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R001
2424
937
TRENTON CANADIAN TIRE STORE HOURS:MON-FRI 7:30 am-9:00 pm
SATURDAY 7:30 am-9:00 pmSUNDAY 8:00 am-6:00 pm
THESE FOLLOWING SPECIALS ON SALE FRIDAY, NOV. 22nd to SUNDAY, NOV. 24th ONLY
SAVE 75% SAVE 60% SAVE 70%
SAVE 71%
SAVE 60%
SAVE 70%
SAVE 70%
SAVE 70% SAVE 60%
TEMPO 632T TREADMILL
5 DRAWER TOOL CHEST YADA BLUETOOTH
42" CEILING FAN
BABY BULLET
52" CEILING FAN
$39999
Reg. $159999
#84-0516
SALE
$6799 $1499Reg. $16999
#58-0833
Reg. $4999
#35-2519
SALE SALE
BABY BULLET STEAMER
6 QUART CROCK POT DANBY 7 CU.FT. FREEZER
$899
$3999
$2399
$4499$2999 $13299
Reg. $2999
#43-0690
Reg. $13999
#52-4748
Reg. $5999
#43-1753
Reg. $14999
#52-4749
Reg. $9999
#43-1691
Reg. $32999
#43-1847
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALESALE SALE
CSRCarlyProducerMark
ORIGINAL LAYOUTInitials: XXmm/dd/yy
LAYOUT REVISIONSInitials: XXmm/dd/yy
PRODUCT/COPY REVIEWInitials: XXmm/dd/yy
PRODUCT/COPY REVISIONSInitials: XXmm/dd/yy
PRICE CHECKInitials: pjmm/dd/yy
FRENCH TRANSLATION Initials: XXmm/dd/yy
FRENCH Q.C./REVISIONS Initials: XXmm/dd/yy
FINAL REVIEW ENGLISHInitials: XXmm/dd/yy
FINAL FRENCHInitials: XXmm/dd/yy
ENGLISH REVISIONS Initials: XXmm/dd/yy
FRENCH REVISIONSInitials: XXmm/dd/yy
PRODUCTION ENGLISH PROOF FRENCH PROOF
Art COM
Trim-10˝ x 21˝, Image-91⁄4˝ x 201⁄4˝Art Base ENG
Art ENG
LIFETIMEWARRANTY ON
MOTOR & FRAME
LIFETIME*
WARRANTY
*Bonus Card to be redeemed on future
purchases at Canadian Tire. See store for details.
when you buy Keurig Elite Brewing System 43-0436-2
PLUS GET A$10
BONUS CARD*
HAVE IT INSTALLED
See in store for details or call 1-855-682-HOME (4663)
SAVE
40%
SAVE
65%
SAVE
70%
SAVE
$100
Text COM ENG
Reload 3
32˝ LCD
SAVE
55%
4 DAYS ONLY!
CANADIAN TIREBLACK FRIDAY STARTS WITHWITHWITH
SAVE$300
SAVE$100
SAVE
$110LIMITED STOCK
SAVE
75%
SAVE UP TO$170
DE
149-
13 0
(ex
NS
)
Zone 0(ex NS)
DE149-01Zone 0(ex NS) Group 1
KITCHENAID STAND MIXERS Professional 5+ stand mixer in assorted colours. 450W motor. 5-qt stainless-steel bowl, dough hook, fl at beater and wire whip. 43-0686X. Reg 599.99...339.99Taxes payable on price before rebate. Visit www.kitchenaidpromotions.com for rebate & offer details.
NOW$ 28999*
*After $50 mail-in rebate
DECORATE YOUR HOME FOR CHRISTMAS Noma 3-piece set includes prelit wreath and two prelit potted trees. Battery operated. 50 lights each tree. 151-1145-0. Reg 119.99.
NOW
3999
MOTOMASTER FORMULA 1 SYNTHETIC MOTOR OIL 10W30, 5W30 and 5W20 grades available. 5L jug. 28-8712X. Reg 40.99.
NOW
1799
HORIZON CT5.4 TREADMILL PerfectFLEX™ Plus cushioning. 2.25 CHP motor. 0.5 to 10 mph and a 0-10% incline range. 5˝ display screen. Models may vary by store. 84-0517-2. Reg 1899.99.
NOW
52999
RCA 32˝ LCD HDTV 720p resolution. 3HDMI. 450:1 Contrast Ratio. 8ms response time. 45-2072-0. Reg 299.99.
NOW
19899
DEWALT 20V LITHIUM MAX DRILL/DRIVER KIT 1⁄2˝ drill/driver with 2-speed transmission. 1⁄4˝ impact driver with LED. 2 batteries, fast charger and case. 54-3177-4. Reg 299.99.
NOW
19999
STANLEY FATMAX 229-PC SOCKET SET Includes 1⁄4, 3⁄8 and 1⁄2˝ drive. Low-profi le pear head ratchets for high torquing action. Deep, shallow and 12-point sockets. SAE and Metric. 58-9285-2. Reg 399.99.
NOW
9999 KEURIG ELITE BREWING SYSTEM Single-service unit with 1.4L removable tank. Brews 6, 8 or 10-oz. 12 K-Cups included. 43-0436-2.
ONLY
7999
DRESS IT UP FOR CHRISTMAS 61⁄2´ Prelit Bowen Fine Cut Pine tree. 250 incandescent lights. 628 tips.151-0303-0. Reg 169.99.
NOW
5999
GARMIN NUVI 30 GPS 3.5˝ touch screen. Lane-assist with junction view. Spoken street names help to get you to your destination. Sorry, no rainchecks. 199-6073-8.
NOW
6999
13-PC CLAD COOKSETLagostina Elite Series set has aluminum core throughout, not just at the base, for true even heat distribution. 18/10 stainless steel. 3-ply. 142-2407-4. Reg 999.99.
NOW
24444
START YOUR CAR WHILE YOU ARE INDOORSSelected ProStart keyless starters. With remote or alarm. 34-0742X. Reg 119.99-259.99...46.95-87.97
FROM
4695
NATIONAL - Marketing review ALTERNATE zones
In Winkler, Steinbach and Port aux Basques the sale will run on Thursday, Friday, Saturday & Monday
November 28, 29, 30 & December 2nd
Terms and conditions apply. Details available at ctfs.com/ctm
CARDMEMBER EXCLUSIVE
when you use the Canadian Tire Options® MasterCard® to purchase items featured on this page!
CANADIAN TIRE ‘MONEY’ ON THE CARD® AWARDS10XGET
THURSDAY TO SUNDAY NOV. 28 - DEC. 1, 2013
DE149_01.indd 1 13-10-22 9:23 AM
BLACK FRIDAY -BLACK FRIDAY BLACK FRIDAY -BLACK FRIDAY CHECK YOUR
CANADA POST MAIL
MON., NOV. 25th to WED., NOV. 27th
for our
TRENTON
IndependentIndependentServing Brighton, Colborne & Area
BrightonBrightonBrightonBrighton
October 17, 2013 www.InsideBelleville.com
Total Distribution 474,000
IndependentIndependentServing Brighton, Colborne & Area
BrightonBrightonBrightonBrighton
November 21, 2013 www.InsideBelleville.com
Total Distribution 474,000
of TRENTON 613-965-6626MOTOSPORTS
R0012423570
WINTER STORAGE
Starting at
$1 PER DAY
R001
1998
787 IndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependentIndependent
www.InsideBelleville.com
Total Distribution 474,000
of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON 613-965-6626613-965-6626613-965-6626613-965-6626613-965-6626613-965-6626613-965-6626613-965-6626613-965-6626613-965-6626613-965-6626613-965-6626613-965-6626of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON 613-965-6626613-965-6626613-965-6626613-965-6626613-965-6626613-965-6626613-965-6626613-965-6626613-965-6626613-965-6626613-965-6626613-965-6626MOTOSPORTSMOTOSPORTSMOTOSPORTSMOTOSPORTSMOTOSPORTSMOTOSPORTSMOTOSPORTSMOTOSPORTSMOTOSPORTSMOTOSPORTSMOTOSPORTSMOTOSPORTSMOTOSPORTSMOTOSPORTS
R0012423570
WINTER STORAGE WINTER STORAGE WINTER STORAGE WINTER STORAGE WINTER STORAGE WINTER STORAGE
Starting at
Starting at
Starting at
$1 PER DAYStarting at
1 PER DAYStarting at
See inside for
your issue of the
BRIGHTON
INDEPENDENT
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R001
2425
136W
TRENTON CANADIAN TIRE STORE HOURS:MON-FRI 7:30 am-9:00 pm
SATURDAY 7:30 am-9:00 pmSUNDAY 8:00 am-6:00 pm
TRENTON
CANADA'S STORE
Don't Forget To Check Your Canada Post Mail Mon. Nov. 25th-Wed. Nov. 27th for our
BLACK FRIDAY Starts With RED THURSDAY Flyer
3 DAY BLOWOUT SALE Friday, Nov. 22nd to Sunday, Nov. 24th ONLY
$199 $249 $199 $299Reg. $1799 Reg. $2999 Reg. $499 Reg. $2999SALE SALE SALE SALE#84-0142 #85-1426 #85-3204 #75-3500
TEMPO PEDOMETER SPEAKER CUSHION MEAT TENDERIZER YUKON GEAR FIXED BLADE KNIFE
$69999#84-0333
SAVE 53%OUTDOOR SAUNA
Reg. $149999
SALE
$4499#84-0487
SAVE 79%AB CIRCLE PRO
Reg. $20999
SALE
$3999#84-0515Reg. $20999
SALE
SAVE 81%MASSAGE TABLE
$10000#84-0519
SAVE 75%
Reg. $39999
SALECARDIO STYLE ELLIPTICAL
$1499#84-0568
SAVE 79%
Reg. $6999
SALETEMPO STEPPER
$1999#84-0533Reg. $9999
SALE"THE RACK" WORKOUT DEVICE
SAVE 80%
$999#84-0537Reg. $9999
SALEI.M. RINGS DVD WORKOUT KIT
SAVE 90%
$999#84-0572Reg. $2999
SALEYOGA TOWEL
SAVE 67%
$25000#84-0689Reg. $99999
SALETEMPO EVOLVE ELLPTICAL
SAVE 75%
Sale dates: Friday, Nov. 22/13 to Sunday, Nov. 24/13 Only. While supplies last. No rain checks. Limited quantities
2 Brighton Independent - Thursday, November 21, 2013
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R001
2421
799 60 Millennium Parkway
1-888-402-9595
We at Boyer’s are committed to building a life-time relationship with you. Your total satisfaction measures our success!A division of Boyer Auto group, serving communities like yours since 1981
Rebate Sign up [email protected]
Visit Kia.cato see the 21 winners so far!
