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Striding for Community Care Peterborough

Runners from around the region worked up a good pace for Community Care Peterborough during the fifth annual Kms. For Care fundraiser; 826 people took part in one-, five- and ten-kilometre events and raised $57,000. In the photo, the top runners blast off from the start of the five-kilometre race (l-r) Derek Snider (406) of Brampton placed first overall with a time of 18:01; Lindsay Furtado (403) also of Brampton was the top woman with a time of 19:21 finishing seventh overall; Jaclyn Kemp (4) of Peterborough finished fourth in the women’s division and 24th overall; Nolan White (378) of Bridgenorth finished first in the 19 and under division and fourth overall with a time of 18:57 and Liam O’Connor (327) of Peterborough who finished second in the 19 and under division and fifth overall with a time of 19:10. Photo: Bill Freeman

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Belmont Babes and friends rock the run

Betty Bennett, Doreen Allen-Bell and Nancy Graham of Norwood are members of the Havelock Town Hall wellness program and took part in the fifth annual Kms. For Care fundraiser for Peterborough Community Care. Photo: Bill Freeman

The Belmont Babes from Havelock, (l-r) Brenda Card, Julie Bearcroft, Gina Morton, Marilyn Liscomb and Barb Stricker, participated in the fifth annual Kms. For Care five-kilometre walk-run for Peterborough Community Care at Trent University. Absent from the photo but part of the team were Bev English, Laurie Deshane and Karen Legrow. Photo: Bill Freeman

lock Town Hall Wellness program University. The eight-member team News - Havelock - The Belmont rocked the fifth annual Kms. For joined over 800 other people who Babes and their friends in the Have- Care fundraising walk-run at Trent ran, walked and strolled in one-, By Bill Freeman

five- and ten-kilometre events that raised $57,000 for Peterborough Community Care. “It was awesome,� said Barb Stricker during a break from the Community Care Havelock’s popular town hall wellness program led by Eleanor Cheyne. The group, some of whom participated last year, donated $310 along with their individual registration fees. The motivation, they said, was from Cheyne and their personal support of a program that’s given them so much. “Eleanor just gets the spirit

going and it’s a good cause that we can support so we just got out and did it,� Stricker said. “It was motivating to see so many other people doing such great work,� added Judy Bearcroft. The twice weekly wellness program draws over 30 people from around the district. Upwards of 14 took part in Kms. For Care. “The class is not only for fitness,� says Stricker, “but for overall health and well-being. “The camaraderie, the friendship of the people you are

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4th Annual “PUTT 4 PUCKS� Charity Golf Tournament Saturday, May 30th, 2015

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with and just the support each other gives you a great feeling,� she said of the fivekilometre walk-run. “This class is free so it gives us a chance to give something back to Community Care as well as Eleanor motivating us,� Bearcroft added. The group praised member Laurie Deshane for doing the legwork in registering the participants. “We’ll do it next year for sure,� Stricker said. “It was absolutely incredible to see,� said Doreen Allen-Bell of the massed group at the starting line near Trent’s DNA building. “It was good fun to be at the start line and we had a good pace.� “Community Care is very close to my heart so it seemed like a good opportunity to do something I’ve never done before. It was a first,� she said. There was a real “festive flavour� at the event, added Nancy Graham who also did a lot of the registration work. When Betty Bennett got ready at the start line the feeling she got was “I belonged there.� “This group [the wellness program] is excellent for getting us in shape,� said Bennett who has been a race committee member in the past. “The encouragement was good for everybody,� said Allen-Bell. “It was nice to see the Trent volunteers and nice to see all ages.� There were lots of baby strollers and pre-schoolers in the one-kilometre walkrun along the Rotary Trail. “There was applause everywhere,� said Allen-Bell. “Everything just went so smoothly,� said Bennett. “It is really neat to see how [it’s a] well-oiled machine [from] the start, [to] getting the course laid out, feeding people. It is a big operation.� Bennett was also at the finish line when wellness program participant Linda Chopping completed her ten-kilometre run. Chopping was the last to cross the line and organizers were already removing official gear from that area. Bennett graciously took her participant’s medal and gave it to Chopping.


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HASTINGS FIELD HOUSE OPERATING COMMITTEE APPOINTMENT VOLUNTEERS NEEDED The Council of the Municipality of Trent Hills is seeking applications from persons interested in serving as members on the Hastings Field House Committee. The term for this volunteer position is one year. Application forms are available at the Municipal Office or on the website www.trenthills.ca. Interested persons are invited to submit their written applications. The deadline for applications is May 22, 2015 Please forward completed forms by person, fax, e-mail or regular mail to: Shari Lang, Clerk 66 Front St. S., P.O. Box 1030 Campbellford, ON K0L 1L0

LOCAL POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGY... Northumberland County Department of Community and Social Services in partnership with Northumberland United Way Invite our community to our TOWN HALL MEETINGS This is an opportunity for citizens to share community driven solutions on preventing and transitioning people out of poverty.

Telephone: 705-653-1900 ext. 240 Fax: 705-653-5203 E-mail: shari.lang@trenthills.ca

MUNICIPALITY OF TRENT HILLS FIRE HYDRANT FLUSHING PROGRAM 2015 April 27 – May 1, 2015 May 4 – May 8, 2015

Campbellford

May 11 – May 15, 2015

Campbellford and Hastings

May 18 - May 22, 2015

Hastings and Warkworth

The Municipality of Trent Hills will be conducting fire hydrant flushing and flow testing in the Urban Centres of Campbellford, Hastings and Warkworth as part of our maintenance program. The Municipal Water Staff will make every effort to maintain this schedule. In some areas, flushing operations may be carried out in the late evening and early morning to minimize the disruptions that can occur to your water supply during these operations. Customers may experience discoloured water. If you do, it would be advisable to refrain from doing laundry or using hot water until the water clears. Trent Hills Municipal Office 653-1900 for more information

REVISED REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS AMENDMENT

SIDEWALK REPAIR/REPLACEMENT PROGRAM 2015 The Municipality of Trent Hills is accepting proposals from qualified contractors for the repair and replacement, approximately 400m of various sidewalks to be completed in 2015 Documents are available by contacting Kelli Stapley, Public Works Assistant kelli.stapley@trenthills.ca (705) 653-1900, ext. 228 Documents are to be submitted, signed by an authorized officer of the company in an envelope clearly marked as to contents to: Shari Lang, Clerk 66 Front Street South, PO Box 1030 Campbellford, ON K0L 1L0 Closing: Thursday, May 14, 2015 at 2:00 p.m. Opened Publicly at 2:30 p.m. on the same day. Late Proposals will not be accepted. The lowest or any price not necessarily accepted. _______________________________

Wednesday, May 13th, 2015 (9:00 - 11:00 am) - Cobourg Community Centre “Cameco Room” Wednesday, May 13th, 2015 (2:00 - 4:00 pm) -Port Hope Capital Theatre: Sculthorpe Theatre” Thursday, May 14th, 2015 (9:00 - 11:00 am) - Brighton Legion Branch 100 Thursday, May 14th, 2015 (2:00 - 4:00 pm) - Campbelllford Resource Centre “Acorn Room” For more details, Call Jackie Diminie at 905-372-6846 or 1-800-354-7051, ext. 2447 or email diminiej@northumberlandcounty.ca

TRENT HILLS LIBRARY BOARD SUMMER STUDENT POSITION The student will be responsible for the Children’s Summer Reading Program at our three branches. Those applying must be between 15 and 30 years of age, registered as a full-time student and be returning to school in September 2015. They will need to supply their own transportation. The position is from June 29, 2015 to August 21/ 2015. Resume deadline is May 15, 2015. Summer Student, Trent Hills Library Board Campbellford Branch Library P.O. Box 509, 98 Bridge St. East Campbellford, Ont. K0L 1L0 or FAX: 705-653-4611 or e-mail: trenthillslibrary@trenthills.ca Trent Hills Independent - Thursday, May 7, 2015 3


!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! !

Trent Hills CAO leaving in July to assume same post at Haliburton County

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Saturday May 16, 2015 9:00am – 1:00pm

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News - Trent Hills - Having worked as CAO of Trent Hills for more than a decade, Mike Rutter figured his bestNo Reserves, Limited Quantities before date was fast approaching so he Entertainment, food tasting, balloon animals, face painting, has accepted a job elsewhere. 1142 Quin-Mo-Lac Road, TWEED Mothers Dayprizes! Every organization needs a “fresh Sparky the Fire Dog, Mini Putt, Maple the Cow, door voice” at some point and that time is Grand Road, CAMPBELLFORD (beside Trent Hillls Auto) HOURS now for Trent Hills, Rutter said in an in!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 7 Demorest Road, STIRLING terview May 1, the day after he handed in his letter of resignation announcing ! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! his intention to quit July 3 to become the chief administrative officer for Halibur! ton County, replacing the current CAO On Stage Ads starting at Delivered to over 69,000 homes !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! who is retiring. (1 column size without photo) 9:00 – 9:30 Tai Chi Demo “For myself it’s a chance for a fresh !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! challenge.” 10:00 – 11:30 Donegal Fiddlers ! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! He grew up in !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Wilberforce and !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 11:30 Baby Show Registration !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ! ! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! his parents and oth!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 12:00 Baby Show (0 – 2and years old) er family members Come! discoverIODE the businesses, people organizations that continue to reside 12:30 Owenserve Wright NDHS Guitar Student this–community. in the county, “so really it is going Saturday May 16, 2015 home,” he added. Saturday May 16, 2015 Saturday May 16, 2015 9:00am – 1:00pm “The timing’s just Millennium Room Entertainment, food tasting,9:00am balloon–animals, face painting, 1:00pm right.” 9:00am – 1:00pm Come discover the businesses, people and organizations that Come discover the businesses, people and organizations that Come discover the businesses, people and organizations that 9:00Sparky – 1:00the Fire Free Local Food Sampling Mayor Hector Dog, Mini Putt, Maple the Cow, door prizes! Come discover the businesses, people and organizations that Come discover the businesses, people and organizations that serve this community. serve this community. serve this community. Macmillan said in serve this community. serve this community. a statement it “has been a privilege to Local Food – Farmer Feature Entertainment, food tasting, balloon animals, face painting, work with Mike Entertainment, food tasting, balloon animals, face painting, Entertainment, food– tasting, balloon animals, facepainting, painting, Entertainment, food tasting, balloon animals, face Entertainment, food tasting, balloon face painting, 9:30 Linlor Farms Maple Syrup Sparky the Fire Dog, Mini Putt, Maple the Cow,animals, door prizes! for the last twelve Sparky the Fire Dog, Mini Putt, Maple the Cow, door prizes! Sparky theMini Fire Dog, Mini Putt, Maple the Cow, door prizes! years,” describ! Sparky the Fire Dog, Mini Putt, Maple the Cow, door prizes! Sparky the Fire Dog, Putt, Maple the Cow, door prizes! 10:30 OtonaBEE Apiary – Bees & Honey On Stage ing him as “an extremely effective 11:30 Next Millennium 9:00 – 9:30 Tai Chi Demo Farms – Cricket Farm CAO [who was] ! 12:30 Chick-A-Biddy Acres – Garden Produce/CSA instrumental in 10:00 – 11:30 Donegal Fiddlers On Stage ! !! the development On Stage On Stage 9:00 – 9:30 Tai Chi Demo 11:30 Baby Show Registration of Trent Hills as a On Stage 9:00 – 9:30 Tai Chi! Demo 9:00 – 9:30 Tai Chi Demo 10:00 – 11:30 Donegal Fiddlers thriving commuFree parking, On Stage 12:00 IODE Baby Show (0 – 2 years old) 9:00 – 9:3011:30 Tai Chi Demo 10:00 – Donegal 11:30 Donegal nity.” FiddlersFiddlers 11:30 10:00 –Baby Show Registration admission & The municipal9:00 – 9:30 Tai Chi Demo 11:30 Baby Show Registration 12:30 Owen Wright – NDHS Guitar Student 10:00 – 11:30 Donegal Fiddlers 11:30 Baby Show Registration 12:00 IODE Baby Show (0 – 2 years old) ity said in its news 12:00 IODE Baby (0 – old) 2 years old) popcorn ! 10:00 11:30 Baby Registration IODEShow Show (0Show –Student 2 years –12:00 11:30 Donegal Fiddlers 12:30 Owen Wright –Baby NDHS Guitar release that Rutter 12:30 IODE Owen Guitar is “highly regarded 12:30 Owen Wright –Wright NDHS Student 12:00 Baby Show (0 –Guitar –NDHS 2 years old)Student while supplies last Room Millennium 11:30 Baby Show Registration for his creative Millennium Room 12:30 Owen Wright – NDHS Guitar Student approach to lead9:00 – 1:00 Free Local Food Sampling 12:00 IODE Baby Show (0 – 2 years old) Millennium Room Millennium Room 9:00 – 1:00 Free Local Food Sampling ership and prob9:00Owen – 1:00 Free Local Food Sampling lem solving,” and 12:30 9:00 – 1:00 – NDHS Guitar Student Free Wright Local Food Sampling Millennium had “spearheaded Local Food –Room Farmer Feature Local Food – Farmer Feature many successful Local Food Local ––Feature Farmer Feature 9:00Local – 1:00 Free Food Sampling Food –Linlor Farmer 9:30 Linlor Farms Maple Syrup initiatives.” 9:30 Farms – Maple Syrup Millennium Room 9:30 Linlor Linlor –Syrup Maple Syrup Farms –Farms Maple They included 10:30 9:30 OtonaBEE Apiary – Bees & Honey 10:30 OtonaBEE Apiary –Bees Bees & Honey 10:30 OtonaBEE Apiary – Honey Bees & Honey the recreation re9:00 – 1:00 Free Local Food Sampling 10:30 OtonaBEE Apiary – & 11:30 Next Millennium Farms – Cricket Farm Local Food – Farmer Feature development plan, 11:30 Next Millennium Farms – Farm Cricket Farm 11:30 Next Millennium Farms – Cricket Farm 88 12:30 Alma Street 11:30 Chick-A-Biddy Next Millennium Farms – Cricket Acres ––Garden Produce/CSA the amalgamation 9:30 Linlor Farms Maple Syrup 12:30 Chick-A-Biddy – Garden Produce/CSA For more information 705-639-5343 12:30 call Chick-A-Biddy Acres – Acres Garden Produce/CSA of the Trent Hills 12:30 Chick-A-Biddy Acres – Garden Produce/CSA 10:30 OtonaBEE Apiary – Bees & Honey Local Food – Farmer Feature Fire Department, Free parking, strategic planning 11:30 Next Millennium Farms – Cricket Farm Free parking, 9:30 Free admission & parking,Linlor Farms – Maple Syrup exercises, and maFree parking, Free parking, admission & 12:30 Chick-A-Biddy Acres – Garden Produce/CSA admission & OtonaBEE jor infrastructure 10:30 Apiary – Bees & Honey ! popcorn admission && ! popcorn projects. admission popcorn ! last while supplies 11:30 Next Millennium Farms – Cricket Farm “He introduced popcorn while supplies last while supplies last popcorn Free parking, !while process improvesupplies 12:30 Chick-A-Biddy Acres – Garden Produce/CSA ments that have admission last while supplies last & brought Trent Hills to the forefront in ! popcorn the areas of emerFreewhile parking, supplies last gency planning and admission & health and safety, 88 Alma Street 88 Alma Street For more information call 705-639-5343 as well as imple88 Alma Street For more information call 705-639-5343

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Mike Rutter, CAO of Trent Hills for the past 12 years, notified council last week his last day on the job will be July 3. He’s returning to where he grew up to become the chief administrative officer at Haliburton County. Photo: John Campbell

mented numerous service and staffing realignments to better serve the community.” Rutter said, “You don’t do anything alone; everything you accomplish requires a council that supports your initiatives [and gives you] the resources necessary to do what you need to do. And then it takes a staff that will respond and deliver.” He was “really fortunate” to have had councils “that were very supportive” and staff who are “really dedicated and very creative.” Rutter listed infrastructure renewal among the things he was able to accomplish, such as rebuilding roads, replacing bridges and bringing all the wastewater treatment plants up to standard. There were “real health and safety issues” when he arrived which have been addressed. “We work much more safely than we used to,” he said, pointing out there’s been “a trend downward” in long- and short-term disability claims. “I’m very proud of that.” Rutter said council made “some very difficult decisions” regarding recreation, such as closing the Hastings arena–“there’s certainly still hurt feelings about that”–and setting aside $500,000 a year for new facilities, but “the community will be better off” as a result. He’s also very proud of the fact that “every surface treated road in this community is

resurfaced every seven years on cycle now. That’s not the norm, that’s unheard of, actually.” The water department is “well-respected across the province,” the roads department crew “really are leaders,” and Trent Hills was “one of the first municipalities in the province to [offer] a community improvement program,” he said. The municipality is “really well-positioned to move forward.” Rutter said Trent Hills “is an amazing place” populated by people who come forward with good suggestions which they are prepared to help implement. “There’s so much energy and so many ideas that come from the community … it makes it easy for us in so many ways,” he said. “It’s really just a question of figuring out how we can … make them work. “They hold you accountable [and] push you to be better.” Rutter has a few loose ends he has to tie up before leaving. One is to lay out the process for a service delivery review; another is to adopt a social media policy, “to use that tool a lot more effectively.” The municipality said council “will immediately begin the process of seeking a replacement [for Rutter] to ensure minimal disruption to the programs and projects currently being undertaken.”


Hastings Village Market launches another season By Bill Freeman

News - Hastings - It was a slow but sunny launch for the Hastings Village Market as it kicked off another season at the intersection of Bridge and Front Streets. “It is something to look forward to,” said market organizer Theo Van Will, who shared the parking lot with one other vendor to begin the season. More vendors are expected to join the al fresco fun and Van Will says he’s always looking for more people interested in being part of the market. “It’s good to be out on a nice day like today,” said Van Will, who had a plenty of wood crafts on display and quickly cashed in with the sale of two bird houses. The corner market has been an institution in Hastings for nearly two decades. “It is fairly well established but we really do need some new vendors,” said Van Will. Last year, they had between eight and ten regular vendors who offered a wide range of items that included locally grown seasonal produce, preserves, fresh baked goods, plants, jewellery, souvenirs and calendars, wood crafts, lawn furniture and ornaments. The market also holds draws for gift baskets on special occasions during the season. Van Will would like to see at least a dozen vendors. “I’ve been busy over the winter. You’ve just got to keep opening the

books and do new projects,” the retired elementary school teacher said. Over the winter, Van Will was also the newest inductee into the Norwood District High School Hall of Honour along with musician-singer and teacher Deborah Richardson-Edge. “Last year was a good one,” Van Will said of the market. “It was very good in terms of people dropping by. The more vendors we can get the better it will be and we will draw more.” The market is a regular attraction for visiting cottagers and local residents alike, he and Eileen Arbuckle, who had jewellery for sale, said. “You do see regular summer visitors,” Arbuckle said. “People stop and say ‘Hi’ and chit chat for a bit even if they don’t buy and that’s still nice.” The “camaraderie and socializing” amongst the vendors is also “very good” and gratifying, says Van Will. The corner block received a makeover last year from the municipality as part of the long-range downtown and waterfront improvement plan. There is dedicated Village Market signage, purpose-built parking, curbing and benches. “The signage helps it; it makes it more attractive,” says Van Will. “It does dress it up.” Van Will also encourages charitable organizations and other volunteer community groups to consider setting up at the market to help raise funds and promote their activities. “They are welcome to come and are

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Theo Van Will was happy to be at the Hastings Village Market as it kicked off another season Saturday morning. Photo: Bill Freeman

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Skin cancer, one of the most preventable cancers, is the most common cancer diagnosed in Canadians. Completely avoiding the sun isn’t a very practical preventative measure so using sunscreen daily is your main tool to prevent skin cancer. When choosing a sunscreen, look for one that is “broad-spectrum”. This means the sunscreen will protect against both UVA and UVB rays. The sun gives off three types of UV rays. UVA penetrates deep into the skin, causing lasting skin damage via tanning, premature aging, wrinkles, and skin cancer. UVB affects the skin’s surface causing sunburns and skin cancer. UVC does not reach Earth’s surface thanks to the ozone layer. Your sunscreen should also have an SPF (Sun Protection Factor) of at least 30. SPF is a measure of the sunscreen’s ability to block the sun’s UV rays. SPF 15 blocks 93% of the sun’s rays while SPF 30 blocks 97% and SPF 50 blocks 98%. No sunscreen can block 100% of the sun’s rays. Its important to note that highnumber SPF sunscreens will last the same amount of time as the low-number SPFs so always reapply your sunscreen every two hours and after excessive sweating or swimming. Many people don’t apply enough sunscreen to get maximal protection. Dermatologists recommend that “one ounce or enough to fill a shot glass” is the amount of sunscreen needed to cover exposed areas of the body. To further protect against sun damage, always apply sunscreen to dry skin fifteen minutes before going outside, apply sunscreen first, let it soak in then apply bug repellant, and apply sunscreen after moisturizers and before makeup. Finally, wear a lip balm/lipstick that contains SPF 30 or higher.

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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Enough of your nonsensical Conservative mail-outs Dear Editor, Please let me say, “Amen Ken Leavens and Leslie Woof.” I too have been receiving unsolicited mailouts from my federal member on an almost weekly basis. Looking at the addresses of the two people mentioned above I would guess that the only difference between the mail-out these folks receive is the name of the member as one lives in Hastings and the other in Northumberland. I have no doubt the

content of these mail-outs is dictated by the PMO. For a party that came to power promising fiscal responsibility and restraint these mail-outs are a waste of taxpayers’ money. Go into any post office the day that these mail-outs arrive and look at the number of them that don’t even make it to the recycling bin; they are strewn about the counter and on the floor. The content of these ask leading questions and are

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full of half-truths. For instance the one I have on my desk as I write this asks, “Do Canadians benefit from trade?” My answer is Yes and No. Free trade should be good for us if we do not give up our rights to create our own environmental laws. But that is not the case. Our government is selling us out to multinational

companies by allowing secret deals whereby Canada can be sued in secret tribunals if these companies cannot get their own way. For example, a Canadian company headquartered in Maryland is suing the Quebec government because Quebec is banning them (and anyone else) from fracking under the St, Lawrence

River. How does that benefit Canadians? The mail out states that in 2014 Canada signed a historic trade agreement with the world’s largest single market: the European Union. Maybe Canada signed it, but not every member of the European Union has signed it, notably France and the German Social

Democratic Party, so therefore the CETA does not in fact exist. Finally, dear member, if you insist on polluting my mailbox with your nonsense, at least have the courtesy to print them on recycled paper. Ted Cullin, Consecon

Stop wasting money and simplify our taxes Dear Editor, Re: It’s tax time. Stop complaining and just pay them. By his own admission, Stephen Petrick is no expert on taxes. It shows. His recommendation to loan the government more of your hardearned dollars (interest free) for a year, by asking your employer to overtax you so you are assured of a tax refund, is ridiculous. “Just pay a professional” to do your taxes is another of his suggestions. I strongly object to being told by Petrick that, “when tax season rolls around, we should all just shut up,

stop our complaining and just pay them, no matter how complicated or frustrating they’ve become!” Does this guy work for CRA? A tax regime that has become so complicated that it requires the taxpayer to hire someone to get their own money back is overburdensome and unfair. There once was a time when the annual tax return could be done in an evening with nothing more than a pencil and a calculator. Now we have to buy tax software (not even tax deductible), or hire a professional. Yes taxes are necessary. I get that. I have no objection to paying

my fair share for the core services we all receive, and paid for through taxes. I do object to governments at all levels wasting our tax dollars (gas plants, e-health, Ornge, Senate expenses etc.), and then crying poor. How many hospital beds or parking spaces would the money wasted on Ornge have paid for, I wonder. I also object to being constantly told I have to pay more taxes for an ever-expanding array of questionable and unaffordable government programs (all-day kindergarten, green energy act, etc.) and the bloated and ever-increasing army of “sunshine-listed” civil servants and

bureaucrats needed to deliver them. This is occurring at a time when the costs for other necessities are also increasing dramatically, or creative new “revenue tools” are being imposed on consumers (bank service charges, insurance, energy, etc.). Many of these are also taxable. It’s time for government to stop wasting money, and to simplify its tax regime. It’s a shame Stephen Petrick and others with his complacent attitude don’t understand this. Paul MacDonald, Warkworth

PUBLIC NOTICE 2015 ROAD CONSTRUCTION PROGRAM Please be advised that the following road sections are included in the 2015 Road Construction Program

One lane of traffic will be maintained at all times, however, please be advised to expect traffic delays during construction. Work is scheduled to commence May 4, 2015 and is expected to be complete by October 31, 2015 For further information, please contact Denise Marshall, Manager, Project Engineering, by email: marshalld@northumberlandcounty.ca or by phone: (905) 372-3329 ext. 2429. 6 Trent Hills Independent - Thursday, May 7, 2015

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OPINION

Franchise wars Editorial - You can’t tell the players without a program, and it’s no wonder that people feel confused by the plethora of names the terrorist groups use. To make matters worse, they keep splitting, and sometimes they change their names just for Gwynne Dyer the hell of it. So here’s a guide you can stick on your wall. In the beginning there was Al Qaeda, starting in about 1989. There were lots of other terrorist start-ups in the Arab world around the same time, but eventually almost all of them either died out or joined one of the big franchises. Al Qaeda is the one to watch, since the success of its 2001 attacks on the United States on 9/11 put it head and shoulders above all its rivals. When the United States invaded Iraq in 2003 and foreign jihadis flocked into the Sunni Arab parts of the country to help the resistance, their leader, a Jordanian called Abu Musaib al Zarqawi, sought to affiliate his organisation with Al Qaeda to boost its appeal. In 2004 Osama bin Laden agreed to allow them to use the name Al Qaeda in Iraq, although there was little coordination between the two organisations. It was Al Qaeda in Iraq that got the SunniShia civil war going by persistently bombing Shia mosques and neighbourhoods, even though it knew that the more numerous Shia would win that war. It was profoundly cynical but strategically sound, since terrified Sunnis would then turn to Zarqawi’s organisation for protection. Al Qaeda in Iraq formally changed its name to Islamic State in Iraq (ISI) in 2006, but it didn’t really begin to flourish until a new leader, Abu Bakr al Baghdadi, took over in 2010. Soon afterward the Syrian civil war broke out, and Baghdadi sent a Syrian member of ISI, Abu Muhammad al Golani, into Syria to organise a branch there. It was called the Nusra Front. The Nusra Front grew very fast–so fast that by 2013 Baghdadi decided to reunite the two branches of the organisation under the new name Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS). But this meant that Golani was being demoted to manager of the Syrian branch, so he declared his independence and asked to join al Qaeda, which

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leaves its affiliates largely free to make their own decisions. Al Qaeda’s leader, Ayman al Zawahiri (by now bin Laden was dead), backed the Nusra Front because he felt that creating an Islamic state, as Baghdadi intended, was premature. Baghdadi thereupon broke relations with Al Qaeda, and in early 2014 the Nusra Front and ISIS went to war. Thousands of Islamist fighters were killed, and after four months it was clear that ISIS could hold eastern Syria but could not conquer the Nusra Front in the west of the country. The two rival organisations agreed to a ceasefire–and two months later, in June 2014, ISIS used its battlehardened forces to invade Iraq. The Iraqi army collapsed, and by July ISIS controlled the western third of Iraq. Counting its Syrian territories as well, ISIS now ruled over 10 to 12 million people, so Baghdadi dropped the “Iraq and Syria” part of the name and declared that henceforward it would just be known as Islamic State. The point of not naming it after a specific territory is that it can be expanded indefinitely with no further name changes. Soon afterwards Baghdadi declared himself caliph, and therefore commander of all the world’s Muslims. This was an extremely bold step, since those Muslims who hear the call of “Caliph Ibrahim” and do not submit to his authority– even fighters in other jihadi organisations like the Nusra Front and Al Qaeda–are technically “apostates” and liable to death in the eyes of those who do accept his claim. In other words, IS’s fighters now have the legal right, at least in their own eyes, to kill most Sunni Muslims in addition to the Shias, Christians, Jews, and assorted other unbelievers they already had the right to kill. There is a potential genocide in the making if Islamic State expands further in Syria, where easily 75 per cent of the population fits into one or another of those categories. Some jihadis in other countries, most notably Boko Haram in Nigeria, declared their allegiance to “Caliph Ibrahim” and Islamic State at once. Other stayed loyal to Al Qaeda–the Nusra Front, Al Shabaab in Somalia, and the al Qaeda branches in Yemen, Egypt, and the Maghreb–and rejected his claim. But Al Qaeda may declare a rival caliphate once Nusra has finished conquering Idlib province and established a firmer territorial base in Syria. So there you have it: two rival franchises competing for the loyalty of all the other jihadi organisations. There’s not really much difference between them ideologically or practically, but the franchise wars will continue. I hope that helps.

