QuinteWest News THE
r fo the ide of T ins e ES e su W Se r is TE S u yo UIN NEW Q
Proudly serving Trenton, Frankford and Area
www.insidebelleville.com
November 27, 2014
TRENTON
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2 Quinte West News - Thursday, November 27, 2014
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QuinteWest News THE
Proudly serving Trenton, Frankford and Area
www.insidebelleville.com
November 27, 2014
New marina Celebrating building to be 25 years ready for spring By Kate Everson
News - Quinte West - A new 5,500square-foot marina building is now being built at the site behind city hall. “It’s scheduled for completion by spring,� said mayor-elect Jim Harrison. “Come to city hall and take a look. You can get a great view from here!� It was indeed a great view of the site with dredging equipment and high hoes having completed their shoreline work and the footings soon to be in place for the building, followed by a breakwater and docks for 370 slips. Lisa Grills, supervisor of tourism and special events, is busy working on promotion for the city’s newest amenity and has already sold a few of the slips. “We have pre-registered over 70 slips, and are now taking [a] $100 deposit to secure a specific slip location,� Grills said. The $3-million building will include a lounge and washrooms, laundry and concessions. The $12-million Trent Port Ma-
rina will be able to take boats up to 72 feet long which are able to access slips with up to 50 amps of power. There will be full security and gated access to the docks and a private boaters lounge. Rates are $43.50 a square foot which includes 30 amps of power or $45 with 50 amps. Transient rates are $1.45 a foot per day, $1.65 a foot for overnight and $7.75 a foot for seven consecutive days. For more information contact Lisa Grills at city hall at <lisag@ quintewest.ca> or 613-392-2841 ext 4421. With its prominent location, boaters have easy access to renowned waterways such as the Trent-Severn, the Bay of Quinte, and the Murray Canal which leads to Lake Ontario. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The new Trent Port Marina has been the dream of many boaters, business owners and residents to have a best in class municipal marina in Quinte West. The new marina will be second to none and make our city an even better place to visit, live, work and play,â&#x20AC;? said Mayor John Williams.
Tracy Taylor of Cobourg checks out a walking stick made by Laird Nelson of Codrington at the recent Trenton Woodlot Conference which celebrated its 25th anniversary. The annual event draws people from all over eastern Ontario. Photo: Kate Everson Please see story on page B1
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Downtown gets into the Christmas spirit By Kate Everson
businesses and individuals who have made donations to our parade so far,â&#x20AC;? says McCormick. They include: Action Towing & Automotive, Billâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Johns, Domtech Inc., Hollandale Landscaping & Garden Centre, International Truckload Services Inc., Knights of Columbus, Lange & Fetter Motors Ltd., M&R Auto Repair, McCurdy GM, Panelas Construction Ltd., Riverside Automotive, Riverside Music Studios and Lioness Club of Trenton. Donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t forget to vote after the parade for the Scotiabank Peopleâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Choice Award for your favourite float. The lights in the Christmas Fantasy will be lit in Fraser Park after the parade and will stay on every night until the New Year. The Downtown Trenton Business Improvement Area (DBIA) is also encouraging people to participate in the Jingle Bell Walk on Wednesday, December 3, meeting at city hall at 6 p.m. for a brisk walk around downtown. The walk will end at Fraser Park just in time for the opening of the Nativity Celebration at 6:45 p.m. Join with Murray Centennial School singing in the park, then follow the piper to city hall where Trenton Christian School choir will greet you with the sounds of the seasons. Refreshments will be offered by the DBIA. This year there will be a special performance by the Steel City Rovers, so stay around and enjoy the sounds of a Celtic Christmas. Wagon rides through downtown Trenton will begin on December 5 and go until December 23, picking people up at the Trent Port Museum which will be open during the wagon rides serving refreshments. On Sunday, December 14, photos with Santa will be taken between 12 and 3 p.m. The lighting of the menorah in Fraser Park will take place on December 16 at 6 p.m. All are welcome. R0013017141
Events - Trenton - Christmas festivities start early in Trenton with the Santa Claus Parade this Sunday, November 30. The parade leaves from Centennial Park at 4:30 p.m. going over the bridge through downtown where the Christmas Fantasy will light up Fraser Park. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Everyone is encouraged to bring a non-perishable food item for the food bank and a toy for the Kinsmen Toy Drive,â&#x20AC;? notes events co-ordinator Jillian McCormick. â&#x20AC;&#x153;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.â&#x20AC;? A popular part of this parade is the Tim Hortons School Band Challenge. Local schools participate in the parade by entering their school band to win some of the $600 prize money toward their music program. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a great way for schools to showcase their talented students and hopefully receive some additional funding,â&#x20AC;? McCormick says. 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: Community Policing, McDonalds, Quintessential Credit Union, Royal LePage ProAlliance Realty, Scotiabank, Scottâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Haulage & Excavating Ltd, Tim Hortons, Trenton Cold Storage, West End Dental Centre and Whitley Financial Services â&#x20AC;&#x153;Donations are still being accepted to help finance the cost of the parade and we would like to thank the following
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Quinte Access new routes working well in city By Kate Everson
News - Quinte West - New routes introduced by Quinte Access on November 3 are now working well. “We adjusted it a little bit,” said executive director Nadyne Mattis. She said the new routes, clearly marked C and D on the buses, start an hour earlier to get people to work. “We start at 5 a.m. for CB Freezers and the Industrial Park,” she said. The new routes have a one-
hour turnaround time, compared to an hour and a half previously. There is also a third route which is the Express. The schedule can be found online at <quinteaccess. org>. “There was a bit of resistance to the new schedule at first,” added employee Shelly Ackers, “but we sorted it out. It’s a faster time and a shorter route.” Mayor John Williams came out for the official announcement of the route on Monday and was surprised with a certificate of appreciation and a framed hu-
morous poem written by Keith McColl that expressed a wish to see him driving the bus after his retirement. Council liaison and board member Bob Wannamaker also got a certificate of appreciation for his time on the board since 1995. Board chair Don O’Neill said he drives the van sometimes as a volunteer when they are shorthanded. “I can’t drive the bus,” he noted, “because I don’t have an F licence!” He said Quinte Access is a great place to work and you
get all the overtime you want. Quinte Access has three buses on the public routes and five for the specialized routes plus four vans. It serves Quinte West, Brighton and Prince Edward County. “Our transit ridership last year was 41,000,” adds Shelly Ackers. “Our specialized ridership was 27,000 trips.” She said they travelled a total of 604,000 kilometres on all the buses. The business started in
1989 with six passengers and one van. The Public Transit system was added a few years ago for seniors and now includes everyone. Don O’Neill noted that Quinte Access has an annual budget of $1.2 million, supporting 25 drivers and maintenance on the vehicles as well as staff. Quinte Access gets some money from the city and through the provincial Gas Tax, but they also have help from the United Way
and fund raisers such as barbecues, Nevada tickets and Cruise Nights. They are trying to get some Aviva funds and have entered the semi-finals. People can vote online from December 1 to 10 to help win funds for new barbecue equipment and after hours service and holidays. Go to <avivacommunityfund.org/ideas/ acf19798> to vote for Quinte Access and help them keep our community on the move.
BETHLEHEM THE ROAD TO
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Downtown participating in Black Friday
Business - Belleville - The Black Friday shopping phenomenon in the United States has apparently made its way to Canada and even downtown Belleville is getting into the act this year. A press release by the Belleville Downtown Improvement Area (BDIA) encourages shoppers to check out deals in the downtown village on Friday, November 28. Black Friday is a reference to the Friday of the American Thanksgiving, which has become one of the busiest shopping days in the country, especially because of its proximity to Christmas. It’s called “Black Friday” because it’s a day when many retail stores get their profit lines out of the red (debt) and into the black. Many downtown Belleville
businesses are expected to feature promotions and extended hours on Black Friday, the press release says. “The various merchants of downtown Belleville offer unique items often found nowhere else,” said Karen Parker, executive director for the BDIA. “What better way to find a truly special gift at the right price for all the loved ones in your life, than to take advantage of the Black Friday Deals.” Each store taking part in Black Friday promotions will be offering ballots to shoppers for a chance to win one of three shopping sprees in downtown Belleville. Full lists of sales and promotions are listed on the BDIA web site <www.downtownbelleville.ca>.
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Promises, promises
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Dear Editor, At the recent G20 in Oz, Canada and the others promised to crack down on tax evasion and corruption. Sounded good but back in the real
world, we prefer to avoid the tax avoidance part except for small business and those “extreme environmentalist groups.” The too big to charge syndrome kicks in when real
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money is in sight. Richard “I am not a crook” Nixon apparently wanted to use the revenue department to get his enemies, but was turned down by the IRS head. The World Bank has blacklisted 250 large corporations under its fraud and corruption policy. Of these 250, it turns out 117 are Canadian, SNC-Lavalin being the most well known here, yet taxpayers are still doing business with them through our government. On the corruption scale, our mining companies must be well up there. In British Columbia, the LNG companies are apparently owed more in tax credits than they would have paid in royalties, not counting the infrastructure supplied free by the taxpayer. In the north, the Yellowknife Giant Mine, having declared bankruptcy a while ago leaving a huge mess of poison behind, is costing
the taxpayer a cool billion in cleanup costs to deal with the 237,000 tons of arsenic trioxide (enough to kill every human on the planet). The ongoing costs will entail freezing it in the ground for the next 100 years after which we don’t expect to be around. It will take about 25 years to freeze it all. May I suggest solar panels to provide the electricity? In the same vein, we have nuclear waste, deadly for a million plus years, possibly being buried next to the water supply for millions of USA and Canadian citizens at the taxpayers’ expense. Or how about the Mount Polly tailings pond disaster. The same company owns another larger operation with similar structure. Or looming larger still, there are the Alberta tar sands tailings lakes, with again no intent to in any way reduce
their toxicity other than to let them leak into the Athabasca as they continue to grow in size. Almost insignificant but closer to home we have the Deloro mine site, costing tens of millions over the years. Next we have FIPA, the trade deal with China, which have investor rights built in. When we wake up and try to protect our environment, or working conditions or any of the other laws passed by the three levels of government in this country, investors will be able to sue our backside off for lost “potential profits.” Is this not corruption of the highest order to allow a transfer of sovereignty from Canada to global corporations, who can then over-rule the laws of the land, and not even have to go through the Canadian courts to do so? Instead, it would be dealt with in secret by
selected corporate lawyers and the results “may” be kept secret. How corrupt is that? Meanwhile, we are treated to the useless monthly mailings at our expense from our Conservative MPs saying, we are for motherhood, tax cuts, and apple pie, and would you please identify your party of choice so that we can update our databank for appropriate use in the next election. Mr. Sona will be cooling his heels in jail over the Conservative robo calls for three months plus good behaviour but there are plenty of other enthusiastic stalwarts willing to be thrown under the bus, if needed. The continual attack on our democracy has to rate as the worst kind of corruption. Paul Whittaker, Gilmour
Syrian refugees and the Harper government Dear Editor, The following is an open letter to Daryl Kramp MP. Thousands murdered and millions displaced and yet the best our obstructionist government can do is bomb the country and state they can work with Assad, the bloody dictator who has barrel-bombed his own peo-
ple and is the root of the uprising. Canada’s foreign and humanitarian policy is a bloody disgrace, playing to an ostensibly Christian powerbase, which is in reality anything but. Germany and Sweden have accepted thousands of Syrian refugees. Others have overwhelmed neighbouring coun-
tries such as Jordan, Lebanon, Turkey, Italy and Greece, which are less able to support this influx and the doors are now closing. Canada, with its wealth and wide open spaces …? We have increasingly come across as just another greedy and jingoist oil state. This country should be ashamed!
Carl V. Ehrke, Belleville P.S. I might add that our national government brings in a large number of foreigners to provide cheap labour in coffee shops and the like. These people are temporary workers denied eventual citizenship. Refugees apparently need not apply.
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OPINION
The coming CETA litigation boom
Ukraine cock-up
Editorial - This is what former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych, subsequently driven from office by mass protests in Kiev, said to German Chancellor Angela Merkel just one year ago, at the start of the crisis. It was recorded by a Lithuanian television crew, eavesdropping on the conversation with a Gwynne Dyer directional mike, at the European Union summit in Vilnius where Yanukovych announced that he was not going to sign an EU-Ukraine trade deal. “The economic situation in Ukraine is very hard, and we have big difficulties with Moscow,” Yanukovych explained to Merkel in Russian (which they both speak fluently). “I would like you to hear me. I was left alone for three and a half years in very unequal conditions with Russia … one to one.” The Ukrainian president was not overthrown by a “fascist” plot, as Russian propaganda would have us believe, nor was NATO hoping to make Ukraine a member. (Indeed, NATO had repeatedly told the previous Ukrainian government, which was very pro-Western, that under no circumstances could it ever join the Western alliance.) Exactly one year into the crisis, it’s useful to remember what really happened. The basic question you have to ask about any international crisis is: conspiracy or cock-up? The Ukrainian crisis definitely falls into the latter category. Nobody planned it, and nobody wanted it. Here’s how they stumbled into it. Yanukovych inherited the negotiations for a trade deal with the EU from the previous government when he returned to the presidency in 2010. (He was overthrown by the “Orange Revolution” in 2004, after winning a rigged election, but in 2010 he won narrowly but cleanly.) And he didn’t break off the talks with the EU because that would have alienated half the country: the western, mostly Ukrainian-speaking part. Yanukovych was a typical post-Soviet political figure, deeply corrupt and almost comically greedy—the presidential palace he lived in on the banks of the Dnieper was so lavish it could have been in the Middle East—but he was a competent politician. Almost all his votes had come from the eastern and southern, mostly Russian-speaking parts of the country, but he knew that he couldn’t simply ignore the west. On the other hand, he couldn’t ignore Moscow either. Russia’s President Vladimir Putin saw the EU as a stalking horse for NATO, and was trying to persuade Yanukovych to join his own “Eurasian
Quinte West News P.O. Box 25009, Belleville, ON K8P 5E0 250 Sidney Street Phone: 613-966-2034 Fax: 613-966-8747 Published weekly by:
By Scott Harris
Economic Union” (EEU) instead. Moreover, Russia had huge economic leverage, since it provided most of Ukraine’s energy and bought half of Ukraine’s exports (mainly coal, steel and heavy industrial goods made in eastern Ukraine). So for three years Yanukovych temporised, trying to get financial guarantees out of the EU that would make up for the economic punishment Putin would inflict if Ukraine signed the trade treaty. The EU wouldn’t budge: there would be no special help for Ukraine. It would just have to take its punishment, Yanukovych was told, but the trade deal would be good for the country in the long term. Politicians have to live in the short term, however, and in 2012-2013 Ukrainian exports to Russia fell by half as Putin turned the screws tighter. Those exports mostly provided income for people in industrial eastern Ukraine, i.e. Yanukovych’s own supporters. The EU had left him “alone for three and a half years in very unequal conditions with Russia … one to one”— so in late 2013 he made his choice: break off the EU talks, and sign up with Putin’s EEU instead. Did Yanukovych foresee that there would be big demonstrations against him in Kiev, where people had pinned their hopes on association with the EU? Of course he did, but he probably didn’t foresee that the protests would be fuelled by the hamfisted resort to violence by his own officials. He certainly didn’t foresee that he would ultimately be overthrown—nor did Putin, who had put him in that impossible position. All the subsequent escalations of the conflict in Ukraine—the Russian annexation of Crimea, the pro-Moscow revolts in the two eastern provinces with the largest ethnic Russian minorities, the direct Russian military intervention that saved those revolts from collapse last August—have been driven by Putin’s determination to reverse his original error. If Ukraine cannot be brought back into Moscow’s sphere of influence, then Putin’s strategy is to neutralise and paralyse it by maintaining a permanent “frozen conflict” in the east. In coldly rational terms, Ukraine’s best strategy now would be to abandon those two provinces, Donetsk and Luhansk, which are basically open-air industrial museums, and leave it to Russia to subsidise them instead. But it’s not going to do that, because sovereign states never give up territory voluntarily. Realistically, therefore, Kiev’s best option is to strengthen the current ceasefire and let the front lines congeal and stabilise into de facto borders, while maintaining its legal claim to the two provinces. It remains to be seen if Moscow will even let that happen.
Vice President & Regional Publisher Mike Mount mmount@perfprint.ca 613-283-3182, ext 104 Publisher John Kearns jkearns@theemc.ca 613-966-2034, ext 570 Editor Terry Bush tbush@metroland.com 613-966-2034, ext 510 Regional Managing Editor Ryland Coyne rcoyne@perfprint.ca
Editorial - After five years of negotiations, Canada and the European Union announced on September 26, 2014, that the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) had been finalized. For the first time since negotiations began, the official text was also released, finally giving citizens on both sides of the Atlantic a look at the complete agreement, which faces growing opposition—particularly in Europe—centred on concerns about CETA’s investment protection rules. These protections, similar to the controversial Chapter 11 of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), are given teeth by an investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) mechanism which allows foreign investors to seek unlimited financial compensation before international tribunals for government measures that they believe interfere with their right to profit. More than a dozen organizations in Europe and Canada this week jointly released the first comprehensive analysis of CETA’s investment protections in a new report, Trading Away Democracy: How CETA’s investment protection rules threaten the public good in Canada and the EU. The report warns that CETA’s investment chapter—which in significant ways provides investors with even greater rights than exist under NAFTA—could “unleash a corporate litigation boom against Canada, the EU and individual EU member states, and could dangerously thwart government efforts to protect citizens and the environment.” For Canada, which has already been sued 35 times under NAFTA and has paid damages to foreign investors totalling C$171.5 million and is facing billions more in current challenges, the report points to CETA’s expansive new corporate rights in the financial sector. “The risks for Canada of being sued by banks, insurers and holding companies will increase significantly with CETA,” the report found, pointing to high levels of European investment in these sectors. “Also, most investment is coming to Canada from exactly those EU countries where investors are notorious claimants in investor-state disputes: the Netherlands and the UK.” The report also cautions that European investors—which account for a quarter of all FDI into Canada—are the most frequent users of ISDS globally. Of the 568 known cases of investorstate challenges, European-based investors have launched 299 of them, or over half of all known suits. U.S. investors account for an additional 127 cases. In other words, if CETA is ratified Canada
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will have investor protection rights agreements with countries that account for three-quarters of all ISDS challenges. Trading Away Democracy warns that Europe is also taking a major risk with CETA, finding that regulations in the mining and oil and gas sectors—where Canadian investment in Europe is significant—are at particular risk of challenge by Canadian-based mining corporations. More than one-third of ISDS cases worldwide are related to mining, oil and gas projects, and Canadian mining companies—which have a global reputation as “far and away the worst offenders in environmental, human rights and other abuses around the world”—are already engaged in a number of controversial projects in the EU that are facing stiff opposition from local residents and environmentalists. Also of significance to Europeans concerned about the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) currently being negotiated between the European Union and the United States is the finding that CETA will act as a Trojan horse in Europe for U.S. multinational corporations with subsidiaries in Canada. These corporations will be able to use their “substantial business interests” to launch challenges against EU regulations even if public pressure in Europe results in similar protections being excluded from TTIP. This is of particular concern for Europeans given the high level of foreign ownership in the Canadian economy, where almost 40 per cent of all large enterprises are foreign owned and almost 60 per cent of annual foreign investment in Canada from 1985 to 2014 was from the U.S. CETA would also allow Canadian corporations with a presence in Europe, such as Bombardier, and European corporations with Canadian arms, including Shell and BP, to sue their own governments over measures that interfere with their profits. Increasing opposition to ISDS has been met by the Canadian government and European Commission with a propaganda drive focused on the cosmetic reforms to the investment chapter in the proposed agreement, which the report argues will provide little meaningful protection from abuse by investors. With CETA being presented as a fait accompli, subject to minor adjustments during the legal review that is expected to take most of 2015 to complete, the report concludes by calling on legislators in Canada, the EU and European member states to reject any CETA text which includes investor-state arbitration. Scott Harris is a trade campaigner for the Council of Canadians. Column courtesy <www. troymedia.com>
EDITORIAL Editor Terry Bush, 613-966-2034, ext 510 tbush@metroland.com Belleville News Steve Petrick steve.petrick@metroland.com Quinte West News Kate Everson kate.everson@gmail.com PRODUCTION Glenda Pressick, 613-966-2034, ext 520 gpressick@theemc.ca Quinte West News - Thursday, November 27, 2014 7
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Violations are down because usage is
Dear Editor, violations have slowed down due to the greatly In response to your article, “Violations reduced use of the conservation areas. slowed down as a result of enforcement in My husband and I retired to the Quinte conservation areas,” I would assume that the area last September. One of the reasons for
choosing this area was the abundance of parks and conservation areas. We quickly fell in love with Proctor Conservation Area, the cedars and the stream are wonderful in any
NOTICE OF PUBLIC INFORMATION CENTRE Rehabilitation of the Highway 401 – St. Hilaires Road Bridge Class Environmental Assessment and Detail Design Study THE PROJECT URS Canada Inc. has been retained by the Ontario Ministry of Transportation to undertake a Class Environmental Assessment and Detail Design Study for the rehabilitation of the Highway 401 – St. Hilaires Road Bridge (W.P. 4131-13-01) in the City of Quinte West. THE PROCESS This study is following the approved planning process for a Group ‘B’ project under the Ministry of Transportation’s Class Environmental Assessment for Provincial Transportation Facilities (2000). Opportunities for public input are being provided throughout the study. A Transportation Environmental Study Report will be prepared and made available for public review at the completion of the study which will document the recommended improvements, consultation undertaken during the study, potential environmental issues and mitigation measures. Notification of the availability of the Transportation Environmental Study Report for review will be published in local newspapers and mailed to those on the project mailing list. PUBLIC INFORMATION CENTRE #1 A Public Information Centre is being held to present an overview of the study process, schedule and existing conditions. Public Information Centre material will focus on the evaluation of the construction staging alternatives, details of the recommended plan and proposed mitigation measures for the rehabilitation of the Highway 401 – St. Hilaires Road Bridge. To facilitate the bridge rehabilitation work, one of the alternatives the ministry is considering is closing the St. Hilaires Road Bridge with a designated detour for approximately one construction season.
Location and date: Tuesday, December 9, 2014 4:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Harvest Ballroom – Ramada Trenton 99 Glen Miller Road Trenton, ON K8V 5P8 COMMENTS To obtain additional information, provide comments or to be placed on the mailing list for this project, please contact the Project Team as follows: Christopher Schueler, P.Eng. Project Manager URS Canada Inc. 4th Floor, 30 Leek Crescent Richmond Hill, ON L4B 4N4 tel: 905-882-4401 fax: 905-882-4399 e-mail: chris.schueler@urs.com
Britta Patkowski, MCIP, RPP Senior Environmental Planner URS Canada Inc. 4th Floor, 30 Leek Crescent Richmond Hill, ON L4B 4N4 tel: 905-882-4401 fax: 905-882-4399 e-mail: britta.patkowski@urs.com
There is an opportunity at any time during the study for interested persons to provide input to the Project Team including comments and information regarding the study. Comments are being collected to provide and obtain information and to identify concerns in accordance with the Ontario Environmental Assessment Act. This material will be maintained on file for use during the study and may be included in project documentation. Information collected will be used in accordance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act. With the exception of personal information, all comments will become part of the public record. If you have any accessibility requirements in order to participate in this project, please contact one of the Project Team members listed above.