of TRENTON 613-965-6626of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON of TRENTON 613-965-6626613-965-6626613-965-6626613-965-6626613-965-6626613-965-6626613-965-6626613-965-6626MOTOSPORTS
R0012423570
BOOK YOUR WINTER STORAGE
& SERVICE
Starting at
$1 PER DAY
R001
1998
787
4 WHEEL ALIGNMENT
$7995
Campbellford Chrysler
Includes suspension system inspection & steering component inspection
$7995
BUY 3 TIRESGET THE 4TH TIRE
FREE!4 WHEEL
ALIGNMENT R001
2338
264
SNOW TIRE
$2995CHANGEOVER
from
Trenton:613-392-1354
303 Dundas St. W.
Cobourg:905-372-6664
461 William St.
29 R001
2386
286
✃
✃
INSIDE
IndependentIndependentServing Brighton, Colborne & Area
BrightonBrightonBrightonBrighton
October 17, 2013 www.InsideBelleville.com
Total Distribution 474,000
IndependentIndependentServing Brighton, Colborne & Area
BrightonBrightonBrightonBrighton
November 21, 2013 www.InsideBelleville.com
Total Distribution 474,000
By Ray YurkowskiNews - Brighton - It seems Brighton is becoming a hotspot for scientifi c research.
First, it was a team from Penn State studying terns at Presqu’ile Park. Then, Laurentian University researchers began a four-year look at road kill and how better road construction can minimize large mam-
Where you naughty or nice this year? The big man himself, Santa, waves to the crowd during the Santa Claus parade, held last weekend in Brighton.
Santa pulls into Brighton
No room for CadetsBy Ray YurkowskiNews - Brighton – At their regular meeting on Monday night, municipal council turned down a request from the Brighton Army Cadets to use Hilton Hall for marksmanship training.
“Their request for free use each week is not unlike that of other not-for-profi t groups, both youth and adult, who wish
to use our facilities,” said Parks and Recreation Director Jim Millar in his report. But, he added, “The Heritage Advisory Committee also has a use for that building.”
Millar pointed to the committee min-utes appearing in the November 4 agen-da package expressing a plan to use the
Please see “Hilton” on page 5
School picks Brightonmals’ mortality. Now, as municipal council heard at their regular meeting on Monday night, the climate and atmospheric sciences section at Illinois State University is asking for permission to use the Ontario Street dock as part of their Ontario Winter Lake-effect Systems experiment in December 2013 and
Please see “Illinois” on page 5
SAY CHEESE
Empire wins big at Royal Winter Fair.
Page B1
8 Wing member awarded for bravery.
Page B2
HERO RECOGNIZED
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YIG
48_13
PAGE 1FLAP BACK
YIG
48_13PRINERGY PROOFFinal Size: 4" x 21" Image Area: 3.75" x 20.25"
YIG_ENG
YIG FLAP A2
Y O U R I N D E P E N D E N T G R O C E R
Y O U R I N D E P E N D E N T G R O C E RV O T R E É P I C I E R I N D É P E N D A N T
499
499 3/999
148 249
99¢
299lb6.59/kg
499
499 3/999
148 249
99¢
299lb6.59/kg
499
249148
499
99¢
3/999
price1/21/21/21/2priceprice
price1/21/21/21/2priceprice price1/21/21/21/2
priceprice
price1/21/21/21/2priceprice
price1/21/21/21/2priceprice
299lb6.59/kg
Purex 2x liquid laundry detergentselected varieties 64 wash 2.95 L
save$5
Quaker Dipps or chew bars 156-206 g or Campbell’s broth 900 mL selected varieties
Jamieson vitamins or supplements selected varieties and sizessee in-store for additional offersBoost meal replacement drink selected varieties 6 x 237 mL
Flyer prices effective from Friday, November 22nd to Thursday, November 28th, 2013. SEE PAGES 10 AND 11 FOR DETAILS. Visit our website at yourindependentgrocer.ca
Schneiders chicken wings, nuggets, burgers or fi ngerlingsselected varieties frozen790/840 g
President’s Choice® split chicken wings Club Pack®, fresh Air Chilled tips removed
save$350lb
5 digits (24 point type)
type positioning samples
4 digits (24 point type)
3 digits (24 point type)
SHADOW SPECS WHEN PLACED IN inDesign:25% opacityX & Y offset... 0.015 insize... 0.02
500
5,000
10,000
500
48_FRONT_YIG_MGSPB_HBC_v4ex.indd 1 13-11-14 12:52 PM PRINERGY PROOFFinal Size: 8.25" x 21" Image Area: 7.75" x 20.25"
YIG
48_13Creative Ready for prinergy
Team Lead
Run NG script
NG script OK
Q.C
Sign Off Production Creative Q.C.
1st PROOF KA
Final PROOF KA
RTS PROOF KA CSR Team LeadPAGE 1
PRINERGY PROOFFinal Size: 4" x 21" Image Area: 3.75" x 20.25"
YIG_BIL YIG_BIL
YIG F1
249lb5.49/kg
3/$5
3/999 249
3/999249
99¢ 199
249lb5.49/kg
3/$5
3/999 249
3/999249
99¢ 199
249lb5.49/kg
3/$5
199
249
99¢
3/999 249
price1/21/21/21/2priceprice
price1/21/21/21/2priceprice price1/21/21/21/2
priceprice
3/999
save$3lb
saveat least$230
PC® split chicken wings Club Pack ®, fresh Air Chilled tips removedailes de poulet séparées PCMD Format ClubMC, fraîches, refroidies à l’air, sans pointes
or/ou $1.67 ea./ch.
or/ou $3.33 ea./ch
or/ou $3.33 ea./ch
économisezau moins
$1
économisezau moins$320
Flyer prices effective from Friday, November 22nd to Thursday, November 28th, 2013. SEE PAGES 10 AND 11 FOR DETAILS. Prix de la circulaire en vigueur du vendredi 22 novembre au jeudi 28 novembre 2013. PLUS DE DÉTAILS AUX PAGES 10 ET 11.
Jamieson vitamins or supplements selected varieties and sizessee in-store for additional offersBoost meal replacement drink selected varieties 6 x 237 mLvitamines ou suppléments Jamieson certains formats et variétésvoir d’autres offres supplémentaires en magasinles boissons de substituts de repas Boost certaines variétés, 6 x 237 mL
Knorr Sidekicks 120-137 g, Knorr 52-83 g or Lipton soup mix pkg of 2/4 selected varietiesSidekicks Knorr 120-137 g, mélange à soupe Knorr 52-83 g ou Lipton pqt de 2/4, certaines variétés
Kraft Philadelphia cream cheese 150/250 g or dips 227 g selected varietiesfromage à la crème 150/250 g ou trempettesPhiladelphia Kraft 227 g certaines variétés
COCA-COLA or Pepsi soft drinksselected varietiesboissons gazeuses COCA-COLA ou Pepsi certaines variétés6 x 710 mL, 12 x 355 mL
Breyers Classic frozen dessert 1.66 L or Popsicle novelties pkg of 4-18 selected varieties frozendessert surgelé classique Breyers 1,66 L ou friandises glacées Popsicle pqt de 4-18,certaines variétés, surgelés
Quaker Dipps or chew bars 156-206 g or Campbell’s broth 900 mL selected varietiesbarres Dipps ou Chewy Quaker 156-206 g oubouillon Campbell’s 900 mL certaines variétés
Dr. Oetker Ristorante, Panebello or Casa di Mama pizza selected varieties frozenpizza Ristorante, Panebello ou Casa di Mama Dr. Oetker certaines variétés, surgelée325-450 g
D’Italiano breadselected varietiespain D’Italianocertaines variétés675 g
raspberries no. 1 grade or blackberries product of U.S.A. or Mexico framboises catégorie no 1 ou mûres produit des É.-U. ou du Mexique170 g
lean ground beef club size fresh or lean ground porkbœuf haché maigre grand format, frais ou porc haché maigre
Y O U R I N D E P E N D E N T G R O C E R
Y O U R I N D E P E N D E N T G R O C E RV O T R E É P I C I E R I N D É P E N D A N T
HOLIDAY SALEBRANDSBRANDS
†
5 digits (24 point type)
type positioning samples
4 digits (24 point type)
3 digits (24 point type)
SHADOW SPECS WHEN PLACED IN inDesign:25% opacityX & Y offset... 0.015 insize... 0.02
500
5,000
10,000
1,000
48_FRONT_YIG_MGSPB_HBC_v4ex.indd 4 13-11-14 12:54 PM
Dewe’s YIG400 Dundas St. E, Belleville613.968.3888
HOURS:Monday-Friday, 8:00 am-9:00 pmSaturday, 8:00 am-7:00 pmSunday, 8:00 am-7:00 pm
HOURS:Monday-Friday, 8:00 am-9:00 pmSaturday, 8:00 am-8:00 pmSunday, 9:00 am-6:00 pm
Smylies YIG293 Dundas St. E. Trenton613.392.0297
Flyer prices effective from Friday, November 22nd to Thursday, November 28th, 2013. Visit our website at yourindependentgrocer.ca
R001
2423
415
R00
1241
3736
Winter Craft& Gift SaleSaturday, November 23, 2013
10:00am-3:00pmCampbellford Community
Resource Centre65 Bridge Street East
Free Admission & Silent AuctionProceeds from the Silent Auction go towards
the Campbellford Community Resource Centre
4 Brighton Independent - Thursday, November 21, 2013
By Ray YurkowskiNews - Brighton – The Brighton Army Cadets will again be invading the streets of the municipality as they carry out ‘Operation Food Drive,’ in support of the local Fare Share Food Bank.