Vice President & Regional Publisher Mike Mount mmount@perfprint.ca 613-283-3182, ext 104 General Manager Seaway Gavin Beer gbeer@perfprint.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

Secrecy of Premier’s visit leaves a bad taste in the mouth By Stephen Petrick

Editorial - In the days leading up to Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne’s visit to Belleville last week I asked perhaps the least probing question of my journalistic career. “What time is she coming?” Several weeks ago Wynne was announced as one of the speakers for the Ontario Small Urban Municipalities Conference taking place April 29 to May 1. Her profile was even put on the conference’s website where it listed speakers, but no exact time, date or location was publicized. Then a media advisory from the City of Belleville came out earlier in the week, listing the speakers and their time slots for Wednesday and Thursday. But there was still no mention of Wynne, prompting me to ask communication co-ordinator Marilyn Warren, “When is she coming?” “I have been directed to give further information on Thursday,” she answered, to my puzzlement. Sure enough, late on Thursday afternoon I got my answer. She’d be here at 8:45 a.m. the next morning. Phooey, I said to myself when I heard the news. (Actually, that’s not the word I said. The word I said was much worse.) Why would someone announce an early-morning meeting so late in the afternoon? Since becoming a parent, I’ve concluded that “8:45 a.m.” is code for “let’s make sure it’s really difficult for parents of daycare-age children to attend.” But the second I parked at the Quinte Sports & Wellness Centre on Friday I got my answer. A large group of OPSEU protesters, claiming Wynne wants to privatize public services, was already outside. I guess if you’re the Premier of Ontario you’ve got to keep your schedule secret for as long as you can to avoid the travelling throng. Upon entrance to the Wellness Centre I was asked to show my “media ID” at the door, and then at the entranceway to the gym I almost wasn’t let in because I didn’t have a conference “badge.” But a city employee who recognized

me let me in, just as the premier was about to take the podium. Inside, another person, one from Wynne’s public relations team, asked me to show ID again. The whole process left a bad taste in my mouth, not just as a reporter, but also as a democracy-believing taxpayer. I hate to think what would have happened had I run out of my little Metroland business cards the night before. The fact that I could show reasonable proof that I’m a full-time employee of a professional news organization got me in, but it shouldn’t have to be like that. What if I was just a freelancer (a lot of news is done on a freelance basis these days)? What if I was there for my own blog? What if I was there because I’m representing a labour union? What if I’m just an interested taxpayer? Or an average Joe Ontario voter? I understand there needs to be security and some measures to control the crowd. There are only so many people you can pack in a small gym. And God knows there are some crazies out there. But the sight of a political leader speaking in a room full of people only wearing dark suits doesn’t exactly leave one with a positive image of our democracy. It gives the perception that our leaders are accessible only to the powerful few. All that being said, I must say that when Wynne took the podium I was actually quite impressed. She spoke with clarity and seemed casual, friendly and confident. It’s no wonder the majority of Ontarians chose her in last summer’s election over that walking billboard of negativity named Tim Hudak. And she delivered some fairly pleasing news for the audience, which consisted of mayors, councillors and other officials from small municipalities. The province will dish out money for infrastructure, such as roads and bridges, fairly. The Toronto-Hamilton region will get what it needs for its population, and rural Ontario will get the same. Or that’s what she said. Time will tell.

Letters policy

The Trent Hills Independent welcomes letters to the editor on any subject. All letters must be signed and include the name of the writer’s community. Unsigned letters will not be published. The editor reserves the right to reject letters or edit for clarity, brevity, good taste and accuracy, and to prevent libel. Please keep letters to 600 words or less. The views written in the letters to the editor do not necessarily reflect the views of the Trent Hills Independent or its employees. Please include a phone number where you can be reached during the day. Please e-mail your letters to <tbush@metroland.com>

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News - Havelock - Students from Havelock Belmont Public School got a ringside seat at council this week as part of their studies in local government. The Grade 4/5 students continued a long-standing school tradition of visiting the municipal office for a tour and meet and greet with councillors and staff and to learn a little bit more about the inner-workings of municipal government and of the township itself. The visits are clearly one of the highlights of the year for Mayor Ron Gerow and his fellow councillors and he took time during a break to chat with the students. The students had a chance to sit through a portion of the regular council meeting; among the items discussed was a joint letter drafted by Havelock-Belmont-Meth-

uen and Asphodel-Norwood in support of Norwood District High School and efforts to enhance programming. “Having a local high school is an economic driver for both communities,” the letter says. “We see the value and importance of schools as community hubs.” “This is very important to each and every one of you,” Mayor Gerow told the students. “This council is very concerned for the future of not only NDHS but also of Havelock Belmont Public School. We are very proud of both.” During his informal chat with students, Mayor Gerow talked about local politicians from both the former Township of Belmont-Methuen and the Village of Havelock who have also served as Wardens of

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Havelock-Belmont-Methuen Mayor Ron Gerow talks to Grade 4/5 students from Havelock Belmont Public School during a visit to Monday’s regular council meeting. The visit was part of class studies on local government. Photo: Bill Freeman

Peterborough County. Mayor Gerow himself is one of those politicians both as deputy-reeve of Belmont-Methuen and following amalgamation as reeve of Havelock-Belmont-Methuen. Township council is always pleased to see students take an interest in local government which can be

the most representative of all levels of public office, he added. One question concerned water levels on Belmont Lake, a thorny issue the municipality has wrestled with a number of times. Mayor Gerow and councillors appreciated the question which was a timely one.

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“The door wasn’t closed; they were very appreciative to get the grassroots input.â€? Vanderhorst has two children at NDHS and says she can provide trustees unfamiliar with the school with “insightâ€? on what’s going on there. “I was able to give them that. We’ve been working [for some time] and coming up with ideas. At the board level, that’s not their focus to ďŹ nd a solution for our school so we’re glad to be a resource and work together with the board.â€? She and members of the two councils also get the sense that KPR timelines have been compressed especially now that the provincial Ministry of Education has released its new accommodation review guidelines.

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NDHS and what’s being done to maximize and creatively adapt programming to the reality of a student population of 296. Vanderhorst says the committee wants to work with the board on four key options: bringing a regional high skills major agriculture course to NDHS; bringing Grades 7 and 8 students back to the building and off-site alternative and continuing education programs in Havelock and Norwood and transforming NDHS into a “community hub.� The group is also aware that the KPR has visited school districts that have implemented Kindergarten to Grade 12 models effectively and extensively. “They really engaged back and were interested,� she said.

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Pine Ridge District School Board and its superintendents and trustees. “It was a wonderful reception from Havelock-BelmontMethuen to meet with us and talk about what we can do for all youth that live in this area,� said Vanderhorst who also sits on Asphodel-Norwood council. “There was a lot of great knowledge, strength and resources sitting in this room to plunge forward for NDHS.� Vanderhorst and Friends’ chair Verna Shackleton addressed the KPR board at their last meeting and reiterated some of the things the group advocates and considers viable in the quest to keep NDHS open. The KPR has released its low enrollment report and continues to work on its long range accommodation plan for its facilities. The Community Friends want to be active in helping the school board understand

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ties to get answers that the board needs to make the right, positive decisions so we can keep our schools open,� Gerow said. “I’m on side here 195 per cent on what we can do to support the situation,� he added. Community Friends secretary and Asphodel-Norwood Councillor Bernadette Vanderhorst reprised her board presentation for the two councils. In making the three-minute presentation they were “trying to get Norwood’s

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to drop to 282 by 2024. Just 43.46 per cent of the school’s space is currently being utilized, the report says. “I think we can support one another in many ways here,â€? HBM Mayor Ron Gerow said. “This is the ďŹ rst time the two councils have had an open discussion in a long time. We appreciate this.â€? “So do we,â€? Asphodel-Norwood Mayor Terry Low added. “We want to work with the committee here and councils and our communi-

the information they need to go back to the ministry and if there is an accommodation review on us we’ve got some of that information ahead of time. That’s part of whey we met [with the board].â€? Shackleton says she told board chair Cathy Abraham that “we’re not going to ďŹ ght you. We’re going to kill you with kindness; we’re going to help you and help you so you’re going to have a hard time saying no.â€?

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By Bill Freeman

Meeting together to talk about NDHS were councillors and staff from Asphodel-Norwood and Havelock-Belmont-Methuen. In the photo (front, l-r) are HBM councillor Barry Pomeroy, Deputy-mayor Jim Martin, CAO Pat Kemp, Councillor David Gerow and Mayor Ron Gerow; (back, l-r) are A-N Clerk Becky Bonisteel-Bourne, Councillors Debbie Lynch and Roy Millett, Councillor Bernadette Vanderhorst, Treasurer Candice White and Mayor Terry Low. Photo: Bill Freeman

voice at the table.â€? Friends Chair Verna Shackleton said the province’s new Accommodation Review guidelines have shortened that process but also requires school boards to engage municipalities and “pre-existing groups.â€? “We want to remind them that we are a pre-existing group,â€? she said. Controversially, those new guidelines move away from considering the impact of school closures on community wellbeing and the local economy. Gerow is troubled by news that the Ministry of Education has $644 million to be made available to school boards to assist with consolidation-related initiatives. “Consolidation is just another word for closure,â€? he said. “So the carrots have been dangled. It’s certainly going to be a difďŹ cult situation for our school board. I know all the superintendents want to support our schools; they don’t want to close them but it’s apparent to me there is another force at work here and the ministry of education is making it clear what they want.â€? “The pressure from the ministry is absolutely ďŹ nancial,â€? Shackleton said. “We need to give them these arguments if these things were added [NDHS] is worth maintaining.â€? “I believe the crunch is to give them

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News - Norwood - In a strong show of unity, Havelock-Belmont-Methuen and Asphodel-Norwood have thrown their support behind the Community Friends of Norwood District High School and the work they’re doing to champion the school in the face of low enrollment and ďŹ nancial and consolidation pressures placed on school boards by the Ministry of Education. In a remarkable joint open meeting, the two councils agreed to draft a letter to the Kawartha Pine Ridge District School Board supporting the Community Friends efforts on attracting a regional high skills major program in agriculture to the school, a plan Minister of Agriculture Jeff Leal supports, as well as its advocacy of alternative continuing education sites in Norwood and Havelock and longer-range work on having NDHS become a “community hub,â€? a concept Education Minister Liz Sandals backs. The Community Friends of NDHS made a well-received presentation at the KPR’s last board meeting which also happened to be the evening the board released its low enrollment school report put together following a series of focus group meetings at ďŹ ve high schools early this year. NDHS’s enrollment has declined 44 per cent since 2000-2001 to 296 students this year; that’s projected

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Fire department downsizing fleet, preparing to buy new mobile command centre

By John Campbell

News - Trent Hills - The Trent Hills Fire Department is reducing the size of its fleet by selling off vehicles that have become surplus and it will use the money to purchase a new mobile command centre. The one now in use, a model built in 1993 and purchased from Cobourg’s fire department in 2007, is “starting to cost us money” for its upkeep, CAO Mike Rutter told council. Replacing it is vital, he stressed. The command centre “provides a very valuable service,” he said, “not just at community events but at significant incidents and training.” Its replacement, a custom-designed trailer, will be much cheaper to maintain, he explained. “It’s just amazing what they can do with these,” Mayor Hector Macmillan said of one company that specializes in the manufacture of trailers for use as a command centre. The mayor said Fire Chief Tim Blake had indicated there is a “possibility” the vehicle could be turned into “a countywide unit” to be shared with Northumberland County’s seven member municipalities, and perhaps the county as well, who contribute funding toward its acquisition. “That’s something he’s still working on,” Macmillan said. “It’s a great concept.” Councillor Cathy Redden agreed the more municipalities involved the better, especially for the smaller ones that might not have the means to purchase a vehicle of their own.

By pooling resources, a “really good” command centre becomes more affordable, “and we can get what we need rather than have to dumb it down because we don’t have the money just for Trent Hills,” she said. A pumper and a first response vehicle are being put up for sale along with the command centre. With the new communications tower in place on County Road 35 that allows for all three stations in the municipality to “respond as one now … we don’t need all the vehicles,” Blake said in an interview, “so what we’re trying to do is downsize our fleet to what we require.” The cost of operating a command centre increases with age because it has an engine, brakes and other components that can wear down, whereas the cost of a trailer’s upkeep “would be greatly reduced,” he said. Blake estimated the vehicles being put on the market could fetch between $5,000 and $10,000. “We’re looking in the $20,000 range for a trailer,” he said. Having a command centre has “worked very well,” because it provides a shelter where firefighters can “get warmed up if it’s cold [and] cooled down if it’s hot,” Blake said. It’s also a place where the person in charge of the scene can make plans or investigators with the fire department, police force or Ontario Fire Marshal’s Office can prepare their notes properly, he said. One feature he would like to see incorporated into a new command post is Wi-Fi capability.

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The fire department will utilize as much as possible the equipment van it purchased from Hamilton Township as a command centre until a new one is bought. That could happen before year’s end but it will depend on how much money the sale of the vehicles brings in. “We want to take our time and do it right,” Blake said. The fire department has removed several vehicles from service as it continues to implement the Fire Service Master Plan approved in 2012. Its centrepiece is a new fire hall in Campbellford. The former Giant Tiger property on River Street was purchased as the future site, and planning will take place this year on “what it’s going to look like,” Blake said. There have been suggestions the building include apartments for seniors and an area for new council chambers. “We are going to design the fire hall first,” he said, and then look at what else can be done to utilize the space “in the most effective way.” Blake issued a reminder that burn barrels are illegal in Trent Hills. “We had grass fires all last week,” he said, and they began with the burning of trash in barrels. “People will be charged if we respond, even to put the barn barrel out,” he warned. The cost is $300 a vehicle. “If it’s called in as a grass fire you could get up to ten [vehicles responding],” Blake said, so the bill would be $3,000. “So maybe it’s better to get a garbage tag.”

Cats and cupcakes, Hillcrest shows it cares

Cat Care Initiative founders Eileen McIntosh and Suzanne Hart, on the left, accepted a cheque for $173.45 last week from Grade 3 student Patience Jonk, whose idea it was to have Hillcrest Public School take part in National Cupcake Day, a fundraiser for SPCAs and humane societies. The school chose to support the local organization that rescues cats in Trent Hills and area, and arranges to have them spayed and neutered. Staff and parents volunteered to make the cupcakes which the students were more than happy to purchase. With Patience are members of the student council and their teacher liaison Krista Grills (on the right in front). Photo: John Campbell

Loading zone approved for Quebec Street business By Bill Freeman

News - Havelock - A loading zone will be established on Quebec Street. Township council has approved a recommendation that a loading zone be created on the east side of Quebec Street in front of Becca’s Pet Emporium. The move follows an official request from Dave Woodside of Country Cottage Books and Business Centre who expressed concerns about traffic tie-ups and parking during deliveries to his business. Superintendent of Public Works Brian McMillan talked to both business owners about a loading zone that could be shared. “There are two spots that are close to the corner in front of Becca’s Pet Emporium,” said superintendent of public works Brian McMillan. To the south of that there is a driveway between the two buildings. “It’s quite a good spot because the driveway entrance is tapered down,” McMillan said. Peterborough County has no concerns about the proposed loading zone, he added. “County staff would like to take a report to County Council so it would be covered in their parking bylaw,” McMillan said.

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Woodside of Country Cottage Books has been after the municipality to address parking issues in that area for a couple of years. “This is not an unusual request as many municipalities have these signs in front of their businesses,” Woodside said of the loading zone request. The business takes frequent deliveries and the building houses five apartments, he pointed out in his earlier request. When funerals take place at the nearby funeral chapel parking issues are magnified, Woodside noted adding that the implementation of five “no parking” signs near St. John The Evangelist Anglican Church set a “precedent” which the municipality should follow. During the initial discussion last month Deputy-mayor Jim Martin said the municipality should look at other businesses in the area to see what their needs are in terms of dedicated and specific parking. “We reacted to the church and got signs there which I totally support. I think it’s something we’re going to have to look at for all our businesses without dragging it out the whole summer. If we react to this one I think we have to look at all the businesses,” Martin said.

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Campbellford Farmers’ Market open for business By Sue Dickens

News - Campbellford - “It’s so great to be back! Lots of goodies being unpacked this morning!� Those words appeared on the Facebook page of Campbellford Farmers’ Market on opening day Saturday. It marked the start of another season with local vendors setting up to sell their wares, everything from locally grown produce, to baked goods, maple syrup, postcards, crafts, meat, flowers and even fresh coffee. This will be the third year at the market for Howson’s Pure Maple Syrup of Hastings. McCormick’s Heritage Meats located near the cheese factory on the way to Stirling is also set up and ready for customers. “We’re here all summer,� said Kristin Dupuis. Market-goers were out early browsing the vendors to see Market enthusiast Angela Runciman, left, joined other shoppers on opening what was being offered. dea? Submit your idea Farmers’ Market and she stopped by the table of newday at the Campbellford “We come here all the time,� ntest for a chance comer Marika to Terentiew of Marika’s Marvels and Munchies to check out her said Karen Reid who was there ar at a prime floral displays. Photo: Sue Dickens with Wesley Szudy. The couple n core!

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lives just down the road from the market. “It’s the selection, the quality and the people who show up here,� she said with enthusiasm. “The people who sell are amazing and it takes you a good hour to get through here because you have to talk to everybody,� Szudy added. “And we love to support the local farmers,� he said. “It’s really social, everybody comes and you see people. I’ve been looking forward to this for week and weeks,� added Reid with enthusiasm as the couple prepared to make a purchase from Frank Vaughan. He is president of the Campbellford Farmers’ Market. “We should have anywhere from 15 to 20 vendors this season. That’s up from previous years and we have some new vendors too,� he told the Trent Hills Independent on what was a beautiful sunny day. Frank and his wife Amanda own and operate Rainbow Ter-

race Greenhouse and Garden in Codrington where they grow herbs, perennials, annuals and vegetables. “This will be our tenth year,� he said. The couple started making their own soap last year and it is available for sale this season along with hummus and lip balm. In the winter months he and his wife keep busy doing maintenance work on their five-acre farm, building crates for use at the market and getting their plants and produce ready. “There’s a lot of maintenance to do,� he said. “It’s been “a universally cold winter,� and “overall it’s been a cold slow start to spring,� Vaughn commented. “This weather is nice now but we need a bit of moisture now,� he added. Further down at the market, perusing the floral arrangement in planters set up by Marika Terentiew of Marika’s Marvels and Munchies was market-goer

Angela Runciman who commented, “Love it here. I like to support local.� Marika has been coming to the market for over 40 years, supporting the local vendors. This year she decided to set up her own vending table with flowers, baking and sewn items. Alongside the regular vendors market-goers will also sometimes see charity groups. “Any charity looking for space can contact us and we will provide it free at least once every year,� said Vaughn. “Trent Hills Relay is going to set up a table.� Entertainment will also be part of the market scene from time to time. The market has been a fixture in town since 1987. It is now open Wednesdays and Saturdays from 8 a.m. until noon until the end of October. To stay up-to-date on what is happening go to <https:// w w w. f a c e b o o k . c o m / p a g e s / Campbellford-FarmersMarket/130934756930239>.

Show of “community unity� lauded t

18

News - Norwood - Local ďŹ re departments and their members have been lauded for their show of “community unityâ€? and support for the Wilford family at the funeral for 35-year volunteer and former interim chief Ken Wilford.

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low-feeling for the Wilford family. “As a life-long member of the Asphodel-Norwood community, I would like to thank Fire Chief Darryl Payne and the members of the Asphodel-Norwood Fire Department as well as ďŹ re departments of our surrounding communities for their exceptional display of community unity in regards [to] the tragic death of Ken Wilford.â€? Crowley also thanked local groups for their work in preparing and overseeing the luncheon that was served following the moving service which attracted at least 500 people to the Asphodel-Norwood Community Centre. Community Centre manager Greg Hartwick was also thanked for the “beautiful decorationâ€? of the facility for the reception. “Thank-you to all other residents of our community who came out to show their support for Mr. Wilford’s family in their time of need,â€? Crowley added.

