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May 21, 2015
Shop Asphodel-Norwood an â&#x20AC;&#x153;inspiringâ&#x20AC;? effort By Bill Freeman
News - Norwood - There were more vendors, more visitors and more diversity at the second annual Shop Asphodel-Norwood showcase. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re thrilled with the response [and] this is just our second year,â&#x20AC;? said Bernadette Vanderhorst, township councillor and member of the municipalityâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Economic Development Advisory Committee which spearheaded the trade fair which ďŹ lled the Asphodel-Norwood Community Centre and Millennium Room. The show attracted 55 vendors, 15 more than last year, including a large number of local food providers who transformed the Millennium Room into a sampling gallery giving visitors a taste of what they have to offer. Foodland Ontario was a major event sponsor providing some funding for promotional activities. As well, there was a strong mix of commercial and organizational displays, entertainment on stage and an ofďŹ cial visit by Minister of Agriculture Jeff Leal and Peterborough County Warden J. Murray Jones who joined AsphodelNorwood Mayor Terry Low during opening ceremonies. â&#x20AC;&#x153;It was a terriďŹ c showcase,â&#x20AC;? said Vanderhorst. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll keep improving in our advertising and just continue to take it to the next level every year.â&#x20AC;? This yearâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s event ran from 9 a.m. unJessica Stillman of Crosswind Farm was one of several vendors who offered samples of their products at the second annual Shop Asphodel-Norwood til 1 p.m. and Vanderhorst says initial reshowcase. Photo: Bill Freeman sponse to the foreshortened time frame
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was positive but the committee will survey all participants to gather their input on the overall show as well as the truncated times. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Piggy backingâ&#x20AC;? on Norwoodâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s renowned Victoria Day yard sales and the inďŹ&#x201A;ux of visitors was something Vanderhorst said works in the showâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s favour. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s just another great exposure of our township to people who have moved away and return for the holiday weekend and other visitors.â&#x20AC;? Not to be overlooked, she added, was showing off the community centre itself which is rightly considered a jewel in the township. â&#x20AC;&#x153;There are people who havenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t been in this building and theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re in awe.â&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x153;This is inspiring,â&#x20AC;? Mayor Low said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;This is really a showcase for the whole township. When you see how diverse our township is itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s really awe-inspiring. â&#x20AC;&#x153;This is a real team effort,â&#x20AC;? Low added. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I think each year it will just get better and better,â&#x20AC;? added Deputy-mayor Rodger Bonneau whoâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s also part of the Economic Development Committee. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Sustainability for our businesses in the area is huge; they can get their names out in a booth, especially on this weekend when there are thousands of people out. Thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a great thing.â&#x20AC;? Bonneau said he was initially skeptical about hosting the event on the holiday weekend but is a â&#x20AC;&#x153;believerâ&#x20AC;? now. The committee will take â&#x20AC;&#x153;small
stepsâ&#x20AC;? with the event, he said, acknowledging the success neighbouring Havelock-Belmont-Methuen has had with Celebrate Havelock which has been built moderately over the past eight years. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve taken a few ideas from them. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s all about showing off Asphodel-Norwood.â&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x153;Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m pleased with the number of people,â&#x20AC;? said Doris Stephens of the AsphodelNorwood Historical Society. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s going strong now.â&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s very exciting with a lot more people,â&#x20AC;? Lisa Cossar
Dr. Paul Giuliani D.D.S.
of the Norwood IODE said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a very nice showcase. If you want to get involved in Asphodel-Norwood thereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s something for every age.â&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s always great to promote local agencies and meet new families itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s also nice to find out information from others that I can pass along,â&#x20AC;? said Leanne Dunn of the Peterborough Family Resource Centre. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s great to have local people show off their wares. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s been a good steady crowd,â&#x20AC;? added Lori Burt of Linlor Farm.
1. Dental Cleanings And Checkups Are Extremely Important To Your Wellbeing. 2. Dental Checkups Include Oral Cancer Screenings. 3. Gum (Periodontal) Disease Affects Your Overall Health. 4. Brush And Floss Twice Daily. 5. Check For Continuous Bad Breath. 6. Proper Nutrition Is Important For Good Dental Health. 7. Dental Problems Do Not Get Better Or Go Away Without Treatment. 8. A Root Canal Is Not A Pain. 9. You Should Change Your Toothbrush Every Three Months. 10. Maintaining Good Dental Health Is Easy. Your oral health is integral to your overall health and often offers advance warning of other serious medical conditions. Make sure you visit us if you have any concerns about your oral health and remember the importance of your routinely scheduled checkups.
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www.bridgestreetdental.com 2 Trent Hills Independent - Thursday, May 21, 2015
NDHS, CDHS feeder school enrollment projections By Bill Freeman
News - Norwood - While enrollment might be declining at Norwood District High School, projections over the next ten years paint a healthier picture for its Thomas Delahaye, four of Peterborough, was feeder schools in Norwood and Havethrilled with the balloon truck that Razberry Norwood Legion Branch 300 president Karen Coats was at the Royal Ca- lock. the Clown (Jessica Jacobs) made for him. Photo: nadian Legion booth during the second annual Shop Asphodel-Norwood Fifty-four-year-old Norwood Disshowcase. Photo: Bill Freeman Bill Freeman trict Public School has a capacity of 323 students with a current enrollment of 351. The Kawartha Pine Ridge District School Boardâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s long-range accommodation plan enrollment projections suggest that by 2024 there will be 375 students at NDPS. Five-year building renewal costs at the school are pegged at $2,080,520. At Havelock Belmont Public School, which celebrated its fiftieth anniversary last year, there are currently 272 students with an enrollment capacity â&#x20AC;&#x153;on the groundâ&#x20AC;? of 326. By 2024 enrollment is projected to increase to 356 students. Building renewal costs for HBPS are estimated at $2,752,883. TÂ?Â&#x2013;Â&#x153; \Â&#x153;vÂ&#x2013; Â?vÂ&#x153;Â&#x201A;Â? yÂ?Â?Â&#x2013;Â&#x2122; vÂ&#x2013;z yÂ?Â?Â&#x2013;Â&#x2122; vÂ&#x2013;z TÂ?Â&#x2013;Â&#x153; \Â&#x153;vÂ&#x2013; Â?vÂ&#x153;Â&#x201A;Â? Enrollment is projected to decline xÂ?Â&#x2122;Â&#x153;Â?Â&#x160;ÂłÂ&#x160;vyz Â&#x153;Â? Â&#x2122;Â?Â&#x201A;Â&#x153; ÂŞÂ?Â?Â&#x2013; xÂ?Â&#x2122;Â&#x153;Â?Â&#x160;ÂłÂ&#x160;vyz Â&#x153;Â?Â&#x2122;Â&#x153;ÂŞÂ&#x2C6;z8 Â&#x2122;Â?Â&#x201A;Â&#x153; ÂŞÂ?Â?Â&#x2013; Â&#x2122;Â&#x153;ÂŞÂ&#x2C6;z8 NorthÂ&#x201A;Â? 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Â&#x2122;Â?Â&#x201A;Â&#x153; ÂŞÂ?Â?Â&#x2013; Â&#x2122;Â&#x153;ÂŞÂ&#x2C6;z8 feeder schools Hillcrest, Kent and Percy vÂ&#x2013;yÂĽvÂ&#x2013;z vyyÂ&#x2122; Â&#x2122;Â?zxÂ&#x201A;vÂ&#x2C6; yzÂ&#x153;vÂ&#x201A;Â&#x2C6;Â&#x2122; Available in a wide range of ďŹ nishes, our xÂ?Â&#x2122;Â&#x153;Â?Â&#x160;ÂłÂ&#x160;vyz Â&#x153;Â? Â&#x2122;Â?Â&#x201A;Â&#x153; Â&#x153; z ÂŞÂ?Â?Â&#x2013;Â&#x2122;Â?zxÂ&#x201A;vÂ&#x2C6; Â&#x2122;Â&#x153;ÂŞÂ&#x2C6;z8 yzÂ&#x153;vÂ&#x201A;Â&#x2C6;Â&#x2122; vÂ&#x2013;yÂĽvÂ&#x2013;z vyyÂ&#x2122; Centennial in Warkworth although the :¤vÂ&#x201A;Â&#x2C6;vwÂ&#x2C6;z Â&#x201A;Â? v ÂĽÂ&#x201A;yz Â&#x2013;vÂ?}z Â?{ Â&#x153; vÂ&#x153; Â&#x160;vÂ&#x2020;z v wÂ&#x201A;} yÂ&#x201A;{{zÂ&#x2013;zÂ?xz8 TÂ?Â&#x2013;Â&#x153; attractive, long lasting hardware adds the :¤vÂ&#x201A;Â&#x2C6;vwÂ&#x2C6;z v ÂĽÂ&#x201A;yz Â?{ÂŞÂ?Â? 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Â?{ wzvÂ?Â&#x153;ÂŞ vÂ&#x2013;yÂĽvÂ&#x2013;z vyyÂ&#x2122; Â&#x153; z that Â&#x2122;Â?zxÂ&#x201A;vÂ&#x2C6; yzÂ&#x153;vÂ&#x201A;Â&#x2C6;Â&#x2122; main relatively stable at around 500 dur vÂ&#x2013;yÂĽvÂ&#x2013;z vyyÂ&#x2122; Â&#x153; z Â&#x2122;Â?zxÂ&#x201A;vÂ&#x2C6; yzÂ&#x153;vÂ&#x201A;Â&#x2C6;Â&#x2122; North Star and doors offer you vÂ?y Â&#x2C6;Â?ÂĽÂłÂ&#x160;vÂ&#x201A;Â?Â&#x153;zÂ?vÂ?xz8 :Â?y ÂŞÂ?Â? xvÂ? Â&#x153; vÂ&#x153; Â&#x160;vÂ&#x2020;z v Â?zÂ&#x2013;{zxÂ&#x153; wÂ&#x201A;} windows yÂ&#x201A;{{zÂ&#x2013;zÂ?xz8 TÂ?Â&#x2013;Â&#x153; ing that time frame. Â&#x153; z xÂ?Â&#x160;wÂ&#x201A;Â?vÂ&#x153;Â&#x201A;Â?Â? Â?{ wzvÂ?Â&#x153;ÂŞ Â&#x153; vÂ&#x153; Â&#x160;vÂ&#x2020;z Â&#x201A;Â? v wÂ&#x201A;} yÂ&#x201A;{{zÂ&#x2013;zÂ?xz8 TÂ?Â&#x2013;Â&#x153; Â&#x153;vÂ&#x2020;z xÂ?Â&#x160;{Â?Â&#x2013;Â&#x153; Â&#x2020;Â?Â?ÂĽÂ&#x201A;Â?} \Â&#x153;vÂ&#x2013; ÂĽÂ&#x201A;Â?yÂ?ÂĽÂ&#x2122; vÂ?y yÂ?Â?Â&#x2013;Â&#x2122;Â&#x153; vÂ&#x153; Â?{{zÂ&#x2013;ÂŞÂ?Â?ÂťÂ&#x2013;z ÂŞÂ?Â? At 48-year-old Hillcrest, which has a the combination ofÂŞÂ?Â? beauty vÂ?y Â&#x2C6;Â?ÂĽÂłÂ&#x160;vÂ&#x201A;Â?Â&#x153;zÂ?vÂ?xz8 :Â?y ÂŞÂ?Â?and xvÂ? \Â&#x153;vÂ&#x2013;perfect ÂĽÂ&#x201A;Â?yÂ?ÂĽÂ&#x2122; vÂ?y yÂ?Â?Â&#x2013;Â&#x2122; Â?{{zÂ&#x2013; zÂ&#x2C6;Â?Â&#x201A;Â?} Â&#x153;Â? Â&#x2122;v¤z Â&#x153; z zÂ?¤Â&#x201A;Â&#x2013;Â?Â?Â&#x160;zÂ?Â&#x153;Ă&#x2039; Â&#x153;Â?Â?8 Â&#x153; zlow-maintenance. Â?zÂ&#x2013;{zxÂ&#x153; xÂ?Â&#x160;wÂ&#x201A;Â?vÂ&#x153;Â&#x201A;Â?Â? Â?{Â&#x2020;Â?Â?ÂĽÂ&#x201A;Â?} wzvÂ?Â&#x153;ÂŞ capacity of 384, enrollment is projected And you can take Â&#x153;vÂ&#x2020;z xÂ?Â&#x160;{Â?Â&#x2013;Â&#x153; Â&#x201A;Â? Â&#x153; vÂ&#x153; ÂŞÂ?Â?ÂťÂ&#x2013;z Â&#x153; z Â?zÂ&#x2013;{zxÂ&#x153; xÂ?Â&#x160;wÂ&#x201A;Â?vÂ&#x153;Â&#x201A;Â?Â? Â?{ wzvÂ?Â&#x153;ÂŞ vÂ?yvÂ?y Â&#x2C6;Â?ÂĽÂłÂ&#x160;vÂ&#x201A;Â?Â&#x153;zÂ?vÂ?xz8 :Â?y ÂŞÂ?Â? xvÂ? @Â?Â&#x192;Â?ÂŞ Â&#x153; z ¤Â&#x201A;zÂĽ Â&#x153; Â&#x2013;Â?Â?} TÂ?Â&#x2013;Â&#x153; \Â&#x153;vÂ&#x2013; to drop to 257 by 2024. There are curÂ&#x2C6;Â?ÂĽÂłÂ&#x160;vÂ&#x201A;Â?Â&#x153;zÂ?vÂ?xz8 :Â?y ÂŞÂ?Â? xvÂ? helping zÂ&#x2C6;Â?Â&#x201A;Â?} Â&#x153;Â? Â&#x2122;v¤z Â&#x153; z zÂ?¤Â&#x201A;Â&#x2013;Â?Â?Â&#x160;zÂ?Â&#x153;Ă&#x2039; Â&#x153;Â?Â?8 comfort in knowing that youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re to Â&#x153;vÂ&#x2020;zÂ&#x153;vÂ&#x2020;z xÂ?Â&#x160;{Â?Â&#x2013;Â&#x153; Â&#x2020;Â?Â?ÂĽÂ&#x201A;Â?} Â&#x153; vÂ&#x153; ÂŞÂ?Â?ÂťÂ&#x2013;z ÂĽÂ&#x201A;Â?yÂ?ÂĽÂ&#x2122; vÂ?y Â&#x201A;Â? yÂ?Â?Â&#x2013;Â&#x2122;8 rently 298 students at the school. xÂ?Â&#x160;{Â?Â&#x2013;Â&#x153; Â&#x201A;Â? Â&#x2020;Â?Â?ÂĽÂ&#x201A;Â?} Â&#x153; vÂ&#x153; save @Â?Â&#x192;Â?ÂŞ the environment, too.ÂŞÂ?Â?ÂťÂ&#x2013;z Â&#x153; z ¤Â&#x201A;zÂĽ Â&#x153; Â&#x2013;Â?Â?} TÂ?Â&#x2013;Â&#x153; \Â&#x153;vÂ&#x2013; zÂ&#x2C6;Â?Â&#x201A;Â?} Â&#x153;Â? Â&#x2122;v¤z Â&#x153; z zÂ?¤Â&#x201A;Â&#x2013;Â?Â?Â&#x160;zÂ?Â&#x153;Ă&#x2039; Â&#x153;Â?Â?8 At Kent, built in 1958 with upgrades zÂ&#x2C6;Â?Â&#x201A;Â?} Â&#x153;Â? 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R0013216187
Shop AsphodelNorwood
Members of the Asphodel-Norwood council take a photo break with Peterborough County Warden J. Murray Jones and Peterborough MPP and Minister of Agriculture Food and Rural Affairs Jeff Leal during the second annual Shop Asphodel-Norwood showcase. From left to right are Councillor Debbie Lynch, Mayor Terry Low, Deputy-mayor Rodger Bonneau, MPP Leal, Warden Jones, and Councillors Roy Millett and Bernadette Vanderhorst. Photo: Bill Freeman
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TEMPORARY BRIDGE / ROAD CLOSURE: RICHARDSON ROAD BRIDGE â&#x20AC;&#x201C; DECKING REHABILITATION RICHARDSON ROAD WILL BE CLOSED TO THROUGH TRAFFIC FROM THE 8TH CONCESSION WEST TO BEAMISH ROAD, IN PERCY WARD, TRENT HILLS FOR DECKING REHABILITATION. CLOSED MAY 13TH 2015 TO MAY 25TH 2015
The Campbellford BIA Street Sale Saturday, May 30 Special, Draws, & Promotions In Stores throughout Downtown Campbellford. Watch our Facebook page (Campbellford BIA) for Specials and Like Us to keep up with all the events in Downtown Campbellford. www.campbellfordbia.ca
Employment Opportunity Campbellford Business Improvement Area (BIA)
Part-time Secretary The Campbellford Business Improvement Area (BIA) is seeking a Secretary to assist the Board of Management. This position is responsible for all administrative support to the Board. The successful candidate will be required to attend monthly meetings, serve as a communication link to the membership and provide assistance with special events. This individual must be able to work irregular hours including evenings and weekends. This is a part-time, contract position. Please forward resumes to: Campbellford BIA Box 1621Campbellford, ON K0L 1L0 The deadline for application is June 25, 2015. Additional information regarding this position is available from Caroline Bingley at Carolineâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Organics Tel: 705-632-0007.
The Municipality of Trent Hills Invites Applications for the position of
Director of Finance/Treasurer Trent Hills is a vibrant and growing community with a population of 13,000 that is located on the Trent Severn Waterway amongst the rolling hills of Northumberland County. It is comprised of a number of urban and rural communities with an annual budget of approximately $21 million. This position will provide a challenging environment for a financial practitioner with a broad range of experience. Reporting to the Chief Administrative Officer, the successful applicant will be responsible for the financial management of the Corporation, including administration of the financial accounting systems, coordination of the annual budgets, financial statements, account analysis, forecasting and monitoring, manage the tax system, collections, municipal banking arrangement, reserve fund investments and debentures, in accordance with the municipal policy and legislated statutes. The successful applicant will also be working with the senior management team as they develop and maintain the municipal policy framework. A complete job description is available from the undersigned upon request. The successful candidate will possess a university degree in business administration, commerce or a related field with a minimum of five (5) years progressive experience as a senior municipal manager. As well, the candidate will be a graduate of the Association of Municipal Clerks and Treasurers Accounting Course complemented by a relevant educational background that includes a CA, CGA, or CMA designation. The salary range for this position is $90,812 - $114,248 together with a generous benefit package. Resumes will be received until 2:00 p.m. on Friday, June 5, 2015. Please send resumes marked â&#x20AC;&#x153;Director of Finance/Treasurer Competition â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Confidentialâ&#x20AC;? to the following address: Kari Petherick, Coordinator of Human Resources Municipality of Trent Hills P.O. Box 1030 66 Front Street S., Campbellford, ON K0L 1L0 4ELEPHONE EXT s &ACSIMILE KARI PETHERICK TRENTHILLS CA s WWW TRENTHILLS CA All information is collected in accordance with the Municipal Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act R.S.O. 1990, Chapter M45. We thank all applicants who apply but advise that only those selected for an interview will be contacted. The Municipality of Trent Hills is an equal opportunity Employer. Accommodations are available upon request, in the recruitment process for applicants with disabilities.
Annual Decoration Day Service at Warkworth Cemetery on June 21st, 2015 at 2:00 P.M.
A piper will sound the beginning of the
Annual Decoration Day Service, which will be led by Rev. John Saynor.
Please bring lawn chairs. Rain or Shine Please share this message with family, friends and neighbours, and those in the community who may not hear about this Decoration Service otherwise. In 2016 the Annual Decoration Day Service will be held at Warkworth Cemetery, on County # 29. There will be an information table re: Beautification of the Cemeteries.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC MEETINGS COMMITTEE OF ADJUSTMENT / COUNCIL NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the following applications under Section 45 and Section 53 of the Planning Act will be heard by the Committee of Adjustment / Council on June 2, 2015 at 7:00 p.m. at the Hastings Civic Centre, 6 Albert Street East, Village of Hastings, Municipality of Trent Hills: Please note the new meeting location above. 1. Severance Consent Application B03/2015 513 County Road 8 / 539 County Road 8, Seymour Ward The application is for the severance of one parcel, being approximately 2.0 acres (with existing residential dwelling located at 513 County Road 8), from 95.8 acres. Subsequently, the existing residential dwelling located at 539 County Road 8, will merge with the retained lands from the above noted severance. 2. Severance Consent Application B04/2015 Concession 4, Part of Lot 12, 1346 4th Line East, Seymour Ward The application is for the severance of one parcel, being a surplus farm dwelling and accessory buildings. The severed parcel will be approximately 14 acres, from 100 acres. 3. Severance Consent Application B15/2015 170 Platt Road, Percy Ward The application is for the creation of one new parcel, being approximately two acres in size, for residential building purposes, from 132.3 acres. The following applications will be heard by Council, following and upon the completion of the Committee of Adjustment meeting noted above. 1. Rezoning Application C01/2015 513 County Road 8 / 539 County Road 8, Seymour Ward Further to Severance Consent Application B03/2015, the purpose of the proposed Zoning By-Law amendment is to recognize the creation of one new parcel, being the severed portion of Severance Consent Application B03/2015. The subject lands will be rezoned to Rural Residential. 2. Rezoning Application C02/2015 1346 4th Line East, Seymour Further to Severance Consent Application B04/2015, the purpose of the proposed Zoning By-law amendment is to recognize the creation of one new parcel, being the severed portion of Severance Consent Application B04/2015, in an approximate size of 14 acres with an existing residential dwelling and outbuildings. The severed portion will be rezoned to Rural Exception. The retained portion will be rezoned to Agricultural Exception (*), to prohibit any future residential development. 3. Rezoning Application C05/2015 170 Platt Road, Percy Ward Further to Severance Consent Application B15/2015, the purpose of the proposed Zoning By-law amendment is to recognize the creation of one new parcel, being the severed portion of Severance Consent Application B15/2015, in an approximate size of 2 acres (vacant land). The severed portion will be rezoned to Rural Residential. The retained portion requires no change in zoning. 4. Official Plan Amendment Application Nappan Island, Part of Lots 1 and 12, Concession 12, Part of Lots 10, 11, 12 and 13, Concession 13, and Part of Lot 12, Concession 14, Seymour Ward The application proposes to amend the designation from being a combination of the Rural Policy Area and Greenlands, to Resource Based Recreational Residential, Greenlands and Shoreline Residential. This is a continuation of a process begun in 2008 to develop the property for a combination of recreations, residential and related uses based on the Trent River. ANY PERSON may attend the public meeting and/or make written or verbal representation, either in support of, or in opposition to, the application. Written submissions can be made to the Clerk of the Municipality. Additional information regarding these applications is available by contacting the Planning Department at 705-653-1900, ext 224 or ext 234, between 9:00 a.m. â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 4:00 p.m., Monday to Friday, or by email: liz.mitchell@trenthills.ca. Trent Hills Independent - Thursday, May 21, 2015 3
First annual Cathy Archer Award recipients announced at special tea By Sue Dickens
in 2014 after a battle with bone cancer. She had retired from the hospital after working there for 40 years. The education bursary will be awarded annually to a registered nurse or registered practical nurse who successfully completes a course related to health care that will enhance their career at CMH. MacAulay commented on receiving the award: â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s wonderful they were able to do this to help nurses.â&#x20AC;? MacAulay has worked at the hospital for the past ďŹ ve years and is currently upgrading her education to become an RN. McIlmoyle has been with CMH for eight years. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I took the O-R course to extend my scope of practice,â&#x20AC;? she told the Independent. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Receiving this award is wonderful,â&#x20AC;? she added. John Russell, executive director of the hospitalâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Foundation commented, â&#x20AC;&#x153;When the Archer family established the endowment those funds are reinvested and that will fund the education award each year and it will go on forever. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a wonderful way to support the hospital and to continue to fund education. Endowments can be set up for equipment as well,â&#x20AC;? he added. Raine made a surprise presentation to Jennifer Petherick, RN and Marion Tinson, RN. â&#x20AC;&#x153;For years now Jennifer has been A surprise presentation was made to two nurses at the Nursesâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Tea held at very instrumental in making sure that Campbellford Memorial Hospital to thank them for their hard work to make nursing week was a success and she did National Nursing Week events a success: from left, RN Jennifer Petherick, a lot of work. And she had a little elf chief nursing officer Jan Raine and RN Marion Tinson. Photo: Sue Dickens helper, Marion. So thank-you for everything you have done,â&#x20AC;? she said, presenting ďŹ&#x201A;owers to each of the nurses. Nurses and hospital staff attended s %LITE s ,EVOLOR the tea which was held as part of Nas (UNTER $OUGLAS s 'RABER tional Nursing Week (May 11 - 17) celebrations which were held alongside Custom Order Blinds & Shutters International Nurses Day and Florence We Promise Good Quality and Value Nightingaleâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s birthday (May 12). The Canadian Nurses Association has on all Our Window Fashions declared this yearâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s theme, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Nursing, 47 B Elizabeth Street With You Every Step of the Way.â&#x20AC;? The Brighton theme emphasizes how important nurses 613-475-3349 MON.-SAT. 8:30 - 6:00 are in the lives of their patients.