This year marks the fourth annual First Canadian Parachute Battalion food drive, which will deploy 65 Cadets along with 22 Girl Guides going door-to-door collecting non-perishable donations for the cause.
“We feel there is a need in Brighton and we want to help out where we can,” said organizer Robin Brooks. “And if we don’t see anything on the front step, we’ll be ringing doorbells.”
According to food bank volunteers, the shelves are almost bare in a few ar-eas. Some of the most pressing needs include crackers, canned meats, dry and hot cereals and juice.
“They’ve got a lot of peanut butter,” says Brooks. “But they don’t have any jam to go with it.”
Last year, the food drive effort filled three pickup trucks and organizers are hoping to help the food bank serve about 120 families who use the service.
Operation Food Drive runs from 9 a.m. until noon on November 30.
Mike Vandertoorn new deputy mayor
By Ray YurkowskiNews - Brighton – At their regular meeting on Monday night, Councillor Mike Vandertoorn was appointed as deputy mayor for the remainder of the current term of municipal council.
In a recorded vote to maintain the po-sition, only Councillor John Martinello was opposed.
“I don’t think a deputy mayor is nec-essary at all,” he said.
When Martinello asked if a raise in pay came with the job, nobody knew ex-actly how much but CAO Gayle Frost offered, “Yes, there is an increase in remuneration, but it’s minimal. It’s to recognize the additional work that may come with the position.”
Brighton Cadets
hoping to feed the
food bank
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West City Honda
670 Dundas Street West, Belleville (613) 962-9513 ext 222
Become a West City Honda Driver...for Life!
www.westcityhonda.ca
There are new vehicles. There are used vehicles. Now there are vehicles that give you the benefits of both.
West City Low Rates Low Payments Great Vehicles FullyReconditioned
CERTIFIED PRE-OWNED HONDAS
at West City Hondaat West City Honda
R00
1242
1626
The Municipality of Brighton invites applications from members of the public who are interested in serving on a Committee of Council. We are seeking interested people from the Brighton community to serve on the following Committee. To apply you must be a resident of Brighton.
Heritage Advisory Committee:This Committee provides assistance and recommendations to Council associated with the identification, conservation, and celebration of Brighton’s cultural heritage resources as governed by the Ontario Heritage Act and the Official Plan. Public Appointments: 2 persons from the public
If you are interested in becoming a member of this committee, please express your interest and applicable background, in writing by Monday, December 13, 2013 to:
Vicki Kimmett, Deputy [email protected] P.O. Box 189, Brighton, Ontario K0K 1H0Or, drop off your application at the Municipal Office at 35 Alice Street.
Please be sure to include your residential address, telephone number and email address.
R001
2420
848
The Municipality of Brighton invites applications from members of the public who are interested in serving on a Committee of Council or Statutory Board. We are seeking interested people from the Brighton community to serve on the following Board. To apply you must be a resident of Brighton.
Brighton Public Library Board:The Library Board is committed to providing a wide range of library servicesto the community. The library is the community’s centre of lifelong learning, literacy, and love of reading.Public Appointments: 1 community member
If you are interested in becoming a member of this board, please express your interest and applicable background, in writing by Friday, December 13, 2013 to:
Vicki Kimmett, Deputy [email protected] P.O. Box 189, Brighton, Ontario K0K 1H0Or, drop off your application at the Municipal Office at 35 Alice Street.
Please be sure to include your residential address, telephone number and email address.
R001
2427
624
RUTTLE BROTHERS FURNITURE
613-969-9263www.ruttlebrothersfurniture.com
SINCE 1974
R001
2409
724
Brighton Independent - Thursday, November 21, 2013 5
Hilton Hall has no room for Army Cadetslocation as a heritage centre, which was accepted by council.
The cadets’ request included free use of the hall from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturdays from November 30 to April 30 for basic marksmanship training as well as biathlon and marksmanship team training using pellet rifl es.
“I’m absolutely satisfi ed (the cadet program) would be an excellent use for the hall,” said Deputy Mayor Craig Kerr. “Unfortunately, it’s a situation where we have two good things but there has to be a choice.”
“Instead of saying absolutely no, could we refer this to staff to see if there is some-where else to accommodate the cadets?” wondered Councillor Mary Tadman.
“Coming out with a fl at ‘no’ is not the message we want to give,” agreed Mayor Mark Walas.
Council referred the request to munici-pal staff to investigate alternate locations.
At their meeting last week, the Heritage Advisory Committee (HAC) ratifi ed a proposal to municipal council in regard to the hall. The group is asking for changes to its mandate to include authorizing the use of the former township offi ce as a municipal heritage centre and setting up a subcommittee to oversee the project. Uses for the hall would include, but not neces-sarily be restricted to, workshops, discus-sion groups, presentations and displays fo-cussed on heritage research, identifi cation, conservation, education and celebration.
Utility and building maintenance costs
would continue to be the re-sponsibility of the municipality under the proposal but the cost of programming, equipment and material improvement would be covered by the com-mittee budget.
“I hope the selling point of this is what this committee does is an inherent part of car-rying out the municipal strategy on heritage,” HAC chairperson Dave Cutler told the group last week. “What we do is munici-pal business. It’s not as if we are a separate organization that has other goals.”
“They’ve been looking for a use for that building for some time,” added committee mem-
ber Joe Banbury. “Nobody is suggesting we should tear it down, but they don’t know what to do with it and we’re taking on that job.”
“The key is, within the scope of our mandate, leaving it up to the subcommittee to go in what-ever direction they choose,” said Cutler. “Everything would come back to the committee for approval and that in turn would go to council for approval through our minutes.”
A delegation from the com-mittee, to include Cutler and local historian Dan Buchanan, will pitch the proposal to coun-cil at their December 2 meet-ing.
Continued from page 3
Illinois school picks Brighton for projectJanuary 2014.
The latest scientifi c study would require launching weather balloons to take observations during lake-effect snow storms to gain a better understand-ing of how they develop and ultimately improve forecasting of the storms. The project is funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation and is in collabora-tion with Environment Canada.
In his letter to council, researcher David Kristovich says “the exact days and times will vary because they de-pend on the weather,” but typically launches will be every one-and-a-half to three hours, starting at 3 a.m. and ending around noon.
“They are basically the same bal-
loons used by Environment Canada on a daily basis,” said Parks and Recreation Director Jim Millar during his report. “The fact that they have liability insurance and permission from both the air base at Trenton and air traffi c control at Pearson Airport in Toronto, makes their request more sound.”
But the decision wasn’t without some controversy. Before council had their say, two residents voiced their concerns during the ‘citi-zen comment’ portion of the meeting.
“I don’t see any net benefi t
to our municipality by doing this,” added Councillor Tom Rittwage.
“I think there is a net ben-efi t for Brighton,” countered Councillor John Martinello. “If this study leads to a better understanding of the envi-ronment and things that ef-fect our environment, I think it’s worth it.”
“I think we’re all very aware that storm systems are getting much more serious,” said Councillor Mary Tad-man. “I think this may be a real benefi t to us.”
Council approved the re-quest.
Continued from page 3
News – Trent Hills - Northumberland Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) re-sponded to report of a break and enter on November 17 at the Pine Ridge Golf and Country Club where three male youths were witnessed on the property.
OPP attended to the club at 2:48 p.m. after being advised that three youths from a local group home had left with-out permission and were seen on the property by a youth worker.
The worker checked out the area where the youths had fl ed from and
Three Trent Hills youth charged with break and enterfound damage to the gazebo on a nearby green.
A large shed across from the gazebo was found inse-cure.
A thorough investigation was conducted by the attend-ing offi cers and the youths were located a short time later.
Two 15-year old-males from Percy Township in the Municipality of Trent Hills,
have been charged with break and enter with intent to com-mit an indictable offence and mischief under $5000 under the Criminal Code.
Both accused were held for a bail hearing in Youth Court of the Ontario Court of Justice in Cobourg, at 1:30 p.m. on Monday November 18.
The males cannot be named under provision of the
Youth Criminal Justice Act.Joseph Michael McDonald,
age 18, from Percy Township, Municipality of Trent Hills, has
been charged with break and enter with intent to commit an indictable offence and mischief under $5,000.
He was released on a promise to appear in the Ontario Court of Justice in Brighton, on Tuesday January 7, at 9:30 a.m.
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We �nally did it, Happy Wife and kids = Happy LifeNO DOUBT CONVERTING MY OIL FURNACE TO GAS PAID
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I previously wrote the following;Here’s what happened; upon renewing my Home Insurance recently, I found myself being asked politely if I can change my oil furnace to gas. I know I am not alone. So, doing a little research, I found out that there are many reasons to do so. Let me name a few; 1. Natural gas or propane is reason enough to save on energy, I understand it can be as much as 70%/year as well as provide my family with a very efficient heating and cooling system. 2. Furthermore, the Ont. Power Auth.(opa) allow up to $650 in an incentive program (with eligibility). Then a co-worker told me about Access HVAC in Belleville, ON. They offered him a financing plan under $100/mth with no payments for the first 12 mths (oac). 3. They also provided him with an additional rebate incentive which once combined with the OPA was up to $2000. 4. Apparently they converted everything for him the same day. Plus my co-worker had no gas in the area, No Problem, Access HVAC set everything with propane. My wife told me, “what are you waiting for, call them now!” She said she wants those incentives to help us with X-Mas. They guaranteed us the install before Santa even shows up this year. Their Guarantee Before Santa Install Program is still available till including December, 2013. Call them as I did at 613-689-7058. Have a Wonderful Warm Winter as my family will.(OPA: Ontario Power Authority, OAC: On Approved Credit) R00
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6 Brighton Independent - Thursday, November 21, 2013
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Dear Editor,It is time for Rolly Ethier to wake up. Once we have
destroyed this planet, there is no other for us to move to. What Rolly also has to remember is that once the food supply is gone, we can’t eat money.
Sincerely,Robert M. Taylor,
Stirling
Rise and shine
Is this legal?Dear Editor,
Has anyone figured out how we got duped into paying HST on the debt retirement charge on our Hydro bill? Is that even legal? Since when do loan repayments attract HST?