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Celebrate Havelock 2015

Celebrate Havelock shows off community spirit

By Bill Freeman

Havelock-Belmont-Methuen – It was a record-setting day all-round for Celebrate Havelock. Well over 1,000 people browsed the displays and exhibitions inside and outside of the Havelock-BelmontMethuen Community Centre that reflected the sheer variety of goods, services and organizational activities that occur in the township. “It’s what community spirit and community development is all about,” Celebrate Havelock chair Elmer Buchanan told The Independent as he stood outside the community centre and looked at the park which was used to its best on Saturday. It was Celebrate Havelock’s seventh anniversary.

the HBM show is. Belmont Women’s Institute which is councillor Barry Pomeroy. “Even local “The fact is that this is the type of preparing to celebrate its one-hundredth residents don’t realize how much stuff event that’s good for a community anniversary. is being produced here or how many and that makes us feel good,” said “It’s brought a lot of people into our small businesses there are in our area.” Buchanan. community from surrounding areas,” “It gets bigger every year so people “It’s just a good thing all over,” says said committee member and township must like it. It’s all a plus.” Diane DeLoof of the policing committee who gave a way a bike during the event. “It’s a really good thing for the township. It’s grown immensely.” “It showcases • Call Vicki Blakely • whatever is around. There are a lot of people who don’t know Automotive Repairs, Licensed Mechanic on Duty where things are Safety Inspections • Oil Changes, Krown Rust Proofing and they will go elsewhere. We Superior Propane Filling Station • 24 Hour Towing, Complete Towing Needs would like them to stay here.” “It’s good to see 18 Ottawa St. E., Havelock, ON all the businesses because you don’t 705-778-3352 really know how • Servicing Havelock and Area for over 40 years • many are hidden Call to set up your appointment today! away in the nooks and crannies. It’s Mike Zuflet Hart Webb John Blakely nice to get the information,” added Marilyn Belanger of the

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We would like to thank the following exhibitors: • #7 Auto Plaza • 2777 Royal Canadian Cadet Corps • Air Barrier Insulation • Amazing Dollar Store • Belmont Small Engine • Bowl Shed • Brushes to Bloom • Campbellford Lawn Bowling • Cat Care • CHEX Television • Cluttered Treasures • Cottage Country Sunrooms • Country 105 • Cruikshank Eavestrough & Siding • Deal Taxi • Dunford’s of Havelock • Ellwood Hamilton Bus Lines • Elmlea Farm • Employment Planning • Foxroy Creations • G.R. Anderson Heating and Cooling • Grampa`s Home Made Fudge • Havelock & District ATV Club • Havelock & District Snowmobile Club • Havelock Community Care • Havelock Foodland • Havelock Guardian Pharmacy • Havelock Home Hardware • Havelock Jamboree • Havelock Library • Havelock Lions Club • Havelock Masonic Lodge • Havelock Metals • Havelock Pentecostal Church • Havelock Royal Canadian Legion • Havelock Scouts • Havelock Timber Mart • HBM & District Chamber of Commerce • HBM Seniors • HBM Township Office • Hydro One -Discovery Centre • ISAGENIX • JJ Stewart Chrysler • K9 Komfort Inn • Kawartha Stone Works • Kenetic Energy • Mary Garron • Nourish Havelock • Old Time Country Carpentry • Peterborough CFDC • Peterborough Economic Development • Peterborough County/City Health Unit Van • Rae McCutcheon Realty • Rural Lynx High Speed Internet • Scentsy • Sharpe’s Physiotherapy • Stepping Stone • Subway • Sugar Caine Catering • Sweet Cheeks Leggings • The Cottage • Tiffany Buchanan Photography • Tim Hortons • Toronto Dominion Bank • Trackside Interiors • Trent Hills Independent • UNIMIN • Vicky Carter Sculptures • Victim Services • Virginia Morten Stained Glass • Wireless North 14 Trent Hills Independent - Thursday, May 7, 2015

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Hayleie Jolly-Caines of Havelock enjoys herself in the petting zoo during the seventh annual Celebrate Havelock community showcase and

“It’s an evolving show and we try to do a few things new (each year),” said Buchanan. Seeing the crowds and how well things were laid out inside and outside was “very pleasing to the committee,” he said. “We’ve added some things (and) the weather has really helped for outside exhibits.” A large petting zoo, a TD Canada Trust Mobile unit, a display by the Peterborough County OPP, new cars from J.J. Stewart Motors and a barbecue hosted by the township’s Community Policing Committee with a big assist from Havelock Foodland, were among the things that filled the park. “We have a very active group of volunteers and they’re very proud of how this has turned out,” said Buchanan. One of the goals of Celebrate Havelock is to promote local businesses and to encourage newer businesses and enterprises to showcase their products and services. “That’s what makes us feel good, new businesses,” said Buchanan. Neighbouring Asphodel-Norwood is taking a page out of the Celebrate Havelock playbook with their first-ever Shop Asphodel-Norwood show May 17 and Buchanan admits there are some “mixed feelings” about that. But it is also an obvious compliment and acknowledgement of how successful


Celebrate Havelock 2015 Havelock Scouts shows off his super truck racer

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Jacob Benjamin of the First Havelock Scouts shows off his super truck racer during the seventh annual Celebrate Havelock community showcase and trade fair which packed the Havelock-Belmont-

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Come

Celebrate Havelock 2015

CELEBRATE HAVELOCK CK s! u h t i w

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HAVELOCK Adirondack Chairs With lumbar support. Assorted colours. 6411-363 to 394

1. Medical Centre (75 Concession St.) 2. Shelter opposite Blakely’s Gas Bar (Hwy 7) 3. Shelter opposite Royal Canadian Legion (Hwy 7) 4. Parking lot by Station Restaurant (Hwy 7) 5. Havelock Belmont Public School (55 Mathison St. E)

Look for the Yellow Bus Stop Signs!

S

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YOUR CHOICE!

19

97 SHOW SPECIAL

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White LED Light. Reg. $24.99

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Come and visit us at the Store

Traeger Grills See how a Wood Pellet Grill cooks! Show Special Pricing R0013252619

Additional Parking & Shuttle Service – There will be additional parking at the Medical Centre, Lions Park (along Hwy 7) and the Public School with a shuttle service provided by Ellwood Hamilton Bus Lines. Look for the Bus Stop Signs!

K-CUP

SALE ENDS MAY 31 - WHILE QUANTITIES LAST Trent Hills Independent - Thursday, May 7, 2015 15


Celebrate Havelock 2015

Havelock & District ATV Club P.O. Box 457 Havelock, Ontario K0L 1Z0

“Still here to take care of you�

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R0013261627

HAVELOCK PHARMACY

ww

w. a t v p t b

o. c a

Saturday May 9, 2015 9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.

For general inquiries please email info.havelockatv@gmail.com or call 705.778.3508

Stop by our booth and see what we have to offer 705-778-3851

44 Ottawa St. W., Havelock

Havelock-Belmont-Methuen Community Centre 39 George Street East, Havelock, ON $3/person, Children 12 & under – Free

• Over $5,000 in Door Prizes • Bouncy Castle • Children’s Activities • Local Businesses • Community Groups • Food Vendors • Petting Zoo •

Havelock Lions Club

Additional Parking & Shuttle Service – There will be additional parking at the Medical Centre, Lions Park (along Hwy 7) and the Public School with a shuttle service provided by Ellwood Hamilton Bus Lines. Look for the Bus Stop Signs!

Come out and celebrate what Havelock has to offer.

www.celebratehavelock.com TRENT HILLS

Independent

Success to the Havelock Celebration

Obedience & Agility!

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R0013262825

North of Hwy 7 Between Norwood & Havelock

25 Ottawa 25 St E Ottawa St. Havelock, ON 25 Ottawa St E 705-778-2535 Havelock, ON highway7vet@hotmail.com highway7vet@hotmail.com 705-778-2535 www.highway7vet.com

a Proud to be in s new busines Havelock

A new full service veterinary clinic that oers a wide range of pet healthcare services. We view pets as family members and oer our patients the highest level of care. We take pride in helping your be-loved pets enjoy optimal health for many years to come. We have a dedicated sta with over 20 years of combined experience and look forward to serving you and your pet in our oďŹƒce soon.

Balloon Popping for Prizes Face Painting Boarding, Grooming & Rescue Dog Information

Phone: (705) 742-3777 Fax: (705) 742-1822

jleal.mpp.co@liberal.ola.org

HIGHWAY

VETERINARY HOSPITAL

236 King St., Peterborough, ON K9J 7L8

33 )BWFMPDL 0OUBSJP , - ;

OPENING SOON! NOW OPEN!

Training and Behaviour Tips

JEFF LEAL, MPP

#*-- 4&"#300,

Lots of fun for everyone!

get Don’t forget to r your ticket fo w! our 50/50 dra

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T: 705-778-3375 F: 705-778-2393

“Free Door Prize Ticket with Donation of a Non-perishable Food Item�

www.belmontenginerepair.com

16 Trent Hills Independent - Thursday, May 7, 2015

Entertainment

10:00 a.m. - 10:45 a.m. NDHS Guitar Band 11:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. Jammers 12:00 p.m. - 12:45 p.m. Train Wreck 1:00 p.m. - 1:30 p.m. DeJong Sisters 1:45 p.m. - 2:15 p.m. Kitchen Cuties

40 Ottawa Street West P.O. Box 40 Havelock, Ontario K0L 1Z0

Proud to be a ck! part of Havelo

E., Havelock

705-778-2535

highway7vet@hotmail.com

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Join us to celebrate your local businesses, non-proďŹ t organizations, and community! Celebrate Havelock gives the opportunity for locals and visitors to learn more about what Havelock-Belmont-Methuen has to oer and increases community pride and visibility.

BELMONT ENGINE REPAIR & MARINE

TD Canada Trust

• www.highway7vet.com

A new full service veterinary clinic that offers a wide range of pet www.highway7vet.com healthcare services. We view pets as family members and offer our patients the highest level of care. We take pride in helping your be-

R0013262824

THE TOWNSHIP OF HAVELOCK-BELMONT-METHUEN

Trent Hills Independent - Thursday, May 7, 2015 17


Celebrate Havelock 2015 SPONSOR #7 Auto Plaza 2777 Royal Canadian Cadet Corps Air Barrier Insulation Allen Insurance Amazing Dollar Store Bellmere Winds Golf Course Belmont Small Engine Bowl Shed - Larry Hubble Brett Funeral Chapels Brushes to Bloom - Virginia Morten Stained Glass Campbellford Lawn Bowling Cat Care CHEX Television Cloverdale Honey Products Cluttered Treasures Cooper’s Therapy Clinic Cottage Country Sunrooms Country 105 Cruikshank Eavestrough & Siding Daniellelees Cutting Edge Hair Design Deal Taxi Dunford’s of Havelock Ellwood Hamilton Bus Lines Elmlea Farm Employment Planning Forever Yours Art Gallery Foxroy Creations G.R. Anderson Heating and Cooling Grampa`s Home Made Fudge Hair by Becky Havelock & District ATV Club Havelock & District Snowmobile Club Havelock Community Care Havelock Foodland Havelock Gardens Restaurant Havelock Gas Bar -J&L Motors Havelock Guardian Pharmacy Havelock Home Hardware Havelock Jamboree Havelock Library Havelock Masonic Lodge Havelock Metals Havelock Pentecostal Church Havelock Royal Canadian Legion Havelock Scouts Havelock Timber Mart HBM & District Chamber of Commerce

18 Trent Hills Independent - Thursday, May 7, 2015

DOOR PRIZE Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Canada & Ont Flags & 3 Camping Chairs Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. BAG with Four Bottles of Wine Check our website or see our prize on May 9th.

SPONSOR

HBM Township Office Hilda Cole Hydro One -Discovery Centre ISAGENIX JJ Stewart Chrysler Gift Certificate Round of Golf -4 Persons W-Golf Cart K9 Komfort Inn Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Kawartha Stone Works Hand Turned Wood Bowl Kenetic Energy Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Mama “P” Projects Stained Glass Hanging Stars Mary Garron Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Murdocks General Store Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Nourish Havelock Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Old Time Country Carpentry Honey Basket Perfection Plus Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Peterborough CFDC Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Peterborough Economic Development Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Peterborough County/City Health Unit Van Small Appliance - Ian Tyson Tickets & Music Gift pack Rachel’s Beautiful Beginnings Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Rae McCutcheon Realty Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Remax Realty - JJ Hudson & Tanya Drain Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Rural Lynx High Speed Internet Gift Certificate for $50 Scentsy Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Sharpe’s Physiotherapy Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Station Restaurant Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Stepping Stone Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Subway Hand Painted / Created Glass Item Sugar Caine Catering Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Sweet Cheeks Leggings Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. The Cottage Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Tiffany Buchanan Photography 1 Club Membership & 1 EOTA Trail Permit Tim Hortons Garden Ornament Toronto Dominion Bank Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Trent Hills Independent Foodland Gift Certificate Shopping Spree UNIMIN Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Vicky Carter Sculptures Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Victim Services $25 Gift Certificate & $50 in Atoma Products Wireless North Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Woody Burger Two Adult - One Day Pass Tickets Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Scout Popcorn Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Check our website or see our prize on May 9th.

DOOR PRIZE Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Oster Single Cup Coffee Maker w-Keurig Cups Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Hair Care Products / ISAGENIX Products Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. One Aprilaire Non Electronic Air Cleaner Metal Wall Ornament Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. $ 100 Visa Card Free Internet Install & 3 month Subscription for Standard Internet package

Gift Basket -Warmer, Wax, and Scent Circle Nordic Sticks - Lessons - Gift Certificate Pool Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Gift Certificate for $500 for Catering or Meal Delivery

Gift Certificate for $25 Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. 48” Haier LED HDTV Flatscreen Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Stihl MS362 Chainsaw w 20” bar -Stihl FS130 trimmer Plus Safety Gear

Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Check our website or see our prize on May 9th. Check our website or see our prize on May 9th.

Free Door Prize Ticket Name: _________________________ Town: _________________________ Phone: _________________________ Redeemable with Paid Admission


Celebrate Havelock 2015 Celebrate Havelock community showcase and trade fair

HAVELOCK

(left) Lawrence Gerow and Gerry Wrightly of the Havelock jammers perform during the seventh annual Celebrate Havelock community showcase and trade fair that filled the Havelock-Belmont-Methuen Community Centre and its grounds Saturday. Photo: Bill Freeman

Fresh Food. Friendly Neighbours.

ate Celebr s! with U

BBQ 10 am-4pm (Donations Accepted)

ALL PROCEEDS GOING TO SUPPORT

TYLER BOUTILIER BURSARY AWARD & PLAQUE

“Help us make a difference�

0UUBXB 4U 8 )BWFMPDL t

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(recipients of both Havelock Public School & Norwood High School)

(right) Sherri Hubble of The Bowl Shed in Havelock shows off one of the studio’s wares during the seventh annual Celebrate Havelock community showcase and trade fair on Saturday at the HavelockBelmont-Methuen Community Centre. Photo: Bill Freeman

LANDMARK ASSOCIATES LIMITED

PLANNERS AND ENGINEERS

Proud to Provide Consulting Planning Services to the Township of Havelock-Belmont-Methuen

LAND USE PLANNING, DEVELOPMENT APPROVALS, PROJECT MANAGEMENT AND SITE ENGINEERING

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Darryl J. Tighe, M.Sc., MCIP, RPP President Time Square, 380 Armour Road, Suite 140, Peterborough, Ontario, K9H 7L7 Tel. (705) 742-3881 • Fax (705) 740-2473 email: landmark@landmarkassociates.ca • website: www.landmarkassociates.ca Trent Hills Independent - Thursday, May 7, 2015 19


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Dual credit culinary course now being offered at CDHS two days a week this time. “Other schools are doing this but it is a ďŹ rst for here,â€? she added. Lillian Oribine from Frankford is one of the students who is glad she has been given the opportunity to take the program and has decided to attend Loyalist College and enroll in the Culinary Management Program. “It’s very hands-on and it’s mostly in the kitchen so I like it. I cook at home and I bake sometimes too. It runs in our family,â€? she said happily while rolling out some dough. Chef Chris Whynott, a culinary professor at Loyalist, is teaching the program which started three weeks ago. She is the primary dual credit professor responsible for delivering the Techniques of Baking, Culinary Techniques and portions of the Ontario Youth Apprenticeship programs to secondary school students from several different school boards. Her employment experience includes large-scale food production for catering and buffets. She has also worked as a pastry chef at the Ramada Inn where she progressed to the position of Garde Manger station and worked the line. Prior to being employed at Loyalist she was a member of the Canadian military. Currently she is teaching the course at East Northumberland Secondary School, Sir James Whitney and at Loyalist in congregated classes. Her main goal is, “to brighten their Pam Donnan, who teaches Nutrition and Health [students] horizon so that they say I can at CDHS, is happy that some Grade 12 students in- do college. Would it be culinary? Who cluding Sebastien Dignard have decided to take knows ‌ but the dual opportunity is a By Sue Dickens

News - Campbellford - Education is heating up at Campbellford District High School (CDHS) with the recent introduction of the Techniques of Baking Dual Credit Program. “Eleven senior students are now earning their Grade Twelve food credit and a college credit at the same time,â€? said Trish Wood, guidance facilitator at CDHS. “This is a program of the Kawartha Pine Ridge District School Board [KPRDSB] and Loyalist College,â€? she added. The students in the program are earning a Grade 12 Nutrition and Health Credit and ďŹ rst-year college credit. “This was presented to us mid-semester; the opportunity was there and we said we wanted it,â€? Wood explained. The 45-hour program is being offered

the new culinary program. Photo: Sue Dickens

very special opportunity to light a spark and for personalities to shine. To start with a very basic task and go through to produce French pastries. The sense of accomplishment the students get from this is very rewarding for me as their teacher.� “We have a lot of success stories from

dual credits,� she added. Sebastien Dignard of Hastings is one of the CDHS students taking the dual credit program. “When I was younger I was always interested in cooking and the idea of going into cooking was there but I never really pursued it. At the beginning of this

course I wasn’t too interested but now that I’ve cooked more and been to Loyalist and seen the facilities and I’ve cooked here a lot with Chef Chris, now I’ve got a lot more interest in it,� he told the Trent Hills Independent. Next year CDHS plans to have a full dual credit session.

Invites you to our

DAY CUSTOMER APPRECIATION

Thursday, May 14th, 10am to 3pm

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)BNCVSHFST )PU %PHT

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The Techniques of Baking Dual Credit Program was brought to CDHS three weeks ago, mid-semester, a first for CDHS and 11 Grade 12 students have enrolled in the 45-hour course: from left, Lillian Oribine, Chef Chris Whynott, Valerie Ibbotson, Joseph Oates, Cameron Mackenzie, Sebastien Dignard, Megan Bellefontaine and Mikaela Mechetuk. Photo: Sue Dickens

LAWN KING GARDENERS

SPECIAL SPRING OFFER

!

R0013257140

! ! !

(limited to new customers) LAWN KING GARDENERS LAWN KING GARDENERS LAWN CUTTING LAWN MOWING & TRIMMING TREELAWN & SHRUB TRIMMING CUTTING GARDENING SERVICE

Sign up for a seasonal lawn mowing service & receive

FREE SPRING LAWN FERTILIZING

Email: lawnkinggardeners@hotmail.ca Web: LawnKingGardeners.com

Cell: 705-931-2626

GARDEN BED DESIGN & PLANTING TREE & SHRUB TRIMMING Frank &BED Fern SOIL/COMPOST/MULCH GARDEN DESIGNReis & PLANTING “Trent Hills’Owners & garden people� DELIVERY &lawn PLACEMENT SOIL/COMPOST/MULCH DEBRIS DISPOSAL DELIVERY & PLACEMENT GROUNDS DEBRIS MAINTENANCE DISPOSAL GROUNDS MAINTENANCE Frank & Fern Reis R0013179086

Cell: 705-931-2626

Trent Hills Independent - Thursday, May 7, 2015 21


PRECISION TRUCK EVENT 2015 GMC SIERRA 1500 4X4 1SA DOUBLE CAB LEASE

145@0%

$

2015 GMC ACADIA ALL-WHEEL DRIVE

CREW CAB LEASE

BI-WEEKLY FOR 24 MONTHS▼

$1,850 DOWN PAYMENT. $0 SECURITY DEPOSIT. INCLUDES FREIGHT, PDI, LEVIES, $1,000 LOYALTY CASH,2 $4,500 CREDIT� & $1,000 PDU CREDIT.

155@0%

$

BI-WEEKLY FOR 24 MONTHS▼

$1,850 DOWN PAYMENT. $0 SECURITY DEPOSIT. INCLUDES FREIGHT, PDI, LEVIES, $1,000 LOYALTY CASH,2 $3,500 CREDIT� & $1,000 PDU CREDIT.

BI-WEEKLY LEASE

179 @ 0%

$

FOR 48 MONTHS▼

$1,495 DOWN PAYMENT. $0 SECURITY DEPOSIT. INCLUDES FREIGHT, PDI, LEVIES & $750 LOYALTY CASH.1

ACADIA SLT-1 SHOWN±

2015 GMC TERRAIN SIERRA ALL-TERRAIN DOUBLE CAB SHOWN±

10,000

STEP UP TO THE COMFORT, CONVENIENCE AND CAPABILITY OF THE KODIAK EDITION

$

KODIAK PACKAGE INCLUDES: DRIVER 10-WAY POWER SEAT ADJUSTER

FOG LAMPS

CASH PURCHASE PRICE

24,995

$

INCLUDES FREIGHT, PDI, LEVIES, $4,200 CASH CREDIT�� & $750 LOYALTY CASH.1

IN TOTAL VALUE*

INCLUDES: $4,500 DELIVERY CREDIT, $2,345 CASH CREDIT, $2,155 KODIAK PACKAGE DISCOUNT, $1,000 LOYALTY CASH

DUAL-ZONE CLIMATE CONTROL

TRAILERING EQUIPMENT

AUTOMATIC LOCKING REAR DIFFERENTIAL

REMOTE VEHICLE STARTER SYSTEM

PLUS UP TO $1,500 LOYALTY CASH ON SELECT MODELS START CONNECTED. STAY CONNECTED. TO GUARANTEE OUR QUALITY, WE BACK IT

1/2

Exclusive OnStar 4G LTE Wi-Fi guarantees a fast internet connection within a 15-m radius of your vehicle. Reliable and easy to use, it transforms your GMC into a luxurious, cutting-edge mobile office.

160,000-KM/5-YEAR

Whichever comes first. See dealer for limited warranty details.�

POWERTRAIN WARRANTY

VEHICLE PRICING IS NOW EASIER TO UNDERSTAND BECAUSE ALL OUR PRICES INCLUDE FREIGHT, PDI AND MANDATORY GOVERNMENT LEVIES. Prices do not include applicable taxes and PPSA. Consumers may be required to pay up to $799 for Dealer fees.***

Visit us at: GMC.GM.CA

For the latest information, visit us at gmc.gm.ca, drop by your local Buick GMC Dealer or call us at 1-800-GM-DRIVE. �Based on a 24/24/48 month lease for 2015 GMC (Sierra 1500 Double Cab 4X4 1SA+G80+H2R+B30/Sierra 1500 Crew Cab 4X4 1SA+G80+B30/Acadia SLE AWD 3SA). Annual kilometre limit of 20,000 km, $0.16 per excess kilometre. OAC by GM Financial. Monthly/ Bi-Weekly payments may vary depending on down payment/trade. A down payment or trade of $1,850/$1,850/$1,495 and/or $0 security deposit is required. Total obligation is $9,369/$9,903/$20,116. Option to purchase at lease end is $22,211/$24,427/$19,315. Excess wear and tear and km charges not included. Other lease options available. †Offer applies to the purchase of 2015 GMC Terrain SLE 3SA. �$4,500/$3,500 is a manufacturer to dealer delivery credit (tax exclusive) for 2015 GMC Sierra 1500 Double Cab/2015 GMC Sierra 1500 Crew Cab and is reflected in offers in this advertisement. Other cash credits available on most models. See dealer for details. ��$4,200 is a manufacturer to dealer delivery credit (tax exclusive) for 2015 GMC Terrain SLE-1 and is reflected in offers in this advertisement. Such credit is available only for cash purchase and by selecting lease or finance offers, consumers are foregoing such credit which will result in higher effective interest rates. Other cash credits available on most models. See dealer for details. ▼/�/��/***Freight & PDI, ($1,695/$1,695/$1,650/$1,650), registration, air and tire levies and OMVIC fees included. Insurance, licence, PPSA, dealer fees and applicable taxes not included. Offers apply as indicated to 2015 new or demonstrator models of the vehicle equipped as described. Offers apply to qualified retail customers in the Ontario Buick GMC Dealer Marketing Association area only (including Outaouais). Dealers are free to set individual prices. Quantities limited; dealer order or trade may be required. Limited time offers which may not be combined with other offers. GMCL may modify, extend or terminate offers in whole or in part at any time without notice. Conditions and limitations apply. See dealer for details. ±2015 Sierra 1500 SLE Double Cab 4WD with GAT, MSRP with freight PDI & levies $45,419. 2015 Acadia AWD SLT-1, MSRP with freight PDI & levies $49,454. Dealers are free to set individual prices. ▲Warranty based on 6-years or 110,000 km, whichever comes first. Fully transferable. See dealer for conditions and limited warranty details. Excludes Medium Duty Trucks. 1 Offer applies to eligible current owners or lessees of any model year 1999 or newer car that has been registered and insured in Canada in the customer’s name for the previous consecutive six (6) months. Credit valid towards the retail purchase or lease of one eligible 2015 model year Chevrolet/Buick/GMC/Cadillac car, SUV, crossover and pickups models delivered in Canada from May 1, 2015 – June 1, 2015. Credit is a manufacturer to consumer incentive (tax inclusive) and credit value depends on model purchased: $500 credit available on Chevrolet: Spark, Sonic, Cruze, Volt, Trax, Malibu (except LS), Buick Encore and Verano; $750 credit available on other Chevrolet, Buick GMC vehicles (except Chevrolet: Colorado 2SA, Camaro Z28, Malibu LS, Silverado Light Duty and Heavy Duty, GMC: Canyon 2SA, Sierra Light Duty and Heavy Duty); $1,000 credit available on Cadillac vehicles (except 2015 Cadillac Escalade) and $1,000 on all Chevrolet Silverado’s and GMC Sierra’s. Offer is transferable to a family member living within the same household (proof of address required). As part of the transaction, dealer may request documentation and contact General Motors of Canada Limited (GMCL) to verify eligibility. This offer may not be redeemed for cash and may not be combined with certain other consumer incentives. Certain limitations or conditions apply. Void where prohibited. See your GMCL dealer for details. GMCL reserves the right to amend or terminate offers for any reason in whole or in part at any time without prior notice. 2 Offer applies to eligible current owners or lessees of any Pontiac/Saturn/SAAB/Hummer/Oldsmobile model year 1999 or newer car or Chevrolet Cobalt or HHR that has been registered and insured in Canada in the customer’s name for the previous consecutive six (6) months. Credit valid towards the retail purchase or lease of one eligible 2015 model year Chevrolet/Buick/GMC/Cadillac car, SUV, crossover and pickups models delivered in Canada from May 1, 2015 – June 1, 2015. Credit is a manufacturer to consumer incentive (tax inclusive): $1,000 credit available on Chevrolet: Spark, Sonic, Cruze, Volt, Trax, Malibu (except LS), Buick Encore and Verano; $1,500 credit available on other eligible Chevrolet, Buick, GMC and Cadillac vehicles (except Chevrolet: Colorado 2SA, Camaro Z28, Malibu LS, GMC Canyon 2SA and 2015 Cadillac Escalade). Offer is transferable to a family member living within the same household (proof of address required). As part of the transaction, dealer may request documentation and contact General Motors of Canada Limited (GMCL) to verify eligibility. This offer may not be redeemed for cash and may not be combined with certain other consumer incentives. Certain limitations or conditions apply. Void where prohibited. See your GMCL dealer for details. GMCL reserves the right to amend or terminate offers for any reason in whole or in part at any time without prior notice. *$10,000 is a combined total credit consisting of a $4,500 manufacturer-to-dealer delivery credit (tax exclusive), $2,345 Cash Credit (tax exclusive), $1,000 Loyalty Cash (tax inclusive) and a $2,155 manufacturer-to-dealer Kodiak Package Discount Credit (tax exclusive) for 2015 Sierra SLE Kodiak Edition, which is available for cash purchases only and cannot be combined with special lease and finance rates. By selecting lease or finance offers, consumers are foregoing this $2,155 credit, which will result in higher effective interest rates. Discounts vary by model. +Visit onstar.ca for coverage maps, details and system limitations. Services and connectivity may vary by model and conditions. OnStar with 4G LTE connectivity is available on select vehicle models and in select markets. Customers will be able to access OnStar services only if they accept the OnStar User Terms and Privacy Statement. OnStar acts as a link to existing emergency service providers. After the trial period (if applicable), an active OnStar service plan is required.

