. help in the form of donations of “Wow! One can only imagine money to cover costs, food for the what this effort has prevented,” animals and facilities to house the said Darlene Quinsey, president ever-increasing number of cats of Fixed Fur Life. “The average without homes. female cast has the potential to “Please consider helping us produce three litters of kittens reach our next milestone 30,000,” per year. Our statistics show that Darlene said. of the 20,006 cats and dogs we Donations or more informahave assisted, 73 per cent have tion can be obtained by contactbeen females.” ing Fixed Fur Life at Box 20091, Fixed Fur Life’s goal is to conBelleville, ON, K8N 5V1 or visit trol the reproduction of cats and their website to make an online dogs in the Quinte area so that donation at www.fixedfurlife.com abandoned feral cats can evenA Snowflake Ball on Nov. 12 tually be eliminated through athas also been organized as a funtrition, but in a humane way. By draiser for Fixed Fur Life. Today stopping the reproduction of the and Forever Events owner Alicia feral cats and looking after or Johnstone and Event Essentials’ finding homes for those cats now owner Sherry Robinson are pasfacing hardships without homes, sionate about their event-related they feel the feral cat situation businesses and want to provide can eventually be brought under this local organization near and control. dear to their hearts with an anBut just as it takes a communual fundraiser. nity to raise a child, it will also The event is to be held at the take the entire community to Knights of Columbus Hall at 57 solve this problem, according Stella Crescent in Trenton. Doors to those working for Fixed Fur open at 5 p.m. and those attendLife. The organization is entireing can enjoy a three-course meal ly operated around a network of with a vegetarian option, sweets adoption centres, approved fostable, cash bar, photo booth, ter homes, an intake centre and silent auction, door prizes and a private location that houses music and dancing. Tickets are two kitten rooms and a senior $35 each or two for $60 and can cat oasis supported by a group be purchased through Today of committed volunteers. and Forever Events, Event Es“This has all been accomplished on a fully volunteer ba- Oraganizers of the Snowflake Ball, from left, Tanya Logan, Kimberly McDonald, Sherry Robinson and Alicia sentials, Déjà vu Boutique, and the Quinte West Chamber of sis,” Darlene stated. “We have Johnstone are pictured here with some of the cats up for adoption through Fixed Fur Life. zero overhead and zero paid emSubmitted photo Commerce. BY ROSS LEES

PREVENTATIVE DENTISTRY, ORTHODONTICS, TMJ, SLEEP APNEA At Riverside Dental Centre Trenton we are committed to helping you maintain your healthy teeth and gums.

We are a full service dental practice.

Visit us in the Riverview Plaza, 255 Glen Miller Rd., Unit #3, TRENTON. Just north of Highway 401.

NEW PATIENTS WELCOME! Dr. Robert Rawluk, DDS

613-392-2732 riversidedentalcentre.com

Dr. Bradley Oldfin, DDS


Sometimes people worry that the amount they can give to the Belleville General Hospital won’t help much, but they shouldn’t. Every donation helps make care better. It’s true we need large donations to reach our goals, but it’s just as true that we NEED smaller ones too. If you care about people, just give what you can and very good things will happen at BGH.

Every gift counts. Every gift matters. Please call us at (613) 969-7400 ext. 2061, or go to BGHF.ca, or even text us at 613-847-6075 and help make care better at BGH today.

B2 Section B - Thursday, November 10, 2016


Forty groups to receive publicly funded hydration stations: health unit

Cops blitz every jurisdiction in region for ‘Big 4’

Hastings/Prince Edward—As part of the Healthy Kids Community Challenge, 40 publicly funded and not-forprofit community groups will receive new water bottle refill stations, water fountains, water coolers, or other water dispensers. “We are purchasing new hydration stations for the community in an effort to make water more accessible to children and their families,” said Emma Pillsworth, Local Project Manager for the Healthy Kids Community Challenge Hastings Prince Edward. “Water is the best thing you can drink to stay healthy and hydrated, and we want to make it the easy choice.” The groups receiving the hydration stations include 18 local schools, nine recreation and community centres, five public libraries and four childcare centres, plus the North Hastings Community Integration Association, the Bancroft Family Health Team, the Gateway Community Health Centre and the Batawa Lions Club. The goal is to make it easier for kids and their families to access clean drinking water throughout Hastings and Prince Edward Counties and encourage kids to drink more water as a healthy alternative to sugary beverages. The Healthy Kids Community Challenge Hastings Prince Edward also is coordinating several other initiatives to promote water consumption.

Regional police agencies have concluded their latest round of traffic blitzes – this one targeting what police call ‘the big four’ of traffic violations. The Quinte Region Traffic Coalition (QRTC) conducted what they term their annual “Big 4” Enforcement Blitz on Nov. 2, said a statement from police, “with special attention being paid to four significant driving violations; aggressive driving, impaired driving, distracted driving and failing to wear seatbelts.” Officers from provincial and municipal forces in the region established a co-ordinated blitz and focused their enforcement efforts in their respective service areas. Final tallies show a total of 123 charges were laid throughout the region during the one-day campaign. Charges included: • 74 speeding • 2 seatbelt infractions • 20 distracted driving (cell phone use) • 1 suspended driver • 1 driver with no insurance • 26 other Highway Traffic Act offences

25th Annual

Christmas at PRESQU’ILE ARTS and CRAFTS SHOW TEA ROOM - Desserts only Featuring the work of over 130 of Eastern Ontario’s finest Artisans and Crafters.

High Efficiency Gas Furnaces © 2016 International Comfort Products, LLC

One distracted driver was found to be texting at a stop light on Highway # 62 in Belleville while his toddler was sleeping in a car seat in the back seat. “Unfortunately too many drivers continue to multitask while driving, which means their focus is diverted from the principal task of driving,” says Constable Alana Deubel, of Central Hastings OPP. “Driving distracted can cost you much more than a $490 fine. Keep your hands on the wheel and your eyes on the road and ensure you, your passengers, and others on the road arrive safely at their destination.” The QRTC warned motorists that police will continue to conduct traffic enforcement blitzes “to ensure the safety of all individuals on the road.” The Quinte Region Traffic Coalition is a partnership of Hastings Prince Edward Public Health, Belleville Police Service, Stirling-Rawdon Police Service, 21 Military Police Flight, Napanee Highway Safety Division and the Central Hastings, Quinte West, Prince Edward County, Bancroft and Napanee OPP Detachments. The stated goal of the QRTC, said the statement, is “to reduce the number of incidents resulting in injuries and deaths on roads, trails, and waterways in Hastings and Prince Edward Counties.”

During October, which was Water Month at participating elementary schools, more than 7,500 local students took part in water promotion activities. Every elementary school student in Hastings and Prince Edward Counties also took home a Water Does Wonders water bottle, which they will soon be able to fill at the new Community Hydration Stations. “It is great to see the positive impact that the Healthy Kids Community Challenge is (having) in our community,” said Tweed Mayor Jo-Anne Albert. “I’m looking forward to filling up my water bottle at one of the new Community Hydration Stations and to seeing others do the same.” The 40 groups were selected after the Healthy Kids Community Challenge Hastings Prince Edward Steering Committee reviewed all applications received and ranked them according to their demonstrated need, commitment to sustaining maintenance of the hydration station, and willingness to promote healthy hydration on an ongoing basis. Applications were submitted in August. Overall, 45 communities across Ontario are taking part in the Healthy Kids Community Challenge. For more information about the Healthy Kids Community Challenge, go to www.healthykidsHPE.ca

Modulating, Two Stage Variable and Single Stage ECM motor models - up to 98% AFUE

10 am to 4 pm ENERGY STAR

Outstanding No Hassle Replacement™ Limited Warranty and 10 Year Parts Limited Warranty Protection* Weld-free heat exchanger design for increased heat transfer and long life Insulated steel cabinet and isolated blower motor enclosure for reduced operating sound

Meet our Signature Artists at The Lighthouse Art Gallery (10 am to 5 pm)

Best Buy CORRECTION NOTICE NEWSPAPER RETRACTION FOR THE BEST BUY NOV. 4 CORPORATE FLYER. In the November 4th flyer, back cover, the Fossil Q Marshal Men’s 45mm Smoke Stainless Steel Smartwatch (Web Code: 10482069) was advertised with the incorrect price. The correct price for this product is $395.00. We sincerely apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused our valued customers.

Trenton

(613) 394-5000 *Timely registration required for 10 year parts limited warranty. Limited warranty period is 5 years for parts if not registered within 90 days of installation. Jurisdictions where warranty benefits cannot be conditioned on registration will receive the registered limited warranty periods. If a compressor, coil, or heat exchanger fails due to defect during the applicable No Hassle Replacement limited warranty time period, a one-time replacement with a comparable Tempstar unit will be provided. Please see warranty certificate for further details and restrictions. AFUE stands for Annual Fuel Utilization Efficiency. Many models are ENERGY STAR© qualified. Ask your contractor for details or visit www.energystar.gov

Belleville

Directions: from exit 509 on Hwy 401, drive south to Brighton, and follow Presqu’ile Provincial Park signs.

christmas@friendsofpresquile.on.ca www.friendsofpresquile.on.ca 613 475 1688

(613) 962-2HOT tempstar.com Section B - Thursday, November 10, 2016 B3


Highway 401 chaos closes both lanes

This semi-tractor trailer is lodged half in one lane, half in another with the concrete lane divider of Highway 401 separating the two. The bizarre crash occurred Friday Nov. 4. Submitted photo

Tyendinaga – Belleville firefighters and those from surrounding townships responded eastbound lanes. to a violent highway rollover that closed Highway 401 east of the city last Friday. The result, which caused injuries to the driver, but none life-threatening, was four At about 1 p.m. Friday, Nov. 4, a transport travelling east on Highway 401 swerved, lanes of Canada’s busiest highway closed for up to three hours. rolled and flipped its cab into the oncoming lanes, while its trailer dragged along the No information has been received concerning charges.

OPEN HOUSE GUIDE DATE & TIME

ADDRESS

PRICE

AGENT

Tuesdays and Thursdays 12pm-4pm 5 Stonecrest Blvd. Quinte West (Bayside) 12pm-4pm 28 Ledgerock Court, Quinte West (Bayside)

$457,900 $251,900

Saturday, November 12, 2016 1:00 - 2:30 PM 93 County Road 3, Ameliasburgh 10:00 AM - 12:00 4990 Stirling Marmora Road, Stirling 12pm-4pm 5 Stonecrest Blvd. Quinte West (Bayside) 28 Ledgerock Court, Quinte West (Bayside) 12pm-4pm

$235,000 $209,900 $457,900 $251,900

B4 Section B - Thursday, November 10, 2016

REAL ESTATE COMPANY

CALL

MLS

Deanna Hall Deanna Hall

Geertsma Homes Geertsma Homes

613-966-8420 613-966-8420

16608262

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EXIT Realty Group EXIT Realty Group Geertsma Homes Geertsma Homes

613-848-7054 613-966-8420 613-966-8420

550070512 403200206 16608262


METROLAND AUCTIONS

AUCTION SALE OF LARGE OFFERING OF SHOP TOOLS SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19 AT 9:30 A. M. DOUG JARRELL SALES ARENA, BELLEVILLE Ridgid 10� table saw/ cast iron table (new in box), Lincoln 225 welder (new in box), several air compressors, 2250 & 5000 watt generators, set of scaffolding, Craftsman table saw, Paslode nailer, scroll saw, chop saw, bench grinder, large number of hand power tools, motors, wrenches & socket sets, hardware, assorted chains, ÀVKLQJ DFFHVVRULHV SDGGOHV RDUV ERDW VHDWV WDFNOH numerous other shop related pieces. A lot of these tools are from an estate and are brand new. See my web site for detailed list & photos. AUCTIONEER: DOUG JARRELL 613-969-1033 www.dougjarrellauctions.com

AUCTION SALE WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16 AT 5:00 P.M. DOUG JARRELL SALES ARENA, BELLEVILLE Maple corner cabinet, love seat, 2 Roxton end tables, corner what not, dressing mirror, single bed/ bs & mattress, Singer cabinet model sewing machine, maple chest of drawers & matching dresser/mirror, Panasonic Âľ Ă DW VFUHHQ 79 DQWLTXH RUJDQ VWRRO PDJD]LQH UDFN DUHD UXJV ZLQJ EDFN FKDLU FRPSXWHU GHVN FKDLU ODUJH TW\ RI JODVV FKLQD &KULVWPDV GHFRUDWLRQV 7ULVKD 5RPDQFH SULQWV ODZQ IXUQLWXUH JDUGHQ VKRS WRROV QXPHURXV RWKHU SLHFHV 7KLV LV DOO QLFH FOHDQ IXUQLWXUH LQ H[FHOOHQW FRQGLWLRQ 6HH P\ ZHE VLWH IRU GHWDLOHG OLVW SKRWRV AUCTIONEER: DOUG JARRELL ZZZ GRXJMDUUHOODXFWLRQV FRP