Butch CailesBelleville
Dear Editor,I was reading one of my regular trucking magazine reads
this week when a subject being covered refreshed my memo-ry regarding a recent event I had experienced. The topic was under safety and was entitled, “2 wheels vs.18. Who wins?” Clearly the subject dealt with the operation of bicycles, pri-marily in cities, and the unfortunate events that occur when large trucks and cyclists collide. It discusses an initiative/campaign being undertaken by the Share The Road Cycling Coalition. While I won’t go into detail on the topic, it primar-ily involves educating cyclists about the inherent dangers of riding around trucks. Especially alongside/up into the blind spot on the right side of a truck while they are making right turns (cars, you are guilty of this too). Anyone who is inter-ested in reading about the topic, it can be found in the No-vember issue of Today’s Trucking.
Now here’s my issue. A few weeks ago, while proceed-ing to make a right turn from Highway 62 South in Madoc, onto St. Lawrence Street West, I came very close to striking/having a cyclist strike my vehicle. Anyone who comes to this intersection knows how limited visibility is in both direc-tions, but much worse to the west where the building (old bakery) on the northwest corner comes out to the sidewalk. After sticking my vehicle’s nose out far enough to see as well as possible and after confirming that it was safe to turn right, I checked to my right again to make sure there weren’t any pedestrians entering/about to enter the sidewalk. I had just started moving when a cyclist entered the intersection imme-diately in front of my vehicle from my right side.
Clearly the cyclist had been riding on the wrong side of the road and owing to vehicles legally parked on the north shoulder of St. Lawrence Street, I was unable to see them. I must admit that a vehicle which had slowed considerably before making their left turn from St. Lawrence Street East
Cyclists need education in rules of the road
to Highway 62 North caught my attention, since there didn’t appear to be any logical reason for their behaviour. Clearly there was, since they didn’t want to run over this same cyclist while making their left turn.
As a former professional Class “A” driver for close to 15 years and the former director of safety with a local transporta-tion company for 15 years, I believe I have a fair grasp of what is considered safe vehicle operation. I’ll admit though that I am not perfect and have made a few mistakes over my driving career. From my limited observations though, it is quite clear that many cyclists do not treat a bicycle as a vehicle.
They believe that the rules of the road do not apply to them. They can ride on sidewalks (and Lord knows, I can un-derstand why they want to ride there) and sometimes ride fac-ing traffic (like pedestrians). The problem is vehicle operators expect pedestrians to use the sidewalk and cyclists to use the roadway, while adhering to regulations like every other ve-hicle that is bound by the Highway Traffic Act. Clearly many cyclists either need to take a formal test to ensure that they know their responsibilities, or parents and enforcement per-sonnel need to do a much better job of educating cyclists.
Cyclists, you have a responsibility! And just to be clear, the cyclist that crossed my path was not a child, has a driver’s licence (I’ve seen them driving) and probably is as old as I am. They likely don’t need to be educated about how to drive a vehicle, but clearly they need to realize they ARE operating one. When cycling, they need to follow the same rules they do when driving an automobile. I may not have been driving an 18(+) wheeler that day, but I do know who would have won the contest. They weren’t wearing a helmet to protect their head!
So cyclists, polish up on the rules of the road! It may save your life and/or those of your children!
Jamie Lahey“Old Whiny Vehicle Operator”
Madoc
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Brighton Independent - Thursday, November 21, 2013 7
IndependentBrighton
21 Meade St., Brighton ON K0K 1H0Phone: 613-475-0255
Fax: 613-475-4546
Published weekly by:Record News Communications,
A division of Performance Printing Limited
This edition serves the following communities:Brighton, Colborne and area
Vice President & Regional Publisher Mike [email protected], ext 104
Regional General Manager Peter O’[email protected]
613-283-3182, ext 112
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613-283-3182, ext 164
General Manager John [email protected]
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613-966-2034, ext 5601-888-Words Ads
Deadline: Monday 3:00pm
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Read us online atwww.InsideBelleville.com
OPINION Connected to your community
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Gwynne Dyer
By Terry Bush
Dear Editor,Canadian government officials are working with those
from 11 other nations to finalize the Trans-Pacific Partner-ship (TPP). I am very concerned about the TPP, which is currently being negotiated without public input.
We know from documents revealed by Wikileaks that the TPP includes an Internet censorship plan that would make the Internet more policed, expensive and censored.
Experts have pointed out that under the TPP, “kids could be sent to jail for downloading” and whole families could be kicked off the Internet. It would force Internet Service Providers (ISPs) to become Internet police and monitor my Internet use, censor website content, and remove entire websites from my view.
It would also hinder our ability to access information and criminalize our every day use of the Internet. As a concerned citizen, I am speaking out for a free and open Internet.
The TPP would also limit accessibility for disabled peo-ple. Visually impaired or deaf people would be criminal-
ized for circumventing digital locks on any digital materi-als they have purchased. This means they would be unable to convert them to braille, audio, or other accessible for-mats. I believe that the Internet should be open and acces-sible to everyone.
In addition, the TPP’s proposal to force ISPs to install costly and invasive surveillance equipment into their net-works gravely worries me.
These added costs would drive up everyone’s Internet bills and could force smaller independent Internet provid-ers out of business. I believe that Internet access is a right and should be kept open and affordable for everyone.
Already over 120,000 have signed the Say No to In-ternet Censorship petition. I encourage everyone to learn more about TPP Internet censorship before it’s too late at this website: https://OpenMedia.org/Censorship
I encourage each and every Canadian to learn more about the TPP at OpenMedia.org/Censorship.
Rob Laing, Campbellford
Say no to Internet censorship
Chinese demographicsEditorial - The big news of the week is that China’s one-child policy is being relaxed. After 34 years when most Chi-nese families were officially limited to only one child, most couples will now be allowed to have two children. The re-ality, however, is that it will make very little difference.
It will make little difference because only about one-third of Chinese couples were still living under those restrictions anyway. The one-child limit never ap-
plied to ethnic minorities, and in the past fifteen years it has rarely applied to people living in rural areas either: couples whose first child was a girl are almost always allowed to have a second child (in the hope that it will be a boy).
Controls were stricter in the cities, but if both prospec-tive parents were only children themselves they were exempt from the limit. And people with enough money can just ig-nore the rules: the penalty for having a second child is just a stiff fine up front and the extra cost of raising a child who is not entitled to free education. (The fines are reported to have raised $2.12 billion for the state coffers last year alone.)
The net result of all this is that the China’s current fertility rate (the average number of children a woman will bear in a lifetime) is not 1.0, as it would be if there were a really strict one-child policy. According to United Nations statistics, it is 1.55, about the same as Canada. Which suggests that most Chinese who really wanted a second child got one.
The new rules that have just been announced by the Third Plenum of the Communist Party say that urban people can now have a legal second child if just one of the would-be parents was an only child. This is not going to unleash a wave of extra babies; it will raise the fertility rate, at most, to 1.6. (“Replacement” level is 2.1.) Indeed, it’s questionable whether the one-child policy really held down China’s birth rate at all.
There are demographers who argue that the one-child pol-icy hasn’t really made much difference. China was already urbanising fast when the policy was imposed in 1979, and the more urban a country is, the lower the birth rate. From about 1970 there was also a very aggressive birth control policy.
The fertility rate in China had already dropped from 5.8 children per woman in 1970 to only 2.7 in 1978, the year before the one-child rule was introduced. It has since fallen to 1.55, but that might well have happened anyway. For com-
parison, Brazil’s fertility rate has dropped from 6.0 fifty years ago to 1.7 now WITHOUT a one-child policy.
China’s National Population and Family Planning Com-mission claims that the one-child policy has spared the coun-try an extra 400 million mouths to feed, but it would say that, wouldn’t it? The real number of births avoided by that policy is probably no more than 100 million in three decades. And if we accept these numbers, then three major conclusions fol-low.
The first is that the one-child policy is not the major cul-prit in China’s disastrous gender imbalance, with at least 120 boys born for every 100 girls. The social effects of this are very dangerous: by the end of this decade there will be 24 million “leftover” men who will never find a wife.
Any sane government would be terrified by the prospect of a huge army of unattached and dissatisfied young men hang-ing around the streets after work with nothing much to do. A regime with as little legitimacy as the Communists will be even more frightened by it. Unfortunately for them, ending the one-child policy will have little effect on this pattern.
Only state intervention as arbitrary and intrusive as the one-child policy could reverse the gender imbalance, and it is doubtful that the Communist regime is still confident enough to risk that degree of unpopularity.
The second conclusion we can draw from these statistics is that China’s population is going to drop whether the regime wants it or not. It will peak at or below 1.4 billion, possibly as soon as 2017, and then begin a long decline that will see it fall to 1.2 billion by 2050.
There’s nothing wrong with that in principle, but it exacer-bates what is already the greatest threat to economic growth in China: the population’s rapidly rising average age. The big, old generations will be around for a long time, but the younger generations are getting smaller very fast. Indeed, the number of people in the 20-24 age group in China will halve in the next ten years.
This means the dependency rate is going to skyrocket. In 1975, there were 7.7 people in the workforce for every per-son over sixty: by 2050, the ratio will be only 1.6 employed persons for every retiree.
No country has ever had to bear such a burden before, but ending the one-child policy won’t get the birth rate back up. The only way China could increase its workforce to lessen the burden is to open up the country to mass immigration. And what are the odds on that?
Editorial - One might almost get the impression that Toronto Mayor Rob Ford is one of the most important people in the world given all the coverage he’s received over the past couple of weeks.
Rob Ford still wants to be Prime Minister of Canada according to a headline on Monday. Chances are pretty slim that Ford will ever sit in Parliament unless he moves to Alberta. We would hope Canadians are a little smarter than that.
It’s really too bad for the Fords that they weren’t born in the United States. Wash-ington Mayor Marion Barry smoked crack and was re-elected mayor after a vacation in custody and is still on Washington city council. If someone ever deserved to be quickly relegated to the dustbin of history after one term in office, it was George W Bush, but Americans inexplicably re-elected him despite the lies and deception that cost trillions and close to a million lives by some accounts.
So despite the fact that Mayor Rob Ford has appeared on pretty well every top ten list on late night television in the past week, there really are more important things going on in the world.