News - Campbellford - A new endowment created by Cathy Archerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s family in her memory was awarded for the ďŹ rst time during a nursesâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; tea held at Campbellford Memorial Hospital (CMH) last week. Marianne McIlmoyle and Tori MacAulay, both registered practical nurses (RPNs) who work on the ďŹ rst ďŹ&#x201A;oor shared the award and were presented with $250 each. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Cathy Archer was a fantastic nurse; what can I say,â&#x20AC;? said Jan Raine, chief nursing ofďŹ cer with the hospital, during the ceremony. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Cathy was a huge proponent of continuing education. She had a lot of letters after her name for all the courses she took, so many it was like the alA new endowment created by Cathy Archerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s family in her memory was awarded for the first time phabet. I think during a nursesâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; tea held at Campbellford Memorial Hospital: from left, granddaughter Isabelle Barr, Cathy would be husband Leonard Archer, Marianne McIlmoyle and Tori MacAulay, both RPNs who work on the first very proud to have her family with us floor. Photo: Sue Dickens
today to honour her,â&#x20AC;? she added. Leonard Archer, her husband, was there with his granddaughter Isabelle Barr, age 11, who made the presentation. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m happy and nervous,â&#x20AC;? Isabelle told the Independent beforehand. It was an emotional time for the Archer family. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Cathy was very much into education. She, for about thirty years, took a course every year in something. She stayed up-to-date even when she was sick,â&#x20AC;? said her husband. She was the unit co-ordinator of CMHâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s operating room and â&#x20AC;&#x153;a valued long-time employeeâ&#x20AC;? who passed away
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Trent Hills Independent - Thursday, May 21, 2015 5
Spring Street project moves forward By Bill Freeman
News - Norwood - Work on the Spring Street reconstruction-watermain project continues to move forward. The $1,343,232 project by Drain Brothers Excavating is tackling one of the oldest pieces of underground infrastructure in Norwood. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s been pretty good,â&#x20AC;? says Mayor Terry Low. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s not like County Road
LOCAL CHURCHES ST. ANDREWâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S PRESBYTERIAN R0011959338
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40 when there were evenings you couldnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t get through that road.â&#x20AC;? Public Works manager Jeff Waldon says thereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s been â&#x20AC;&#x153;great co-operationâ&#x20AC;? from residents in the installation of a temporary watermain bypass through backyards; houses from County Road 45 west to Pine Street are currently running on the bypass as work on that section of Spring Street progresses. The bypass was set up in the backyards because of the â&#x20AC;&#x153;narrowness of the work space,â&#x20AC;? says Waldon.
TRENT HILLS
Property owners were notified ahead of time that the bypass installation was going to take place; while it was being set up each residence was checked to make sure there was a working outside tap and whether or not the tap contained a backflow. â&#x20AC;&#x153;There was some minor plumbing done at various residences to correct any issue with the outside tap,â&#x20AC;? Waldon said. A three-quarter inch hose is attached from the temporary main to the outside tap of every home to
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supply water during the construction. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Plumbing costs were part of the contractorâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s responsibilities by setting up the bypass and making it work,â&#x20AC;? said Waldon. Once the bypass was chlorinated and tested (two samples over 48 hours) buildings were connected and switched over from the existing watermain. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve had great co-operation from residents to put the bypass through backyards which makes life so much easier than tripping over that during the whole duration of construction,â&#x20AC;? said Waldon. An â&#x20AC;&#x153;isolation valveâ&#x20AC;? has also been installed at the corner of Pine and Spring Streets something that was never at that location before. The isolation valve allows them to shut down the existing watermain from County Road 45 to Pine Street but allows them to leave Spring Street serviced on that existing watermain between Pine and Oak Streets. The first pieces of new watermain have been installed. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Once the work reaches Pine Street the new watermain will be pressure-tested, flushed, chlorinated and once zero samples are achieved the watermain will be put into service,â&#x20AC;? says Waldon. When that section is completed, homes from Pine to
Oak Streets will utilize the temporary bypass in similar fashion. St. Paul School is expected to be out for summer before that switch occurs. A pre-construction survey of every building was done by a consultant with both interior and exterior examinations done to identify any current cracking in plaster or concrete or any other preexisting issues that might be later blamed on the contractor. Crews have been doing the main line then going back and doing services at homes, says Waldon. Waldon says thereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s also a geologic consultant on site and he says that with the sandy soil he doesnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t see any transfer of vibration. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s not like itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s bedrock,â&#x20AC;? he said. He says there have been â&#x20AC;&#x153;minimal complaintsâ&#x20AC;? from residents. Councillor Debbie Lynch wondered if they are considering installing â&#x20AC;&#x153;traffic calmingâ&#x20AC;? speed bumps on Spring Street to deter drivers from using a rebuilt Spring Street to make a quick jog from Highway 7 to County Road 45. Waldon says thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s something people have talked about in the past. Mayor Low called speed bumps a â&#x20AC;&#x153;good pointâ&#x20AC;? and
Whale of a day
Please be advised that work is scheduled to begin on the Masonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Creek Bridge, located on County Road 45, just north of Meyers Road starting on May 25, 2015. Work is expected to be completed by October 31, 2015. One lane of traffic will be maintained at all times, however, please be advised to expect traffic delays during construction. For further information, please contact Kaela Esseghaier, Project Engineer, by email: esseghaierk@northumberlandcounty.ca or by phone: (905) 372-3329 ext. 2344.
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6 Trent Hills Independent - Thursday, May 21, 2015
Norwood Lions Club president Rodger Bonneau holds up one of the speedy blue whales that sped along the Ouse River during the annual Norwood Wacky Water Whale race with its top prize of $1,000. Picking up the cool $1,000 was Samantha Tully with the second prize of $200 going to Austin Webb; third place went to Cathy Ross with tenth spot to Barclay Begg, twentieth to Andrew Scott and thirtieth to Spencer Hilts. Along with their barbecue in Lions Park which was a busy spot to start yard sale shopping in the village and a visit to Shop Asphodel-Norwood at the community centre, the Lions also hosted an Italian Feast in the town hall. Photo: Bill Freeman
OPINION
Another Bush damaged by Iraq God save the queen, for Editorial - He just misheard the question. A basically friendly interviewer on Fox News asked Jeb Bush, now seeking the Republican nomination for the U.S. presidency: “Knowing what we know now, would you have authorised the invasion [of Iraq]?” And he Gwynne Dyer replied: “I would have.” When the storm of protest, even from Republicans, swept over him, he explained that he thought the interviewer had said: “Knowing what we KNEW THEN.” An easy mistake to make. “Know now” sounds an awful lot like “knew then.” Besides, Jeb Bush is on record as claiming that he is Hispanic (on a 2009 voter-registration application), so the poor man was struggling with his second language. If only she had asked the question in Spanish, he would have understood it perfectly. Enough. When you listen to the entire interview, it’s clear that Bush didn’t want to say a flat “No” to her question, because that would be a condemnation of his brother’s decision to invade Iraq in 2003. But as soon as he could, he switched to talking about the “intelligence failures” that misled his brother into invading the wrong country. Anybody can make a mistake. So nobody’s to blame. Hillary Clinton, currently the favourite for the Democratic presidential nomination, uses exactly the same defence. In fact, every American politician who voted in favour of the invasion of Iraq at the time claims that the problem was faulty intelligence, and maybe some of them outside of the White House genuinely were misled. But the intelligence wasn’t “faulty”; it was cooked to order. There was no plausible intelligence that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction, so the U.S. intelligence services were told to “find” some. There were no Islamist terrorists in Iraq either: Saddam Hussein hunted down and killed anybody suspected of being an Islamist activist, because the Islamists wanted to kill him. The U.S. Central Intelligence Agency tried very hard to create a link between al Qaeda, the organisation responsible for the 9/11 attacks, and Iraq. The only thing they came up with, however, was a rumour that a little-known Islamist from Jordan called Abu Musab al Zarqawi who knew Osama bin Laden had been in Baghdad receiving treatment for
Trent Hills Independent
P.O. Box 25009, Belleville, ON K8P 5E0 250 Sidney Street Phone: 613-966-2034 Fax: 613-966-8747 Published weekly by:
wounds received in Afghanistan in May-November 2002. (He was actually in Iran at that time.) If you were on the White House staff in early 2003, you HAD to know that the “intelligence” you were using to justify the invasion of Iraq was false, because you were one of the people demanding that the spooks manufacture “evidence” for it. The decision itself had been taken even before Bush’s election in 2000 and the 9/11 attacks in 2001, for reasons that had nothing to do with terrorism. The incoming Bush administration was full of people called “neo-conservatives.” They believed the Clinton administration had failed to exploit the sole superpower status that the United States inherited after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 to put the world to rights. What was needed, therefore, was a display of U.S. power that would make all the “bad guys” behave. So invade somewhere and take the local bad guy down. Iraq was the obvious choice, because it was very weak after a decade of arms embargo, and Saddam Hussein was a very bad guy. We don’t yet know just how disastrous the invasion of Iraq was, because the damage is still accumulating. Abu Bakr al Baghdadi, the man who now rules “Islamic State,” the terrorist-ruled new country that occupies the eastern half of Syria and the western third of Iraq, started fighting Americans as part of the Iraqi resistance in 2003. By 2006 at the latest, he had joined the group then called Al Qaeda in Iraq, which was largely made up of jihadis from other Arab countries who had flocked to Iraq to fight the infidel invaders. And the founder of Al Qaeda in Iraq was none other than Abu Musab al Zarqawi–who parlayed the reputation as a major jihadi leader that the U.S. intelligence services gave him into a real leadership position in the resistance. Through the years that followed, that organisation gained experience in guerilla war and terrorism, and through several changes of name and leadership (Zarqawi was killed in 2006) it ultimately morphed into Islamic State. Baghdadi was with it all the way, and now styles himself “Caliph Ibrahim,” demanding the loyalty and obedience of all Muslims everywhere. So we owe a lot to the “neo-cons” in George Bush’s administration who pushed for the invasion of Iraq: people like Dick Cheney (vice-president), Donald Rumsfeld (Secretary of Defense), and Paul Wolfowitz (Undersecretary of Defense). They just used the 9/11 attacks as a vehicle for their pre-existing Iraq invasion plans. It was Wolfowitz, above all, who worked tirelessly to link Iraq to terrorism. And guess who is the most prominent name on Jeb Bush’s current team of foreign policy advisers (apart from George W. Bush himself). Why, it’s the very same Paul Wolfowitz. The problem with Jeb Bush is not the foolish answers he gives. It’s the company he keeps.
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
the sake of the holiday By Stephen Petrick Editorial - We’re coming off a long weekend and my mind is mush, so I’m going to make some short comments on a few issues here instead of the usual long rant on one. First, since we’re on the topic of holidays, am I the only one who, for 364 days of the year, sees little value in Canada keeping its connection with the monarchy? Of course, the one day I love it is Victoria Day. I’ll take a day off to celebrate the Queen’s birthday. But being a fan of the we’reall-born-equal philosophy, I’ve never understood why I’m supposed to have an infatuation with the Royal Family. There was a time when I would have argued there’s no use for the monarchy–even in Britain– but that changed for me in 2003 when, as a young man, I spent a summer in London. That’s when I learned that tourists from around the world are mesmerized by the elegance of royal properties such as Buckingham Palace. The Royal Family generates millions of pounds for the British economy and gives the country an identity. And many of us Canadians, I suppose, still want some connection to it, just so we can say we’re not American. *** Second, I want to say something about the Elementary Teachers’ Federation of Ontario’s work-to-rule campaign, as a result of a labour dispute with the provincial government. But given the fact that I once worked as a teacher and there are several teachers in my family, I’d feel I’m in a conflict if I went too heavy into details. However, I want to point out that this dispute will die off in time, just like the dispute that led to a two-week province-wide strike in 1997. You’ll hear a lot over the next few weeks about how teachers are lazy and overpaid. I don’t agree, but such comments are fair game in a labour dispute that impacts the public as much as this one. You can argue for or against either side, but, really, such conflicts are inevitable when you’ve got a union as powerful as ETFO. Teaching is one of the most common professions in Ontario, which means teachers’ unions have incredible
bargaining strength. The government, to an extent, has to give them what they want, at least until it feels the request is so outlandish the public will be on its side. But eventually the two sides will work it out because, while teachers are reasonably paid (many would argue really well paid) they’re not filthy rich enough to afford a long work stoppage, if it comes to that. Professional athletes are the only ones who can afford to hold out for months. *** Third, for our readers who don’t appreciate my left-leaning views on issues such as taxation, I’ve got good news. I’m moving to a place where my pinko-commie attitude will be better received: Alberta. I’m kidding about the move, but how incredible is it that 40 years of Conservative rule is about to end in Alberta after the surprising election of an NDP government earlier this month? I don’t purport to be an expert in Alberta politics, but I presume that when a certain party is in power for so long, it becomes arrogant and just assumes voters will re-elect it, only to lose its grip to a fresh alternative. It’s like how in the early part of this century the Liberals, having ruled Canada federally since the early 1990s, got cocky and were caught in several scandals in which they awarded contracts to supporters. (Remember the famous Toronto Star headline, “Your money, their friends.”) That helped turn the country Conservative, with the election of Stephen Harper as Prime Minister in 2006. A few months ago in this space, I predicted Harper will win a majority government in this fall’s election, on the grounds that Liberal leader Justin Trudeau is too young and inexperienced. But if Alberta is no longer a Tory stronghold that could be a game changer. And after nearly ten years in power, Harper is showing he isn’t immune to scandal either (Isn’t that right Mike Duffy and Nigel Wright?) Prime Minister Thomas Mulcair? I wouldn’t rule it out.
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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Trent Hills Independent - Thursday, May 21, 2015 7
Cancer campaign volunteers honoured in Hastings By Bill Freeman
Dorothy Smith of Havelock (c) was presented with her 30-year service award by the Canadian Cancer Society during a special ceremony in Hastings. Joining her are (l-r) Hastings and area campaign co-ordinator Phyllis Donnelly and Anita Record, manager of the societyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Peterborough and District office. Photo: Bill Freeman
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News - Hastings - â&#x20AC;&#x153;Thereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s so much to life, share it with others,â&#x20AC;? says Dorothy Smith, a long-time Canadian Cancer Society volunteer from Havelock who was honoured during a celebration at St. Georgeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Anglican Church in Hastings. Smith was presented with a 30-year volunteerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s certiďŹ cate joining others from Hastings, Norwood and Havelock at a ceremony hosted by inspirational local campaign co-ordinator Phyllis Donnelly. Two representatives from the Canadian Cancer Societyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Peterborough and District ofďŹ ce were also on hand to honour the volunteers. â&#x20AC;&#x153;It certainly enriches your life by doing something for someone else,â&#x20AC;? said Smith who now concentrates on the Havelock seniorsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; building. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I enjoy the visits and have met some wonderful people.â&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x153;They look forward to me coming and I enjoy the visits too,â&#x20AC;? she says. Twenty-ďŹ ve-year volunteer Marilyn Wharram urged young people to think seriously about dedicating some of their time to the cause. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I encourage everyone here to get young people involved,â&#x20AC;? Wharram said. Wharram says she knows younger people are busy and say they canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t spare the time but insists thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s still possible. â&#x20AC;&#x153;When I started I was busy and I had a young family and a business to run,â&#x20AC;? she said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t think they realize what they can get out of volunteering. Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve made a lot of friends.â&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x153;Phyllis is outstanding,â&#x20AC;? said Anita Record, manager of the Peterborough and District ofďŹ ce. â&#x20AC;&#x153;That is one of the reasons Havelock, Hastings and Norwood do so well. She is known in this community and she motivates people; she has a passion.â&#x20AC;? Locally, daffodil pin sales in stores and during the three-day Daffodil Days blitz raised $363 in Havelock, $343 in Norwood and $649 in HastingsRoseneath and Keene. The door-todoor campaign in Hastings alone raised $5,800 and Donnelly expects theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll collect another $1,000. Record enjoys gatherings like the one in Hastings because it gives her a chance to personally meet and thank
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volunteers. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The local campaign has been good, especially in this area,â&#x20AC;? she said. Record reminds volunteers that there are cancer survivors they know in their communities and â&#x20AC;&#x153;one of the main reasons there are survivors is all the research.â&#x20AC;? That research, she stresses, is made possible by the funds they help raise. â&#x20AC;&#x153;That has a huge impact all over Canada. We have top-notch researchers in Canada.â&#x20AC;? The Pedal for Hope cycling team travelled through this area last week and Record says the tour â&#x20AC;&#x153;helps kids realize that volunteering is critical. â&#x20AC;&#x153;It does inspire them. The police ofďŹ cers are role models not only for fundraising but for volunteering too.â&#x20AC;? She lauds their efforts which have now spanned 11 years and the new $1-million Impact Grant presented in their name to Dr. Lillian Sung and her research team at Sick Kids Hospital where they are developing a new smart phone app.
Marilyn Wharram of Norwood (r) is presented with her 25-year Canadian Cancer Society volunteer appreciation certificate by local campaign co-ordinator Phyllis Donnelly during a special night in Hastings. Photo: Bill Freeman
â&#x20AC;&#x153;Doctors at Sick Kids can ďŹ nd out every day how those kids are feeling so children donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t have to travel to Toronto as often or if there is a problem parents can get them up there right away.â&#x20AC;? Thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s the kind of research fundraising dollars support, Record noted.
Garden time is here
Norm Grigg, of Pickering, gets some help from Marg Knight, of Norwood, and Pauline Wilkins, of Vansickle, north of Cordova Mines, during the annual Norwood and District Horticultural Societyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s plant sale. The event is a true sign that garden season has finally arrived and is hotly anticipated by eager gardeners from around the region. Photo: Bill Freeman
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Hastings’ community yard sale makes impressive return News - Hastings - Hastings’ community yard sale made an impressive return after a year’s hiatus. With between 40 and 50 vendors at the downtown ballpark, browsers and shoppers had everything they could ask from a yard sale where the chase of the perfect unfound treasure is always the strongest lure. “It’s a lot of work but also a lot of fun and the people seem to like it,” said Erin Farley chair of the Hastings Waterfront Festival which oversees Wendy Baggs and Wendy Asselstine raised funds for the Kawartha Turtle the event. The Waterfront FesTrauma Centre with their yard sale table at the Hastings Community Yard tival Committee took over the Sale at the ballpark on Saturday. Photo: Bill Freeman
Victoria Day Weekend holiday sale in 2013 from the Hastings Revitalization Association but did not hold the event last year. Farley says the Waterfront Festival took on the challenge after receiving a lot of positive feedback about the sale following the announcement that the HRA no longer wanted to organize the event. This year’s sale was shortened to a 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. time frame, something Farley says works well. “This is a good weekend, the first real fun weekend of the summer season,” she said.
“Everybody does their spring cleaning [and that translates into yard sale material].” Farley praised the “regular” festival volunteers who helped with the event. “They are very hard workers.” The ninth annual Hastings Waterfront Festival takes place August 14 to 16 kicking off with a Friday barbecue and concert starting at 4 p.m. and running until 11 p.m. Saturday’s activities include a family fun and heritage day along with a children’s area from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m.; in the evening there will be another bar-
NDHS will be reviewed in 2016, closure on the table
News - Norwood - Not unexpectedly Norwood District High School will face an accommodation review in 2016 and closure is on the table along with the possibility of establishing a Kindergarten to Grade 12 school or a Grade 7 to 12 school on the site. The recommendation is contained in the Kawartha Pine Ridge District School Board’s weighty 245-page Long-Term Accommodation Plan for 2015-2020. The multi-year plan is used to provide the board with information and direction with data on things like current enrollment, ten-year enrollment projections, school capacity, utilization of space and estimated costs for building renewal needs. The plan is revised and updated every year as new information becomes available. The document paints a familiar picture of a school board facing declining enrollment with 18.4 per cent fewer high school students in the
system this year than 2007 and a drop of 13.3 per cent at the elementary level. It’s a dilemma faced by most school boards across the province. NDHS, built in 1950 with four additions since, has a capacity of 681 students with 298 currently enrolled; the board estimates that figure will drop to a low of 277 in 2020 with a spike upwards to 303 by 2024. In 2010 there were 383 students at NDHS. The KPR expects NDHS to remain at 43 per cent capacity over the next ten years. It also says the school needs an estimated $3,583,576 in “building renewal needs.” Across the entire KPR, fiveyear renewal needs top out at a staggering $178,536,765. The board is recommending the status quo for Campbellford District High School which currently has 512 students in a building that houses 711. Projections indicate a slight decline with enrollment dropping below 500 in 2019 with a 493 students at the
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school in 2024. The school, built in 1960 with additions in 1963, 1970, 1989 and 2007, faces five-year building renewal costs of $5,449,195. It was no surprise to the Community Friends of Norwood District High School that the high school is set for a review for review in 2016. They’re pleased the KPR has acknowledged that as part of any option considered for NDHS alternative education be provided in Norwood and area, a proposal the group advocated strongly during a presentation to the board last month and reiterated in a follow-up submission endorsed by both Asphodel-Norwood and Havelock-Belmont-
Methuen councils. They also support a proposal for a regional high skills major course in agriculture and the return of Grade 8 and even 7 students to NDHS. “Ours [review] actually looks somewhat positive,” said Friends chair Verna Shackleton, a former school board trustee. “It wasn’t going to disappear [from the list]. It’s been on the list for ten years. We needed as positive an outcome as we could and I think we got that.” The Community Friends has “a good dialogue” with the board, she says. “They obviously read what we presented because it was reflect-
ed in what they put forward.” “They’re saying let’s look at these various alternatives rather than [just] it’s too small, close it down,” said Shackleton. “And the fact [is] that it’s another year down the road and who knows what can happen in that year.” Shackleton understands the financial constraints the board is struggling with after being asked by the provincial Ministry of Education to cut $3.5 million this year. “But I think we got out of it what we wanted which was to perceive us as a school with possibility. We will continue to provide them with information to remind them it is.”