22 Trent Hills Independent - Thursday, May 7, 2015


Community foundation invests another $141,450 in local projects

CDHS student success teacher Julie Brahaney, presented with an “accepting certificate” for $5,000 from Campbellford-Seymour Community Foundation board member Dave MacDougall, said a portion of the money will be used Since Aron Theatre’s rebirth five years ago as a not-for-profit co-operative, Campbellford-Seymour to have internationally recognized speaker and bestselling author Barbara Community Foundation has provided ongoing assistance in a number of ways, beginning with the Coloroso speak at the high school May 13 about teaching young people to purchase of $80,500 in bonds. Aron president Mark White, who was presented an “accepting certifi- act ethically. Her talk, which starts at 7 p.m., is free to the public. Photo: cate” from foundation board member Dave MacDougall, said the organization will use its 2015 grant John Campbell Aron Theatre Co-operative Ltd. will of $5,000 to install sound and thermal insulation. Photo: John Campbell By John Campbell

News - Campbellford - Campbellford-Seymour Community Foundation has more money in the bank than when it started out 14 years ago, even though it has invested more than $2.7 million in community projects since 2003. And the news just keeps getting better, as the flow of money in support of local organizations continued Monday, with another $141,450 in grants, for 2015, being announced at the foundation’s annual general meeting, with the presentation of “accepting certificates” to recipients. The largest amount drawn from its Community Fund was for $50,000, the second installment in a $500,000 commitment the foundation has made in support of Trent Hills’ vision to build a recreation and wellness

centre in Campbellford. The municipality was given an additional $15,000 from the Ontario Endowment for Children and Youth in Recreation Fund for the purchase of equipment to loan out at the new Hastings Field House, to encourage people to get involved in physical activity. Most organizations received $5,000. Campbellford District High School will put the money it received in support of its Building Resiliency and Caring in High School Youth program. Student success teacher Julie Brahaney explained some of it will go toward having internationally recognized speaker and bestselling author Barbara Coloroso come speak at the high school May 13. Her evening talk, free to the public, will be about

teaching young people to act ethically. It starts at 7 p.m. “We’re really excited to have her come and speak to our community,” Brahaney said. Another portion will make it possible for CDHS to introduce Rachel’s Challenge, a series of programs by a non-profit organization that is “dedicated to creating safe connected school environments where learning and teaching are maximized.” It was started by the father and stepmother of Rachel Scott, the first victim in the Columbine school killings in 1999. The remaining amount will introduce students to habits that will help them to achieve personal and inter-personal success as well as learn how to take care of themselves, based on the books of Stephen Covey and his son Sean.

use its $5,000 grant to install sound and thermal insulation. Campbellford and District Curling and Racquet Club will buy a rowing machine and a leg curl/extension machine with its grant. St. Mary Elementary School plans to improve its sound system and pro-

vide risers for its choir, while Hillcrest Public School will purchase benches for indoor and outdoor use, each in partnership with their respective school boards. The Rotary Club of Campbellford will rehabilitate the Rotary Trail that runs along both sides of the Trent River. Masonic Golden Rule Lodge No. 126 will use its grant to renovate the men’s and women’s washrooms at its hall on Front Street South. Westben Arts Festival Theatre will invest the $5,000 it received in a theatre lighting enhancement initiative. Five recipients planned to use the money to hire youth for the summer: Beehive Daycare (early childhood education assistant), Campbellford Incredible Edibles Festival (marketing and social media intern), Campbellford Memorial Hospital (laboratory and finance assistant), Campbellford Memorial Hospital Foundation (special events assistant), and Community

Care Northumberland Inc. (program assistant). The municipality was given $4,950 to hire a marketing/business student to work in the canteen at Kennedy Park, and Artworth, the children’s art camp, was granted $2,500 for an assistant camp co-ordinator. The foundation also gave $1,000 HATCH (Helping Assure Tomorrow’s Charitable Hearts) grants to each of the four local schools for the purchase of hallway benches (CDHS), physical education equipment (St. Mary and Kent Public School) and cordless microphones (Hillcrest). Trent Hills directed $126,450 from the Municipal Fund the foundation manages to the recreation and wellness centre project, as part of a $1.5-million commitment it has made to the project. The foundation, which originally started out with $6.2 million, ended 2014 with a fund balance of $6.7 million.

Trent Hills Independent - Thursday, May 7, 2015 23


Signage additions possible in Norwood By Bill Freeman

News - Norwood - There could be some modifications to the new Asphodel-Norwood events sign along Highway 7 to help draw more attention to the community centre and its attractions; there might even be additional directional signage to remind travellers of amenities available in the township. Township council will continue to mull over a report from community centre manager Greg Hartwick which outlined a few options for modifying the sign near the post office in a way that would provide information on how to get to the centre and its adjacent playground, splash pad and softball field. Councillor Debbie Lynch also suggested the municipality consider adding new signs in strategic locations in the west and east ends of the village to catch the attention of travellers before they pass through. “We need to let people know we’ve

got a splash pad, we’ve got a bank,” Lynch said. “We really need something that catches [a] cottager’s attention so that they know we have a commercial section, a splash pad etc.” “Is there any thought about trying to develop a new sign up in the area of the millpond?” Lynch wondered. She said it would be beneficial to find a location somewhere in the west end of the village to catch eastbound travellers and likewise in the east end to alert westbound travellers. “If you’re heading westbound you’re not really looking at it [the current sign near the post office] or seeing it,” she said. “I think it’s a good idea to maybe make some changes to the current sign but I’m also thinking of a much bigger sign elsewhere or two on each end [of the village].” Hartwick tabled his report for information suggesting three options that might be considered for further discussion. In the first option, the top part of the current sign which now has the Asphodel-Norwood logo could be replaced with a photo or written directions. The second suggestion is reduc-

ing the number of rows for letters to four from five and using the fifth row for information about the community centre. Hartwick says this is what was done with the sign in Hastings. “The information would not be as large as the current letters but it would be readable,” he said. This option would limit the ability to advertise larger events in the future because there would be one less row for letters, he added. A possible third option would be adding a new piece below the existing sign but Hartwick worries that it might become a target for vandals. “This could be a good project for the Economic Development Committee,” said Mayor Terry Low. Mayor Low suggested they take a close look at the Hastings sign as part of the annual council road tour. “Part of the focus is to highlight the splash pad and the park,” stressed Councillor Bernadette Vanderhorst. “I love the arena dearly but if you just say community centre it doesn’t sound like the splash pad or park are there. For people in the summertime, they Asphodel-Norwood council will continue to discuss possible changes to the township’s events sign need to know they’re there.” that would provide visitors with information about the Asphodel-Norwood Community Centre. Photo: Council will continue to discuss the Bill Freeman issue.

Former deputy-mayor appointed to police board By Bill Freeman

News - Norwood - Former Deputy-mayor Joe Crowley has been appointed to the Asphodel-Norwood Police Services Board as a representative of the province. The two-year appointment was made by Lieutenant-Governor Elizabeth Dowdeswell following an Order in Council signed by Minister of Community SafeFormer Asphodel-Norwood Deputy-mayor Joe Crowley has been appointed the provincial representative on the township’s police services board.

24 Trent Hills Independent - Thursday, May 7, 2015

ty and Correctional Services Yasir Naqvi; the position runs until April, 2017. Crowley joins Mayor Terry Low and Al Partington as representatives on the Police Services Board. Prior to his election as mayor, Low had been the township’s provincial appointee but upon election could not hold that post and will now sit on the PSB as council’s representative. The police services board prior to the October municipal election was composed of Mayor Doug Pearcy, Low and Partington.


Shop Asphodel-Norwood gears up for second show By Bill Freeman

Events - Norwood - Shop AsphodelNorwood is coming back for a second year and will try to match the success it enjoyed in its inaugural year. The trade show and showcase for

local businesses, organizations and activities in the township will fill the Asphodel-Norwood Community Centre May 16 as part of holiday weekend festivities in the municipality. The municipality has once again

partnered with Foodland Ontario and will offer a range of entertainment, food tastings, demonstrations and displays in both the arena and the Millennium Room. Last year’s kick-off event featured over 20 vendors, a variety of food tasting stations and a special yard sale area for local organizations; there was also entertainment, a baby show and other activities for children and families. The event was about showcasing what Asphodel-Norwood can offer residents, visitors and families thinking of moving to the community. The fact that it takes place on the same day as Norwood’s famous holiday weekend yard sales is a bonus. In addition to free sampling of locally produced fare in the Millennium Room, visitors will have the opportunity to hear local farming experts discuss how foods such as maple syrup, honey and garden produce arrive at their tables. Entertainment on stage will include performances by the Donegal

Fiddlers, Tai Chi demonstrations and the IODE’s second annual baby show. There will also be balloon animals, face painting, a visit by Sparky the Fire Dog, mini putt golf, Maple the Cow, door prizes and free popcorn. “I think it’s a good idea. It’s nice to showcase what’s available from both a retail point of view and all the service

clubs,� Asphodel-Norwood Beautification Committee co-chair Doreen Allen-Bell said during last year’s event. “You can be as involved as you want to be here because there are plenty of things going on. I’m not sure everyone knows what is around.� Shop Asphodel-Norwood runs from 9 a.m. until 1 p.m. Admission is free.

Lloyd Gaskin of the Royal Canadian Legion Branch 300 in Norwood tends the branch’s booth at the first ever Shop Asphodel-Norwood trade fair and showcase. The second annual Shop Asphodel showcase will run May 17 from 9 a.m. until 1 p.m. in the Asphodel-Norwood Community Centre.

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Trent Hills Independent - Thursday, May 7, 2015 25


Township will help Cattlemen with barbecue entrance

Shearing weekend at Twoloom Alpacas By Bill Freeman

This curious alpaca sports a summer haircut following the annual shearing at Twoloom Alpacas in Hastings over the weekend. The event was open to the general public who got to see how much of a team effort the harvesting requires. Twoloom Alpacas is owned and operated by Melody Macdonald and Dawn Campbell. Photo: Bill Freeman

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News - Norwood - Asphodel-Norwood will help create a temporary entrance at the Baker Farm as it prepares to host more than 1,000 guests at the 34th annual Peterborough County Cattlemen’s Association barbecue this summer. The event is both a showcase for the local beef industry as well as a fundraiser that has donated thousands of dollars to worthy causes and fire and rescue departments in the municipalities that host the event. This year’s barbecue will be held August 2 at the farm of Joan and Murphy Baker on the Asphodel Third Line. The Cattlemen’s Association made a formal request to township council for assistance with the entrance which will bear a heavy traffic load that day. The Cattlemen asked that the work be done at no cost to the association or to the Bakers. Council approved the request noting that the barbecue is a major oneday gathering that draws people from around the region to the host farm and its municipality. “It is important for us to realize that the last three years the association has provided a large amount of money to local causes,� Councillor Debbie Lynch said. “It’s a real showcase for our municipality to be able to host this event.� Lynch said that by installing the entrance the municipality would make it easier for people to attend the event which would produce “a great return� on the work involved. “We can accommodate the request if we just build a roadway in for them [that way] we have an opportunity to

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remove it and straighten everything up,� said Mayor Terry Low. Last year’s barbecue at the Skibbereen Farm in Otonabee South-Monaghan raised $8,400 which was split evenly between Team 55: Let’s Tackle Suicide Awareness and the OSM Firefighters Association equipment fund. The event drew over 1,000

guests and involved 50 volunteers with firefighters also helping out with the barbecue. In 2013, 1,400 guests attended the barbecue hosted by Darrel and Susan Drain at their DouroDummer farm which raised $5,000 with Camp Oochigeas and the Douro-Dummer Firefighters receiving $2,500 each. Seventy-five volunteers and 110

Cemetery Board volunteer honoured

The Township of Asphodel-Norwood honoured a long-time member of the municipality’s cemetery board during its regular council meeting. Tom Deen, who served 23 years on the board, was presented with a special certificate by Mayor Terry Low and Peterborough County Warden J. Murray Jones who was also in attendance at the meeting. “It couldn’t go to a nicer person,� said Jones, who is also the mayor of Douro-Dummer where Deen and members of the Norwood Highway 7 Cruisers Classic Car Club are frequent guests at Warsaw and District Lions cruise nights. “The things that Tom gets involved in are numerous and again that’s what makes Peterborough County what it is. We’ve had a lot of fun with Tom over the years.� Photo: Bill Freeman

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Hospital auxiliary hosts “Forever Fashions”

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Heralding the arrival of spring, these models were among those who showcased the fashions and accessories from three local businesses at the annual fundraiser hosted by the Auxiliary to the Campbellford Memorial Hospital: from left, Norah A social hour preceded the Auxiliary to Campbellford Memorial Hospital’s “Forever Fashions” 2015 Spring Show. Edna Findlay, MacGregor and Pat Annaert (clothes from Julia’s Women’s Wear, Stirling); Jennifer Little and Ruth Lewis (fashions from ZAZU one of the auxiliary volunteers, helped serve during the event. Money raised from the show will go to the hospital for muchBoutique, Campbellford); Judy Pearce and Maureen Marvin (clothing from Trentmendous, Warkworth). Photo: Sue Dickens needed medical equipment. Photo: Sue Dickens

28 Trent Hills Independent - Thursday, May 7, 2015


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SPORTS

Bittersweet awards night for the Campbellford Rebels as they look to the future By Sue Dickens

Sports - Campbellford - Looking forward to their next season while applauding the efforts of the past year the Campbellford Rebels celebrated with a dinner and awards night on Saturday. The evening was bittersweet as a few of the players will be moving on. “In regards to the past season, management and coaching staff thought we had a very successful season,â€? said Director of Hockey Operations John Vandertoorn. “We were in a competitive loop. Reilly Dunn, left, and Gerald Bilker, right, shared the Most Dedicated Player The results of the standings show Award which was presented by the Campbellford Rebels’ treasurer Bob Reid that ‌ Any time you can ďŹ nish at the team’s banquet and awards night. second in this loop you’ve completed what you’ve set out to do,â€? he told the players and their families who attended the wrap-up banquet held at the curling club here. The Rebels did suffer four straight losses that knocked them out of the Empire B Junior C Hockey League playoffs. Dr. Paul Giuliani D.D.S. “Unfortunately we’re going to lose a big part of our team this year. Andy Doxtator has played his last game, [John] Samis has played his Dental veneers are an exciting dental treatment last game and also Nick Ferguson,â€? alternative recommended for teeth that are cracked, he said. chipped, worn, or slightly crooked, and can be used to But there was plenty of good news close unsightly gaps. to be shared at the banquet. “In regards to our successes Veneers are thin, custom-made porcelain laminates that this year our attendance is up cover and transform the front portion and most visible which is good for this community. We’re averaging roughly 150 for a area of your tooth. A single veneer or a set of them is home game crowd,â€? Vandertoorn custom made to the exact specification of your smile. commented. Along with holding a perfect size and shape, veneers “That’s a tribute to the players,â€? are also made to exactly match the color of your teeth. Within the span of a few days, you can have an entirely new smile and an entirely new look, thanks to this simple procedure.

he added. “They all had a very good season, some even had a career season.â€? Looking forward, “We see a bright future for Campbellford and the Rebels,â€? he said. Vandertoorn talked about the new coaching staff being in place but said the announcement as to who they are would be coming soon from Rebels’ President Jim Peeling, who was unable to attend the banquet because of knee surgery. “What I will say about them is they are young, they are eager, they are local and are well known in the community and judging from their performance at our rookie camp two weeks ago we think this organization has a bright future with them on the bench and helping us out on the management side of things,â€? Vandertoorn concluded. A special presentation was made to Sherry Doxtator of Belleville, whose son Andrew is one of the players who will be moving on. “Sherry was there when we made the phone calls to her to help us out with setting up rookie camps ‌ We saw her at the front door, she had everything itemized and more ‌ we’re deďŹ nitely going to miss her,â€? he said. Also that evening the Campbellford Minor Hockey Ladies Auxiliary presented a cheque for $700 to the Rebels. Bob Reid, the Rebel’s treasurer, gave a special thanks to the parents who helped and to the team’s sponsors.

The Campbellford Rebels held their wrap-up banquet on Saturday with the following players receiving special awards: from left, Leading Scorer - Jeremiah Doherty; Rookie of the Year Award - Colin Doyle; Most Valuable Defenceman - Andrew Doxtator; Most Valuable Player - Cole Mahoney; Coach’s Choice - Ethan McDougall.

Photos: Sue Dickens

A surprise presentation was made by some of the Rebels on behalf of the team to their fellow players who have played their last game with the hockey team: from left, Grant Fry, John Samis (who is leaving), Cole Mahoney, Jeremiah Doherty, Andrew Doxtator (who is leaving). Nick Ferguson is also leaving but was absent when the photo was taken.

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Committee will review field house operations and recommend improvements will be taking a proactive approach to ensure the new indoor facility will be utilized to its fullest, will incorporate input from residents on services offered and engage the primary facility users in discussions on potential improvements to adequately serve all community needs,” he stated. Rose suggested the committee be composed of representatives from walking groups, soccer and football clubs, and council, as well as include citizens at large, which council amended to include one from each ward. Councillor Cathy Redden said she had visited a similar facility north of Guelph and was “really impressed” by the many

different recreational uses it had to offer. “It was really something and if this even comes close to what I saw it’s going to be really neat place,” she said. “The opportunities are practically endless; there are all kinds of things it can be used for,” Mayor Hector Macmillan said. Council also approved the purchase and installation of a 50-ton air conditioning unit to cool the turf and sports floor area of the air-supported dome. The net cost is around $84,000. Although air conditioning was not included in the original construction tender, provisions were made during its design for it to be added at a later date.

Gold, silver for Knights

The NDHS junior mixed doubles badminton team of Hayden Baptie and Nicole Bennett won a gold medal at the COSSA championships with a twogame sweep of Holy Cross. Photo: Submitted By Bill Freeman

Sports - Norwood - The Norwood District High School Knights picked up a gold and silver medal at the COSSA badminton championships and will

continue the tradition of sending a team to the provincial (OFSAA) finals. The junior mixed pair of Hayden Baptie and Nicole Bennett knocked off challengers Melissa Duong and Adam Nguyen from Holy Cross in straight games to win the gold medal reversing the results of the Kawartha championship final won by the Hurricanes. On the senior court, Travis Bennett and Kelen McIvor placed second in the mixed doubles losing out to the Crestwood team of Olive Earl and David Pham but still earning a berth in this week’s OFSAA championship tourney at the spectacular Atos Markham Pan Am Centre in Markham. Norwood has had a great deal of success in recent years at the OFSAA championships; the Knights duo will open their tourney against Kelly Duan and Martin Chan of the Toronto District School Board. Placing fifth in the junior mixed doubles was the team of Saarah Rivera and Steven Wilson.

It was thought at the time that it might be “beneficial to have the new facility in operation for a period of time to better assess the need for air conditioning based on use during summer months,” Rose said. Many other facilities were looked at but were found to be not open in the summer . As the Hasting Field House will be a year-round use facility, “a controlled indoor temperature during the summer months could provide a more enjoyable environment for our users,” he said. “According to the Farley Group, the internal temperatures of an air-supported structure are the same as outside temperatures, without being exposed to direct sunlight. It is similar to being under shade when outdoors.” The cost to operate and maintain the air conditioning unit is an estimated $11,721 a year. Macmillan said council “made a whole

2015/16 Coaching Applications Now Being Accepted Applications being accepted for the following teams:

All REP Teams: Novice-Juvenile and MITES, JR IP & SR TYKE The senior mixed doubles team of Travis Bennett and Kelen McIvor will represent NDHS at the OFSAA badminton championships this weekend at the Atos Markham Pan Am Centre in Markham after winning a silver medal at the COSSA finals in Brighton. Photo: Submitted

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lot of changes based on what the public commented on” and it removed “some things out of it to make it a little more palatable off the get-go,” rather than “take a little longer” to pay them off. However, as Councillor Ken Tully noted during council’s budget session, “we should be putting our best foot forward on our grand opening of this facility on potentially one of the hottest days of the year when it does open,” Macmillan said. “It just might not be a very nice day to be inside that type of facility because it’s extremely hot.” The projected opening is now the end of June. And just because the field house will have air conditioning, “it doesn’t mean it will be on all the time, it just means we’ll have the availability to use it,” Macmillan added.

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Applications can be found on the NDMS website www.norwoodminorsports.com Deadline for applications is Friday May 29, 2015. Interviews to take place in June.

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Sports - Hastings - The Hastings Field House is still weeks away from opening but Trent Hills is setting up a special committee to review its operations and make recommendations on where improvements can be made. In a report to council, community services officer Scott Rose said “it makes sense” for a committee to be in place to review the facility’s fee schedule, hours of operation, services provided and “community use patterns” within the first six to eight months of its opening. “By creating a Hastings Field House Operational Review Committee now, council

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Trent Hills Independent - Thursday, May 7, 2015 31


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Great weekend for fishing in Kiwanis Walleye World By Kate Everson

Sports - Quinte West - The 35th annual Kiwanis Walleye World Fishing Derby on May 2 and 3, was a huge success, with over 3,000 anglers on the waters of the Bay of Quinte with nine weigh stations from Picton to Napanee, Trenton, Brighton and Belleville. “The weather was a lot better than last year,” said chair for the fourth year Remco DeGooyer. “It was a beautiful weekend.” He said the Trenton Kiwanis Club has only 25 members but did a fantastic job organizing the event. “It was impressive,” he said. “This is the largest registered fishing derby of its kind in North America.” He said it has been live release for many years to ensure that fishing stocks are kept intact. If a fish does not survive the weigh-in it does not count for the prizes. Fish are kept alive in a tank at the fishing derby weigh-in stations before being released. “We watch to see if it lives,” he said. “It can spend up to 15 minutes in the tank. Sometimes we push it through the water to get the air into its gills.” Children loved watching the fish in the tank as well as outside in the huge aquarium set up at the Trenton headquarters. There was also a jumbo slide, rock climbing and barbecues for families during the day. Many camped along the river in tents or trailers, watching the boats all lit up fishing throughout the night from midnight Friday to Sunday at 4 p.m. Awards were presented in the arena on Sunday at 5 p.m., a new venue for the derby headquarters which was previously held in a tent. Winner of the top prize, the biggest walleye at 12.88 pounds was Ryan Tropea from Ottawa with his buddy Mike Adamec from Keswick. They caught the big fish right in Trenton waters on Ryan Tropea hoists his trophy for first place in Senior Walleye presented by David Chong of Ultra Tungsten tackle. The 35th annual event was a huge success, with over 3,000 anglers on the waters of the Saturday night with a Rapala lure. Please see “Water” on page B4 Bay of Quinte. Photo: Kate Everson


A story of a West African boy, some chicks and loose change By Sue Dickens

News - Campbellford - The story of a West African boy named Kojo recently captured the hearts of the Kindergarten students at Hillcrest Public School. It all began in the classroom with the birth of eight healthy chicks hatched in an incubator. “I am so excited I am going to

explode,â€? said Kindergarten student Piper Nichols. “They really enjoyed the experience and loved watching and waiting for our chicks to arrive and now they are thrilled to have the responsibility of feeding them and seeing ďŹ rsthand the daily changes,â€? commented their teacher Joy Petherick.

For these students the answer to the question what came ďŹ rst the chicken or the egg was simple in this situation, the egg of course, because local dairy farmer Jerry McKelvie delivered them to the classroom. “He brought a dozen eggs and they were able to ask questions and he had questions for the kids. It was a lot of

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information sharing,â€? Petherick said. And thus began a 21-day project for the Kindergarten class. “Each day the students followed the visuals we have on a chart and had an excellent video to watch. We were so impressed with the connections they made,â€? said Sarah Real. Petherick and Real are the Early Learning Kindergarten team at this Campbellford school. In the book One Hen: How One Small Loan Made a Big Difference, which is used for classroom teaching, Kojo receives a small loan to buy a hen, and takes ight as an entrepreneur. He moves gradually from poverty, to well-being, to provider who creates opportunities for others. It is described on the educational website as a story of how the world undergoes change–one person, one family, and one community at a time. The Kindergarten students were asked what would they do if they had a small loan and at ďŹ rst they said “a slushy, toys, a chocolate bar,â€? but after learning about Kojo and how his father had died and how he was trying to help by buying a hen, they soon understood the importance of the money. “It was amazing how they made the connection and they wanted to help so it really was spearheaded by them making

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that connection with the book and wanting to help and reach out to others, so it’s great empathy,� commented Real. “So Kojo raised the chicken and they could have eggs and eat the eggs and some were left over so he sold the eggs to raise money to buy two chickens,� said Lily Fischer, one of the students. “From this story the students learned how a small amount of money can make a big difference to families in other countries around the world. We then decided to raise some money here at school to purchase chickens for families living in the Third World,� added Petherick. The next project “loose change� saw students bringing in dimes one day of the week, quarters, then loonies and toonies. The enthusiasm started in the Kindergarten classroom but “When we went to the assembly and shared it with the entire school and told them about this book a lot of the other teachers bought into it and wanted to be a part of it,� Real explained. “Together we can make a difference,� said the teachers as the students of Kindergarten 101 chimed in with enthusiasm. No word yet on how much money was raised or to which organization it will go.