AUCTION SALE ESTATE OF LENORE BULMAN 231 CARMAN ROAD, R.R.#7 BRIGHTON, ONT. FRIDAY NOVEMEBER 18TH AT 11:00 AM Exit NORTH off 401 Highway at Brighton (Interchange 509) for 2 miles and turn EAST onto Carman Road Original Harriston Princess Pat cookstove with warming closet and reservoir, 4 antique can bottom chairs, antique extension table, antique walnut parlour table, antique rocker, antique pillar clock, child’s antique Morris chair, antique wicker fernery, antique walnut sewing box, upright piano, antique oak 3 drawer file cabinet, antique Rogers table top radio, antique blanket box, oak 4 piece bedroom suite – like new; chest of sterling silver flatware, stoneware, dash churn, cups and saucers, bell collection, flo blue, hand painted china, Cornflower pieces, Royal Nippon, vintage hats, vintage purses and wedding dress, toys, collector books, kitchenware’s , numerous other articles. TERMS- CASH OR CHEQUE OWNER & AUCTIONEER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENT OR INJURY DAY OF SALE SULLIVAN AUCTIONEERS 3ODLQÀHOG www.sullivanauctions.com

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18TH Consignment Sale Viewing 5:00pm Sale 6:30pm At Koopmans Auction Centre located at 662 Cty. Rd. # 12. 3.5 kms south west of Bloomfield, Ont. See website www.koopmansauctionservices.com Always accepting good clean consignment for upcoming sales. We do onsite sales or purchase estates. Canteen Available. Terms: Cash and Debit. For your entire auction needs, call Auctioneer: Gerald Koopmans 613-393-1732

AUCTION SALE ESTATE OF FRANK FOWLER WITH INCLUSIONS FROM PRIVATE COLLECTIONS SALE CONDUCTED AT BELLEVILLE AND DISTRICT FISH AND GAME CLUB 170 ELMWOOD DRIVE, BELLEVILLE, ONT WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 16TH AT 10:00 AM 2 miles EAST of Belleville on Old Highway 2 and turn NORTH onto Elmwood drive for ½ mile ORIGINAL ARTWORK including works by A.Lismer, Manly MacDonald, J.W. Beatty, Harold Barling Town, Chandler, C Wright, MJL Bobak, James Keirstead, Britton, Robert Whale, Tom Stone, G Travern -Kingston market – wood cut, vintage prints; ANTIQUE CLOCKS Including long case mahogany and oak finish European clock with painted face, Paquegnat mantle and drop wall clocks, Canadian Time oak cased wall clock, oak cased Victoria, Montreal mantle clocks; pillar wall clocks, cottage clocks, King Edward gingerbread style clock, Porcelain European mantle clocks, anniversary clock, clock shelves, figural mantle clocks, ANTIQUE FURNITURE walnut cylinder bookcase secretary desk, ornate 4 poster canopy bed, early needlepoint arm chair, walnut 9’ x 8’ bookcase with upper glass doors and lower doors, Victorian parlour chairs and settees, fainting couch, mahogany drop front desk with lower drawers, mahogany chest of drawers, mahogany spinette desk, parlour tables, mahogany sideboard with ornate backsplash, needlepoint firescreen, walnut cantaberry, Windsor style chairs, press back chairs, mahogany curio, spinning wheel , wool winder, Asian style sideboard , Asian style 2 door cupboard, pine chest of drawers, walnut dresser mirror, OIL LAMPS approx. 50 oil lamps including hanging lamps, finger lamps, miniatures lamps, press glass lamps, parlour lamps, tin lamps, novelty lamps; TOYS Lineol toy soldiers on horseback, Lineol British soldiers, Lineol 1930’s animal menagerie, tin toys, vintage Dinky toys, Fleishman tin speed boat toy, Wynotte auto carrier, Budgie toys, Barclay toys, Corgi, COLLECTIBLES Frost and Clear comports, Canary glass, stoneware, Iron ware, toilet set pieces, Moustache cups, carnival glass, depression glass, Flo blue “Georgiaâ€? dinnerware, Royal Albert “Blossom Timeâ€? dinnerware for 6, kitchenware’s, hand painted china, candle molds, wooden tools, tins, copper pieces, Hudson Bay blankets, coverlets, area carpets, silver plate serving pieces, advertising papers, numerous other articles. NO BUYERS PREMIUM VIEWING 8 AM – SALE TIME DAY OF SALE. SAME DAY REMOVAL OF ITEMS IS REQUIRED. TERMS- CASH OR CHEQUE OWNER & AUCTIONEER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENT OR INJURY DAY OF SALE SULLIVAN AUCTIONEERS 3ODLQĂ€HOG www.sullivanauctions.com

BRED COW SALE

Wednesday, November 23 - 7:00 pm at Kawartha Lakes Community Sale Barn Inc. 580 Woodville Rd., Woodville, ON 2 kms east of Woodville!

All vaccinated herds dispersal lots include: t ZPVOH QVSFCSFE $IBSPMBJT DPXT CSFE 4JNNFOUBM t $IBS $IBS 9 IGT CSFE UP QPMMFE QVSFCSFE $IBS CVMM t CMBDL "OHVT DPXT FYQPTFE UP B QVSFCSFE $IBS CVMM +VMZ TU t -JNP DSPTT DPXT FYQPTFE UP QVSFCSFE CMBDL 4JNNFOUBM CVMM "VHVTU TU t )FSFGPSE DPXT CSFE CMBDL "OHVT EVF GPS TQSJOH MJWF WBD t 8FTUFSO IGT NBKPSJUZ CMBDL "OHVT JOĂžVFODF XJUI TPNF SFET FYQPTFE UP 8FTUFSO QVSFCSFE CMBDL "OHVT CVMMT +VMZ t $IBSPMBJT IGT CSFE UP BO FBTZ DBMWJOH $FEBSEBMF $IBSPMBJT CVMM For more info or to consign to this sale visit: www.klcauction.ca - or call: Sale Barn 705-439-4444 Kevin Barker 705-878-2947 Bruce Woodrow 705-879-0507 Sale Managed & Sold by:

Kawartha Lakes Community Sale Barn Inc.

Call to book your ad today! 613-966-2034 AUCTION SALE ESTATE OF AL CLEARY 4322 OLD HIGHWAY 2, BELLEVILLE, ONT. SATURDAY NOVEMBER 19TH AT 10:30 AM 3 miles EAST of Belleville on Old Highway 2 – Vicinty of Point Anne Lane. VINTAGE BOATS AND MARINE SUPPLIES 1954 19 ft Greavette Utility mahogany boat with original Chrysler “Aceâ€? 6 cyl engine and extra mahogany planking – stored inside-restoration project; Lapstrake 15 ft boat with Larson engine-stored outdoorsneeds restoration; Buchanan “Midgetâ€? marine engine, Steelcraft “Grayâ€? 6 cyl egine, Watkins Motor Co 3 hp marine engine, Marine transmission, St Lawrence Engine Co engine parts, Kermath Mfg marine parts, Kermath boat dashboard, canoe jigs, paddles, oars; SHOP TOOLS TTL 18â€? wood cutting band saw, Bridgewood horizontal band saw, Detal combination belt/disc sander, General floor model drill press, Engine lift, Beaver 8â€?table saw, parts washer, wood lathe, wood clamps, pipe clamps, wall mount boring drill, weigh scales, commercial Singer sewing machine; ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLES Peter Wright blacksmith anvil “1 0 5â€?, blacksmith forge with attached bellows, blacksmith hand tools, British made “Mini Motorâ€? bicycle engine, carpenters tools chests, grindstones, Smart Brockville cast iron collectibles, steel wheels, hand tools, stencilled wood boxes, barn jacks, wooden pulleys, standing mitre box, barn augers, cross cuts, ice saws, buzz saw blades, dental pedestal rinse sink, Iron Horse gas engines, Fairbanks Morse gas engine, Peterboro skis, numerous other articles. TERMS- CASH OR CHEQUE OWNER & AUCTIONEER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENT OR INJURY DAY OF SALE SULLIVAN AUCTIONEERS 3ODLQĂ€HOG www.sullivanauctions.com

Visit us online www.InsideBelleville.com

Section B - Thursday, November 10, 2016 B5


EVENTS BELLEVILLE BELLEVILLE FISH & Game Club General Meeting, Nov 21, at Belleville Fish & Game Club at 6:30-9p.m. Pot luck dinner, Wild Game/Fish and Fall Harvest is the theme. please call 613-966-6731 ‘THE WATCHMEN’ in Concert, Hastings Park Bible Church 36 Harder Dr, Nov13 6:30. Church at 613-968-9544 for more info. BELLEVILLE ART Association members’ “Windows and Doors” at the Belleville Art Association Gallery and Studio, 392 Front St., until Nov 12. contact Gallery 613-968-8632 MISTLETOE MARKET is being held on Nov 12, 9:00 a.m. to 2 p.m.St. Columba Presbyterian Church, 520 Bridge Street East CHRISTMAS CRAFT and Vendor Fair and Tea Room Nov 12, 9-5 @ Moira Hall 29 Carson Rd. NOV 21, 10 AM -12 PM Creative Art Programs For Those Living With Dementia Gallery 121, 48 Bridge St. East, Cost:

Free. wheel chair accessible. contact: Marie Timbers 613-848-4422 AUTHOR C.W Bill Hunt speaking about the former Airfields during WW1 & WW2. Nov 12, 1:30 pm Hillcrest Community Centre 69 Centre St. THE OSTOMY Support Group of Belleville Nov 13 2PM Rm. P10 in the Quinte Business Centre Building, Loyalist College. FRIDAY, NOV 11th, Belleville Legion Remembrance Day Reception In the Club Room following the Parade. DJ Jeff Murray, 2 to 6 pm. Everyone welcome. THE DRAWING Room offers non-instructional studio sessions, third Thurs of each month, 2-4 p.m. in the third floor, John M. Parrott Art Gallery. Info: 613-968-6731 x2240 or e-mail gallery@bellevillelibrary.ca BELLEVILLE CLUB 39 Country music on Nov. 11, 8-12am at the Legion Br.99 132 Pinnacle St (upstairs)Singles & Couples are welcome. Members $10 Nonmembers $12 Lunch will be served. for info 613-392-1460 VOLUNTEERS NEEDED. Bibles for

Missions Thrift Store, 315 Pinnacale St. is seeking volunteers (cashiers, sorters, receiving area). Contact Esthel 613-9625665 or drop by the store. HALL RENTALS at The Royal Canadian Legion, 132 Pinnacle Street, 613-968-9053 SCOTTISH COUNTRY Dancing: Come alone or bring a partner. Classes Tues evenings, 7:30-9:30pm, Harry J. Clarke School, 77 Rollins Dr. Info 613-965-4212 or 613-967-1827. NOV 12, 10am - 4pm Mistletoe Magic Artisan Show and Sale - Join us for the 7th Annual Mistletoe Magic Artisan Show and Sale Albert College - Ackerman Hall. QUINTE AMATEUR Radio Club Nov. 16, 7pm, Loyalist College, Pioneer Building, Room P24.Drone presentation cancelled, silent auction on donated equipment instead. bring equipment to display or sell. more see WWW.QARC.ON.CA NOV 12 @ 9:30 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. Walk Down Candy Cane Lane - Local Artists & Crafters are inviting the public to join

us in our annual fund raiser. - Bridge St. United Church , 60 Bridge Street East. NOV 12 @ 6:30 pm - 9:00 pm Songs from the Heart, Gospel music. $25. Available at Pinnacle Music Studios, Riverside Music, Chamber of Commerce. - Maranatha Church , 100 College St. HARVEST BEEF Supper at St. Mark’s United Church, 237 Cannifton Rd N on Nov 12, 5:30pm. Adult $14; Child $6; Family $35. reserve early at 613-968-8268. MON BINGO; Tues Cribbage; Wed Euchre; Thurs Carpet Bowling and Shuffleboard; Fri Darts and the 3rd Sun of every month Cribbage. All start at 1p.m. Open to all seniors 50+. Trillium 2000 Seniors Club, 75 St. Paul St. QUINTE QUILTERS Guild, 7 PM, first Wed of the month. St Columba Church, Bridge St. E. Everyone is welcome. FAMILY SPACE supports families learning through play. Drop-in playrooms, 100 Station Street. Open 6 days/wk. Info: www. familyspace.ca or 613-966-9427.