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becue and concert running from 4 to 11 p.m. There will also be a silent auction. On the Sunday the antique and classic car show returns to the waterfront. The festival includes exhibit areas for artists and artisans, community, service and education organizations and other participants. Last year the Kawartha Turtle Trauma Centre and the Lower Trent Conservation Authority’s invasive species awareness were among the informational displays. For more information call 705696-1697 or visit <www.hastingsfestival.ca>. TICO#50007364
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High quality but low turnout at painters’ show By Bill Freeman
News - Norwood - The quality of work was exceptionally strong but the turnout through the doors at the Royal Canadian Legion Branch 300 in Norwood for its annual spring arts show should have been larger. Held to coincide with the large numbers of visitors who flock to Norwood for its famous community-wide yard sales, the fifth annual exhibition drew poorly and that was a major disappointment for Rob Howat who curated the show and is the driving force behind the Norwood Arts Group which meets regularly at Branch 300. “This is our big effort to try to get Evelyn Van Hoekelen of Warkworth was an exhibitor at the annual Norwood people coming in and if you can’t Spring Arts Show held at the Royal Canadian Legion Branch 300 over the manage it today with all the sales maybe it’s just not going to work for weekend. Photo: Bill Freeman
Former township councillor dies
By Bill Freeman
News - Hastings - AsphodelNorwood has lost one of its leading citizens with the death of Rick Kloosterman. The former township councillor who served a four-year term before losing his seat in the last municipal election died May 13 at Peterborough Regional Health Centre after a long and courageous battle with cancer. A successful business owner with JPR Manufacturing of Hastings, Kloosterman also served on Asphodel Township’s council before it was amalgamated with the village of Norwood in 1998. “He was a good councillor and dedicated to his job,” said former Asphodel-Norwood Mayor Doug Pearcy who served alongside Kloosterman for four years and praised his business
success. “I have nothing but good thoughts in my mind about Rick. I enjoyed working with him,” Pearcy said reflecting on the passing of a young man “in the prime of life.” “I didn’t realize how sick he was. When I heard of his passing it really shocked me.” Pearcy said he knew Kloosterman had had health problems and that showed great courage in attempting council business and undergo treatments. “I know how hard it is to do your job when you’re not feeling good. He kept up, worked hard and did a good job. He definitely had the interests of the people in his heart.” Pearcy said Kloosterman “adapted pretty quickly” to the learning curve new councillors
always face. “He was a real integral part of council because he had the interest and was willing to work hard. His wife and family should be very proud of what Rick did; he ran his own business, served on council and he loved the community. He needs to be remembered with a lot of respect and dignity.” Kloosterman leaves his wife Patricia, his daughter Jennifer (Mike), Joshua and Robert all of Hastings and his granddaughter Elsie Violet. He is also survived by his brothers Harry, Albert, John and Don and sisters Shirley, Audrey, Alice and Eileen as well as many nieces, nephews, great-nieces and great-nephews. In memoriam donations can be made to the Canadian Cancer Society or Autism Society.
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Norwood,” Howat said. The show also marked the 21st anniversary of Norwood’s spring art show which used to be held at the Pine Street Centre when it was still a public building; when the facility was declared surplus and sold the Legion invited artists to exhibit there. The Branch 300 show often includes members of the Kawartha Artist’s Gallery but this year it was strictly a show featuring local artists and members of the Legion’s arts group. “Despite the numbers we’ve
put on quite a good show,” Howat said noting that included a wide range of media and styles, everything from oils and acrylics to pastels, abstracts, pen and wash and digital. “I don’t think we’re short of talent, there’s every form of art here. There is a great deal of talent and diversity.” Howat has moved the date for the show across the calendar, including Canada Day, and has had trouble building up viewing numbers; artists are eager to be part of the event although last
NOTICE OF PUBLIC COMMUNITY MEETING
For a Project Proposal Under the Large Renewable Procurement The proponent identified below is proposing to submit a proposal to the Independent Electricity System Operator (IESO) to design, build, and operate a Large Renewable Project for the generation of electricity under the IESO’s Large Renewable Procurement (LRP). The LRP is a competitive process for procuring large renewable energy projects generally larger than 500 kilowatts. At the conclusion of the LRP, the IESO may award contracts for successful projects up to the specified procurement targets for each renewable fuel: 300 megawatts (MW) for wind, 140 MW for solar, 75 MW for waterpower, and 50 MW for bioenergy. This notice is being distributed to notify members of the public of a public community meeting that has been scheduled to discuss the Large Renewable Project proposal. Information regarding the proponent, the Large Renewable Project proposal, and the meeting details are described below.
weekend’s show also competed with Warkworth’s Art in the Park and the first North of Seven exhibition of the season in Havelock. “Perseverance is part of the game plan,” Howat said determinedly. The Norwood Arts Group is a “good group,” he says. “I’m happy with it; I’d be even happier if there were more of them and we’d have more donations to give to Branch 300.” The group has contributed to the Legion’s coffers to the tune of nearly $1,500, he says.
Name of the Large Renewable Project proposal: SheerLight Renewable fuel of the Large Renewable Project: Non-Rooftop Solar Proposed capacity of the Large Renewable Project (MW): 12.5 MW (AC) Proposed connection point of the Large Renewable Project: Havelock Transmission Station The proposed SheerLight Solar Project is located in the Municipality of Trent Hills and it will connect to the Havelock Transmission Station. Address as listed below: N 1/2 Lt 15 Con 12 Seymour except PLCO452; Trent Hills Public community meeting information Campbellford Auditorium 313 Front Street North Campbellford, ON K0L 1L0 Date: Wednesday, June 17, 2015 Time: 6-8pm Contact information for the proponent: Charmaine Thompson Vice President, Ontario Projects 1-866-376-6050 communityengagement@skypower.com 100 King Street West, Suite 3050 Toronto, ON M5X 1C9
This public community meeting is being held as part of the early community engagement requirements of the LRP. The public community meeting will present details about the Large Renewable Project and its proposed connection line. Representatives of the proponent will be available to discuss the Large Renewable Project and the overall LRP process. Should this Large Renewable Project be awarded a contract, the Large Renewable Project would need to obtain all required permits and approvals and conduct any further required community engagement activities. Further details regarding the LRP are available at www.ieso.ca/lrp. Proponent: SheerLight LP Qualified Applicant from the LRP Request for Qualifications stage associated with the proponent: 2432243 Ontario Corp.
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Trent Hills Independent - Thursday, May 21, 2015 15
Companies at odds over plastic waste blowing in the breeze By John Campbell
News - Campbellford - Local businessman Doug Runions says he couldn’t take it anymore when he decided to go to the municipal office and dump a small bag of defective feminine hygiene products and other material that had blown onto his property. “It was a little bit unprofessional of me,” he told Trent Hills council in apologizing for his actions earlier in the day. But “drastic actions” were An angry Doug Runions, president of Precision Wood Products, showed up at council to complain required to draw attention to a problem about bits of plastic material he said blows across from a neighbouring business onto his property that’s been going on for ten years, said in Tanner Industrial Park. He passed around a small bag of the scraps he had collected and invited Runions, president and majority owner council members “to come take a look, it will open your eyes.” Photo: John Campbell of Precision Wood Products with his wife Lori. Pieces of plastic being delivered to a neighbouring business in Tanner Industrial Park for recycling often end on his property, Runions said. SPECIAL SPRING OFFER up “I’ve lost accounts over it.” Sign up for a seasonal lawn mowing service & receive The wayward stuff gets into the FREE SPRING LAWN garden mulch and the sawdust his FERTILIZING company sells for livestock bedding; (limited to new customers) mulch and sawdust are created as LAWN LAWN CUTTING MOWING & TRIMMING byproducts of making pallets. Runions TREELAWN & SHRUB TRIMMING CUTTING GARDENING SERVICE said a potential huge customer, GARDEN BED DESIGN & PLANTING TREE & SHRUB TRIMMING Norampac, was also interested in Cell: 705-931-2626 Frank &BED Fern SOIL/COMPOST/MULCH GARDEN DESIGNReis & PLANTING buying his wood waste to burn as fuel Email: lawnkinggardeners@hotmail.ca and to generate heat but decided not “Trent Hills’Owners & garden people” DELIVERY &lawn PLACEMENT SOIL/COMPOST/MULCH Web: LawnKingGardeners.com to after two trial loads because they DEBRIS DISPOSAL DELIVERY & PLACEMENT contained plastic. GROUNDS DEBRIS MAINTENANCE DISPOSAL He has repeatedly asked for the GROUNDS MAINTENANCE Cell: 705-931-2626 Frank & Fern Reis municipality’s help in trying to get Email: Cell: lawnkinggardeners@hotmail.ca 705-931-2626 Min-Tech Inc. to contain the “mess” Frank & Fern Reis Owners Web: LawnKingGardeners.com Email: lawnkinggardeners@hotmail.ca that’s created when tractor-trailers drop Owners Web: LawnKingGardeners.com off the material at its loading docks but he’s “got nowhere,” he complained. Both Mayor Hector Macmillan and CAO Mike Rutter said they thought the matter had been resolved. “There was a cleanup and I thought that was the end of it,” Macmillan said after Runions left. “I wasn’t aware it was still ongoing.” Rutter said bylaw enforcement staff had spoken to Min-Tec and he “hadn’t heard anything … in years” until a few months ago when it was brought to his attention “that it was still a problem.” Staff were sent out again “and they’ll continue to work on it as long as it’s a problem,” he said. Rutter said he had seen during a visit to Precision Wood “a significant amount of stuff that escapes” when a tractor-trailer opens its doors to drop
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off material at Min-Tech across the road. “My understanding was that they developed a means to correct it.” Dale McLellan, co-owner of MinTech, said he has “tried every avenue” to reduce the amount of plastic material that lands on the ground and blows away when deliveries are made to his plant, at the rate of 25 trailers a day. “You do get about 20 garbage bags worth of garbage that’s blowing around the yard but we pick it all up,” he said, by hand and with the aid of a vacuum truck. McLellan said scraps accumulate during the winter when “it’s impossible” to gather them during bad weather. “Every spring it’s there, we do a cleanup,” he said, and “at least four, five times during the summer.” Min-Tech diverts plastic waste from landfills by shredding it and giving it “a second life” in a new form that is either burned in kilns to produce energy or sent overseas to China for use in the manufacture of other goods. One of the Fortune 500 companies he has as a customer has saved more than $3 million in disposal costs at one of its locations since 2005, he said. McLellan stressed the plastic that Min-Tech re-purposes is “postindustrial” and re-usable, and not “post-consumer” and contaminated. Runions told the Independent when he showed up for work May 5 and found “a whole bunch of garbage right in front of [his] plant door,” he “snapped” and did “a little stupid thing” at the municipal office to register his disgust. “Sometimes you get better results by doing something drastic like that,” he said. He’s “not proud” of what he did, and police visited him later for “causing a ruckus,” without laying charges, but he needed to do something to send a message to the municipality: The plastic waste on his property is an “eyesore” and it’s hurting his business, but “nothing is getting done.” Runions said he’s “losing customers” and not getting the Norampac contract was a big blow as it “would have been an unbelievable deal” and provided him with “a significant amount of
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Dale McLellan, co-owner of Min-Tech Inc., said he’s doing what he can to reduce the amount of plastic waste blowing off his property. Doug Runions, his industrial park neighbour, has suggested an extension be built onto Min-Tec’s loading docks, which the trailers could enter, to keep inside any contents that get loose. But McLellan said he hasn’t room for addition and it wouldn’t work, in any event; the trailers’ doors would need to be opened prior to backing in because the docks are closely spaced together. “You’re still going to have air hitting that and it’s going to fly before you back in,” he said. Photo: John Campbell
money.” McLellan disputed Runions’ assertion plastic from Min-Tec is getting into his mulch and sawdust. He argued the problem lies with how stretch wrap around skids on Precision Woods property is removed. Runions has complained to the Ministry of the Environment but was told it’s a municipal issue. Rutter said in an interview May 14 that a staff report will be done for council detailing what the municipality’s response has been over the years. “Compliance is our goal in our bylaw enforcement,” he said. “We don’t look to lay charges.” Rutter “assumed [the issue] had been resolved” with Min-Tec’s purchase of a machine to clean up the mess “each and every time” and he never heard it was still a problem until recently, so staff went out again. They “were working on it prior to Doug’s attendance,” he said, and “they will continue to work … with the owner of the property to make sure there is compliance.”
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Tennis anyone? Havelock court is open News - Havelock - The Havelock tennis court is open for action but making people aware of it remains a challenge. The court in the Concession Street Park across from Tim Hortons was extensively refurbished last summer after a long period of disuse but is still a well-kept secret except to a few dedicated tennis players from cottage country. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Right now weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re not seeing a lot of people using it,â&#x20AC;? says Havelock-BelmontMethuen Deputy-mayor Jim Martin. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Maybe we need to put a sign up to try to get people using it.â&#x20AC;? Deputy-mayor Martin says Havelock Belmont Public School has hinted at interest in the court and the possibility of inviting a tennis group from Peterborough to provide demonstrations for students and others interested in the sport. He acknowledged the â&#x20AC;&#x153;faithfulâ&#x20AC;? visitors from Belmont Lake who used the court when they were in the township.
â&#x20AC;&#x153;It was closed for so long,â&#x20AC;? he said, noting that some HBPS students have gone to school with their tennis rackets so there are youth in town who are familiar with the sport. â&#x20AC;&#x153;If theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re not going to use it there could be other uses,â&#x20AC;? said Martin. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I would like to get the school involved but we also need to encourage locals,â&#x20AC;? said Councillor Barry Pomeroy. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Right now there are not many locals there [using it]; its people from out of town.â&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x153;We need to do something so people know itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s open,â&#x20AC;? said Pomeroy. The municipality agreed to restore the regulation, doubles-sized court last spring at a cost of $6,500 or less. That decision was made after several council discussions about what to do with the court which was once the site of a skateboard park but was rapidly becoming an eyesore because of lack of maintenance.
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Visit us online www.InsideBelleville.com Trent Hills Independent - Thursday, May 21, 2015 17
SPORTS By Bill Freeman
Knights’ trio wins Kawartha track titles
Sports - Peterborough - A trio of Norwood District High School track and field athletes won Kawartha titles last week and helped a strong team showing at the 2015 championships held at the Thomas A. Stewart’s new outdoor athletic facility. The team also had six second-place finishes along with one third and will be well-represented at this week’s COSSA championships in Belleville. Emma Beavis took the midget javelin championship with a throw of 18.10 metres and also added a second-place finish in the discus. Andrew Hembruff also earned first- and second-place finishes topping the field in the midget discus with a 28.91 throw and following that up with a second in the javelin.
Saarah Rivera finished in first place in the junior javelin with a throw of 29.01 metres. Also placing second were Hayden Baptie in the junior 100 metre hurdles, Mike Burtt in the senior long jump, Griffin Leeper in the midget shot put and Owen Wright in the senior high jump. Jacob Bennett placed third in the senior shot put. The Knights had a number of fourth-place finishers including Nic Buchanan in the junior javelin, Mike Burtt in the senior 400 metres, Rile Day in the junior girl’s javelin, Owen Hubert in the midget triple jump and javelin, Shannon Scriver in the midget discuss and the midget boy’s 400-metre relay team of Hubert, Hembruff, Jack Wilson and Simon Dubeau. Placing fifth were Hayden
Baptie in the junior 300-metre hurdles, Day in the junior shot put, Leanne Degray in the midget shot put, Dubeau in the midget 300-metre hurdles, Jackson Stewart in the midget shot put and discus, Alexa Vanderhorst in the midget 200 metres and midget 80-metre hurdles, Jack Wilson in the midget 100-metre hurdles and the senior girls relay team of Kailee Rose, Kara Sicker, Taylor Pedersen and Megan Janke. Placing sixth were Jacob Bennett in the senior discus, Travis Bennett in the senior javelin, Ashton Gee in the midget long jump, Rivera in the junior discus, Rose in the senior 200 metres, Hannah Turner-Robertson in the junior 80-metre hurdles, Colin Van Den Hurk in the junior discus 100-metre hurdles and the senior boy’s relay team of Travis
Bennett, Jacob Bennett, Kyle McGriskin and Mike Burtt. Placing seventh were Bailey Anderson-Carter in the midget javelin, Jacob Bennett in the senior javelin, Buchanan in the junior 100-metre hurdles, Dubeau in the midget long jump, Leeper in the midget discus,
Rivera in the junior shot put, Kara Sicker in the senior 200 metres, Van Den Hurk in the junior 200 metres, and the junior girl’s 400-metre relay team of Jessica Bennett, Rivera, Day and Turner-Robertson. Finishing eighth and also qualifying for COSSA were
Anderson-Carter in the midget 80-metre hurdles, Justin Martin in the midget 100-metre hurdles, Wilson in the midget 300-metre hurdles and javelin and the junior boy’s relay team of Buchanan, Nathan Ellwood, Eric Sicker and Van Den Hurk.
Registration being accepted for hospital foundation golf tournament Sports - Campbellford - Preparations are under way for the 16th annual Campbellford Memorial Hospital Foundation Golf Classic, presented by HTM Insurance Company. The important fundraising tournament will take place Wednesday, June 17, at the Pine Ridge Golf and Country Club.
For the third year now, HTM is showing great community leadership by supporting this important annual event.” First played in 2000, the tournament has become an important part of the foundation’s fundraising efforts that support the purchase of critical medical equipment for the hospital. This year’s needs include a new autoclave sterilization machine and laparoscopy instruments for the operating room.
“We are thrilled that HTM Insurance Company is back as our tournament’s Signature Sponsor,” CMH Foundation executive director John Russell said in a news release. “For the third year now, HTM is showing great community leadership by supporting this important annual event.” Newman, Oliver and McCarten Insurance is on board as the official cart sponsor. Other interested sponsors can contact the CMH Foundation for more information. Registration to play in the tournament is on a firstcome first-served basis. For more information call Catherine Holt at 705653-1140 ext. 2104 or email <cholt@cmh.ca>. The tournament begins with a shotgun start at 1 p.m. sharp. The cost of $110 per player includes 18 holes of golf, a golf cart, complimentary use of the driving range, on-course barbecue lunch, treat station, steak dinner, and on-course activities. A donation receipt will be issued for a portion of the registration fee.
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SPORTS
Hastings Public School athletes soar
Photos: Bill Freeman
Alex Kroes clears the bar in the Grade 8 high jump division during the track and field meet.
Erin Conroy competes in the Grade 8 girls’ long jump during the Caleb McMillan competes in the long jump. annual Hastings Public School track and field meet
The Trent Hills Regional News published a series of articles on my business. Now everyone knows how great we are!
Havelock tennis court is open for action Continued from page 17
The original tennis court was built in the 1980s and was converted to a skate park in the early 2000s. Ideas for the site ranged from rehabilitation of the tennis court, transformation into a park and even the creation of a community garden on the court’s surface. Council was also curious about how much it would cost to add a basketball court but that was
rejected because of safety concerns of a shared-used facility. The surface of the court was refurbished, new lines were painted and new nets added. The fence was also repaired. Martin was a champion of having something done with the facility while sitting as a councillor and was excited by plans to restore the court at a minimal cost. As it sat unused and became a vandalism target he called it an “eyesore.”
“I’m really happy to see what was done up there,” he said last year. “I don’t think it’s a dead sport. It looks really good. Once it’s open I think it will be used.” “We did talk about having some sort of ceremony,” said CAO Pat Kemp. “Maybe we can do something like that and coordinate it with the school.” Councillor Hart Webb jokingly suggested a charity tennis match between Martin and Pomeroy might draw a crowd.
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www.insidebelleville.com
Fifth annual Art (and Music) in the Park showcases the work of artists and artisans
Events - Warkworth - Titillating the senses with the sounds of various styles of music by local musicians and varied visuals of the work by artists and artisans the fifth annual Art (and Music) in the Park once again did not disappoint. This traditional Victoria Day holiday weekend event heralded the start of many activities in the village which draws visitors from throughout Ontario. A total of 35 vendors were located on the grounds of Mill Creek Park for this event that not only showcased their handmade creations but also the village itself. Nearby in the Warkworth Town Hall Centre for the Arts, artist Blandford Gates previewed his newest sculpture installation. Vendors came not only from Trent Hills but nearby Frankford and Tweed and as from as far away as Windsor and Haliburton. “I’ve been coming here ever since this festival started. It’s a great place to share ideas, network and meet,” said A.J. VanDrie, a Frankford painter inspired by energy in nature. Ellen Ruttan and Staci Owens, who are from Toronto and Trent River decided to take in the festival for the first time. The Independent caught up Patricia Commins from Cobourg was among the many who attended the fifth annual Art (and Music) in the Park at Warkworth. She purchased this painting called “Beaver Island” from A.J. VanDrie, a Frankford painter Please see “Art” on page B10 who was there to showcase and sell his works of art. Photo: Sue Dickens
Guildâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s quilt show at King Edward facility a first for Brighton
News - Brighton - For the first time in its history, the Trent Valley Quiltersâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Guild will hold its quilt show in Brighton, after years of holding it in Trenton. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re expecting between 700 and 1,000 people,â&#x20AC;? says co-convenor Lorrie Barber. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Quilters will travel hundreds of miles to go to a quilt show.â&#x20AC;? The guild, which celebrat-
ed its 25th anniversary last year, decided to switch to a new venue, the King Edward Park Arena, because itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s â&#x20AC;&#x153;bigger and brighterâ&#x20AC;? than the Knights of Columbus Hall it has used in the past, Barber said. In January Brightonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s community centre also became the new home for the guildâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s monthly meetings, which had been held in Trenton at King Street United Church since
Healthy Mouth, Healthy Youâ&#x20AC;Ś There has been lots of research recently in medical and dental scientiďŹ c journals about the effects of having a healthy mouth as well as those of having an unhealthy mouth. Your mouth is the gateway Dr. Brian Ho to the rest of your body. If your mouth is full of infections, the latest medical research has been showing that it affects the rest of your body quite signiďŹ cantly. If you suffer from diabetes, heart disease, and many other common ailments, the gum disease that is present in your mouth has the potential to contribute in a negative way to these medical conditions. You might be asking how this may be. Think of it this way: your body is a system that is constantly trying to heal itself. If you have a condition like heart disease, and your body has to use some of its valuable resources to combat your gum disease, it makes it that much harder for your body to take care of the heart. Also, if you suffer from gum infections in your mouth from periodontal disease, every time you eat and chew, bad bacteria are released that can directly affect things like your arteries and your heart valves. If you are pregnant, the constant stream of bad bacteria that may be in your mouth from infections can certainly affect an unborn child. Given that periodontal or gum disease has many negative effects, one would assume that it is easily detectable. Surprisingly enough, many people with periodontal disease are unaware that their mouths are burdened with this condition. Letâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s take a moment to highlight some of the tell-tale signs of periodontal (gum) disease: bleeding of the gums when you brush or eat, loose teeth, bad breath, little gum pockets around your teeth that are swollen, and pain upon chewing. These are just some of the signs that you may have signiďŹ cant gum disease. Call your dentist and make an appointment to assess your gums so that you can keep your mouth and yourself healthy.