8 Quinte West News - Thursday, November 27, 2014
with the trails and who felt they had a vested interest in the well being of the park. As for dogs damaging the park, I’ve never seen it— unless they mean that dead stick Molly chewed up. I have seen garbage left in the woods, but not by the dog walkers. There have been tree branches broken, again not the dogs or their owners. Thanks to the LTC enforcement policy the conservation areas are not being fully used. We were there most days and know that generally families do not use the conservation areas at the same times as the dog walkers. They will go occasionally in the summer and over the holidays, if the weather is great. It may be the threat of ticks, Lyme disease, coyotes or poison ivy, but they usually head for the beaches not the woods. I would suggest that the LTC be required to show that the Proctor Conservation area is being effectively used, otherwise let’s downsize the administration of these areas and save some tax dollars. Madeline Busch, Carrying Place
Wind creates hazardous situations
The Public Information Centre will be an informal drop-in centre with Ministry of Transportation and consultant team representatives available to answer questions.
Chris Belanger Project Manager Ministry of Transportation, Eastern Region Planning & Design Section 1355 John Counter Boulevard, Postal Bag 4000 Kingston, ON K7M 8J4 tel: 613-540-5187 toll-free: 1-800-267-9295 fax: 613-540-5106 e-mail: chris.belanger@ontario.ca
season. We walk our dog daily and enjoyed meeting other seniors on the trails. Like most seniors we have a very friendly totally nonaggressive dog. Even in the most inclement weather, the dog walkers were out; the activity is good for the dogs but even better for the owners. We always entered the park with our dog on a leash and only let her off leash once we are well within the park and only if there are no other walkers or families around. We enjoyed Proctor last fall, winter and into the spring. We rarely used Proctor during the summer but returned this fall. We immediately noticed that we seldom met with anyone using the park. When we did the first conversations were about the off-leash fines that were handed out over the summer. We now feel like children sneaking into the woods to do something illicit. Unfortunately it is a lot easier for the Frontier staff to catch us seniors than teenagers. The dog walkers are the ones who used to pick up the trash, report any problem
News - Belleville - The Belleville Police Service responded to several calls last evening regarding the downed power lines and trees. On North Park Street at Marsh Drive police responded to a broken hydro pole which was swaying in the wind. Traffic control was conducted until the proper agencies could attend and solve the problem. There were no injuries reported during the storm, but there was property damage. November 24, 2014, at 10:40 p.m. police responded to a residence on Auburn Street regarding a disturbance. Investigation revealed a female had been assaulted by a male that she knew as a friend. Police later in the evening arrested a 20year-old Belleville man. He will be in court today for a show cause hearing, facing charges of assault, breach
of probation and weapons dangerous to the public peace. The victim received minor injuries . Also on November 24 at 5:55 p.m., police responded to a failure to remain vehicle collision involving two vehicles on North Front Street near Pizza Hut. Police learned that a car and truck were being driven southbound on North Front. As a result of road rage, the truck was driven into the side of the car forcing it off the roadway and causing the car to crash into a large electrical box. The driver of the car was not seriously injured and the driver of the truck did not stop. Police are hoping to identify the driver of the grey or dark-coloured Ford pickup. If you have any information please contact Constable Darrell Hatfield of the Belleville Police Service or Crime Stoppers.
Christmas Fantasy in Fraser Park better than ever but are trying to buy new LED lights each year for the display. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We have 99 per cent LEDs now,â&#x20AC;? he said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;It will save money in the long run.â&#x20AC;? The team of Doug Whitney, Ross Livingstone, Bill Fry, Dave Shoniker, Duncan Armstrong, Shawn Brooks and Randy Forsythe have been busy repairing some of the old displays, and also had help from Sylvia and Gerry King. In the coldest weather they were out in the park setting it all up. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We stripped and repainted the Trenton Train Station,â&#x20AC;? Whitney said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We fixed up Thomas the Train too, but he still needs more work next year.â&#x20AC;? He said the kids love Thomas and parents want to get their childâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s picture taken next to it. The brighteyed engine almost winks at them in the park. The train was originally donated by Eben James. A big Christmas tree donated by Tim Colasante will be the central point of the display. Hai Precision Jet made the stand for the tree. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Children will get free hot dogs donated by Freshco and free hot chocolate donated by Tim Hortons,â&#x20AC;? Whitney added. â&#x20AC;&#x153;This year it will be given out before the parade, instead of afterwards.â&#x20AC;? Whitney said he has been
The work crew for Christmas Fantasy takes a break with Thomas the Train: Ross Livingstone, Doug Whitney, Bill Fry, Dave Shoniker Duncan Armstrong, Shawn Brooks and Randy Forsythe. Photo: Kate Everson
By Kate Everson
News - Trenton - The Christmas Fantasy display of lights in Fraser Park will be a spectacular sight after the Trenton Santa Claus Parade on Sunday night, November 30, thanks to a hard-working group.
â&#x20AC;&#x153;We have a couple of new displays this year,â&#x20AC;? said Doug Whitney, the â&#x20AC;&#x153;bossâ&#x20AC;? of the volunteers. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We have Santa and his reindeer and a nativity scene donated by the city and the DBIA.â&#x20AC;? He said they have a small budget
involved in decorating the park for were over 16,000 visitors including the past 13 years. busloads of visitors from all over. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The last six years I was the boss,â&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x153;There was even a wedding here he said with a smile. He even has the one year,â&#x20AC;? he said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;And one guy â&#x20AC;&#x153;Bossâ&#x20AC;? hat to prove it. proposed in front of Thomas the â&#x20AC;&#x153;The help I have is unreal,â&#x20AC;? he Train.â&#x20AC;? adds. Whitney lost his leg from complications in surgery but is still able to get around in his wheelchair. He hopes to have a prosthetic installed by SET YOUR OLD Christmas at Eagle Industries in Shannonville. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m a prime candidate, they told me,â&#x20AC;? he said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I have strong legs.â&#x20AC;? He says he can get up on one leg and can push his own chair, remaining See insert in independent. Whitney is todayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s paper very proud of the Christmas Fantasy. He says last year there
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Visit us online www.InsideBelleville.com Quinte West News - Thursday, November 27, 2014 9
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Frankford Santa Claus parade celebrates 25 years By Kate Everson
Events - Frankford - For 25 years the Frankford Santa Claus parade has been exciting youngsters along the route. This year it is on Saturday, November 29, starting at 2 p.m. “We will be having fireworks in the park after the parade at five o’clock to celebrate,” notes co-chair Lynda Reid. “It will be short and sweet.” Lynda and Keith Reid have been involved with the parade committee for 25 years. Keith’s sister Kathy Rupert is chair this year. “We wanted some fresh ideas,” Lynda said. The parade starts at the arena and winds its way down Mill Street to the Legion where children can meet up with Santa and also get free hot dogs, hot chocolate and a piece of anniversary cake. “We have five bands confirmed,”
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Lynda says, “and Stompin John too. So there will be lots of music. And lots of floats.” She says children can bring their letters to Santa which will be picked up by mail carriers along the route. Families are also encouraged to bring nonperishable items for the Frankford Food Pantry. “We are hoping for nice weather,” she adds. In the Frankford Tourist Park the lights will go on for Christmas Fantasy at 4:30 p.m. “The park is all set up,” said Lynda. “We started on November A car following a school bus too closely rammed into the back of it when it stopped on Glen Miller Road to pick up students early Friday morning, November 21. Police rushed to the scene and directed traffic around the incident. Fortunately, there were no injuries.
1 because most of the volunteers are hunters and we also didn’t want to have to work in the snow or frozen ground.” She said something new this year are the aluminum frames around the names on the Memory Boards which are on both sides of the Memory Tree as you enter the park. “We have eight pages of names,” she said. “We put the boards up the day before and there will be spotlights on them and overhead lights.” She noted that any donations from the Memory Boards go
toward adding more lights in the park. “We are working towards getting all LED lights as they [old ones] wear out,” she said. A tree all lit up in red lights is also new this year, supporting the troops. A new stone with a plaque is beside the tree. Singers will entertain in the park and there will be hot chocolate and TimBits to keep everyone warm and cheerful. “It takes lots of organizing,” Lynda says, “but we have a great hard-working committee. It’s a great group of people.”
Following too close
Photo: Kate Everson
New council might want to consider alternative forms of voting: staff
By John Campbell
results,” she stated in a report to council November 18. She suggested telephone or Internet voting be considered as these formats produce “almost instant election results” once the polls close at 8 p.m. on election day. “One of the strengths of the vote by mail system”—which the township employed in 2006 and 2010 as well as this year—is that it permits residents to cast their ballots in their own home thereby eliminating physical barriers,” Doiron wrote. For voters who did not wish
to cast their ballots by mail a poll station was set up at the municipal office on the last day of voting; 427 were turned in by hand that day. In talking to people “a lot of them were saying they like to vote on election day,” he said. The township sent out 5,399 vote-by-mail kits; 2,511 were returned with ballots cast and another 206 were returned “undeliverable,” Doiron stated. “These numbers reflect a 48 per cent voter turnout.” In 2010 it was 51 per cent and in 2006 46 per cent.
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News - Cramahe Township - A staff report has suggested the new council “may want to consider an alternative form of voting” in the next municipal election to speed up determining the results. Deputy-clerk Candice Doiron said it took about three hours to declare the winners in the October 27 election. “Although this is not an unusual length of time for a manual count, some candidates and members of the public have expressed frustration with having to wait three hours for election
10 Quinte West News - Thursday, November 27, 2014
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Karen White and Carol Brooks stand by the Memory Tree at the Holly Bazaar at Trenton Memorial Hospital, with each Christmas ball purchased in memory of a loved one going toward the local hospital. Photo: Kate Everson
The Holly Bazaar on Friday, November 21, put on by the auxiliary of Trenton Memorial Hospital raised funds for the hospital. Photo: Kate Everson
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QHC’s new cancer-fighting device gets under the skin body. The device is about the size of a coin and it distributes chemotherapy medication from a soft tiny capsule, that’s placed directly onto the heart. It’s attached to a long tube that can also be used to inject medication or draw blood needed for tests. Dr. Annette Polanski calls it “magic” for its ability to treat cancer patients in a more direct way. Many cancer patients get so many shots through their veins over years that their veins wear down, making the chemotherapy less effective. With a portacath “you get better bang for your buck,” she said. “If you can
deliver drugs right to the system that delivers it to the rest of the your body, i.e. the heart … that’s your best shot.” QHC has had access to this tool for 18 months, Polanski said. During that time, it’s been used on more than 50 patients. She believes it’s making immediate results. “We’re seeing less complications, less vein scaring, less trips for line changes or damage,” she said. Dr. Nick Gambarotta, a member of QHCs Diagnostic Radiology team, added that the portacath leads to “better quality of life.” “Patients with other lines can’t get them wet, so they can’t go to the pool, they can’t go the lake. With a portacath, it’s literally under your skin. You can dive into a lake and R0012994644
News - Belleville - It’s a little device, but it’s making a big difference in the way cancer is treated at Quinte Health Care. It’s called a portacath and the hospital organization’s chief radiologist calls it “a game changer” as it allows patients to receive chemotherapy treatments directly to the heart. The device is implanted inside the skin of patients identified as needing at least nine months of chemotherapy treatments. It’s seen as a breakthrough because it allows patients to receive chemotherapy without having to receive injections through veins, which take a toll on the
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go for a swim; the water can’t get to it.” Polanski says receiving treatment through a portacath is far less painful than receiving chemotherapy through injections. The device is implanted in the patient while they undergo what health care workers call “conscious sedation.” Essentially that means they’re given medication so their nerves don’t feel any pain, but they’re conscious enough that they can communicate with doctors. The procedure causes a one-and-a-half inch scar, Polanski said, but that will heal in time. In the end, it causes far more joy than pain for patients, she said. She added that her office has celebrations with patients who get the portacath removed when their treatment period is over. “I put them in and I help to take them out. I often do a happy hug dance with them before we take out the portacath. “We’ll remove it and I’ll show it to
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Quinte Health Care Chief Radiologist Dr. Annette Polanski holds up a device called a portacath, which is now being used to treat cancer patients. The device is implanted in the body and allows patients to receive chemotherapy directly at the heart. Photo: Stephen Petrick
them and often they’ll bring it home as a souvenir because this has been their best friend. It has allowed them to be treated and have their cancer melted.” The portacath was just one tool talked about on Wednesday, November 19, when Polanski and her team gave a presentation at the Travelodge Inn to guests at a Belleville General Hospital Foundation luncheon. There, she, Gambarotta, Dr. Susan James and Dr. Jess Biederman gave a presentation on what a typical breast cancer patient’s journey looks like, starting from her first appointment with QHC’s Mammography centre in Trenton, to the Nuclear Medicine department to the MRI department and finally to starting treatments with a portacath. The presentation was to encourage donations so QHC can continue making ground with the latest radiology technology. Polanski said the hospital organization has made incredible strides since she began employment there in 2004, most notably with the installation of new MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) technology in 2008. The message from the presentation was that with today’s technology, health care workers can see virtually every inch of a person’s body in order to see what ails them. “This community now has access to non-operation operations,” Polanski said. “We’ve saved a lot of sick people who are too sick to go to the operating room.”
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Hwy 401 & Glenmiller Rd., Trenton 613.394.4792 Quinte West News - Thursday, November 27, 2014 13
Rednersville Road Art Tour has mini-Christmas sale
By Kate Everson
Events - Rednersville - Five artists along Rednersville Road are inviting visitors to their homes and studios for a Christmas sale on November 29 and 30 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We have held this mini-sale for the
past six years,â&#x20AC;? says art tour president Tina Osborne. These artists are a few of the 30 who regularly participate in the very popular Labour Day weekend art tour every year. â&#x20AC;&#x153;There are paintings and some crafty things,â&#x20AC;? says artist Susan Moshynski. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Perfect for gifts.â&#x20AC;? She says people are starting to give paintings away as presents and over the past few years many of the artists along the road have developed a steady clientele. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We did well on the tour in Septem-
Tina Osborne is one of the artists on the Christmas Rednersville Road art tour. Photo: Submitted
painter. Featured at her studio are vibrant coloured scenes of Prince Edward County and beyond, as well as caricatures and portraits by commission. Susan has also been the Presquâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ile Artist in the Park for the last two years. A new studio that joined the Tour in 2014 is Gwynn Bedford at Blue Jay Lane. Gwynn previously taught scrapbooking, but now finds watercolour a fun, free medium, while acrylics allow her to explore and paint metal and wood objects. Her studio has all kinds
of exceptional items such as life-size birds, small cabinets, milk cans, pails, oars, and saws in addition to canvases of flowers and scenes. Gwynnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s guest is Brigitte Rittinger. Brigitte loves working with old windows and stained glass, glass beads and even mirrors to produce interesting pieces of art for indoor and outdoor use. She also enjoys creating distinctive and colourful purses and afghans from recycled blue jeans, tapestries and other materials.
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Cypresses on a windy day, painted by Tina Osborne. Photo: Submitted Blue Irises by Tina Osborne. Photo: Submitted
ber,â&#x20AC;? she notes. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We are getting to be more well known.â&#x20AC;? She says to just watch for the signs along the road that indicate this artist is part of the tour, from Quinte West to Belleville, including painter Susan Moshynski at By the Bay, 3370 Rednersville Road, Tina Osborne at Shadow Ridge at 2145, Bluejay Lane Arts at 956 with Gwynn Bedford and guest artist Brigitte Rittinger, and Jeff Keary at Active Art Studio at 116 Barley Road just off Rednersville Road. Tina Osborne is one of the original members. Originally Tina was a visual artist who started painting in earnest after retiring from the federal service. Tina is known for her large butterfly and dragonfly paintings, inspired by two years as Artist in the Park at Presquâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ile, as well as horses, other animals and intuitive paintings, in her favourite mediums of coloured pencil, pastel and acrylic. After training to become a Reiki Master she became intrigued with how the energies of stones interacted with human energies and started wire wrapping semi-precious stones such as amethyst and quartz. This blossomed into jewellery design of all kinds. The painting and dying of silk and natural fibres became a natural progression for a colourful complement to the jewellery. It also expanded into garden art for outside spaces. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I enjoy providing something that is totally personal and totally unique to an individual that they might not otherwise have,â&#x20AC;? she says with a smile. In 2013 she was commissioned by the Sandbanks Summer Village to produce artwork for their outside pavilion. In 2014 she created the soundtrack for the documentary by Brittany Ollerenshaw, Unravelling Vincent. Another one of the original tour members is Susan Moshynski. Susan is an illustrator, published cartoonist and
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14 Quinte West News - Thursday, November 27, 2014
:LOOLDPVEXUJ 21
TRENTON
WEEKEND SPECIALS
THURSDAY NOV. 27 TO SUNDAY NOV. 30 ONLY!
ALL DISPLAY SHEDS SOLD AS IS FOR
1/2 PRICE
SAVE 75%
KITCHENAID BICLAD 10 PC COOKSET
Reg 699.99 #042-8589
$
SALE
175
93
ASSORTED MASTERCRAFT SOCKETS
Reg 6.99 #093-0072
$
Reg 69.99 #043-1232
SALE
137
Reg 199.99 #043-6872
SALE
99
92
SALE
BRAVETTI 14L BLACK TOASTER OVEN
27
93
$
SALE
99
93
Reg 599.99 #085-3082
$
OREK AIR PURIFIER 100 CADR
Reg 199.99 #043-6092
$
SALE
SALE
299
119
93
SAVE 50%
Reg 249.99 #043-6874
$
SALE
BISSEL GARAGE VAC
124
93
SAVE 40%
PROSCAN 32" DIRECT LED TV
NAPOLEAN LEGEND PROPANE BBQ
93
12
95
SAVE 40%
SAVE 50%
DEWALT 18V COMPACT DRILL/ DRIVER
$
$
SALE
CHARLESCRAFT BAGLESS CANISTER VAC
SAVE 50%
Reg 199.99 #054-2970
10
$
Reg 64.99 #054-3429
SAVE 50%
DYSON DC34 ANIMAL VAC
93
SALE
¢
MASTERCRAFT 50 PC MASONRY DRILL BIT SET
SAVE 60%
SAVE 40%
Reg 229.99 #043-6858
SAVE 80%
SAVE 99%
Reg 299.99 #045-2092
$
SALE
179
93
R0013018680
Sale dates: Thursday, November 27 to Sunday, November 30th/14 only. While supplies last. No rain checks. Limited quantities.
TRENTON CANADIAN TIRE $5.$!3 34 % s
Open at 7am Thurs. & Fri.
STORE HOURS: MON-FRI 7:30 am-9:00 pm SATURDAY 7:30 am-6:00 pm SUNDAY 9:00 am-5:00 pm
Quinte West News - Thursday, November 27, 2014 15
RED THURSDAY BLACK FRIDAY
TRENTON
Open at 7am Thursday & Friday
WEEKEND SPECIALS THURSDAY NOV. 27 TO SUNDAY NOV. 30 ONLY!
SAVE 75% SAVE 50% SAVE 85%
12 PC KITCHENAIDE STRAIGHT EDGE COOKSET
SALE
Reg 599.99 #042-1877
$
149
93
BISSEL HARD FLOOR DELUXE CANISTER VAC
Reg 179.99 #043-6876
$
SALE
89
99
SAVE SAVE 60% SAVE 40% SAVE 40% SAVE 40% SAVE 40% SAVE 40% MEN'S ASSORTED ILUV ZVOX SOUND BASE PROSCAN 50" DIRECT POLAROID 40%
PLAQUE CANDLE HOLDER
5
$ 95
Reg 39.99
SALE
#059-0046
Reg 699.99
$
#043-6856
BELTS
DYSON DC66 ANIMAL VAC SALE
419
93
Reg 9.99 #087-5014
3
$ 95
SALE
HEADPHONES BLACK
Reg 89.99 #044-1209
$
SALE
53
93
SALE
Reg 234.99
$
#044-2025
8" LCD UNDER COUNTER TV/DVD
139
93
LED HDTV
SALE
Reg 249.99
$
#045-2078
149
93
$
SALE
Reg 599.99 #045-2090
16MP BRIDGE CAMERA
359
93
SALE
Reg 169.99
$
#069-4541
101
93
SAVE 40% SAVE 40% SAVE 75% SAVE 53% SAVE 75% SAVE 80% SAVE 86% SAVE 83% SAVE 71% SAVE 45%
Reg 109.99 #046-0086
$
SALE
1.06 CU MOLDED FIRE/ WATER SAFE
65
93
SWAN DIGITAL SECURITY CAMERA
SALE
Reg 299.99 #046-0285
$
179
93
PENDANT 1500W GARRISON CUISINART 12 PC 3 LIGHT CONVECTION LED HEATER TRI-PLY CLAD COOKSET MANCHESTER FIXTURE
Reg 159.99 #052-0383
$
SALE
39
95
Reg 169.99 #052-2025
$
SALE
79
93
SALE
Reg 849.99
$
#142-5457
SAVE 74% SAVE 60% SAVE 60% SAVE 60% 12 OZ DRINKING GLASSES
Reg 14.99 #142-0008
MAINSTREET TV STAND
3
$ 95
SALE
Reg 249.99 #068-4447
R0013019233
#142-5463
SALE
9
99
Reg 199.99 #068-7936
$
SALE
BOONER COMPOUND BOW
VOLUMETRIC SAPON SCALE
$ 95
SALE
93
79
93
#052-2307
$
SALE
28
99
#052-8895
$
11
95
SALE
Reg 69.99 #052-9917
9
$ 95
SALE
ZEP FLOOR FINISH
Reg 29.99 #053-2817
4
$ 95
SALE
MASTERCRAFT 246 PC DRILL/ DRIVER BIT SET
Reg 113.99 #54-3577
$
SALE
Reg 69.99 #899-0744
SALE
Reg 219.99
$
#068-2998
FIT QUICK 4 DOOR WARDROBE CABINET
109
93
WALL MOUNT ELECTRIC FIREPLACE
Reg 399.99
$
#064-3560
MIRROR
SALE
159
93
Reg 119.99 #063-5481
$
SALE
35
93
MAXIMUM 4PC DOUBLE OPEN END RACHET
SALE
Reg 189.99
$
#054-6900
Reg 49.99 #058-8896
$
SALE
12
93
GAS FRAMING NAILER
SALE
Reg 349.99 #058-8397
$
14995
$
SALE
34
95
SALE
Reg 399.99 #039-8563
$
PLATINUM 2600SPI GAS PRESSURE WASHER
219
95
Reg 599.99 #071-1004
$
26" WOMEN'S MOUNTAIN BIKE
SUSPENSION MOUNTAIN BIKE
26" FULL SUSPENSION BIKE
MENS MOUNTAIN BIKE
WOMEN'S MOUNTAIN BIKE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
239
93
Reg 599.99 #071-1021
$
239
93
Reg 499.99 #071-1039
$
249
93
Reg 499.99 #071-1065
$
249
93
Reg 499.99 #071-1066
$
249
93
29" FULL SUSPENSION MOUNTAIN BIKE
Reg 759.99
$
#071-1071
Sale dates: Thursday, November 27 to Sunday, November 30th/14 only. While supplies last. No rain checks. Limited quantities.