QUINTE GRANNIES for Africa meeting Sat Nov 12/16 at St. Thomas’ Church located on the corner of Bridge and Church Streets. Breakfast/ social 8:30 am. Meeting 9 am. Just bring yourself and your coffee mug. QUINTE NEEDLEARTS Stiching. Salvation Army, Bridge St. W., 1st, 3rd Thurs of month. 9:30am - 3pm. 613-473-4831 ALZHEIMER SOCIETY Caregiver Support Groups, Bay View Mall, 1st & 3rd Thurs of month, 10am-12pm. Info: Kristel at 613-962-0892

BRIGHTON MEET THE Nurse, Nov 14, 10 am -12pm, Ontario Early Years Centre (170 Main St.) Parents with children meet with Public Health Nurse, discuss infant care, Call 1-866-888-4577 THE PROBUS Club of Presqu’ile invites retired or semi-retired people to monthly meetings, 3rd Wed every month, King Edward Park Community Centre, 10 amnoon. Jean 613-242-5387 Continued on page B7

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EVENTS Continued from page B6

BRIGHTON SUPPERS READY Wed, 5-6 pm at Trinity-St.Andrews United Church, 56 Prince Edward St. There is no charge for this meal but donations are gratefully accepted. TRENT VALLEY Quilters Guild, 3rd Wed of month, King Edward Park Arena & Community Centre, 75 Elizabeth St, 1:30 - 3:30 pm. All welcome. WATERCOLOUR HOLIDAY Cards November 16, 2-5pm Fee: $10.00 Location: CCN Office in Brighton. To register, please contact Gail (613)475-4190 TOBACCO TALKS Quit-Smoking Support Program, November 16, 1 pm, Health Service Centre (1st Floor, 170 Main St.). call 1-866-888-4577, ext. 1518. ALZHEIMER SOCIETY, Brighton caregiver support group meets the third Monday of every month, Applefest Lodge 2-4 P.M. For family and friends of someone with a dementia. Info: Sharon 613-394-5410 TRINITY-ST. ANDREW’S United Church Clothing Depot, 58 Prince Edward St, WedThurs 10-2, Fri, 10-6pm, Sat, 10-1. All donations welcome. Interested in Volunteering? Call Jean 613-242-5387 BRIGHTON ALL Star Concert Band rehearsing every Wednesday all Winter in the music room at ENSS, 7-9 pm. Open to anyone who plays a concert instrument.

CAMPBELLFORD CAMPBELLFORD BAPTIST Church, 166 Grand Rd. on Nov 13th 6 pm.“Raw Gospel” from Belleville, sharing their music. Refreshments to follow! Everyone Welcome! SEXUAL HEALTH Clinic, Nov 15, 10Noon. The clinic provides health teaching. call 1-866-888-4577, ext. 1205. NOV. 16 at 1:30pm. Campbellford Fare Share Food Bank Annual Meeting at Legion, Vimy room. Everyone welcome CAMPBELLFORD KINETTE Bingo every Thurs, 7pm. Campbellford/Seymour Arena, 313 Front St. N. $1000 Jackpot in 54 numbers, consolation prize of $200. NOV 12 @ 2:00 pm - 3:00 pm For Kids! Museum in a Bag. Meet local children’s author Jan Thornhill.The Clock Tower Cultural Centre , 36 Front Street South. BLOOD PRESSURE Clinic, Nov. 18 2016 at Campbellford Memorial Hospital, 1-4pm, Room 249 2nf Floor. All Welcome ST ANDREW’S Presbyterian Church is holding their Annual Christmas bazaar Saturday November 26th 11am-2pm,17 Ranney St. S. Come and enjoy. TOBACCO TALKS Quit-Smoking Support Program, Nov 17, 1 pm, Community Resource Centre (65 Bridge St. E.). call 1-866-888-4577, ext. 1518. LEARN THE Art of Taoist Tai Chi - classes available throughout the week, Community Resource Centre 65 Bridge St, Info: 705 696 1841 or 705 243 5216. EVERY MONDAY, 7 p.m. Campbellford Citizen’s Choir meets at Senior Citizen’s Building. All welcome NOV 1-MID April, Indoor Walking and Exercise Program, St. John¹s United Church

Auditorium, Tuesdays, Fridays, 10-11am. FRANKFORD U.C.W. will be holding their bring clean, comfortable shoes. 50 Bridge annual CHRISTMAS LUNCH & BAZAAR St. W.705-653-2283. Nov 19, 2016, 11 a.m-2 p.m.Lunch $4.00 FREE SENIORS fitness classes, Mon COBOURG and Thurs, 1 pm, Frankford Legion. To SEXUAL HEALTH Clinic, Nov 15, register: 1-888-279-4866 Ext 5350 4:30-6:30pm. The clinic provides health teaching. call 1-866-888-4577, ext. 1205. OPEN T.G.I.F. with games and meal, first Fri of month, 4 pm, Frankford Legion WOMENS GROUP, every Wed, 2 pm, Halcyon Place, 580 Courthouse Rd, To GLEN MILLER register: 905-372-7356. TOPS (TAKE off Pounds Sensibly) meetings Tues mornings at Christ Church Glen CODRINGTON Miller. Weigh ins 8:30-9:30 a.m. with a CODRINGTON WI, R.O.S.E. ( Rural meeting following. Join anytime. Info: Ontario Sharing Education)Event, on Nov Brenda Kellett 613 392-8227 17 , 7 pm in the Community Hall: “A Trip To India” by member Linda Wallis. All HASTINGS are welcome. ACRYLIC PAINTING Workshop WHEN: CODRINGTON COMMUNITY Centre, Nov 17, @ 9am – 12pm. Hastings Civic 3rd Wednesday of month, Codrington Se- Centre, 6 Albert St E. $10 Community Care niors Group meets at noon for a Pot Luck Northumberland, 705-653-1411 lunch. TOWN HALL With MP Mike Bossio NORTH BRIGHTON Seniors Club look- Discuss 2017 federal pre-budget consultaing for new members. Meeting 3rd Wed tions. Nov 12th, 9:30am -11:00am, Arts of month. Potluck lunch at noon followed Centre Hastings by short business meeting. social events JAM SESSION, second Sun of month, through the year. Joan Walker 613-475-4631. 2-6 pm. Bring your instrument or voice. EUCHRE, EVERY Fri, 7 pm. Codrington Everyone welcome. Hastings Legion. Community Centre. All welcome. MEALS ON Wheels Delivery Drivers Required, Community Care for South HastCOLBORNE ings. Once a week or once a month. Info: COLBORNE LIBRARY Storytime pro- Lee at 613-969-0130 ext. 5207 gram, open to children 2-5 years old. Thurs, HASTINGS & District Seniors Club, 11 am. To register: 905 355-3722 6 Albert St. E, Civic Centre downstairs. COLBORNE ART Gallery Heritage Cra- Mon-Regular Euchre, 12:30pm Tues- Bid mahe, “Northumberland Went to War”, Euchre, 1pm. Tournaments 4th Sat. of month, until Dec. 11, Thurs-Sat, noon-5pm, 51 alternating bid euchre then reg euchre. King St. E. HASTINGS MANOR Auxiliary monthly SERVICE OF Remembrance Parade meeting Nov 14, at 12: 45 p.m. in the VolColborne Legion Nov 11, form up behind unteer Education Centre on the main floor Mac’s Milk. Service 11am at the cenotaph of Hastings Manor. in Victoria Square. The Remembrance Day Dinner, Friday Nov. 11, 6pm. All Veterans FUNDRAISING COMMITTEE mem& spouses are free, everyone else $20. bers needed for Community Care South Tickets are at the branch, Pick up in advance. Hastings. Info: Deb at 613-969-0130 ext. 5214 or debm@ccsh.ca FOOD ADDICTS Anonymous Meetings, Wed, 11-noon, Prospect House, 1 Elgin HAVELOCK Street (at King), www.foodaddictsanony- DINER’S CLUB, first and third Wed of mous.org each month, Havelock United Church, 12pm. $9.00. Info: 705-778-7831. CORDOVA MINES CORDOVA MINES United Church BINGO EVERY Wed at the Havelock Christmas Bazaar and Bake Sale Nov 26 Community Centre sponsored by Havelock Lions.5:30pm. Early Birds 7pm. Regular 9am-1pm.light lunch available. start 7:30pm. Info: Lion Joe at 705 778 3588 FOXBORO RCL HAVELOCK, Branch 389 RememFALL GOSPEL Sing at the Chapel of brance Veterans’ Dinner, 5:30 pm. Veterans The Good Shepherd 513 Ashley St. Nov and spouse, no charge. Adults $14, 5-11 19, 2016 at 6:30 p.m.Come join us Lunch yrs $7, 4 and under free. Tickets at the Clubroom or at the door. to follow. CHRISTMAS BAZAAR & Café, Em- MADOC manuel United, Nov 12, 9 to 2 458 Ashley WOMEN¹S CAREGIVER Group, women Street, $1 admission. caring for a person with memory loss. 3rd Wed. of each month, 9:30-11:30am. Madoc FRANKFORD Arts Centre/Skate Park, 242 Durham St. MOONSHOT EUCHRE every Wed, Info: 613-962-0892 1pm. Tournaments Every 3rd Sun of the NOV 14. St Johns Anglican Church Hall, Month, 1pm. Frankford Lions Club 115 Durham St N. Lunch is at noon. bring FRANKFORD UNITED Church: Sunday your own plate, cup, and cutlery. Program service with Sunday School at 10:30 a.m. for those with physical disabilities. 1-800All are welcome. 554-1564 to pre-register. ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS 8 pm MADOC BLOOD Pressure Clinic: Nov every Thurs, Holy Trinity Anglican Church 16. 47 Wellington St, Seniors Building Hall, 60 Trent St. N. (rear), 1-866-951-3711

Common Room 9:30-11:30 AM. Program open to those with physical disabilities. Call 1-800-554-1564 to pre-register. CROWE VALLEY Lions Open Mic for the winter season on Nov. 13 1.00pm- 4.30pm at Marmora Community Centre Victoria St.Bring your voice,instruments. Contact 613-472-2377 MADOC AM Indoor Walk: Mon, Wed, and Fri 9:45-10:45 AM. PM Indoor Walk: Mon, Tues, Fri 6:45-7:45 PM Centre Hastings Secondary School, 129 Elgin St. Program opened to those with physical disabilities. call 1-800-554-1564 to pre-register. MARMORA SOCIAL: Nov 24: 43 Mathew Place. 11:30AM. Lunch is served at noon. Program opened to those with physical disabilities. contact 1-800-554-1564 to pre-register GOOD FOOD Box depot, Marmora Pentecostal Church, 53 Madoc St. Fresh fruit and veg, $10 or $15 size boxes/bag of fruit for $5. Order any Wed. between 10am-2pm. Elaine 613-472-3219 WHITE LAKE Bethesda Boutique (Corner of Springbrook Road & Hwy. 62) Saturday, Nov 12, 9 - 12 NOON. Clothing Items $2.00 each. Baked items available CROKINOLE: THIRD Fri of every month, 8 p.m. at Trinity United Church (side entrance), St. Lawrence St. East. $2.50/person. Door prizes. Light lunch MARMORA AGRICULTURAL Society Annual Meeting on Nov 15, at Marmora Legion, 7pm. Election of officers to the Fair Board. RC 363 Madoc: Mixed Darts every Thursday 7 pm. Random draw for teams. MARMORA LEGION Fish Fry Nov 18, 4pm-7pm CHASE THE Ace Sat Nov 12, tickets noon-8pm, draw at 8:30pm, Marmora Legion

NORWOOD IODE POPPY Day Lunch and Bazaar Norwood Town Hall Nov. 12, 2016 11:30am to 2:30pm. $2.00 or $8.00 with lunch ASPHODEL-NORWOOD HISTORICAL Society next meeting Nov 15 at 7 p.m. at Norwood Legion. NORWOOD BEAUTIFICATION Committee Bid Euchre, 2nd Sun of every month, 1pm, Norwood Legion. Lunch will be available. ASPHODEL-NORWOOD HISTORICAL Society free Family Tree Workshop Westwood Heritage Centre, #1818 Concession 3, Nov 12.11 a.m-2 p.m.