B2 Section B - Thursday, May 21, 2015
membership. Co-convenor Sandi Repic said â&#x20AC;&#x153;itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s always lovelyâ&#x20AC;? as well as â&#x20AC;&#x153;inspirationalâ&#x20AC;? to see other peopleâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s work when guild members gather the third Wednesday of the month. There are also â&#x20AC;&#x153;wonderful speakers.â&#x20AC;? Guild president Stella Dorsman got â&#x20AC;&#x153;hookedâ&#x20AC;? on quilting after taking a quilting course in 2001. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I think a lot of women followed the same path I did,â&#x20AC;? she said. She has sewed her whole life and â&#x20AC;&#x153;got a lot of satisfactionâ&#x20AC;? from it but she sewed to make clothing. When she retired she didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t need to create â&#x20AC;&#x153;the workday wardrobeâ&#x20AC;? any more and be-
gan to look around for something else to do. Quilting proved to be the answer. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I found it to be very satisfying, very creative, and people love quilts, you can give one to every family member,â&#x20AC;? Dorsman said. One of her larger quilts took her two-and-a-half years to finish. Lorraine Hancott is still working on a double-ring wedding quilt after almost 11 years. Three-quarters done, she has got sidetracked along, making baby quilts for her grandchildren. She quilts by hand rather than by machine â&#x20AC;&#x153;because I can sit in
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front of the TV and do it,â&#x20AC;? Hancott said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;It takes me longer but itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s fun.â&#x20AC;? The guild does a great deal of charitable work, making quilts for people in need of comfort and for babies born prematurely needing warmth. Funding for the purchase of material is supplied by Rotary, Lions and businesses. The organization also receives donations of material.
Midnight madness gets the fish jumping By Bill Freeman
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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 and discussion, please visit his office at www.trentonfamilydental.com.
1997 until it closed last year. The quilt show, which takes place every three years, will have more than 200 quilts and wall hangings on display (including â&#x20AC;&#x153;quilts of valourâ&#x20AC;?), a tea room, a merchants mall (with ten vendors), raffles, door prizes, demonstrations and quilt appraisals. The doors will open each day at 10 a.m. and close at 5 p.m. June 6 and 4 p.m. June 7. Admission is $6. The guild has grown so large it was forced to cap its membership at 160 last fall. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Quilting is becoming really popular,â&#x20AC;? Barber said. The move from evening to afternoon meetings helped boost
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By John Campbell
Sports - Hastings - Canadaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s ultimate fishing town lived up to its name with another round of Midnight Madness angling off the famous bridge in Hastings. The annual Victoria Day holiday weekend tradition at the crack of midnight of May 15 had fishers of all ages out in force with their rods and reels, bait and tackle and fishing season smiles. The fishing celebration is hosted every year by the Hastings Historical Society and this yearâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s event was another success, said lead organizer Skye Morrison, taking over from the redoubtable Tony Tuit who now lives in British Columbia. There were over 50 draw prizes given away during the course of the event along with special prizes for first fish caught through derby time. Organizers were able to give away only two of the first fish prizes with Lucas Sofranoiou, 13, of Oshawa hauling in the first fish. Taryn Campbell of Port Hope was the first woman to catch a fish. A third youth did not come forward to claim his prize, Morrison said. Tops amongst raffle prizes was a weekend at Springbank Cottages valued at $325; there were also gift cards from Hastings Home Hardware, Toddâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s valu-mart, The Captainâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Table and the new Hastings House. There were some great contributions from Ultimate Bait and Tackle, Emâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Dollar Plus and Water Lily, Allan Insurance, Johnsonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Pharmacy and RE/MAX. Banjoâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Restaurant was a busy spot and provided outstanding entertainment with the dynamic Cale Crowe from Alderville First Nation dipping into a repertoire that included tunes from his first EP Stars and Promises, showing why he is one of the best regional talents around.
Check us out online. www.insidebelleville.com
Roaring into 1920s history in Norwood By Bill Freeman
Grade 10 history students at NDHS wrapped up their Canada in the Twentieth Century course with a Roaring Twenties “Speakeasy.” Lounging around the “bar” are Kierra Knight, Sequoia Miller, Taylor Smith, Gavin Woodburn, Nathan Ellwood, Mitchell Rogers, Taylor Gauthier and Marissa Hembruff. Photo: Bill Freeman
“I like students, figuratively speaking, to time travel through history and this helps them out,” the award-winning teacher said while students dressed in period costumes enjoyed jazz, played cards and
put their own stamp on dances like the Charleston. While there was certainly no alcohol, the speakeasy theme reminded students that prohibition in the United States and in parts of Canada had an
enormous influence on social mores in the 1920s and fuelled an underground economy that benefitted organized crime as well as Canadian distillers who continued to produce alcohol for export markets; how that
booze reached American “markets” was often unconventional and spawned a cross-border rum-running industry that tested relations between border communities. There was up to a $1 million a month in alcohol pouring across the Windsor-Detroit border, Vandenberg notes. Boatloads of booze made its way across the Niagara River and the short distances between the shores of Lake Erie in south Niagara to Buffalo. Chicago crime bosses like Al Capone became rich, powerful and infamous. The Roaring Twenties event “seemed like a perfect way to finish off the unit,” said Vandenberg. The class also talked about changing fashions and the changing role of women during the post-war decade. The shortening of hemlines to above the knees from near the ankles was
a “shocking” development and bobbed hairstyles and their “androgynous look” were statements of growing independence, said Vandenberg. The whole Flapper style was a turning away from the conservatism of ten years earlier. The history unit allowed students to learn a little bit about the emergence of jazz music from New Orleans where it percolated northward through cities like Memphis, Kansas City, Chicago and New York and eventually across the border into Canada and beyond. Jazz Age music would produce new genres of music which are still influential today and introduce great African American singers, songwriters and musicians to the world. The literature of the day often reflected and referenced popular culture as it came to terms with a generation forever scarred by World War I.
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News - Norwood - Hemlines crept up from ankles, jazz music invested the air around it with the rhythmic energy of musical trailblazers like Louis Armstrong and Duke Ellington, a new “lost generation” of writers like F. Scott Fitzgerald and Ernest Hemingway forged literary careers and governments found new ways to drive booze underground much to the delight of organized criminals. And throughout the 1920s people tried to forget the unspeakable horror of the Great War that inflicted catastrophic losses on countries large and small but forgetting was a hard thing to do and the hyper-kinetic world of the “Roaring Twenties” was one response to madness that ripped the world apart for four years. “They wanted to have fun; for four years there was heartache and war and now it was time to try to have a good time,” says Norwood District High School history teacher Norm Vandenberg who brings the subject alive with experiential events like reenactments, medieval feasts and this week’s Roaring Twenties speakeasy which wrapped up his Grade 10 Canada in the Twentieth Century course.
Section B - Thursday, May 21, 2015 B3
The Quinte Repair Café returns for May 30 News - Belleville - What do you do with a broken toaster? Or a ripped sweater? Toss it? No way. Bring it to the Quinte Repair Café on Saturday, May 30, from 12 to 4 p.m. at the Quinte Sports & Wellness Centre. Loyalist College is teaming up again with community partners Quinte Waste Solutions and the Bay of Quinte Region to host the pop-up event, giving local residents an opportunity to fix their broken and damaged household items, free of charge, with the help of a local repair guru. Typically, over 75 per cent of items brought to the Café are repaired on site. Electronics, small appliances, furniture, clothing, jewellery and bikes are among the household items that are welcome (but be reasonable and please, leave things like couches at home). Tools, as well as snacks
and refreshments, are provided. At the region’s first Repair Café held back in October 2014 at the Core Centre, organizers had over 100 visitors; some came with repairs in tow and others were there just to see what it was all about. From toasters to bikes and tablets to nursery toys, over 30 items were either repaired or diagnosed for repair, diverting over 250 pounds of material from landfill in the process. Want to bring a little one along? A new addition this time around is an arts and crafts table where children can create treasures out of recycled materials. By promoting repairs, Quinte Repair Café wants to help reduce mountains of waste. This is absolutely necessary, according to Chuck Barsony, one of the event’s volunteer repair specialists and a Loyalist College faculty member.
“We have made it far too easy to simply throw things out and that’s a horrific waste of materials,” he said. “The architect in me looks at it from an environmental standpoint: each item took energy and materials to produce and we must try to get as much use out of those resources as possible.” Conor Brennan, one of the event organizers, hopes the Café will engage people in conversations about the benefits of repairing old items instead of buying new. “The beauty of repair is you can save money while preserving resources. But above all, it’s fun and typically way easier than people might think.” The Repair Café concept arose in Amsterdam in 2009 and since then has taken off with the launch of Repair Cafés all around the world, including several in Canada.
Edith Piaf’s 100th anniversary celebrated in Belleville Entertainment Belleville - Paris of the 1930s and 1940s will seemingly arrive in Belleville at 8 p.m. on Saturday, May 23, at Cafe Sans Souci. Singer Ariana Nasr will bring the songs of French cabaret singer Edith Piaf to life in time for the 100th anniversary of her birth. The full-length show will include 18 songs from Piaf’s repertoire. Nicknamed “the Little Sparrow,” Piaf became widely regarded as France’s national diva, as well as being one of France’s greatest international stars. All songs will be sung en-Francais accompanied by Ariana’s husband and long-time collaborator Andy Flinn. In between numbers, she will translate some of the songs and tell a few stories about Piaf. Although relatively new, first
performed in February 2015, the show has met with overwhelming positive response. It’s fitting this show takes place in Belleville because Piaf was born in the Paris neighbourhood known as Belleville in December 1915 and went on to become France’s most popular entertainer. After the war, she became known internationally, touring Europe, the United States, and South America and eventually she appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show eight times and at Carnegie Hall twice in the 1950s. Ariana Nasr, singer, multi-instrumentalist and recovering anglophone of Afghan/Canadian descent lives in Wolfville, Nova Scotia. She and Andy Flinn have produced seven CDs of original material and have spent many years on the road
performing. “I’m enjoying the opportunity to perform solely as a singer, unfettered by physical instruments. The drama, the vocal-centric nature of the material and the language present an exciting opportunity for musical adventure,” she said. Chef Greg Sheridan of Sans Souci will prepare special French treats and hors d’oeuvres in his Special Occasion facility at 240 Front Street in historic downtown Belleville. $20 tickets that include the en case snacks are available from Sweet Escape Cafe, Quinte Arts Council and Cafe Sans Souci. For more details call 613-8491976, or visit <www.ariananasr. com> or <www.sanssoucichef. com>.
Campbellford District High School big winner at Musicfest Canada News - Campbellford - Campbellford District High School was a big winner at the Nationals of Musicfest Canada at the University of Toronto last week. The school won two gold awards in the senior jazz ensemble and jazz combo categories. Student Peter Wowk, 18, was the recipient of a major national award as one of the finest young musicians in the country. Wowk won an $8,000 Humber College Scholarship and the Rico Golden Reed Award for most outstanding woodwind player at the festival. Campbellford’s jazz groups were highly praised by several adjudicators for having outstanding performances. Christine Jensen, one of Canada’s top saxophonists, B4 Section B - Thursday, May 21, 2015
commented that the senior jazz group was “swinging its butt off and was fabulous.” “There are so many great things going on with band,” said Jensen, who also complimented the group for “really having the New Orleans sound going on.” Many other adjudicators and teachers throughout the day offered their congratulations on the outstanding CDHS performances. Two Campbellford performers, Wowk and Meaghan Steinmann, 17, won leadership awards at the festival. The CDHS Senior Jazz Ensemble was also filmed during the festival for a TV documentary for Swedish public broadcaster UR. The film crew was capturing the spirit of the world’s biggest music festival (over 400,000
students participate in regional Musicfest Canada festivals and 10,000 perform at the Nationals). The crew chose the CDHS group and followed the progression from warm-up to performance and then adjudicated clinic and interviewed students about the process. The documentary will be aired in September and will be able to be viewed on the broadcaster’s website. CDHS musicians are staging shows for 1,200 elementary students and then a year-end Music Night Friday, May 22, at 7 p.m. in the school’s gym. There is no cost for the event. For more information, contact CDHS music teacher Dave Noble by emailing <david_noble@ kprdsb.ca>.
Demographics influence priorities at CMH By Sue Dickens
News - Campbellford - An aging population is influencing the types of programs and services being offered and/ or brought to Trent Hills. That became evident in the reports made to the Campbellford Memorial Hospital board at their recent regular
meeting. For example, an update on the recently established Rural Geriatric Assessment and Intervention Network (GAIN) Community Team working out of Campbellford Memorial Hospital (CMH) shows bookings until September.
The statistics were provided at the meeting by the hospital’s Chief Nursing Officer Jan Raine. “Since opening on March 9 we have had 43 visits, including new assessments,” she told the board. Assessments take two to three hours to complete so that means three per day
Jack Vance Corporate and Community Golf Tournament The Tweed and Area Arts Council is preparing for this year’s Jack Vance Corporate and Community Golf Tournament. The event commemorates General Jack Vance, a distinguished Canadian military leader and long-time Tweed resident. The popular tournament will be held on June 14 at the Poplars Golf Club, and registration forms are available on-line at <www.tweedartscouncil.ca>. Foreground, from left: Roely Devries, Marj Buck and Jim Ayers. Rear, from left: Bonnie Marentette, Meriel Child, Bob Giguere, Gerry Brinson, Greg Norris and Larry Cook.
can be done. The GAIN team is an interdisciplinary group of health care professionals established in March to support frail seniors and their caregivers so they can continue to live in their homes and community. The assessments identify challenges for the patients whether they are cognitive, physical or social. A behaviour support nurse helps the families with strategies for the health care required. “The challenge the GAIN clinic is having right now is trying to recruit a nurse practitioner and physiotherapist,” noted Raine. By working in partnership with an older adult’s primary care provider and using an integrated care plan, the Trent Hills Rural GAIN Community Team’s goal is to ensure that the right care is being delivered at the right time in the right setting. When the new GAIN team was announced, hospital CEO Brad Hilker noted that the Central East LHIN recognized that there is a growing population of seniors in this area who have complex health issues that will benefit from the new group of professionals. It is those demographics that are affecting other hospital priorities. In his report to the hospital board at the same meeting Hilker noted, “Our
key focus for our organization is about palliative care for patients at the end of life and we did a lot of work with our partners to create a palliative care collaborative and address the gaps like direct admission into the hospital creating a common language, a common referral form, etc. Hilker also noted, “Now we’re working with The Bridge Hospice [Warkworth] to see if there’s ways we can support the hospice. It’s the next step in terms of palliative care partnerships.” In addition the hospital has created a quiet space for family and friends of palliative care patients to utilize while their loved one is in the hospital. The local Health Link program is another tool being used by CMH. Health Link is a local health care network consisting of patients, caregivers, health care providers and community support agencies. “They are committed to working better together to improve the health outcomes for patients with complex health care needs,” said Hilker. “We’ll have discussions with the community agencies about patients that do require a lot of resources and we’re starting to narrow down that patient population and are talking to direct care providers,” he added. Health Links is in the beginning stages of development here.
Section B - Thursday, May 21, 2015 B5
B6
Dir. From 401 Belleville take Hwy 37 North 2km to Casey Rd., turn east and follow 6km to 1146 Casey Rd. A.Y. Jackson silkscreen â&#x20AC;&#x153;Winter Sleighâ&#x20AC;?. Watercolours by Howard Leigh and W.H.Outhwaite. Thomas Faed 1864 steel engraving. Oil on canvas military scene. Several signed vintage W.R. MacAskill photos. 1914 Titanic souvenir plate. 1920â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Peerless 1 cent floor model lollipop scale. Rare 1920â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Pratt and Lambert double sided display wheel.1930â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Dawes Brewery â&#x20AC;&#x153;Rookwood Graniteâ&#x20AC;? beer tray. Cunard Franconia advertising litho in orig. Cunard frame. 1957 Texaco sign. Pepsi sign. 1893 Goodrich Tire framed adv. print. 1911 Dinah mechanical bank all orig. Several other banks. 1930â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Sailor and Guitar player doorstops. 1929 signed Greyhound doorstop. 1891 turtle spittoon. 1865 Starrett mechanical food chopper. Chas Cory and Son brass shipâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s telegraph. WW2 navy ship brass binnacle with compass. Antique compass in mahogany box. Antique brass double barrel telescope. Antique pedal dentist drill and tooth extraction keys. Antique cameras. Duck decoys. Drive-In speakers. Wooden shaft golf clubs. Vintage Peterborough Canoe paddle. Art Nouveau figural lady lamp. Gone with the wind lamp. Angle lamps. Rare early 1900â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s CCM â&#x20AC;&#x153;Joycycleâ&#x20AC;? tricycle. 1920â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s wagon. Pedal car. Rare 1950â&#x20AC;&#x2122;sâ&#x20AC;? Minnitoyâ&#x20AC;? metal water pistol/box. 1950â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s â&#x20AC;&#x153;Minnitoyâ&#x20AC;? Toronto Star Transport. 1922 â&#x20AC;&#x153;Silver Bulletâ&#x20AC;? race car. 1953 hockey game. Schoenhut childâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s piano. 1950â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s â&#x20AC;&#x153;Donald Duckâ&#x20AC;? lantern. Hubley cast iron motorcycle. Wyandotte car and trailer. Tin wind-up roller skating chef. Tin wind up â&#x20AC;&#x153;Slugger Championsâ&#x20AC;?. â&#x20AC;?Roy Rogersâ&#x20AC;? lunch pail and camera. Wild Bill Hickock on Kelloggâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s cereal box. Hopalong Cassidy saddle watch box. 1950â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Dinky toys. Tru Scale farm toys. Several other vintage steam, battery, wind-up and friction toys. 1933 CCM hockey picture set. Several vintage sport related items. Vintage â&#x20AC;&#x153;Davy Crockettâ&#x20AC;? & â&#x20AC;&#x153;Wilma Flintstoneâ&#x20AC;? cookie jars. WW1 German Pickelhaube. WWII German belt/buckle, arm band and pony hair backpack. WWI and WWII metals. Several Canadian WWII cap and collar badges. WWII posters. Several other items from WWII. 1864 Civil War sword. Royal Engineers sword. Antique cupboard from Hastings County. 1893 oak bakers cupboard. Dough box signed and dated 1876. Miniature chest of drawers and blanket box. This is a partial list only. For a more detailed list and photos please view our web site.. See my web site for detailed list & photos Terms: NO BUYERS PREMIUM. Cash, debit, Visa, MasterCard, or cheque with ID. Lunch available. Owner and auctioneer not responsible in case of accident day of sale AUCTIONEERS: DOUG JARRELL & BEN TREVERTON For any other inquiries about this sale please call 613-969-1033 or email relichunter53@gmail.com or www.dougjarrellauctions.com
Section B News - Thursday, May 21, 2015
FARM AUCTION SALE SATURDAY, MAY 23, 2015 FOR ARNOLD DEVRIES, R.R. # 8 PICTON AT 9:30 A.M. ON SITE
AUCTION AUCTIONSALE SALE ESTATE DAVE WARD ESTATE OFOF DOREEN ACKERS, 60 JOHN STREET, STIRLING 96 COYLE ROAD, R.R.# 3 ROSENEATH, ONT. FRIDAY MAY 29TH 10:3010:00 AM A.M. THURSDAY, MAY 28ATAT Exit NORTH off 401 Highway at Cobourg onto County Road 45 ( ONandSITE Interchange 474) for 20 miles turn onto Coyle Road OR 6 miles
See my web site for detailed list & photos AUCTIONEERS: DOUG JARRELL & BEN TREVERTON 613-969-1033 www.dougjarrellauctions.com
Koopmans Auction Services
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Directions: As youonare going into45Stirling, before crossing SOUTH of Hastings County Road and turn onto Coyle Road. the bridge turn 574 south onto John Street frommarket the covered International 2 wd diesel tractor with(across Koehn after canopy & follow to sale site. â&#x20AC;&#x201C;bridge) good running condition; New Holland 492 9 ft haybine â&#x20AC;&#x201C; excellent; Round pedestal table / 2 leaves 6 rod back chairs,4500 matching New Holland 315oak small square baler,&Case International 14 ft china hutch, chesterfield, chair & 160 ottoman, 2 Lazy boyspreader, rocker trail type cultivator Massey Ferguson single axle manure coffee table,flatend small end 3recliners, point hitchround 3 wheel hay rake, bed tables, hay wagon withdrop 8 tonleaf running table,Kverneland TV & stand, magazine rack, plant tables, queen size bed/ gear, 3 point hitch 3 furrow plow with spring reset, tandem gentlemanâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s hi boy chest, dresser./mirror & 2 night stands, double axle hydraulic dump trailer with steel floor and sides, Kverneland 5 ft bed/ box spring, office desk, large safe on casters, cups & saucers, front stonepinwheel forks, 6 ft end loader material vases,end qty.loader of crystal & front cornflower, antique cheesebucket, dish, bale custom&built calf super at 10:30 cakefeeders, plates, bowls bakeware, 2 x 8hutch, place TOOLS settings â&#x20AC;&#x201C;ofsell Tudor plate am Mastercraft stacking tool chest, metal assorted chop saw,prints, Craftsman floor flatware, Madeline McIntosh painting, collector model press,salts Lincoln 225 electric oxyacetylene kit, plates,drill novelty & peppers, 2 setswelder, of dishes, linens & torch bedding, electric pressure washer, finger hardware; COLLECTIBLES including B.P. & high Co. crock Belleville, jug, blueberry picker, mustache table butter original red leather and of chrome cups,top cookie jar, churn, everyday dishes,Belmont pots & pans, a number coal barbers chairs â&#x20AC;&#x201C; excellent condition, few other articles. oil lamps, harness bells, milk & medicine bottles, 2 Stirling Dairy bottle caps, large of Texaco memorabilia including several TERMS-CASH OR qty. CHEQUE cans, decals, booklets, ephemera, yard sticks etc., lamps, Beaver 8â&#x20AC;? OWNER & AUCTIONEER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENT table saw, grinder on stand, OR INJURY DAY OF SALE.1927 licence plate, old adze, broad axe, 2 washboards,AUCTIONEERS nail keg, barn lantern, wood box, strawberry boxes, SULLIVAN garden supplies, hand & power tools, metal stamp sets, storage PlainďŹ eld 613-477-2082 cabinets, large qty. of shop tools & numerous other pieces. www.sullivanauctions.com