TRENTON CANADIAN TIRE
16 Quinte West News - Thursday, November 27, 2014
33
43
HITACHI 11 AMP FIXED ROUTER
104
93
SAVE SAVE 60% SAVE 70% SAVE 74% SAVE 57% SAVE 72% LEXINGTON MASTERCRAFT MASTERCRAFT STANLEY 183 PC 50% MADRID STAINLESS STEEL
NOMA HEAVY DUTY 12 GAUGE OUTDOOR EXTESION CORD
Reg 69.99
Reg 59.99
COAX CABLE TESTER
BLACK CROME SOCKET SET
Reg 249.99 #058-9287
$
SALE
7993
SAVE SAVE 45% SAVE 60% SAVE 60% SAVE 50% SAVE 50% SAVE 50% SAVE 55% SAVE 55% SIMONIZ SCHWINN CONVERSION CCM DESCENT 26" FULL BLADE COMPRESSION BLADE RESPONSE 26" BLADE RESPONSE 26" SCHWINN GRANDE 6.2 SCHWINN GRANDE 6.3 50%
SAVE 80%
Reg 49.99
$
STORAGE BENCH & OTTOMAN
199
93
GARRISON 5+1+1 THERMOSTAT
285 DUNDAS ST. E. 613-392-3500
29" FULL SUSPENSION MOUNTAIN BIKE
SALE
341
93
Reg 859.99 #071-1072
$
SALE
386
93
STORE HOURS: MON-FRI 7:30 am-9:00 pm SATURDAY 7:30 am-6:00 pm SUNDAY 9:00 am-5:00 pm Quinte West News - Thursday, November 27, 2014 17
TRENTON
WEEKEND SPECIALS
THURSDAY NOV. 27 TO SUNDAY NOV. 30 ONLY!
SAVE 83%
SAVE SAVE 30% SAVE 60% SAVE 50% R8 SPYDER RED MAGELLAN 5202LM 5" GPS COVENTRY 30% AUDI 6VRIDE ON
WOMEN'S WINNIPEG JETS BASEBALL CAP
GAS FIREBOWL
200 LB HOME GYM Reg 16.99
SALE
#083-1772
2
$ 95
Reg 699.99 #084-0525
$
SALE
489
93
SALE
Reg 239.99
$
#084-1009
167
93
$
SALE
Reg 169.99 #199-6074
69
99
SALE
Reg 249.99
$
#085-2097
124
93
SAVE 60% SAVE 70% SAVE 50% SAVE 50% SAVE 31% COLEMAN EVEN HEAT 4 BURNER PROPANE BBQ
Reg 599.99 #085-3074
$
RESIN GARDEN CART WITH SHELVES
SALE
239
93
Reg 99.99
$
#060-0128
COLEMAN EVEN HEAT INFRARED PROPANE BBQ
COLEMAN EVEN HEAT INFRARED NATURAL GAS BBQ
SALE
SALE
SALE
29
95
Reg 649.99 #085-3092
$
324
93
Reg 699.99 #085-3093
$
349
93
CLARKSON HARDTOP GAZEBO 10X10
SALE
Reg 799.99 #088-1447
$
54993
SAVE 75% SAVE 50% SAVE 50% SAVE 70% SAVE $300 SUPER SOAKER MICRO BURST
9
$ 95
Reg 39.99
SALE
#050-2865
Reg 79.99
UNISEX ROLLER BLADES SENIOR SIZE 5-12
ADJUSTABLE ROLLER BLADES GIRLS ANDSIZES BOYS 1-13
WHEELED PICNIC COOLER
SALE
SALE
SALE
$
#084-9016-2x
3993
Reg 49.99
$
#084-9031-3x
2493
$
Reg 69.99 #084-0758
1995
COLEMAN 12' ALUMINUM BOAT
Reg 1799.99 #079-8000
$
SALE
149993
SAVE 50% SAVE 85% SAVE 50% SAVE 60% SAVE 50% COLUMBIA QUEEN SIZE SLEEPING BAG
Reg 139.99 #076-0738
$
SKYSCOPE TELESCOPE FRENCH
SALE
69
93
Reg 329.99 #076-1020
$
PORTABLE PROPANE CAMP FIRE
SALE
49
93
Reg 199.99 #076-2023
$
BROADSTONE 6 PERSON DOME TENT
SALE
99
93
Reg 159.99 #076-2254
$
SALE
63
93
SNOW MX SLED XGAMES
Reg 149.99 #082-6000
$
SALE
74
93
R0013020227
Sale dates: Thursday, November 27 to Sunday, November 30th/14 only. While supplies last. No rain checks. Limited quantities.
TRENTON CANADIAN TIRE $5.$!3 34 % s
18 Quinte West News - Thursday, November 27, 2014
Open at 7am Thurs. & Fri.
STORE HOURS: MON-FRI 7:30 am-9:00 pm SATURDAY 7:30 am-6:00 pm SUNDAY 9:00 am-5:00 pm
Fusion craft show a whimsical affair
BRIGHTON
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BRIGHTON APPLEFEST “Celebrating 40 years of fun, friends and family! Join us this year from September 25-28 for a weekend filled with exciting events” www.brightonapplefest.ca
FIRST PLACE TRAILERS “A big thank you to the community of Brighton for making our first six years a success. We look forward to serving you for many years to come.” - Nathan Brown www.firstplacetrailer.ca
CHEER FARMS “Cheer Family farms welcomes you to our roadside market on Hwy 2 just west of Brighton. Here you will find fresh local produce plus a selection of preserves, honey and baked goods.” - Cheer Family
Batawa’s Fusion craft show on November 22 attracted many quality artisans like Claudette Boulanger from Belleville seen here with some of her paintings and crafts including painted character stones. Photo: Kate Everson
STORE HOURS: Monday thru Sunday 8:OOam - 10:00pm
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Friday Nov 28 Thursday Dec 4
BRIGHTON ARTS COUNCIL
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Quinte West News - Thursday, November 27, 2014 19
Loyalist AEAP students looking for business partners
By Stephen Petrick
Business - Belleville - Maranatha Church had probably never seen so many people so sharply dressed so early in the morning. But the group of students who were dressed in sharp tuxedos and glitzy dresses by 8 a.m. Friday morning had something to prove; they were hoping to show Quinteâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s business leaders that theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re ready to work for them. Students in Loyalist Collegeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Alliance Excellence Achievement Program (AEAP) held a kickoff event at the College Street Church on Novem-
ber 21 and the group dressed to the nines to stage a James Bondthemed presentation. Their goal was to tell local businesses owners that theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re here to help them with their needs, no matter how great the challenge is. The kickoff precedes the classâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s annual Show and Tell event in January. At that time, local businesses will attend the college to present to students. Theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll let them know about opportunities within their companies. Bob Millard, the instructor and founder of AEAP, said the goal of the program is to connect students with the business
community. He said some of the businesses that partner with students in the program are run by past graduates from the AEAP program. The Show and Tell event will hopefully allow students to work with businesses on all sorts of special projects, covering anything from marketing, to social media, to human resources or financial plans. â&#x20AC;&#x153;It gives them hands on experiences and it promotes the college,â&#x20AC;? Millard said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a winwin for everybody involved.â&#x20AC;? Student Jennifer Rockell said she enrolled in the program to learn skills that will help her
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achieve her goal of opening a cake her goal of opening a salon. the relationships you need business. She said sheâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s enjoying the â&#x20AC;&#x153;Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve learned about the to have with people,â&#x20AC;? she course, because itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s teaching her in the structure of businesses and said. ins and outs of business. Her business idea requires more than just baking skills, she explained, as sheâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s also trying to learn about managing finances and health and safety issues. But most importantly, the AEAP course is providing her an opportunity to network. She said people from bridal businesses were at the kickoff event, which allowed her to make some helpful connections. â&#x20AC;&#x153;If Bobâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s preaching anything to us, itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s to get out there and get to know people,â&#x20AC;? she said. But the program doesnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t just benefit people looking to be entrepreneurs, explained Linda Joyce. Sheâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a mature student who enrolled hoping to learn skills that can apply to a career in Human Resources. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I like the routine [of going back to school],â&#x20AC;? she said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;And Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve met some fun people.â&#x20AC;? Another student, Rachel Polmanter, said she feels the course is giving her an opportunity to learn skills to meet Belleville & District Chamber of Commerce CEO Bill Saunders speaks to Dal-
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ton Driscoll, a student in Loyalist Collegeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Alliance Excellence Achievement Program, during an event the class held at Maranatha Church on Friday, November 21. The goal of the event was to help students connect with local business leaders. Photo: Stephen Petrick
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Alliance Excellence Achievement Program students Linda Joyce (l) and Rachel Polmanter say theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re enjoying the courseâ&#x20AC;&#x201D;although for different reasons. Linda is hoping for a career in HR, while Rachel hopes to open a salon. Photo: Stephen Petrick
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20 Quinte West News - Thursday, November 27, 2014
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Standard 10 airbags, ABS, traction control and StabiliTrak®. **The 2-Year Scheduled Lube-Oil-Filter Maintenance Program provides eligible customers in Canada, who have purchased, leased or financed a new eligible 2014MY Chevrolet, Buick or GMC vehicle (excluding Spark EV), with an ACDelco oil and filter change, in accordance with the oil life monitoring system and the Owner’s Manual, for 2 years or 40,000 km, whichever occurs first, with a limit of four (4) Lube-Oil-Filter services in total, performed at participating GM Dealers. Fluid top-offs, inspections, tire rotations, wheel alignments and balancing, etc. are not covered. This offer may not be redeemed for cash and may not be combined with certain other consumer incentives available on GM vehicles. General Motors of Canada Limited reserves the right to amend or terminate this offer, in whole or in part, at any time without prior notice. Additional conditions and limitations apply. See dealer for details. ▲Whichever comes first. 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Quinte West News - Thursday, November 27, 2014 21
Singerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s benefit concert for womenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s shelter a way of saying thank you
The Castleton-area singer/ All ten songs were written by Some of them are â&#x20AC;&#x153;painful,â&#x20AC;? News - Castleton - Cheryl Cas- songwriter revealed much about her, and two of them won Ontario says Casselmanâ&#x20AC;&#x201D;â&#x20AC;&#x153;real tearselmanâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s music is her diary, each her life with her first CD, Any Independent Music best country jerkersâ&#x20AC;? but â&#x20AC;&#x153;very heartfelt.â&#x20AC;? song an entry. Road North, released in 2008. awards in consecutive years. They tell what sheâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s gone through in a highly accurate way, she says. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m pretty open.â&#x20AC;? One of Casselmanâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s favourite songs from the CD is No More which talks about not waiting any longer â&#x20AC;&#x153;for life to happenâ&#x20AC;? to her and instead â&#x20AC;&#x153;taking more controlâ&#x20AC;? of her destiny. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I like to sing that song to remind myself,â&#x20AC;? she says, of a time, 16 years ago, when things werenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t so good and she had to make a major decision: leave a â&#x20AC;&#x153;bad relationship.â&#x20AC;? She and her two children, one and four years old at the time, found safety and Compact tractor at 24 & 28 HP with plenty of power for 4 Yr. Limited Warranty, 2 Yr. Full Warranty. attachments (loader, backhoe, mid-mount mower & more) Models available with Cabs, Heating and Air Conditioning. comfort at a womenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s shelter, Models with HST (Hydrostatic Transmission) where they remained for two FINANCING weeks. TERPSTRA EQUIPMENT Staff there â&#x20AC;&#x153;turned our lives AVAILABLE OUTDOOR POWER PRODUCTS (OAC) aroundâ&#x20AC;? through counselling. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s #39 PRINCE EDWARD RD 3 BELLEVILLE ! â&#x20AC;&#x153;like taking a psychology course TerpestraAD_24-80hpAd_Oct14.indd 1 10/29/14 1:33 PM 101â&#x20AC;? that helps you â&#x20AC;&#x153;learn about yourself,â&#x20AC;? Casselman says. When she went back home she asked her partner of seven years to leave. â&#x20AC;&#x153;It was really, really tough,â&#x20AC;? being a single parent and unemployed. â&#x20AC;&#x153;It took me three years of counselling to get back to a healthy place,â&#x20AC;? she says. The first year was â&#x20AC;&#x153;like a blur, [she was] so emotionally wrought.â&#x20AC;? But Casselman got back on her feet, then found love, and settled into a relationship thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s lasted 12 years. The two plan to get married next summer. Throughout it all she continued to write songsâ&#x20AC;&#x201D;â&#x20AC;&#x153;Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve always had a passion for music,â&#x20AC;? she saysâ&#x20AC;&#x201D;and she performed with local bands before deciding to strike out on her own. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I wanted to establish myself as a singer/songwriter,â&#x20AC;? Casselman says. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I was really
Castleton-area singer/songwriter Cheryl Casselman will perform songs from her new CD at a Christmas show this Sunday in Cobourg, with all proceeds to go to Cornerstone Family Violence Prevention Centre. The show starts at 2 p.m. Tickets are $15. Photo: John Campbell
aiming to make a mark and I feel that I did, at least to myself [with her first CD and subsequent awards].â&#x20AC;? Last month she released her second CD, Cheryl Casselman, recorded at 3A Studio in Hastings, owned by local country music singer Aiden McGill. Three of the songs are hers and she will perform them this Sunday, November 30, at The Joy of Giving Christmas Show sheâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s organized as a fund raiser for Cornerstone Family Violence Prevention Centre, the place that turned her life around. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s her way of saying thankyou, which she began doing in 2008 with a benefit concert that raised $3,800. Her target is $5,000 this time around. Casselman will long remember staff at the shelter showing up at her door just before Christmas, her first on her own, with â&#x20AC;&#x153;three huge garbage bags full of giftsâ&#x20AC;?
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for her children, provided by students at a local high school who had adopted her family without knowing who they were. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I was so moved by that,â&#x20AC;? she says, that every Christmas she believes she â&#x20AC;&#x153;should do somethingâ&#x20AC;? to express her lasting gratitude. The show will take place at Best Western in Cobourg, starting at 2 p.m. She will be joined by the musical group Joyful Noise and musicians Katelyn Brant, Randy Morrison (Canadaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s top fiddle player, Tim Sanders and Will Murray. Tickets are $15, children admitted free. There will be a silent auction. Casselmanâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s latest CD is available at Downey Pharmacy in Colborne, Nessieâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Gifts and British Fare in Cobourg, and Roxyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Hair Salon in Campbellford. You can also order by emailing <c.cass@ hotmail.com>.
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Not the Musketeers you had in mind By Richard Turtle
Entertainment - Stirling - So who were these protectors of the queen and why were the socalled Musketeers better known for their swordsmanship than their marksmanship? And how many were there? Exactly? If you ask Ken MacDougall
at this time of year, the answers are bound to generate a few good laughs. MacDougall is back as this year’s writer/director of The Stirling Festival Theatre’s annual Panto that opened last weekend, taking all the appropriate jabs at a familiar tale and offering a slightly different perspective on
the characters we thought we knew. The Alexandre Dumas Musketeers, Aramis, Athos and Porthos, joined by d’Artagnan, are replaced in the MacDougall version by their somewhat sillier counterparts, Ajax, Oshawa and Whitby (played by Amir
Haidar, J.P. Baldwin and Stefne Mercedes) who form a partnership with newcomer d’Arlington, played by Aryana Naddelin. They are charged with protecting a rather disturbing Queen Milady Du Winter (Arthur Wright) as she faces the wrath of the evil Count Roquefort (Michael Hogeveen). And Roquefort, a cross between Sesame Street’s The Count and any character played by Arnold Schwarzenegger, always exits with the promise, “I’ll be back.” And that is not a rumour. Theatre officials are pleased with the early response to the show as well as ticket sales for upcoming performances with Managing Director David Vanderlip noting that opening weekend crowds were very encouraging as the annual production has become a family tradition for many. House Manager Kim Whiteman agrees, adding that for nearly 20 years
the Panto has been attracting new patrons to the theatre and each year audiences have continued to grow. This is true of both the family version and the naughty version, she says, with many familiar faces returning year after year along with the addition of new school groups and others. The same is true of the actors and crew, with many members returning to familiar territory. Debbie Collins is also back on the Stirling stage, this time as Marion the Maid, and musicians Scott Christian and Freddy Vette provide their expertise from the pit. There’s plenty of swordplay and song and dance, sometimes all at once, and the latest rendition of If I Should Ever Lose My Job, offers yet another new twist. The set and costumes are also impressive. And a bit cheesy where required..
And on the opening weekend, special guest Santa Claus made an appearance following a pair of matinee shows. As cast members signed autographs in the Eugene Burrell Hall, another lineup formed in front of the jolly old elf, who found a comfortable chair beside a Christmas tree. “It’s always fun,” Baldwin said of his regular appearances in the Stirling panto. And while he plans to move to Las Vegas in January, the versatile actor hasn’t ruled out a return to Stirling next year. The Three Musketeers continues through the rest of this month and next, closing on December 31 with a naughty sendoff. Tickets are still available for family and naughty versions throughout the run with special pricing for seniors, groups and families. For information, contact the theatre box office at 613-3952100.
Family supports Loyalist campaign Cast members of this year’s panto The Three Musketeers, join Santa Claus and audience member Jessica Gougeon for a photograph after the first matinee performance.
From left to right are Campaign Co-Chair and Honorary Chair, Loyalist College Foundation Wilf Wilkinson, Kyle Reynolds, Kristin Crowe (Reynolds), Kevin Reynolds, Sheila Reynolds, Campaign Co-Chair and Foundation Chair Bernie Ouellet, Loyalist President and CEO Maureen Piercy and Loyalist Board of Governors Chair Brian Smith. Photo: Submitted
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23 Quinte West News - Thursday, November 27, 2014
News - Belleville - Loyalist College has accepted a donation of $25,000 in support of the Campaign for Loyalist College, from a local family business. Sheila Reynolds, Kevin Reynolds, Kyle Reynolds and Kristin Crowe (Reynolds), made the donation in recognition of the late L. Glynn Reynolds. Mr. Reynolds was a Master Electrician by trade, owning and operating a construction business in the Belleville area before founding QuinteKawartha Alarm Systems Limited, operating as Alarm Systems. “We recognize that the college has such an important role in our community and that Loyalist graduates have
made many contributions to the success of our business,” said Kristin Crowe, who is the president of the family company. “We currently employ twelve Loyalist graduates in our Belleville operation. We are extremely proud to provide this support to our community college.” The $6-million Loyalist Campaign is in place to complete and equip the Skills Centre and to provide support for student financial assistance. The Skills Centre, which opened in 2011, features 50,950 square feet of repurposed green space, and an additional 70,850 square feet of new, flexible space for teaching, laboratories, shops, research labs and classrooms.
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Quinte West News - Thursday, November 27, 2014 24
News - Stirling - A group of residents gained some insight into the intricacies of police work earlier this week as the Stirling-Rawdon Police Service hosted its first Citizens Police Awareness Forum. The nearly four-hour session last Monday evening featured presentations by several of the service’s officers as well as a tour of the facility and ample opportunity to pose questions. StirlingRawdon Police Services Chair Tara Dier welcomed the crowd of about 20, which included Mayor Rodney Cooney and incoming councillor Dean Graff, who arrived at the emergency services building on a blustery evening to learn more about the local police service. Explaining that the informational and informal evening was an initiative undertaken by the chief, Dier thanked the participants for their attendance before introducing Police Chief Dario Cecchin. Cecchin provided an overview of the evening, outlining the various topics to be discussed by the presenting officers and then went on to explain departmental and administrative structures as well as the roles and responsibilities of individuals in the chain. Sergeant Colin Cook then outlined the many steps involved in the application and selection process and discussed the attributes the country’s police services are looking for as well as the post-hiring training, which includes 12 weeks of police college followed by several months working alongside a senior officer, before a new recruit can work alone. But these days, Cook says, it is also understood that most
recruits will not be coming from high school but will arrive after completing a post-secondary program in college or university. On another topic, Cook also discussed traffic enforcement and the reasons behind it as well as the public’s perception. In response to the commonly asked question of why traffic officers aren’t solving real crimes, Cook points to the fact there are about 600 murders in Canada per year. In the same time there are more than triple the number of vehicular fatalities. And while speeding tickets may be perceived as a nuisance, he says, they do create results that can be measured in a reduction in crashes and ultimately deaths. Constable Tom Wilson spoke on police use of force and how officers are expected to assess situations and respond immediately on arrival. There are numerous factors to take into account when taking control of or maintaining control of a situation, he says, and provided a short training video as an example. Constable Jarrett Rutledge discussed issues relating to the provincial and national sex offence registries as well as the gathering of evidence in order to identify an individual involved in a crime. Specific information that police have at their disposal is not readily available to the public, he explained, but there are reasons why individuals and addresses are kept from the public. Unlike the United States where sex offenders are identified, he says Canada has a 98 per cent compliance rate, compared to 40 per cent south of the border, because most offenders who are named
Constable Tom Wilson puts some parameters on police use of force during a presentation in Stirling this week.
go into hiding. The information available to the public, he says, is the number of sex offenders living in a given postal code. There are 136 in the KOK area. Rutledge also provided a brief history lesson on identification, dating back to the days before photography or fingerprints, progressing to the present day and the strength of evidence offered by DNA. Prior to the station tour, Sergeant Jim Orr also spoke about criminal investigations and the responsibilities of officers to properly gather evidence, including witness statements, without infringing on the rights of the individual. And when the rules aren’t followed to the letter, he says, a case can be overturned or lost as a result. Immediately following the presentations, about half of those in attendance stayed behind for a tour of the station and cells as well as an explanation of the InSergeant Jim Orr directs a tour of the Stirling-Rawdon Police Station following presentations by fel- toxilyzer and how it determines a blood low officers on various aspects of policing. alcohol level from a breath sample.
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Stirling-Rawdon Constable Tom Wilson explains the science behind the Intoxilyzer, which determines blood-alcohol levels, during the recent Citizens Police Awareness Forum hosted by the department.
Stirling-Rawdon Police Services Board Chair Tara Dier, welcomes visitors to the Citizens Police Awareness Forum in Stirling last week. Police Chief Dario Cecchin is seen in the background.
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Curious residents get lesson in policing
By Richard Turtle
Lions to take over Water Buffalo Fest
News - Stirling - The Stirling and District Lions Club will be taking over the annual Water Buffalo Festival after its most profitable year and the previous Business Improvement Association (BIA) organizers are more than happy to hand over the reins. Stirling BIA representative Marlene Braun attended the most recent meeting of the club, presenting them with a cheque for $1,000 for their involvement this year and officially passing the torch to the new event organizers. “You’re taking over at a lucky time,” Braun noted, referring to the fact 2015 will mark the local food festival’s seventh
year and follows a 2014 edition that proved to be the most successful to date. “It was successful for all of us,” club President Lin Clarke said, adding the Lions don’t intend to make any significant changes, planning instead to follow much the same formula as in the past. The Stirling-Rawdon Water Buffalo Food Festival is held annually in September on a closed off section of Mill Street as well as in the parking lot across the covered bridge. Each year area chefs are invited to participate, offering dishes prepared with local ingredients including water buffalo meat and cheese produced by the Ontario Water Buffalo Company
north of the village. The event has also endured wind and rain and power outages in the past and organizers are hopeful that luck is about to change. But crowds have continued to show their support despite the obstacles created by Mother Nature and the Stirling and District Lions Club is looking forward to the years ahead. Along with the servings of appetizers, entrees and desserts, the annual celebration of local food has also regularly featured a few four-legged special guests from the farm. Water buffalo are common livestock in other parts of the world but the Ontario Water Buffalo Company, owned and operat-
ed by Lori Smith and Martin Littkemann, became one of the first such farms in Canada. The couple has attracted significant attention over the past decade, granting media interviews and appearing in magazines and on television as
well as organizing farm tours and, most recently, opening a store on the property stocked with local food products. The food festival has attracted thousands of visitors to the village, some travelling several
hours to attend, and there is much involved in the planning and preparation. But, Clarke says, with the support of the community and past organizers the future looks bright for the annual event.