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Hillcrest Public School’s Kindergarten 101 students Lily Fischer and Landen Coupland, front, hold two of the eight chicks that were born in their classroom as part of a learning project, while several of their classmates gather behind. Photo: Sue Dickens

! ! !

B2 Section B - Thursday, May 7, 2015

These kindergarten students are rolling loose change collected at Hillcrest Public School in Campbellford: from left, Alana Huble, Tithi Tadhiar and Ella Watson. All of the school got involved after the Kindergarten class explained their project based on a book One Hen: How One Small Loan Made a Big Difference, during a school assembly. Photo: Sue Dickens


By Sue Dickens

News - Campbellford - The universal appeal of ying a kite has been a phenomenon for centuries and continues to rise in popularity making the 14th annual Friends of Ferris (FofF) Kite Day a popular outing for many. Last year more than 125 people showed up for the event according to Anne Kidd, a director with the FofF board. She helps Kite Day Chair Sandy Chapman make sure everyone has a good time. “I love kite ying. It’s something I never did as a kid,â€? Chapman told the Trent Hills Independent. “We have friends and family that do kite surďŹ ng,â€? she added with a grin. Hopes are high that the annual Kite Day will attract another big crowd of participants. “We get a lot of local people but we also have people come from as far away as Toronto and from nearby Peterborough and Stirling just to enjoy the kite ying,â€? she said. “We had a lot of people with special needs come out in the

past so people should know we have a DeBug all-terrain wheelchair at the park and it will be at the kite day site, available for use,â€? she added. Avid kite yers will often bring their own kites, many of which are homemade. “We have kites we cut too ‌ sled kites,â€? said Chapman. “We can provide everything anyone needs to make a kite,â€? she commented. “Carol Robertson, [vice president FofF], went around to all the lumber yards and got their wrapping material so we use the white side and have templates to make kites,â€? she explained. Friends of Ferris volunteers will be at the event to help kite ying enthusiasts build their own kite. A barbecue and refreshments that day will help raise money for the non-proďŹ t organization. There is no charge to participate in the event, however, donations are welcomed. Any money raised goes back into the FofF programs and activities at the park. Members assist in the

maintenance of trails, trail markers and have installed trail benches so park visitors can sit and enjoy the area. A major project undertaken by the Friends in partnership with the Campbellford Rotary Club was a new picnic shelter built by volunteers; it can be used for family gatherings, company picnics and special events. Another recent improvement was the purchase and installation of playground equipment. As well the group purchased The 14th annual Kite Day is being hosted by Friends of Ferris on Sunday, May 24. This photo shows one of the sled kites in flight; an all-terrain wheelchair for use it can be made using a template provided by Friends of Ferris. Josh and father Kevin McCarthy from Campbellford are shown in the park. flying a kite at one of the previous Kite Days held near Ferris Park. Photo: Submitted “Money raised helps with all these things but Kite Day is really about just having fun,â€? said Chapman. To make the day even more interesting FofF gives away a commercial kite every hour the event takes place. Kite Day will be held Sunday, May 24, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. It takes place in a large ďŹ eld a few minutes south of Ferris Park’s main entrance at 474 County Road 8. For more information call 705-632-0894 or go online to <www.friendsofferris.ca>.

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Waters were warm and the fish were biting

Continued from page B1

Tropea had been fishing since midnight on Friday. “We caught about forty walleye before we got that one,” he said. “We always do well here. You have to put the time in, and get lucky.” He won a 2015 Legend 16 CX boat with a Mercury 50 horsepower motor and a trailer. Second in the senior walleye was Roch Desjardins with a 12.8 pounder and third was Josh Adams with 12.76. Josh Adams from Kingston said he caught his pike on Saturday morning in Hay Bay with his buddy Matt Lee and was hoping that would be the winner. He was first on the leader board for a few hours until the other numbers came in. He won a kayak and rack from Ocean Kayaks. Winner of the biggest pike was

Paul McTaggart from Belleville with a 15.43-pound pike. Second was Garnet Armitage with 14.72 and third was Nick Baker with 14.35. “I caught the pike just east of Picton Saturday morning,” McTaggart said. “We had been fishing for about four hours and caught about 65 pike.” He said he was very proud to have won first place. His friend Jeremy Bench was with him in the boat. He noted that fish are late spawning this year and the water temperature was warm. He has been fishing in the tournament for several years and once came in eighth. Kevin Weaver from Trenton Kiwanis Club thanked everyone for their support of the tournament which helps raise funds for the work they do in the community. For final results of the Ethan Caley won third, fourth and fifth prize in tournament go to the Leader Board at the Junior Pike division with a 9.5-pound pike <www.kiwaniswalleyeworld.com>. Paul McTaggart from Belleville won first place in the Senior Pike division. and two 9.1-pounders.

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Josh Adams from Kingston won third place in the Senior Pike division and won this kayak and trailer.

Photos: Kate Everson


Commodores to hold scholarship concert, release new CD May 14

Entertainment - Belleville - One thing about the late Bruce Parsons: his friendliness and love of music made him the Quinte area’s favourite trumpet teacher for dozens of young musicians. One of them was Blair Yarranton, now a grizzled veteran in the trumpet section of the Commodores Orchestra, which will stage its second annual Bruce Parsons Scholarship Concert at Centennial Secondary School on Thursday, May 14, at 7:30 p.m. Yarranton now teaches instrumental music at Centennial. Last year, the Commodores presented $1,500 in scholarships to help three university-bound musicians with their postsecondary education. Yarranton says the band would like to do more in 2015. “Bruce Parsons gave so much to everyone around him. We were astounded by the generosity of people … there’s still this huge wellspring of affection people feel for Bruce. People from as far away as England contributed, if they couldn’t attend the show. We want to keep this thing going in a big way.” In addition to the scholarships, part of the money raised last year helped the Commodores establish the new Quinte Youth Jazz Ensemble, which has been rehearsing since September. It’s made up of 17 student musicians from all over the Quinte area between the ages of 11 and 17, who have

By Jack Evans

Members of the newly formed Quinte Youth Jazz Ensemble, or the Navy Blues, rehearse for 2015 performances. Photo: Submitted

an extracurricular opportunity to develop their jazz skills. The “Navy Blues,” as they are also known, will play at the May 14 concert, as will the Centennial Secondary School Jazz Orchestra. The Commodores will also release their new CD Live at the Stirling Festival Theatre at the May 14 show. It was recorded at the band’s Stirling Theatre

show in September. Tickets are $20. Advance tickets are available at Parsons Cleaners in Belleville, which is promising a ten-dollar reduction in their next cleaning bill for customers who present their show ticket after May 14. Donations can also be made at Parsons Cleaners, or by contacting Andy Sparling at 613968-8691.

Barbershop is a family show

Entertainment - When it comes to “harmony,” it’s hard to beat old-fashioned barbershop singing. Once again the Quinte area’s all-male barbershop chorus, A Cappella Quinte, presents its annual show on the Mother’s Day weekend–a perfect treat for the whole family. Special guests for this year’s show are four well-seasoned Toronto area singers called “Cruisin’” who have entertained audiences across Canada and the United States with both song and hilarious comedy for several years now. This marks their first appearance in the annual Quinte Chapter show. Along with them will be the chorus’s own quartet of many years standing and well-known in the area, In-Four-Mation plus the almost 40 voices of today’s A Cappella Quinte chorus, now one of the larger ones in Ontario singing songs spanning the decades right through to songs by the Beatles. Cruisin’ brings its own unique talents and repertoire with a captivating presentation spanning the golden age of doo wop and rock and roll up to modern times, throwing in generous portions of humour. A traditional highlight of the spring season, the local chorus show has been part of the scene for several decades and has delighted many thousands over the years. This

Toronto area singers, Cruisin’.

year’s show is Saturday, May 9, at 7:30 p.m. in the acoustically rich and comfortable Maranatha Church on College Street West, with lots of parking.

Tickets at $20 will be available at the door, also in advance at the Quinte Arts Council Office or from members of the chorus.

Section B - Thursday, May 7, 2015 B5


B6

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1 ad, 5 newspapers, 69,000 homes plus online!

Resdiential ads only. Deadline: Mondays at 3 p.m.

AUCTION SALE RANDY AND DARLENE RACICOT 1997 11TH LINE WEST, R.R.#4 CAMPBELLFORD, ONT. SATURDAY MAY 16TH AT 10:30 AM 5 miles NORTH of Campbellford on County Road 50 ( west side of Trent River) and turn EAST onto 11th Line West for ½ mile. Massey Ferguson 65 gas tractor with front end loader- goods running condition; custom built wood splitter with 13 hp Honda gas engine, Walco 5 ft 3 point scraper blade, 3 point hitch post hole auger, 3 point hitch 5 ft rotary mower, Turf Pro riding lawn mower, 4’ x 8’ single axle utility trailer, Hobart 295 electric stick welder, Powermate 5000 w portable generator, Campbell Hausfield “professionalâ€? 1.5 hp air compressor, stationary air compressor, Yard Machine power lawn mower, Ryobi straight shaft grass trimmer, Stihl 026 chainsaw, Mastercraft 10â€?table saw, custom built drill press, tool chest, quantity of power and hand tools, steel work bench, vise, storage cabinet, large quantity of electric cable, builders hardware, scaffolding, Security Plus gun cabinet, HOUSEHOLD CONTENTS – SELL AT 10:30 AM maple dining table and chairs oak china cabinet, curio cabinet, Kelvinator upright freezer, Kelvinator refrigerator, Pioneer stereo system, living room furniture, numerous other articles. 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

PLEASE NOTE: BOOKING DEADLINE FOR MAY 21ST NEWSPAPER IS FRI. MAY 15TH AT 11 A.M.

Section B News - Thursday, May 7, 2015

s EXT

0/ 4*5& &45"5& "6$5*0/ 4"563%": .": 5) ! " .

CLASSIFIEDS $13.00

Directions: From Hwy. 401 take Marysville Road north to stop sign. Turn east (right) and follow to first left, then follow to 972 Marysville Rd. New Idea 483 soft core round baler (4x4), Wood flat rack wagon, Ford side delivery rake, wheel rake, John Deere 14T square baler, Mayrath hay & grain elevator on undercarriage, 10 ft. set of trail type discs, Ford 3 PTH 3 furrow plough, 3 PTH 10 ft. cultivator, Inland SA84 3 PTH snow blower, field roller, NH manure spreader, older model seed drill, antique John Deere sub soiler on steel, 2 sets of spike tooth drags/evener bar, 3 PTH cement mixer, 3PTH wood splitter, utility trailer, a number of tube & steel gates, cattle squeeze, round bale feeders, bale spear, galvanized water trough, 4� grain auger with motor, Two old Ski-doos, Honda 50 moped (as found). Antique platform scales/weights, chicken feeders & waters, old chicken brooder, wooden pulleys, wooden buggy wheels, qty. of fencing supplies, wire etc., wooden pulleys, old tools, child’s wooden bobsleigh, antique bicycle, old license plates, Texaco oil pails, grease tins, old horse shoes, several wood crates with stenciling, wooden barrels, harness makers vice, seed drill box, church pew, “Salada Tea� push bar, “Velvet Pastry Flour� push bar, several old windows & doors, wood ladders and numerous other pieces. See my web site for detailed list & photos AUCTIONEERS: DOUG JARRELL & BEN TREVERTON 613-969-1033 www.dougjarrellauctions.com

Saturday May 9th. Tack 10 am. Equipment Noon. Horses Sell at 2 pm. 3340 Galetta Side Road, 1/2 hr West of Kanata. 10 min East of Arnprior. To consign call 613-622-1295

Ads can be placed by calling 613-966-2034 ext. 560 or 1-888-967-3237

CL455103

Sale Managed & Sold by

FARM AUCTION SALE FOR DONALD MCRAE, LONSDALE, ONT. SATURDAY, MAY 16 AT 10:00 A.M. ON SITE

GALETTA LIVESTOCK HORSE SALE

WORDS

Machinery: Sale includes a 2635 MF 4x4 diesel tractor w/DL250 front end loader with q/a 6’ material bucket (only 286 hrs., 2 sets of rear remotes, 16.9R28 rear & 9.5R24 front tires), 165 MF diesel tractor w/glass shelter (8446 hrs., set of rear remotes), 1950 Massey Harris 101 Junior twin-power gas tractor (completely restored), Ram Rod mini loader w/Honda 10 hp gas motor (24� bucket), 488 NH haybine (show room condition), 1475 Gehl TDC round baler, #9 MF square baler plus extra baler for parts, Allied hydraulic driven stooker, manual stooker, stooker fork, 42’ & 16’ Skeleton hay elevators, 4 & 2 wheel hay rakes, Agri-metal portable 5.5 hp gas straw shredder, 213 NH manure spreader, 10’ Triple K 3 pth cultivator, MH 15 run seed drill on steel, 8’ MF 3pth disc, 8’ q.d. fertilizer applicator, 4 section diamond harrows, 3 drum land roller, 8’ cultivator on steel, 3/12 MF 3 pth plow, 620 McKee snow blower, Allied 4� x 14’ grain auger w/motor, MF 7’ sickle mower, 200 gal. steel water tank on wheels, logging chains, & a 5 hp garden tiller! Equipment: 1998 Smith 16’ x 8’ steel 5th wheel tandem livestock trailer (excellent condition), Artic Trailer 30’ tandem 5th wheel flat deck trailer (like new), portable For-Most A25 cattle shute with Paul livestock scales, 8’ Buhler/Farm King 3 pth scraper blade, 10’ x 6’ tandem bumper hitch trailer, The Sanitary Power Meat Saw/ Processor (Model KB1R 1hp), 8 hp Homelite LR4400 gas generator, Master Craft Maximum 12� wood planer & stand, Beaver 10� table saw, Ryobi 10� surface planer, Makita 12� chop saw, electric hand planers, sanders, bench band saw, Rockwell 4� jointer, Lincoln 225 AC welder, sand blaster & cart, Jobmate bench drill press, Workmate, Iron Man 2 cylinder Industrial air compressor, small air tire changer, acetylene torch set & cart, electric grinders, pipe cutters, large bolt cutters, Alemente air greaser, steel roller stands, Champion spark plug service unit, shop vac, various valves, hydraulic cylinders, fasteners, bolts, lubricants, knick knacks, large selection of hand, electrical, mechanical & farm tools, Clarke parts washer, ‘C’ clamps, wood clamps, wooden extension ladder, step ladders, h.d. modified portable hydraulic driven wood splitter, belt driven buzz saw, steel gates, water & feed troughs, round bale feeders, wheel barrow, round bale bucket spear, 1/6 yard cement mixer, calf puller, dehorners, cow lift, big & small burdizzos, misc. cattle supplies, large assortment of scrap metal & steel, steel stakes, chains, new wagon signal lights, pto pulley drive unit, large selection of 1� & 2� rough cut lumber (various dimensions) Lakewood wood stove, fuel tanks, & electric motors! Vehicles/Recreational Vehicles: 1995 Red Dodge automatic pick up, 179,584 kms, sells “running, as is�, 1970 Olympic Ski-Doo, 1970 Snow Cruiser snowmobile, GMC 950 Stake truck sold “as is� (1950’s era), 1976 GMC C65 Stake truck sold “running as is�. Hay: 5,000 small square bales of 2014 1st cut hay, 30 round bales of 2014 1st cut hay, & 150 small square bales of straw! Collectibles: Large collection of cast iron implement seats i.e. “Buckeye�, “Bradley’s�, “The Rake�, “Percival�, “Frost & Woods�, “Walter & Woods�, “Noxons�, “M�, “Massey Toronto�, “Sylvester�, “79�, etc., plus a large offering of tin seats, double furrow drag plow, single furrow horse plows, potatoe plow, scufflers, wooden shafts, grain cradle, scythes, logging tongs, whipple & double trees, set of older leather team harnesses w/brass for heavy horses, g.d. manure spreader, Champion (belt driver) oat roller, hand cream separator, old platform grain scales, large & medium size iron kettles, old forage, shoe shoes, old tins & pails, old metal & wooden water pumps, various old saws, broad axes, adzes, old wooden shoulder yoke, cast iron bell, old wooden wagon wheels & axles, old wood planes, an old pine box, fanning mill, plus a wooden flat bottom boat. AUCTIONEER’S NOTE: There has never been an Auction Sale conducted at this farm. Consisting of 3 generations of items. Plan to attend this extraordinary sale! LUNCH NO AVAILABLE RESERVE NOTE: 2 AUCTIONEER’S SELLING! Owner(s), Auctioneer & Staff are not responsible for any injury, accident or any loss in connection with the Auction Sale. All verbal announcements take precedence over any prior print advertising! Respectfully no pets allowed! LUNCH AVAILABLE - NO BUYER’S PREMIUM! - NO RESERVE Terms: Cash, Known Cheque with I.D., Visa, MasterCard & Interac

AUCTIONS

Holiday Monday, May 18th at 10:30 a.m. To be held on site at Civic #4518 Holleford Rd., Hartington, from Hwy 401 take exit #611 at Kingston, travel North on Hwy. 38 approx. 21 kms to Holleford Rd., turn East travel Approx 1.5 km. Watch for signs! Tractors, farm machinery, portable saw mill & more Tractors & Combine: AC 185, AC 7000 2wd with cab, Leyland 270 with front end loader, Gleaner A Combine with grain head. Machinery: NH DR740A silage special rdn baler (very nice), JD 8350 grain drill with DD, grass seed and fert (very nice), Bush-Hog 10ft. offset discs, Kneverland 4 furrow semi mount variable width plough, 18ft 8 ton running gear with all steel bale thrower rack, NH 790 forage harvester with wide pick up hay head, NH forage box on 10 ton running gear, NH forage box on tandem running gear, 8�x40ft Westfield grain auger, PTO driven roller mixer, 10ft rubber tired land roller, 12ft set of chain harrows, Cattleman’s choice dolly style feeder wagon, set of 20.8-34 T-rail snap-on duals with hardware, 28ft board banded port saw mill will square 24� log, homemade round bale wagon, 4 round bale feeders, 2 creep feeders. Note: Plan to attend on time, for there are no small items, entire auction will not exceed 1.5 hrs. Owner & Auctioneer Not Responsible For Loss or Accident Terms: Cash or Good Cheque with proper I.D. Props: Bill & The Late Neil Babcock Auctioneers & Sale Managaers Tom Peter Ross Harrison Auction Services Ltd. Erinsville, ON Ingleside, ON 613-379-1006 613-537-8862 www.theauctionfever.com

CLS449339/0507

From Hwy #35 between Norland & Coboconk take Laxton South Quarter Line west 1 km. to #194. See Signs!

Breakfast table/4 chairs, chesterfield & matching rocker, wing back chair, coffee & end tables, 2 matching queen bedsteads / matching dressers/mirrors & night stands, chest, telephone table, file cabinets, lamps, qty. of glass & china, die cast cars, lamps, area rugs, garden pieces, wheelbarrow, small tools & numerous other pieces. See my web site for detailed list & photos AUCTIONEERS: DOUG JARRELL & BEN TREVERTON 613-969-1033 www.dougjarrellauctions.com

CL455104

Sharon Kay & the Estate of the Late Dave Kay 194 Laxton South Quarter Line, Norland (Coboconk), ON

CL443472

METROLAND MEDIA AUCTIONS

3ATURDAY -AY TH s AM

CL455111

of farm machinery, tools, hay, straw, lumber, equipment & collectibles!

FARM AUCTION SALE CL443496

AUCTION SALE WEDNESDAY, MAY 13 AT 5:00 P.M. DOUG JARRELL SALES ARENA, BELLEVILLE

LARGE AUCTION SALE


EVENTS BELLEVILLE

Events

BATAWA

"6$5*0/ 5)634%": .": 5) ! 1 . Warner’s Auction Hall, 12927 Hwy 2, Just West of Colborne.

(BSZ 8BSOFS "VDUJPOFFS t www.warnersauction.com $&-&#3"5*/( :&"34 */ #64*/&44

CL455110

Excellent sale with home furnishings, some antiques, nearly new riding mower, some collectables, 2 nearly new coffee makers both top of the line, selection brand new-still in the boxes-sandles, shoes and cowboy boots in various sizes and colours, plus more. Nice antique dining room suite with china cabinet, drop leaf table with leaf & 4 chairs, very nice modern sectional sofa with coordinating chair & foot stool, exceptional nice queen bed with top of the line mattress set-never used, nice solid walnut unusual gate leg table, selection small tables, Kios electric trike copy of European Vespalike new hardly used, 17.5 hp riding mower, only used 4 times-just like new, brand new dog cage, also never used-fold up small picnic table, child’s wing chair, top of the line Cuisenart coffee maker with self grinder, old Johnson outboard motor gas tank, new small scroll saw, electric chain saw, quantity of smalls, collectables, figurines, glass, china, books, etc. Large clean sale. Terms: Cash, Cheque with I.D., Visa, M/C, Interac

THURSDAY, MAY 14, 2015, AT 6:00 PM, (COINS & STAMPS SELL AT 9:30 AM) The contents of a Campbellford estate and others.

CL455105

At Stanley Auction Centre, 56 Alma St., Norwood, Ontario. From the traffic lights on Highway 7, travel south one block, then east for 3 blocks on Alma Street. Watch for signs. Appliances. Home furnishings. Lawn mowers. Very large quantity of household items. Full list on our website. Terms are cash, Interac or cheque with ID. Job lots sell at 5:00 pm. Foodbooth.

AUCTION SALE ESTATE OF LES HALL 794 FOXBORO – STIRLING ROAD, R.R.# 1 FOXBORO, ONT. MONDAY MAY 11TH AT 11:00 AM Turn WEST off #62 Highway at Foxboro onto Foxboro – Stirling Road (Highway 14) for 3 miles. Original Brunswick 5’ x 10’ slate bottom billard table (from National Pool Room – Belleville) , vintage “Golden Shellâ€? wooden oil crates, Honda 8 hp snow blower with rubber tracks, Buffalo floor model drill press, portable air compressor, power washer, engine stand, Craftsman 6â€?combination sander, vintage 10â€?band saw, power tools, hand tools, King scroll saw, jack stands, air brush spray gun, 54â€? lawn sweeper, 48â€? lawn roller, yard wagon, fishing rods and accessories, camping supplies, single door storage cabinet, Magic Chef bar refrigerator, park bench, garden tools, patio furniture, antique occasional chairs, electric treadmill, prints , numerous other articles. 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

CL455101

METROLAND AUCTIONS

9th Annual Community Yard Sale, Saturday, May 9, at participating households throughout Batawa. 8am to Noon. Mother’s Day Brunch, Batawa Ski Hill. Sunday, May 10, 10am-2pm. $16 adults, $10 seniors and kids 10 & under. The Ladies of Sacred Heart Church, Batawa annual Bake and Plant Sale, Parish Hall, Saturday, May 9, 8a.m.-12p.m.. Batawa Villagers receive a free flat of perennial or annual flowers compliments of Sonia Bata (Coupon required.)

Food Addicts in Recovery Anonymous, Wednesdays, 7 p.m., St. Columba Presbyterian Church, 520 Bridge St E, Belleville. No dues or fees for members. Info: Susan at 613-471-0228 or Hilly at 613-354-6036 or visit foodaddicts.org. Belleville Garden Club meets the 4th Tuesday of the month, 7-9 pm, Moira Secondary School, 275 Farley Ave, Belleville. Info 613-966-7455. Spring Concert Holy Trinity Lutheran Church Choir and Friends, Thursday May 7, 7 pm. 510 Victoria Ave., east of Farley. Concert includes choir, soloists and instrumentalists. Free will offering.