The ongoing negotiations between the permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany and Iran has to rank somewhere near the top of current world events. After all, a little goodwill shown towards Iran would go a long way towards restoring some semblance of peace in the Middle East especially in Iraq, Syria and Lebanon where Iran has influence. That would be beneficial to the whole world. But what’s going on behind the scenes is a little disturbing.
Both the United States’ intelligence community and Israel’s intelligence community have stated that to the best of their knowledge, Iran isn’t pursuing nuclear weapons. International inspectors on the ground say all nuclear material in Iran has been account-ed for and nothing has been diverted to a nuclear weapons program. Construction of nuclear facilities in Iran has almost completely shut down.
Yet, despite the assurances of their intelligence agencies, politicians in both countries continue to say that Iran is building a bomb. Israel has been saying Iran is six months away from a bomb for almost 20 years so obviously that record will never stop skip-ping.
What has happened since Iranians elected a new president has been a complete about face when it comes to dealing with the west. So if Iranian President Rouhani is push-ing for engagement and willing to put his neck on the line to get an agreement with the security council concerning Iran’s nuclear energy program, does anyone think for a mo-ment that the Grand Ayatollah who actually runs the country isn’t on board. Wouldn’t a deal that opens up the country’s nuclear plants to even more intense scrutiny than is required as a signatory to the Non-Proliferation Treaty be a good thing?
Not according to Saudi Arabia and Israel who have pulled out all the stops to quash any deal with Iran. In fact a deal was almost done last week until the French pulled a fast one changing the language in the agreement and adding conditions at the last minute. It should surprise no one that huge deal involving France selling more arms to the Saudis put the kibosh on that one. That and a phone call from the Israeli Prime Minister.
The Saudis, a regime not shy about backing terrorists as long as they’re of the Sunni variety, will never support any deal involving Shiite Iran, its regional rival. A poor, disabled Iran is just what the doctor ordered.
Israel for its part has been relentless in trying to block any deal that may come out of these meetings. They say they won’t abide by it. They’ve done their best to control US lawmakers through calls and lobbying, utilizing their powerful lobby group AIPAC to once again strike fear in the hearts of incumbents seeking re-election. Members of the US congress are drawing up even more sanctions despite Iran’s overtures and many vow to block any deal Obama’s team might make. Israel has also been lobbying coun-tries on the Security Council to make sure no deal gets done.
The problem is, if a deal, even an interim deal is completed with Iran, then Israel’s settlement of the West Bank and East Jerusalem will come to the forefront of world news and there’s no way a right wing government in Israel which depends on settlers’ support could let that happen. Israel, despite its many advantages including having a big brother with a big stick in the USA, doesn’t want any competition in the region either. The fact that Israel has nuclear weapons, chemical weapons and biological weapons in its arsenal never seems to come up unless you’re talking to its neighbours.
So once again we have politicians looking out for basically themselves and the arms industry despite the objections of their constituents. French President Francois Allende has the lowest approval rating of any French president since 1958 yet sees no reason to listen to the public.
The US Congress has an approval rating of around ten percent these days, a rating that might suggest their constituents don’t have any use for them or how they’re repre-senting American interests.
The American people are starting to wake up to the abuses of their government, congress and the senate. People power stopped the US bombing of Syria in its tracks. Sixty-six percent of Americans think a deal with Iran is in their best interests. It might just be time politicians around the world started listening to the people who elected them. That would be a pleasant change.
And now back to our regular programming
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8 Brighton Independent - Thursday, November 21, 2013
Dear Editor,I am writing regarding an item dis-
cussed at the Brighton Municipal Coun-cil meeting on November 4th. At that meeting, council passed a motion to renew an agreement with a company called LAS to perform Closed Meeting Investigations. From the discussion it seems that they charge $330 per year and $225 per hour for legal fees, whereas the same service can be provided by the of-fice of the Ontario Ombudsman without any cost to the municipality. This makes no sense to me or to the other taxpayers that I have spoken with. It is a disgrace-ful waste to pay for something that is provided for free and if council is going to be throwing our money away, I hope that they won’t be looking to increase our taxes again this year. Is this the same perspective they have on all our expenditures?
Drew MacDonald,Brighton
Brighton Council
agrees to pay for services
they can get for free
LETTERS TOTHE EDITOR
Dear Editor,I wish to respond to Chris Faiers’ let-
ter to the editor in the October 31 edition of Central Hastings News.
Mr. Faiers makes a number of state-ments that are factually incorrect and I would like to see accurate information presented.
Canadians have been required to ap-ply for OAS for many, many years, long before the “Harperite” regime. Service Canada, under the Harper government, is currently revising the process so that
seniors may be automatically enrolled (and they will be informed of this, in the month after they turn 64), while those who will not be automatically enrolled will be informed that they must apply, also in the month after they turn 64.
Mr. Faiers reports that his total in-come is made up of $400 CPP and $550 OAS monthly. Clearly, this does not include the Guaranteed Income Supple-ment (GIS), or the Guaranteed Annual Income System (Ontario - GAINS), both of which are available to him. In
his circumstances, with an annual in-come of $4,800 from CPP, Mr. Faiers qualifies for combined OAS and GIS annually of $12,557.76, plus $996 an-nually in GAINS. These supplements would take Mr. Faiers’ income from $11,400 to $18,353.76. This exceeds the $16,800 on which Mr. Faiers says he could almost survive.
The minimum guaranteed annual in-come of a Canadian senior in Ontario is $16,573.20, not a lot, but significantly more than the $12,000 the writer reports
Old age pensioners beware misinformationas his income.
Lest I be taken as a Conservative apologist, I am a life-long supporter of the NDP. I have worked with seniors all my working life, and would like to ensure they—including Mr. Faiers—“wake up” to the programs available to them.
Anne MacNeill,Toronto
Letters policyThe Brighton 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 EMC or its employees. Please include a phone number where you can be reached during the day. Please e-mail your letters to <[email protected]>
![Page 9: Brighton112113](https://reader038.fdocuments.in/reader038/viewer/2022103008/568bf46a1a28ab89339df5b9/html5/thumbnails/9.jpg)
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Brighton Independent - Thursday, November 21, 2013 9
Brighton YMCA says thanks to community
By Ray YurkowskiNews - Brighton – Dozens of support-ers and curiosity seekers were on hand last weekend as the Brighton YMCA said “thanks.”
In April, when YMCA Northumberland offi cials announced they would be closing the doors at the local branch, a grassroots campaign team gathered petitions and made its case known to municipal politicians. At a public meeting in May, testimonials from members and endorsements from Family Health Team doctors led to the creation of a working committee charged with keeping the ‘Y’ in town. The group included representatives from the municipality, YMCA, Brighton Health Services Centre (BHSC), the Family Health Team and YMCA membership. In July, Brighton Council voted unanimously to renew their support, in the amount of $30,000 annually for the next fi ve years.
On the weekend, BHSC board member Bev Anderson expressed her gratitude for the YMCA decision to stay in Brighton.
“The YMCA is our longest-term tenant,” she said. “They’ve been here for 10 years.”
Dr. Richard Wiginton announced a partnership with the ‘Y’ and Family Health Team nurses on a wellness program, which would include programs to help clients reach and maintain a healthy lifestyle as well as access to exercise facilities.
“It’s based on the Stanford model, which is a well recognized way of people taking responsibility for their own health care and becoming preachers themselves to carry that message to others,” he said. “It’s an exciting time, with the integration of what we’re doing next door and what’s happening here.”
The thank-you celebration also marked the offi cial launch of the ‘Trim Down With Tom’ campaign as municipal Councillor Tom Rittwage vies to shed 100 pounds.
“You can support Tom by pledging a dollar amount or you can join Tom in your own weight loss program and get pledges yourself,” explained Brighton YMCA membership services coordinator Anne Gear. “All funds received during the campaign are being put towards the purchase of a new Arc Trainer.”
“The fi rst to sign up is MP Rick Norlock, for one dollar per pound,” Rittwage announced to the crowd. At the offi cial weigh-in, Rittwage tipped the scales at 387 pounds. The fi nal tally will take place in April 2014.
From the left, YMCA Northumberland interim CEO Eunice Kirkpatrick ac-cepts a $2,000 donation to the local ‘Y’ from Brighton Dragon Boat Club representatives Cathy Hewton and Sharon Caswell. Photo: Ray Yurkowski
YMCA Northumberland � nance director Mike Bunn (middle) accepts a do-nation from Applefest Fun Run representatives Doreen Van Egmond (left) and Yvonne Vandertoorn. Photo: Ray Yurkowski
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10 Brighton Independent - Thursday, November 21, 2013
By Ray YurkowskiNews - Brighton – The Christmas sea-son officially kicked off in Brighton last Friday as the most popular man in the world made his annual return to town to highlight the Santa Claus Parade.
Cool and dry conditions greeted the guest of honour as hundreds of specta-tors lined the parade route. The streets were packed with jubilant kids, par-ents and grandparents as the parade
rolled down Main Street, wound its way back up Prince Edward Street and ended at the fire hall, where kids could visit with Santa.
The evening also marked a histori-cal event: the return of the Brighton Citizens Band, the first of its kind since the 1940s, as they opened the festivities by providing musical enter-tainment during the “Light Up Brigh-ton” ceremony at Memorial Park.
Santa visits Brighton
The Cold Creek Comets, girl’s hockey teams, are in a festive mood.
Oak Ridge Percussion, from Colborne, rocked the crowd along the pa-rade route.
The ‘Sunny Day Elves’ wave to the crowd.
Santa’s elves wish everyone a merry Christmas.
Continued from page 3
The Big Apple, from Colborne, rode in on a festive float.
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Brighton Independent - Thursday, November 21, 2013 11
NeedHelp?
New portable ultrasound on wish list for TMHBy Kate EversonNews - Quinte West - A new portable ultrasound for the emergency depart-ment is on the Christmas Wish List for the Trenton Memorial Hospital (TMH) Foundation.
“It costs $60,000,” says Foundation executive director Wendy Warner. “It’s part of our Christmas campaign in the mail-outs.”