Codrington Hall a welcoming place for artists and crafters
pear when I’m here.” Anyone can join. There is no charge to attend and Stirling BIA representative Marlene Braun presents members of the Stirling and District Lions Club with a cheque for $1,000 refreshments are available from proceeds of the Stirling-Rawdon Water Buffalo Food Festival. Also pictured are (from left) Deb Brown, Lin Clarke and Kenn Deck. for a dollar. Future plans include bringing in guest artists to conduct workshops. To learn more about the sessions, call Jessica at 613-475-3671, Janet at 613-475-5111 or Bernice at 613 397-1563. The hall is located at Artists and crafters congregate every Monday morning to paint, sketch or do needlepoint at the Codrington Hall. From the left, Janet Webb, Bernice Callingridge, Jessica Huitema 2992 County Road 30 in Codrington. and Jeannita Campbell show off their creations. Photo: Submitted News - Codrington - Every Monday, between 9 a.m. and noon, a group of artists and crafters gather at the Codrington Hall to paint, sketch, and do needlework, or other crafts, in an atmosphere that’s friendly and supportive. The welcoming environment allows artists to work beyond their comfort level and improve their skills. Given the cost to take art lessons or rent space in a studio, “this is an inexROUTE MAIN ST # PAPERS LOCATION pensive way to improve your work by GI019 Nelles/Shoniker 114 Trenton learning from others,” group member GI016 Nelles/Warren Rd 70 Trenton Jessica Huitema said in a news release. “For example, I started with the group GI022 Gould/West 148 Trenton doing sketches and was encouraged GI024 Panelas Cres/Austin 135 Trenton to paint. I tried it and now enjoy it imGI028 Kidd Ave/Connolly Ave 82 Trenton mensely.” GI029 Jason Cres/Sommerset 88 Trenton Bernice Callingridge’s advice to GI018 Coleman Dr/Weeks Ave 109 Trenton newcomers is: “Don’t feel intimiGI021 Richard St/Mccann St 67 Trenton dated; we all had to start somewhere. GI020 Campbell St/Princess 121 Trenton I’ve learned to grow as an artist and improved my oil painting. I’m more relaxed and look at the world differently now. The worries of life disap-
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FUTURE SHOP CORRECTION NOTICE
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For more information on any of these routes please call Kathy Labelle 613-966-2034 ext 512
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Quinte West News - Thursday, November 27, 2014 26
Canadian heavyweight champ a small town boy Sports - Madoc - Dillon Carman is a family man, often seen surrounded by his mother, grandmother and partner, Stephanie King. He wants to have a big family some day and has a soft spot for his dogs and pet chinchilla. After winning the Canadian Heavyweight Championship, hobnobbing with George Chuvalo, and the usual photos and interviews, Carman says he went out to eat his favourite double burger “stacked with lots of bacon.” “Then I just went back to the hotel to sleep.” “He likes to be home though. If we can make it back home, that’s where he’d rather be,” Stephanie explained. King and Carman met in Mississauga and became a couple. She has working professions but says she has dedicated herself to supporting Dillon. Similarly, Sherri Oswald, his mother, and Bente Barton, grandmother, are in full support of Dillon’s career. Sherri said he was always athletic, excelling at an early age. “He could control a soccer ball when he was three, and when in T-ball they couldn’t believe his skills; he moved up fast.” She says he was also good at badminton, basketball and hockey which finally took him to Florida with an offer to play in a professional junior league. “It wasn’t just sports he was good at though,” says Sherri. “He was the regional chess champion in both grades seven and eight.” Carman left Madoc at the age of 17, finishing high school in Florida while training for hockey. It was there he discovered boxing was his passion.
“Ever since I was little I said I would be the best in some sport, a professional; I never knew which sport. I thought it was hockey, but when I started boxing, I knew I’d found where I wanted to be,” Dillon said, often placing his hand on his heart. “I’m doing what I love.” He says he went to Texas to box. “If you can make it in Texas as a boxer you can go anywhere.” Seventeen days before the Canadian heavyweight bout, the other contender chose to retire. After only four years fighting professionally Dillon Carman was called up for the big fight. November 22 he returned to his roots in Madoc at the invitation of the Kiwanis Club who opened their doors for the homecoming. Proceeds of the event were donated to the local food bank, a cause Dillon was pleased to be part of. Carman received recognition certificates from all levels of government. Deputy-mayor Tom Simpson presented one from the municipality, with a few joking remarks about his young life in Madoc. MP Daryl Kramp presented a federal document for his success. Kramp, federal member for the region where Dillon grew up, spoke in the House of Commons to announce Dillon’s championship. “I included the notes of Hansard so you know you will be remembered in parliamentary records. They will be there long after you and I are gone.” MPP Todd Smith presented a document from the province and said he would look for Carman’s picture at the former Maple Leaf Stadium where the title fight was held October 25. Mayor-elect Tom Deline
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presented on behalf of the Kiwanis Club. He also remembered Dillon’s early days in the village and offered Carman the title of Mr. Madoc Two, after another accomplished athlete, John Ellis, who earned the title after winning many medals in Special Olympics and for his dedication to volunteering. Council has suggested a sign be added under the name of Madoc/ Centre Hastings to recognize Carman’s success and his roots in the village. Dillon Carman was born and raised in Madoc. His mother Sherri Oswald, and grandmother Bente Barton, are active supporters of his career but were willing to share some of the more interesting moments from his formative years. Photo: Diane Sherman
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www.avivacommunityfund.org/ideas/acf19494 Quinte West News - Thursday, November 27, 2014 27
SPORTS By Kate Everson
Battle of Quinte West includes young and old
Sports - Trenton - Some very old hockey players and some very, very young ones were included in the Battle of Quinte West at the Duncan McDonald arena on November 19. Celebrity hockey players, alumni all stars from the 1950s strolled out on the carpet at centre ice just before the game started, the third annual Battle of Quinte West between the RCAF
Flyers and the Trenton Junior A Golden Hawks. Dropping the puck for the game was left winger Pete Conacher who was born in 1932 and played NHL between 1951 and 1958, then went on to the American Hockey League (AHL) until 1966. Jim Morrison, an offensive defenseman was with the NHL in 1951 and 1952 and an AHL all star.
Ron Hurst, a right-winger with the Toronto Maple Leafs in the 1950s also spent most of his career in the AHL and at the senior level. Ivan Irwin, known as Ivan the Terrible, played 155 games with the Montreal Canadiens and New York Rangers in the 1950s. He was best known as a regular enforcer. The hockey legends also signed autographs in the foyer
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between periods, where a silent auction of framed famous hockey players helped raise funds for the Afghanistan Repatriation Memorial. The Battle of Quinte West was a fight to the finish, with fans cheering for both sides, to a 9 - 4 win for the Hawks. Even Colonel David Lowthian, #23 for the Flyers, couldn’t make his team win over the favourite. But everyone was smiling. After the first period, the little TimBits came on the ice for their own mini-hockey game. At one point an RCAF Flyer skated over to be goalie
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He shoots, he scores for the Hawks; Tyler Donaldson gets a goal. Photo: Kate Everson
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SPORTS
Colts stickhandle around Bulls; extend losing streak to five games
By Stephen Petrick
Sports - Belleville - George Burnett saw no need to knock over chairs, throw water bottles or scream at the top of his lungs in the dressing room on Sunday night. As a veteran Ontario Hockey League coach and general manager, he knew having his players just acknowledge the ďŹ nal score following a dismal home game would be punishment enough. The Belleville Bulls lost 9 - 3 to the Barrie Colts at the Yardmen Arena on Sunday. It was their most lopsided loss of the season and it extended the teamâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s losing streak to ďŹ ve games. The Bulls lost 3 - 2 to the Owen Sound Attack at home a night earlier and 6 - 4 to the Oshawa Generals on the road on Friday night. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t think there needs to be a lot said tonight,â&#x20AC;? said Burnett calmly, following the Sunday game. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I think theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll have a chance to think about it and weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll address our group tomorrow. You can bang and crash, but that gets old quick.â&#x20AC;? This week, the Bulls are simply focusing on putting a bad stretch behind them and getting ready to play a tough road trip that, if not successful, could make them lose ground in the Eastern Conference standings. The Bulls head to Niagara on Friday to play the IceDogs (6-16-
0-0), then to Mississauga on Saturday to play the Steelheads (9-11-1-0). Theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll then cross the United States border on Sunday to play the Erie Otters, who lead the OHLâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Western Conference with a 19-3-0-1 record. (However, the Otters will be without star forward Connor McDavid who is out until at least Christmas with a hand injury.) The Bulls head into the weekend still in second place in the OHLâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s East Division, and as the third-seeded team in the Eastern Conference playoff standings with a 12-10-1-1 record. But the gap between them and those behind them is a lot narrower now. The Bulls got out to a great start this year, winning 11 of their ďŹ rst 15 games. But that hot start, Burnett feels, prompted opponents to take them seriously and now the team has to play much better each night if they are to win. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The past couple [of] weeks havenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t been great,â&#x20AC;? Burnett acknowledged. â&#x20AC;&#x153;But when you win 11 of your ďŹ rst 15 games expectations get a little bit silly and we have to manage those expectations. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Do we think weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re a ďŹ rstplace club? I donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t know if that was fair or realistic, but weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re better than we were tonight. If this is the bottom weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve got lots of work ahead of us and we better decide quickly that we have to
make things right.â&#x20AC;? Burnett acknowledged that the team has to be better on special teams and that was evident on Sunday. Fifteen minutes into the game, Barrie led 3 - 0 on three power-play goals. The Bulls gave up another four goals in the second period (one of them a shorthanded goal) and two more in the third, both of which were powerplay goals. It was such a bad night that goaltender Charlie Graham started the game for Belleville, was pulled after the ďŹ fth goal in the second period, and returned in the third period, after his replacement Connor Hicks had given up two goals. On Saturday, Hicks was better, stopping 32 of 35 shots he faced, but the Bulls still lost, because of a late Owen Sound comeback. Adrian Carbonara of the Barrie Colts tries to pass the puck from his knees while being checked by David Tomasek of the Belleville The Bulls had leads of 1 - 0 and Bulls, as goaltender Charlie Graham keeps his eye on the play. There was a lot of action around the Belleville goal during the 2 - 1 in the game, but the Attack game, as the Colts won 9 - 3. Photo: Stephen Petrick tied the game and scored the game winner within a four-minute span of the third period. On Friday, the Bulls attempted a spirited comeback of their own but came up short, against the East Division leading Generals. Oshawa led 3 - 0 and 5 - 2 before two goals by Brandon Saigeon and Alex Yuill brought Belleville to within a goal late in the third period. But an emptynet goal by Oshawa with 18 â&#x20AC;&#x153;I love playing in seconds left ensured a win for the front of the home home team.
BULL BULLieve IN THE Dream town crowd at the Yardmen Arena.â&#x20AC;?
Another Subban is starring for Bulls Sports - Belleville - Could the Subban family make it three for three when it comes to spots on the Canadian national junior hockey team? Hockey Canada is expected to announce a list of players invited to a tryout camp for the team that will represent the county at the World Junior Hockey Championships in Montreal over the holidays. The Belleville Bulls star defenceman Jordan Subban is by no means a lock to make the teamâ&#x20AC;&#x201D;he wasnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t invited to the development camp for the junior team held in the summerâ&#x20AC;&#x201D;but his play of late may get him some consideration. The 19-year-old from Rexdale, Ontario, is the Ontario Hockey Leagueâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s top-scoring defenceman. After scoring against Barrie on Sunday, he had 12 goals and 13 assists, for 25 points in 24 games. If he makes the team heâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d be following in the footsteps of his two older brothers, Malcolm and P.K., who earned spots on the junior team while playing for the Bulls. Malcolm was a goaltender for Canada in the 2013 World Juniors in Russia and minded the
net in Belleville from 2009 to 2013. As for P.K, youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve probably heard of him. Now a Norriswinning defenceman with the Montreal Canadiens and one of the gameâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s most popular players, P.K. played for the Bulls from 2005 to 2009. He was part of Canadaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s goldmedal winning teams from 2008 and 2009. A good omen for Jordan Subban was that he was invited to play in the Subway
Super Series game held on November 17 in Kingston, where he helped the OHL allstar team defeat Russia 5 - 1. The Bulls were also represented in the game by forward Remi Elie, who scored one of the teamâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s goals. Elie is the Bulls leading scorer so far this year. The Dallas Stars prospect has 11 goals and 14 assists in 24 games, which makes him 15th in the league in scoring.
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HEIGHT: 6.02â&#x20AC;&#x2122; WEIGHT: 181 BIRTHDATE: â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;97-05-05 HOMETOWN: Oakville, ON
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HOW DOES THE HOME CROWD AFFECT THE WAY YOU PLAY? - They keep me and the rest of the boys energized while on the ice. FONDEST HOCKEY MOMENT? Winning the OHL cup in my Minor Midget year with the Rangers.
2
By Stephen Petrick
Meet Your BULLS!
â&#x20AC;&#x153;Enjoying my first OHL goalâ&#x20AC;?
IF YOU WERENâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;T PLAYING HOCKEY, WHAT WOULD YOU DO? I would like to manage or coach a hockey team. Photo by Aaron Bell
Follow Matt @Matt_Luff3 See it. Feel it. LIVE it. www.YourBulls.com Quinte West News - Thursday, November 27, 2014 29
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Woodlot Conference celebrates 25th anniversary
A 25th anniversary cake was cut by guest speaker Diana Beresford-Kroeger backed up by Ken Sinclair, Matt Caruana, Dale Grant, Charles Robinson, Ray Wellman, Jim Pedersen, Frank Taylor, Kevin Durkin, Stephen Pitt, Cliff Maclean and Louise Livingstone. Photo: Kate Everson
News - Quinte West - The Trenton Woodlot Conference celebrated its 25th anniversary at the Knights of Columbus Hall on November 21. “It’s quite remarkable,” said Jim Pedersen from the Hastings Stewardship Council. “We appreciate the sup-
port over the last two and a half decades.” Larry McTaggert from the Bancroft Area Forest Industry Association added, “Trees are amazing. They have been here as long as the planet.” Guest speaker Peter Hynard said he has been a forester for 40 years and
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a woodlot owner in Hastings County. He talked about the history of the land, including the rocks and the trees, and how to find out their age. “Don’t believe everything you hear,” he said. “Sometimes you can find real evidence in the dates on headstones in old graveyards.”
A cake celebrating the 25th anniversary was cut by keynote speaker Diana Beresford-Kroeger, backed up by several members of the Hastings Stewardship Council. Beresford-Kroeger said she is interested in making global changes to save our planet, including treasuring
our trees. “Take my hands,” she said. “You are important people. Politicians are not needed here. Just hold my hands.” As a little girl in Ireland, she was close to the freshest water in the whole world. Now it is the greatest
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CP Holiday Train stops in region November 29
Events - Quinte-area families will have another opportunity to get into the Christmas spirit on Saturday, November 29. And all they have to do is visit some designated train track locations in their community. The CP Holiday Train is making stops in Belleville, Quinte West and Brighton on that day. It first stops in Belleville at 10 a.m. at Mile 91, west of the storage facility on Keegan Parkway. That’s right behind Belleville General Hospital and along Ki-
wanis Bayshore Park. It then stops in Trenton at 11:15 a.m. at RCAF County Road 21, on the south side of the railway crossing. Its next stop is in Brighton at 12:30 p.m. along Prince Edward Street, east of the railway crossing. The CP Holiday Train has been called North America’s longest rolling food bank fund raiser and since it started in 1999, it has raised close to $9.5 million and has generated 3.3 million pounds
of food for local food banks. Those who attend are encouraged to bring donations for their local food banks. They’ll then be treated to a music show featuring The Odds and Roxanne Potvin. The Odds are one of Canada’s most popular alternative rock bands, perhaps best known for their song Eat My Brain. Roxanne Potvin is a Junonominated singer-songwriter and blues artist. They’ll perform from a boxcar that’s been converted into a travelling stage.
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The CP Holiday Train has stopped in this area for the past eight years and has traditionally supported Gleaners Food Bank in Belleville. The train project originally
started with a partnership between CP and the National Food sharing program. CP began running a freight train decorated with thousands of Christmas lights across Canada, to raise
Look after the forests Continued from page B1
contaminated water. She looks to the trees of Canada. “You have marvellous forests,” she said. She said we have to plant trees to protect our forests. “If you want land for your children and grandchildren, look after your forests,” she added. “They are green machines, farmers of the sun, banking carbon.” She said we have to get back the great trees. The black walnut is one of them, as well as the magnolia, the magical tree of the Hurons which has anti-inflammatory properties. She said there are 157 areas in the ocean that are highly toxic, each the size of New Jersey. “These are graveyards,” she said. “We will not allow this to happen to our forests.” She said the cause of ebola is cutting down of forest, taking away the trees that monkeys used which then spread the disease. Diana recalled fondly the one huge oak in Ireland still standing that was planted by the last King of Ireland and is now protected by a big, black bull that no one dares to pass. “I am a descendant of the Druids,” she admitted. “I was given their ancient ways of thinking.” The burr oak is another of the local trees that need to be preserved. It was the basis of bannock for the natives who also ground the acorns into flour. It is drought resistant.
A packed Knights of Columbus Hall watched slides from guest speaker Peter Hynard. Photo: Kate Everson
The shag bark hickory was once used to make nut milk for cooking. The aboriginals who used it did not have Alzheimer’s or other aging diseases of the brain. “If you eat these nuts you will not have these diseases,” she said. “Eat a few nuts a day.” Black walnut was a medicinal tree for First Nations. It has an acid that has been used in treatment of cancers, by detoxifying the cells. She said to rub the crushed leaves on your arm to protect from breast cancer.
“Basswoods are the most important tree in your forest,” she added. “It makes poor wood but the blossoms feed all the pollinators. The crops depend on it. It will bump up your harvest by 35 per cent.” She said the flowers are healing and helpful for sleep. It also makes a greenish honey, the best in the world. Diana urged woodlot owners to be her ambassadors for the trees and to “hold hands across Canada.”
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awareness of the issue of hunger prevalent in all communities. CP also has a Holiday Train that runs throughout the United States. To learn more about the Holiday Train visit <www.cpr.ca>.
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A Christmas story
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From left to right are cast members Mark McQuillan, Leigh McMurdo and Mickaula Douglas. Photo: Submitted
ing scripts, sewing costumes, and memorizing lines all with the hope that we will be able to share with the community something of the joy and wonder that comes with hearing the story of Christmas. Churches throughout Canada and the U.S. have seen these kinds of programs visited by thousands of guests and we hope that ours will grow to become a family tradition for many in this region for years to come.” Admission to the Road to Bethlehem is free. It all takes place on the grounds of Quinte Alliance Church at 373 Bridge Street West in Belleville on December 5 and 6. Walking tours depart every few minutes throughout the evening between 6:30 and 9 p.m. and visitors should plan to be outside for approximately 20 minutes. Please remember to dress for the weather and in consideration of the live animals on the trail, no pets are allowed. For more information visit <www.quintealliancechurch. ca> or call 613-969-4473.
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Events - On December 5 and 6 the Christmas story will come to life at Quinte Alliance Church as dozens of volunteers, dressed in period costumes will take guests back in time to retrace the steps that Mary and Joseph would have taken on the road to Bethlehem. Along the road, guests will interact with familiar characters like Caesar Augustus, Roman soldiers, shepherds, angels, tax collectors and innkeepers. They will also be able to see a variety of live animals and enjoy the sights and sounds of a bustling ancient marketplace. Following the walking tour, guests will be welcome to warm up inside with some refreshments, view a display of works by local artists, and perhaps join in the singing of a few Christmas carols. “Preparing for an event like the Road the Bethlehem is a huge undertaking for our church,” says Pastor Allan Langlois. “Our congregation has been working since early in the summer designing sets, edit-
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Barbershop Christmas comes to Centennial concerts for local audiences. Also around for many years is the barbershop chorus, which has made a tour of area nursing and retirement homes to sing Christmas music for several decades. For the symphony’s annual Christmas concert on Sunday, November 30, at 2 p.m. in Centennial
Secondary School, the two performance organizations come together for the first time. The chorus, now one of the largest men’s barbershop choruses in Ontario, will be special guests of the symphony, demonstrating their style of a cappella (unaccompanied) singing in both yuletide and other songs. In
Santa Claus Parade
Sunday, November 30th – 4:30pm Parade will start in Centennial Park, arriving Downtown around 5:00pm. Following the parade the CHRISTMAS FANTASY OF LIGHTS will take place.
Jingle Bell Walk
Wednesday, December 3rd, at 6:00pm The walkers will meet at the Quinte West City Hall for a brisk walk around downtown Trenton. The walk will end at Fraser Park just in time for the opening of the Nativity Celebration. (Support the Trenton Food Bank with a donation.)
Nativity Celebration
Wednesday, December 3 at 6:45pm rd
Please join the Murray Centennial School Choir in celebration of the Nativity at Fraser Park. Following the celebrations we will walk to Quinte West City Hall, led by a piper, playing seasonal music. At City Hall the Trenton Christian School choir and the Murray Centennial School choir will greet us with more sounds of the season and refreshments will be served by the DBIA.
This Year we have a special performance by the
Steel City Rovers So please plan to stay around and hear the Sounds of a Celtic Christmas
one number, they will be supported by the symphony for Feliz Navidad with a special arrangement by Larry Pohjola, a member of the symphony’s board. They will also lead the audience in a carol singalong—a popular tradition at all symphony Christmas concerts. A Cappella Quinte is now one of
Wagon Rides SCHEDULE Friday, December 5 6:30pm-8:30pm Saturday, December 6 12:00pm-3:00pm Thursday, December 11 6:30pm-8:30pm Friday, December 12 6:30pm-8:30pm Saturday, December 13 4:00pm-7:00pm Sunday, December14 12:00pm-3:00pm Monday, December 15 6:30pm-8:30pm Tuesday, December 16 6:30pm-8:30pm Wednesday, December 17 6:30pm-8:30pm Thursday, December 18 6:30pm-8:30pm Friday, December 19 6:30pm-8:30pm Saturday, December 20 4:00pm-7:00pm Sunday, December 21 12:00pm-3:00pm Monday, December 22 6:30pm-8:30pm Tuesday, December 23 6:30pm-8:30pm All rides will pick up and drop off at Trent Port Museum in the Market Square Parking lot.
Lighting of the Menorah
ALL EVENTS ARE FREE!
AT FRASER PARK
Sunday, Dec. 14th, 2014
December 16th – 6:00pm
STEP INTO THE WARMTH OF TRENTON TOWN HALL – 1861 They will be open during the wagon rides serving refreshments.
12:00PM – 3:00PM
PHOTOS WITH SANTA WILL TAKE PLACE AT THE TRENTON TOWN HALL – 1861
B4 Section B - Thursday, November 27, 2014
the largest men’s barbershop choruses in Ontario. The lively overture to Rossini’s Barber of Seville will open the program, which will also feature a Russianstyle sleigh ride piece by Prokofiev called Troika and a Mozart Sleigh Ride. More contemporary will be A Charlie Brown Christmas and Leroy Anderson’s popular Sleigh Ride. The symphony’s trumpet section will get a workout with Buglers’ Holiday and a warm Christmas closer, A
Most Wonderful Christmas. If Christmas means toys, Quinte Symphony has some real toy instruments to demonstrate in the famous Haydn Toy Symphony. This is a concert for the entire family. Tickets are $20 for adults, $15 for seniors, $10 for students and children get in free. They are now available at the Quinte Arts Council Office, Sam the Record Man in the Quinte Mall and Books and Company, Picton. Tickets will also be available at the door.