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Directions: As you are going into Stirling, before crossing the bridge turn south onto John Street (across from the covered bridge) & follow to sale site. Round pedestal oak table / 2 leaves & 6 rod back chairs, matching china hutch, chesterfield, chair & ottoman, 2 Lazy boy rocker recliners, round coffee table, end tables, small drop leaf end table, TV & stand, magazine rack, plant tables, queen size bed/ gentlemanâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s hi boy chest, dresser./mirror & 2 night stands, double bed/ box spring, office desk, large safe on casters, cups & saucers, vases, qty. of crystal pinwheel & cornflower, antique cheese dish, cake plates, bowls & bakeware, 2 x 8 place settings of Tudor plate flatware, Madeline McIntosh painting, assorted prints, collector plates, novelty salts & peppers, 2 sets of dishes, linens & bedding, B.P. & Co. crock Belleville, finger jug, blueberry picker, mustache cups, cookie jar, everyday dishes, pots & pans, a number of coal oil lamps, harness bells, milk & medicine bottles, 2 Stirling Dairy bottle caps, large qty. of Texaco memorabilia including several cans, decals, booklets, ephemera, yard sticks etc., lamps, Beaver 8â&#x20AC;? table saw, grinder on stand, 1927 licence plate, old adze, broad axe, 2 washboards, nail keg, barn lantern, wood box, strawberry boxes, garden supplies, hand & power tools, metal stamp sets, storage cabinets, large qty. of shop tools & numerous other pieces. See my web site for detailed list & photos AUCTIONEERS: DOUG JARRELL & BEN TREVERTON 613-969-1033 www.dougjarrellauctions.com
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AUCTION SALE TOYS, MILITARY, ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLES SATURDAY MAY 30, 2015 AT 10 AM VIEWING MAY 29, 5 PM - 8PM & 8 AM DAY OF SALE AT DOUG JARRELL SALES ARENA, BELLEVILLE ONTARIO
AUCTION SALE ESTATE OF DOREEN ACKERS, 60 JOHN STREET, STIRLING THURSDAY, MAY 28 AT 10:00 A.M. ON SITE
Saturday May 30th Sale 10:00am Viewing 8:00am Antique Tractor and Farm Machinery Sale
Directions: From Deseronto take Hwy. 49 south to Fish Lake Road. Follow it west 4 Kms. To Bethesda Rd. Turn south and follow to 15 Machills Rd. (Watch for signs). MF 1085 2wd tractor/cab, David Brown 990 tractor/loader, MF 925 haybine, NH 55 side delivery rake, MF #9 baler, Bale buncher, 32 ft. pipe frame elevator on undercarriage, flat bottom hay wagon, homemade big bale wagon undercarriage, Kongskilde 3 PTH 12 ft. cultivator, 10 ft. set of trail discs. 9 shank chisel plow, 3 PTH manure bucket, 4 drum field roller, 3 section trail harrows, trail type mower, JD 506 3 PTH rotary mower, trail type rotary mower, 3 PTH post hole auger, 3 PTH scraper blade, 2 antique walking ploughs, old scuffler, several sets of horse drawn sleigh bunks, 3 wood wagons (as is), several wagon running gears, set of drag discs, Speed king 4 inch grain auger, 5 inch grain auger, Honda 4514 hydrostatic riding lawnmower (as is), rolls of page wire, barbed wire, electric fencers and fencing supplies, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Tâ&#x20AC;? bar fence posts, farm gates, qty. of used steel sheeting, garden trailer, 3 PTH boom, chicken feeders, large qty. of horse accessories including a show wagon (rough), western pony & horse saddles, assorted harness, nylon halters, collars, shaves & tongues, harness brass, brushes, bridles & much more. Large qty. of shop tools including Mastercraft wood lathe (new), compressor, welder, new electric door opener, battery charger, chainsaws, workmate, jackall, al. ext. ladder, step ladder, wrenches, hammers, Stainless steel sink, shovels, hardware, garden supplies, garden tiller, assorted chains, large pile of scrap & many more items far too many to list. Household effects selling at 9:30 a.m.:Kenmore washer & dryer, Antique walnut dining suite including table, 6 chairs, sideboard & china cabinet, antique washstand/teardrop pulls, chesterfield & chair, Yamaha organ, wing back chair, antique pine jam cupboard, set of 8 cane bottom chairs, Victorian chair, hall table, Pine queen size sleigh bed/ matching 5 drawer chest & dresser/mirror, lyre back chair, queen size bed, dresser/ mirror, chest of drawers, small side table, rocker, spinning wheel, several antique wall clocks, Sessions mantle clock, clock shelf, apple basket, old licence plates, collector plates, magazine rack, cabinet model sewing machine, air conditioner, small kirchen appliances, assorted everyday dishes, DeLaval clock, cast iron pieces, old prints, assorted lamps, a number of coal oil lamps, barn lanterns, strawberry boxes & numerous other pieces. See my web site for detailed list & photos 4ERMS #ASH $EBIT 6ISA -# OR #HEQUE )$ s ,UNCH AVAILABLE Owners and/or auctioneers not responsible in case of accident AUCTIONEERS: DOUG JARRELL & BEN TREVERTON 613-969-1033 www.dougjarrellauctions.com
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205 SAGERS CORNERS ROAD, R.R.# 4 STIRLING, ONT. SATURDAY MAY 30TH AT 11:00 AM 2 miles SOUTH of Stirling on Highway 33 and turn onto Sagers Corner Road (Vicinity of Oak Hills Golf Course). Collection of antique oil lamps including cranberry hanging hall lamp, Aladdin lamps and parts including Lincoln Drape, Simplicity, amber, Coolidge, Washington Drape, brass, chrome, floor lamp; Rayos, Models 23, 4, 5,6, chimneys, burners; hanging Pittsburg lamp, wall bracket lamps, vintage store lamps, stem lamps, finger lamps, tin lamps, candle lamps, brass candle lamps, piano lamp, barn lanterns, rail lanterns, SMP tin signage, tin oil cans, candle molds, skaters lamp, bicycle lamps, Lodge wall brass and copper oil lamp, cast iron hanging lamp, smoke bells, , hand painted shades, school house shades, shade frames, antique oak knee hole desk with upper glass door cabinet, contemporary stacking bookcase, shelving, numerous other articles from many years of collecting. 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
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METROLAND MEDIA AUCTIONS
AUCTION SALE TOM AND GERI LOGAN ANTIQUE LAMP AUCTION
774 County Road #1 Picton, 2 kms North of traffic circle
Sale conducted for Paul Sharpe who has been collecting Antique tractors and machinery for the last 40 years. Some vary unique and interesting pieces. 1962 Pontiac Parisienne with 283 motor 2 speed power glide transmission all original with 18564.1 miles on speedometer, hit and miss engines, 20hp 648 Case tractor with loader, Antique Tractors: Case S, 9N Ford, Farmall H, 2- Alice Chalmers C, Cockshutt 30, Ford 8N, Case S junior, Massy Harris 44, Massy Harris 102, Massy Harris 22, LA Case 45, Oliver 70 standard, Oliver 70 rowcrop, 950 David Brown with allied loader, Cockshutt 60 rowcrop, 1020 McCormick Deering- steel tractor for parts. Antique Equipment: Bolens garden scuffler, Cockshutt working ground driven manure spreading, walking plows, riding plows, 3pth plows, Massy trip rake, various size tractor tires and wheels, numerous Antique tractor parts and fenders, Antique tractor seats, rubber tired wooden spoke farm wagon, John Deere grass seeder, 64 GMC with 283 motor, Hus-Ski 1950-60s snow machine, large quantity of small antique tools, milk cans, steel barrels, 3pth buzz saw, IH #430 baler, Massy baler, 1600 lb roller, 3pth post hole digger, 3pth balance weight, 3pth grader blades, bale fork, 2 ton engine lift Tools: 5200 Powerpack generator, Craftsman 7hp 60gallon upright aircompressor 220volt, 2 ton engine lift, quantity of woodworking tools, power tools, T Bar fence posts, 2 ATV blades, Gravely mower with blade, gaspowered walk behind sickle mowers, walk behind weedeaters, 12 hp White riding lawnmower, 8hp snowblower, electric bicycles, 5hp wood chipper, 10hp Johnston outboard, heavy duty wench, double axle utility trailer with brakes, double axle cargo trailer plus various size utility trailers, Many more articles too numerous to list. Canteen Available. See website for pictures. www.koopmansauctionservices.com Always accepting good clean consignment for upcoming sales at our Auction Centre. We also conduct Estates, Farm and Commercial sales onsite. Payment cash and cheque with ID.
For your entire auction needs call Auctioneer: Gerald Koopmans 613-393-1732
Auctions continued on B7
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ESTATE OF FLOYD BUCK SATURDAY, MAY 23, 2015 AT 10:00 AM The Estate of Floyd Buck of RR 3 Marmora, Ontario
From Marmora travel south on County Road 14 for 11 km, then west on Springbrook Road for 7 km, then North on Rylestone Road for 3 km. From Campbellford, travel 12 km north on County Road 38, then 3 km north on Rylestone Road. Watch for signs. Quarter cut oak dining suite. Barrel type butter churn. Cast iron bed frame. Antique parlour tables. Duncan Phyffe fold over hall table. 3â&#x20AC;&#x2122; carved mountie. Quantity of antique glass, china & silverplate ware. Maytag 3 door fridge. Maple corner & flat to the wall kitchen cupboards. Maple dining table & chair set. Recliner. Oak office chair. Heavy pine sofa & chair set. Washer & dryer. Maple end table. Antique drop front desk. Antique chest of drawers. Large antique mirrored dresser. Set of press back chairs. Wooden rocker. Washboard. Cast end school desk. Antique 3 drawer chest. Organ stool. Antique washstands. Counter scales. Troy Bilt roto tiller. White 10528SE snowblower. Aluminum ladders. Stihl grass trimmer. Hand & power tools. Cement planters. Picnic table. Many other small items too numerous to list. Large auction sale. Full list on our website. Terms are cash or cheque only. Foodbooth.
COMMERCIAL ESTATE AUCTION SAT. MAY 23rd 10am Preview 8am For the late Mr. D. F. Fisher
LOCATION: 205 Peter St., Port Hope, ON. In the Cameco Industrial Building at rear of building. Beside Vosburg Furniture. Watch for signs.
Generator, Busy Bee DF 1237G machinist metal lathe, Busy Bee B096 milling & drilling machine w/rotary table & vise, drill presses, Milwaukee horizontal cut off saw/metal, Torga 612 B surface grinder, jig boring machine #B.C.A. mark 3, Bull 3 ton arbour press, bench grinders, A.R. Williams machinist lathe 24" bed. Floor model band saw ST WSB180, Busy Bee 18" band saw, power inverter. Tile saw, oxy-acetylene set, Mastercraft compressor, Mastercraft arc welder AC230CA, misc. tools, Makita cordless drill, Croz Busy Bee metal bender, Mastercraft pneumatic tool set, Johnson outboard 3hp 1930-1940s motor, lathe attachment 4 drawer chuck, tool boxes, router table, rechargeable tool set, circular saw, jack set, Palm Nailer kit, bits for joiner or planer, end mills, Alpha numeric punch set, new digital indicator, Mastercraft band saw, work tables. Plus many support items. Auction to be held inside. TERMS: cash, debit, Visa, M/C. 10% Buyers Premium.
All items must be paid for in full day of sale. All sales final. Removal day of sale. Sunday, May 24 10am-5pm, Monday, May 25 9am-1pm. It is the sole responsibility of purchaser for removal of all articles. Member of the Auctioneers Association of Ontario NOW BOOKING on site auctions COMPETITIVE RATES Auctioneer/Executor are not responsible for any public liability, accident, theft, or loss in connection with this sale.
Details at www.keithmonkauctions.com
KEITH MONK AUCTION SERVICE (705) 875-1184
HAVE AN UPCOMING AUCTION? Get the word out to more than 69,000 homes.
Call to find out how. 613-966-2034
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"6$5*0/ 5)634%": .": TU ! 1 . Warnerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Auction Hall, 12927 Hwy 2, Just West of Colborne.
A good mixed auction with antique pieces, collectables, tools, new fishing & hunting related articles, quality home furnishings, sports prints & pictures plus more. Partial list only includes quality dining room with ext table resting on Queen Anne legs, with leaves, 6 chairs & matching sideboard, excellent bedroom set with gents highboy, ladies dresser with mirror, night stands, king size bed, all original oak dining table with 6 chairs, matching sideboard & china cabinet, sofa bed, good fridge, chest freezer, nice set solid wood coffee & end tables, nice set of nesting tables, nice selection hand & power tools, selection new articles, good hunting & fishing boating related articles, glass, china, silver, lot of boxes still yet to be unpacked - early advertising deadline - not all ready & seen. Terms: Cash, Cheque with I.D., Visa, M/C, Interac
(BSZ 8BSOFS "VDUJPOFFS t
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580 Case Diesel Industrial Backhoe; 2-Massey Ferguson Tractors 165/135 Diesel; Round Baler; Line of Machinery; Primitives; Antiques; Collectibles; Household Effects Note: This sale has something for everyone, there has never been a sale on this property before. (Still finding things)
Round pedestal oak kitchen table/leaf & 4 rod back chairs, chesterfield, chair & ottoman, 2 blue recliners, sofa table, coffee & end tables, double bed, 2 chests of drawers, vanity/mirror, blanket box, quilt rack, cabinet model sewing machine, glass & china, cups & saucers, art glass, brass pieces, die cast cars, prints, linens & bedding, lamps & many more items. See my web site for detailed list & photos AUCTIONEERS: DOUG JARRELL & BEN TREVERTON 613-969-1033 www.dougjarrellauctions.com
www.warnersauction.com $&-&#3"5*/( :&"34 */ #64*/&44
MARSHALL GUMMER ESTATE AUCTIONS SUN MAY 24th 10AM MULTI-ESTATE AUCTION
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10:00 A.M. SHARP
AUCTION SALE WEDNESDAY, MAY 27 AT 5:00 P.M. DOUG JARRELL SALES ARENA, BELLEVILLE
Historic Castleton Town Hall Just 7 Minutes Straight North of Hwy 401 Exit 497(Big Apple, Colborne) Preview 8:30 day of sale and Sat 12-3 FEATURE ITEMS Pr Norval Morrisseau Acrylics on Paper c.1960s Private Collection of Large Inuit Soapstone Carvings by Tytoosie Tunnillie,Jaco Ishulutak,Tutuiya Qatsiya,Qupapik Ragee,Jimmy Petaulassie and Inuit Art. Rare Red Indian Motor Oil Double Sided Porcelain Oil Rack Sign c.1930s. Guttorn (Toro) Otto(1919-2012) Oil Painting on Board â&#x20AC;&#x153;Stump on Kawagamaâ&#x20AC;?, Donald A. Smith Oil Painting on Board â&#x20AC;&#x153;Farm Pondâ&#x20AC;? Palgrave Ontario Antiques,Art,Sterling Silver to incl. Tiffany & Birks, Estate Jewelry-10kt18kt Gold, Pottery,Porcelain,Art Glass, Setting for 12 of Royal Worcester Evesham w/Serving Pieces,Collectibles & Memorabilia,Inuit & First Nations, Vintage Advertising,Coins,Stamps,Pocket Watches,Walking Sticks, Vintage & Retro Clothing, Mid-Century Modern, Furniture and much more
For Complete Listing and pictures Please Visit www.theappraiser.ca â&#x20AC;˘ 289-251-3767 Payment by Cash/Cheque/Visa/Mastercard, No Buyers Premium
AUCTION SALE ESTATE OF STEVEN VOSBOURGH 113 SOUTH TRENT STREET, FRANKFORD ONT MONDAY MAY 25 th AT 10:30 AM South of traffic lights in Frankford. Craftsman 15.5 hp riding lawn mower with rear bagger, Craftsman 9 hp snow blower, Yardworks electric limb chipper, Ryobi radial arm saw, Delta chop saw, power tools, hand tools, garden tools, antique washstands, antique parlour table, 4 piece walnut bedroom suite, antique oak library table, antique walnut Duncan Phyfe drop leaf table, Antique toilet set pieces, oil lamps, collection of blue and white china, Depression glass piece, Iris depression, colored glass, Royal Nippon, silver overlay, Frankford Dairy bottle, quilt, vintage Canadian paper money,collection of silver coins, 10 k gold and diamond bracelet, Kitchen Aid counter top mixer, Crosley upright freezer, 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
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SAT. MAY 23, 2015
CLS449508_0521
Approx. 35 KM North of Kingston, Take Division St. North through Inverary to North Shore Road on Right, Follow to Leland Rd. Turn Left (422 Leland Rd)
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THE ESTATE OF THE LATE SANFORD & EMMA YOUNG
Sale consisting of items such as: china cabinet, matching buffet and dining room table, four chairs, 2 - 85 inch couches, 1 of the couches has a matching arm chair, 4 piece bedroom set, 3 piece walnut bedroom set, 5 piece antique parlour set, antique cleopatra, French Provincial end tables and coffee table, other tables and lamps, steel storage cabinets, Royal Albert China Set 12+ setting, covered bowls and cream/sugar, many other various dishes and collectible items, single bed, various mirrors and pictures, fridge, deep freezer, washer, dryer, microwave, cream cans, antique wardrobe screen, rocking chairs, crocks, humidiďŹ er, cane seat rocker and chair, assorted mirrors, cedar chest, 6 piece wash basin set, assortment of tools, 12 piece antique silver cutlery set with storage box, small dining room table with leaf, 12 piece dish set, corner step table, assorted glassware, cups, saucers and dishes, antique glass bottles, oil lamp, antique irons, antique slide viewer, light up picture, reclining chair, antique washstand, gramophone, antique wooden desk, assorted lawn care items, small antique tools, Honda tire rims, planer, pressure washer, chainsaw, chicken feeders/ waterers, antique farm scale and many other various household items. Terms: Cash or Cheque with ID.
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ESTATE FARM AUCTION
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METROLAND AUCTIONS
AUCTION SALE for Douglas Badgley of Tweed, ON 122 Spring St. East, Tweed May 23rd 2015 - 11 AM
Section B News - Thursday, May 21, 2015
B7
TRAVEL
Relaxed, “civilized” dining in Bruges, Belgium
By John M. Smith
Lifestyles - For those of you who have visited Belgium, you’re probably already familiar with Bruges, for it’s one of the most popular tourist destinations in the entire country. After all, the perfectly preserved medieval town centre and beautiful network of picturesque canals have combined to make Bruges a real tourist magnet, attracting over two million visitors a year. Some of its not-to-be-missed attractions include the Market Square, at the heart of the city, with its colourful guild houses and its dominating 83-metre-high belfry tower, the Burg, another beautiful square, with its renowned 14th century city hall. Also found here is the inspirational, sacred Basilica of the Holy Blood, the Minnewater, often referred to as “the Lake of Love,” and the Church of Our Lady, with its eye-popping Michelangelo marble sculpture of “Madonna with Child.” However, instead of concentrating on these awesome tourist attractions in this particular article, I’ve decided to write about some of my dining experiences, for I discovered that fine dining is taken very seriously here. Having one’s evening meal is not an experience to be rushed. Rather, it’s to be slowly savoured and enjoyed. Therefore, I found my dining
in Bruges to be relaxed and “civilized.” One of my evening meals was at “Assiette Blanche,” on Philipstockstraat, near Market Square, and once I arrived, it was simply expected that that particular table would be mine for the evening. There was no thought that I might eat and leave quickly so that the table could be re-used for another customer. Rather, it was expected that I’d relax and enjoy and stay. The restaurant was quite small, intimate, and crowded, yet it wasn’t particularly noisy. I saw that many potential customers were turned away. However, this didn’t seem to bother the staff at all. They were there to serve those with reservations for that particular night. I was able to make selections from a threecourse meal (for 35 Euros) or a four-course meal (for 47 Euros), and I found that the actual selections arrived rather slowly, for there was no rush to get customers to leave. However, the staff always seemed to have time to explain a specific dish, or choice of wine, if asked. After I was finished my delightful meal and finally ready to leave, I had to ask for my bill. This is very common in Belgium, and throughout much of Europe, for it would be considered
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B8 Section B - Thursday, May 21, 2015
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rude to try to rush the customer. Another evening meal in Bruges was at “Den Dyver,” next to one of the canals, and what was particularly unusual about this experience was that each course was paired with a beer, and each beer was carefully explained so that the customer knew why a particular beer had been chosen to be paired with a specific food choice. I again found myself spending an entire evening, relaxing and dining, and I was able to select from even a four-course or five-course meal, with paired beers. My dessert beer was particularly dark and strong, but all the paired beers seemed very appropriate and tasty. I was here for well over two hours, and I then strolled back to my accommodations at the Hotel Navarro, which was conveniently located near the city centre. Belgium is also renowned for such specific foods as its fries and mussels, its waffles, and its chocolates, so dining in this country will often include these A view of Bruges’ Gothic City Hall. items. For example, “Poules Moules,” on Simon Stevinplein, offers healthy portions of mussels and Belgian fries, “Laurenzino,” on Noordzanstraat, has freshly baked Belgian waffles with such toppings as whipped cream, caramel, and chocolate, and “Chocolaterie Sukerbuyc,” on Katelijnestraat, has delicious hand-made chocolates and hot chocolate. I also tried some genuine Flemish beef stew at “Maximiliaan van Oostenrijk,” on Wijngaardplein, and it was also very tasty. With all this food consumption, it was important that I get some exercise, too, to work off some of the calories, so I also did a walking tour of this picturesque city with Anne de Meerleer of Bruges Tourism. As we were exploring some of the main tourist attractions and checking out some of the specialty boutique shops, a young girl came out of one of the shops and said “hi” to me. It turned out to be my waitress at “Den Dyver,” the beer pairing restaurant from the night before, and I learned that she also had a daytime job at this shop. She explained This “beer wall” is located in downtown Bruges. that she was a student, on summer “break,” so “I have to work two jobs, both night and day.” For more information: <www. visitflanders.us>.
This T-shirt advertises Belgian chocolate.
Mussels and fries are very popular in Belgium.
You really can’t grow petunias?
The Good Earth: Lifestyles - Well, Gentle Reader, it seems I made a few of you chuckle last week. Some of you thought I was “SUPERGARDENER!” and could grow any plant in any soil in any place. Some of you knew better but were very surprised that a garden writer would publish a column admitting their failings in their own profession. Truth be told, those
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were two of the reasons for “Not in my Backyard.” The third and most compelling was that I was overwhelmed by the florid floral dreck that was washing over the pages of horticultural prose in far too many media. Almost any seasoned gardener will be able to produce a long list of plants or methods that they have tried over the years which produced results less than desirable. In some cases, it was a lesson learned and they moved on; in other situations, modifications were introduced that resolved the earlier disappointments and they moved on. I haven’t met one yet who has told me that every plant they ever planted performed beautifully during its allotted life span. Sometimes there is a plant that might be offered to the general public before it is ready. I can clearly remember a certain series of echinacea and a specific cultivar of tickseed that performed abysmally during the first few years on the market. Dan’s commentary to Dan’s comments: that’s two incidences out of more than several thousand new offerings. Once those times of trial (in
customers’ gardens instead of breeders’ fields) had nature’s Darwinian judgment passed upon them, all of those plants moved into a proper place on garden centres’ shelves. In both of those cases, the garden media was abuzz with everybody–from writer to gardener– talking about these early epic failures. However, I am confident in telling you that before most plants make it to the marketplace they have undergone many, many trials. Often, the year prior to public release, the media has the opportunity to receive those new introductions and grow them in their own gardens. The sellers expect the plants to do well and they are looking forward to wonderful publicity leading up to a comprehensive circulation. What they’re not expecting–at least hoping–is to have the writers extreme test the plants to the point of death and then report the plant is lacking. I have seen pictures of one designated for xeriscaping conditions being submerged in bottomland with a high water table. I know that because the pictures the company’s representative sent me show a river nearby and a series
of holes half filled with water. The plant was not recommended by the writer. In another situation, a plant meant for full to part shade and moist rich soil, was plunked in the middle of an unmulched garden–in full sun, in clay, in Georgia. It melted away and, again, this particular plant was not recommended. It has since become the most successful selling new shrub in the past decade and deservedly so. For many years, I was fortunate to receive samples from Proven Winners, two each for their intended introductions the following year. I would grow one in our yard and give the other to a neighbour or friend to grow in theirs. I’m supposed to be a professional gardener so the plant should do well. And that was my goal– to give the plant everything the label asked for and then report on its progress. As a check, the other plant went to a “normal” person who also wanted the plant to do well. If we both experienced problems, then my rating would reflect our experiences. GR, for me it is very important to say that my goal was to succeed with the plant, not see how
quickly I could kill it. I have very little patience or respect for those who take the lower road and literally trash the plant any way they can. So it can be a fine line between being perturbed by those who have never ever experienced failure as a result of their actions and those who deliberately go past the limits and gleefully post a negative report. (Folks who know me just call me grumpy and move on.) My advice to you, GR, is to check as many different sources as you think necessary, before laying down your hardearned money for a new introduction. And take those sources with a pinch of salt; for example, I might do well in describing the absolutely incredible depth of darkness in the new petunias but don’t expect me to lecture you on how to grow them. Now, let’s talk about coleus; I’m some good with them.