P.E. COUNTY COUNTYLICIOUS CHOOSE from 11 participating restaurants for 3 course meal 40$. visit countylicious.com NOV 15 Understanding the Fisher. The Prince Charles School, 75 Graham Street West Napanee, 7pm. contact 613-379-5958 NOV 12 @ 2 pm - 4 pm Arts on Main Gallery Winter Magic Show, 12” x 12” artwork for $100. 25 County artists. runs Nov. 9 to Jan. 30. - Arts on Main Gallery, Picton ALBURY FRIENDSHIP Group - Quilts for sale each Wed 10 am - 12 noon. Albury

Church Rednersville Rd. Proceeds to local charities for women. ST. ANDREW’S Anglican Church Roast Beef Supper, November 13, Ameliasburgh Town Hall, Cty. Rd.19. 4 p.m. - 6 p.m. Adults $14 children 6-11 $5. 613-968-3320 NOV 12 @ 6:00 pm - 1:00 am Firelight Lantern Festival 6 PM, Benson Park (Bad weather? Go to Crystal Palace at 7 PM) 6:30 Community Parade to Crystal Palace 7 PM, Arrive at Crystal Palace. $5 adults, $3 children Costumes encouraged! MEALS ON Wheels, Picton: Daily noon time meal delivered to your door. Info: 613-476-7493. PICTON SHOUT Sister Choir welcomes new members. Practices Thurs, 7-9 p.m., St Mary Magdalene Church, 335 Main St, www.shoutsisterchoir.ca APPLE ROUTE Grannies meet the 2nd Sat of each month, Trinity-St. Andrew¹s United Church Hall, Prince Edward St, 9 a.m. Supporting the Stephen Lewis Foundation African Grannies. Info: 613475-5260. FREE SENIORS Exercise Classes VON SMART classes. Gentle and progressive and can be done standing or seated. Info: 1-888-279-4866 ex 5350.

ROSENEATH FOOTCARE CLINIC, 2nd Fri every other Month, Alnwick Civic Centre. VON offers Basic, Advanced and Diabetic Foot Care (Fee for Service). For appointment call the VON at 1-888-279-4866 ex 5346

STIRLING STIRLING CLUB 55 and over Moonshot euchre in Springbrook Hall Nov 12 at 1:00. Refreshments available, all welcome. CHRISTMAS @ Farmtown Park! Heritage Village, Nov 18,10am - 9pm, Nov19,10am - 6pm,Nov 20,10am - 3pm Cost $5, Children under 12 Free. 435 West Front St. 613-395-0015. MEMORY CAFÉ, 3rd Wed. of ea. month, 2pm-4pm. Stirling Public Library 43 Front St. Inquiries call 613-962-0892 ST. ANDREWS Presbyterian Church, Mill St, fund raising dinner on Nov. 12, 5:30 pm. Ham and Scalloped potato dinner $10.00. Pie Auction. contact 613395-2735. MONDAY BINGO, Upstairs of Stirling Arena.Starts at 6:50pm. Proceeds to support community projects. Sponsored by Stirling & District Lions Club. STIRLING CITIZENS Band, volunteer concert band. Rehearsals every Tues. 7:30pm, Stirling Public School. All ages welcome. Student community service hours available. Info: Donna, 705-653-3064. NOV 12 Legion Karaoke night from 7-11 pm. Admission $2.00. AL-ANON FAMILY Group, every Fri, 8 p.m., St. Paul’s United Church. 866.951-3711 SENIORS’ EUCHRE every Thurs, 1 pm, Stirling Legion Branch #228, Stirling-Marmora Rd. Only $2.00 to play, refreshments provided. Info: (613) 395-2002. Continued on page B17 Section B - Thursday, November 10, 2016 B7


Silent Night My breath shone in the flashes, heavy with my vapour, as I recall that night. Wet and numb, I dared not ponder my favourite distractions, for surely they would come tonight. I could no longer feel my toes. Warmth was all I craved. I had lost all track of time, but did it really matter in this place of no return. The night wore on, as constant shelling streaked the sky, making the air reek with the stench of cordite. A whiz bang delivered its deadly package nearly on top of me. My heart stopped for a second or two, as if waiting for me to make a move. I chuckled when I felt my warm sap ooze from the tear it had made in the arm of my coat. “Only tore my coat Jerry, is that the best you can do”, I thought, knowing only too well what it could have done to me. I patched up my nick. Do snipers ever sleep, I asked myself ? No matter what the time, day or night, their single cracks could be heard. Poor bastards on recon, I thought. Every flare seemed to be escorted into the night by the crack of

B8 Section B - Thursday, November 10, 2016

a snipers bullet. If Hell could speak, surely this never ending thunder would be its’ voice. Somewhere in the hours of the night, the battlefield fell ominously silent. I prepared myself, for this could mean only one thing, Jerry was on the way. I waited for the whistle warning my sergeant would surely send, but seconds ticked by, and I knew he was late, perhaps a sniper had found his mark. I checked my bayonet locked, my clips full and my safety off. My heart picked up its pace, I was ready for my fate. I waited for an eternity of seconds, and then to my left there seemed to be an unusual chatter in the trench. I suspected a breach, swung my bayonet that direction, and I waited silently in the darkness, ready for the fight of my life. I reached for a grenade, just to know it was close. Our sergeant knew the drill, identify or die, and so he gave me the proper word or surely that would have been his fate that night. I will never forget his words as his boots splashed their way to me. “Merry Christmas young man” is all he said, shook my hand as he passed me by, and repeated the same to all of us on down the line……”twelve hour armistice”. I stood there, silent in the dark, and began to shiver with relief. Uncontrolled tears made their way down my face as I wept to myself. How could I have forgotten Christmas Eve, but I had. The smoke slowly cleared as I peered up into the heavens to be greeted by streams that were beautifully silent. I laid my Enfield against the

Gordon Reid lives in Campbellford and submits this piece as a “personal tribute to the soldiers of WWI. “I tried to put myself in their position at such a young age. My father and three of his brothers were all in the Allied forces during WWII…” bank, habitually close, of course, and fumbled for a smoke in my breast pocket. It tasted extra good that night, and so did that chunk of chocolate that I had been saving. “Merry Christmas”, I said to myself, as I savoured it on my tongue! My thoughts drifted far away as I gazed at the continuously brightening stars. What was my family doing tonight, I pondered. I dug out my watch from deep in my trousers. It read 12:08. My God, its’ Christmas morning. Everyone at home will be sleeping now, I thought, as a sense of loneliness settled over me. Suddenly, the sky filled with flares. Instinctively, I crouched and froze, but not a rifle cracked, and not an artillery shell could be heard. It was an uncanny silence. I grabbed my gun and squeezed up to the trench wall, and breaking all the rules, I stuck my head up just high enough to get a sniper bullet in the head, which is what I would have gotten twenty minutes before. Could this be for real, I thought. Approaching from the other side, I could see five German soldiers walking slowly toward our line, a white flag clearly fluttering in the light breeze. Both sides continued to launch flares, illuminating the sky like never before, it seemed. I could see these men were not armed, and I quickly and willingly, disposed of my gun. To my left in the distance, I could hear marching commands from our trench, and soon could be seen our equally unarmed group marching smartly for the German assembly. It was an overload for my weary being. I felt like wreckage. My mind and body did not seem to understand this sudden onset of humanity after this long endurance of slaughter. Yet, I watched with grateful eyes that again filled with tears. Magically, both commanders had some kind of offering to present to their greeting party on no man’s land. A shaking of hands and respectful Christmas greetings ensued even though not a word was understood, I expect, from either side. Soon they returned from their Yuletide excursion, and one by one, the flares faded into the night sky that now seemed mesmirizingly clear. Our sergeant managed a case of rum from the rear unknown to anyone prior, but ensured that we all got a glass or two as his Christmas gift to us. Perhaps it was his way to say goodbye. We all knew that our days were numbered if we stayed on the front. So we toasted each other, told dirty jokes and laughed for a few short hours. As our short respite closed, I distinctly heard my favourite Christmas hymn emanating from the German trenches. It was Silent Night.


Canadian greats to play Old Church this weekend Quinte West - The Old Church Theatre is presenting a double bill weekend this Friday and Saturday Nov. 11 and 12. Friday brings the return of the popular duo Kane and Potvin who played the Old Church last year to a sell out crowd. The heart and soul of two of Canada’s greatest bands, Kevin Kane (Grapes of Wrath) and Bryan Potvin (Northern Pikes) put on a high energy performance featuring hits from both bands as well as new songs. They are currently on a coast to coast tour with their new CD. Al Lerman takes the stage on Saturday, fresh on the heels of another Maple

Blues award nomination for 2016 and great reviews for his newest CD. He’s taking a solo turn away from his Juno award winning band Fathead. Al’s easy style and great storytelling has always a crowd pleaser for his enthusiastic blues following. Learn more about these three great Canadian musicians and reserve seats at www.oldchurch.ca or phone (613) 848-1411 A special rate for both acts is available of $35 and separately are $15 for Al Lerman and $30 for Kane and Potvin, in advance. Both shows begin at 7 p.m. The Old Church Theatre is located at 940 Bonisteel Road in Quinte West.

FLU CLINICS 2016

This Friday brings the return of the popular duo Kane and Potvin who played the Old Church last year to a sell out crowd. Submitted photo

Protect yourselves and your loved ones. The influenza vaccine is available at no cost to all persons over the age of six months who lives, works or attends school in Ontario. The clinics listed below are run by Hastings Prince Edward Public Health and do not require an appointment. If you have any questions, please contact the Immunization Program at: 613-966-5500 or 1-800-267-2803 | TTY: 711 or 1-800-267-6511 hpepublichealth.ca Wednesday

NOV

02 Thursday

NOV

03 Monday

NOV

07

BANCROFT St. John’s Anglican Church 21 Flint Street 12pm – 6pm

MADOC Trinity United Church 76 St. Lawrence Street East 10am – 3pm

STIRLING St. Paul’s United Church 104 Church Street 1pm – 7pm

Wednesday

NOV

09 Monday

NOV

14 Tuesday

NOV

15

Friday

PICTON

NOV

Salvation Army 46 Elizabeth Street 12pm – 6pm

18 Monday

TRENTON Knights of Columbus Hall 57 Stella Crescent 1pm – 7pm

NOV

21

FRANKFORD Royal Canadian Legion 12 Mill Street 10am – 3pm

TWEED Tweed Agricultural Society White Building 27 Louisa Street 12pm – 6pm

BELLEVILLE

Maranatha Christian Reform Church 100 College Street West 1pm – 7pm

Public Health is committed to making our publications and information accessible to all. To request this or any other publication in an alternative format, please contact 613-966-5500 or by email accessibility@hpeph.ca.

Section B - Thursday, November 10, 2016 B9


November focuses on adoption for CAS BY JACK EVANS

“Permanent family connections,” either through their real parents or adoptive ones is a key factor for children, according to Highland Shores Children’s Aid Society officials. This is recognized as a problem, especially for many older children, teens, sibling groups and children with special needs who are in CAS care. November has been declared “Adoption Awareness Month” marked by an orange ribbon, designed to increase public awareness of the role they can play in helping young people to achieve permanency and stability through a “forever” home. The agency is proud of the fact that 97 per cent of CAS investigations result in the children remaining with their original parents. But there remain more difficult cases, as outlined above. These are not only a problem for the children, but also for prospective adoptive adults who need extra preparations and qualifications to handle problems resulting from age, religion, culture, special needs or perhaps two or more siblings who do not want to be separated. Options for children include living with kin through legal custody, regular CAS care or adoption. When a suitable permanent home is found, efforts are made to allow chil-

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Trenton, ON 613-965-1837 Gananoque, ON 613-382-1937 Williamsburg, ON 613-535-1837 B10 Section B - Thursday, November 10, 2016

dren continued contact with significant-role others in their lives to help maintain past connections. Toward increasing the number of adoptive parents, the Ministry of Children and Youth Services is holding a conference to help locate and match adoptive families with Ontario children and youth needing adoption. This year’s conference, which is free, is in Toronto on Nov. 19, open to anyone interested in adopting an Ontario child. Families can find information about children or youth in need of homes on the Adopt Ontario website: www.adoptontario.ca. During the 2015-16 fiscal year, Highland Shores CAS, which serves Hastings, Prince Edward and Northumberland counties, successfully processed 17 adoptions. Adoptive families get special support and training as well as subsidies, based on income for older youth or sibling groups. “The power of having permanent family connections can’t be understated,” said Heather Owens, regional adoption supervisor for both Highland Shores and Kawartha Highlands CAS. “All children deserve to benefit from this.” For more information, contact Bonnie Perrigard, communications, community and stakeholder relations co-ordinator for Highland Shores at (613) 982-9291. Ext. 2202.