Dr. Filip Gilic, emergency doctor at TMH, says a new machine would do wonders in the Emergency Room (ER).
“It has a very defi nitive role,” he said. “It allows us to diagnose quicker. We
can react quicker to trauma, and look for places of accumulating blood.”
The ER currently has a seven-year-old portable ultrasound, but a new one would be more effi cient and have greater uses.
“We would keep the old one as a back-up,” he noted.
Dr. Gilic said the technology is
newer and could more quickly track infections that have spread through the body.
“If a woman is pregnant we could immediately tell if she has miscarried or not,” he added. “We could also fi nd fractures resulting in back pain. It would be useful fi nding out how well hydrated an old person is. We use it
quite a bit.”He said the portable version of the
ultrasound is very convenient in the emergency department. They can bring it to the patient and not have to wheel patients to another room.
“It’s for critical use,” he adds. “These are serious traumas, cardiac arrest and serious illnesses.”
The TMH emergency department sees 35,000 patients a year. The new equipment would also save on wait times.
Donations can be made online at tmhfoundation.com or mailed into TMH Foundation at 242 King St. Trenton K8V 5S6 or by calling 613-392-2540 ext 5401.
Dr. Filip Gilic, emergency department doctor at TMH, checks out Paula Herrington, RN, with a portable ultrasound. Photo: Kate Everson
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CampbellfordSanta Claus
Parade
R00
1242
6055
Saturday, Nov. 30 at 3:00 pm Contact Nancy Allanson (705) 653-1047
Before or After your Excursion to the Campbellford
SANTA CLAUS PARADE VISIT US
R00
1242
4119
705-653-1440509 Grand Rd. Campbellford
Season’s Greetings To All Our Customers,
Families & Friends
7:00AM - 5:00PM
SUNDAY
R00
1242
6278
R00
1212
0280
Be sure to drop by and see our
Great Selection of New & Used vehicles!
Have a Great Timeat the Parade!
R0012425072
(705) 653-1047(705) 653-1047(705) 653-1047(705) 653-1047Before or After the Campbellford
Santa Claus Parade visit us
R00
1242
4274
Before or After the Campbellford
Parade Theme
Winter Wonderland
12 Brighton Independent - Thursday, November 21, 2013
![Page 13: Brighton112113](https://reader038.fdocuments.in/reader038/viewer/2022103008/568bf46a1a28ab89339df5b9/html5/thumbnails/13.jpg)
R00
1242
5851
TIRE STORAGE $2000
YARD AND GARDEN TIP
Handheld Displacement Weight ‡ Air Velocity Air Volume MSRP Promo Models (cc) (kg/lb) (mph – km/h) (cfm) Price
BGE 71 Electric 3.0 / 6.6 148 – 238 394 $149.95 $139.95
BGE 61 Electric 3.0 / 6.6 148 – 238 394 $129.95 $119.95
BG 55 27.2 4.1 / 9.0 140 – 225 418 $219.95 $179.95
BG 56 C-E 27.2 4.2 / 9.3 143 – 230 418 $249.95 $229.95
SHE 71 Electric 4.1 / 9.0 148 – 238 394 $169.95 $159.95
HANDHELD BLOWERS
27.2 cc / 0.7 kW / )
$17995 $219.95
$24995 $299.95
BG 55 Handheld Gas Blower
STIHL QUALITY
‡ Wit t el.
$119.95
$119.95
Promo Price
$119.95
$159.95
$229.95
$139.95
$179.95
27.2 cc / 0.8 kW / )
64.8 cc / 3.0 kW / )
Backpack Displacement (cc) / Weight‡ Air Velocity Air Volume MSRP Promo Models Power Output (kW) (kg/lb) (mph – km/h) (cfm) Price
BR 200 27.2 / 0.8 5.7 / 12.6 132 – 212 406 $329.95
BR 350 1.2 / 3.36 10.0 / 22.0 168 – 270 441 $449.95
BR 430 9.2 / 3.36 10.1 / 22.3 183 – 295 500 $499.95
BR 600 MAGNUMTM 64.8 / 3.0 9.8 / 21.6 201 – 323 712 $599.95
BR 500 OW NOISE 64.8 / 2.3 10.1 / 22.3 181 – 291 477 $579.95
BR 550 64.8 / 3.0 9.9 / 21.8 199 – 320 530 $549.95
BACKPACK BLOWERS
$54995MSR $599.95
BR 600 MAGNUM™ Backpack Blower
SERIOUS POWER
READY TO GO
BR 200 Backpack Blower
$29995MSR $329.95
‡ Wit t el.
$119.95
$119.95
Promo Price
$299.95
$449.95
$499.95
$549.95
$399.95
$529.95 $11995
LawnGrips® Pro 8 Boots
#7002 885 3100-11
$11995
Lightweight Safety Boots
#7002 884 4400-08
$6995
Cutter’s Pants (Cotton)
#7002 886 7828-44
$9995
LawnGrips® Pro Shoes
#7002 885 3300-11
$8995
“Worktunes” Hearing Protection
#7002 884 0502
$1995
“B” Headband Ear Muffs
#7002 888 0204
Starting at $1195
Safety Glasses
$4995
Blower Gutter Kit# 4241 007 1003
$595
5 Litre (1 Gallon) Gas Can
#AB5
$1995
Anti-Vibration Gloves
#7002 884 1108-10
$5995
Lightweight Pruning Shears#0000 881 3669
$1195
Hand Pruner#0000 881 3604
$995
Leather Work Gloves
#7002 871 0163-4#7002 871 1114
$1495
ProScaper Gloves
#7002 884 1104-7
SH 56 C-EShredder/Vac
-
-
FOR MORE TIPS AND TRICKS VISIT WWW.STIHL.CA
LIMITED TIME OFFER GET THE GEAR
$22995MSR $249.95
MS 170 Gas Chain Saw
GET THE JOB DONE
‡ Wit t el
Chain Saw Models Displacement (cc) Power Output (kW) Promo Price
MS 251 C-BE 45.6 2.2 5.2/11.5 $139.95
MS 180 C-BE 31.8 1.5 4.2/9.3 $119.95
MS 291 C-BE 55.5 2.8 6.2/13.7 $159.95
$119.95
$119.95
Promo Price
$299.95
$549.95
$449.95
Weight (kg/lb)
Chain Saw Models Displacement (cc) Power Output (kW) Promo Price
MS 271 50.2 2.6 5.6/12.3 $139.95
MS 250 45.4 2.3 4.6/10.1 $119.95
$119.95
Promo Price
$399.95
$449.95
Weight (kg/lb)
Chain Saw Models Displacement (cc) Power Output (kW) Promo Price
MS 362 59.0 3.4 5.9/13.0 $139.95
MS 261 50.2 2.8 5.3/11.7 $119.95
$119.95
Promo Price
$649.95
$749.95
Weight (kg/lb)
YARD AND GARDEN TIP
Handheld Displacement Weight ‡ Air Velocity Air Volume MSRP Promo Models (cc) (kg/lb) (mph – km/h) (cfm) Price
BGE 71 Electric 3.0 / 6.6 148 – 238 394 $149.95 $139.95
BGE 61 Electric 3.0 / 6.6 148 – 238 394 $129.95 $119.95
BG 55 27.2 4.1 / 9.0 140 – 225 418 $219.95 $179.95
BG 56 C-E 27.2 4.2 / 9.3 143 – 230 418 $249.95 $229.95
SHE 71 Electric 4.1 / 9.0 148 – 238 394 $169.95 $159.95
HANDHELD BLOWERS
27.2 cc / 0.7 kW / )
$17995 $219.95
$24995 $299.95
BG 55 Handheld Gas Blower
STIHL QUALITY
‡ Wit t el.
$119.95
$119.95
Promo Price
$119.95
$159.95
$229.95
$139.95
$179.95
27.2 cc / 0.8 kW / )
64.8 cc / 3.0 kW / )
Backpack Displacement (cc) / Weight‡ Air Velocity Air Volume MSRP Promo Models Power Output (kW) (kg/lb) (mph – km/h) (cfm) Price
BR 200 27.2 / 0.8 5.7 / 12.6 132 – 212 406 $329.95
BR 350 1.2 / 3.36 10.0 / 22.0 168 – 270 441 $449.95
BR 430 9.2 / 3.36 10.1 / 22.3 183 – 295 500 $499.95
BR 600 MAGNUMTM 64.8 / 3.0 9.8 / 21.6 201 – 323 712 $599.95
BR 500 OW NOISE 64.8 / 2.3 10.1 / 22.3 181 – 291 477 $579.95
BR 550 64.8 / 3.0 9.9 / 21.8 199 – 320 530 $549.95
BACKPACK BLOWERS
$54995MSR $599.95
BR 600 MAGNUM™ Backpack Blower
SERIOUS POWER
READY TO GO
BR 200 Backpack Blower
$29995MSR $329.95
‡ Wit t el.
$119.95
$119.95
Promo Price
$299.95
$449.95
$499.95
$549.95
$399.95
$529.95 $11995
LawnGrips® Pro 8 Boots
#7002 885 3100-11
$11995
Lightweight Safety Boots
#7002 884 4400-08
$6995
Cutter’s Pants (Cotton)
#7002 886 7828-44
$9995
LawnGrips® Pro Shoes
#7002 885 3300-11
$8995
“Worktunes” Hearing Protection
#7002 884 0502
$1995
“B” Headband Ear Muffs
#7002 888 0204
Starting at $1195
Safety Glasses
$4995
Blower Gutter Kit# 4241 007 1003
$595
5 Litre (1 Gallon) Gas Can
#AB5
$1995
Anti-Vibration Gloves
#7002 884 1108-10
$5995
Lightweight Pruning Shears#0000 881 3669
$1195
Hand Pruner#0000 881 3604
$995
Leather Work Gloves
#7002 871 0163-4#7002 871 1114
$1495
ProScaper Gloves
#7002 884 1104-7
SH 56 C-EShredder/Vac
-
-
FOR MORE TIPS AND TRICKS VISIT WWW.STIHL.CA
LIMITED TIME OFFER GET THE GEAR
$22995MSR $249.95
MS 170 Gas Chain Saw
GET THE JOB DONE
‡ Wit t el
Chain Saw Models Displacement (cc) Power Output (kW) Promo Price
MS 251 C-BE 45.6 2.2 5.2/11.5 $139.95
MS 180 C-BE 31.8 1.5 4.2/9.3 $119.95
MS 291 C-BE 55.5 2.8 6.2/13.7 $159.95
$119.95
$119.95
Promo Price
$299.95
$549.95
$449.95
Weight (kg/lb)
Chain Saw Models Displacement (cc) Power Output (kW) Promo Price
MS 271 50.2 2.6 5.6/12.3 $139.95
MS 250 45.4 2.3 4.6/10.1 $119.95
$119.95
Promo Price
$399.95
$449.95
Weight (kg/lb)
Chain Saw Models Displacement (cc) Power Output (kW) Promo Price
MS 362 59.0 3.4 5.9/13.0 $139.95
MS 261 50.2 2.8 5.3/11.7 $119.95
$119.95
Promo Price
$649.95
$749.95
Weight (kg/lb)
Receive a
FREE WOOD-PROTM
KITWITH THE PURCHASE OF ANY ELIGIBLE STIHL CHAIN SAW
AN $85 VALUE!