Dan Clost
REPORTS FOR APRIL 2015 I Pledge, My Head to clearer thinking, My Heart to greater loyalty, My Hands to larger service, My Health to better living, for my club, my community and my country. The 4-H Touring Horse Club
membership fees and member information MUST be received by the second meeting in order for the member to participate in the club. Come join our first meeting on May 23 @ 2pm at The Machining Center (582 Hamilton Rd, Belleville On ) Need more information please contact: Sarah Wolters 613-885-2302? admin@themachiningcenter.com
Our club includes meetings that are based Dogtastic 4-H Dog Club! around developing skills in horsemanship by
associating with many different people in the horse industry. We are called the travelling horse club because we try to host meetings in many different locations throughout Hastings County. This enables us to expose our members to a variety of different methodologies for handling and caring for horses. Members will be provided with an opportunity to handle (and maybe even ride) horses. However, this is not a requirement for completing their 4-H horse project. This club is challenging for members who have experience with horses but also suitable for members who are new to horses. Members are required to attend six meeting plus the Achievement Day. New members will not be accepted after the second meeting. All
Do you love dogs? Want to learn about caring for and handling dogs? Then how about joining Dogtastic 4-H Dog Club! You will be encouraged to learn basic daily care, grooming and dog handling skills. Dogs make great companions in our everyday life but they also require lots of our time, care and commitment. If your family already has a dog or if you are dreaming of having one of your own someday, this club is for you! The best part is you don’t need to have a dog to join! Location of meetings: 2062 Harmony Rd Corbyville K0K1V0 Please contact Barbara Huffman at srscooldown@hotmail.com
The Poultry Project!
The Poultry Club is a project where we will be learning all about Poultry eggs and interesting facts about different types the birds. No chickens are needed as it is just a learning club at this point. We will be travelling to farms of different poultry as well as learning meetings at the Springbrook Hall. Please contact: Shelley Kay at skay8@hotmail.com FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTION ABOUT 4-H PROJECTS: I don’t live on a farm! Can I still join 4-H? Yes, you can! There are many different projects that 4-H members can take during their 4-H career, including food, craft, and the outdoors, environment, sports, and machinery, crops and livestock projects. Many 4-H club leaders will help you to find a project animal if you enroll in a livestock project but don’t have your own livestock – and some clubs even offer livestock clubs without the livestock! 4-H is such a flexible program! Both volunteers and members can learn about all kinds of different topics in any setting at any time. Skill building, critical thinking and empowerment are what make all 4-H programs excellent experiences.
4-H is a grassroots organization of leaders building leaders. 4-H emphasizes the importance of looking at the big picture that youth need to see beyond them and focus on how their actions affect their relationships, their community, the environment and society as a whole. This belief is reflected in the 4-H pledge, said at the beginning of every 4-H meeting and event. The 4-H pledge encourages a balanced lifestyle (intellectual, emotional, physical and spiritual), and reminds participants to aim to be a good friend, mentor, community member and citizen. 4-H is based on a “Learn to do by Doing” philosophy. Members aged 9-21 and volunteer leaders come together to create a 4-H club, where members learn about a selected topic through hands on activities and mentorship. In the Cloverbud program, participants aged 6-8 work with volunteer leaders on a variety of unit’s over a full year. The Hastings County 4-H Association is looking for volunteers who live in the Thurlow, Belleville, and Madoc and Tweed area. For more information Check out the 4-H website www.4-hontario.ca
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Section B - Thursday, May 21, 2015 B9
Art in the Park does not disappoint
Continued from page B1
to them at the booth of Peterborough artist Garrett Gilbart whose works involve taking tools such as saws and shovels and creating cutout art that is unusual and had caught the eye of these two women. From the sounds of the StarPainters Jazz Trio to Al Lermanâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s blues music to the CDHS Jazz Ensemble the entertainment at the event provided an atmosphere that was enjoyed by the more than 2,000 who attended.
Ellen Ruttan and Staci Owens admire the metal creations by Garrett Gilbart of Peterborough who takes simple tools such as saws and shovels and The StarPainters Jazz Trio performed on opening morning at the fifth annual Art (and Music) in the Park: from left, Howard creates cutout art, using a plasma cutter. Baer on bass, David Reed on electric guitar and Andy Sparling on trombone. Baer is from Warkworth. The group is based in Belleville.
Photos: Sue Dickens
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Artist Laura Sultan of Designs by Nature Gems, from Toronto, shows Karen Caruana from Marmora a jewellery piece she created. Sultan works with gems and uses the stone, the line and colour as part of her creative process.
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Ruth Wojtiuk takes a moment to check out the cookie samples offered at the festival by Warkworthâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Sprucewood Handmade Cookie Co. at the booth manned by Jacob Allen, left, and Mark Pollard, chef.
Lucy Kovarova-Weir of Lunacy Glass in Tweed showcased her handmade jewellery and beads which caught the eye of Helen Marshall of Warkworth. â&#x20AC;&#x153;This festival is so neat everybody has such great stuff,â&#x20AC;? said Marshall.
Tyendinaga Cavern & Caves opens for summer It’s called Tyendinaga Cavern & Caves and it’s a business run by Charles and Elizabeth Koch. The couple purchased the property at 2623 Harmony Road 21 years ago and spent 14 years working on the site to make it accessible to the public. They opened the business in 2008 and every year since it has attracted hundreds of visitors. They open for the summer every Victoria Day weekend and, through May and June, offer guided tours on weekends or by appointment on weekdays. Then, from July to Labour Day weekend, they’re open seven days a week. Now in their eighth season, the couple is seeing a nice return on all the sweat equity they put into getting the business up and running. “We’ve seen several thousand people come through and check it out,” said Elizabeth. “It’s nice to see the public’s reaction to it. They appreciate that there’s something unique in their backyard.” The tour of the site takes about 45 minutes. It starts with an above-land tour, where the guide showcases sink holes and an hour-glass cave that’s not safe for entering. It then continues into the one large cavern that’s been made Charles and Elizabeth Koch are the owners of Ty- accessible to the public. The Kochs added lighting, paved endinaga Cavern & Caves. Here they’re pictured by the entrance to the cavern, which is described stairways and floors to the cave to make as Ontario’s oldest natural cavern. Photo: Stephen it safe, but have left the walls intact, so guests can see them in their natural state. Petrick By Stephen Petrick
News - Tyendinaga - One of the coolest tourism attractions in the region opened for the summer last weekend. It’s a dark, moist place away from the heat of the sun and the hectic nature of urban life. And a journey inside is like a trip 100,000 years back in time.
They can see naturally formed cave curtains, a wishing well and inscriptions on the wall believed to have come from the early 1800s. The Kochs say the cavern is Ontario’s oldest natural cavern. It descends more than 30 feet below the ground and covers about 20,000 cubic feet. On a hot summer day, the tour is quite refreshing, as the temperature inside is always about ten degrees Celsius. Guests are asked to not mind if a little mineral water sprinkles on the head as they walk around. And if the tour group is feeling brave, they can experience the feeling of pitch blackness when the tour guide briefly turns off the lights. Both Charles and Elizabeth have a deep fascination with geology and appreciate having the opportunity to teach guests about how the caves were formed. They explain that these caves are “solution caves,” which means they were created by water that once flowed through the area, altering the shape. Somehow they were able to survive the glacier period, Elizabeth explained, and remain in effect for people to see in the modern day. The Kochs believe people are fascinated by the cavern because a chance to go inside is a rare experience. “To enter, you have to be adventurous,” Charles said. “It gets the blood flowing when you enter. People are pretty curious.”
Brenden Burshaw holds his two-year-old son Jaxton up to check out the limestone inside the cavern at Tyendinaga Cavern & Caves. The business opened for the summer on the Victoria Day weekend. Photo: Stephen Petrick
Tickets to enter are $12 for adults, free. For more information visit <http:// $10 for children 13 to 17, $8 for seniors tyendinagacaves.blogspot.ca/>. or children five to 12. Kids under five are
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Betty Harry receives prestigious Cora Bailey Award By Kate Everson
News - Quinte West - Recipient of the Cora Bailey Award from Retired Women Teachers of Ontario (RWTO), Trenton and District Branch, was Betty Harry. “Betty has always been a wonderful ambassador for RWTO and its philosophy of caring and sharing,” past president Marie Mitchell said. “She is certainly a worthy recipient of our 2015 Cora Bailey Award.” Betty received flowers presented by past president Marie Mitchell, and certificates from Karen Rynard, Area 7 director, and Marilyn Emmett, president of the RWTO. The event was held at Occasions by the Bay on May 7 and included dinner and entertainment. Her brother Grant Ketcheson and wife Gail from Madoc did a great comedy act that kept the group laughing. Other members of Betty’s family were also present for the award. Betty Harry retired from the position of teacher-librarian at Frankford Public School in 1995 and immediately joined the branch. She held numerous positions of responsibility in the branch. For nine years Betty was a member of the program committee and chaired it for one. She became president for 2006Metroland Media Classifieds
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Betty Harry receives a certificate from area director Karen Rynard. Photo: Kate Everson
2007. As past president, she chaired the Cora Bailey Award committee and has also attended several conventions. Betty was instrumental in encouraging new members to join the organization. She was always willing to supply her famous gift baskets for guests. She also hosted many meetings at her home
for programs, executive, and Cora Bailey Award committee meetings. “Any job that Betty was asked to do she accepted with a smile and a positive response,” commented past president Marie Mitchell. “She was most appreciative of individuals who had helped her in any way.”
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Volunteers appeared to come under the spell of Jimmy G during the Percy Agricultural Society’s recent presentation of a hypnotist show. Victoria Coyle (seated,) Gary (the laughter policeman) Ryan Hughson and Rick Morden participated in body building, cow milking and racing boat driving during the 90-minute show. More than 100 people attended the event which included a silent auction of donated swag from Campbellford, Warkworth and Hastings businesses. Photo: Percy Agricultural Society
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Conservation lesson comes alive Students at Norwood District High School take photos of a great horned owl held by Chris Ketola of the Ontario Specialized Species Centre near Havelock. The centre was established in 1987 and has â&#x20AC;&#x153;three primary objectives: promoting conservation through education, establishing and maintaining captive breeding populations of specialized species and providing a sanctuary to raptors that have been so severely injured in the wild they cannot be released back into their natural habitat.â&#x20AC;? The centre is home to around 300 animals, most of whom are raptors (birds of prey) and bats. Photo: Bill Free-
Chris Ketola holds a great horned owl during a fascinating presentation to students at Norwood District High School that featured bats and birds of prey. Photo: Bill Freeman
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Raise ethical children by giving them responsibility at early age
News - Campbellford - Parents must teach their children to “care deeply, share generously [and] help willingly” to make the world a safer place, says an expert and international best-selling author on parenting, teaching and bullying. They’re “integral to raising a ethical human being,” Barbara Coloroso told an audience of nearly 130 parents and educators at Campbellford District High School May 13. They’re also the “antidotes” to the “three most virulent agents ripping apart the fabric of our humanity: hating other human beings with utter contempt, hoarding–me, mine and more instead of us–and harming with lying, cheating and stealing.” In an illuminating two-hour talk that mixed humour with insight drawn from her own experience as a mother of three children and more than 40 years as an educational consultant, Coloroso asked her listeners how is it possible “to raise a generation of kids who will act with … in-
tegrity and civility and compassion, who is willing to stand up for a value and against injustice, who is not easily led?” You start by allowing them to make decisions for themselves at a young age, where the consequences are not “lifethreatening, morally threatening, or unhealthy,” she said, such as allowing them to choose what colour of pajamas to wear to bed. Let them “make cheap mistakes when they’re young, they rarely make expensive ones later,” Coloroso said. “Your goal is to constantly increase responsibility and decision-making, and decrease limits and boundaries,” so when they leave home and school “they are truly responsible for their own behaviour” and not blaming others for their actions. She warned if a child is told to dress and act in a certain way, later in life he will listen to what others tell him do–his peers. “The kid hasn’t learned how to think,” Coloroso said. “Compliant children are very easily led,” because they seek approv-
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Parenting expert and international best-selling author Barbara Coloroso covered a lot of ground in her talk, “Toddlers to Teens, Teaching Kids to Think and Act Ethically, at Campbellford District High School May 13. Photo: John Campbell
al and want to please others, unlike strongwilled, independent children who “have that gift of skepticism and wonder.” Coloroso said parents should strive to raise children who become the fourth character in a “bully circle”–the bully, the bullied, and bystander–and that is the “witness-resister-defender,” the daughter who befriends the new girl in school who is shunned and mistreated, for example, or the son who stands up to friends who say
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nasty things about those of another race, religion, sex or ability. Coloroso has seen what can happen in the extreme when people are viewed as less than human, having worked with orphans whose parents and families were slain in the 1994 Rwanda genocide. “In 100 days almost a million human beings were macheted to death because they were made into ‘its’, they were cockroaches,” to be exterminated, she said.
The massacre was “meticulously planned, horrifically carried out by people who turned other human beings into its, and that’s why we cannot tolerate kids denigrating another human being verbally,” she said. “It has devastating consequences.” To teach children how to care deeply, parents have to lead by example in what they say and do, such as speaking up when a relative spews “bigoted comments thinly disguised as jokes,” she said. The Ministry of Education, the public and separate school boards, and the CampbellfordSeymour Community Foundation provided funding for Coloroso’s visit, which included a two-hour talk earlier in the day on teaching with wit and wisdom, attended by nearly 40 area teachers, early childhood educators, and support staff. Coloroso said there are three basic tenets to parenting and teaching: “kids are worth it,” do not treat them in a way you would not want yourself to be treated, and, whatever works “must leave my dignity and my
child’s dignity intact.” There are also “six critical messages” children need to hear from parents every day: “I believe in you, I trust you, I know you can handle it, you are listened to, you are cared for, you are very important to me.” The most effective parent raising a child is one who is “mindful with a wise heart,” that is, not too strict, not too wish-washy. Coloroso also spoke about the differences between teasing and taunting, telling and tattling, discipline and punishment, flirtation and sexual bullying. “Children raised to be ethical human beings need to experience discipline,” she said. It teaches them to accept responsibility for a wrong they have done and that they must fix it, and learn from it. Punishment “arouses resentment” and teaches them to fear, to fight back or to flee, Coloroso said. You can learn more about what she has to say about parenting, bullying and ethics at her website, <http://www.kidsareworthit.com>.
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I brought my parents for lunch. The service was excellent and the waitress was so helpful with settling my parents into their seats. My Mom really enjoyed her liver and onions. Fish and Chips were delicious.Very comfortable atmosphere. We'll be back !
Tired of the same old local restaurant or pub? Try something g new and unique – try Tartan Toorie! At Tartan Toorie we focus on providing you with a unique dining g and entertainment experience. sportt the best We serve homemade Scottish pub food, o and nd spor nd city. fish and chips and steak pie in the cit ty. We We also alsso ccarry carr arry a h hos host ost st of refreshing and distinctive beers that a are rarely found at other pubs and restaurants. You mayy have experienced the Hamilton has offer, British and Irish pubs the city of Ham milton on h on ass to off a er,, but bu ut ut Tartan Toorie is the ONLY SCOTTISH P PUB UB in n all al al of of Hamilton! Ham H Hamil Hami ami ton! on! n 10am-6pm All-day Sunday Breakfast from 10am-6 - pm m Our Products & Services include: Authentic Scottish Pub Food Unique Beers Live Music Hank Thursday Night Open Jam night with H an nk and nk d the th he B Boys.
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Good food shared with good company is always an occasion to be savoured. Regrettably, for most the harried lifestyles of today don’t always allow for this luxury. In an ideal world all your meals would be jjoyful y events; yyour taste buds teased and spoilt for choice with an abundance of l local l iing redients, di served fresh in a warm, ingredients, inviting atmosphere. Fortunately for the minutes community commu munit un ttyy of Carlisle le e (j (ju (just ((jus jju usstt a fe ffew ew m mi in nutes utes u utte ess Waterdown) surrounding north n orth th o th off W Waterdown r ) and d tthe h surro surround o ing area, local resident Angela Checchia, reminiscent dreamed of creating a community based, Italian inspired bistro reminis scent of old world id ideals d ls ls an a nd p philoso philo h hilo hil ilosophie phi p hie h hiies. ie es. es and philosophies. 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Section B - Thursday, May 21, 2015 B15
Annual Lindsay Country Jamboree, July 16th-19th, 2015. Lindsay Fairgrounds. $65/person before June 23rd $70/person after June 23rd, 2015.(includes rough camping) Day passes: Thursday $20, Friday $20, Saturday $20, Sunday $15. w w w . l i n d s a y countryjambore e.com or i n f o @ l i n d s a y countryjambore e.com. 1-800-954-9998.
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DEATH NOTICE
DEATH NOTICE
Miller-Millon, Marilyn Josapheen
at the Trenton Memorial Hospital on
Saturday, May 9th, 2015, age 72 years. Marilyn Miller-Millon of Brighton, daughter of the late Joseph John Miller-Millon and the late Isabelle (MacLeod). Loving sister of Sandra Lyssikatos of Brighton. Predeceased by her brother-in-law Peter Lyssikatos. Sadly missed by her nephews, John Lyssikatos of Morristown, New Jersey, Joseph Lyssikatos and his wife Cindy of Boston Massachusetts, great nieces, Kiera and Jessica, and great nephews Peter and Miller. A Celebration of Marilyn’s Life will be held at the Brighton Masonic Hall, 157 Main Street, Brighton on Saturday, June 6th, 2015 from 1 to 3 p.m. Speical thanks to Odette Oliver of Rivera, the nursing staff of Trenton Memorial Hopital Palliative Care Unit, and Katherine Flindall of Community Care Northumberland. As an expression of sympathy, donations to the Brighton Community Care, or the Community Care Northumberland – Hospice Palliative Care Unit, would be appreciated by the family. Arrangements in care of the Brighton Funeral Home (613-475-2121). www.rushnellfamilyservices.com
HAPPY 50th ANNIVERSARY Mom and Dad (and Nana and Poppa) May 22, 2015 Love and hugs Kelly, Lorne, Lora and Joseph and Lee Ann, Jim and Allison Please join us to celebrate this special occasion on Saturday, May 23, 2015 Open House 1-4 pm St. Andrew’s United Church Hall, Toledo Your presence will be their most cherished gift.
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A1 - Rainbow, Speckled & Brown Trout For stocking. 6,8,10,12,14”. Fountains/ Aerators / Windmills/ TrueBlue/ Pond supplies. silvercreekponds. com Erin 519-833-2559
1993 34 FT WINNEBAGO Adventurer. Sleeps 6; 113,000 km; Chevy chassis, 454; 3 spd ,auto, overdrive; cruise. Well looked after vehicle. Recent bills for upgrades. $16,900 obo 613-403-2332
PINE LUMBER SALE, Ontariowidelumbersales.com Flooring, T&G V-Joint, log siding, molding, bevel siding, etc. Specials 1x6 VJoint $0.45 a lineal foot. 1x4, 1x6 pine flooring $1.25 a square foot. 613-292-9211
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.
White Cedar trees for landscaping and hedges, 4’-5’ tall, $6 each. CEDAR LOGS SIDING, 613-473-4017. round or square profile. 1x6 round log $0.99, 2x8 KENMORE - 5 Cubic ft square log $2.25, 2x8 chest freezer. 3 1/2 years round log $2.99. old $160.00. O n t a r i o w i d e l u m b e r sales.com 613-292-9211 613-966-8422 7 days a week
DAFOE, Mary Alice (nee: Poulain) At Stirling Manor, on Sunday, May 17, 2015. Alice Dafoe, of Gilmour, in her 93rd year. Daughter of the late Charles and Mary Poulain. Wife of the late Lee Dafoe. Mother of Reg (Linda) Dafoe and Ken (Mary) Dafoe. Grandmother of Deborah (Rick), Reginald (Diana), Mary, Judy, and Trudy. Great grandmother of Becky, Chad, Michelle, Shane, and Lindsay. Friends were received at the McConnell Funeral Home, Madoc, on Wednesday, May 20 from 12 noon until service time at 1:00 p.m. Interment Gilmour Cemetery. Donations: Canadian Cancer Society. www.mcconnellfuneralhome.ca CL451935
Come share a drink & memories.
Gordon and Shirley MacDonald 50 years of marriage Countless memories, laughs and smiles
FOR SALE
at Royal Canadian Legion Branch 110 Trenton ~ Upstairs
Mark Larmon
ANNIVERSARY
FOR SALE
DEATH NOTICE
for
(613) 475-1044
FOR SALE
Sunday, May 24, 2015 1:00pm to 4:00pm
BRIGHTON LEGION BR 100
ANNIVERSARY
BIRTHDAY
DEATH NOTICE
DEATH NOTICE
Celebration of Life Ash James Edward (Jim) April 23 1950 to April 12, 2015 passed away at Peterborough Hospital in his 65th year. He was a loving husband of Vivian, cherished father of Stacy and Amanda and beloved Grandpa to Randi, Sierra, Selena, Kyle and Dalton. Also left to remember him are his brothers, sisters and sister-in-law. The last few years Jim has been through the unimaginable and never had a negative complaint about the condition he was in. Jim will be greatly missed. Friends and family are invited to a celebration of Jim’s Life at his home on May 30th, 2015 at 2:00 pm. Everyone is welcome. Directions: 20 minutes north of Belleville up Hwy. #37, turn left onto Thomas Street, then right onto Clare Street which turns into Rapids Road. Drive 1 km north to #70. For more information, call Vivian 613-478-6361. Bring your own seating... this will be an outside event.