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Public Health to tackle alcohol use BY JACK EVANS

Belleville - Higher than average alcohol consumption has long been registered in the social life of Quinte area residents. Hastings and Prince Edward Public Health is planning to do something about it. Over the next several months and throughout 2017, the agency will roll out a campaign called “Rethink Your Drinking in the wake of new data on area drinking patterns. While national health official have recently issued new guidelines on the use of alcohol, surveys show nearly half of all adults in the region continue to consume in excess of the guidelines. For the age group 19 through 29, the percentage of excessive drinking is 71 per cent; for ages 30 through 39, it is 44 per cent; for40 through 64 years, it’s 46 per cent and fir seniors it is 26 per cent. To kick the campaign off, public health officials recently held a “Low risk alcohol drinking” seminar for Loyalist College students. The event has been branded a “success”

with some 140 student participants and lively interest. “There is a significant link between use of alcohol and the agency’s work” a press relate states. Public Health’s mandate calls for reduction of “preventable injuries and disease.” Alcohol is a known risk factor contributing on both counts. In a similar vein meanwhile, the agency continues to support provincial efforts to minimize opioid misuse through more modern prescriptions and monitoring, also improvements in pain treatment options available. The agency will also promote is services in addiction and harm reduction supports. The agency is well aware that overdose incidents, including many deaths, have reached “epidemic” proportions in many communities across North America. Hastings and Prince Edward Public Health will partner with other medical services in the community to reinforce and support provincial initiatives in this worsening situation.

Flu clinic season is here BY JACK EVANS

Flu clinics have become old hat at this time of year and yes, it IS this time of year. They were a key topic at the November meeting of Hastings and Prince Edward Public Health Board last week. Indications are it is a toned- down approach to the annual round of clinics, focussing on seniors. The program is already under way with one in Bancroft last week with clinics scheduled at seven other sites across the two-county region over the next few days. As in past years, the influenza shots are also available at many pharmacies and family doctors for convenience and at health unit offices. “There has been little influenza activity in Canada so far this season,” the board was told. Dr. Richard Schabas, Medical Officer of Health, who has been somewhat critical of the efficacy of the vaccines used in past years, said this year’s vaccine is “most beneficial for individuals over the age of 75.” Cases of flu normally increase as Christmas approaches, so residents are advised to get their vaccination early for maximum protection. The board was also reminded that November is Falls Prevention Month. Falls, particularly by seniors, is a leading health hazard and has been a key concern of Quinte Health care facilities in recent years, also across the Southeast LHIN as this area has the highest proportion of people over 65 years of age in Ontario. Many steps can be taken to prevent falls which can lead to serious injury, major trauma and even untimely death. The health agency will play a key role this month in helping educate the public, especially seniors and their caregivers in the hazards and prevention ideas, along with other health care partners.

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Section B - Thursday, November 10, 2016 B11


The Good Earth : Things I have I learned outside of a textbook

Dan Clost This past week saw the gardens of the Clost Estate tucked away for the winter- “put to bed” as the saying goes. It seems a logical asser-

B12 Section B - Thursday, November 10, 2016

tion, doesn’t it? However, the idea of the plant going to sleep, aka dormant, is not as straightforward as it seems. That understanding didn’t come to me until well into my gardening career. In fact, understanding isn’t always my forte; as I once remarked to someone, “I have yet to plumb the depths of my ignorance.” I have learned that I need to take a multi-faceted approach to make sure I see all aspects a situation. For example, not too long ago a question had arisen concerning the purchasing preferences of the Millies (Millenials) and this led to a bit of research. What I discovered was a distinct dichotomy in the definitive pronouncements from the marketing boffins and their advice to those of us who sell horticultural stuff, like plants and things. Both sides were quite assured in their assessments: an exact polarity of opinion. I can’t really argue for either side. All I know is that no matter what label you assign

to a group, i.e. Millies, when they want a plant I best have a good one ready for them when they coming knocking on my door. So I thought about what it means to be an expert and, going one step further, pronouncing yourself as such. More research. I was quite surprised at how many gardening experts were out there flogging their knowledge onto starry-eyed neophyte gardeners willing to follow the first guru they found. I have learned that a gardening guru is someone who thinks like you do, even if you are both wrong. Fortunately, this isn’t often the case but it does happen. Unfortunately, I have had occasion to find myself in that position. I have learned that plants know more about themselves than I do. I have learned that, while I have read many, many textbooks on my journey of becoming an expert, plants don’t read. I have learned that the more I know about horticulture, the more there is to learn.

Here are some of the other things I have learned- most of which can be applied to gardening. There is a difference between a professional and an expert although one can be both. A professional is one who is charged with accomplishing a task and goes about it methodically- seeking advice and opinion when presented with something beyond their ken. An expert often seeks their own counsel. It is why I prefer not to be considered an expert or a gardening guru; there is so much that I still don’t know. I have learned that while most folks know that plants are living organisms they don’t understand what that means. The most common oversight is that plants need to eat, just like us. Ya gots to feed ‘em; iffen you don’t, they will die sooner than they should. I have learned that there is a body of thought that ascribes a miraculous quality to water. “My ______ (insert name of incredibly

expensive plant) died but I watered it every single day for the last 5 years, even during the winter. You must have sold me a defective plant.” I have learned that plants will work really hard at not dying. I once did an experiment with propagating forsythia- softwood cuttings, hard wood cuttings, layering, even leaf cuttings- everyone lived. I have learned that you only need to buy one forsythia plant. I have learned that we are incredibly fortunate to be able to garden, to claim stewardship of a parcel of land for our duration, and to be in tune with this good earth which both sustains and nurtures. This column will be published on Remembrance Day. As I grow older, I better understand the price paid by the men and women across the globe who work for peace. It is a debt that we must honour by consciously striving to live out those ideals.


TRAVEL

Remembering Normandy’s Beaches in France

At the Canadian War Cemetery at Beny-sur-Mer. John M Smith/Metroland

whelmed by the row after row of white, clean, ies, I returned to my cruiseship, where our straight gravestones engraved with a maple AmaWaterway’s cruise manager, Annie, told leaf. I noticed that many of these young sol- about some of her memories of the war. She diers had been members of the Queens Own was just a child at the time, but she rememRifles of Canada, and several of these stones bered the rationing of products and some of had the following inscription: “I have fought the hardships faced by her parents in France. a good fight. I have finished my course. I She said that her dad had a great fear that have kept the faith.” there wouldn’t be enough soap for the family, I also visited a very large British Cemetery “so he hid bars of soap away so that the famat nearby Ranville, and I noticed that the one ily would be able to keep clean. By the end of the young soldiers buried there had my of the war, we probably had several years’ very name: J. Smith. He was 19 years old at supply!” She also said that after the war, the time of his death! her dad was strolling along this Normandy My next stop was at the Pegasus Bridge coastline one day when he suddenly discovMemorial. It was the first bridge to be lib- ered something just barely visible beneath the erated by British troops on D-Day, and a sand. It turned out to be an Allied tank that section of the actual bridge was displayed, had been buried over time! It was eventually along with some planes and jeeps. The mu- unearthed and is now on display near these seum there also had samples of the original famous beaches. wooden grave markers that were used, but For More Information: www.amawaterthese have now been removed and replaced ways.com; ca.normandy-beaches.com by the white granite headstones. There was [John was hosted by AmaWaterways] also some information posted on a museum wall about the present role of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission: “The CWGC ensures that 1.7 million Commonwealth men and women who died in both world wars will never be forgotten. We care for cemeteries and memorials at 23,000 locations in more than 150 countries around the world.” My last stop on this Normandy tour was along the landing beaches near Arromanches-les-Bains (Gold Beach), where ghostly concrete vestiges of this invasion are still visible just offshore. They’re now moss-covered and rather decrepit, but they’re still there – and Remembrance Way at Juno Beach, Normandy. it’s a rather macabre, eerie sight. John M Smith/Metroland There’s yet another war museum there, too, next to the artificial harbour, and it’s actually the oldest of the museums commemorating the Normandy invasion. In the village itself, an artist had sketched two chilCOACH & TOURS dren writing on a wall, and the message they wrote, in large block letters, stated “PLEASE NO MORE WAR.” After viewing these Normandy beaches, museums, and cemeter-

veterans and volunteers. Both the French I’ve decided to write about my recent riv- and Canadian flags were flying there, and I er cruise visit to Normandy for this year’s discovered that there were several touching “Remembrance Day” travel piece, for it was memorials on this site. One such stone was along an 80 km. stretch of the Normandy inscribed: “In honour of all those who died coastline that the Allied Forces invaded on or disappeared while serving in the Royal CaJune 6, 1944 (D-Day). More than 160,000 nadian Navy during the conflict of 1939-1945 soldiers were involved in what became the and in Operation Overlord June 1944. Thank largest amphibious invasion in world history, You.” There’s also a memorial cross in honand although it was not totally successful, it our of soldiers who were lost at sea. Some of was very instrumental in turning the war in the wartime underground tunnels and trenches have been preserved for visitors to see, so I our favour. The code name of this invasion of Nor- had to check those out, too. Several military mandy was “Operation Neptune”, and Gen- weapons and vehicles are also displayed on eral Dwight D. Eisenhower was the Supreme site. Furthermore, Laurence Binyon’s poem, Commander of the Allied Forces. Ground “For the Fallen”, is prominently featured on forces were under the command of General an interior museum wall: “They shall grow not old Bernard Montgomery. It had already been As we that are left grow old; decided to do the actual invasion in two Age shall not weary them phases, with airborne troops landing shortly Nor the years condemn; after midnight, followed by an early morning At the going down of the sun arrival of infantry and armored divisions. It And in the morning had also been predetermined to divide the We will remember them. Normandy coastline into five sectors: Utah, We will remember them.” Omaha, Gold, Sword, and Juno. American I checked out the Canadian War Cemetery soldiers were concentrated at Omaha and at nearby Beny-sur-Mer, where I was overUtah, Commonwealth soldiers were primarily at Sword and Gold, and Canadian soldiers were prevaGoMcCoy.com lent at Juno. 613-969-8884 I spent most of my day touring 81 Millennium PKWY. Unit D, Belleville ON K8N 4Z5 the British and Canadian landing beaches – so that I could write this Festival of Lights Caribbean Cruise ..Nov 26-Dec11 article. I visited Juno Beach, of in Niagara Falls Come From Away ............. Nov 30 course, where about 14,000 Cana- Daniel O’Donnell Alight at Night ................Dec 2 & 9 dian soldiers took part on D-Day, DEC 4-6 Niagara Falls .................... Dec 4-6 fiercely fighting their way inland amid the enemy’s heavy gunfire and Royal Winter Fair ................ Nov 12 Johnny Cash Tribute............ Dec 7 treacherous beach landmines. I Niagara Falls ...................... Nov 14 The Illusionists..................... Dec 17 also visited the nearby Juno Beach Toronto Outlets/Yorkdale.. Nov 19 Quebec Winter Carnival .. Feb 3-5 Centre at Courseulles-sur-Mer, which pays homage to the 45,000 Nashville Christmas ......Nov 21-26 St. Pete’s Florida........ Feb 6-Mar 5 Canadian soldiers who lost their Ripley’s/CN Tower ............. Nov 25 Saturday Night Fever............Feb 8 lives during WWII. It’s designed to Ripley’s/NHL Hall of Fame. Nov 25 New York City ............... Feb 10-13 be a permanent memorial to all Ca- St. Jacobs ........................... Nov 26 St. Pete’s Florida............ Feb 13-28 nadians who served during WWII, Eaton Centre ...........Nov 26/27/30 Cabaret ...............................Feb 15 and it was opened in 2003 by both TICO#50007364