FREE Crafts Workshop. Materials provided. Tues May 12, 1:30 – 3:30pm, 161 Bridge St. W., Belleville. Call Belleville and Quinte West Community Health Centre at 613-962-0000 ext. 233 Spring Musical at Quinte Christian High School: “Ernest in Love� based on Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest. May 7, 8 and 9, 7 pm. Tickets: adults $15, Students & Seniors $10 at the door. 138 Wallbridge-Loyalist Rd. Belleville Art Association: May 11 – June 6: Fine Art Show & Sale “Apple Works�, 392 Front St., Belleville. 10am to 4pm, Tuesday-Saturday, 613-968-8632 Quinte Prostate Cancer Group, Support and Awareness, Questions and Informational Material. Second Wednesday each month, 7-9 P.M., Steele Family Center, 30 Moira St. Belleville. Drop in or call Jurgen Hermes @ 613 478-6139 Roast Beef Dinner, Saturday May 9, 4.30 - 6 PM., College Hill United Church 16 North Park St., Belleville. Roast Beef, Mashed Potatoes, Vegetables, Coleslaw, Rolls and Homemade Pies. Adults $14.00 Children 6-12 $7.00. For Tickets call Bonnie at 613-962-4147. Belleville Garden Club annual Plant Sale, Memorial Gardens, North Park Street and Bell Blvd. Saturday, May 9, 8:30am until 2pm. Rain or Shine. Friday, May 8, The band Juke Box, Belleville Legion. 8 pm to midnight, $2.00 charge or items for food bank. Canteen 4 to 6 pm, Horse Races. Everyone welcome (age of majority event) Monthly Nutrition Education Group, Every 2nd Tuesday of the month, 1-2:30 p.m, Community Health Centre, 161 Bridge St. W., Belleville. Registration required, 613-962-0000 x 233. Belleville Legion: Every Friday: Canteen open 4-7 p.m. Meat Rolls and Horse Races 5-6:30 pm., Legion Clubroom. Everyone welcome. Age of majority event. Quinte Grannies for Africa meeting, Saturday May 9, Christ Church Anglican Church, Coleman St. Breakfast/ social time at 8:30 am, meeting at 9 am. Interested persons always welcome. Bring your coffee mug Ostomy Group Belleville meets at Loyalist Collage Business and Development Centre, second Thursday of each month except July-Aug. Quinte Region Crokinole Club, every Tuesday, 7 p.m., Avaya building at 250 Sidney St., Belleville, south entrance. Cost is $4.00. http://www.qrcc.ca . For info: Dave Brown at 613-967-7720 or Louis Gauthier at 613-849-0690. Belleville Support Group, 2nd Wednesday of every month, 7:30 - 9:00pm. Eastminster United Church, Belleville Seniors 5-pin Bowling, Tuesdays, 1 p.m. Come and meet new friends for fun and fellowship. Belleville Pro Bowl, Bayview Mall. Call Ken 613-962-3429 The Canadian Hearing Society offers Walk In Wednesdays from 10 am-noon and 2-4pm. Speak to a Hearing Care Counsel-

lor. No appointment necessary. Bayview Mall, 470 Dundas St. E Belleville Luncheon Wednesday, May 13, 12-2pm, 290 Bridge St W. Belleville. $12. Featuring VON Smiles Referral Program, soloist Jean Herrington and special guest speaker Judy Cobham from Kingston. Free nursery, reservations call Darlene 613-961-0956. Sponsored by Christian Women’s Connection. If you enjoy chatting, reading, going for short walks or going for coffee, become a Volunteer Visitor. Only an hour a week Make a positive change in a senior’s life today! Please call 613- 969-0130. Stroke Support Programs: Facilitated survivor, caregiver, and couples support groups. All groups meet on a monthly basis in Belleville. Living with StrokeŽ Series– a six week course focusing on life after a stroke. Info: Lee 613-9690130 ext. 5207 Activity Group, every Thursday, 470 Dundas Street East at CrossRoads To Care 1-3 pm, activities vary from one week to another. For info and registration call Irene 613-969-0130 The Ontario Early Years Centre at Family Space supports families learning through play. Drop-in playrooms, 301 MacDonald Ave., Belleville. Open 6 days a week. Info: www.familyspace. ca or 613-966-9427. Trillium 2000 Seniors Club at 75 St. Paul St., Belleville. Tuesday: cribbage; Wednesday: euchre; Thursday: carpet bowling and shuffleboard; Friday: darts. Cribbage 3rd Sunday of month. All start at 1 p.m. Open to all seniors 50 and over. Home Help & Home Maintenance support service. Fees arranged between the worker and client. Info: Community Care for South Hastings Belleville office at 613-969-0130 ext. 5209 or Deseronto office 613-396-6591. Free Seniors Exercise Classes – VON SMART classes. Gentle and progressive and can be done standing or seated. Info: 1-888-279-4866 ex 5350. Euchre/Bid Euchre Cards, 4th Monday of month, College Hill United Church 16 North Park St, Belleville, 7 pm. Joyfull Noise Choir invites women of all ages. Sing songs from the 50s and 60s. Tuesdays, 7-9 pm, Core Centre, 223 Pinnacle St., Belleville. No auditions. Novice to experienced singers all welcome. www.joyfull-noise.com. Probus Club Of Belleville meets the 2nd and 4th Thursdays every month, 10 am at the Pentecostals of Quinte, 490 Dundas St. W. For retired and/or semiretired business and professional people. Social time and a guest speaker. Guests are welcome. Belleville Brain Tumour Support Group meets monthly on the second Wed.,7:30 p.m., Eastminster United Church. If you or someone you know has been affected by a brain tumour come join us. Inn from the Cold Winter Food Ministry Program. Every night of the week, until Sat., Feb. 28, Bridge St. United Church, 60

Bridge St. E. (side door), Belleville. Free hot meals and a warm place to be during the coldest time of the year. Doors open 4 p.m., coffee/soup at 4:30 p.m. Nutritious, hot meal from 5-6:30 p.m. No registration necessary. We invite & welcome all.

BRIGHTON The Brighton Community Concert Band rehearses every Wednesday, 7-9 pm, ENSS Music Room during the school year. All ages welcome. Membership is free. WOMEN’S GROUPS meet every Thursday, 9:30-11:00 am at Fellowship Christian Reformed Church, 204 Main St, Brighton. Coffee Break and Mom to Mom groups study “Restless-Because you were made for more�. Sharon 613-475-1908 Knit your own scarf, with Anna-Lisa, Master Knitter. Materials supplied. Wednesday, May 13, 6-8pm. Fee: $10.00. Info: Gail at Community Care Northumberland (613) 475-4190 The Brighton Arts Council presents the work of Robert Frederick Down at the Gates, 291 Presquile Parkway Brighton, May 8 to May 25. Opening reception Saturday May 9 at 7 P.M. Public Welcomed VOCALESE, Brighton’s community choir, every Monday, 7-9pm, Trinity-St. Andrew’s United Church, Brighton. New members are always welcome. The Brighton Lions Club is looking for new members. Meetings 2nd and 4th Mondays of month, Brighton Community Centre. Membership Chair Fran Fulford 613-475-0475. Everyone Welcome.

CAMPBELLFORD FootCare Clinic- 1st Fri, 2nd and 3rd Thurs Each Month Royal Canadian Legion. VON offers Basic, Advanced and Diabetic Foot Care (Fee for Service). For appointment call the VON at 1-888-2794866 ex 5346 IODE Yard Sale, Saturday, May 9, 7am01pm, 69 Front St. S., Campbellford next to municipal building. Spring Luncheon and Bake Sale, Christ Church Anglican, Kent St., Campbellford, Sat. May 9, 11 am - 2 pm Baptist Busy Bee Opening Thursday May 14, 9a.m. - 4p.m. 166 Grand Rd. Campbellford Campbellford Osteoporosis Information Meeting May 12, 2pm, Trent Hills Library, 98 Bridge St. Warkworth Spinners and Weavers Guild meet the second Thurs. of every month, 10am, upstairs at the Campbellford Library. Info: warkworthguild@gmail.com. New members always welcome Campbellford Salvation Army Thrift store offers a free hot lunch every Friday. Also, Silent Auction the last Friday of each month Solo Friendship Group for Solo adults aged 45 and up looking for friendship. Wednesdays 1-2:30 pm, Riverview Restaurant, Campbellford. Continued on page B21

Section B News - Thursday, May 7, 2015

B7


TRAVEL

A visit to the deepest gorge in North America National Park the previous day, I headed into Kings Canyon National Park, where I soon found myself in General Grant Grove, surrounded by several gigantic sequoias. In fact, this is home to the world’s second largest sequoia tree (the largest sequoia is located in nearby Sequoia National Park), named the General Grant, and former President Calvin Coolidge nicknamed it the “Nation’s Christmas Tree.” It’s still decorated for the Christmas season each year, and it certainly attracts many tourists to the site. Kings Canyon National Park is actually divided into two separate sections, so after exploring the western section of the park at Grant Grove, I actually drove northeast, out of the park, still on Route #180, through the steepest section of the canyon, past Kings Canyon Lodge, where gas and food are available, and eventually back into the park near Cedar Grove, which is the only portion of this main section of the park that’s accessible by motor vehicle. the Much of this route was a rather steep nature store descent, and I some cyclists Just Arrived! met who seemed Something to be merrily

By John M. Smith

R0013267481

Lifestyles - On my most recent visit to California, I drove into Kings Canyon National Park, home to the deepest canyon in North America. Yes, it’s even deeper than the Grand Canyon, and one of its deepest portions is at the confluence of the middle and south forks of Kings River. Since I was flying out of Fresno, this central California city made a great base for my trip to and from the park, and I stayed right next to this airport at the Holiday Inn Fresno Airport. It was very easy to pick up my car rental right across the street from the hotel, too, and the trip to the park was about an hour to the east, on Route #180. As I arrived at the park’s entrance, I could choose to head south into Sequoia National Park or north into Kings Canyon National Park. The two parks are administered by the same superintendent, and one entrance fee works for exploring both parks. Since I’d already explored Sequoia

Birdhouse

extra special for Mom. Concrete bird baths in 11 different styles & shapes

plummeting down into the canyon. However, as a cyclist myself, I couldn’t help worrying about their struggle ahead to get back up out of that canyon, for this road would eventually dead-end and they would have to turn around and begin pedalling back up. Arriving at this lower section of the park, at the east end, on the canyon floor, I found a couple of very nice short hikes to waterfalls. For example, Roaring River Falls was located just five kilometres east of the Cedar Grove Village, and a short walk on a paved path brought me to a powerful waterfall rushing through a granite chute. I also found a short, paved walk (handicap accessible) to Grizzly Falls, and I did a nice hike in the nearby Zumwalt Meadow, which took me through fields sprinkled with colourful wildflowers, along the Kings River. Returning to my car, I continued heading east, to Roads End. This is as far as one can drive east, but it’s the starting point for several intriguing backcountry footpaths, including Bubbs Creek Trail and Mist Falls Trail. For the truly avid hiker, the Pacific Crest Trail, a more than 4,000-kilometre route between Canada and Mexico, passes through this park, so connections to this very long pathway can be made. Since so much of the park is not

Kings Canyon National Park’s Zumwalt Meadow.

accessible by motor vehicle, there’s a lot of opportunity for wilderness camping and hiking. However, if you prefer, lodging is available in both the Cedar Grove and Grant Grove sections of the park. As I turned around and began my ascent out of the canyon, I checked out Knapp’s Cabin (an old cabin located on the shore of Kings River, where a California businessman stored gear

for his fishing trips during the Roaring Twenties), Boyden Cave (where tours are offered into a giant underground cavern, with stalagmites, stalactites, a subterranean stream, and a bat grotto), and some spectacular viewpoints, including Canyon View, Yucca Point, and Junction View. Kings Canyon National Park, located east of Fresno, in the Sierra Nevada, is only a couple of hundred miles from San Francisco and Los Angeles, and yet it’s an opportunity for a real escape into wilderness and solitude. For more information <www. americansouthwest.net/california/ kings_canyon/national_park.html>.

4UESDAY 3ATURDAY AM PM s 3UNDAY .OON PM $OWNTOWN 7OOLER s 4OLL &REE www.facebook.com/birdhousewooler Email: connie@thebirdhouse.ca

FRANKLIN COACH & TOURS EXPERIENCE THE ROAD TO EXCELLENCE

613-966-7000 or Toll Free 1-800-267-2183 www.franklintours.com TICO Reg1156996

B8 Section B - Thursday, May 7, 2015

R0013264831

Blue Jays vs Red Sox - Saturday, May 9/15 Ottawa Tulip Festival - Wednesday, May 13/15 Cavalia ODYSSEO - Saturday, May 16/15 Amish Indiana - June 1 - 5/15 St. Jacobs - Saturday, June 6/15 & Saturday, September 12/15 Ontario Summer Adventure - July 6 - 11/15 African Lion Safari - Tuesday, July 7/15 Newfoundland Spectacluar - July 16 - August 3/15 Casa Loma & Ripley’s Aquarium - Wednesday, August 5/15 Orillia Island Princess Boat Cruise & Show - Thursday, August 13/15 Pure Michigan 400 - August 14 - 17/15 Blue Jays vs NY Yankees - Saturday, August 15/15 Cape Cod & Boston - August 30 - September 3/15 PA Amish Country - September 16 - 19/15 International Plowing Match & Rural Expo - Wednesday, September 23/15 Agawa Canyon, Mackinaw & Frankenmuth - September 23 - 28/15 Music, Trains & Moonshine - Smokey Mtns & West VA - October 15 - 21/15 Branson - Autumn in the Ozarks - October 25 - November 1/15 Call us for your group transportation needs. We offer the most modern and diversified fleet in the area and along the 401 corridor. Our goal is to offer SUPERIOR SERVICE at an OPTIMAL PRICE!

Kings Canyon National Park’s Grizzly Falls.


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Antique fishing and sports supplies event a great success By Margriet Kitchen

News - Marmora - Saturday, May 2, the Marmora Legion Branch 237 hall was the location of choice for many enthusiasts of antique fishing gear and associated items. The venue was filled to capacity with collectors and traders from all parts of Canada, including several Ontario communities and British Columbia. The equipment, antique reels, poles, baits and accessories attracted a steady flow of visitors during the day. Unusual items included a large glass beaker designed to be used in fish culture of many years ago, to allow the fertilization and safe growth of fish larvae. Wooden “plugs,” old style muskie minnow baits, unusual tin manufacture lures, and beautifully manufactured and even finely inscribed fishing reels were on display. Poles made of all kinds of materials as well as the traditional bamboo fly rods; fishing reels of brass, Spike, Sidemount, birdcage, Indiana and Kentucky material and design could be found at many of

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the tables in this show. All the vendors eagerly shared their enthusiasm for the hobby of collecting antique fishing tackle, as well as rare and unusual books, maps, finely crafted storage cases and much more. An easy camaraderie was evident as friendships were renewed, and newcomers to the hobby were welcomed to the event. Paul and Karen Labonte of Kanata are the show organizers. “We have had a successful show. We’ll be here again next year, the first weekend in May.” This has been a good turnout, people buying as well as swapping gear. Vendors are happy with sales. There are a lot of treasures. Vendors are here from Ottawa, Toronto, Creemore, British Columbia, Sudbury, and of course, Marmora. “I find this location in Marmora is perfect, since it is midway between the major centres of Toronto and Ottawa, with so many other population centres in between as well. Marmora is a great location.”

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Jack Robins, of Toronto/Rice Lake area shows a fine fly rod he brought along for a fellow collector. His display included a great many antique painted wooden fishing lures.

!

QUINTE REGION CRAFT GUILD Presents Their Annual

Spring Show & Sale Knights Of Columbus Hall 57 Stella Cres., Trenton

“Just In Time For Mother’s Day”

All Fine Handmade Products Come out and enjoy the show and shop from your local vendors. Treat Mom To Lunch & A Delicious Dessert Door Prize, Bake Table & Lunch Counter Wheel Chair Assessible

Admission $2.00

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Sat. May 9th, 10:00-4:00

John Simpson from British Columbia, previously from Creemore, Ontario, who has spent over 40 years collecting, attended with his large selection of fishing tackle including lures, reels, poles, and other antiques like snowshoes and fine hand crafted antique duck decoys.

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Paul and Karen Labonte are the organizers of the Marmora Antique Fishing Show, now in its second year. Paul expressed his appreciation of the enthusiasm of the vendors committed to this event, and also to the people of Marmora and the Royal Canadian Legion Branch 237 for their friendliness and support.

D R WO with our FREE COMMUNITY CALENDAR

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Campbellford resident recalls excitement of Victory in Europe News - Trent Hills - Seventy the surrender of Germany in years ago this Friday, May 8, World War II. Victory in Europe, or VE Day, “In Paris and London, was held to officially celebrate Canadians joined people in

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in England when the victory announcement was made. She recalls how “excitement reigned” in this brief recollection: “Immediately after our evening meal, those of us not on duty decided to join the celebrants downtown. My memory of the festivities is now only a blur; yet my recollections of the walk to the central square are still very clear. “With no GPS in those days, blackout conditions had been enforced for more than five years, in order to avoid leading enemy bombers to their intended destinations after

Entertainment - Belleville Quinte Christian High School students are getting ready to stage their spring musical, Ernest in Love. The show is a witty jaunt through the dreadfully complicated social scene of upper class Londoners. Based on Oscar Wilde’s The

Importance of Being Earnest, this musical adaptation written by Anne Croswell and scored by Lee Pockriss takes us back to the late Victorian age when manners, money and marriage were all that really mattered. The show runs May 7 to 9 at 7 p.m. each night. Tickets are $15 for adults, $10

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B10 Section B - Thursday, May 7, 2015

dark. All artificial lights were obscured, windows draped with heavy curtains, and street and car headlights shaded. It was very dull. Now, what a transformation! “With such restrictions no longer necessary, houses along the way had their curtains thrown back. Light poured out into the street. We could see families relaxing in their living rooms, or gathered around dining tables. The message was there: ‘Look at us! Safe and happy, but please send our men back soon.’ “It is impossible to describe the extent of my feelings of exhilaration.”

Quinte Christian High School stages spring musical Ernest in Love

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the streets while three Mosquito aircraft dropped tickertape overhead. Most Canadian cities and towns held religious services of thanksgiving. Frustrations built up after years of wartime controls and rationing led to riots and looting in some places, but nowhere else on the scale of those in Halifax … The war was not yet over–the war with Japan was still under way–but the major threat of Nazi Germany had ended.” Julie Hallett, a resident of Campbellford since 2012 and a member of the Trent Hills Probus Club, was a British Wren stationed in East Anglia

for seniors and are available at the door. Quinte Christian High School is at 138 Wallbridge-Loyalist Road. Come enjoy a farcical comedy with love and white lies in the air, when the characters are earnest only when they’re not Ernest.


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Section B - Thursday, May 7, 2015 B11


The Good Earth: Lifestyles - Good fences make good neighbours. It’s tough to nail down the origin of that aphorism although many of us are familiar with Robert Frost’s inclusion of it in his poem, Mending Wall. Another erudite American, Benjamin Franklin, offered a similar sentiment, which fits

today’s column rather well: “Love your neighbor yet don’t pull down your hedge.” Today’s title, “Hedging Your Bets,” has an origin that predates the current financial interpretation. Way back when, so far back that etymologists have a difficult time in their discerning,

Hedging your bets

planting a hedge around a property was done in order to maintain the original size of that parcel of land. In other words, it was done to ensure that boundaries didn’t creep outward and what was inside that property stayed within it. It is interesting to note that on occasion a “traditionally” accepted property line, denoted by a generations old hedge, is given credence over an actual surveyor’s certificate. For most of us, in our modern era, a hedge is primarily an ornamental affair and, if you do trim it FACTORY OUTLET STORE OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK! occasionally, it is a simple form of topiary. Any plant can be used to form a hedge, from Lavendula ans#HOC BULK OLAT gustifolia to the ubiquitous Thuja !LMOEN #OVERED DS s #ARA occidentalis, aka white cedar. The M E s -IN L "AR May 7th - May 13th function of a hedge is to demarcate s #ARAT -ELTAWAYS S MEL 7 one area from another, whether it HIRLS is your property from your neighRTH O bour’s, or a section of your estate, 7 S )T VE TO such as patio and play area. I R $ E TH RD No matter which plant you BELLFO $3.99/lb(8.80/kg)plus taxes. #AMP choose, there are two issues that Reg. price $5.19/lb (11.44/kg) plus taxes. must be assessed: proving where (While supplies last) colate, Premium ClehoOutlet the actual property line is and loAffordab es! ...and many more items at “factory outlet” prices Pric cal municipal bylaws or ordinancOpen 9-5:30 Monday to Saturday, Sundays & Holidays 10-4:30 es. For example, you might come WE’RE LOCATED ON SECOND STREET IN CAMPBELLFORD across a setback regulation (how

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hedge but only have a width of four feet in which to work, you might select a DeGroot’s Spire over a western red. A third thought centres around the longevity of the plant and the ability to replace damaged sections years down the road. In the case of deciduous hedging, it is possible to pleach or lay down a hedge (cutting into the stem near the base deeply enough so it can be bent over without causing serious injury) so that existing material can fill in any spaces. Have some fun with your choices. Ninebark, Physocarpus opulifolius, is a rugged, colourful shrub that has benefitted from attention by the plant propagation boffins over the past decade or so. There are many new cultivars, with very similar forms, from which to choose, so you can play around a bit. Perhaps the first ten feet can be the dark chocolate leafed Diabolo, followed by the chartreuse accents of Dart’ Gold and then anchored by the coppery orange tints of Coppertina, a cross between the first two. When to prune depends on what you plant. A spring-flowering hedge,

Dan Clost e.g. bridal wreath spirea, is best trimmed immediately after flowering; a row of yews, e.g. Hick’s Yew, prefers a late fall clipping. Always gen up on the plant’s bio. Most hedges are clipped into some sort of formal shape and, if yours is in this group, then that shape should be wider on the bottom than on the top so that all parts of the hedge receive its share of sunshine. Pruning should be deliberate in the sense that free-form trimming is not always desirable. Don’t be afraid to run a guideline. If you’re cutting out an arch or symmetrical feature, make a cardboard or plywood jig. It’s possible a neighbour might turn up an eyebrow as you struggle with its placement, but they will nod approvingly when all is said and done. And that is hedging your bets.

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far from the property line) or a right to light proviso (you may not be able to plant a tall screening row of cedars if the subsequent blockage of the sun prevents your neighbour’s enjoyment of its rays or if it changes the nature of their garden planting). So far, in a very brief look at the issue, what I have found is that in many residential neighbourhood disputes, a judge will rule on the side of the person who would lose the light. In situations where mega developments are involved, the discussion can become quite lengthy and expensive, to the detriment of the homeowner who is often unable to hedge their bets. The next areas to discuss centre around the plants being used. Cultural considerations are common sense, will the plant grow at that site? A thought for the future, will the small tree planted in the hedgerow eventually cast too much shade for the hedging plant? Perhaps selecting something like alpine currant, Ribes alpinum, which works well in sun and shade will take that into account. Next, can you maintain the hedge within its designated space? If you want to have a solid cedar

B12 Section B - Thursday, May 7, 2015


Premier attends grand opening News - Colborne - Unlike her reception in Peterborough, Colborne had nothing but smiles and pizza for Premier Kathleen Wynne. Premier Wynne toured the new Ontario Agri-Food Venture Centre in Colborne on May 1, shortly after a visit in Peterborough where protesters gathered outside from union groups representing CUPE and OPSEU, along with No Casino Peterborough members and the Public Hydro Coalition. There was a police and security presence in Colborne but no protest. The premier gathered with officials including Minister of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs Jeff Leal, and Northumberland-Quinte West MPP Lou Rinaldi for a tour and the grand opening celebration of the new 15,000-square-foot facility located on Industrial Drive, just south of Highway 401. The Ontario Agri-Food Venture Centre will be operated by Northumberland County as a not-for-profit small-batch food processing facility, offering services that include

Dan Borowec, Northumberland County director of economic development, left, gave a tour of the new Ontario Agri-Food Venture Centre in Colborne for Premier Kathleen Wynne, Minister of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs Jeff Leal, and Northumberland-Quinte West MPP Lou Rinaldi on May 1. Photo: Karen Longwell

wash, cut, quick chill, flash freeze, cold/frozen/dry storage, packaging, labeling, a fully equipped commercial kitchen, business incubation and a train-

ing facility. It is expected to be accessed by local farmers and food producers. The facility and equipment will be tested during May and

should be available for business in mid-June, said Dan Borowec, Northumberland County director of economic development. The centre is unique in Ontario and the facility was developed in response to findings from the Regional Local Food Business Retention and Expansion Project conducted in 2012. The premier praised the creativity of the initiative and said it would bring job growth. “It’s going to inspire foodies,� Wynne said. “I am so proud our government is able to support it.� A recipe incubator area in the building is expected to be very popular, Borowec said. Often it is not possible for small producers to access space and equipment needed to process and package food but the new facility will provide that opportunity, Wynne said. Tina Moorey, executive chef with On the Side Gourmet Catering, out of Warkworth, hopes to use the facility to make her own relishes and jams. “It [the centre] is fantastic,� Moorey said. “We are so lucky to have it here.�

Armed Forces community can receive discount on Women’s World Cup tickets

Sports - The National Organizing Committee for the FIFA Women’s World Cup Canada 2015 is offering discounted tickets to Canadian Armed Forces members and their families from coast to coast when Canada hosts the world’s best female soccer players starting this June. Under the Canadian Forces Appreciation Program, a dis-

count of 25 per cent off individual group stage match tickets will be offered until May 31. The ticket offer will give troops the chance to see up to 36 group stage matches across the country, including Canada’s first two matches in Edmonton–the Opening Ceremony and Match featuring Canada versus China on June 6 and Canada versus New Zea-

land on June 11–and Canada’s third group stage match against the Netherlands in Montreal on June 15. Members of the Canadian Armed Forces are able to access the discount by logging into the <CFAppreciation.ca> website and using the keyword search to find “FIFA.â€? The discount is available on Category 2, 3 and 4 tickets and is an online offer only. Troops are limited to 20 tickets

per order. The FIFA Women’s World Cup, from June 6 to July 5, will be hosted in Canada with matches to be played in: Vancouver, Edmonton, Winnipeg, Ottawa, MontrĂŠal and Moncton. Information related to the competition, including the Ticketing and Spectator Guides, is available at <www.FIFA.com/ Canada2015>.

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Vintage Pizza Pie Co. owners Richard and Isabelle Clarke from Cobourg, plan to freeze and package pizza at the facility in the future. The Clarkes presented the premier with glutenfree pizzas as she left the grand opening celebration. Farmers and business owners will be able to access the facility with the help of one full-time staff member, the operations manager, and three contract po-

Don’t let the

sitions, Borowec said. The centre was funded through $1.48 million from Northumberland County, $490,000 from the provincial Local Food Fund,$225,000 from Community Futures Development Corporation Network, $159,000 from the Trillium Foundation, $135,000 from Community Futures, and $5,000 from the Northumberland Federation of Agriculture.

te Bad Bihurt you bite your teeth together. 3. You may avoid or have difďŹ culty chewing gum, carrots, nuts, bagels, protein bars, or other hard and dry food.

Dr. Brian Ho

Did you know that up to 90 percent of headaches actually come from how your teeth ďŹ t together?