Nativity scenes from around the world
News – Napanee - At this time of year, it’s a tradition to put up colourful lights and decorate Christmas trees, activities that have evolved over time. Many families also put up a nativity scene. It may be on the front lawn or on display inside our home; it usually consists of Mary, Joseph, the baby Jesus, shepherds, wise men, maybe some sheep and other animals that you would find in a stable. For the past three years, The Church Of Jesus Christ Of Latter Day Saints in Napanee has presented a Nativity Showcase for three days just before the holiday. And this year they’ll be doing it once again. On December 12 from 4 until 9 p.m. and on December 13 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., between 130 and 150 nativity scenes from over 20 countries will be on display in their
church at 501 Crouse Street. The figures in these beautiful nativity scenes are made from many different materials. One from Vietnam is made from colourful recycled magazine paper. Another from Kenya is made from banana peels. In one from Uganda, the figures are dressed in native tribal costumes. All are exquisitely made. The event is open to the public and there is no charge to attend this wonderful presentation. Light refreshments will be served. They invite you to bring a nonperishable food item for the local food bank. If you are travelling to visit family and friends, it’s worth the detour. Napanee is close to the 401 about a half hour west of Kingston. Take exit 579A on to Centre Street, and you are no more than five minutes away.
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The Israeli Palestinian conflict focus of church presentation News - Campbellford - Witness to what is happening in the Israeli Palestinian conflict, the Reverend Noel Gordon brought a message to this community, sharing his story with others. Gordon recently returned from a three-month trip to the conflict-ridden area and was invited to talk about his experiences to a gathering hosted by St. Andrewâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Presbyterian Church in Campbellford. â&#x20AC;&#x153;He has just completed his third study tour to Israel and Palestinian territory,â&#x20AC;? explained the Reverend Blaine Dunnett, pastor of St. Andrewâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s church. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I felt he gave us a perspective from the Christian church in Palestine among the Palestinian Christians that indicated what is happening. That part of the story we donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t often hear. It gave a little balance to what we usually hear through the media and other forums,â&#x20AC;? he said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The historical background he provided was very informa-
tive,â&#x20AC;? he added. About 25 people gathered at the church to listen to the Reverend Gordon, who made a PowerPoint presentation with photographs of the region he visited. All of this took place against a backdrop of recent reports that the Israeli Palestinian conflict may be moving toward a religious war. Gordon, who recently retired after 40 years serving at four churches, the last one in Bowmanville, has been to the conflict area eight or nine times, leading study trips. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I went there for the first time 47 years ago as a young man to work on an Israeli Kibbutz,â&#x20AC;? he told the Trent Hills Independent. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Thereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s been tremendous change since then.â&#x20AC;? Gordon travelled to Haifa in 1967, the largest city in northern Israel. He later took a job teaching at a boys secondary school run by a Christian church in the Palestinian Territory, in the City of Ramallah,
before he studied theology and became a minister. â&#x20AC;&#x153;It certainly opened my eyes to all sorts of things,â&#x20AC;? he said, and he has been returning to the region ever since. His presentation last week included his impressions of the region as he shared his experience. â&#x20AC;&#x153;What I was attempting to do was share some insights into the Palestine Israel conflict through the words of the authors of the Kairos Palestinian document,â&#x20AC;? he commented. Described as the Christian Palestinianâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s word to the world about what is happening in Palestine, it was written in 2009 and titled â&#x20AC;&#x153;A Moment of Truth â&#x20AC;Ś a word of faith, hope and love from the heart of Palestinian suffering.â&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x153;At the heart of the Palestinian suffering is the more than 47 years of illegal occupation of Palestinian territory by Israeli military,â&#x20AC;? said the Reverend Gordon, as he talked about people forced out of their homes
Amnesty International group to participate in Human Rights Day Events - Belleville - Those interested in justice and international issues can participate in whatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s being called the worldâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s biggest human rights event, and they can do it not far from home. Bellevilleâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Amnesty International Group is participating in International Human Rights Day on December 10. People at the event will be encouraged to write letters and cards in support of â&#x20AC;&#x153;prisoners of conscience and human rights defenders.â&#x20AC;? The Belleville Group will be at the Core CafĂŠ at 223 Pinnacle Street on the day, between 1:30 and 7 p.m. The letter-writing campaign is known as Write For Rights and Amnesty International supporters around the world are expected to be writing letters on December 10. The letters are intended to pressure governments to uphold human rights on select cases. The cases Amnesty International is focussing on this year involve individuals at risk from the Philippines, China, Saudi Arabia, and the United States, as well as vulnerable communities from South Africa and India and indigenous women and girls from Canada. As well, several cases speak
to Amnestyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s campaigns â&#x20AC;&#x153;Open for Justiceâ&#x20AC;? and â&#x20AC;&#x153;Stop Torture.â&#x20AC;? According to a press release from the Belleville group, last year people in 143 countries took a record-breaking 2,373,422 actions during Write for Rights. â&#x20AC;&#x153;It shows that when ordinary people stand together and send a clear message demanding governments fulfill their duty to protect and uphold peopleâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s human rights we can achieve fantastic results,â&#x20AC;? said Salil Shetty, Amnesty Internationalâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Secretary General. Last year, messages pressuring authorities led to the release of two prisoners of conscience: the Cambodian housing rights activist Yorm Bopha and the Russian peaceful protester Vladimir Akimenkov. A small act of writing a card can also change the outlook of so many prisoners of conscience or human defenders under threat and their families. For more details on the campaign, visit <www.writeathon.ca/index.php/ cases/>. For more information on the Belleville group contact Mieke Thorne at 613-969-1782.
having to live in refugee camps. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Over 750,000 displaced Palestinian persons basically living in these camps,â&#x20AC;? he said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;People seemed to be appreciative of the information I gave, though not The Reverend Blaine Dunnett, of St. Andrewâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Presbyterian Church in Campbellford, left, welcomed everybody agreed the Reverend Noel Gordon, a retired minister who talked about the Israeli Palestinian conflict based with what I had to on his experiences during several trips to the region. Photo: Sue Dickens say,â&#x20AC;? said Gordon after the event. He admitted, â&#x20AC;&#x153;There are a lot of different views about what is going on in that part of the world and people with different solutions.â&#x20AC;? For the Reverend Dunnett the presentation fulfilled its purpose. â&#x20AC;&#x153;He [Gordon] was here to throw additional light on the situation and what the Christian church is seeking to do by way of reconciliation. We donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t hear that perspective of things through the media. It was interesting to learn what the Christians are seeking in a very religious and secular environment.â&#x20AC;?
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Section B - Thursday, November 27, 2014 B5
TRAVEL
The world’s oldest social housing complex still in use
By John M. Smith
Lifestyles - Jakob Fugger (1459-1525), a very wealthy merchant and banker who resided in Augsburg, Germany, decided to use some of his money to establish the Fuggerei, a social housing complex to help needy citizens of the area. It was founded in 1521, and it still exists today. Therefore, it’s considered to be the world’s oldest social housing complex still in use, and it’s supported by a charitable trust that was actually set up back in the early 16th century and is still administered by family descendants. By 1523, 52 apartment houses had been built in this “city within the city,” and others were later added, with its own streets, gates, and church, and needy Augsburg citizens could apply to live here and pay a yearly fee of a mere one Rheinischer Gulden (less than one Euro) and, amazingly, the rent is still the same today, hundreds of years later. One of the “lucky” inhabitants back in the 17th century (1681-1694) was Franz Mozart, the great-grandfather of that illustrious composer, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, and there’s still a plaque in this complex to commemorate this bit of history. It’s, of course, not easy to get one of these “bargains,” for there’s a long waiting list and stringent
rules. The apartments were set up for hard-working people who had fallen on hard times but were debt-free, and they had to be devout Roman Catholics. One of the original parts of the agreement was that the apartment dweller had to pray for the Fugger family three times every day (and this is still a requirement), including a recitation of the Lord’s Prayer, for Jakob had originally set this up as a kind of religious “insurance,” just in case he had some difficulty getting into heaven. After all, he had been a somewhat ruthless businessman in life, but he also had a strong faith (and perhaps a bit of a guilty conscience), and he didn’t want to be trapped in Purgatory for too long. Since this complex is still inhabited today, there are lots of curious tourists who want to check it out, and it has become a major tourist attraction in this beautiful Bavarian city. I joined a guided tour of this intriguing area, and I discovered there are now several buildings in this social housing complex, and each apartment has its own door and street entrance. The left door always leads down to an apartment with an outdoor garden area and shed, and the right door leads to an upper apartment with an attic. These one-bedroom units have obvi-
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ously been renovated and updated over the years, but I found that some of the old Gothic house numbers remain intact, and some of the elaborately shaped bell pulls date to pre-streetlight days, when residents could feel their individual bell pull in the dark and know they’d arrived at their correct destination. I also discovered that one apartment unit used to be used as a hospital, exclusively for the treatment of syphilis, and that another unit has been preserved “as it was” and is now kept open as a museum. Here I was able to see an original kitchen, where the resident would cook over an open fire, and the separate old bedroom, with its antique furnishings, coal oil lamp, and bedpan under the bed. A fully furnished modern apartment is also kept open and on display for visitors, and it includes a TV set showing a documentary about the Fugger family. I also learned that this Fuggerei was heavily damaged during World War II, so much of it has been rebuilt/repaired, and the bunker where residents sought shelter during the bombing is also now kept open as a museum. I couldn’t help but think about the fact that the modest fee for my tour of this social housing complex was actually more than an entire year’s rent here. That seemed rather strange. And I also found it intriguing that Jakob and his brother, Ulrich, also founded a chapel within Augsburg’s St. Anne’s Church just prior to when the Fuggerei was begun, to serve as a family crypt. However, this Roman Catholic Church eventually became a Protestant Church, so this now Protestant Church houses a Roman Catholic family crypt! Augsburg was founded in 15 BC, more than 2,000 years ago, so it has a very long and distinguished history. It was named after the Roman Emperor Augustus, became the capital of the Roman province of Rhaetia, and was, by the Middle Ages, an important intersection of several trade routes. There was a lot of money here at that time, and the
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B6 Section B - Thursday, November 27, 2014
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(Above) This bust of Jacob Fugger is located in Augsburg, Germany. (Right) Franz Mozart was a resident here in the 17th century.
A view of a section of the oldest social housing complex still in use.
Fugger family was certainly a major part of this. Augsburg became the base for the Fugger banking empire, and the city was even sometimes referred to as “Fuggerstadt” (“Fuggers’ City”). They were, indeed, an influential family back then, and still are, because of the existence of the Fuggerei. There’s a bust of Jakob near this complex and a painting of him (by renowned painter Albrecht Durer) in the city’s Maximilian Museum (where an enclosed courtyard also houses three Renaissance Fountains). While in this area of Germany, just northwest of Munich, sometimes referred to as “the gateway to the Alps,” I’d also recommend checking out the restored Golden Hall in the City Hall, the Perlach Tower, St. Mary’s Cathedral, the Imperial Mile, and the Fugger City Palace (a residential and business house of Jakob Fugger). For more information: The left door leads down and the right door leads up into two separate <http://www.augsburg-tourismus.de/>. apartments.
ENTERTAINMENT
Westben hosts Music Makes Me Smile day for schoolchildren By Sue Dickens
News - Campellford - Local schoolchildren filled the Clock Tower Cultural Centre to learn about a program hosted by Westben Arts Festival Theatre called “Music Makes Me Smile.” The goal of last Monday’s event was to also introduce students, teachers and parents to the centre. Westben co-founders Brian Finley and Donna Bennett were joined by renowned local musician and music teacher Nancy Elmhirst, to welcome more than 150 schoolchildren from Kent and Hillcrest Public schools. “The goal is to welcome and introduce students, teachers and parents to the Clock Tower Cultural Centre. There is immense potential with this Cultural Centre and we want the youth of this
community to know the door is open,” said Bennett. Music Makes me Smile not only introduced the current programs Westben has to offer but it was designed to create interest with fun and involvement through musical demonstrations and interactions,” Bennett explained. Sheldon Sporring, a Grade 7 student at Hillcrest agreed that music is important. He was there with the Westben Foundation Junior Band and plays the bass clarinet. “The first year I was in the Junior Band and now the second year I am in the Foundation Band and next year it will be the Wind Ensemble,” he explained. “I joined because it’s something to do and it’s good for you to learn how to do different
things. Who knows later on in life I might be able to play professionally,” he said enthusiastically. Emily Williams, who plays the clarinet, also in Grade 7, agrees that music is also a big part of her life. “I love it I really enjoy it,” she said. “The nice part of playing an instrument [is] once you get to know that instrument, you can pretty well play any instrument you want to,” she added with a big grin. The morning of the program, Elmhirst and members of the Westben Instrumental Foundations group performed and introduced their own instruments to the other school children. The presentation ended with a question and answer session.
Rock show coming to Belle Pub
“It is thrilling to have the Clock Tower full of children enjoying music,” Bennett remarked. “We at Westben believe strongly in the value of arts education and recognize the importance of quality musical experiences in helping children grow and develop intellectually, socially and emotionally,” she added. “Engagement with the arts
helps children achieve their potential as individuals and as members of the larger community. Westben is committed to providing opportunities for children to discover the exciting and joyous world of music, and through this experience, to gain an appreciation for music that will form the basis of a life-long journey.” Westben hopes to create interest and involvement, focusing on
fun and value through musical demonstrations and interactions. Westben also stands for a strong belief in the value of arts education and demonstrates time and time again, connections between Westben programming and Kawartha Pine Ridge District School Board curriculum objectives. For more information about Westben and its programs go to <www.westben.ca>.
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Entertainment - Belleville - Modern rock music will be blaring from the Belle Pub on Friday, December 5 Burlington post-hardcore outfit Silverstein and Oakville pop punk band Seaway are playing a show as part of their special holiday weekend tour of Juno-nominated rock band Silverstein will perform at the Belle Pub on Friday, December 5. Photo: Submitted Ontario. The show starts at 7 p.m. Silverstein is touring to support their seventh and latest album This is How the Wind Shifts. The band is also getting ready to release an eighth studio album titled I Am Alive In Everything I Touch in the spring of 2015 through New Damage Records Silverstein consists of lead vocalist Shane Told, guitarists Paul Marc Rousseau and Josh Bradford, bassist Billy Hamilton and drummer Paul Koehler. Since forming in 2000, the Juno-nominated five-piece band has sold over 1.2 million albums worldwide and has performed over 1,600 shows across 40 countries. Meanwhile, Seaway released its latest EP, All In My Head on November 4 in Canada via New Damage Records. In 2013, Seaway gained international attention with the release of its debut full-length album, Hoser. Since releasing their critically acclaimed debut, the band has extensively toured across Canada and the U.S. with the likes of Major League, Knuckle Puck, Have Mercy and many more. The band recently shared a video for the lead track Your Best Friend which can be seen on You Tube. Tickets are available at the Belle Pub and are $22 in advance or $25 at the door. The Belle Pub is located at 310 Front Street.
Hamming it up for the camera these Grade 7 students from Hillcrest Public School are members of the Westben Foundation Junior Band and performed at a special Westben day called Music Makes Me Smile. From left, Brian Finley, Donna Bennett, student Sheldon Sporring who plays bass clarinet, Emily Williams who plays the clarinet and Austin Billen who plays baritone. Nancy Elmhirst, founder of Westben’s Concert Band program joined in the fun. Photo: Sue Dickens
Section B - Thursday, November 27, 2014 B7
LIFESTYLES
The Good Earth:
Dan Clost Lifestyles - Once again the air in our homes is redolent with the malodorous stench of rotting tree carcasses. Yes, Gentle Reader, ’tis the time of year when we join the maddened, extravagant world of the Victorian gardener. We have convinced ourselves it is the grandest idea to bring dead trees into the home; homes with neither conservatory nor l’orangerie. Okay, that’s my bit of curmudgeonry for the season, with the exception of a continuing commentary on “festive jolly music” turning our brains into mush. To clear the air, so to speak, I really do like Christmas trees and really do look forward to having one in the house.
B8 Section B - Thursday, November 27, 2014
Caring for your dead tree
I am also very pleased that the Fraser fir is readily available for one primary reason, it has a pleasing fragrance, especially when compared to the white spruce, aka cat spruce. (What is implied but not said is that a white spruce can sometimes smell like cat pee.) There are many varieties of conifers now available to us and each has distinct characteristics that help us prefer one over the other. Some are old favourites such as Scots pine, white pine, Norway spruce and balsam fir. Some are newer to us such as Fraser fir, Canaan fir, Nordmann fir and Serbian spruce. Whichever you prefer, there is one feature you must look for and that is freshness. Freshness does not necessarily mean freshly cut or harvested from the field. In fact, a tree bundled up from the plantation in November can be fresher than a tree sawn down from the woodlot in mid-December. Trees are just like any other plant in the garden; they enter into dormancy in the late fall. Signals are received externally, e.g. temperature differentials, declining sunlight, and this triggers internal changes, e.g. production of different hormones, a slowing down of metabolic processes. One of the affects is reduction in moisture moving from roots to needles. When the tree
is cut down before the external signals happen to effect these changes, the top part doesn’t know it is dead. And it won’t know it for a very long time. Coincidentally, this is the time between harvest and January composting. When the tree is cut, the sap will form essentially a scab (congealed sap) while it tries to heal itself: think of a geranium leaf cutting. If the temperatures remain cool, with little difference between night and daytime temperatures, the tree is almost in a state of suspended animation. Once you bring it into the house, the warm temperatures will “awaken” it. The tree will be very thirsty. This is the reason for making a fresh, or new, cut at the base of the trunk: you remove the scab so water can replenish the desiccated or drying out needles. Your dead Christmas tree might even break open buds and start to “grow.” This is common with varieties that have a shorter dormancy period, for example silver fir and some balsam firs. Don’t look for roots, GR, just keep the reservoir filled with water. You can add all sorts of stuff to the water if you wish from preservatives to soft drinks to aspirin to sugar. You’ll feel better and know that you are doing your bit to feed a dead tree. The tree itself won’t care. If you check the web sites,
be sure to differentiate between those that sell preservatives and those that have some academic and horticultural credibility. A fresh tree is one that holds onto its needles. Give the tree a good shake before you buy it. Many old needles will fall, especially from a spruce, but they’re not the important ones. The important ones are those that remain on the tree. There should be many needles left on the branches and those branches
should be pliant or easily bendable. Once a tree loses its suppleness and stops taking up water, it is time to take it out of the house, even if it is Christmas Eve. It is better to be inconvenienced by replacing a tree than standing out on the street watching the fire department do their job. A Christmas tree is a wonderful addition to the season and is a focus for both the secular and the divine. Take care of it.
Bake sale for group that helps people with disabilities News - Quinte West - If the cold weather and snow is making you think of Christmas, you can reduce your stress at this time of year and help Quinte SailAbility as well by ordering homemade baked goods. Every dollar spent goes directly to the sailing school for people with disabilities. On the menu are cookies, muffins, breads, cakes, pies, tarts, squares and other yummies. Quantities are limited so orders will
be filled on a first-come first-served basis. The deadline is December 3. To order or learn more about the 2014 Christmas Bake “Sail,” email <qsbakesail@hotmail.com> or call 613-475-4427. The items range in price from $3 to $20 (for a rum cake). They can be picked up at Baker Island Community Centre, on the south side of CFB Trenton December 8, between 11 a.m. and 5 p.m.
said if infected ash trees are not treated there is a 95 per cent mortality rate, within one or two years. “It’s really fast,” she said. The dead wood and branches falling can be hazardous. The trees can fall on other trees or on roads. “Ash is a valuable hard wood for furniture or burning,” she said. “It does not need to be seasoned. You can cut it today and burn it tonight.” Cane said ash reproduces by the roots so it reforests quite quickly. “It can be annoying, sprouting up all over,” she added. “But it’s really good for woodpeckers. They have a banquet.” The cause of the problem is a tiny emerald insect. “It’s an emerald green, really beautiful,” she said. “But terrible.” She said people barely ever Emma Cane points out a sample of an emerald see them because they are up high on the tree. They leave ash borer. Photo: Kate Everson By Kate Everson
News - Quinte West - Ash trees are going to be a thing of the past if the emerald ash borer gets its way. “It’s only a matter of time,” says Emma Cane, Source Protection Assistant with Lower Trent Conservation. She
their exit holes in the bark. They drop their eggs and the larvae goes into the bark. The new bugs eat their way through the bark cutting off its circulation of sap. “In a heavy infestation they peel the whole bark off the tree,” she said. The adults also feed on the leaves of the ash trees. Cane said landowners have resources through Lower Trent Conservation to deal with the problem. “In the next five years it’s all they will ever talk about,” she said. “It’s a really big forestry issue.” She said landowners can pay $200 a tree to inject insecticide. Some are proactive and cutting down their ash trees now before it gets hazardous. Cane said people can still use the wood even if it is infected. “It’s still good wood,” she said. She said the disease is similar to the Dutch elm disease but faster.
Teens finish one-two at dairy classic
Jessica Sills, 17, a member of the Hastings County Dairy Calf Club, placed first in the Holstein Senior Calf Class at the 34th annual Canadian 4-H Dairy Classic held recently at the Royal Winter Fair in Toronto. Matthew Forestell, 18, from the Campbellford Dairy Calf Club, placed second. There were 107 calves in the class. Sills’ Kingsway Goldwyn Lipsmack and Forestell’s Kingsway Goldwyn Elsie are from Kingsway Farms, near Trent River, operated by Gord and Pauline McMillan and family. Photo: Submitted
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Emerald ash borer coming
Section B- Thursday, November 27, 2014 B9
Enchanted Forest attracts hundreds By Richard Turtle
News - Stirling - It was a busy weekend at Farmtown Park as volunteers and staff hosted a massive pre-Christmas party and raffle that continued long after the annual Starlight House Tour held last Thursday night. Museum Manager Margaret Grotek says Christmas in Heritage Village has become a popular and eagerly anticipated annual event for many, and the support of both sponsors and community are behind its success. About 200 people took part in the house tour, hosted in five area homes and Farmtown Park last Thursday evening, with many arriving at Heritage Village as the final stop. Inside the streetscape, dozens of trees, decorations and toy
bundles were available for raffle, all provided by a large group of museum supporters. This year the event had an Enchanted Forest theme with a bullfrog on a giant toadstool greeting visitors as they entered through a tunnel of greenery to a brightly lit and colourful Christmas display. Throughout the weekend visitors arrived to view the various raffle prizes and drop their tickets in the accompanying boxes with the hopes of taking something special home. Farmtown Park President Harry Danford welcomed visitors on the final day and thanked the many supporters for their generosity before Hastings County Queen of the Furrow Jessica Sills began drawing tickets for about 60
valuable prizes. Grotek says volunteers spent several weeks in preparation for what has become the largest annual fund raiser for the facility. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Once again our sponsors have been very generous, and we really appreciate it,â&#x20AC;? Danford said before the draws began. And based on the list of winners, most of whom were not in attendance at the time, there were plenty of out-oftown guests during the weekend. Prizes went to residents from throughout the area including Trenton, Campbellford, Norwood, Marmora, Madoc and Stirling. Winners would be contacted by phone, he explained, and could arrange to pick up their prizes in the coming days. Jane Reid and Kaden Dunlop were among the many visitors to Farmtown Park last weekend who A full prize and winners list is posted filled out raffle tickets for various Christmas prizes. on Facebook, Grotek says. Each year the special events bring hundreds of visitors to the museum, and officials say it is also an opportunity to attract firsttime guests to see the impressive displays. And while there is much work involved behind the scenes, she notes, there are plenty of experienced and availablevolunteers who have made it a tradition of their Visitors to last weekendâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Enchanted Forest at Farmtown Park in Stirling were greeted by a colourful own. R0013013730
display in Heritage village.