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O’BRIEN, Dorothy Velma Peacefully at the Stirling Manor on Friday, November 4th, 2016; with Carol and Larry at her side, at the age of 98 years. Daughter of the late James and Ethel Allan. Beloved wife of the late Ross O’Brien. Loving mother of the late Barry (surviving Julie) O’Brien, and Carol (Larry) Forestell of Stirling. Loving grandmother to Tracy, Alison, Ryan and Tyler, and great grandchildren Logan, Alexandra, Christoper, AvaSoleil, Adyena, Thea, and Rowyn. Sister of the late Frank (Evelyn) Allan. A Memorial Mass was held at St. James the Minor Roman Catholic Church, Stirling, on Wednesday, November 9th, 2016 at One O’clock. Father Charles Enyinnia officiated. If desired, donations may be made to the Canadian Cancer Society. Arrangements under the direction of the STIRLING FUNERAL CHAPEL, 87 James Street, Stirling (613-395-2424). Online condolences at www.rushnellfamilyservices.com

DEATH NOTICE

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KNIGHT, M. “Jean” Peacefully at home in Brighton on Saturday, November 5, 2015, age 88 years. Jean Knight, daughter of the late William Ferguson and the late Lena (Stevenson). Beloved wife of the late James Henry Knight. Loving mother of Roger Knight and his wife Diane and Ron Knight and his wife Dianne. Predeceased by her daughter Wendy Knight. Sister of the late Audrey, Willa, Ola, Grace, Stella, Bruce, Wilfred, Delbert, Bob, Clayton and Ken. Sadly missed by her grandchildren, Sarah, David, Melissa, Andrew, Heather, Amber, her ten great grandchildren, and her many nieces and nephews. Predeceased by granddaughter Michelle. A private Graveside Service will be held at a later date. As an expression of sympathy, donations to the Canadian Cancer Society, or Trinity St. Andrews United Church, Brighton, would be appreciated by the family. Arrangements in care of the Brighton Funeral Home (613-4752121). The Family would like to thank all health care professionals who have assisted in the care of our mother. www.rushnellfamilyservices.com. DEATH NOTICE

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IN MEMORIAM

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ANNOUNCEMENT DEBT OR CREDIT CRISIS NEED HELP? ALLEN MADIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLING .COM Visit Our New Web Site For details of our unique service Free consultation Call 613-779-8008

FIREWOOD Wood for Sale, cut, split and ready to burn. 613-395-3605

Book your ad 613-966-2034

Thankful to God for His faithfulness, please help us celebrate Pete and Jane Dibbits’

50th Wedding Anniversary at an Open House on Saturday, November 19, 2016 from 2-4 pm at the Trenton Christian School, 340 2nd Dug Hill Road, Trenton, Ontario. Best Wishes Only Please

Ask about our

HALF PRICE and FREE birthday ads!

613-966-2034 DEATH NOTICE

DEATH NOTICE

QUINN, Matthew James

SPENCE, John Edward, September 8/1952 to October 29/2016 - It is with great sadness and heavy hearts that we announce that we have lost a wonderful and caring husband, father, grandfather and brother. John was in PERRY, Margaret “June” - Peacefully with her family by her side at the Cornwall Community his 65th year when he passed away Hospital on Saturday, October 29, 2016, unexpectedly at his home on Saturday June Perry of Ingleside, age 87. Born in October 29th, 2016. Husband of Eva London, England June was from a large Cartwright, father of Lori (Jonathon) and family and was predeceased by many Karen (Jesse), step father to Dale (Jane) and siblings. While raising her two boy’s June Lindsey (Sean). Loving grandfather to Tyler, worked in real estate and the legal profession Jacob, Carver, and step grandpa to Curtis before owning a gift shop in Campbellford. (Taylor) and Noah. Will be missed by his She moved to Morrisburg in 1996 and then to sister Jean (Bill), and brother Earl (late Ingleside in 2012. She made some very close Cathy). Predeceased by brother Bob (Ellen). friends whose company she cherished. June Also missed by his nieces and nephews. will be sadly missed by sons Lee (Cathy) of John is a retired General Motors employee of Whitby, Clark (Colette) of Ingleside, and 32 years. John loved his sports and grandchildren Jacob, Cole, Wade, Tessa, participating as well as a Legion member. Corey & Dylan. June belonged to the John will be missed by all his family and Lakeshore Drive United Church in Morrisburg friends. He was the kindest person ever, for many years and during the past few years always putting everyone ahead of himself. A she attended St. Matthews Presbyterian Funeral Service will be held at Church where she was a proud member of MacCOUBREY FUNERAL HOME, 30 King the choir and she rarely missed the St. E. in Cobourg on Saturday, November opportunity to sing. A Celebration of June’s 5th, at 11 am. Reception to follow with later life will be held at St. Matthew’s Presbyterian interment at Baltimore United Church Church in Ingleside on Saturday, November Cemetery. Visitation to be held at funeral 12th at 1 p.m. featuring hymns sung by the home on Friday, November 4th, from 6 to 9 choir that were chosen by June. A reception pm with a RCL Branch #133 walk through to will follow. Donations to the Heart and Stroke be held on Friday evening at 5:45pm. In lieu Foundation or the Canadian Cancer Society of flowers donations to the Heart & Stroke would be gratefully acknowledged by the Foundation or charity of your choice. family. Online condolences may be made at Condolences received at marsdenmclaughlin.com. www.MacCoubrey.com. B14 Section B - Thursday, November 10, 2016

WANTED

ANNOUNCEMENT

Peacefully at Crown Ridge Place on Sunday, November 6th, 2016. Jim Quinn of Trenton in his 88th year. Beloved husband of Florence (Campbell) Quinn. Loved father of Jim (late Barb), John (Debbie), Donny (Susan), Karen (late Bill) Cooper, Danny (Sheila), Chris (Kim), Kevin (Cathy), Bruce (Billie Joe), Brad and Shannon (Stephen) Gibson. Ever remembered by twenty-seven grandchildren and thirteen great-grandchildren. Survived by siblings Jack (late Rita), Ann Engemoen, Helen (Clyde) Lyon, Herbie (late Charis), Fred (Patsy), Tom (Millie) and the late Patty. Predeceased by his parents Matthew and Mary (Coon) Quinn. The family will receive friends at the RUSHNELL FUNERAL CENTRE, 60 Division Street, Trenton on Wednesday from 6-8 p.m. Service will be held in the Chapel on Thursday, November 10th, 2016 at 11:00 a.m. with visitation one hour prior to Service. Interment Mount Calvary Cemetery. If desired, Memorial Donations to Heart and Stroke Foundation, Canadian Cancer Society or the Canadian Diabetes Association would be appreciated by the family. On-line condolences at www.rushnellfamilyservices.com

In loving memory of a dear husband and father

FOR SALE

Hugh Fox December 7, 1935-November 10, 2014 We didn’t know that morning That God was going to call your name In life we loved you dearly In death we do the same It broke our hearts to lose you For part of us went with you The day that God called you home You left us beautiful memories Your love will be our guide And though we cannot see you You are always by our side Our family-chain is broken And nothing seems the same But as God calls us one by one The chain will link again Loved and sadly missed by Mary K., Susan & Dan, Jerry & Colleen, Stephen & Christine, Peter & Anita, Linda & Donny, Joanne & Herb, Celina & Joe and families FOR SALE

FOR SALE

NEW & USED APPLIANCES USED REFRIGERATORS Stoves, washers, dryers, freezers, 3 months old & up. Sold with written guarantee. Fridges $100. and up.

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

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

CL447164 CL642293

DEATH NOTICE

CL443017 CL460544

DEATH NOTICE

We Sell Gas Refrigerators!

SMITTY’S APPLIANCES LTD. 1-613-969-0287 VEHICLES

VEHICLES

CAR FOR SALE

FOR SALE

CENTRAL BOILER OUTDOOR FURNACES ASK US ABOUT THE NEW

EDGE

2016 FALL REBATE SAVINGS UP TO $800 Call for more information Your local DEALER

WOOD HEAT SOLUTIONS www.chesher.ca

FRANKFORD, ON 613.398.1611 BANCROFT, ON 613.332.1613

2012 CHEV CRUZE LT 4DR

4 cylinder, auto, air, tilt, cruise, CD, power locks, and windows, keyless, auto start, clean car proof, safety & e-test, excellent condition.

SALE PRICE

$9500.00 Stock #17059 Dealer

Visit us online InsideBelleville.com

FINANCING AVAILABLE

PHONE 613-962-6353


IN MEMORIAM

In Loving Memory of Helen Burkholder who passed away Nov. 9, 2015. Not a day goes by that we don’t think about you and miss you for you are greatly loved by your family, grandchildren and great grandchildren and Fall Gospel Sing husband Doug. Chapel of The Good Forever loved by Terry & Shepherd Sherry Stinchcombe, 513 Ashley St. Foxboro Debbie & Brian Grills, Nov. 19, 2016 at 6:30 Darlene & Glenn Come join us Cassalman, Judy & John Lunch to follow Menzies. May you rest in peace tell we meet again. Christmas Treasures Gift Show will be taking place on November 20th from 10-3pm at the Masonic Hall in Brighton. 25 vendors, free admission & free draw!

IN MEMORIAM

FOR RENT

FOR SALE International 574 Tractor 60 HP with mount o matic front end loader. Good rubber 613-848-4380

FITNESS & HEALTH GET FIT FOR FALL Zumba Fitness 1 hour classes. Mondays 5:30 pm Brighton Masonic Hall, Wednesdays 6 pm at ENSS single gym. Call Cynthia 613-847-1183.

WANTED

IN MEMORIAM

613-847-9467 FITNESS & HEALTH

Linda Corner

Love Always In Our Hearts Forever; Ed, Tammy and Families

Diabetic

Ingrown or fungus problems? Need toe nails trimmed by a professional RN with over 20 yrs experience. WILL COME TO YOU. $30/person.

CL460541

(Scrap or unwanted) Cars, Trucks, Vans or Farm Tractors, etc. for scrap recycling. Cash Paid. Pick up from Norwood to Tweed to Belleville.

A special smile, a special face, In our hearts, a special place. Memories are a gift to treasure, Ours of you will last forever.

Professional Office Space in Brighton Is your business getting stressed in the home?

On site we have office space with a closed and open format, a meeting room and storage spaces. With the following: WiFi, a wide format printer, a wide format scanner and a business standard office format printer. All this is available in the Brighton downtown core with plenty of parking.

For viewing call 613-475-6146

WANTED - WANTED

December 21, 1949 November 7, 2012

APARTMENTS P R A D A

FARM

CALL

613-475-3793 9am - 5pm www.pradacourt.com

613-475-3621

Kenmau Ltd. BELLEVILLE

FARM

Ann Street – Bachelor apartment $675.00 + Hydro (available now)

HONEY FOR SALE

29 Dunbar St. – 2 bedroom $750.00 + Heat & Hydro (available now)

Twin Sisters Hive & Honey Products

191 Lingham - 2 Bedroom $850.00 + hydro (available November)

LOTS OF NEW GIFT IDEAS TOO!

Call

Kenmau Ltd.

613-392-2601 or visit www.kenmau.ca

Property Management (Since 1985)

231 Frankford-Stirling Road, Stirling

MORTGAGES

We sell bulk honey in your containers, prepackaged liquid and creamed honey, wedding favours, buckwheat honey, beeswax skin creams & lip balms, candles, pollen, maple syrup, honey butter, gifts and more.

MORTGAGES

METRO CITY MORTGAGE TEAM ‡ 5HQHZDOV ‡ 0RUWJDJHV /RDQV ‡ /HDVLQJ - 1st, 2nd & Private Mortgages ˆ *VII (S[R 4E]QIRX 4VSKVEQ OAC ˆ ˆ &ERO XYVR HS[RW WIPJ IQTPS]IH [IPGSQIH

CL460910

Open Saturdays only, 10 am-4pm. Call 613-827-7277

C O U R T

BRIGHTON Featuring 2 bedroom apartments Featuring 2 bedroom apartments with all all amenities amenities including: including: with fridge, stove, air conditioning stove, air conditioning.and wheelchair access. The apartments are attractive The apartments attractive and the buildingsareare secure. and the buildings are secure. Ideal for retired couples. Ideal for Seniors or retired couples

Receipts available

FARM

FOR RENT

CREDIT PROBLEMS? I HAVE SOLUTIONS! Andrea Johnston A.M.P (YRHEW 7XVIIX ) 7YMXI &IPPIZMPPI 32 / 2 ) 3J½GI 8SPP *VII I\X )QEMP ERHVIE $W]QTEXMGS GE ;IF [[[ QSVXKEKIWF]ERHVIE GSQ *7'3 0MG 1 &VSOIV (0' 7QEVX (IFX -RHITIRHIRXP] 3[RIH ERH 3TIVEXIH

FOR RENT

MORTGAGES

BRIGHTON

$ MONEY $

AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY 1-2 bedroom unit on the second floor-sliding doors leading to balcony, laundry facilities on site and walking distance to downtown. $800/mth plus Hydro. 1-2 bedroom lower level available in September $750/mth plus Hydro.