4. You may notice that your teeth are becoming shorter or thinner or worn.

All our adult teeth ďŹ rst come together during our teenage years. Unfortunately, teeth don’t always know how to come together properly. For the most part, they ďŹ t together enough so that you can chew and eat. However, only 10 percent of the population is lucky enough to have upper and lower teeth that ďŹ t well together like a puzzle. Most people are not that lucky and their teeth must go through some type of adaptation in order to chew. If you belong to this group, you may experience the following symptoms:

5. You may have more than one bite and need to squeeze to make your teeth ďŹ t together. 6. You may clench your teeth in the day time. 7. You have may problems with sleep or wake up with an awareness of your teeth.

If you have one or more of the above symptoms, you may have a bite mismatch. If not treated, your symptoms will likely get worse and you can end up with worn and short teeth. Also your ďŹ llings, crowns or veneers may not last as 1. Pain, clicking, limited long as they should. opening, locking and popping from your jaw Be sure to talk to your joint dentist about your treatment options so 2. You may feel like that you don’t let the your lower jaw is being bad bite hurt you later pushed back when you in your life.

Dr. Brian Ho is a practicing general dentist in Trenton, Ontario. He can be reached at Trenton Family Dental, 613.394.3883. For further information

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By Karen Longwell Northumberland News

Section B - Thursday, May 7, 2015 B13


Christmas coming to Tweed in August

for the Elvis Festival’s 2015 Me- was a bit light this year, despite, Events - Tweed - The turnout dia Launch at the Tweed Legion or perhaps because of, the beautiBy Brett Mann

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Stephen Goodberry, an Elvis Tribute Artist from Brockville who is popular in the Tweed area performs at the recent Elvis Festival Media Launch at the Tweed Legion. The 2015 festival will feature three headliners and about 30 Elvis Tribute Artists. Tickets are selling quickly says festival organizer and chair Lisa Lesage.

ful spring weather. The August festival will be very well attended however, judging from current ticket sales. Half of the campsite weekend tickets have already been sold according to Lisa Lesage, president of Tweed Music Festivals Inc. (TMI). This is the fifth anniversary of the successful Tribute to Elvis Festival and this year’s theme will be “Christmas in August” highlighting Elvis’ Christmas music. “Today we have dignitaries coming here, [MPP] Todd Smith will be here, Don DeGenova will be here from the municipality and the Legion president will be presenting us with a cheque as the Legion has been a sponsor for the past four years,” said Lesage. Elvis Tribute Artist (ETA) Stephen Goodberry provided live renditions of Elvis tunes

little people,” Lesage remarked. Further funding of $7,500 for marketing the festival was also received from the province’s Tourism Event Marketing Program (TEMP). The 2015 Elvis Festival will feature three headliners rather than just one and about 30 ETAs. Live music will be provided on Saturday night and Sunday by the excellent Casino Brothers who played last year. Gord Hendricks, festival winner two years ago and last year’s headliner, will be playing a separate show in Tweed on August 1. A new element will be added this year in the form of a duck race down the Skootamatta River through the village at the end of June. The ducks, purchased for $2 each will be released at the Louisa Street Bridge and collected by festival volunteers in hip-waders and canoes farther downstream. The first place winner receives a barbecue and tools donated by Rashotte’s Hardware. “We’re hoping to have it as an annual event,” says Lesage. Tickets for the festival are selling fast, says Lesage, and can be obtained at Bush Furniture, Pinnacle Music Studios in Belleville and Chumleigh’s in Kingston, or may be purchased online at the Elvis Festival website.

on stage to an appreciative audience chowing down on burgers and hot dogs grilled by the SOLAR HEAT ECOSAVER Enersol 1-2’x10’ SUNPIRATE 1-4’x10’ Panel Legion. Goodberry is from the Panel LIQUID SOLAR 2-2’x20’ Panels Reg. $149.99 Reg. $349.99 Fish Reg. $399.99 Brockville area and “always SALE SALE Bogo SALE $299.99 $99.99 places in the top ten,” notes $339.99 Free Lesage. A surprise treat for the HAYWARD crowd was a captivating vocal PATIO Great Savings on S WIM & S ALT HEATERS performance by Goodberry’s Select Pool Reg. $699.00 15% SALE Cleaners wife Debra Currier who provid$ 99 OFF 599. ed warm-up for Stephen with a beautifully rendered range of 10% OFF PRICES EFFECTIVE material including Leonard Cohen’s Hallelujah. MAY 9TH, 2015 Festival organizers got an ONLY! extra boost this year when after failing to gain a Celebrate Ontario grant last year (as they had 130 Richmond Blvd., Napanee in previous years) they learned 613.354.4391 that this year’s application EARN POINTS 1407 John Counter Blvd., Kingston WHILE YOU SHOP AT was successful and the festival 613-542-1831 SHELIN POOLS. would be receiving $22,050. NOW ACCEPTING 13239 Loyalist Parkway, Picton “They realize the value [of 613-471-1194 the event] to tourism, and Todd News - Belleville - The Law EnforceSmith has always been helpful. ment Torch Run for Special Olympics He’s always championing the will take place on Wednesday, May 13. The run will leave the Quinte Mall at approximately 9 a.m. and make its way down North Front Street to the Market Sponsored by: Square behind city hall. The Law Enforcement Torch Run and the Belleville Police Service are proud to continue a partnership that will bring together local officers and local Special Olympics athletes in an effort to raise 14 North Front Street SIMPLY SIT BACK AND LET funds and awareness for Special OlymBelleville • 613-961-1777 pics programs across Ontario. COLUMBIA® TAKE THE Funds raised through Torch Run “WORK” OUT OF events support community-based SpeYARD WORK ARGO GOES WHERE OTHERS cial Olympics Ontario activities. It asCAN’T FOLLOW! sists community programs with a variety of expenses including travel to games, accommodations, meals, staff support, grants to new community programs, Test drive an athlete training, public education, volunteer/coach training and development Argo Extreme Terrain Vehicle initiatives like school programs. or Columbia Lawn Tractor On the same day as the Torch Run, Belleville Police will also participate in the Cops and Cowboys Event at the Lone Star Bar and Grill during lunch and dinner hours. Event being held at: Belleville Police Officers will be rolling up their sleeves, taking orders and serving meals, all with the hope of earning tips that will go to Special Olympics FREE FLOW athletes. 5380 Old Hwy 2, Shannonville, ON GAS BAR OLD HWY 2 Last year, close to $1,300 was raised BELLEVILLE SHANNONVILLE FREE FLOW MX PARK & CAMPGROUND through these events. The goal this year Book your test ride 613.961.1777 is to reach $1,500.

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B14 Section B - Thursday, May 7, 2015

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Making parenthood a joy … not a burden is part of a larger network of services throughout Belleville, Picton and Quinte West supported in part by community fundraising. April 25 the Anchor hosted their spring fundraiser at Centre Hastings Secondary School with over 200 supporters sitting down to a full course dinner. On average the agency sees 25 new clients each year with at least 250 client connections in the greater Central Hastings area of Madoc, Marmora, Tweed, Stirling and Cloyne. Services include a post natal home visiting program and a hospitality program which delivers meals to new parents following delivery of their baby. At the centre parents can find various resources including maternity clothing, supplies and clothing for infants and attend a weekly session to discuss all aspects of parenting, and personal care. The dinner was an opportunity to introduce Darla Keene, a community education liaison who will be offering a community education program to students from Grades 7 to 11, based on prevention of early pregnancy. Keene’s mandate is to encourage an abstinence-based approach to prevention of unwanted pregnancy. The message, she said, is simple, “What do you visualize for Jen Couperus, chair of the Anchor of Hope cen- your future, and how would an unexpected tre in Madoc welcomed over 200 supporters to pregnancy affect that plan?” Keene said young women are often presthe annual fundraiser April 25, in support of the pregnancy and family care centre. Photo: Diane Sherman sured into sexual relations by peer pressure By Diane Sherman

Lifestyles - Madoc - Raising a family is a challenge under the best of circumstances. An unexpected pregnancy late in life, or at a young age, can be stressful for anyone. The Anchor Of Hope Pregnancy and Family Care Centre in Madoc offers a support network for expectant parents, new parents and families. The outreach centre at 135 Elgin Street

and relationships started at an early age. “Knowing you have a full life ahead of you, and, you have freedom of choice to abstain from relations strengthens one’s resolve. A baby is a full-time job in itself. We want young folks to understand how that will affect their future.” A fathering program is also in the making. Program director Tara Flagler says community partnerships are welcomed to help create this needed service. “Fathers are an important

part of raising children. We are hoping to encourage their involvement.” The theme of the event was acceptance; recognizing that no matter where an individual has been, what they have done or the condition they find themselves in, we should embrace them, each is deserving of love and compassion. The Anchor of Hope is open Tuesday to Thursday or contact Darla Keene addressed over 200 supporters at the annual Anchor of Hope at <info@anchorofhope.ca>, charity benefit dinner in Madoc April 25. She is in charge of promoting an abstinence-based community education program for young people 613-473-0606. throughout the region. Photo: Diane Sherman

County and United Way hosting public meetings on Poverty Reduction

News - Campbellford - Campbellford is one of the locations for a public meeting on poverty. On Wednesday, May 13, and Thursday, May 14, Northumberland County and United Way Northumberland are co-hosting a series of public, community-based meetings throughout the county to hear ideas that will help people leave poverty behind and realize their full potential. “We want to hear from people in Northumberland who have experienced poverty or who work with people who are struggling to make ends meet. It is important as

we plan that we truly understand the issues impacting our community members. This will help us develop solutions together,” said Mark Darroch, Director of Northumberland County’s Community and Social Services Department. “United Way Northumberland believes that working together is the best way of approaching poverty prevention and finding solutions to transition people out of poverty in our community. These public meetings will occur throughout the county and we encourage people to come prepared to share their thoughts, issues and concerns,”

says Lynda Kay, CEO of United Way Northumberland. “These moderated sessions will help us tackle poverty together.” The meetings will take place in Cobourg, Port Hope, Brighton and Campbellford. The meeting in Brighton will take place from 9 to 11 a.m. at the Legion Branch 100 and in Campbellford also from 9 to 11 a.m. at the Campbellford Resource Centre, both on Thursday, May 14. For further information visit Northumberland County’s website at <http://www. northumberlandcounty.ca/Town_Hall_ Meetings/>.

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Section B - Thursday, May 7, 2015 B15


(613) 475-1044 Metroland Media Classifieds

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I would like to sincerely thank my family and others who organized my 90th birthday celebration.

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Grateful thanks to everyone. May King

ANNIVERSARY

40th Wedding Anniversary

The family of the late John Peacock, wish to express sincere appreciation for the many acts of kindness and messages of sympathy. We especially wish to thank RCL Br. 100, VON (Sadie), St. Elizabeth Health Care (Teddy), CCAC and special thanks to Melanie of Weaver Funeral Homes. IN MEMORIAM

Marie and Bruce Marshman Saturday, May 9, 2015

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Section B News - Thursday, May 7, 2015

A big man with a big heart In memory of Jeff McCann He is remembered for his love of cattle and horses, his sense of humour, his hearty laugh and his generous nature. Always loved and greatly missed. Howard and Cathy

Psychic Night. May 16th Dance Party! All Request Music, Dancing, & Readings, 50/50 & Fun! Special Guest Psychic Reader! $20 for 20 mins Doors open @ 8 pm, Metroland Media Dance until 9 pm-1 am, Call to book your ad today! Top Floor, Trenton Legion We have the key to Use back door entrance. 1-888-967-3237 unlock locked-in pension 613-392-9850. 613-966-2034 funds. Free consultation. To relieve financial stress, call FINANCIAL / INCOME TAX 613-966-2034 613-779-8008. MEDICAL CONDITION? Get up to $40,000 from the Canadian government. ALL medical conditions qualify. Call Ontario Benefits 1-888-588-2937 ext#101

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IN MEMORIAM

JARRELL - In Loving Memory of Joshua James Douglas Jarrell March 27, 1984 - May 11, 2010 Everyday in some small way Memories of you come our way. Though absent, you are always near In our hearts you are held dear. Forever loved and missed on the 5th Anniversary of your passing With much love Your Family

FOR SALE

WANTED

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

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.

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PETS

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t.035GA(&4t L O Craig Blower A .BSCFMMF N Financial Services Inc. $

IN MEMORIAM

Gone is the face we loved so dear, Silent is the voice we loved to hear, Too far away for sight or speech, But not too far for thought to reach, Sweet to remember him who once was here, And who, though absent, is just as dear.

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DEATH NOTICE

WET-TECH all weather mats for 2013 Ford Escape. 2 front mats black, 2nd row mat, cargo mat. $125.00 613-962-5967 White Cedar trees for landscaping and hedges, 4’-5’ tall, $6 each. 613-473-4017.

DEATH NOTICE

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WANTED

WRIGHT, MARY KENNEDY (nee DOCHERTY) Born January 7th, 1926 in Glasgow, Scotland - Died April 24th, 2015 in Trenton, Ontario Mary passed away suddenly on Friday, April 24th after a brief illness and surgery. She is survived by her daughters Catriona May (Port Hope), Fiona Spencer (Ottawa/Vancouver), son Stanley (Calgary), son-in-law David May and daughter-in-law Heide Wright. She was a loving grandmother to her six grandchildren: Aaron, Morgan, Angela, Janine, Suzanne and Braden and six great-grandchildren: Lennox, Tucker, Wyatt, Piper, Sophia and Caleb. Mary was born and raised in Scotland and never forgot her highland roots. While serving with the Royal Navy she met her future husband, John. They immigrated to Canada in 1956 when John joined the Canadian Air Force and after a number of years they eventually settled in Trenton, Ontario. Mary was cared for in the last years of her life at Crown Ridge Long Term Care. A private family ceremony is planned. Anyone wishing to remember Mary may do so by donating to their local VON or Canadian Red Cross and can be made through the HIGHLAND PARK FUNERAL CENTRE 2510 Bensfort Rd., Peterborough. On-line condolences may be made at www.highlandparkfuneralcentre.com

In Memory of

We miss you Josh, Love Your Family

IN MEMORIAM

15 Yr old Bird Shelter moved, under emergency from Perth to Belleville asking for donations for housing, food, toys etc. Donations accepted at Box 23001 Belleville ON, K8P 5J3. Attn: Mrs. Bell. KENMORE air conditioner Thanks, receipts to be isbtu; Nexus Walker; sued if requested. FINANCIAL / INCOME TAX 12000 frame for a double bed. All in excellent condition. Call Dog Grooming by Berna613-966-6784 dette. Professional services with TLC. New clients welcome. 550 TrentonProwler Trailer For Sale Frankford Rd, 1 minute DEBT CONSOLIDATION 23 ft. Sleeps 6. Just like PURCHASE FINANCING north of 401. new. 1994 with brass in& CONSTRUCTION LOANS (613)243-8245. side and mirrors. Everything in working order. Call 613-965-0416 $6,000 MORTGAGES Must See!

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March 27, 1984 – May 11, 2010 I feel this warmth around me like your presence is so near, And I close my eyes to visualize your face when you were here, I endure the times we spent together and they are locked inside my heart, For as long as I have those memories we will never be apart, Even though we cannot speak no more your voice is always there, Because every night before I sleep I have you in my prayer.

Codrington September 12, 1964 - May 15, 2013

Glovers Farm Market, 14260 County Rd. 29, Warkworth ON

COMING EVENTS

Joshua Jarrell

IN MEMORIAM

Jeff McCann

An Afternoon Tea from 2 to 4pm

ANNOUNCEMENT

Rodney J.Steele

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ANNIVERSARY

The visits, meals, birthday party, owers and so many beautiful cards were all very much appreciated.

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Twenty-ďŹ ve Vendors offering interesting and unique crafts and gifts for sale. Silent Auction made up of generous donations from the Vendors. Proceeds go to the Resource Centre, a nonproďŹ t organization. Coffee $1/cup beneďŹ ting Kids Camps. Indoor event will happen rain or shine. Fully accessible building, loads of free parking and FREE ADMISSION!! Don’t miss out on a fun day of easy shopping to support local craftsmen, artists and entrepreneurs while beneďŹ ting worthy causes!!

Annual Meeting of Greenwood Cemetery at St. Andrew’s United Church Hall, Queensborough on Tuesday, May 12 at 7:30 p.m.

COMING EVENTS

Visit us online www.InsideBelleville.com

In Memoriam

WANTED - WANTED

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

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I would like to thank everyone who attended my great 80th birthday party in Clearwater, Florida. The people that were in Florida and the people that came down from Hastings and area. Also thanks for all the cards and gifts. Thanks to the people that made the lunch, and to my family for making it such a great surprise. Wayne Dodd

Debt Relief Allen Madigan Certified Credit cousellor. Solving financial problems for over 18 years. Renew hope seniors respected. Free confidential consultation. 613-779-8008

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CARD OF THANKS ADDY’S SUPER SQUAD would like to thank everyone who contributed to, and supported our Relay For Life fundraising yard sale on Sat. April 25th. We raised $2,640.00 Bless you all.

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The Trenton Wooler Elks will be holding their

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Secondary teachers needed for research about teaching students with hearing loss in regular classrooms. Contact cj.dalton@queensu.ca to book 60-minute interview near you. Study meets Canadian and Queen’s University ethics guidelines. 613-331-0319. DO YOU HAVE 10 HRS/WK to turn into $1500/mth using your PC and phone? Free info: www.BossFree123.com

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STIRLING (North St.)

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$

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The apartments attractive and The apartments are attractive and wheelchair access. wheelchair access. fridge, stove, airare conditioning apartments are attractive and The wheelchair access. the buildings are secure. the buildings are secure. Theand apartments are attractive The apartments are attractive and wheelchair access. the buildings are secure. the buildings are secure. and The apartments are attractive and Ideal for Seniors or retired couples Ideal for Seniors or retired couples theIdeal buildings are secure. the buildings are secure. Ideal for Seniors or retired couples The apartments are attractive the buildings are or secure. for Seniors retired and Ideal for Seniors or retired CALL Ideal for Seniors or retired couples CALL couples. the buildings areorsecure. Ideal for Seniors retiredcouples 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 613-475-3793 1-800-706-4459 1-800-706-4459 CALL

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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 with all amenities including: Featuring bedroom apartments Featuring 22 air bedroom apartments fridge, stove, conditioning and fridge, stove, air conditioning and with allallamenities including: with amenities including: Featuring 2 bedroom apartments fridge, air conditioning and with amenities including: with all allstove, amenities including: wheelchair access. wheelchair access. fridge, stove, airair conditioning and fridge, stove, conditioning fridge, stove, air conditioning. with all amenities including: wheelchair access. fridge, stove, air conditioning and and

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Section B News - Thursday, May 7, 2015

B17


KANALCO LTD.

has the following job openings

ESTIMATOR DESIGNER/DRAFTSMAN

‌What Does it Take?

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LEGAL

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CL443229

All claims against the estate of Margaret Lamoine Foster, late of Madoc in the Municipality of Centre Hastings, County of Hastings, who died on or about 19 March 2015, must be filed with the undersigned estate solicitor on or before 15th May 2015, 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 20th day of April 2015. Bonnie Foster, Estate Trustee by Brad Comeau, Estate Solicitor BRAD COMEAU PROFESSIONAL CORPORATION, LAW OFFICE, P.O. BOX 569, 33 MILL STREET, STIRLING, ON K0K 3E0 Ph: 613-395-3397, Fx: 613-395-3398

NOTICES

NOTICES

NOTICES

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CL450804

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# )XZ /PSUI $PSCZWJMMF , , 7 t

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Visit us online www.InsideBelleville.com

Full-time and part-time positions available for experienced tractor and field equipment operators on local farm. If you have any experience from planting to harvest, please send resume to rivervalleyherefords@kos.net or call 613-378-2701.

IMMEDIATE OPENING!

HELP WANTED

Tractor trailer AZ driver wanted for local runs, home every night, 4 years’ experience, clean abstract. Hauling empty trailers and containers from Toronto to Ottawa area. Family run business.

CL455717

OWNER

P.O. Box 967 Tweed, ON K0K 3J0 sswitzy@hotmail.com

CL441740

CL447100

Seamless Eavestroughing Soffit and Facsia Steven Switzer

Call 1-800-361-3228

s EXT

613-243-5605

HELP WANTED

Resdiential ads only. Deadline: Mondays at 3 p.m.

HELP WANTED

Farm Labourer

Tree Pruning / Apple Picking $11/hr required Immediately at: Scarlett Acres Ltd. Please apply within or email Knight’s Appleden Fruit Ltd. amycook@ knights-appleden.ca

Beehive Daycare, Campbellford Hiring Summer Students!

We are hiring energetic, enthusiastic students for the positions of Early Childhood Education Assistants July & August 2015 Must be 18 years of age and returning to school full time in Sept. 2015 Please email resume and cover letter to beehivedaycare@bellnet.ca by Tuesday, May 19th, 2015 Only students considered for interview will be contacted. Supported by grants from the Campbellford/Seymour Community Foundation Career Edge, Northumberland County Children’s Services and Service Canada

NOTE UPCOMING HOLIDAY AD DEADLINE: Deadline for Monday, May 22nd edition is Friday, May 15 at 11 a.m. Call 613-966-2034 ext. 560 or 1-888-967-3237 B18

Section B News - Thursday, May 7, 2015

CL455085

CAREER HUNTING in BELLEVILLE & AREA

HELP WANTED

CLASSIFIEDS $13.00

HELP WANTED

1 ad, 5 newspapers, 69,000 homes plus online!

FLOORS & MORE

Hardwood Floor Installation & Resurfacing, All Ceramics, Your Light Revovations & Upgrades. Over 30 years experience. Please call for free estimate.

HELP WANTED

WORDS

HELP WANTED

CL455724

PATTY’S CLEANING SERVICE New to Belleville Area Over 20 years experience Professional, reliable, competitive rates. Call today for your free quote. 613-477-1615 Weekly/biweekly rates available. Will customize to your needs. Thursday’s and Friday’s available.

BUSINESS SERVICES

CL455716

BUSINESS SERVICES

CL451627

BUSINESS SERVICES


TENDERS

MUNICIPALITY OF BRIGHTON

Public Works & Development 67 Sharp Road, Brighton, ON K0K 1H0 Tel: 613-475-1162 Fax: 613-475-2599 - TENDERS The Municipality of Brighton is issuing the following tenders. Each tender is separate from the other.

GARAGE SALE

GARAGE SALE

GARAGE SALE

May 9, 10 and 16, 17, 9 a.m.-3 p.m., lots of great stuff, collectibles, household items, clothing, tools, etc. 158 Thrasher Road, off Hwy 37 north of Belleville.

DOWNSIZING GARAGE SALE 18 George St (Hwy 30) BRIGHTON Across from Sine’s & Pearsall Saturday, May 9 7 am - 2 pm Sunday May 10? Household goods, mother’s day, collectors and Royals, shoes, purses, belts, books

MULTI FAMILY YARD SALE Saturday, May 16th at Northumberland Tractor Parts 104 Bridge St Hastings 9 am - 4pm Rain Date May 23rd

Moving Sale, Friday May 8 & Sat. May 9, 7-4pm, 370 Enright Road, Shannonville, good variety of household goods.

FUEL -CLEAR, COLOURED DIESEL & UNLEADED GAS TENDER NO. PW-2015-04 To supply to the Municipal Garages at 71 Chatten Rd and 67 Sharp Rd

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

SUPPLY & APPLICATION OF DUST SUPPRESSANT TENDER NO. PW-2015-03 Supply & Application of approximately 110,000 Litres of dust suppressant Tenders forms are available at the Public Works and Development ofďŹ ce (67 Sharp Rd.). All tenders must be submitted using the required forms in a sealed envelope, clearly marked with the tender number and the proponent’s information by the date and time speciďŹ ed below:

EARN UP TO

YARD SALE 25 PARKSIDE RD MONTROSE SUBDIVISION Saturday May 9th 7 am - 4 pm House items, hockey equip

ALL NEW STREET MOTORS SALES DIVISION 613-205-1212 NOW OPEN

GARAGE SALE Yard Sale. May 9, 8-1 p.m. rain date May 16, 8-1 p.m. 165 Garry St., Campbellford.

Give Your Old Stuff a New Life

If it’s collecting dust, it could be collecting cash! Garage Sale Ads starting at

13.00

$

2nd week

Deadline for classifieds is Monday at 3 p.m.

FREE!

PLUS 2 FREE SIGNS!

Metroland Media Classifieds

Call to book your ad today!

7 DAYS 9am to 4pm 613-284-2000 streetfleamarket.net 5 MILES SOUTH OF SMITHS FALLS CORNER OF HWY 15 & BAY ROAD

EXT s www.InsideBelleville.com

Work Seeking Honest Hard Working Staff

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

Case Presenting Officer

• full-time, one-year contract

In this existing position, you will ensure compliance with social assistance and housing legislation and requirements of tribunals, complete Internal Reviews for the Ontario Works Program, act as a liaison with the Community Legal Clinic to negotiate settlements with clients and their representatives where appropriate, and compile evidence and documentation to support the Department’s position. Additionally, you will prepare and file written submissions to tribunals within the prescribed time frames and review and assess the appellant’s submissions to tribunals to assist in preparing cases, attend hearings of the Social Benefits Tribunal and Landlord and Tenant Board, and provide backup duties for the Family Support Worker and Eligibility Review Officer.

QuintEssential Credit Union is a full service institution with $100 million in on and off book assets with locations in Trenton and Belleville. As a Member Service Representative you will be responsible for cash handling, sales and providing excellent service to our members. Successful candidates must exhibit QuintEssential’s values of respect, integrity and team work. You must have initiative and the ability to build strong relationships. You are self-motivated and your approach to selling financial products and services is based on understanding and serving members’ needs and building relationships. You must be available to work evenings and weekends.