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WEâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;RE LOCATED ON SECOND STREET IN CAMPBELLFORD
Hastings County Queen of the Furrow Jessica Sills and Farmtown Park President Harry Danford drew the names of raffle winners at last weekendâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Christmas fund raiser.
WELCOME TO RIVERSIDE DENTAL CENTRE
Dr. Robert Rawluk, D.D.S.
613-392-2732 riversidedentalcentre.com
B10 Section B - Thursday, November 27, 2014
â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Over 30 years in the Quinte Regionâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;
NEW PATIENTS WELCOME! R0012982516
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TransCanada answers questions about pipeline project By John Campbell
News - Codrington - Close to 70 people turned out for the open house TransCanada held last week to explain its proposal to build a natural gas pipeline across southern Ontario, and most attendees had one thing in mind: where exactly is it going to be located. “The feedback was pretty consistent,” said TransCanada external communications specialist Sharan Kaur. “People wanted to see on the map where specifically in the community the pipe is going to be going through.” The energy company is proposing to lay 250 kilometres of pipe between Markham and South Dundas in eastern Ontario “to meet current and future needs” of gas customers in Ontario and Quebec, Kaur said. The $1.5-billion Eastern Mainline Project requires the approval of the National Energy Board before it can proceed. The open house held November 20 at the Codrington Community Centre marked the start of a second round of public consultations this year. Pending approval, TransCanada hopes to begin construction in 2016 and have the new transmission infrastructure in service by 2017. Nine new compressor units will be added to five existing compressor stations, including the one in Alnwick-Haldimand Township. “There are going to be thousands
of jobs that are going to come into the community along the pipeline route [during construction],” Kaur said. “That’s important to a lot of folks.” The “economic spinoffs” include workers staying in hotels, dining at local restaurants and purchasing local goods and services. The pipeline will require a new right-ofway, but it will be located where possible adjacent the existing corridor. That’s an issue for Bev Dahmer, who already has two TransCanada pipelines crossing her farm properties north of Grafton. She and two others want to organize area landowners into a group to negotiate “the best possible deal” for easement agreements. She’s had “all sorts of problems” with two other gas companies whose pipelines run across her land, and while she hasn’t had an issue with TransCanada, it “has a very poor track record in safety and transparency and honesty in other parts of Canada and … the world.” Dahmer said she and other landowners are looking for a commitment from TransCanada that the new pipeline will cause “the least amount of damage possible … and our livelihoods aren’t going to be greatly impacted.” She’s “not anti-development, antipipeline. I want it done in a way that’s fair to the landowner, that’s safe [and]
compensates us fairly because we put a lot of blood and sweat into our land.” Project manager Brian West said farmers will be compensated for the loss of crops during construction, based on thirdparty appraisals that take into account their “market value at the time.” TransCanada had 25 of its experts at the open house to answer questions on a broad array of issues, including pipeline safety. Transporting natural gas through pipes “is the safest method,” Kaur said. “Our goal is no incidents across the board … There are occurrences that do happen and we make sure that we address them” but “there hasn’t been anything here on the main line in Ontario specifically for quite some time.” Pipelines are monitored around the clock for “even the smallest drop of pressure” by control centres in Calgary and Houston, and when that happens “they can shut off the pipeline valves on both ends and isolate it,” she said. “There’s always room for improvement and we’re always doing that” through Brian and Eleanor Maunder, Brighton, had questions for one of TransCanada’s land agents about changes in technology. where the pipeline for the Eastern Mainline Project will be located. Photo: John Campbell West said the company is able to detect and deal with leaks “fairly quickly … so the impact to the environment from natural gas is minimal, if at all.”
2014 BELLEVILLE CHRISTMAS LIGHTING DISPLAY
FREE BUS SERVICE
Franklin Coach Lines and Tours have generously offered up free transportation from the north end of Belleville (the old Zeller’s parking lot on Bell Blvd.) to Jane Forrester Park, making a stop at the downtown bus terminal for more passengers. The schedule is as follows: 6:30 p.m. 6:45 p.m. Leave old Zeller’s Downtown bus parking lot terminal
7:00 p.m. Arrive at Jane Forrester Park
7:30 p.m. Leave Jane Forrester Park
8:00 p.m. Arrive at old Zeller’s parking lot
7:45 p.m. Stop at downtown bus terminal
FR A N
KLIN
The City of Belleville and display committee thank Franklin Coach Lines and Tours for providing this service, giving many Belleville Residents the opportunity to enjoy this festive winter wonderland.
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Wednesdays December 3, 10, 17
Section B - Thursday, November 27, 2014 B11
SARFIP improves the farm while benefitting wildlife By Kate Everson
News - Quinte West - A Species at Risk Farm Incentive Program (SARFIP) is helping improve farms while benefitting wildlife and helping the environment. â&#x20AC;&#x153;There are over 200 species at risk in Ontario,â&#x20AC;? said Paul Reeds, regional lead in the Ontario Soil and Crop Improvement Association. â&#x20AC;&#x153;This program gives farmers an opportunity to enhance biodiversity and habitat, with incen-
tives from the government.â&#x20AC;? He said they help farmers do things like setting up windbreaks by planting trees, and fencing livestock so they donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t pollute streams. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We even encourage them to delay cutting their hay,â&#x20AC;? he said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Birds are nesting. We pay farmers the difference lost in the value of the hay by delaying the cut.â&#x20AC;? He said the Ministry of Natural Resources will offer funds for certain incentives. Best manage-
ment practices include control of invasive plants, grazing management plans, biodiversity and wetland restoration. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We encourage biodiversity,â&#x20AC;? he said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t overgraze. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s also good for the livestock when you rotate pastures.â&#x20AC;? He said the federal and provincial governments pay half the costs. The five-year program was set up in 2013, beginning with a series of workshops, setting up a plan and implementing the plan.
HOCKEY for Christmas! Gift Cards
for Belleville BULLS Games and PROshop Gear!
HOLIDAY TICKET PACKAGES: 4 Pack $50 - 6 Pack $75 %8< RU 3DFNV LQ SHUVRQ DW WKH %8//6 %R[ 2ĆŤFH Pro-Shop or specify gift amount online or in person.
613.966.8338
www.YourBulls.com
â&#x20AC;&#x153;Many people donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t have the time and money to do these things on their own,â&#x20AC;? he noted. â&#x20AC;&#x153;If it benefits people downstream and the environment, it is helping your neighbour. Even just building a buffer strip with trees and shrubs helps hold the land.â&#x20AC;? Information is available on-
line at <www.ontariosoilcrop. org> which gives details on the free two-day workshop schedule. Producers are invited to attend the free Canada Ontario Environmental Farm Plan workshops to develop an action plan for their farm. In Brighton the area workshop is in January and in Bel-
leville it starts in March. Growing Forward 2 (GF2) is a five-year federal-provincialterritorial initiative designed to encourage innovation, competitiveness and market development in Canadaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s agri-food and agriproducts sector through costshare funding opportunities.
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Next Home Games: @ML q Dec 3 <I\ q Dec 6
Paul Reeds encourages farmers to improve their farms and benefit wildlife. Photo: Kate Everson
B12 Section B - Thursday, November 27, 2014
Knox craft bazaar a welcome stop
Doris Embleton and Lamoine Hodge hold a couple of giant festive stuffed animals during the Knox Presbyterian Church Christmas craft bazaar in Havelock. The delightful sale gave guests a great chance to stock up on early Christmas presents. Photo: Bill Freeman
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B14 Section B - Thursday, November 27, 2014
Locals do well at Royal Winter Fair ship took the limelight in mainstream media for their young bull, Baker Farms Zuma, who finished as the Grand Champion. O’Hara Sugar Maples, Harts Road, Madoc Township, operated by the Needham family, entered five products, finishing first place for their maple sugar
candy, third for extra light syrup and fourth for maple butter, with sixth and ninth for other entries. Downey farms, once again finished well with fourth place in the National Canadian roadster to wagon competitions with their four-year-old mare, Road Tour, born and bred at their Centre Hastings farm. Last year Glen and Lori Downey were inducted into the Canadian Road Horse Association hall of fame. The Bakers have been breeding a prize line of Charolais cattle by insemination, using stock from Gerrard Montezuma 6T, a bull from “out west” as Kevin Baker explained. A heifer, Baker Farms Zagucci, from the same breeder, finished as grand champion last year at The Royal and went on to take the championship at Regina’s Canadian Western Agribition. Ashley Baker is the one who shows their stock in the ring. She has personally handled Zuma since he was born. They have a bond both in and out of the ring, and, now, national fame. Zuma finished as the Grand Champion after successful showO’Hara Sugar Maple products of Madoc had a great showing at the Royal Winter Fair, ings as a calf in 2012 and conplacing number one for their maple sugar candy, and third for their extra light syrtinued championships in 2013 up. Heather and Stephen Needham are pleased with their work. Photo: Diane Sherman at Peterborough, Renfrew, and By Diane Sherman
News - Madoc - The Royal Winter Fair is Canada’s predominate agricultural fair where the best from across the nation compete. This year three local families came home with honours for their entries. Baker Farms of Madoc Town-
DK A E R CLIC
WIN T TES N O C
Beachburg fairs, finishing as reserve champion at The Royal. Throughout 2014 he showed with nothing less than supreme status to succeed as champion this year. As members of the Quinte chapter of the Ontario Maple Sugar Producers Association, the Needham family, Stephen and Heather, with their two children, Vanessa and Jager, began to take maple syrup seriously only a few
years ago. Stephen attributes their high quality products to continued improvements in equipment and the importance of a small calibration tool by Atago, which tests the heat and water of syrup. The Needhams also wanted to give credit to their colleague, president of the Quinte local Kris Koopman, who finished as the reserve champion at The Royal,
for his extra light syrup. O’Hara Sugar Maple syrup will be served at O’Hara Mill Christmas breakfasts December 6 and 7. The Needham family plans to host a spring syrup festival at The Mill featuring their products. One may find further information at either the O’Hara Mill Facebook page or web site and on Facebook at O’Hara Sugar Maples.
Attention Clubs, Organizations & Schools
Congratulations to this lucky winner in our READ CLICK WIN contest!
Phone 613-966-2034 ext 560 to avoid disappointment when requesting how many of these popular books you would like!
ANNE MARIE REATH
mas Christ
Christmas
2014
mas Christ
Digest Magazine
2014
Publishing Dec. 4, 2014 This glossy, full colour festive Christmas Digest Magazine will include Christmas recipes, crafts, songs and more!
Anne Marie Reath is our weekly winner of a $5,000 La-Z-Boy Furniture Galleries Gift Certificate. Melissa Hudgin, Sales Manager, The Brighton & Trent Hills Independent/ The Contact/Belleville News/Quinte West News/Central Hastings News presented Anne Marie with her prize.
BRIGHTON Independent
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Our Contest is now closed. See our winner of the 2015 Hyundai Elantra in this week’s paper! Metroland Media would like to thank everyone who entered our contest!!!
Back home in Madoc Township, Zuma the bull is still the Grand Champion but with a little less stress and less grooming. Showing their prize stock are Kevin Baker, Ashley, Colin and Sherry Baker. Photo: Diane Sherman
TRENT HILLS
Independent
Independentt HILLS Independen Independent TRENT BRIGHTON
The magazine will be distributed with the Brighton & Trent Hills Independent and The Contact newspapers on December 4th.
Call your advertising sales representative at
613-966-2034 x560 R0013021384
Section B - Thursday, November 27, 2014 B15
Thank You
The family of the late Douglas Hugh Scott wish to express their sincere thanks for all the cards, phone calls, flowers and food offerings. Thank you to Rev. Bruce Fraser for the service and house calls. The ladies of St. Paul’s United Church for their kind acts and the Stirling Funeral Service. Also thanks to Peter Stewart for the Eulogy and Barb Drensek & Denise Sproul for taking care of lunch after the service. Your kindness means so much.
Paying cash for Coins, Collectibles, Gold. Tootallbob - Ontario Picker at “The Water Lily” Hastings, 8 Bridge St. North. Nov. 29th, only 9:00-6:00 Bob 289-228-1295 tootallbob@sympatico.ca R&J’s Country Night Theme Dance! Throw on your jeans & Cowboy/girl hats! Sat Nov 29th! Top floor. All music types after 11 p.m. Trenton Legion, 9 p.m.-1 a.m. www.romeoandjuliet.ca 613-392-9850.
DEATH NOTICE
PARKER, Gordon Raymond passed away peacefully at Lakeridge Health Bowmanville on Sunday, November 16th, 2014, at age 87 years. Loving husband of Doreen Jane (nee Simpson). Dear father of Matthew. Cherished by his sister Joyce, sister-in-law Thelma and his many nieces, nephews and cousins. He will be sadly missed by his granddaughters Victoria and Brooke. Gordon worked for JWT in the advertising industry for over 40 years. He was an avid golfer and was involved in many clubs and organizations both in Brighton and Toronto. The family will receive friends at the Brighton Funeral Home, 130 Main Street, Brighton (613-475-2121) on Wednesday, November 26th, 2014 from 10:00 o’clock. Service to follow in the funeral home chapel at 11 o’clock. Cremation with interment at Pine Hills Cemetery, Scarborough on Wednesday, November 26th at 2:00 o’clock. A Celebration of Gordon’s Life will follow. As an expression of sympathy, donations to the Canadian Cancer Society, would be appreciated by the family. www.rushnellfamilyservices.com CL447264
Born February 17th, 1939 in Belleville, Ontario. David Bradford, passed away November 13th, 2014 in Brighton, Ontario. He is survived by his wife Marilyn Mae (Killam), his daughter Dawn King (Bill), his son David (Claire), his grandchildren Liam and Sarah King, his brother Edward (Simone) and several nieces and nephews. Predeceased by his parents David and Nora (Tett) and his brother Roger. A family graveside service to be held at the RCMP National Memorial Cemetery in Ottawa (Beechwood Cemetery), followed by a reception for family and friends on Friday, November 21st, 2014 at 1:30 p.m. A reception for friends in Brighton will take place at the Sandpiper Community Centre on Saturday, November 29th, 2014 from 2:00 p.m. In lieu of flowers, a donation to the Canadian Cancer Society would be appreciated by the family. Arrangements in care of the Brighton Funeral Home Ltd. www.rushnellfamilyservices.com
STEEL BUILDINGS/METAL BUILDINGS UP TO 60% OFF!30x40, 40x60, 50x80, 60x100,80x100 sell for balance owed! Call: Butcher Supplies, Leather 1 - 8 0 0 - 4 5 7 - 2 2 0 6 www.crownsteelbuild+ Craft Supplies and Animal Control Products. Get ings.ca your Halfords 134 page FREE CATALOG . DARK GREEN SOFA 1-800-353-7864 or email: approx 99” long order@halfordhide.com. 613-970-3396 Visit our Web Store w w w. h a l f o r d s m a i l o rWANTED der.com.
FOR SALE
Buying Comic Books. Old comic books in the house? Turn them into cash today. My hobby, your gain. kentscomics@yahoo.ca 613-539-9617.
DUMP RUNS
FOR SALE
Two winter tires, just like new, Uniroyal Tiger Paw Touring, size 225-60R-17 Telephone: 613-395-6363 Stirling or 705-924-2482 Warkworth
CENTRAL BOILER OUTDOOR WOOD FURNACES
CARD OF THANKS
Dining Room Set
LETH, Margit – of Belleville. Passed away peacefully at the Belleville General Hospital, on Saturday November 22nd, 2014, in her 85th year. Beloved wife for 62 years of the late John Leth. Dear Mother of Marianne Coutlee (late Charles) of Ottawa, Gerda Hatfield (Todd) of Owen Sound, and Peggy Ann Minifie (Scott) of Cobourg. Loved by her eight grandchildren, and five great grandchildren, and their families. Margit will be greatly missed by her special friends Lis Hansen, and Irene Weatherstone, she will also be missed by her many neighbors and friends from her Bridge Clubs, and the Red Hat Society. In keeping with Margit’s wishes, cremation has taken place. A Celebration of Life will be held at a later date. Donations to the Belleville General Hospital Foundation, or a Charity of your choice would be appreciated. QUINTE CREMATION AND BURIAL SERVICES (613-962-7900)
CL446763
CLASSIFIED AD DEADLINE: Mondays at 3 p.m.
613-392-8550 Bernie CL447422
FERGUSON, NORMA EVELYN passed away peacefully at her home in Brighton on Sunday, November 23rd, 2014, in her 96th year. Norma was the daughter of the late Clifford Twiddy and the late Emma (Couch). Beloved wife of 71 years to the late William Kenneth “Ken” Ferguson. She was the loving mother of Diane and her husband Milan Cocek. Dear Nan will be sadly missed by her grandchildren, Christopher and his wife Kelly of Halifax, Christina and her husband Jack Barclay of Courtice, and Craig and his wife Aleesha of Smithfield. Ever remembered by her great grandchildren, Ben and Emily Barclay, Layne, Trey, Vaughn, and Mila Cocek. Predeceased by her sister Nanetta. The family will receive friends at the Brighton Funeral Home, 130 Main Street, Brighton (613 475-2121) on Wednesday, November 26th, 2014 from 1:30 p.m. Service to follow in the funeral home at 2:30 p.m. Interment Greenwood Cemetery, Smithfield. As an expression of sympathy, donations to the Victorian Order of Nurses, or Community Care Brighton, or to a Charity of your Choice would be appreciated by the family. www.rushnellfamilyservices.com CL447266
CENTRAL BOILER
OUTDOOR FURNACES
2014 WINTER REBATE WITH A SAVINGS UP TO $500 ON SELECTED MODELS Call for more information
Your local DEALER
WOOD HEAT SOLUTIONS www.chesher.ca
Wanted: Standing timber, mature hard/softwood. Also wanted, natural stone, cubicle or flat, any size. 613-968-5182.
FARM
Dog Grooming by Bernadette. Professional services with TLC. New clients welcome. 550 TrentonFrankford Rd, 1 minute north of 401. (613)243-8245.
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
Table with 4 chairs, 24 inch leaf, oak. Made in Canada. $600 OBO. Call
(613) 475-1044
Section B - Thursday, November 27, 2014
5,990
$
Standing timber, hard maple, soft maple, red and white oak, etc. Quality workmanship guaranteed. 705-957-7087.
PETS
FOR SALE
Starting at
MUTTON METAL SALVAGE Free removal of scrap metal. Call Jeff at 905-344-7733.
Airless spray painting, roofs & sides, steel roofs repairs. 5 & 6” seamless eavestrough, soffit, facia, gutterguard installed or delivered. Free estimates. 1(877)490-9914.
Junk removal & willing to move articles for individuals. 613-475-9591
THE FURNACE BROKER Godfrey, ON | 613-374-2566
For receptions, weddings, etc. Catering & bar facilities available. Wheelchair accessible.
CARD OF THANKS
WANTED
FOR SALE
Delivery and maintenance package included. Limited time offer. Instant rebates up to $1,000.
AIR COND. HALL
We would like to thank Cherlee & Wayne, Lynn & Wayne, Angela & Denny, Kelly & Brad, Shelley, Todd & Glenda and all of our grandchildren for all of their planning and effort that they put into our 50th Wedding Anniversary party. Thank you to all who came out to visit despite the poor weather, and to all those who sent their well wishes and cards. It was a special day not to be forgotten. Love Shirley & Larry Pressick
B16
SUPT. DAVID ALFRED BRADFORD, RETIRED RCMP
ANNOUNCEMENT
BRIGHTON LEGION BR 100
Thank You
CARD OF THANKS
Christmas Bazaar. St. Andrew’s Church, Norwood. Sat. Dec. 6. 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Lunch 11 a.m.-1:00 p.m. $7.
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Eleanor & Brenda (Peter), Derrick & Kerry (Angela).
Campbellford Legion presents karaoke with Shawn Nelson, Saturday November 29, 9:00 p.m. - 1:00 a.m. A building fundraiser for information call 705-653-2450
DEATH NOTICE
FOR SALE Fish Aquariums, 40 gallon, 25 gallon & 5 gallon, pumps, filters & heaters included. 613-475-2417
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
,OREITA -ACK
CL442017
It was a day I will never forget.
COMING EVENTS
613-966-2034
DEATH NOTICE
CL458257
To my family, thank you so much for all the kind words, work and planning that went into my birthday celebration.
Sell it fast!
Carpet, laminate, hardwood flooring deals. 12 mm laminate installed with free pad $2.29/sq. ft.; engineered hardwood $2.49/sq ft.; Free shop at home service. saillianflooring.com 1-800-578-0497, 905-373-2260.
DEATH NOTICE
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We have the key to unlock locked-in pension funds. Free consultation. To relieve financial stress, call 613-779-8008.
SKS Automatic rifle 30 calibre, folding stock, scope mount 180 round of amo, must have P.A.L. 613-395-3590
FOR SALE
CL458741
I would like to thank everyone who attended my 90th Birthday celebration. For all the cards, gifts, Gideon donations, and plaques from various heads of government. They were all very much appreciated.
FOR SALE
CL447036
Debt Relief Allen Madigan Certified Credit cousellor. Solving financial problems for over 15 years. Renew hope seniors respected. Free confidential consultation. 613-779-8008
4HANK 9OU
Thanks so much everyone.
ANNOUNCEMENT
CL447253
CARD OF THANKS
CL443017
CARD OF THANKS
FRANKFORD, ON 613.398.1611 BANCROFT,` ON 613.332.1613
We Sell Gas Refrigerators!
SMITTY’S APPLIANCES LTD. 1-613-969-0287
MORTGAGES
FOR RENT
165 Herchimer Ave. Spacious 1 & 2 bdrm suites! GOING FAST! Outdoor pool, sauna, social rm w/events, gym, laundry rm.
MORTGAGES
Drop in for your tour TODAY!
FSCO Lic# M08002475 Broker# 12236 DLC Smart Debt Independently Owned and Operated
FARM
FARM
Twin Sisters Hive & Honey Products
231 Frankford Rd., Stirling
Christmas OPEN HOUSE
November 29 & December 6
s ,IQUID !ND #REAMED (ONEY "ULK 0REPACKED s "EESWAX #ANDLES 3KIN #REAM ,IP "ALMS s (ONEY 'IFT "ASKETS -ANY /THER 'REAT 'IFT )DEAS Open Saturdays 10 am - 4 pm
CL458856
Closing Dec. 20 for the winter, re-opens spring 2015
613-827-7277
AMAZING
SUNSTRUMâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S HOME IMPROVEMENTS
www.realstar.ca
AMENITIES!
Bay Terrace Apartments
CL458968
APARTMENTS APARTMENTS APARTMENTS APARTMENTS APARTMENTS APARTMENTS Featuring Featuring2 2bedroom bedroomapartments apartments APARTMENTS Featuring 2BRIGHTON bedroom apartments with allallamenities including: with amenities including: Featuring 2 bedroom apartments P PR RA AD D A A CC OO UU RR TT P R A D A C O U R T P PR RA AD D A A CC OO UU RR TT P R A D A C O U R T P R A D2 bedroom A C O U R T Featuring apartments
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with all amenities including: Featuring 2 air bedroom apartments fridge, and fridge, stove, airconditioning conditioning and with allstove, including: with allamenities amenities including: Featuring 2 bedroom apartments fridge, air conditioning and with allstove, amenities including: wheelchair access. wheelchair access. fridge, stove, airairconditioning and fridge, stove, conditioning with all amenities including: wheelchair access. fridge, stove, air conditioning and and The apartments attractive and The apartments are attractive and wheelchair access. wheelchair access. fridge, stove, airare conditioning The apartments are attractive and wheelchair access. the buildings are secure. the buildings are secure. TheThe apartments are attractive apartments are attractive and wheelchair access. the buildings are secure. The apartments are attractiveand and Ideal for Seniors or retired couples Ideal for Seniors or retired couples theIdeal buildings are secure. the buildings are secure. for Seniors or retired couples The apartments are attractive and the buildings are secure. Ideal for Seniors or retired couples CALL Ideal for Seniors or retired couples CALL the buildings areorsecure. Ideal for Seniors retired couples CALL 1-800-706-4459 1-800-706-4459 CALL Ideal for Seniors or retired couples CALL 1-800-706-4459 CALL 613-475-3793 1-800-706-4459 1-800-706-4459 CALL 613-475-3793
Kenmau Ltd.