®
®
YARD AND GARDEN TIP
Handheld Displacement Weight ‡ Air Velocity Air Volume MSRP Promo Models (cc) (kg/lb) (mph – km/h) (cfm) Price
BGE 71 Electric 3.0 / 6.6 148 – 238 394 $149.95 $139.95
BGE 61 Electric 3.0 / 6.6 148 – 238 394 $129.95 $119.95
BG 55 27.2 4.1 / 9.0 140 – 225 418 $219.95 $179.95
BG 56 C-E 27.2 4.2 / 9.3 143 – 230 418 $249.95 $229.95
SHE 71 Electric 4.1 / 9.0 148 – 238 394 $169.95 $159.95
HANDHELD BLOWERS
27.2 cc / 0.7 kW / )
$17995 $219.95
$24995 $299.95
BG 55 Handheld Gas Blower
STIHL QUALITY
‡ Wit t el.
$119.95
$119.95
Promo Price
$119.95
$159.95
$229.95
$139.95
$179.95
27.2 cc / 0.8 kW / )
64.8 cc / 3.0 kW / )
Backpack Displacement (cc) / Weight‡ Air Velocity Air Volume MSRP Promo Models Power Output (kW) (kg/lb) (mph – km/h) (cfm) Price
BR 200 27.2 / 0.8 5.7 / 12.6 132 – 212 406 $329.95
BR 350 1.2 / 3.36 10.0 / 22.0 168 – 270 441 $449.95
BR 430 9.2 / 3.36 10.1 / 22.3 183 – 295 500 $499.95
BR 600 MAGNUMTM 64.8 / 3.0 9.8 / 21.6 201 – 323 712 $599.95
BR 500 OW NOISE 64.8 / 2.3 10.1 / 22.3 181 – 291 477 $579.95
BR 550 64.8 / 3.0 9.9 / 21.8 199 – 320 530 $549.95
BACKPACK BLOWERS
$54995MSR $599.95
BR 600 MAGNUM™ Backpack Blower
SERIOUS POWER
READY TO GO
BR 200 Backpack Blower
$29995MSR $329.95
‡ Wit t el.
$119.95
$119.95
Promo Price
$299.95
$449.95
$499.95
$549.95
$399.95
$529.95 $11995
LawnGrips® Pro 8 Boots
#7002 885 3100-11
$11995
Lightweight Safety Boots
#7002 884 4400-08
$6995
Cutter’s Pants (Cotton)
#7002 886 7828-44
$9995
LawnGrips® Pro Shoes
#7002 885 3300-11
$8995
“Worktunes” Hearing Protection
#7002 884 0502
$1995
“B” Headband Ear Muffs
#7002 888 0204
Starting at $1195
Safety Glasses
$4995
Blower Gutter Kit# 4241 007 1003
$595
5 Litre (1 Gallon) Gas Can
#AB5
$1995
Anti-Vibration Gloves
#7002 884 1108-10
$5995
Lightweight Pruning Shears#0000 881 3669
$1195
Hand Pruner#0000 881 3604
$995
Leather Work Gloves
#7002 871 0163-4#7002 871 1114
$1495
ProScaper Gloves
#7002 884 1104-7
SH 56 C-EShredder/Vac
-
-
FOR MORE TIPS AND TRICKS VISIT WWW.STIHL.CA
LIMITED TIME OFFER GET THE GEAR
$22995MSR $249.95
MS 170 Gas Chain Saw
GET THE JOB DONE
‡ Wit t el
Chain Saw Models Displacement (cc) Power Output (kW) Promo Price
MS 251 C-BE 45.6 2.2 5.2/11.5 $139.95
MS 180 C-BE 31.8 1.5 4.2/9.3 $119.95
MS 291 C-BE 55.5 2.8 6.2/13.7 $159.95
$119.95
$119.95
Promo Price
$299.95
$549.95
$449.95
Weight (kg/lb)
Chain Saw Models Displacement (cc) Power Output (kW) Promo Price
MS 271 50.2 2.6 5.6/12.3 $139.95
MS 250 45.4 2.3 4.6/10.1 $119.95
$119.95
Promo Price
$399.95
$449.95
Weight (kg/lb)
Chain Saw Models Displacement (cc) Power Output (kW) Promo Price
MS 362 59.0 3.4 5.9/13.0 $139.95
MS 261 50.2 2.8 5.3/11.7 $119.95
$119.95
Promo Price
$649.95
$749.95
Weight (kg/lb)
YARD AND GARDEN TIP
Handheld Displacement Weight ‡ Air Velocity Air Volume MSRP Promo Models (cc) (kg/lb) (mph – km/h) (cfm) Price
BGE 71 Electric 3.0 / 6.6 148 – 238 394 $149.95 $139.95
BGE 61 Electric 3.0 / 6.6 148 – 238 394 $129.95 $119.95
BG 55 27.2 4.1 / 9.0 140 – 225 418 $219.95 $179.95
BG 56 C-E 27.2 4.2 / 9.3 143 – 230 418 $249.95 $229.95
SHE 71 Electric 4.1 / 9.0 148 – 238 394 $169.95 $159.95
HANDHELD BLOWERS
27.2 cc / 0.7 kW / )
$17995 $219.95
$24995 $299.95
BG 55 Handheld Gas Blower
STIHL QUALITY
‡ Wit t el.
$119.95
$119.95
Promo Price
$119.95
$159.95
$229.95
$139.95
$179.95
27.2 cc / 0.8 kW / )
64.8 cc / 3.0 kW / )
Backpack Displacement (cc) / Weight‡ Air Velocity Air Volume MSRP Promo Models Power Output (kW) (kg/lb) (mph – km/h) (cfm) Price
BR 200 27.2 / 0.8 5.7 / 12.6 132 – 212 406 $329.95
BR 350 1.2 / 3.36 10.0 / 22.0 168 – 270 441 $449.95
BR 430 9.2 / 3.36 10.1 / 22.3 183 – 295 500 $499.95
BR 600 MAGNUMTM 64.8 / 3.0 9.8 / 21.6 201 – 323 712 $599.95
BR 500 OW NOISE 64.8 / 2.3 10.1 / 22.3 181 – 291 477 $579.95
BR 550 64.8 / 3.0 9.9 / 21.8 199 – 320 530 $549.95
BACKPACK BLOWERS
$54995MSR $599.95
BR 600 MAGNUM™ Backpack Blower
SERIOUS POWER
READY TO GO
BR 200 Backpack Blower
$29995MSR $329.95
‡ Wit t el.
$119.95
$119.95
Promo Price
$299.95
$449.95
$499.95
$549.95
$399.95
$529.95 $11995
LawnGrips® Pro 8 Boots
#7002 885 3100-11
$11995
Lightweight Safety Boots
#7002 884 4400-08
$6995
Cutter’s Pants (Cotton)
#7002 886 7828-44
$9995
LawnGrips® Pro Shoes
#7002 885 3300-11
$8995
“Worktunes” Hearing Protection
#7002 884 0502
$1995
“B” Headband Ear Muffs
#7002 888 0204
Starting at $1195
Safety Glasses
$4995
Blower Gutter Kit# 4241 007 1003
$595
5 Litre (1 Gallon) Gas Can
#AB5
$1995
Anti-Vibration Gloves
#7002 884 1108-10
$5995
Lightweight Pruning Shears#0000 881 3669
$1195
Hand Pruner#0000 881 3604
$995
Leather Work Gloves
#7002 871 0163-4#7002 871 1114
$1495
ProScaper Gloves
#7002 884 1104-7
SH 56 C-EShredder/Vac
-
-
FOR MORE TIPS AND TRICKS VISIT WWW.STIHL.CA
LIMITED TIME OFFER GET THE GEAR
$22995MSR $249.95
MS 170 Gas Chain Saw
GET THE JOB DONE
‡ Wit t el
Chain Saw Models Displacement (cc) Power Output (kW) Promo Price
MS 251 C-BE 45.6 2.2 5.2/11.5 $139.95
MS 180 C-BE 31.8 1.5 4.2/9.3 $119.95
MS 291 C-BE 55.5 2.8 6.2/13.7 $159.95
$119.95
$119.95
Promo Price
$299.95
$549.95
$449.95
Weight (kg/lb)
Chain Saw Models Displacement (cc) Power Output (kW) Promo Price
MS 271 50.2 2.6 5.6/12.3 $139.95
MS 250 45.4 2.3 4.6/10.1 $119.95
$119.95
PromoPricePricePrice
$$$111333999.9995
$$111199..9955
$$$$$$$$$$$$1$11$11$1111111111111313313313111313313313919919919999999999999 9999999999.99.99.9999595595595555
Promo Price
$399.95
$449.95
Weight (kg/lb)
Chain Saw Models Displacement (cc) Power Output (kW) Promo Price
MS 362 59.0 3.4 5.9/13.0 $139.95
MS 261 50.2 2.8 5.3/11.7 $119.95
$119.95
Promo Price
$649.95
$749.95
Weight (kg/lb)
YARD AND GARDEN TIP
Handheld Displacement Weight ‡ Air Velocity Air Volume MSRP Promo Models (cc) (kg/lb) (mph – km/h) (cfm) Price
BGE 71 Electric 3.0 / 6.6 148 – 238 394 $149.95 $139.95
BGE 61 Electric 3.0 / 6.6 148 – 238 394 $129.95 $119.95
BG 55 27.2 4.1 / 9.0 140 – 225 418 $219.95 $179.95
BG 56 C-E 27.2 4.2 / 9.3 143 – 230 418 $249.95 $229.95
SHE 71 Electric 4.1 / 9.0 148 – 238 394 $169.95 $159.95
HANDHELD BLOWERS
27.2 cc / 0.7 kW / )
$17995 $219.95
$24995 $299.95
BG 55 Handheld Gas Blower
STIHL QUALITY
‡ Wit t el.