CL455218
WANTED
WANTED
I WANT YOUR SCRAP METAL AND E-WASTE Items that I accept: ✔ Household Appliances ✔ Stainless Steel ✔ Farm Machinery ✔ Household Vehicles/Batteries ✔ Cars, Trucks ✔ Electronic E-Waste ✔ Copper, Brass, Zinc, Leads
✔ PROPERTY CLEAN UP SERVICES t ALSO TAKING TIRES t ANY METAL ITEMS Fully licensed and Insured Contact Information 613-919-6482 (8am - 4 pm)
Kerby’s Scrap Metal Pick Up & Salvaging Matt Kerby, Owner
IN MEMORIAM
IN MEMORIAM
CL462085
COMING EVENTS
Debt Relief Allen Madigan Certified Credit cousellor. Solving financial problems for over 18 years. Renew hope seniors respected. Free confidential consultation. 613-779-8008
CL459426 CL455600
ANNOUNCEMENT
Robert Wayne Wright “Bob” May 25, 2014
There is a new star up above. It is Bob, he’s shining bright on all of us now. God received him with full military honours and his everlasting love. Well deserved for a man who touched so many lives with his talents, humour and sincere feelings for everyone. Yes I miss him as will many but I take solace in knowing that he is looking down and smiling at peace in God’s presence. May the music he loved and enjoyed so dearly continue in all of us. This is the best tribute we can give to a wonderful man, husband and friend. Weep not for Bobby is walking and talking, spinning records and waiting for all of us, watching over us and protecting us. Thank you Lord for a new star that is so important to us. Every time we look up we will ask him to play a song. Missed by his beloved companions, Penny, Maggie and Ricki. Miss you. Love you forever and always, Darlene
FOR RENT
FOR RENT
My client buys property in need of renovation for cash. Premium paid for waterfront. Call Gerry Hud-
Charolais Gelbvieh Bull, 1 year old, Purebred Limousin Bull, 2 years old, 613-275-2930.
$ MONEY $
2 Bedroom apartment in quiet, spacious seniorâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s residential building, Downtown Trenton (across from Metro). All inclusive, $915/mth. Senior discount, non-smoking, no pets. Call 613-922-5528.
BRIGHTON - New 1 bdrm apt for rent, extra clean, private entrance, own backyard, close to downtown, quiet neighbourhood $675 plus heat & hydro Call 613-475-3676
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
Sell it fast! 613-966-2034 FARM
FARM
THE FURNACE BROKER Godfrey, ON | 613-539-9073
CENTRAL BOILER 2015 SPRING REBATE Call for more information
CL446906
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FRANKFORD, ON 613.398.1611 BANCROFT,` ON 613.332.1613
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All Work Guaranteed
Janome Baby Lock Elna Bernina Sewing Machine Tune-ups from New Machines from
HONEY FOR SALE Twin Sisters Hive & Honey Products
NOW IN THREE LOCATIONS
62 Bridge Street East Campbellford (705) 653-5642 51 B King St. E. Bowmanville (905) 623-2404 182 George St. N. Peterborough (705) 742-3337
NOW OPEN FOR 2015 231 Frankford Road, Stirling
Call 613-827-7277
NEW & USED APPLIANCES USED REFRIGERATORS
At the lowest prices in the area. Trade-ins accepted on new appliances. Big selection to choose from.
PAYS CASH $$$
For good used appliances in working order or not, but no junk, please. VISA & MASTERCARD accepted. We have our own financing also. Shop at our competitors and then come see for yourself, quality at low prices. Open evenings 7 days a week. WE DELIVER.
We Sell Gas Refrigerators!
SMITTYâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S APPLIANCES LTD. 1-613-969-0287 FOR SALE
OFFICE OPEN DAILY, DROP IN!
CALL TODAY! 613-707-0886 www.realstar.ca
613-704-6390 realstar.ca
CL455652
Canadian Made
Book an ad 613-966-2034 FOR RENT
CL455538
Semi detached, 2 storey, 3 bedroom home. Large living & dining space. Fridge & stove incl. Gas Heat, fenced backyard, walking distance to town. $1100/mth & utilities.
Utilities Incl.
Call Kenmau Ltd. Property Management (Since 1985)
613-392-2601
FINANCIAL / INCOME TAX FINANCIAL / INCOME TAX
APARTMENTS APARTMENTS APARTMENTS t . 0 3 5 G A ( & 4 t APARTMENTS APARTMENTS APARTMENTS Featuring Featuring2 2bedroom bedroomapartments apartments APARTMENTS Featuring 2BRIGHTON bedroom apartments L with all amenities including: with all amenities including: Featuring 2 2bedroom apartments Featuring bedroom apartments with all amenities including: Featuring 2 air bedroom apartments fridge, stove, conditioning and fridge, stove, air conditioning and with all amenities including: with all amenities including: Featuring 2 bedroom apartments fridge, air conditioning and O Craig Blower with allstove, amenities including: wheelchair access. wheelchair access. fridge, airairconditioning fridge, and with stove, allstove, amenities including: and wheelchair access. fridge, stove, air conditioning conditioning and The apartments are attractive and The apartments are attractive and A wheelchair access. wheelchair access. fridge, stove, air conditioning and The apartments are attractive wheelchair access. the buildings are secure. the buildings are secure. TheThe apartments are attractive apartments are attractive and wheelchair access. the buildings are secure. The apartments are attractiveand and .BSCFMMF N Financial Ideal for Seniors or retired couples Ideal for Seniors or retired couples the buildings are secure. the buildings areare secure. Services Inc. Ideal for Seniors orsecure. retired couples The buildings apartments attractive and the are Ideal for Seniors or retired couples CALL Ideal for Seniors or retired couples CALL $ the buildings areorsecure. Ideal for Seniors retired couples CALL 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 D A C O U R T Featuring 2 bedroom apartments with all amenities including: fridge, stove, air conditioning.
DEBT CONSOLIDATION PURCHASE FINANCING & CONSTRUCTION LOANS
MORTGAGE BROKER Lic. #10343
The apartments are attractive and the buildings are secure.
/FF s 2ES &RONT 3T #ENTURY 0LACE "ELLEVILLE CRAIG?MARBELLE LKS NET Each office independently owned and operated.
MORTGAGES
MORTGAGES
ONE MILLION DOLLAR$ TO LEND Talk to Us
Portage and Main
Havelock- Great for seniors! One bedroom on ground level. $700; 2 bedroom on main floor, $730. Centrally located. Controlled access to quiet building. Appliances, storage unit, parking and laundry incl. Utilities extra 705-778-5442.
Trenton West Side
1 BDRM $700. 2 BDRMS $800.
Call 905-269-7335 905-355-1237
Fantastic 1 & 2 bdrm suites. Styles for every renter! Laundry rm, prkg, events, on-site mgmt.
Property Management 613-392-2601
Bay Terrace Apartments 334 Dundas St. E. COME SEE! RENOâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;D bach, 1 & 2, GREAT VALUE! Be WOWED by our amenities: INDOOR pool, gym, laundry rm, BBQ area and MORE!
COME SEE!
Business startup, maintenance, or expansion
We sell bulk honey in your containers, prepackaged liquid and creamed honey, wedding favours, buckwheat honey, beeswax skin creams & lip balms, candles, pollen, maple syrup, honey butter, gifts and more.
Open Saturdays only, 10 am-4pm.
4595 $ 22900 $
CL443627
613-395-2857 1-800-290-3496
91 Front Ave. W. (OFFICE)
Downtown Store Front & Apartments
NEW APPLIANCES
Your local DEALER
WOOD HEAT SOLUTIONS www.chesher.ca
Brockville Apts.
Colborne
Stoves, washers, dryers, freezers, 3 months old & up. Sold with written guarantee. Fridges $100. and up.
WITH A SAVINGS UP TO $700 ON SELECTED MODELS
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DONâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;T MISS OUT!
FOR RENT
CL451625
Starting at
6,400
$
OUTDOOR FURNACES
FARM
CL460634
CENTRAL BOILER OUTDOOR WOOD FURNACES Delivery and maintenance package included. Limited time offer. Instant rebates up to $1,000.
LOOK NO FURTHER!
CL451669
BELLEVILLE 8 month sublet. Top floor; balcony, great water view, parking included. Immediate possession, 1 mth free. New tractor parts- 1000s of mynewapt@bell.net parts for most makes. Savings. Service manuals. Our Trenton room for rent, 40th year. 16385 Telephone $125/week. Cable and Road, Brighton. www. utilities included. Suitable diamondfarmtractorparts.com for working person only. 6 1 3 - 4 7 5 - 1 7 7 1 , First and last weeks. Sid1-800-481-1353. ney St. 613-965-5731.
BRIGHTON DOWNTOWN
since 1985
CL447164
Wanted: Standing timber, mature hard/softwood. Also wanted, natural stone, cubicle or flat, any size. 613-968-5182.
FOR RENT
FOR RENT
Kenmau Ltd.
CL455179
Standing timber, hard maple, soft maple, red and white oak, etc. Quality workmanship guaranteed. 519-777-8632 .
from Belleville. Rubber matted box stalls, nylon electro braid fence, new 50â&#x20AC;&#x2122; round pen, daily turn out. Hay and stall bedding (shavings) included. Indoor board $270/mth. Outdoor board $195/mth. Call Jessie at 613-848-9145
FOR RENT
Bachelor, 1 & 2 bedrooms with fridge & stove. $525-$675 plus utilities
CL458109
son, Kingston 613-449-1668 Sales RepFARM resentative Rideau Town and Country Realty Ltd, Brokerage 613-273-5000. HORSE BOARDING 5 min
CONSOLIDATE Debts Mortgages to 90% No income, Bad credit OK! Better Option Mortgage #10969 1-800-282-1169 www.mortgageontario.com
FOR RENT
FOR SALE
Northumberland CFDC 905 372 8315 financingandstrategy.com
Ideal for Seniors or retired couples.
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 CALL 1-800-706-4459 9am - -5pm 9am 5pm 613-475-3793 1-800-706-4459 613-475-3793 9am - -5pm 9am 5pm www.pradacourt.com www.pradacourt.com 613-475-3793 9am - 5pm www.pradacourt.com www.pradacourt.com www.pradacourt.com
Kenmau Ltd.
BELLEVILLE (Lingham St.)
Bachelor apartment with fridge, stove & water included. $650/mth + heat & hydro
(William St.)
2 Bedroom apartment on upper floor. Fridge, Stove, water and heat included. $750/mth + hydro
STIRLING (North St.)
Upper 1 bedroom apartment in downtown Stirling. Fridge, stove, heat & water included. $675/mth + hydro. 613-967-8654
Call Kenmau Ltd.
Property Management (Since 1985)
613-392-2601
CL446901
MORTGAGES
CL4455534
LIVESTOCK
CL455096
WANTED
Visit us online www.InsideBelleville.com Section B News - Thursday, May 21, 2015
B17
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To apply please send your resume and cover letter to: chr11@cruickshankgroup.com no later than May 31, 2015
CANCEL YOUR TIMESHARE. NO RISK program. STOP Mortgage & Maintenance Payments Today. 100% Money Back Guarantee. FREE Consultation. Call us NOW. We can Help! 1-888-356-5248
HELP WANTED 2 EMPLOYEES REQUIRED for food trailer. Must be available to work weekends and must be able to travel. 905-355-2000 AAAbsolute Property Maintenance. Marmoraâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Residential Yard Work Services. (Residential and Commercial). Good Rates. Please call Adam 647-780-2005.
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED CL462023
HELP WANTED
TRAVEL/VACAT/COTTG
Assistant for Chiropractic Clinic (approx 18 hours/week), training provided. Please send resume to Box 3081, Brighton, ON K0K 1H0.
www.cruickshankgroup.com
HELP WANTED
Brighton, breathe taking lakeview property for sale, build your dream home, on 1 1/3 acre land, 30 seconds from Hwy #2, surveyed & well. Call for info 613-475-1445.
ROADS SUPERVISOR The City of Quinte West Public Works & Environmental Services Roads Division is currently inviting applications for a Roads Supervisor. Reporting to the Manager of Outdoor Operations, the Roads Supervisor is accountable for providing direction and instruction in the repair and maintenance of our road system. The Roads Supervisor will also carry out operational and maintenance activities related to the road system. The ideal candidate will have a minimum of five (5) years related experience in a Municipal Public Works environment, coupled with at least two (2) years direct supervisory experience as a Supervisor directing, organizing, scheduling and managing unionized staff. This position will require knowledge and experience with equipment utilized in the road system, roads, bridges, water mains, sanitary and storm sewers, sidewalks, curb and gutters, drainage systems, traffic signage and markings of a municipality. Demonstrated leadership, communication, decision-making and public relations skills are essential, along with being capable of issuing clearly understood written and oral instructions. The applicant must ensure that the terms of the Occupational Health and Safety Act and any City Policies are observed on the work site at all times, and provide, as required and in conjunction with the Manager, 24 hour year-round emergency standby and maintain, as required, twenty-four (24) hour winter patrol. The position will support the Manager with assigning work to staff; prioritizing assignments taking into account demand and budget constraints. The position will also be required to compile records pertaining to resources and activities completed and forward time sheets, accounts and vouchers to the Manager for approval and payment. The applicant is also expected to be responsible in conjunction with the Manager for the operation of the road crews and the road division in the absence of the Manager of Outdoor Operations. The position will require a minimum grade 12 graduation Diploma. A valid Class G, valid DZ with Air Brake Certification Driverâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Licence and a safe driving record are required. The ideal candidate will hold the CRS (Certified Road Supervisor) designation and Urban experience would be preferred. Additionally, comprehensive knowledge of the Occupational Health and Safety Act and knowledge of Ontario Regulations pertaining to roads construction and maintenance and traffic standards is required. Remuneration: 2015 Non-union Band 8 - $74,229 to $82,475 Qualified applicants are invited to submit a resume clearly marked: â&#x20AC;&#x153;Application: Roads Supervisorâ&#x20AC;? in the subject line by 4:30 p.m. Monday, June 1, 2015 to hr@quintewest.ca We thank all applicants for their interest and advise that only those candidates selected for an interview will be contacted. Personal information is collected under the authority of the Municipal Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act and is used to determine eligibility for potential employment. In accordance with the Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act, the City of Quinte West is pleased to accommodate individual needs of applicants with disabilities within the recruitment process. Please call 613-392-2841 (4489) or email the above if you require an accommodation to ensure your participation in the recruitment and selection process. B18
Section B News - Thursday, May 21, 2015
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
EARN UP TO
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
$400
CASH DAILY
FT & PT Outdoors Spring/Summer
Work Seeking Honest Hard Working Staff
PROPERTYSTARSJOBS.COM HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
Professionals Needed. Looking for career-minded persons willing to speak to small groups or do oneon-one Presentations locally. Part Time or Full Time. A car and internet access are necessary. Training and ongoing support provided. Build financial security. Paid daily. Call Diana 1.866.306.5858
Sell it fast! 613-966-2034
ARCHER TRUCKING is looking for
Owner Operators and Company Drivers US capable Pneumatic tank operation an asset, but not required.
Competitive wage and benefit package. Please forward resume to: Box 160, Norwood, ON, K0L 2V0 fax: 705-639-2422 or dheayn@archertrucking.com
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
Township of Stirling-Rawdon is currently seeking applicants for the position of
Summer Student
within the Public Works Department Applicant must be a student returning to post-secondary education in September 2015. Interested parties should forward their resume and references, in a sealed envelope clearly marked Summer Student, to the undersigned no later than Monday, May 25, 2015 at 2 p.m. The current hourly rate for the position is $11.15.
Marmora Pastoral Charge is looking for a Secretary. Must have computer skills. Three days a week max of 10hrs a week. Please send resume via email to sectmpcucc@bellnet.ca. (Not a job for a student)
Note: Only those applicants selected for an interview will be contacted.
Charles Croll, Public Works Manager Box 40, Stirling, Ontario K0K 3E0 (may be dropped off at 14 Demorest Road) or email to cao@stirling-rawdon.com with the subject line: Summer Student
NEEDED
Monday - Friday 8:00a.m. - 5:00p.m.
BUSINESS SERVICES Ken Chard Construction. Renovations, decks, siding, sidewalks, fences, ceramic, windows, painting etc. Free estimates. Call: 613-398-7439. Rogerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Mobile Wash and Detailing: For all your washing needs. Auto, Boats, RVs, Homes, Decks, Patios, Driveways, Heavy Equipment, and Monument cleaning. Also, Store Front, and Graffiti cleaning. Bug Spraying available. Free Estimates Home 613-962-8277 or Cell 613-885-1908.
FLOORS & MORE
Hardwood Floor Installation & Resurfacing, All Ceramics, Your Light Revovations & Upgrades. Over 30 years experience. Please call for free estimate.
613-243-5605
THE STATION RESTAURANT is looking for cooks. Apply in person at 30 Ottawa Street East, Havelock or call 705-778-1077
PART-TIME
HELP WANTED Ages 25+ Clean abstract OPP Report For further info. call
Deal Taxi Ltd. 705-778-7979
between 7 a.m.-4 p.m. leave name & number
Stirling Manor Nursing Home
Drop Resume into Rod in our Service Department. No phone calls please.
Forest Silviculture lawn mowing, hedge & shrub trimming, gardening, Call Brian 613-392-5626.
HELP WANTED
Licensed Auto Body Technician with current license status. Continuous Training, BeneďŹ ts available. Send Resume to: Cobourg Car Star 1056 Elgin St. W. Cobourg, Ont. K9A 5V5 or email to: Cobourg@carstar.ca
SERVICE ADVISOR
WORK WANTED
CL451627
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REAL ESTATE
is accepting applications for Registered Practical Nurses Permanent Part Time and Casual Positions Must have good standing with the College of Nurses of Ontario. Experience working with seniors in long term care and ability to perform tasks that are necessary for the position (i.e. lifting/transferring residents) required. Please forward resume and cover letter to: Lesli Anawati Director of Nursing 218 Edward St. Box 220 Stirling, ON K0K 3E0 lanawati@bellnet.ca
CL455214
HELP WANTED
CL455189
HELP WANTED
CL455222
HELP WANTED
GARAGE SALE
GARAGE SALE Yard Sale
HUGE COMMUNITY GARAGE SALE
Building materials, tools, furniture, house items. Saturday, May 23 7 am - 12 71 Towerline Rd Off County Rd 30 1 1/2 km south of Codrington
Brighton-by-the-Bay
Saturday, May 30 at 8:00 am Rain or Shine
Yard Sale, Saturday, May 30, 4 Cooper Court, Brighton, 8 a.m.-1 p.m. Antiques, Sunice jackets, TVs, lamp, unit, etc. 613-439-8942.
Great bargains to be found!
CL462086
Entry from Habour Street at Mills or Ontario Street at Raglan or Presqu’ile Gate.
GARAGE SALE
GARAGE SALE
GARAGE SALE
GIGANTIC YARD AND PLANT SALE
YARD SALE 217 Bellevue Rd Belleville Friday, May 22 @ 1 pm Saturday, May 23 Sunday, May 24 Household Goods etc.
YARD SALE Saturday, May 23 48 Friendly Acres Rd. East of Hastings 8 am - 1 pm
YARD SALE 246 & 247 Byron St
Multi-family sale, 16 Anna Court, Trenton, May 23, 8 a.m.-1 p.m. Baby items, Red Rose Tea collectibles, furniture, antiques, household items and much more.
of household items and plants too! Something for everyone Rain or shine
Trinity-St. Andrew’s United Church Community Hall 56 Prince Edward St. Brighton
Fri., May 22 (8-5) Sat., May 23 (8-1)
Trenton Saturday, May 23 8 am Household items, furniture, tools, antiques
PLEASE NOTE: BOOKING DEADLINE FOR ADS IS MONDAYS AT 3 P.M. CALL 613-966-2034
Network DRIVERS WANTED
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
STREET FLEA MARKET
ALL NEW Furniture & Antique Store NOW OPEN OPEN
ALL NEW STREET MOTORS SALES DIVISION 613-205-1212 NOW OPEN
7 DAYS 9am to 4pm 613-284-2000 streetfleamarket.net 5 MILES SOUTH OF SMITHS FALLS CORNER OF HWY 15 & BAY ROAD
FINANCIAL SERVICES
$$ MONEY $$ 1ST, 2ND & 3RD MORTGAGES FOR ANY PURPOSE '(%7 &2162/,'$7,21 %$' &5(',7 7$; 25 0257*$*( $55($56 '(&5($6( 3$<0(176 UP TO 75% 6(/) (03/2<(' 12 3522) 2) ,1&20(
INSURANCE
ADVERTISING
CALL TODAY for a fast & friendly insurance quote and receive a $20 Petro-Canada Card. No purchase necessary. 1-800-665-SAVE (1-800-665-7283) Mention Promo Code: GET20 *limit one per person
WORLD CLASS CRUISING CLOSE TO HOME! The hassle free way to travel 3,4,5 or 6 Nights in Private Staterooms INCLUDES: 6+25( (;&856,216 *5($7 0($/6 1,*+7/< (17(57$,10(17 AND MUCH MORE… StLawrenceCruiseLines.com
253 Ontario Street, Kingston, Ontario (TICO # 2168740)
1-877-588-0057 ext. 4612 for more details on each position.
26th Annual HAVELOCK COUNTRY JAMBOREE - Big & Rich, Clint Black, Gord Bamford, Brett Kissel, Tanya Tucker, Joe Diffei, Corb Lund, Wes Mack, Rhonda Vincent, Jason D. Williams, Stampeders, Autumn Hill & Many More. Canada’s Largest Live Country Music & Camping Festival - AUG. 13-16, 2015, Over 25 Acts - BUY TICKETS 1.800.539.3353, www.HavelockJamboree.com.
FOR SALE
Mississauga terminal also looking for licensed LCV Drivers.
BUSINESS OPPS. $$$ MAKE FAST CASH - Start Your Own Business - Driveway Sealing Systems, Lawn Aerating Units, Possible Payback in 2 Weeks! Part-Time/ Full-Time. Quote Ontario Newspapers. CALL Today Toll-Free 1-800465-0024, www.protectasphalt.com.
PERSONALS A LWAY S L O O K I N G F O R T H E RIGHT PERSON to share your life with? Tired of weekends & evenings alone? MISTY RIVER INTRODUCTIONS is Ontario’s Traditional Matchmaker. 613-257-3531, www.mistyriverintros.com.
WWW.SEAGRAVEBUILDINGS.COM 1-888-368-9088 STRAIGHT WALL STEEL BUILDING BLOWOUT SALE Don’t Miss Out Concrete, Foundations, Doors, Erection One Call & We Do it all! 100% CANADIAN MADE INFO@SEAGRAVEBUILDINGS.COM SAWMILLS from only $4,397 - MAKE M O N E Y & S AV E M O N E Y w i t h your own bandmill - Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. FREE Info & DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com/400OT 1-800-566-6899 Ext:400OT. 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 613735-1928.
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!
VACATION/TRAVEL
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B19
EVENTS Events
BATAWA Landscape Painting Classes, six Wednesday evenings starting June 3 at the Batawa Community Centre led by Suso Bach. $150 (or $30 per lesson). For more info or to register, contact Judi Clark, 613398-6111 or cdc@batawa.ca. A portion of proceeds to new Batawa playground.