Kenmau Ltd.
Call Kenmau Ltd.
613-392-2601
Brighton, ON
(Since 1985)
Property Management
613-392-2601
TRENTON WEST SIDE
(Albert Street) 1 bedroom upper apartment with fridge, stove and water included. $550/mth plus utilities.
Property Management (Since 1985)
905-355-1357
Attractive 2 bdrm with fridge & stove, water. Window coverings and freshly painted. Building has security entrance & laundry facilities. $700/mth plus heat & hydro.
BELLEVILLE
(Albert Street) 1 bedroom upper apartment with fridge, stove, heat and water included. $675/ mth + hydro
Electrical. Plumbing. Carpentry. Painting. Flooring. Cleanup
BRIGHTON
9am - -5pm 613-475-3793 9am 5pm 1-800-706-4459 613-475-3793 9am - -5pm www.pradacourt.com 9am 5pm www.pradacourt.com 613-475-3793 9am - 5pm www.pradacourt.com www.pradacourt.com www.pradacourt.com
General Home Repair & Remodeling
334 Dundas St. E. Renoâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d bach, 1 & 2 bdrms, GREAT VALUE! Indoor pool, fitness facility, social rm, laundry rm, BBQ area, covered pkg. Move-in Incentives.
CL445824
CL458961
613-966-2034
1-888-862-0819
BUSINESS SERVICES
Attractive 2 bedroom apartment with fridge, stove and utilities included. Laundry facilities in building. $875/ month.
Kenmau Ltd. (Since 1985)
Property Management
613-392-2601 CL430449
FANTASTIC FIND! Brockville Apts. Office at 91 Front Ave. W. Beautiful 1 & 2 bdrm suites, GREAT FIND! Laundry, events, secure property, on-site mgmt. DAILY OPEN HOUSES! Call now. 866-455-3029 realstar.ca
Dennis 905-269-6295 Sharon 905-925-4081
NOTICES
RETIREMENT APARTMENTS, ALL INCLUSIVE Meals, transportation, activities daily. Short Leases. Monthly Specials! Call 866-338-2607
WORK WANTED
Hardwood Floor Installation and resurfacing. Ceramics. Light renovations and upgrades. Over 30 years experience. Please call for free estimate 613-394-1908.
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
Ken Chard Construction. Renovations, decks, siding, sidewalks, fences, ceramic, windows, painting etc. Free estimates. Call: 613-398-7439.
COMPUTER
WORK WANTED
RESIDENTIAL SNOWPLOWING
Freelance IT
within 10 km radius of Stirling
Computer Services Network Support
Call Tom 613-849-9622 GARAGE SALE
GARAGE SALE
STREET FLEA MARKET
ALL NEW Furniture & Antique Store 40% OFF! NOW OPEN OPEN
ALL NEW STREET MOTORS SALES DIVISION 613-205-1212 NOW OPEN
â&#x20AC;&#x153;Home & Officeâ&#x20AC;? Factory Imaging Virus Removal Data Recovery Wireless Setup Internet & Email â&#x20AC;&#x153;On-site Serviceâ&#x20AC;? Ph: (613) 902-5455 www.freelance-it.ca CL458991
7 DAYS 9am to 4pm 613-284-2000 streetfleamarket.net 5 MILES SOUTH OF SMITHS FALLS CORNER OF HWY 15 & BAY ROAD
NOTICES
Contract Drivers & Dispatcher
CL447033
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
FULL TIME & PART TIME
NOTICES
SURPLUS VEHICLES FOR SALE BY PUBLIC ON LINE AUCTION GovDeals http://www.govdeals.ca The following vehicles are posted on the Government Surplus On Line Auction Site. Bidding is open to everyone. Auction will end Thursday December 4, 2014 in accordance with the GovDeals website auction rules. Interested parties should visit the website (address as shown above) for further details. s 2006 Ford F-150 s 2000 Ford F-150 s 2000 GMC Sierra Classic 2500 Reg. Cab 4WD s 2002 Ford F-250 SD XL 4WD s Toro Greens Mower s John Deere - 1435 Mower s Case 580K - 4 X 4 Loader The vehicles may be viewed at the Trenton Public Works Yard, 30 Pelham Street, Trenton, Ontario. Monday â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Friday 7:30 am â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 4:00 pm. The City makes no representation regarding the condition of any of these vehicles. Vehicles are sold â&#x20AC;&#x153;AS IS â&#x20AC;&#x201C; WHERE ISâ&#x20AC;?. It is the sole responsibility of each potential buyer to determine the condition of the vehicle(s) prior to submitting a bid. If you have any questions please contact Lisa Mason, Purchasing Clerk at 613-392-2841 Ext: 4480
PLEASE NOTE: BOOKING DEADLINE FOR ADS IS MONDAYS AT 3 P.M.
Sell it fast
CREDIT PROBLEMS? I HAVE SOLUTIONS! Andrea Johnston A.M.P 200 Dundas Street E, Suite 305 Belleville, ON K8N 1E3 OfďŹ ce: 613-968-5151 Toll Free: 1-855-968-5151 Email: andrea005@sympatico.ca Web: www.mortgagesbyandrea.com
Professionals Needed. Looking for career-minded persons willing to speak to small groups or do oneon-one Presentations locally. Part Time or Full Time. A car and internet access are necessary. Training and ongoing support provided. Build financial security. Paid daily. Call Diana 1.866.306.5858
HELP WANTED!! Make up to $1000 a week mailing brochures from Home! Genuine Opportunity! No Experience Required. Start Immediately! h t t p : / / w w w. l o c a l m a i l ers.net
HELP WANTED
Ads can be placed by calling 613-966-2034 ext. 560
CONSOLIDATE Debts Mortgages to 90% No income, Bad credit OK! Better Option Mortgage #10969 1-800-282-1169 www.mortgageontario.com
FOR RENT
PRINCE WILLIAM APARTMENTS
â&#x20AC;˘ Renewals â&#x20AC;˘ Mortgages & Loans â&#x20AC;˘ Leasing - 1st, 2nd & Private Mortgages â&#x20AC;˘ Free Down Payment Program OAC â&#x20AC;˘ â&#x20AC;˘ Bank turn downs, self employed welcomed
$ MONEY $
HELP WANTED WORK AT HOME!! $570/WEEKLY** ASSEMBLING CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS + GREAT MONEY with our FREE MAILER PROGRAM + FREE HOME TYPING PROGRAM. PT/FT - Experience Unnecessary - Genuine! www. AvailableHelpWanted.com
CALL TODAY!
METRO CITY MORTGAGES
MORTGAGES
LEGAL CRIMINAL RECORD? Canadian Record Suspension (Criminal pardon) seals record. American waiver allows legal entry. Why risk employment, business, travel, licensing, deportation, peace of mind? Free consultation: 1-800-347-2540
BUSINESS SERVICES County Water TreatmentSofteners, U.V. Lights, R.O. systems, chemical free iron and sulphur filters. Sales, installation, service and repair. Steven Menna. (613)967-7143.
CL455926_0918
/FF s 2ES &RONT 3T #ENTURY 0LACE "ELLEVILLE CRAIG?MARBELLE LKS NET Each office independently owned and operated.
FOR RENT
Hi! I am an attractive widow. I have my own home in Trenton, I am looking to meet a caring gentleman 75- 79 yrs, non smoker, no pets, to share my home. Please send photo and phone number to my daughter 1020 Tillison Ave, Cobourg, ON K9A 5N3
HELP WANTED
CL446827
2 bedroom apartment, $700/month + Heat and Hydro. Parking Laundry facilities, balcony, mature building. No pets. Available now (613)392-3069
t.035GA(&4t L O A .BSCFMMF N Financial Services Inc. $
In loving memory, Theresa, Chris, Karen, Kathy, Connie and families
FARM
Warkworth Main St., 546 sq. ft. store with parking and water included, rent is $550/month plus utilities and HST. Call 705-927-8409.
CL460572
And if I go, While youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re still here... Know that I live on, Vibrating to a different measure -behind a thin veil you cannot see through. I wait for the time when we can soar together again, -both aware of each other. Until then, live your life to its fullest. And when you need me, Just whisper my name in your heart, ...I will be there.
Havelock - Great for seniors! One bedroom on ground level no stairs, Buy 1 wetek newly decorated, central! ge 1 free ly located $700. ConResidential items only trolled access to quiet 1-888-967-3237 building. Appliances, storage unit, parking and launLOVELY, dry incl. Utilities extra FINANCIAL / INCOME TAX FINANCIAL / INCOME TAX BAHAMAS... Breezy cottage in quaint 705-778-5442. town on Eleuthera 2 bdrms $700/wk. Fabulous Marmora- 2 bedroom lowbeaches, excellent snorkel- er level duplex. Newly ing and diving. renovated. Immediate oc613-472-0789. Leave cupancy. $800.00 plus gas DEBT CONSOLIDATION (furnace) & hydro. 1st/last message and number PURCHASE FINANCING reqâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d. 416-497-7260 & CONSTRUCTION LOANS Belleville, Old East Hill, 2 Need a home? Call the bedroom apartment in Hastings Housing Requiet heritage building, source Centre. Services gas fireplace, non smok- offered in Belleville, Quinte Craig Blower ing, $850 including heat, West, North and Centre MORTGAGE BROKER 613-849-2944 Hastings. (613)969-1748. Lic. #10343 Metroland Media Classifieds
PERSONAL
CL460547
Author unknown
PERSONAL
FOR RENT
CL442555 CL442556
Dec. 1938 - Nov. 2013 Ascension
FOR RENT
CL459015
Remembering Wayne Gerow
COMMERCIAL RENT
CL443036
COMMERCIAL RENT
IN MEMORIAM
Section B - Thursday, November 27, 2014
B17
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
STIRLING MANOR NURSING HOME requires a Food Service Worker
Please forward resume by December 4, 2014 to Nutrition Manager, Stirling Manor Nursing Home, 218 Edward Street Box 220, Stirling ON, KOK 3E0. Fax 613-395-0930 or email coutram@bellnet.ca. Only those selected for an interview will be contacted.
CL458825
(must hold a Food Service Worker certiďŹ cate or be enrolled in the Food Service Worker program) to work in the dietary, housekeeping and laundry departments.
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
PHARMACY ASSISTANT WANTED Part-time hours. Knowledge of Nexxsys system an asset. Please apply in person or by email with resume to: 2253general@rexall.com
Come Join Our Team!
WANTED
Belleville Pharma Plus
AUTOMOTIVE TECHNICIAN WANTED
173 Dundas St. E., Belleville
â&#x20AC;˘ Alignment experience an asset â&#x20AC;˘ Willing to train right candidate â&#x20AC;˘ Must be able to perform general repairs â&#x20AC;˘ Strong diagnostic skills â&#x20AC;˘ Drivers license and abstract required upon successful hiring â&#x20AC;˘ Competitive wages and benefits NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
! " ! " ! !
# $ % & ' ( ! " ) ! " ! # * ! " ! " * + "
Submit resume in person to: Ed Caddick or email servicemanager1@kawarthachrysler.com
Network
CL455839
ADVERTISE ACROSS ONTARIO OR ACROSS THE COUNTRY! For more information contact your local newspaper.
MORTGAGES
FOR SALE
AS SEEN ON TV - Need a MORTGAGE, Home Equity Loan, Better Rate? Bad Credit, Self-Employed, Bankrupt? Been turned down? Facing Foreclosure, Power of Sale? CALL US NOW TOLL-FREE 1-877-733-4424 and speak to a licensed mortgage agent. MMAmortgages.com specializes in residential, commercial, rural, agriculture, farms, & land mortgages. Vi s i t : w w w. M M A m o r t g a g e s . c o m (Lic#12126). $$$ 1st, 2nd, 3rd MORTGAGES Debt Consolidation, Refinancing, R e n o v a t i o n s , Ta x A r r e a r s , n o CMHC fees. $50K you pay $208.33/month (OAC). No income, bad credit, power of sale stopped!! BETTER OPTION MORTGAGES, CALL TODAY Toll-Free 1-800-282-1169, www.mortgageontario.com (LIC# 10969). 1 s t & 2 n d M O RT G A G E S f r o m 2.45% VRM and 2.99% FIXED. A l l C r e d i t Ty p e s C o n s i d e r e d . Let us help you SAVE thousands on the right mortgage! Purchasing, Re-financing, Debt Consolidation, Home Renovations...CALL 1-800225-1777, www.homeguardfunding.ca (LIC #10409).
#1 HIGH SPEED INTERNET $32.95/Month Absolutely no ports are blocked Unlimited Downloading Up to 11Mbps Download & 800Kbps Upload ORDER TODAY AT: www.acanac.ca or CALL TOLL-FREE: 1-866-281-3538
FINANCIAL SERVICES
Consultation
$$ MONEY $$ Â&#x2021; 1ST, 2ND & 3RD MORTGAGES FOR ANY PURPOSE Â&#x2021; '(%7 &2162/,'$7,21 Â&#x2021; %$' &5(',7 Â&#x2021; 7$; 25 0257*$*( $55($56 Â&#x2021; '(&5($6( 3$<0(176 UP TO 75% Â&#x2021; 6(/) (03/2<(' Â&#x2021; 12 3522) 2) ,1&20( Ontario-Wide Financial 1-888-307-7799 www.ontario-widefinancial.com
ANNOUNCEMENTS
MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION is an indemand career in Canada! Employers have work-at-home positions available. Get the online training you need from an employer-trusted program. Visit: CareerStep.ca/MT or 1-888-5280809 to start training for your work-athome career today!
(Licence #12456)
EMPLOYMENT OPPS.
NEWFOUNDLAND CHARM MEETS LABRADOR SPLENDOUR! Experience ancient geology at Gros Morne, lose yourself in the Torngat mountains and spot whales, polar bears, and seals from our beautiful ship. Quote Ontario Newspapers AND SAVE $500! www.adventurecanada.com
Section B - Thursday, November 27, 2014
ADVERTISING REACH MILLIONS OF CUSTOMERS IN ONTARIO WITH ONE EASY CALL! Your Classified Ad or Display Ad would appear in weekly newspapers each week across Ontario in urban, suburban and rural areas. For more information Call Today 647-3502558, Email: kmagill@rogers.com or visit: www.OntarioClassifiedAds.com.
TOLL-FREE:
WANTED
1-800 363-7566
FIREARMS. All types wanted, estates, collections, single i t e m s , m i l i t a r y. We h a n d l e a l l paperwork and transportation. Licensed Dealer. 1.866.960.0045 www.dollars4guns.com.
14 Front St. S. Mississauga (TICO # 04001400)
HELP WANTED MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTIONISTS needed! Employers seeking over 200 additional CanScribe graduates. Student loans available. Income-tax receipts issued. Start training today. Work from Home! www.canscribe.com. info@canscribe.com. 1.800.466.1535
Connect with Ontarians â&#x20AC;&#x201C; extend your business reach! www.networkclassified.org B18
STEEL BUILDINGS STEEL BUILDINGS/METAL BUILDINGS 60% OFF! 20x28, 30x40, 40x62, 45x90, 50x120, 60x150, 80x100 sell for balance owed! Call 1-800-457-2206 www.crownsteelbuildings.ca
FREE
SAWMILLS from only $4,397 - MAKE M O N E Y & S AV E M O N E Y w i t h your own bandmill - Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. FREE Info & DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com/400OT 1-800-566-6899 Ext:400OT.
BUILDING COMMUNITY - ONE STAR AT A TIME. Recognize a six to 17 year old with the prestigious 2014 Ontario Junior Citizen of the Year Award nomination by Nov. 30. www.ocna.org/juniorcitizen or call 905-639-8720 ext. 221.
VACATION/TRAVEL
DRIVERS WANTED LAIDLAW CARRIERS VAN DIVISION requires experienced AZ licensed drivers to run the U.S. Premium mileage rate. Home weekly. New equipment. Also hiring Owner Operators. 1-800-263-8267
LEGAL
LEGAL
LEGAL
LEGAL
LEGAL
LEGAL
LEGAL
LEGAL
LEGAL
LEGAL
NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS
All claims against the estate of Helen Mae Bailey, late of the Township of Stirling-Rawdon, County of Hastings, who died on or about 05 November 2014, must be filed with the undersigned estate solicitor on or before 22 December 2014, after which date the estate will be distributed having regard only to the claims of which the Estate Trustees then shall have notice.
All claims against the estate of John Bronislaw Tokarewicz, late of the Municipality of Marmora and Lake, County of Hastings, who died on or about 12 October 2014, must be filed with the undersigned estate solicitor on or before 22 December 2014, after which date the estate will be distributed having regard only to the claims of which the Estate Trustees then shall have notice.
All claims against the estate of Lila Doreen Ackers (aka Lela Doreen Ackers) late of the Township of Stirling-Rawdon, County of Hastings, who died on or about 21 September 2014, must be filed with the undersigned estate solicitor on or before 05th December 2014, after which date the estate will be distributed having regard only to the claims of which the Estate Trustee then shall have notice.
DATED at Stirling this 24th day of November 2014.
DATED at Stirling this 10th day of November 2014
DATED at Stirling this 24th day of November 2014. Brad Comeau, Estate Solicitor BRAD COMEAU PROFESSIONAL CORPORATION, LAW OFFICE, 33 MILL STREET, P.O. BOX 569, STIRLING, ON K0K 3E0 Ph: 613-395-3397, Fx: 613-395-3398
Anita Paven and James Tokarewicz, Estate Trustees by Brad Comeau, Estate Solicitor BRAD COMEAU PROFESSIONAL CORPORATION, LAW OFFICE, 33 MILL STREET, P.O. BOX 569, STIRLING, ON K0K 3E0 Ph: 613-395-3397, Fx: 613-395-3398
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
Sharon Lawrence, Estate Trustee by Brad Comeau, Estate Solicitor BRAD COMEAU PROFESSIONAL CORPORATION, LAW OFFICE, 33 MILL STREET, P.O. BOX 569, STIRLING, ON K0K 3E0 Ph: 613-395-3397, Fx: 613-395-3398 CAREER OPPORTUNITY
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
1 AD 5 NEWSPAPERS 1 SMALL PRICE Wedding Announcements starting from
$21.50
1 column, without photo CL447351
CL458823
NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS
CL458828
NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
Call 613-966-2034 x 560 or 888-967-3237 CAREER OPPORTUNITY
Fantastic Scenery, Located an hour east of Toronto, the thriving Southeastern Ontario Fresh Air & community of Northumberland County has a rich history of agricultural Friendly production, world-class manufacturing, and economic viability. As the Faces upper tier of municipal government, we weave together seven diverse yet complementary municipalities.
Weigh Scale Operator • part-time (as required) You will fill an existing vacancy. You will operate the weigh scale and vehicle recording systems for the County of Northumberland’s landfill and transfer facilities as well as serve as the primary contact to the public, providing direction on waste disposal and placement at the facility. Your two-year community college diploma covering courses in customer service, administration, and basic computer skills is coupled with one year of experience in a related position or other positions requiring customer service, general administration, data entry, and cash management. You also have experience working with databases and cash as well as using a cash register. Training in the use and application of Geoware software is considered an asset. Please submit a resume and cover letter, by 4:30 p.m. on Friday, December 12, 2014, to: Human Resources County of Northumberland 555 Courthouse Road Cobourg, ON K9A 5J6 e-mail: hr@northumberlandcounty.ca fax: 905-372-3046 The successful candidate will be required to submit a satisfactory Criminal Reference Check or Vulnerable Sector Search prior to the commencement of employment. We thank all applicants for their interest; however, only those selected for an interview will be notified. Please note that accommodations are available, upon request, to support potential applicants with disabilities throughout the recruitment process. Please e-mail your request to accessibility@northumberlandcounty.ca or call 905-372-3329 ext. 2327.
CL449905
Alternative formats of this job posting are available upon request.
www.northumberlandcounty.ca
CLASSIFIEDS 13.00 $
s EXT
WORDS
Resdiential ads only. Deadline: Mondays at 3 p.m.
1 ad, 5 newspapers, 69,000 homes plus online!
Section B - Thursday, November 27, 2014
B19
EVENTS
Ads can be placed online at www.EMCclassified.ca or by calling 613-966-2034 x560 613-475-0255 or 1-888-WORD-ADS
RESIDENTIAL ADS starting at
12.75/wk
$
2nd week FREE!
COMMERCIAL ADS Includes rental ads
QUALITY ITEMS AT A FRACTION OF RETAIL PRICES
at www.estatetreasures.ca
Tel: 905.373.0501 Toll Free: 1.855.503.2963 Fax: 905.373.1467 Email: pn@waddingtons.ca 9 Elgin St. E., Unit 6, Cobourg ON K9A 0A1 Section B - Thursday, November 27, 2014
Tuesdays, 1-3 p.m., Fun Darts. All Welcome. Campbellford Legion Branch 103, 34 Bridge St W 705-653-2450 Indoor Walking and Exercise Program, St. Johnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s United Church Auditorium, every Tuesday and Friday, 10-11am. Bring clean, comfortable shoes. Program is free. 50 Bridge St. W. Campbellford. Info: 705-653-2283. Learn the Art of Taoist Tai Chi classes available throughout the week, Community Resource Centre 65 Bridge St, Campbellford, Join at anytime. Info: 705 696 1841 or 705 243 5216. Kinettesâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Childrens Christmas Shop, Friday Nov 28, 11 a.m.-6 p.m. and Saturday, Nov 29, 10 a.m.-? p.m. 17 Bridge St W. (next to B & Corner Store). Gifts $0.25 to $3.00. Bake sale Saturday. The Campbellford & District Horticultural Society Christmas Potluck Dinner and monthly meeting. Members & guests welcome. Mon. Dec. 1, 6:30 pm, Christ Church Anglican, Campbellford. http://www.gardenontario.org/site.php/ campbellford & on Facebook! TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly), every Wednesday, St. Andrews Presbyterian Church, 17 Ranney St. S. (side door). Weigh-ins 5:30-6:00 p.m. Meetings 6:00-6:30 p.m. Join any time. All welcome. Continued on page B22
AUCTION SALE WEDNESDAY, DEC 3/14 AT 5:00 P.M. DOUG JARRELL SALES ARENA, BELLEVILLE Antique oak dining table, antique dresser/oval tilt mirror, steel single bed, wooden gun cabinet, older fridge, assorted old wooden chairs, antique pump organ, framed oak sideboard mirror, rod back rocker, old high chair, childâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s wagon, wooden boxes, old trunks, qty. of glass & china, lamps, stilliards, old prints & frames, old Christmas decorations, Royalty pieces, Hastings & Prince Edward and Frontenac & Lennox Addington atlases, qty. of old post cards, stamps, old maps, quilt top, train set, crock, finger jug, ship models, wooden rake, 2 antique walking ploughs, Renfrew cream separator, old hay car, old farm tools, hardware & numerous other pieces from this old farmstead. See my web site for detailed list & photos. AUCTIONEERS: DOUG JARRELL & BEN TREVERTON 613-969-1033 www.dougjarrellauctions.com
CL446829
AUCTION SALE ESTATE OF TERENCE BINGLEY MUSICAL INSTRUMENT AUCTION
SATURDAY: Sterling Silver & Silver Plate, Early English Porcelain, Crystal, Dinner Sets, Bronzes, Oriental Items, Lusters, Collectorsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Items, Linens, Books, Decorative Items, Watercolours & Oils. SUNDAY: Diamond Point Cupboard, Quebec Pine Cupboards, Display Cabinets, French Furniture, Dining Room Furniture, Modern Design Italian White Leather Sofa Set, Modern Glass & Marble Table & Italian Designer Chairs, Carved French Armoire, Lighting & Decorative Items. Note: Large Selection of Priced Modern & Antique Furniture
BROWSE OUR HOME FURNISHINGS CONSIGNMENT STORE-REDUCTIONS WEEKLY
B20
www.warnersauction.com $&-&#3"5*/( :&"34 */ #64*/&44
9 Elgin Street East, Cobourg
Office: 250 Sidney St. (in the parking lot behind Avaya) Belleville
14.80/wk
(BSZ 8BSOFS "VDUJPOFFS t
ANTIQUE, COLLECTORSâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; & FINE FURNITURE AUCTION SATURDAY November 29th & SUNDAY November 30th Preview @ 9:30 a.m. Auction @ 11:00 a.m.