Your post-secondary degree or diploma is, preferably, complemented by court system/legal administration experience and sound knowledge of relevant legislation such as Ontario Works Act, Regulations and Directives, the Ontario Disability Support Program Act, the Criminal Code of Canada, the Canada Evidence Act, Statutory Powers Procedures Act, and the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act. Additionally, you have outstanding presentation, interpersonal, and verbal and written communication skills coupled with the proven ability to make decisions using sound judgment. A valid driver’s licence and access to a vehicle is required. In order to be considered for this position, an acceptable driver’s abstract must be submitted with your resume.

Preferred Qualifications: Possess a post-secondary education. Interested applicants should have experience in a financial institution. Credit union experience would be a valued asset.

The work is subject to inflexible deadlines on a frequent basis. In return, the County of Northumberland offers a friendly, dynamic, and supportive work environment. Please submit a resume and cover letter, by 4:30 p.m. on Friday, May 15, 2015, to:

Send Resumes to: Kim Lee by email: klee@qcu.ca

Human Resources County of Northumberland 555 Courthouse Road Cobourg, ON K9A 5J6 e-mail: hr@northumberlandcounty.ca fax: 905-372-3046

We thank all candidates; however, only those to be interviewed will be contacted.

CL455722

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. Alternative formats of this job posting are available upon request.

www.northumberlandcounty.ca

GOT CLUTTER? PLANNING A YARD SALE? Book your Yard Sale ad in the Metroland Media Classifieds for as little as

$13.00

+ HST

BOOK EARLY AND GET THE SECOND WEEK FREE!

Classified Deadlines: Mondays at 3 p.m. Ads can be placed by calling t FYU

l

Member Service Representative Part-time

FREE!

Faces

20 words, residentia ads only.

Friendly

HELP WANTED

Located an hour east of Toronto, the thriving Southeastern Ontario community of Northumberland County has a rich history of agricultural production, world-class manufacturing, and economic viability. As the upper tier of municipal government, we weave together seven diverse yet complementary municipalities.

s EXT

Fresh Air &

CLASSIFIEDS

Fantastic Scenery,

Your ad appears in 5 newspapers plus online

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

Call or visit us online to reach over 69,000 potential local buyers. Deadline: Mondays at 3 p.m.

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

0OST AN AD TODAY

PROPERTYSTARSJOBS.COM

CL451391

HELP WANTED

OPEN

CASH DAILY

Lucas Kelly Public Works Projects Supervisor 67 Sharp Road, Brighton, Ontario, K0K 1H0 lkelly@brighton.ca – (613) 475-1162 HELP WANTED

$400

ALL NEW Furniture & Antique Store NOW OPEN

GARAGE SALE

Orland Acres Garage Sale, Yard sale, May 16 and 17, May 9, 8am, just off Hwy from 8-4, on Myers Island, 30 in Orland. south of Campbellford.

STREET FLEA MARKET

FT & PT Outdoors Spring/Summer

11:30 A.M. WEDNESDAY, MAY 20th 2015

HELP WANTED

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

GARAGE SALE

13.00 2nd week

TENDERS

$

TENDERS

CLS444128_0205

TENDERS

Section B News - Thursday, May 7, 2015

B19


Network

CL455839

ADVERTISE ACROSS ONTARIO OR ACROSS THE COUNTRY! For more information contact your local newspaper.

INSURANCE

NOTICE

COMING EVENTS

GET $20 PETRO-CANADA CARD FREE with every quote until May 31 Kidde Canada in conjunction with Health Canada has announced a voluntary recall to replace certain Kidde black plastic valve disposable fire extinguishers.

CALL TODAY for a fast & friendly insurance quote and receive a $20 Petro-Canada Card. No purchase necessary. 1-800-665-SAVE (1-800-665-7283) Mention Promo Code: GET20 *limit one per person

ABC and BC-rated fire extinguishers manufactured between July 23, 2013 and October 15, 2014 could be affected. If you believe you may have one of these fire extinguishers please contact Kidde Canada at 1-844-833-6394 (8am - 5pm) Mon-Fri or visit www.kiddecanada.com and click “Safety Notice.”

Save up to 25% on your car insurance with Plug’nSAVE

FOR SALE

DRIVERS WANTED HIGH SPEED INTERNET Starting at $26.95/Month Enjoy Up to 10Mbps Download & 1Mbps Upload! Up to 500 GB of usage per month! Owner Operators Required

ORDER TODAY AT:

Requirements Must be 2009 trucks or newer We will inspect older equipment Clean driver’s abstract/CVOR/FAST Card Minimum 2 years cross border exp.

www.acanac.ca or

Cross Border Company Drivers Required $.51 cents per mile Clean driver’s abstract/CVOR Criminal Record Search Minimum 2 years cross border exp. Must complete pre-employment drug test APPLY TO: recruiting@rosedale.ca OR CALL TOLL-FREE: 1-877-588-0057 ext. 4612 for more details on each position. Mississauga terminal also looking for licensed LCV Drivers.

VACATION/TRAVEL

VACATION/TRAVEL

NEWFOUNDLAND CHARM MEETS LABRADOR SPLENDOUR! (No Single Supplement)

WORLD CLASS CRUISING CLOSE TO HOME!

21st Annual May Long Weekend POW WOW Hiawatha First Nation May 16th & May 17th On Rice Lake South of Peterborough Drug and A l c o h o l F r e e E v e n t w w w. hiawathafirstnation.com

CALL TOLL-FREE: 1-866-281-3538 SAVE BIG!!! 1 MILLION FEET OF WHITE PINE LUMBER - Huge selection of Moulding, Doors, Door knobs, Fasteners, Screws, Nails and Cabinet Hardware. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL TODAY 613-735-1928. SAWMILLS from only $4,397 - MAKE MONEY & SAVE MONEY with 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. REFORESTATION NURSERY SEEDLINGS of hardy trees, shrubs, & berries for shelterbelts or landscaping. Full boxes as low as $0.99/tree. Free shipping. Replacement guarantee. 1-866-873-3846 or www.treetime.ca.

26th Annual HAVELOCK COUNTRY JAMBOREE - Big & Rich, Clint Black, Gord Bamford, Brett Kissel, Tanya Tucker, Joe Diffei, Corb Lund, Wes Mack, Rhonda Vincent, Jason D. Williams, Stampeders, Autumn Hill & Many More. Canada’s Largest Live Country Music & Camping Festival AUG. 13-16, 2015, Over 25 Acts BUY TICKETS 1.800.539.3353, www. HavelockJamboree.com.

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 www.adventurecanada.com

MORTGAGES 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 1-877-7334424 and speak to a licensed mortgage agent. MMAmortgages.com specializes in residential, commercial, rural, agriculture, farms, & land mortgages. Visit: www.MMAmortgages. com (Lic#12126). DO YOU HAVE EQUITY In Your Farm or Acreage & Need Cash? I can get Approval for you @ MrApprovZ.com. Anywhere in Ontario. Need 1st, 2nd MORTGAGES, Purchases, Refinances, Renewals? Apply online: www. MrApprovZ.com or CALL Toll-Free 1-844-APPROVZ (1-844-277-7689), (FSCOLic#10731). $$$ 1st, 2nd, 3rd MORTGAGES Debt Consolidation, Refinancing, Renovations, Tax Arrears, no CMHC fees. $50K you pay $208.33/month (OAC). No income, bad credit, power of sale stopped!! BETTER OPTION MORTGAGES, CALL TODAY TollFree 1-800-282-1169, www.mortgageontario.com (LIC# 10969). 1st & 2nd MORTGAGES from 2.15% VRM and 2.59% FIXED. All Credit Types Considered. Let us help you SAVE thousands on the right mortgage! Purchasing, Re-financing, Debt Consolidation, Construction, Home Renovations...CALL 1-800-225-1777, www.homeguardfunding.ca (LIC #10409).

The hassle free way to travel 3,4,5 or 6 Nights in Private Staterooms INCLUDES: 6+25( (;&856,216 *5($7 0($/6 1,*+7/< (17(57$,10(17 AND MUCH MORE…

TOLL-FREE:

StLawrenceCruiseLines.com

1-800-363-7566

TOLL-FREE 1-800-267-7868

14 Front St. S. Mississauga (TICO # 04001400)

253 Ontario Street, Kingston, Ontario (TICO # 2168740)

CAREER TRAINING

ADVERTISING

MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTIONISTS are in huge demand! Train with the leading Medical Transcription school. Learn from home and work from home. Call today. 1.800.466.1535 www.canscribe.com. info@canscribe. com.

BUSINESS OPPS. HIP OR KNEE REPLACEMENT? COPD or Arthritic Conditions? THE DISABILITY TAX CREDIT. $1,500 Yearly Tax Credit. $15,000 Lump Sum Refund (on avg) Apply At Any Time of the Year! For Assistance Call: 1-844453-5372.

STEEL BUILDINGS STEEL BUILDINGS...”SPRING SALES WITH HOT SAVINGS!” All steel building models and sizes are now on sale. Get your building deal while it’s hot. Pioneer Steel 1-800668-5422 www.pioneersteel.ca

PERSONALS MISTY RIVER INTRODUCTIONS We can make this the summer you meet someone special. CALL TODAY 613-257-3531, www.mistyriverintros. com. No computer required.

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 647-350-2558, Email: kmagill@rogers.com or visit: www.OntarioClassifiedAds.com.

EMPLOYMENT OPPS. MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION! Indemand career! Employers have work-at-home positions available. Get online training you need from an employer-trusted program. Visit: CareerStep.ca/MT or 1-855-768-3362 to start training for your work-at-home career today!

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

RESIDENTIAL ADS FROM

1300

$ B20

LOOK WHO’S MAKING MONEY WITH THE CLASSIFIEDS FREE

2nd WEEK

Section B News - Thursday, May 7, 2015

OCNA Network &ODVVL¿ HGV

www.InsideBelleville.com Week of May 4

Posted

To book your ad, call us at 1-888-967-3237 or 613-966-2034 ext 560


EVENTS Continued from page B7

COBOURG Men’s Group, every Thursday, 1pm, Cobourg Retirement Residence, 310 Division St, Cobourg. To register: Community Care Northumberland: 905-372-7356. FootCare Clinic, Mon and Wed Mornings, St. Andrews Presbyterian Church. VON offers Basic, Advanced and Diabetic Foot Care (Fee for Service). For appointment call the VON at 1-888279-4866 ex 5346

CODRINGTON Euchre, every Friday, 7 pm. Codrington Community Centre. All welcome. 2nd Wednesday of the month, Codrington Women’s Institute 7:15 pm, Codrington Community Centre

COLBORNE Colborne Library Storytime program for children 2-5 years. Thursdays at 11:00am This free program introduces the world of books to your children. To register call 905 357-3722 or drop by (library hours: Mon. 3-8, Tues. & Thurs. 11-8, Fri. & Sat. 11-4).

FRANKFORD Free Seniors Exercise Classes – VON SMART classes. Gentle and progressive and can be done standing or seated. Info: 1-888-279-4866 ex 5350. Frankford Lions Hall Giant Yard Sale, May 15 and 16. Donations needed. To drop off: Wednesday between 12 and 3pm or call Jana 613-398-1438 or June 613-398-0499 to make an appointment Frankford United Church Plant Sale, Saturday May 9, 9am – sold out. Everyone Welcome Frankford Legion: Moonshot Euchre, Tuesdays, 1 pm. Seniors Euchre, Wednesdays, 1 pm. Snooker, Thursdays, 6 pm. Free Senior’s workout Mondays and Wednesdays 1 pm. Registration 1-888279-4866 ext 5350.

GLEN MILLER

$4. Yoga, Wednesdays 1pm, $3. Belly Dancing, Thursdays, 10am, $3. Knitting Club, Thursdays 1pm. Wool donations appreciated. Hula Hooping, Fridays, 2pm, $3. Civic Centre, 6 Albert St. E., Hastings. Info: Community Care 705-696-3891 Salvation Army Lunch, 11:30AM – 1:00PM on the 2nd and the 4th Friday of each month, Civic Centre, Hastings. Soup, sandwiches, salad, dessert, coffee, tea and juice. Everyone welcome Hastings Legion, Sunday May 10, please note that the jam session scheduled is cancelled and the branch will be closed for Mother’s Day. Next scheduled jam session: June 14. YMCA Northumberland Ontario Early Years Centre, 6 Albert St E, Hastings. Open 5 days a week. Info: www.ymcanorthumberland.com or 705-696-1353 Line dancing, Wednesdays 10am, $4. Yoga, Wednesdays 1pm, $3. Belly Dancing, Thursdays, 10am, $3. Knitting Club, Thursdays 1pm. Wool donations appreciated. Hula Hooping, Fridays, 2pm, $3. Civic Centre, 6 Albert St. E., Hastings. Info: Community Care 705-696-3891

HAVELOCK Havelock Seniors Club weekly events: Monday: Cribbage and Bid Euchre, 1pm. Tuesday: Shuffleboard, 1pm. Wednesday: Carpet Bowling, 1pm and Euchre 7pm. Thursday: Bid Euchre, 1pm. Friday: Euchre, 1pm Traditional Country Music Jam session, every Wednesday, Ol’ Town Hall, Havelock. Doors open 12 pm, tunes begin 1 pm. Bring along your instruments, your songbook and some friends. BINGO Every Wednesday at the Havelock Community Centre sponsored by the Havelock Lions. Doors open at 5:30pm. Early Birds at 7:00 pm. Regular start 7:30 pm. Info: Lion Joe at 705 778 3588 Havelock Legion Branch 389: Mondays: Mixed Darts 1 pm, Bingo 7 pm, Tuesdays: Shuffleboard 12:30 pm, Thursdays: Ladies’ Darts, 1 pm, Fridays: Mixed Darts. Saturdays Meat Roll. Everyone welcome. 8 Ottawa St. 705-778-3728. New rehabilitation class to improve movement and balance suitable for people just getting started or recovering from recent surgery. Tuesdays & Thursdays 12:30-1pm, Town Hall, 1 Mathison St. Info: Community Care. No Cost

TOPS (Take off Pounds Sensibly) meetings Tuesday mornings at Christ Church Glen Miller. Weigh ins 8:30-9:30 a.m. with a meeting following. Join anytime. Info: Brenda Kellett 613 392-8227 Spring Tea & Sale, Christ Church Glen Miller, Saturday, May 9, 12–2pm. Bake Table, Craft Table, Silent Auction MADOC and Touch and Take. Cost $3.00 which BADMINTON every Tuesday and includes lunch. Everyone Welcome. Thursday, 7-9:30 p.m., Centre Hastings Secondary School. Coaching for new and HASTINGS Junior players Tuesdays 6-7 p.m. Info: TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly) meet- Terry at 613-473-5662 or visit http://www. ings Wednesdays at the Trinity United centrehastingsbadminton.com/. Church, Hastings. Weigh-in 5:15-6:15pm Madoc Active Living Exercise: and meeting 6:30-7:30 pm. Join anytime. Wednesdays, 10:30 am. Trinity United For info Kathy (705) 696-3359 Church, 76 St Lawrence St E. Program Line dancing, Wednesdays 10am, opened to seniors and adults with physical

disabilities. Contact Community Care for Central Hastings 1-800-554-1564 if not a member of this program Madoc Public Library presents author Lynda Simmons. Talk, reading and signing, Tuesdsay, May 12, 7 p.m.. Free event. Madoc Seniors Club Bid Euchre, every Tuesday, 1 pm, downstairs at the Library (elevator accessible). 2nd Tuesday Pot Luck at noon prior to Bid Euchre Line Dancing, Every Thurs. 10:3011:30 am., St. John’s Anglican Church Hall, 115 Durham St. N. Madoc. Info: Carol Cooper 613-473-1446

STIRLING

River Valley Community bid euchre party, River Valley Centre, every Friday 7:30 pm. Cost $ 2.00. Ladies bring something for a light lunch. Info: Grace Bush 613-395-5190 May 9. Stirling Club 55 and over bid euchre, Springbrook Hall, 1pm. Refreshments available, all welcome. The Stirling Festival Theatre presents Rock & Roll Motown, Friday May 8, 2pm & 8pm. Roast beef buffet pre show dinner at 6pm in our Upper Hall prior to the 8pm performance for $25. Please book ahead. Info: 613-395-2100 MARMORA or 1-877-312-1162.www.stirlingfestiWeekly Euchre, Fridays, Deloro valtheatre.com Hall, 7 pm. Bring light lunch. Co-ordinated TRENTON by Marmora Crowe Valley Lions Bingo every Monday (except holi- 8 Wing CFB Trenton Officers’ Mess days), Marmora Legion. Early bird games Ladies Club is hosting a Games Nights, Wednesday, May 13 at 6:30 pm in the start at 7 pm. Upper Lounge Officers’ Mess. Prizes White Lake Bethesda United Church and refreshments. Admission: Members Fish Fry, May 15, Veteran’s Hall (Ivan- $5 and invited guests of members $10. hoe), Corner of Springbrook Rd and Hwy For more info: chambersj@live.ca 37. 4:30 pm-sold out. $13 adults, $6 kids Trenton Lions Club Bazaar & Craft (612), under 6 free. Sale, May 9, 10am-4pm, 77 Campbell Sunday May 10, Marmora Legion St., Trenton. 20+ vendors, snack bar, Mother’s Day Brunch with Turkey, 9AM free gift draw. to 2 PM. Cost is $9 for adults and $4 for children under 8. Everyone is welcome. Quinte West MS Society Support Group, every second Monday of the Marmora Crowe Valley Lions month, Quiet Room, Quinte West Public Club last Open Mike for the season, The Library, Trenton. 6:30pm. For those Marmora Community Centre, Victoria St. affected by MS, caregivers and friends. Marmora, May 10,1-4.30 pm Admission Info: trentonmsgroup@live.ca $5.00, entertainers free. Bring you talent & instruments. 50/50, refreshments, LCBO. JOIN Quinte West’s Kente Kiwanis. Meetings held every Thursday morning. Info: Leo Provost 613-472-2377. Everyone welcome. Call Secretary John Eden at 613-394-0316 for more info. NORWOOD Take Off Pounds Sensibly (TOPS) Toastmasters InternationTuesdays, St. Andrew’s Presbyterian al, Trenton Library. Every 2nd and 4th Church, Norwood. Weigh in from 5:30, Wednesday, 6:30-8 pm. New members meeting at 7 pm. Elaine 705-639-5710 and guests welcome. Preschool Storytime, Norwood AOTS Men’s Club Luncheon Buffet, Public Library. Every Friday, 10-11 am. Trenton United Church, 85 Dundas St. Story, craft and snack. 705-639-2228 or E., Trenton, Saturday, May 9, 11 am - 1 pm. Build your own sandwich, delicious www.anpl.org soup, desserts and beverages. Adult: $7 Tuesday, May 12, Norwood Commu- Children: $4. Tickets at the door. nity Care Diners, Norwood Curling Club, Mother’s Day Breakfast, Sunday, 12pm. Entertainment. Cost $10.00. May 10, 8-11:30 am, Trenton Wooler Elks The Norwood Beautification Com- Lodge. Free. Donations accepted. mittee Bid Euchre, the second Sunday of every month, 1 pm, Norwood Legion. Trenton Lions Club Craftsale, May 9, 10am to 4pm. Over 20 Vendors, Snack Lunch will be available. Bar open for Chili, Sandwiches, Soup, desserts. 77 Campbell Street, Trenton P.E. COUNTY Albury Friendship Group - Quilts Trenton Al-Anon Family Group, for sale each Wed 10 am - 12 noon. Albury every Wednesday, 8 p.m., Trenton United Church Rednersville Rd. Proceeds to local Church, 85 Dundas St. E. Trenton, Tel: 866-951-3711 charities for women. Loyalist Decorative Painters’ Trenton Knights of Columbus, Guild meeting every second Wed. of the 57 Stella Cres.: Sunday & Wednesday month. New members welcome. Carry- Night Bingos 7pm. Cards on sale 5.30pm. ing Place United Church, 7pm. Coffee & Everyone welcome snacks at 6:30. Bring your regular painting Trenton Legion Branch 110-supplies. Info: Noreen 613-475-2005 or check out our website for our Events www.freewebs.com/ldpg/

calendar: www.rcl110.ca Trenton VON Monday Mornings. VON Foot Care Clinic: Basic, Advanced and Diabetic Foot Care (Fee for Service). For appointment call 1-888-279-4866 ex 5346

TWEED Tweed Library: May 9, 1-2:30 Mother’s Day Tea and Craft. Pre-register by phone or in person. May 13, 3:30pm, last Homework Club until September. Bid Euchre every Thursday, 1 p.m., Actinolite Recreation Hall Mother’s Day Tea, Land O’ Lakes Curling Club, 301 St, Joseph St., Tweed, Saturday, May 9, 2pm - 4pm. Line Dancing, Every Tues., 10:3011:30 am, Hungerford Hall, Tweed. Info: Carol Cooper 613-473-1446 Tweed Legion “Toonie for a Tune” Karaoke, Friday, May 8, 7 to 11 pm. Proceeds to the Tweed Music Festival Committee. Food, draws and $150 in prizes. Information 613-478-1865 Gateway Tack Sale & Trade Show, Sunday, May 24. 10AM-3PM, Land O’Lakes Curling Club (next to the arena).New and used tack for sale as well as art, crafts, etc. Free admission and free parking. Vendor tables available. Call Marlene 613-849-7440 or mswhite64@hotmail.com to reserve, $20 per table.

TYENDINAGA Community Care Closet Thrift shop, 393 Main St. Deseronto, open Tuesday through Saturday from 10:00 until 4:00 Tyendinaga Fitness Resource Centre / Fitness Studio Free Essential Oils Workshop, May 13, 5:30-6:30pm. 14 York Rd Shannonville (613) 962-2822

WARKWORTH Warkworth Library Tot Time Storyhour, Every Tuesday at 10:30. Crafts, stories, songs, snack. All are welcome The Knitting Guild, second Tuesday of each month, Millcreek Manor, 140 Church St. Warkworth, 1:30. Anyone interested in knitting is invited. Info: Cheryl 705-924-2598. SAT. MAY 9, 10:30 am, Warkworth Arena – The Bridge Hospice Walk-AThon & Duck Race. Group walk of 1K, 2K or 5K. All ages. Registration 9:30 am. No entry fee. Pledge forms at www. thebridgehospice.com/events/ or call 705-924-9222. Saturday, May 9, Household Contents Consignment Sale, Red Barn Warkworth Fair Grounds, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Auction of unsold items at 1 p.m. Items include-antiques, household furniture, smaller kitchen appliances, dishes, clothing and more! Info: 705-924-9683.

Do you have an opinion a non-profit event you’d like to share?

Email your listing to debbie.johnston@metroland.com. Deadline is Mondays at 3 p.m. Please note one listing per event. Ads may be edited as space permits. Check out our online listings at www.InsideBelleville.com Section B News - Thursday, May 7, 2015

B21


Auto show sees huge weekend crowds By Richard Turtle

News - Stirling - There was plenty of trafďŹ c in the village last weekend as record crowds ocked to the fairgrounds for the annual Automotive and Antique Flea Market presented by the Stirling Agricultural Society. The two-day show and sale has consistently drawn thousands of visitors and car enthusiasts to the area, whether looking to buy or looking just to look, and last weekend was no exception. In fact, many of the organizers, vendors and visitors well acquainted with the show say crowds this year were bigger than ever. Organizers say with paid admissions reaching 4,200, attendance on opening day surpassed 5,000 and ideal weather conditions helped attract thousands more on Sunday. While numbers did create some parking challenges, particularly in the hours immediately after the gates opened Saturday at 7 a.m., Agricultural Society President Amanda Jeffs-Skinkle and other volunteers at the gate reported a steady ow of vehicles throughout the weekend and nothing but positive comments from visitors and vendors alike. “It’s been really good,â€? said JeffsSkinkle early Sunday afternoon, long after experiencing the heaviest trafďŹ c of the weekend the day before. Others nearby agreed, noting the weather over the course of the weekend was perhaps the best the show had seen and certainly helped boost the overall admissions. Many of those in attendance made a family day of it, often arriving with children and the dog in tow, and there was no shortage of interesting and unusual sights both inside and out. Warm temperatures and sunny skies offered ideal conditions for touring the fairgrounds where hundreds of vendors displayed thousands of automotive ac-

Many vehicle makes and models have become iconic for a variety of reasons. This 1931 DeSoto was Vehicles of all descriptions were on display in Stirling last weekend as record crowds arrived for the remembered particularly for its criminal ties. annual Stirling Automotive and Antique Flea Market.

Chrome and colour were on display during the weekend Automotive and Antique Show in Stirling.

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attention of driving enthusiasts of all ages, and foot trafďŹ c was heavy inside as well. Booths were also set up in both the arena and curling club with snacks Lindsey Terry of Belleville took some time to look through the toys with her children Shawn and and refreshments available throughout Madison during the annual Stirling Automotive and Antique Flea Market last weekend. the show site. As well, local service of roles. trict Lions Club and the local branch of Members from the Stirling and Dis- the Royal Canadian Legion were among clubs were well represented in a variety the volunteers onsite throughout the weekend while their counterparts from WE ARE WELCOMING NEW PATIENTS! WE ARE WELCOMING NEW PATIENTS! the Stirling Rotary Club hosted their annual Giant Yard Sale just down the road. Jeremy Solmes, the grandson of the WE ARE WELCOMING NEW PATIENTS! late show founder Roy Solmes, has been a regular visitor or volunteer for more than 40 years and has seen signiďŹ cant changes since that ďŹ rst show was held in a Spring Brook driveway. And after another weekend of automotive activity, he says, the annual event has continued s #OMPLETE DENTAL CARE to be a popular attraction for adults and s #OMPLETE DENTAL CARE FOR FOR ALL AGES children alike.

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Section B - Thursday, May 7, 2015 B23


B24 Section B - Thursday, May 7, 2015

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