Kenmau Ltd. (Since 1985)

Property Management

613-392-2601 HELP WANTED

CONSOLIDATE Debts Mortgages to 90% No income Bad credit OK!

Better Option Mortgage #10969

1-800-282-1169 CL442555

COMING EVENTS

www.mortgageontario.com

WANTED Standing timber, hard maple, soft maple, red and white oak, etc. Quality workmanship guaranteed. 519-777-8632 .

FOR RENT

2 bedroom apartment, 8 mins south of Tweed in Thomasburg area. $675/plus hydro. Well maintained building, beautiful rural setting. Call 613-885-5914.

Wanted: Standing timber, mature hard/softwood. Also wanted, natural HALL RENTALS stone, cubicle or flat, any Belleville Shrine Club size. 613-968-5182. 51 Highland Ave Belleville Rooms available for large or small parties or meetings. Now taking bookings for Christmas. Licensed by LLBO. Catering available. Wi-Fi available. Air condiHELP WANTED tioned. Handicap access w w w. b e l l e v i l l e s h r i n e club.com. For more information call 613-962-2633 or 613-921-9924

Book your ad 613-966-2034 HELP WANTED

WANTED! CARRIERS to deliver

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY “Business Opportunity� Successful Pet Grooming Shop and Boutique, turn key. See details at: www.BusinessSellCanada. com/62921003.htm

BUSINESS SERVICES Ken Chard Construction. Renovations, decks, siding, sidewalks, fences, ceramic, windows, painting etc. Free estimates. Call: 613-398-7439.

HELP WANTED

APPLE PACKERS

Full Time Farm Labourer

Earn Extra Money! Only 1 delivery a week! Papers are delivered right to your home!

Tree Pruning / Apple Picking $11.40/hr required immediately at: Scarlett Acres Ltd. Colborne, Ontario Please apply within or email

Call NOW to start delivering!

amycook@knights-appleden.ca ARCHER TRUCKING

613-966-2034 x512 or email: mruttan@metroland.com

is looking for

Owner Operators and Company Drivers US capable Pneumatic tank operation an asset, but not required.

Our Carriers Make The Difference! HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

Marmora Duplex, one bedroom, one bath, two storey, spotless, $890.00 p/m includes water and heat. Hydro extra. Available Dec 1/16 613-472-3825

required Immediately Knight’s Appleden Fruit Ltd. Please apply within or email amycook@knights-appleden.ca

REWARD

HELP WANTED

FOR RENT

HELP WANTED

WANTED! CARRIERS to deliver

REWARD Earn Extra Money! Only 1 delivery a week! Papers are delivered right to your home!

Competitive wage and benefit package. Please forward resume to: Box 160, Norwood, ON, K0L 2V0 fax: 705-639-2422 or dheayn@archertrucking.com

Mature Drivers Wanted Drive to Medical Appointments $500 Weekly Car provided start ASAP Email: DriverRCT@gmail.com

UPPER CANADA DISTRICT SCHOOL BOARD Two positions available Manager, HR Special Services and Temporary Manager, Communications Visit www.ucdsb.on.ca/careers. Send cover letter and resume to askHR@ucdsb.on.ca by November 15, 2016 at 4pm.

Call NOW to start delivering! 613-966-2034 x513 or email: sotoole@metroland.com

Our Carriers Make The Difference! Section B - Thursday, November 10, 2016 B15


Buy 1 wetek ge 1 free!

Residential items only

Contract Drivers

HELP WANTED

needed for Belleville/ Trenton Courier Service. Must have own vehicle. Call Tues. To Fri. 8 am - 2 pm. 613-392-5585 or 613-967-5941

HELP WANTED

The ideal candidate will possess the following qualifications: t 7BMJE %; %SJWFS T -JDFODF t .JOJNVN (SBEF 0OUBSJP 4FDPOEBSZ 4DIPPM %JQMPNB t .JOJNVN ZFBST IFBWZ USVDL UBOEFN TOPX QMPX FYQFSJFODF

Metroland Media Classifieds

1-888-967-3237

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

Maintenance/Janitor (Part time)

Marmora District Housing Commission (24 unit sng. apt. bldg.) 7KLV SHUVRQ ZLOO EH UHVSRQVLEOH IRU WKH VDYH HIÆ“FLHQW FOHDQLQJ general maintenance of the building and grounds. Grass cutting, gardening, snow removal and general knowledge of mechanical, electrical & plumbing repairs. The recruitment process requires a criminal background check for working with vulnerable persons. Please forward covering letter, resume or enquiries by Wed., Nov. 23/16 to: Debbie Harris - Administrator Marmora District Housing Commission #210 - 2 Madoc, St., Marmora, ON K0K 2M0 HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

Manufacturing – Quality Assurance Lab Leader – Full-time – Belleville, Ontario Immediate Need – Job # MFG00005353 The purpose of this role is to provide leadership, technical and quality assurance expertise to one of the site lab which supports a key operation at the Belleville, Ontario site. The Lab Leader will be responsible for the management of the lab to comply with QA Laboratory Controls policies and relevant market regulations while executing and overseeing the execution of the required analytical and physical testing required for daily release and operations support. Important responsibilities t VQEBUF MBC QSPDFEVSFT UP DPNQMZ XJUI D(.1 SFMFWBOU NBSLFU SFHVMBUJPOT BOE 1 ( Laboratory Controls t FYFDVUF BOE PWFSTFF EBJMZ DIFNJDBM SFMBUFE UFTUJOH PG QSPEVDU t NBJOUBJO MBC FRVJQNFOU DBMJCSBUJPO TFSWJDJOH BOE SFDPSET UP DPNQMZ XJUI 1 ( 2" TUBOEBSET t NBOBHF QBSUT BOE TVQQMZ JOWFOUPSZ GPS MBC FRVJQNFOU t USBJO BOBMZTUT PO QSPDFEVSFT BOE FRVJQNFOU PQFSBUJPO BT OFFEFE t USPVCMFTIPPU UFTU FRVJQNFOU JTTVFT BOE XPSL XJUI BOBMZTUT t BTTJTU JO DPPSEJOBUJPO PG FYUFSOBM BOBMZUJDBM XPSL BT SFRVJSFE t DPNNVOJDBUF SFTVMUT PCTFSWBUJPOT PS PVUBHFT JO B UJNFMZ NBOOFS UP 2" BOE PQFSBUJPOT Job Qualification 1: Education/Experience #BDIFMPShT EFHSFF JO B SFMBUFE ýFME 4DJFODF $IFNJTUSZ &OHJOFFSJOH PS FRVJWBMFOU LOPXMFEHF FYQFSJFODF GBNJMJBS XJUI D(.1 '%" MBC control standards and practices. Job Qualification 2: Leadership %FNPOTUSBUFE BCJMJUZ JO UIF MFBEFSTIJQ NBJOUFOBODF PG BO BOBMZUJDBM MBC JO B SFHVMBUFE CVTJOFTT %FNPOTUSBUFE DBQBCJMJUZ JO USBJOJOH RVBMJGZJOH PUIFS BOBMZTUT UFDIOJDJBOT Job Qualification 3: Technical Expertise &YQFSJFODF JO PQFSBUJPO BOE NBJOUFOBODF PG BOBMZUJDBM JOTUSVNFOUT BOE FYFDVUJPO PG XFU DIFNJDBM NFUIPET TVDI BT (BT $ISPNBUPHSBQIZ -JRVJE $ISPNBUPHSBQIZ BVUP UJUSBUPST ,BSM 'JTIFS .PJTUVSF '5*3 NJDSPTDPQZ 3IFPNFUFS "CMF UP RVBOUJUBUJWFMZ QSFQBSF BOE WFSJGZ SFBHFOUT BOE DBMJCSBUJPO TUBOEBSET BCMF NBJOUBJO FRVJQNFOU DBMJCSBUJPO BDDPSEJOH UP 2" -BC DPOUSPM TUBOEBSET BCMF UP DPOEVDU ýSTU MJOF PG QSPCMFN TPMWJOH GPS BOBMZUJDBM JTTVFT BSJTJOH JO UIF MBC TLJMMFE BU JOUFSGBDJOH XJUI FRVJQNFOU WFOEPST UP TPMWF JTTVFT (SFBU DPMMBCPSBUJPO TLJMMT Job Qualification 4: Priority Setting 5IF DBOEJEBUF XJMM CF DBQBCMF PG TFUUJOH PXO EBJMZ work items according to business priorities and completing tasks successfully with very little supervision. Job Qualification 5: Quality 5IF TVDDFTTGVM DBOEJEBUF XJMM IBWF EFNPOTUSBUFE FYQFSJFODF JO implementing projects with quality control mechanisms. Ensure you include your detailed education and work experience in your resume. Employment opportunities will be conditional upon the results of a background check. There will be rolling start dates throughout the year, so please apply today via www.pgcareers.com KPC .'( *G ZPV SFRVJSF B NFEJDBM PS EJTBCJMJUZ SFMBUFE BDDPNNPEBUJPO JO PSEFS UP QBSUJDJQBUF JO UIF recruitment process, please email careers.im@pg.com to provide your contact information. 1 ( 5BMFOU 4VQQMZ TUBGG XJMM DPOUBDU ZPV XJUIJO XFFL B16 Section B - Thursday, November 10, 2016

Qualifications considered an asset: t 2VBMJýFE FYQFSJFODF PQFSBUJOH B SPBE HSBEFS GSPOU FOE MPBEFS tractor backhoe t 4USPOH LOPXMFEHF BOE FYQFSJFODF JO FRVJQNFOU SFQBJS The position may require working overtime and unusual hours including weekends and holidays. 1MFBTF TVCNJU SFTVNF PO PS CFGPSF /PPO PO 'SJEBZ /PWFNCFS UI UP UIF BUUFOUJPO PG Roger Taylor, Superintendent of Public Works 7 Furnace Street, PO Box 900 Madoc, Ontario, K0K 2K0 Phone 613-473-4030 Fax 613-473-5444 Email: rtaylor@centrehastings.com

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

Help keep your community clean. Please recycle this newspaper. CAREER OPPORTUNITY

Now Hiring Store, Yard Staff & A DZ Licensed Truck Driver

Campbellford Home Hardware Building Centre Home Hardware is a leading Canadian Retailer of building and home improvement products. If you want to work with the best and apply your skills and experience in a fast paced, customer focused environment, then this might be the opportunity you have been waiting for.

Experience Required These are full-time and part-time positions and will require some weekend hours. We offer competitive wage and benefits to the successful candidate.

Please submit your resume in confidence to Campbellford Home Hardware Building Centre 545 Grand Road, Campbellford, ON K0L-1L0 or Fax to (705) 653-5009

20 word ads only.

613-403-0881

t FYU

Applications are now being received by the Municipality of Centre Hastings for the position of Public Works Equipment Operator/Labourer (1 position).

mrmwrichards12@gmail.com

FULL TIME & PART TIME

HELP WANTED

Municipality of Centre Hastings Employment Opportunity Public Works Department Equipment Operator/Labourer

Small business bookkeeping, accounting, financial statements, tax returns and consulting.

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

FRs,EreEsid!ential

MIKE RICHARDS CPA, CMA

HELP WANTED

CLASSIFIEDS

HELP WANTED

Call or visit us online to reach over 69,000 potential local buyers. Deadline: Mondays at 2 p.m.