BELLEVILLE The Canadian Hearing Society offers Walk In Wednesdays from 10 am-noon and 2-4pm. Speak to a Hearing Care Counsellor. No appointment necessary. Bayview Mall, 470 Dundas St. E Belleville The Belleville & District Olde Tyme Fiddlers Assoc. party Sunday, May 24, Belleville Fish & Game Hall, Elmwood Dr., 1 PM. Round and square dancing. Open Mic. Lunch served after the party. Eastminster United Church Movie Night, Monday, May 25, 7pm: “Without A Clue”. Donations to Belleville Community Trust. BOOK SALE, Saturday May 23, 9am-1pm. Bridge St. Church, 60 Bridge St. E, Belleville. Large selection books, vinyl records, DVD’s & CD’s. Free admission. Yard and Plant Sale, and BBQ, Quinte Bible Chapel, 188 Victoria Ave, Belleville. Saturday, May 23, 8am-1pm. Rain or shine. Dance to Social and Ballroom music, Friday May 22 with the Quinte Ballroom Dance Club, Masonic Hall, corner of Foster and Dundas, Belleville, 8 pm to midnight. Light lunch served. Cost $10.00/member couple and $20.00 /guest couple. Couples only. Info: Don at 613 392-7450. Belleville Plein Air Festival, May 28-May 31. Artist reception, Friday, May 29, John M. Parrott Gallery. $30 registration for artists. Info: downtownbelleville. ca or BDIA at 612 968-2242 or bdia@ downtownbelleville.ca BOOK SALE : Saturday May 23, 9am1pm. Bridge St. Church, 60 Bridge St. E, Belleville. Large selection of books, vinyl records, DVD’s & CD’s. Free admission. Metropolitan Silver Band concert, Sat., May 30, 7 p.m, Bridge St. United Church, Belleville. Tickets $25 ($15 for students) from the church office or online at www.bridgestreetchurch.com The CN Pensioners’ Association, Belleville and District dinner meeting, Thursday May 28, Travelodge Hotel, Belleville, at 12 pm. All CN pensioners, their spouses, widows and new members welcome. Call 613- 395-3250 by May 24 if not contacted Sat May 23, 15th annual Spring Sprint in support of the Canadian Brain Tumour Foundation and Belleville Support Group. 2.5 or 5k walk / fun run, Zwicks Centennial Park. Registration 8:30, 10am start. Donate online at http://www.springsprint. ca/site/TR?fr_id=1201&pg=entry or at the Park. Fun festivities, Fab Music, Face painting and Food May 23, Sans Souci, 8pm, hear Ariana Nasr interpret the songs and legend of
B20
Edith Piaf, $20. Tickets at Sweet Escape Cafe and Quinte Arts Council. Info: Gary Magwood 613 849 1976. Attention high-school students! Why not join the Belleville General Hospital Auxiliary and do your volunteer hours over the summer? Good selection of days and times in our retail venues. Info: 613 969-7400 ext: 2297 Belleville Garden Club meets the 4th Tuesday of the month, 7-9 pm, Moira Secondary School, 275 Farley Ave, Belleville. Info 613-966-7455. Bring the Bulls back project community yardsale Saturday May 23, 8am to 2pm, Hillcrest Community Centre, 69 Centre St. Herbert’s Fries and Family Fun Inflatables will be on location. A service of celebration will be held at St. Mark’s United Church, 237 Cannifton Rd N, Sunday, May 24, 3p.m. to recognize the first church in Kente Presbytery to become an affirming ministry. We welcome everyone to join us. TGIF Food Ministry Program. Every Friday, 2-4 p.m., Bridge St. United Church, 60 Bridge St. E. (side door). Nutritious, delicious, church-prepared and frozen meals. Register on your first visit by providing ID for each meal you wish to pick up. We invite & welcome all. Gentle yoga for everyone, Fridays 10:00 am, Eastminster United Church, 432 Bridge St. Belleville. To register call Sandra (613) 743-3318. Free Seniors Exercise Classes – VON SMART classes. Gentle and progressive and can be done standing or seated. Info: 1-888-279-4866 ex 5350. 4th Friday of month: Karaoke with Rita and John 6:30 - 10:30 pm, Belleville Legion. Age of majority event. Euchre/Bid Euchre Cards, 4th Monday of month, College Hill United Church 16 North Park St, Belleville, 7 pm. St. Mark’s United Church 237 Cannifton Rd. N., offers Foot Care Clinic - 4th Thursday of month. VON basic, Advanced and Diabetic Foot care. For appointment call VON at 1-888-279-4866 ex 5346 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. 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. 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. 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 Stroke Support Programs: Facilitated survivor, caregiver, and couples support
Section B News - Thursday, May 21, 2015
groups. All groups meet on a monthly basis in Belleville. Living with Stroke® Series– a six week course focusing on life after a stroke. Info: Lee 613-969-0130 ext. 5207 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 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. Food Addicts in Recovery Anonymous, Wednesdays, 7 p.m., St. Columba Presbyterian Church, 520 Bridge St E, Belleville for those suffering from overeating, food obsession, under-eating, or bulimia. No dues or fees for members. Info: Susan at 613-471-0228 or Hilly at 613-354-6036 or visit foodaddicts.org. 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.
BRIGHTON 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. Apple Route Grannies meet the second Saturday of each month, Trinity-St. Andrew’s United Church Hall, Prince Edward St, 9 a.m. Supporting the Stephen Lewis Foundation African Grannies. Info: 613-475-5260. Parent Support Group, Brighton, last Thursday of each month, 6:30-8pm, Autism Ontario/Autisme Ontario East & South East Region. Info: (613) 968-5554 The Brighton Clothing Depot, 5 Craig Blvd., Unit 2, Brighton. On May 23rd, from 10-1 will celebrate one year at new location and 50 years in total helping the community. Everyone welcome. Stamps, Coins and Postcard Fair, Saturday, May 23 , 10:30 A.M. - 3:30 P.M., Brighton’s King Edward Community Centre / Hockey Rink Complex, 75 Elizabeth St. / Hwy #2 E, Brighton. Free admission and parking. Mosaic Art with Anja Hertle. Create a 6”x 6”mosaic using recycled materials. All materials are supplied. Wednesday, May 27, 6-8pm. Fee: $10.00. CCN Office in Brighton. Info: Gail at Community Care
Northumberland (613) 475-4190 Saturday May 30, 2nd annual Bike For The Beacon motorcycle rally. Riders register at 9:30 am, 10 Alice St. Unit 5, Brighton. Tour Prince Edward County. Prizes, T-shirts, Barbecue, and more. Riders $30, passengers $15. On Facebook ‘The Beacon Youth Center’ or beaconinbrighton. blogspot.ca for info 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
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 Kite Day, Sunday, May 24, south of Ferris Park’s main entrance, 474 County Rd. 8. No charge. Donations appreciated. BBQ food and drinks may be purchased. 10a.m.-3p.m. Info Barb at 705-632-0894 or www.friendsofferris.ca. Continued on page B21
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EVENTS CAMPBELLFORD Campbellford Salvation Army Thrift store offers a free hot lunch every Friday. Also, Silent Auction the last Friday of each month Campbellford Baptist Church, 166 Grand Rd., Sunday May 24, 7pm. “Our Journey Calls” musical show featuring Kelly Nelles and family. Refreshments and a time of fellowship to follow. Diabetes Education Drop In, Campbellford Memorial Hospital, Rm 249. Diabetes Management, Information, Recipes. May 25, 10-11 am. No appointment necessary. Free. OPEN HOUSES begin Friday, May 22 at 6:45 p.m., Campbellford Lawn Bowling Club. Try the game, enjoy refreshments and enter our special draw. Every Friday evening until June 26. Please arrive no later than 7:30. Info: Joan at 705-696-1525. Baptist Busy Bee Opening Thursday May 14 at 9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. 166 Grand Rd. Campbellford Solo Friendship Group for Solo adults aged 45 and up looking for friendship. Wednesdays 1-2:30 pm, Riverview Restaurant, Campbellford
COBOURG 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 Men’s Group, every Thursday, 1pm, Cobourg Retirement Residence, 310 Division St, Cobourg. To register: Community Care Northumberland: 905-372-7356.
CODRINGTON Euchre, every Friday, 7 pm. Codrington Community Centre. All welcome. The annual Codrington Community Yard Sale, BBQ and Bake Sale May 23, 8am, Community Centre. For info or to rent a table for $10, call 613-475-1842
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). Brighton Relay for Life yard sale, 188 King St East, Colborne, Saturday May 23, 8am - 2pm
FOXBORO Diners Club Thurlow: Every 4th Wednesday from 12-2:00pm, Gerry Masterson Community Centre, 516 Harmony Rd. $8/member, $9/non-member. Reservations required. Info: 613-969-0130. Auction, Thursday May 28, 6:30 pm. Preview at 5:45 pm. New items, gift certificates, talents, treats and pies. Emmanuel United Church, 458 Ashley St., Foxboro. $2 entry includes bid card and coffee. Info or to donate: Donna Kennedy, 613-477-2338.
FRANKFORD Frankford Figure Skating Club Bottle Drive and BBQ, Dr. McMullen Recreation Centre, May 23, 10am-2pm. Accepting all alcoholic bottles/cans. Leave bottles beside your garage or before May 23, call Tanya MacDonald 613-394-1016. Free Senior’s workout Mondays and Wednesdays, 1 pm, Frankford Legion. To register: 1-888-279-4866 Ext 5350 Frankford Legion: Moonshot Euchre, Tuesdays 1pm and last Sunday of month, noon. Senior’s Euchre, Wednesdays 1pm. Open Snooker Thursdays 6pm.
GLEN MILLER
chre, 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.
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 IVANHOE Flea Market at Christ Church Glen Ladies Meeting hosted by Ivanhoe Miller every Saturday, 8:00-12:00. Rent a Wesleyan Standard Church, Saturday. space for $20.00. Info: 613-394-4532. May 23, 10 AM. Special Guest - Cecilia Flint. Refreshments to follow. Come and HASTINGS bring a friend. YMCA Northumberland Ontario Early Years Centre, 6 Albert St E, Hastings. MADOC Open 5 days a week. Info: www.ymcanLine Dancing, Every Thurs. 10:30orthumberland.com or 705-696-1353 11:30 am., St. John’s Anglican Church Salvation Army Lunch, 11:30AM Hall, 115 Durham St. N. Madoc. Info: – 1:00PM on the 2nd and the 4th Friday Carol Cooper 613-473-1446 of each month, Civic Centre, Hastings. Madoc Seniors Club Bid Euchre, Soup, sandwiches, salad, dessert, coffee, every Tuesday, 1 pm, downstairs at the tea and juice. Everyone welcome Library (elevator accessible). 2nd Tuesday Saturday, May 23, 8 am-2 pm, St. Pot Luck at noon prior to Bid Euchre George’s Church, Hastings, Outdoor Flea Roast Beef Dinner, Thursday, May 28, Market & Bake Sale, rental tables $5.00. 4-7 pm, Madoc Township Hall, Eldorado. Pancake breakfast being served, $5.00. Adults $12, Children 6-12 $6, under 5 TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly) meet- free. Tickets at the door. ings Wednesdays at the Trinity United Toonie Lunch and Loonie Auction Church, Hastings. Weigh-in 5:15-6:15pm Sat. May 23, St. John’s Anglican Church and meeting 6:30-7:30 pm. Join anytime. Hall 115 Durham St. N. Lunch 12 pm, $2 For info Kathy (705) 696-3359 Auction at 1 pm, $1 per bid. Hastings Legion: Saturday May Benefit dance for fire victims Linda 23, Fred Crate Memorial Euchre TournaHagerman and Gerry Young, Saturday May ment, $10/person. Bring your own partner. 23, Madoc Legion, 8 p.m. to 1 a.m. $5.00/ Register 12-12:45, play 1 pm. Open to the person. Silent Auction, 50/50 Tickets, public. Info: Branch at 705-696-2363 Grocery basket. Contributions to a light Free Seniors Exercise Classes – VON lunch would be appreciated. SMART classes. Gentle and progressive BADMINTON every Tuesday and and can be done standing or seated. Info: Thursday, 7-9:30 p.m., Centre Hastings 1-888-279-4866 ex 5350. Secondary School. Coaching for new and Sunday May 24, 1/2 Chicken dinner Junior players Tuesdays 6-7 p.m. Info: with all the fixings, Hastings Legion. Tick- Terry at 613-473-5662 or visit http://www. ets now on sale at the bar. Cost is $12. centrehastingsbadminton.com/. Line dancing, Wednesdays 10am, Madoc Active Living Exercise: $4. Yoga, Wednesdays 1pm, $3. Belly Wednesdays, 10:30 am. Trinity United Dancing, Thursdays, 10am, $3. Knitting Church, 76 St Lawrence St E. Program Club, Thursdays 1pm. Wool donations opened to seniors and adults with physical appreciated. Hula Hooping, Fridays, 2pm, disabilities. Contact Community Care for $3. Civic Centre, 6 Albert St. E., Hastings. Central Hastings 1-800-554-1564 if not Info: Community Care 705-696-3891 a member of this program
HAVELOCK 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 Havelock Seniors Club weekly events: Monday: Cribbage and Bid Eu-
MARMORA Weekly Euchre, Fridays, Deloro Hall, 7 pm. Bring light lunch. Co-ordinated by Marmora Crowe Valley Lions Bingo every Monday (except holidays), Marmora Legion. Early bird games start at 7 pm.
NORWOOD
Take Off Pounds Sensibly (TOPS) Tuesdays, St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church, Norwood. Weigh in from 5:30, meeting at 7 pm. Elaine 705-639-5710 Preschool Storytime, Norwood Public Library. Every Friday, 10-11 am. Story, craft and snack. 705-639-2228 or www.anpl.org The Norwood Beautification Committee Bid Euchre, the second Sunday of every month, 1 pm, Norwood Legion. Lunch will be available.
P.E. COUNTY Albury Friendship Group - Quilts for sale each Wed 10 am - 12 noon. Albury Church Rednersville Rd. Proceeds to local charities for women. CARP Greater Bay of Quinte Area Chapter 39 : “History as a Business in Prince Edward County” presented by Peter Lockyer. Tuesday, June 16, 2-4 pm, The Community Centre, Wellington on the Lake, 14 Empire Boulevard, Wellington. Admission is free; donations accepted. Light refreshments. St. Andrew’s Anglican Church Roast Beef Supper, Sunday, May 24, Ameliasburgh Town Hall. 4-6 p.m. Adults $14 children 6-11 yrs. $5. 613-968-3320
ROSLIN Plant & Garden Art Sale, Sat May 23, 8am-12pm, Trinity United Church Roslin
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 Plant, Yard and Bake Sale, Saturday May 23, St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church, 8 am-2 pm. Corner of Mill and Edward Street in Stirling. May 23, Spring Plant Sale, Stirling & District Horticultural Society. Perennials, annuals, seedlings, seeds, and gardening accents, “Expert Advice” & gardening tips. Covered bridge, Mill Street, Stirling. Saturday, May 23, 8-11:00 am. The Stirling Festival Theatre presents HonkyTonk Gal the Loretta Lynn Tribute, Friday May 22, 2pm & 8pm. Roast beef buffet pre show dinner at 6pm in our Upper Hall for $25. Please book ahead. Info: Box Office 613-395-2100 or 1-877-312-1162. www.stirlingfestivaltheatre.com
TRENTON
Saturday, May 23, 8 AM-2 PM, Bethel Pentecostal Church (corner of Herman & Dundas St, Trenton) yard sale. Rain or shine. Trenton Al-Anon Family Group, every Wednesday, 8 p.m., Trenton United Church, 85 Dundas St. E. Trenton, Tel: 866-951-3711 Trenton Lions Club is looking for new members. Meetings 2nd and 4th Wed of each month, Sept to July. Info: Member Chairman Diane Gardy 613 392 2939 Trenton Knights of Columbus, 57 Stella Cres.: Sunday & Wednesday Night Bingos 7pm. Cards on sale 5.30pm. Everyone welcome Trenton Legion Branch 110--check out our website for our Events calendar: www.rcl110.ca
TWEED Line Dancing, Every Tues., 10:3011:30 am, Hungerford Hall, Tweed. Info: Carol Cooper 613-473-1446 May 23 & 30 Salt Dough Crafts, 12-1 pm, Tweed Legion. Pre-register for this event. Attendance for both dates is necessary due to baking and decorating. Tweed Legion will be offering roast and steaks at their “Cow and Sow” Meat Draw, May 23. Toss a dart to win. Info: moc.br428@gmail.com Tweed Lions Charity Jamboree ,Sunday May 24 1- 4 pm at the Tweed Agricultural Building, L A Country Band, Open Mic, Dancing, Canteen, Admission $ 6.00 Club Donation to the Legion. FISH FRY, Sunday, May 24, St. Matthew’s Hall, Marlbank, 4–6:30 pm. Adults: $15.00, Children 6-12: $7.00, Under 6: Free. Cooked by Mike Mundell. Tweed Library: Quilting Club, every 4th Friday, 10:15-1:30. Fee $2.00. Every Friday, 2-4pm, Knitting Club. Beginners welcome. Every Tuesday, 1-4pm, Bridge or Euchre. Refreshments. Fee $2.00
TYENDINAGA Community Care Closet Thrift shop, 393 Main St. Deseronto, open Tuesday through Saturday from 10:00 until 4:00 50’s night Sat. May 23, 4:30-8:00 pm. 50’s music, and old cars. Shannonville Fairgrounds, 363 McFarlane Rd Melrose. Info call Debbie 613-477-2485.
WARKWORTH Canadian Cancer Society, Warkworth Branch: Euchre, 4th Tuesday every month, 7:30 pm. $3 includes coffee and sandwiches.Everyone welcome. Warkworth Legion. Info: Kathy Ellis (705) 924-9116 Warkworth Library Tot Time Storyhour, Every Tuesday at 10:30. Crafts, stories, songs, snack. All are welcome
Toastmasters International, Trenton Library. Every 2nd and 4th Wednesday, 6:30-8 pm. New members and guests welcome. JOIN Quinte West’s Kente Kiwanis. Meetings held every Thursday morning. Everyone welcome. Call Secretary John Eden at 613-394-0316 for more info. Have a non-profit event? Trenton VON Monday Mornings. Email your information to VON Foot Care Clinic: Basic, Advanced debbie.johnston@metroland.com and Diabetic Foot Care (Fee for Service). Deadline is Mondays at 3 p.m. Please note: ads For appointment call 1-888-279-4866 may be edited or omitted as space permits ex 5346 Section B News - Thursday, May 21, 2015
B21
Got Events?
D A E R SP E TH
Police Week marked by open house By Richard Turtle
News - Stirling - In recognition of Police Week, the Stirling-Rawdon Police Service hosted an open house last Saturday, offering tours, video presentations, information sessions and some practical advice about personal safety. Police Chief Dario Cecchin says the event was intended to provide residents with a glimpse behind the security glass and offer insights into police work, the equipment used and the services offered to citizens. And with the arrival of Police Week, he says, â&#x20AC;&#x153;it was a good opportunity to keep up our engagement with the public.â&#x20AC;? Held at the emergency services building from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Dixie Webb and two-year-old Dailyn got some friendly advice from SerCecchin and other SRPS officers offered geant Jim Orr during an open house at the Stirling-Rawdon police station information sessions on child car seat last weekend. and ATV safety with butter tarts from A Little Taste of Paradise as an added
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Wednesday, May 27, volunteers and enthusiasts will be on the street in Madoc for the season opening of the Madoc Village Classic Cruise Night. Proceeds from the biweekly gathering will go to support the Heart of Hastings Hospice serving residents of Central Hastings. The show starts at 5:30 p.m. with vintage car, truck and motorcycle classes. File Photo: Diane Sherman
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attraction. In addition, officers were administering the Child Identification Kit which contains valuable information in the event a child goes missing. Tours of the police facility were also conducted and, Cecchin says, the cells and surrounding area is of particular fascination for visitors who are always free to leave. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s the cells and that whole [processing] area. People just want to see it,â&#x20AC;? he says, adding that is also where much of the technical equipment, from fingerprint machines to breathalyzers, is located. Outside, officers were available to inspect car seats and ensure they conformed to present standards as well as provide other safety and security tips. Police Week, this year from May 11 to 15, has been observed in Canada since 1970.
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Section B - Thursday, May 21, 2015 B23
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IS HERE!
SEE PAGES 12 - 16 ",Ê"1,Ê 1 Ê INVENTORY
! NT H ABO O M UT OU A CH R LOWE MERS E O T ST PRICE GU S U C Y P ARANTEE... OVER 300 HAP
UP P TO
600
VEHICLES IN STOCK
14 TOYOTA CAMRY
£xÊ 91 Ê /,
23581, Auto, 4 dr, 4 cyl, Sedan, keyless entry, alloys, pwr roof, windows, locks, mirrors, height adj. seat, Bluetooth, AC, heated mirrors, cruise. 34,297 km
20,495 +HST 124.00
$
$
PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL BI-WEEKLY 0 DOWN +HST 96 MTHS @ 6.99%
23672, Auto, 4 dr, 4 cyl, Sedan, keyless entry, alloys, pwr roof, windows, locks, mirrors, height adj. seat, heated seats, AC, sat, Bluetooth, cruise. 18,853 km
17,995 +HST $109.00
$
15 SUBARU WRX
23652, Manual, 6 spd, 4 dr, 4 cyl, Sedan, keyless entry, alloys, height adj. seat, heated seats, AC, sat, reverse camera, Bluetooth, pwr windows, locks, mirrors, cruise, SIDrive. 7,186 km
39,995 +HST 251.58
$
$
Bi-WEEKLY 0 DOWN +HST 96 MTHS @ 6.99%
£xÊ ,9- ,Ê/E
23622, Auto, 4 dr, 6 cyl, keyless entry, alloys, pwr seats, windows, locks, mirrors, rear sliding doors, liftgate, height adj. seat, AC, sat, DVD, reverse camera, heated mirrors, cruise. 31,939 km
27,995 +HST 169.00
$
$
14 FORD ESCAPE
20,995 +HST 127.00 $
Bi-WEEKLY 0 DOWN +HST 96 MTHS @ 6.99%
PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL BI-WEEKLY 0 DOWN +HST 96 MTHS @ 6.99%
15 DODGE RAM
23648, Auto, 4 dr, 4 cyl, keyless entry, alloys, pwr seats, windows, locks, mirrors, height adj. seat, heated seats, mirrors, AC, sat, reverse camera, cruise, roof rack, tinted windows. 56,597 km
$
PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL BI-WEEKLY 0 DOWN +HST 96 MTHS @ 6.99%
23797, Auto, 4 dr, 8 cyl, keyless entry, crew cab, short bed, alloys, pwr seats, sliding rear window, windows, locks, mirrors, folding mirrors, height adj. seat, AC, sat, heated mirrors, 5 ft 5 box, tow/ haul pkg. 11,585 km
34,495 +HST 208.00
$
Because of our high sales volume, our Business Managers are equipped to offer the most aggressive financing rates & options available with flexible terms to fit your budget.
UP TO 600 CERTIFIED PRE-OWNED VEHICLES IN STOCK! 6692 HWY 62 BELLEVILLE, 1KM NORTH OF THE 401 HOURS: MON.-THURS. - 8AM-8PM, FRI. - 8AM-6PM, SAT. - 9AM-5PM, SUN. - 10AM-4PM
$
PREVIOUS DAILY RENTAL BI-WEEKLY 0 DOWN +HST 96 MTHS @ 6.99%
OPEN DAYS
8
A WEEK
777° 96 7 1/"° ÊUÊ/" Ê , Ê£ nÈÈ x { ÓÓÈÓ All payments are based on bi-weekly payments. All 2007, 2008, 2009 & 2010 – 60 mths: 2011 – 72 mths, 2012 & 2013 – 84 mths, 2014 & 2015 – 96 mths: P.P.S.A, License and taxes extra. EG: $10,000 + Taxes $1,300 + P.P.S.A. $65 = $11,365 financed over 60 mths at 6.99% = $117.34 Bi-Weekly with a cost of borrowing of $1,962.47 on approved credit. All cash deals are price of vehicle + taxes. Terms & rates are current at time of print. 0 Down + HST. Most 2014 & 2015 vehicles are former daily rentals. Bayview Auto is not responsible for any errors in pricing. See dealer for details.
B24 Section B - Thursday, May 21, 2015
BAYVIEW AUTO
MAY D 2015, PAGE 1