LARGE INDOOR YARD SALE. Watch the Website for Updates & Photos. www.waddingtons.ca/cobourg
CAMPBELLFORD Kent YMCA Child Care Centre before and after school and PA day care. Kent Public School. Call 905-372-4318 x 404 or 705-632-9205 for rates and info.
Warnerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Auction Hall, 12927 Hwy 2, Just West of Colborne. /PUF OFX TUBSU UJNF XJOUFS IPVST Owners moved, nice selection of small hand power tools, selection household articles - everything from Christmas decorations to pots & pans, dishes, miscellaneous articles. Matching washer & dryer set like new, 30â&#x20AC;? electric stove, pine bedroom set with nice pillow top mattress set, dresser with mirror & 2 night stands, occasional chairs, sofa, small wardrobe, pine corner cupboard, walnut chest of drawers, small tables, table & chair set, qty collectable pcs, books, selection of artwork, prints etc. Plus countless other articles too numerous to list. Terms: Cash, Cheque with ID, Visa, M/C, Interac.
Waddingtons.ca/Cobourg
starting at
$
BRIGHTON Supperâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Ready, Trinity St Andrewâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s United Church, every Wednesday, 5 pm. A community meal for those for whom a free meal is a blessing. Donations welcome. Trinity-St. Andrewâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s United Church Clothing Depot open Wed., Thurs. 10am â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 2pm, Fri. 10am â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 8pm, Sat. 10am â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 1pm. Closed Sun. Mon & Tuesday. For pick ups: 613-475-2705. Callanetics Class: Stretch of Yoga, strength of ballet. Fridays, 10 a.m. at Trinity-St. Andrews United Church, 56 Prince Edward St. Brighton. Call Gail to register 613-967-4447. Neil Diamond Tribute Show featuring Joey Purpura, Brighton Legion, 25 Park St. Friday, Nov. 28. Dinner 6 p.m., show 7:30. Tickets $20 in advance, at the Legion. $25 at the door. 613-475-1044. â&#x20AC;&#x2039;â&#x20AC;&#x2039;Twelve Drummers Drum Circle, Dec. 4 and 18 - every second Thursday from 7-8:30 p.m. Explore rhythm. Play djembe. For address and information, email twelvedrummers@gmail.com.
"6$5*0/ 5)634%": /07&.#&3 ! 1 .
CL447263
Classified Word Ad Deadline: Mondays at 3 p.m.
For more info: 613 969-5212.
SALE CONDUCTED AT THURLOW COMMUNITY CENTRE 516 HARMONY ROAD, CORBYVILLE, ONT. THURSDAY DECEMBER 4TH AT 10:00 AM 5 miles NORTH of Belleville on Highway 37 and turn West onto Harmony Road for ½ mile. Sale of Musical Instruments including like new and restored guitars by Blue Ridge, Sigma, Song Bird, Vester, Gitaine, Regal Dobros ; Kentucky mandolins, Sigma mandolins, various size violins, electric violins, Gold Tone banjos, Diplomat band instruments including soprano sax, flutes, clarinets, French horn, piccolos ; Huang Harmonicas including 1 key pack of 12 keys; Spoons, guitar and banjo cases, instrument strings, gig bags, chin rests, tail pieces, violin bows, pre amps, numerous other musical instrument parts and pieces. VIEWING 8 AM TO SALE TIME â&#x20AC;&#x201C; DAY OF SALE TERMS-CASH OR CHEQUE OWNER & AUCTIONEER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENT OR INJURY DAY OF SALE. SULLIVAN AUCTIONEERS PlainďŹ eld 613-477-2082 www.sullivanauctions.com
MARSHALL GUMMER ESTATE AUCTIONS OUTSTANDING MULTI-ESTATE AUCTION SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 30TH 10AM
Historic Castleton Town Hall Just 7 Minutes Straight North of Hwy 401 Exit 497(Big Apple,Colborne) PREVIEW 8:30 day of sale and Sat 12-3
FEATURING: The Estate of Grant and Elizabeth Allen of Warkworth Plus Selected Quality items from other Ontario Estates. Auction will also Feature a private Hires Root Beer and other Nostalgia collection. Antiques,Art,Sterling Silver,Estate Jewelry incl.10-14kt Gold, Militaria, Cranberry Glass,Vintage Advertising and Nostalgia, Collectibles & Memorabilia,Vintage Toys & Games,ScientiďŹ c Instruments,Walking Sticks, First Nations, Mid-Century Modern,Antique & Vintage Books,Vintage Persian Carpets, Antique Clocks, Lighting,Furniture, and much more.
CL447254
METROLAND MEDIA AUCTIONS
(upper Floor) 187 Front St, Belleville, Tuesday nights from 630-830pm. All are welcome. For info: www.anaf201.ca Opening of â&#x20AC;&#x153;On the River â&#x20AC;&#x201C; A Sailorâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Perspectiveâ&#x20AC;?, Thursday, December 4, 6-7:30 p.m., John M. Parrott Art Gallery. An Exhibition of new works by Peter Davis. Show continues until December 31st. 4th Friday of month: Karaoke with Rita and John 6:30 - 10:30 pm, Belleville Legion. Age of majority event Quinte Seniors Euchre Club meets at the Parkdale Community Centre every Mon. at 1 pm. Everyone 50 plus welcome. Cost $3.00 includes door prize, 50/50 draw and euchre score prizes New members welcome, Quinte Living Centre Concert Band. Students to seniors, if you play any band instrument. Mondays 7-9 p.m., Quinte Living Centre, 370 Front St, Belleville. Info: Marialice, mtfielding@hotmail.com 613962-2881, or Sally, ssedore@hotmail. com 613-243-1450 Overeaters Anonymous meeting every Friday, 10 a.m. Calvary Temple, corner of Wallbridge Loyalist and Hwy 2 West. Contact Dianne 613-392-0081. Open Door CafĂŠ - Every Wednesday from 11:30am to 1:00pm at Eastminster United Church, 432 Bridge St. E, Belleville. There is no cost for this hot meal however donations are gratefully accepted.
CL446830
BELLEVILLE Friends of the Library book sale daily at the Bookstore. Accepting gently used books, CD and DVD donations. Foyer of Belleville Public Library 10-4, MondaySaturday. 613-968-6731 ext 2245 Free Indoor Walking Program, Centennial Secondary School. Drop in until March 12, 2015. Tuesdays & Thursdays, 6-7:30pm, 160 Palmer Rd, Belleville. Call Belleville & Quinte West Community Health Centre, 613-962-0000 x233. Fun With Crafts: Make a craft for yourself or give as a gift. Thursdays, Nov 6-Dec 11, 1:30 - 3:30pm, 161 Bridge St. W., Belleville. Call Belleville and Quinte West Community Health Centre at 613-962-0000 ext. 233 Belleville Choral Society Christmas Concert, Sun., November 30, 3pm, St. Michael the Archangel Church, 296 Church St, Belleville. Tickets $20 Adult, $5 ages 6 to 18 at www.bellevillechoralsociety.ca;, St. Michaelâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Office, The Icon, Stephen Licence, members and at the door. Christmas Wrap Volunteers Required, The Quinte Mall from December 1-24. Shifts generally 3 or 4 hours, day, evening or weekends. Suitable for mature high school who need volunteer hours. Info: Irene, Community Care for South Hastings at 613-969-0130 ext.5204.
Christmas Sale, Saturday November 29, 10AM - 2PM. College Hill United Church, 16 North Park St, Belleville, 613-962-4147. Craft Items, Bake Sale, Luncheon, and Silent Auction! Conversations with a Rattlesnake, December 8, Banquet Centre, 1 Alhambra Square, Belleville. 9am-4pm. $50/person. Theo Fluery with Kim Barthel speak about sexual assault. Registration 8:30am. Meals on Wheels Belleville: Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday a hot meal delivered to your door around noon. Info: 613-969-0130 Dinerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Club, every Tuesday, 12-2 pm. CrossRoads to Care, 470 Dundas St. E., Belleville $9/member. $10/nonmember. Reservations required. Call 613-396-969-0130 The Retired Women Teachers (Belleville and area) invite members and retired women teachers, to their Christmas luncheon. First Pentecostal Church, 400 Dundas Street W., 11 am, Thursday, December 4. Turkey dinner and music of the DeJong Family. Bring personal hygiene products, in original packaging, for donation to the Hastings and Prince Edward Learning Foundation. Info and to reserve your place: 613-967-1863. The ANAF Unit 201 Pipes and Drums is recruiting members. Free lessons and Band practices are at the ANAF Unit 201
CL446818
Events
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Section B - Thursday, November 27, 2014
B21
EVENTS Continued from page B20
CAMPBELLFORD Free guided walks in Ferris Park, Campbellford, every Tuesday. Meet at the east end of the Suspension Bridge at 9 am. Enjoy this one hour opportunity to explore the park, rain or shine. Every Monday, 7 p.m. Campbellford Citizen’s Choir meets at Senior Citizen’s Building. All welcome Saturday, November 29, Campbellford Santa Claus Parade, 3:00pm. Info: www.campbellfordparade.ca Wed. Dec. 3, 7.30 p.m, 45th Annual Community Christmas Concert, St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church,17 Ranney St S, Campbellford. All welcome. Soup & sandwich lunch, 1st Wednesday of month, 11:15 a.m., Campbellford Senior Citizens Club. $7 includes soup, sandwich, dessert and tea or coffee. Forest Denis Centre, 55 Grand Rd, Campbellford. FootCare Clinic- 1st Fri, 2nd and 3rd Thurs of Month Royal Canadian Legion. VON offers Basic, Advanced and Diabetic Foot Care (Fee for Service). For appointment: 1-888-279-4866 ex 5346
COBOURG Women’s Group, every Wednesday, 2 pm, Halcyon Place, 580 Courthouse Rd, Cobourg. To register: Community Care Northumberland: 905-372-7356.
Royal Canadian Legion, 12 Mill St Frankford United Church Sunday Service with Rev. Norman Long, 10:30 am. every week. Sunday school available. Come join us in fellowship. Frankford Lions Hall, Moonshot Euchre, Wednesdays 1p.m. Frankford Santa Claus Parade, November 29, 2pm. Santa will be in the Legion until 4.30pm. Free hotdogs will be served for the children Frankford United Church Annual Christmas Brunch, Saturday November 29, 8:30 am-12 Noon. Adults $10.00, Children $5.00 (6-12 years) Under 5 years Free Beef ‘n Pork Buffet, Masonic Hall, 33 King Dr. Frankford, Friday Nov. 28. Social Hour 5:15 Dinner 6:15. Only $12.50 Flu clinic, November 28, 10.30 am until 3 pm, Frankford Legion. Info: Patty at 613-966-5513. 12 Mill St. Alcoholics Anonymous Keep It Simple Group, 8 pm every Thursday at Holy Trinity Anglican Church Hall, 60 Trent St. N. (rear), Frankford. Info: www. quintewestaa.org or 1-866-951-3711 Take Off Pounds Sensibly (TOPS) Weekly Meetings, Wednesday Evenings, 7-8 p.m. Holy Trinity Anglican Church, 60 North Trent St. Frankford. For more information call Fern 613-3952345
GRAFTON
Nov. 20, Community Diners, Eddystone CODRINGTON Baptist, 378 Eddystone Rd., Grafton. Info Codrington Library open Tuesday, and reservations: Brenda 905-355-2989. 2-5 pm; Thursday 9:30-11:30 am; Friday 5-8 pm; Saturday 10am – 2pm. HASTINGS
COLBORNE Colborne Library Storytime program, open to children 2-5 years old. Thursdays, 11 am. To register: 905 3553722 or drop by the library (Mon. 3-8, Tues. & Thurs. 11-8, Fri. & Sat. 11-4). Men’s Social Group, Tuesdays at Community Care Northumberland, 11 King St. E. Colborne, 10-11 a.m. Info: 905-355-2989. Food Addicts Anonymous Meetings, Wednesdays, 11-noon, Prospect House, 1 Elgin Street (at King), Colborne, www. foodaddictsanonymous.org Play Group, hosted by Northumberland Cares for Children, Colborne Public School, 8 Alfred St. Colborne, Fridays, 10 a.m. to noon. Info: Cheryl McMurray 905-885-8137 ext.209.
CORDOVA MINES Cordova Mines United Church Christmas Bazaar and Bake Sale, November 29, 9a.m.-1p.m. Lunch available homemade soup, roll, cupcake and beverage $6.00
FOXBORO
Hastings Legion: Horseshoes, Thursdays, 6:30 pm. Zumba, Mondays 6:30 pm. Summer Darts, Thursdays, 7:30 pm. Meat Draws Fridays 5 pm. Christmas Farmers market, Northumberland Tractor Parts Ltd., Hastings, Dec. 6, 10 A.M.- 4 P.M. Last Chance Christmas Bazaar, Hastings Legion, Saturday, Nov. 29, 10am. Lunch available, $6. Vendors needed. Info: Victoria 705-696-2363 Washboard Hank, Hastings Civic Centre, Friday, November 28, 10am, 6 Albert St E, Hastings. Info: 705-696-1351 Christmas House Tour in the Village of Hastings Saturday November 29, 12-5pm. Seven decorated homes open for viewing. Ticket/brochures $20 at Eclectic Mix, Warkworth, Chamber of Commerce, Campbellford, or in Hastings: Legion Br 106, Bridgewater Coffee & Pizza, Water Lily Gift Shop. Draws, Discounts, Shopping and Door Prizes. Info: 705-696-1697 8th Annual Chili Fest Cook Off, Sunday, Nov. 30, 4:30 pm. Be a contestant or taster. $5/person to taste. Hastings Legion. Grey Cup Party following.
Foxboro Santa Claus Parade, Saturday, November 29, 12:30 pm, Ashley HAVELOCK Street (north of Frankford Rd). Helpers Havelock Legion: Mondays, Fun along parade route accepting letters to Santa Darts start 1 pm. Saturdays, Meat Roll and donations for Gleaners Foodbank. start 3 pm. All Welcome Havelock OddFellows Brunch, FRANKFORD first Sunday of every month. All you can Last Sunday: Euchre 12pm, Frankford eat pancakes, sausage, eggs, bacon, coffee, B22
Section B - Thursday, November 27, 2014
tea, juice. Adults $6, Under 12 $3. Diner’s Club, first and third Wednesday of each month, Havelock United Church, 12pm. $9.00. Info: 705-778-7831. Havelock’s Wellness Program, Town Hall, 8 Mathison St., Havelock, from 9:30 am to 12:00 pm, Tuesdays and Thursdays. Weights, stretches, exercises, health education discussion. Free.
MADOC
Cold Creek Cloggers, Mondays 6:30pm. Trenton Baptist Church 15 South St Trenton. Classes start Sept 8. First night free. Info Debbie 613-920-9034 Quinte Bay Cloggers every Friday, 6:30 STIRLING - 9 pm, Salvation Army, 244 Dundas St E, Stirling and District Horticultural Trenton. All ages welcome, no experience Society is looking for new Members. necessary. First two nights free, $5/night. Monthly meetings, guest speakers, social Info: Eve or Ozz at 613-966-7026 connections and shared interests. Meetings 3rd Monday of the month, 7pm, Presby- TWEED terian Church, Mill St, Stirling. Annual Attention Teens: Are you bored? membership $12.00. Barbara 613-395 Looking for a challenge? Join the Truth & 9165, Sue 613-398-0220. Dare Youth Group, Fridays, 7 p.m. Fun, Weekly Monday Night Bingo, Up- Food, Games, Trips and more. Tweed stairs of Stirling Arena. Cards on sale at Pentecostal Church, 16 Jamieson St. W. 6:15pm. Starts at 6:50pm. Proceeds to Free one to one computer lessons, support community projects. Sponsored Tweed Public Library. Book one hour by Stirling & District Lions Club. at a time. 613-478-1066 for availability Stirling Al-Anon Family Group, and sign up. every Friday, 8 p.m., St. Paul’s United Tweed Pentecostal Church Free Church, Stirling. 866.951-3711 Turkey Dinner, Sat. Dec 13, 16 Jamieson Sunday Brunch, Stirling Legion St West Tweed, 3pm. Carol sing following November 30, 8 a.m.- 1 p.m. Bacon, ham, dinner. To reserve: Lorraine (613) 473sausages, eggs, homefries, baked beans, 5146 by Dec. 9. Leave a message with toast, coffee, juice. $9/person. Children your name, number of people attending and your phone number. under 10 $5.00. Everyone welcome. Gigantic Book Sale November TRENTON 27, 28 & 29 during library hours, Tweed The Trenton Memorial Hospital Public Library. Auxiliary is looking for new volunteers (18 years +). Give back, make new friends Tweed Blood Pressure Clinic: Wednesand learn important skills. Training pro- day, Dec 3, 23 McCamon Ave, Seniors vided. Call the volunteer office at 613 392 Building, 8AM-12PM. Open to seniors and adults with physical disabilities. 2540 ext. 5454 Friends of the Quinte West Library Through the Roof Ministry Centre, Book Sale, every Tues and Thurs and the Flinton Coffee House, Sunday, Nov.30, last Sat of month, 10 am-1 pm. Accepting 6:30 pm. Open mic. Free will offering book donations as well. 25 cents to $1.50. Fit and Fun Exercise Classes. On going aerobic, weight and core classes Monday, Quinte West Public Library. SAFE & Fun Seated Exercise program. Thursday and Friday, 9 a.m., Land O’Lakes Wednesdays, 9:30-11:00am until Dec 10, Curling Club, Tweed. $5/class or $25/ 70 Murphy St, Trenton. Call Belleville and month. Info: Nancy 613-478-3464 Choir welcomes new members. Practices are Wednesdays, 2-4 p.m., St Mary Magdalene Church, 335 Main St, Picton. www.shoutsisterchoir.ca
Royal Canadian Legion Br 363 Madoc: Mixed Darts every Thursday, 7pm. Friday Night ‘Jams’, 7-8:30pm. Bring your own instruments Royal Canadian Legion Br 363 Madoc: Mixed Darts every Thursday, 7.30. Friday Night ‘Jams’, 7-8:30pm. Bring your own instruments 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. Open to seniors and adults with physical disabilities. Christmas Craft Show, Cooper Community Centre, Saturday, Nov. 29 & 30, 9am-4pm. Free admission. Pony rides. 20 kms north of Hwy 7 on Cooper Rd. Madoc Foot Care Clinic: Thursday, Dec 4, 47 Wellington St, Seniors Building Common Room, 8 AM. Open to seniors and adults with physical disabilities. Contact 1-800-554-1564 to pre-register if not already a registered client of the clinic. Large Nativity Display, St. John’s Anglican Church Madoc, 115 Durham St. N. Saturday Nov. 29, 1-4 PM. To loan your set (any medium) bring it to the church, Friday Nov 28, 1-4 pm or call 613-4723176. Cider and cookies served. No Admission. Display also on view during the Sunday service Nov. 30, 10:30. Quinte West Community Health Centre at 613-962-0000, ext. 233. MARMORA Weekly Euchre, Fridays, Deloro MONARC Weight Loss Surgery SupHall, 7 pm. Bring light lunch. Co-ordinated port Group for bypass, band or sleeve recipients or those interested - next meeting by Marmora Crowe Valley Lions is Monday, Dec1, 2014 at 7pm at Trenton Memorial Hospital, 2nd Floor Boardroom. NORWOOD monarcwls@gmail.com Asphodel-Norwood Santa Claus Parade, Saturday, November 29, Downtown Retired Women Teachers, Trenton Norwood, 7:30 pm. Fireworks during the & District, celebrate the Christmas Season on Thurs. Dec. 4, 11:45 A.M, King St. parade. Visit Santa in the Town Hall. United Church, Trenton. Donations to the Preschool Drop-in, Westwood food bank will be collected. Turkey DinPublic Library. Every Thursday, 10 am- ner $15 (guests $18). All retired women noon. Enjoy play and creative areas. 705- teachers are welcome. 696-2744 or www.anpl.org FM Reset Concert, Bethel Church, Norwood Lioness annual Come & Trenton, Saturday, November 29, 7 pm. Get Stuffed Turkey Luncheon, November Tickets $7 (advance) or $10 (door) from 30, Norwood Town Hall, 11:30 am. to Emily at 613-438-2807 or lifegirls323@ 1 pm. Cost $13, Child 6-11 $5, under 6 gmail.com Free. Tickets available at Norwood Home Quinte West Probus Club,1st. Thur. of Hardware 705-639-5361. the month, 9.30 am, upstairs at the Royal Warsaw Santa Claus Parade, Sat- Canadian Legion, Branch110, Trenton. Next urday, November 29, 5 pm starting at the meeting: Dec.4 .All seniors welcome. Township Barns towards the Municipal Trenton Club 105 Roast Beef DinBuildings. Meet Santa at the Gazebo. ner, Sat. November 29, 61 Bay St., 4:30Norwood Legion: Wing Night 6:00pm Advance ticket $10, at the door Thursdays, from 4:30pm. Meat Draws $12. Info 613-392-5400 Fridays from 5 p.m. Trenton Art Club. Calling all artists and would be artists. Painting every Friday P.E. COUNTY afternoon, Smylie’s Independent Store Picton afternoon Shout Sister (upstairs) Info: Connie 613-398-6525.
TYENDINAGA Meals on Wheels Deseronto: Tuesday through Friday a hot meal delivered to your door around noon, for more information call 613-396-6591 Diner’s Club, 1st Wednesday of month, Deseronto Community Centre, 12-2 pm. $6/member. $7/non-member. Reservations required. Call 613-396-6591 December Silent Auction at Tyendinaga Fitness Resource Centre, Dec.1 to 12, during open hours: Mon. to Thurs. 6:30am to 8pm, Friday 6:30am to 6pm, Sat. 8am to 2pm. (613) 962-2822. Open to the Public
WARKWORTH Warkworth Legion hosts bid euchre at 2 p.m. every Wednesday and a dart league at 7:30 p.m. every Thursday. Everyone welcome
WOOLER Soup and Sandwich Monday December 1, 11:30 am – 1 pm $7 per person Wooler United Church
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Section B - Thursday, November 27, 2014 B23
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