BUSINESS SERVICES

12n3d w.0ee1k

BUSINESS SERVICES

1PTU BO BE UPEBZ

BUSINESS SERVICES

$

BUSINESS SERVICES


TENDERS

TENDERS

TENDERS

TENDERS

TENDERS

TENDERS

TENDERS

TENDERS

TENDERS

TENDERS

THE CORPORATION OF THE CITY OF QUINTE WEST SALE OF LAND BY PUBLIC TENDER Take Notice that tenders are invited for the purchase of the land(s) described below and will be received until 3:00:00 p.m. (three o’clock sharp) local time on Friday, November 18, 2016 at the 2nd floor reception of the Municipal office located at 7 Creswell Drive, Trenton, ON. (Local time is in accordance with the electronic stamp used for receiving documents. This clock will be deemed conclusive. The tenders will then be opened in public on the same day at approx. 3:10 p.m. at the same Municipal Office. Brief Description of Lands (full tender package available at www.quintewest.ca under Business>Bids and Tenders)

$9,279.72

Tenders must be submitted in the prescribed form and must be accompanied by a deposit in the form of a money order or of a bank draft or cheque certified by a bank or trust corporation payable to the municipality and representing at least 20 per cent of the tender amount. The municipality makes no representation regarding the title to or any other matters relating to the land to be sold. Responsibility for ascertaining these matters rests with the potential purchasers. This sale is governed by the Municipal Act, 2001 and the Municipal Sales Rules made under that Act. The successful purchaser will be required to pay the amount tendered plus accumulated taxes (anything accrued after cancellation price calculation) and the relevant land transfer tax. The municipality has no obligation to provide vacant possession to the successful purchaser. Register with the City of Quinte West online and select the category “Property Tax Sales” as your area of interest. You must register to gain access to electronic document(s). Benefits of registration include automatic notification of future bid opportunities, status updates, and final results. For further information email purchasing@quintewest.ca or phone at 613-392-2841 X 4450 or 4480

EVENTS Continued from page B7

TRENTON TRENTON MEMORIAL Hospital Auxiliary annual Holly Bazaar on Fri, Nov. 18th , 11am-4pm. The Tea Room will be open from noon to 2:30. Silent Auction ends at 3:30. Contact: 613 965 0423 TRENTON HORTICULTURE Society Meets Nov 17, Trenton United Church, 85 Dundas St. East 6:30 pm for Pot Luck supper, Annual General Meeting and Elections. Guests are welcome. COLD CREEK Cloggers, Mon nights. Beginner class 6:30pm. Trenton Baptiste Church 15 South St. First night free. For info call Debbie 613-920-9034 MEN’S GOSPEL Music group “Raw Gospel”November 13, 6pm at Campbellford Baptist Church. $10 tickets 613-392-7450 VON DINERS Lunch, Trenton Lion’s Hall Nov 16 12:00pm. Hot meal $8.00,

free transportation can be arranged. bring own plate, mug, and utensils. Call 613-3924181 reserve your spot by Friday Nov 11. ROAST PORK Dinner at Christ Church Glen Miller on Nov 16 5-6:30 pm. Cost $13.00 for adults, children 6-12 $7.00 children 5 and under Free. TRENTON ART Club. Calling all artists and would be artists. Painting every Fri, Smylie’s Independent Store (upstairs) Info: Connie 613-398-6525. FREE TREE & Shrub Seedlings for spring 2017 can be ordered now. Contact Ewa Bednarczuk, 613-394-3915 ext 252, ewa. bednarczuk@ltc.on.ca or order on-line at www.ltc.on.ca TRENTON MEMORIAL Hospital Auxiliary wants new volunteers (18 years +). Training provided. Call 613 392 2540 ext. 5454 JOYFULL NOISE Women’s Choir every Mon, 7 - 9 p.m., room 217 at Trenton High School. We sing 50’s, 60’s and 70’s

tunes. No auditions, you DO NOT need FREE COMMUNITY kitchens, Gateway to read music. New members welcome. CHC, third Tuesday of each month, 1:30Info: Cathy 613 397 3236. 3:30pm. Taste new foods, learn to cook in healthy ways, and meet new people. Info TWEED or to register, call 613-478-1211 ext 228. SENIOR MEN’S Exercise Class, Tues and TWEED LEGION: Pool, shuffleboard, Thurs, 10-11 AM, Land O’ Lakes Curling darts weekly. Open to everyone. Bi-weekly Club. Light weights available, bring your Thurs Open Bingo in the Upstairs Hall, 7 own mat. 7/class or $40 monthly. Show pm. Euchre every other Sat in the Clubroom, up or contact: 613-478-5994 1 pm. Info 613-478-1865 ATTENTION TEENS: Join the Truth & FINDING YOUR Way clinics. Free ID kit Dare Youth Group, Fridays, 7 p.m. Tweed to help with memory loss and their loved Pentecostal Church, 16 Jamieson St. W. ones be prepared, prevent a missing person. COUNTRY BENEFIT JAMBOREE for Call 613-395-5018 Hudson Hill, Great grandson of Anna & BID EUCHRE every Tuesday, 7 p.m., George York November 13, 1 - 4 pm at Actinolite Recreation Hall St. Matthew’s Hall, Marlbank. Canteen TWEED LIBRARY: Bridge every Tuesday available. Call 613-478-2831. from 1-4. Knitting every Friday from 2-4 VOLUNTEERS NEEDED for Gateway Community Health Centre Pole Walking TYENDINAGA program. No experience necessary. For DINER’S CLUB, 3rd Thursday of month, more information, please call the Dietitian Tyendinaga Community Centre, 12-2 pm. at 613-478-1211 ext. 228. $7/member. $8/non-member. Reservations

required. Call 613-396-6591 TYENDINAGA TOWNSHIP Remembrance Day Service Fri Nov 11, at 10:30am at the Tyendinaga Township Municipal Office (859 Melrose Road). potluck lunch social after service at Tyendinaga Recreation Hall (363 McFarlane Road). bring a food dish and dishes and cutlery. Coffee and Tea included. FREE LUNCH Time Fitness with Active membership at the Tyendinaga Fitness Resource Centre. $20.00 for seniors (55 +) $30.00 for adults. Stop in classes 12:15pm Mon to Thurs. (613) 962-2822

WARKWORTH WARKWORTH LEGION Moonshot Euchre, 1:30 p.m. every Wednesday. Dart League, 7:30 p.m. every Thursday. WARKWORTH PERFECT Pie ContestNovember 12, @ 9am–5pm.Warkworth Town Hall, 40 Main St, Free. contact Barb Trotter 705-924-2066

Section B - Thursday, November 10, 2016 B17


Letter

Wyley has some burrs in his saddle

Agency prepares for MOH retirement

Dear Editor: “Grumpy”: Adj., Surly and moody - Whoohoo: That be me! The US Election: By the time you read this, Hillary should be president. (Of course when Truman inexplicably won in 1948, I was but 10 years old - and I thought that “Dewey” was only wet grass in the morning!) Eric Adams, writing in the Globe & Mail recently, described Donald Trump as follows: “The republican party has nominated an unfit candidate of almost unimaginable proportions, unmoored from conventional political morality and civic virtues”. In the opposite corner, however, Ms. Clinton has often exhibited poor judgement, is a benefactor of an incredibly lavish “family foundation”, but is otherwise the most skilled and highlytrained potential leader perhaps in American history. The better of two unprecedentedly bad choices. If Mr. Unfit wins: “Oh Oh Beav. - Now you gonna get it!” Liberal Bribes: Selling tickets to rich companies/ persons who are trying to influence decisions in their favour is just WRONG! Ms. Wynne has got to go, and the guillotine has started its descent. Mr. Selfie-Beautiful, however, painstakingly laid out rules and regulations to all his newly-minted Federal ministers, then stood silently by while ministers were bribed. WHAT WAS HE THINKING? How does this square with a squeaky-clean image? OAS Reversal from 67 to 65: There was some pain involved in the original decision to up the age of eligibility to 67. Other enlightened nations

BY JACK EVANS

Belleville - The announcement by Hastings and Prince Edward Public Health that a new public health doctor in training has been hired is seen as first steps to filling the gap when Dr. Richard Schabas fulfills his determination to retire as he recently announced. He is Dr. Piotr Oglaza, who was formally introduced to the agency’s board at its November meeting last week. Dr. Oglaza is in his fourth year for public health specialist training at Queen’s University . He will contribute to the local agency as a public health physician in the coming months, being supervised by Dr. Schabas until he retires and then with supervision by Dr. Kieran Moore from Kingston, Frontenac, Lennox and Addington Public Health. This time will provide additional training for Dr.Oglaza while maintaining access for HPE Public Health staff to a qualified public health physician through Dr.Schabas’ retirement and the transition to leadership under a new MOH.

have realized that we are living much longer and this manufactures a huge and ever-rising deficit in OAS. Old people like me should not render advice on this subject except to warn the young that these payments are unsustainable unless a commensurate major lowering of the income-tested threshold is also announced. Sell-off of money-making assets: Certain businesses are known as “Licences To Steal”. These include things like the LCBO, Highway 407, and the various Federal airports. The decisions to even consider selling these money-churning assets for the short-term gains they produce in budgets - has to be made by complete and absolute jackasses. An enlightened long-range leader would fire such doltish advisors immediately. Defined Benefit Pensions: The favourite bug-bear of everyone NOT in possession of such generosity. After the latest automotive settlement in would appear that the only significant remaining recipients of such “forever” security are public servants. You know who you are: Fed/Provincial/ Municipal Employees, Police, Hydro, Teachers, Firemen. The DBP’s cannot continue to be offered to new employees. The continuing escalating liability is unsustainable. Stop it now! Period! End of Argument! Hydro Costs: This baby is so volatile it deserves a second (inflammatory) article. Wyley Canuck (AKA Ken Leavens) RR4, Stirling

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Warkworth pond a mirror for Mother Nature – until after Thanksgiving BY JOHN CAMPBELL

Warkworth – Beauty is more than a metre deep. At least the kind that is seen in the fall, reflecting off the water in the Warkworth pond. When the water’s gone too early and no longer a mirror for the vibrant colours of the trees on the hill, people get upset. Trent Hills Councillor Rick English said he had received calls from residents in the village wondering why Lower Trent Conservation had drained the pond right after the Thanksgiving weekend. It’s “a real focal point for the village” at this time of year, with people wanting to take photos of the autumn colours reflected on the water, and a tourist attraction for Warkworth, drawing visitors from Trenton and Belleville, English said. But once the water is gone, all that’s left is a “mess on the bottom, mud that’s all it is.” He said he couldn’t understand why the conservation authority doesn’t keep the logs in for another week or two before removing them. “The leaves are done,” English said, “they can go out now.” The pond is drained every October to prevent ice from building up over the winter, which could cause flooding during the spring run-off. Mayor Hector Macmillan said it’s not the first time the issue has been raised about the LTC’s management of the pond that’s “a thing of beauty” for Trent Hills residents. He and other council members supported English’s request that the municipality contact the agency to see if the two sides could work together to address the concerns of residents. Macmillan suggested putting LTC “on notice that we’d like to revisit our arrangement with them, perhaps they shouldn’t be managing our dam ... I’m tired of having this same thing pop up again.” “It’s our dam, we’re going to tell them when we’re going to

have the logs (pulled),” he said. “If they’re not going to do it our way then they’re going to get out of our way.” CAO Lynn Phillips said she had been in touch with the Lower Trent and got “the impression there was some flexibility there ... a potential to work” with the municipality and to notify it when the logs were to be removed. “I’m happy to continue that conservation in a letter and see if something can be put in place for next year,” she said. It was a feeling shared by Councillor Rosemary Kelleher-MacLennan and director of planning Jim Peters who had also broached the subject with Lower Trent CAO Glenda Rodgers at a source water protection meeting. Rodgers explained in an interview the conservation authority follows a protocol set out in its Warkworth pond is a beautiful sight in the fall, before most of the logs in the dam operations manual for the Wark- are removed to drawn down the water. John Campbell/Metroland worth dam, which is to remove the logs after Thanksgiving weekend. the water could expose the pond’s amphibians, reptiles and By leaving it to later, when the weather gets colder in Oc- crustaceans. They face “potential mortality” by having the tober, there’s the possibility of the deck on the dam getting mud “all stirred up” after they have burrowed into it to hiicy, creating a “safety risk” for LTC employees in removing bernate over the winter. the logs. Rodgers said she had discussed the matter of the logs’ Also, it’s a job for three people and one of the staff on removal with staff and it was decided that when October contract is gone by mid-October, Rodgers said, “So we need rolls around again next year, she and staff will look at the to do that work while we have the staffing.” weather forecasts “at that point and see whether we can deAnother consideration is that delaying drawing down lay it by maybe a week.”

Section B - Thursday, November 10, 2016 B19


B20 Section B - Thursday, November 10, 2016


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