$119.95
$119.95
Promo Price
$119.95
$159.95
$229.95
$139.95
$179.95
27.2 cc / 0.8 kW / )
64.8 cc / 3.0 kW / )
Backpack Displacement (cc) / Weight‡ Air Velocity Air Volume MSRP Promo Models Power Output (kW) (kg/lb) (mph – km/h) (cfm) Price
BR 200 27.2 / 0.8 5.7 / 12.6 132 – 212 406 $329.95
BR 350 1.2 / 3.36 10.0 / 22.0 168 – 270 441 $449.95
BR 430 9.2 / 3.36 10.1 / 22.3 183 – 295 500 $499.95
BR 600 MAGNUMTM 64.8 / 3.0 9.8 / 21.6 201 – 323 712 $599.95
BR 500 OW NOISE 64.8 / 2.3 10.1 / 22.3 181 – 291 477 $579.95
BR 550 64.8 / 3.0 9.9 / 21.8 199 – 320 530 $549.95
BACKPACK BLOWERS
$54995MSR $599.95
BR 600 MAGNUM™ Backpack Blower
SERIOUS POWER
READY TO GO
BR 200 Backpack Blower
$29995MSR $329.95
‡ Wit t el.
$119.95
$119.95
Promo Price
$299.95
$449.95
$499.95
$549.95
$399.95
$529.95 $11995
LawnGrips® Pro 8 Boots
#7002 885 3100-11
$11995
Lightweight Safety Boots
#7002 884 4400-08
$6995
Cutter’s Pants (Cotton)
#7002 886 7828-44
$9995
LawnGrips® Pro Shoes
#7002 885 3300-11
$8995
“Worktunes” Hearing Protection
#7002 884 0502
$1995
“B” Headband Ear Muffs
#7002 888 0204
Starting at $1195
Safety Glasses
$4995
Blower Gutter Kit# 4241 007 1003
$595
5 Litre (1 Gallon) Gas Can
#AB5
$1995
Anti-Vibration Gloves
#7002 884 1108-10
$5995
Lightweight Pruning Shears#0000 881 3669
$1195
Hand Pruner#0000 881 3604
$995
Leather Work Gloves
#7002 871 0163-4#7002 871 1114
$1495
ProScaper Gloves
#7002 884 1104-7
SH 56 C-EShredder/Vac
-
-
FOR MORE TIPS AND TRICKS VISIT WWW.STIHL.CA
LIMITED TIME OFFER GET THE GEAR
$22995MSR $249.95
MS 170 Gas Chain Saw
GET THE JOB DONE
‡ Wit t el
Chain Saw Models Displacement (cc) Power Output (kW) Promo Price
MS 251 C-BE 45.6 2.2 5.2/11.5 $139.95
MS 180 C-BE 31.8 1.5 4.2/9.3 $119.95
MS 291 C-BE 55.5 2.8 6.2/13.7 $159.95
$119.95
$119.95
PromoPricePricePrice
$$113399.995
$$111199..9955
$$$111555999 999
$$$$$$$$1$11$1111111113133131131331391991999999999 9999999.99.99959559555
$$$$$$$$$$$$1$11$11$1111111111111515515515111515515515919919919999999999999.9..9.999999999.9.99.9999595595595555
Promo Price
$299.95
$549.95
$449.95
Weight (kg/lb)
Chain Saw Models Displacement (cc) Power Output (kW) Promo Price
MS 271 50.2 2.6 5.6/12.3 $139.95
MS 250 45.4 2.3 4.6/10.1 $119.95
$119.95
Promo Price
$399.95
$449.95
Weight (kg/lb)
Chain Saw Models Displacement (cc) Power Output (kW) Promo Price
MS 362 59.0 3.4 5.9/13.0 $139.95
MS 261 50.2 2.8 5.3/11.7 $119.95
$119.95
Promo Price
$649.95
$749.95
Weight (kg/lb)
Large Property MaintenanceRaise the bar on power, performance and comfort
Make starting STIHL outdoor power tools almost effortless
YARD AND GARDEN TIP
Handheld Displacement Weight ‡ Air Velocity Air Volume MSRP Promo Models (cc) (kg/lb) (mph – km/h) (cfm) Price
BGE 71 Electric 3.0 / 6.6 148 – 238 394 $149.95 $139.95
BGE 61 Electric 3.0 / 6.6 148 – 238 394 $129.95 $119.95
BG 55 27.2 4.1 / 9.0 140 – 225 418 $219.95 $179.95
BG 56 C-E 27.2 4.2 / 9.3 143 – 230 418 $249.95 $229.95
SHE 71 Electric 4.1 / 9.0 148 – 238 394 $169.95 $159.95
HANDHELD BLOWERS
27.2 cc / 0.7 kW / )
$17995 $219.95
$24995 $299.95
BG 55 Handheld Gas Blower
STIHL QUALITY
‡ Wit t el.
$119.95
$119.95
Promo Price
$119.95
$159.95
$229.95
$139.95
$179.95
27.2 cc / 0.8 kW / )
64.8 cc / 3.0 kW / )
Backpack Displacement (cc) / Weight‡ Air Velocity Air Volume MSRP Promo Models Power Output (kW) (kg/lb) (mph – km/h) (cfm) Price
BR 200 27.2 / 0.8 5.7 / 12.6 132 – 212 406 $329.95
BR 350 1.2 / 3.36 10.0 / 22.0 168 – 270 441 $449.95
BR 430 9.2 / 3.36 10.1 / 22.3 183 – 295 500 $499.95
BR 600 MAGNUMTM 64.8 / 3.0 9.8 / 21.6 201 – 323 712 $599.95
BR 500 OW NOISE 64.8 / 2.3 10.1 / 22.3 181 – 291 477 $579.95
BR 550 64.8 / 3.0 9.9 / 21.8 199 – 320 530 $549.95
BACKPACK BLOWERS
$54995MSR $599.95
BR 600 MAGNUM™ Backpack Blower
SERIOUS POWER
READY TO GO
BR 200 Backpack Blower
$29995MSR $329.95
‡ Wit t el.
$119.95
$119.95
Promo Price
$299.95
$449.95
$499.95
$549.95
$399.95
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14 Brighton Independent - Thursday, November 21, 2013
By John CampbellNews - Brighton – Sticks and stones can break bones but name-calling can do just as much damage, crushing the spirits of its vic-tims.
This week Brighton Public School launched a four-week program “to head off any potential issues” with bullying, principal Mary-Beth Zeggil said, by having the found-er of a character building educational com-pany, Celebrate the Hero, address students in a pair of assemblies Monday morning.
The first one was for students in Kinder-garten to Grade 3. Nick Foley kept their at-tention the entire half-hour with an interac-tive presentation that showed the youngsters
the harm that can come from hurtful remarks. He encouraged them to make good choices and to treat each other positively.
For the older students, the message was to accept individuality and, with the help of real-life stories, recognize the detriment that bullying can wreak.
“It’s all based around self-esteem and do-ing good in their community,” Foley said in an interview prior to the assemblies. “We don’t talk about the bully ... we just say let’s celebrate the goodness that we’re all capable of and build on that.”
The program includes follow-up visits and various activities that include, for students above Kindergarten, filling out slips that
celebrate what makes classmates individual heroes. After four weeks, the slips are put to-gether in a booklet the students receive con-taining “all kinds of great things their friends have said about them,” Foley said. “At the end of it the kids are usually feeling pretty good about themselves.”
Brighton Public School has also intro-duced a peer helper program to organize games that promote cooperative play.
It gives the students “something to do con-structively” during the twice-a-day recesses, special education teacher Lisa Facciol said.
“Some kids just don’t know what to do on the yard,” Zeggil said.
The peer helpers are “also modelling prop-
Students encouraged to celebrate everyday heroes and not be bullies
er behaviour,” to set an example for the other students.To encourage communication between students and the
school administration, boxes have been placed throughout the school to allow students to report incidents of bullying anonymously, which teaching staff can act upon if neces-sary. This was seen as a better option than the box placed in the main office for the same purpose, which was viewed as a negative because of its location, Facciol said.
Zeggil said “any kind of negative has an impact on stu-dents, and bullying is one of those negatives. If students aren’t feeling safe and they’re not feeling accepted, then they’re not going to perform to the best of their ability. We want to make sure students are feeling safe, that their voice is heard. It’s really important that students have a chance to speak out.”
They will become better community members and want to do things “if they’re feeling accepted,” Facciol said. But if negative things are said to or about them, “they’re going to withdraw socially and academically.
Celebrate the Hero founder Nick Foley made presentations at two assem-blies Monday encouraging students to act positively and not engage in bul-lying. Photo: John Campbell
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Brighton Independent - Thursday, November 21, 2013 15
Stopping the flu
“The best way to prevent the flu is to be im-munized every year,” says the Haliburton, Kawartha, Pine Ridge District Health Unit. “Studies have shown that the flu shot can prevent up to 80 per cent of influenza cases in healthy adults and children”; in older adults, it can prevent or reduce complications and hospitalizations. The health unit organized eight free flu vaccination clinics in Northum-berland County, including one at Evangel Pentecostal Church in Brighton November 16, where Hilary Groves was immunized by vac-cinator Edit Danilko. The last clinic will take place this Saturday, November 23, at Camp-bellford Baptist Church, between 10 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. Photo: John Campbell
Boston Pizza opens in TrentonNews - Boston Pizza International Inc. has an-nounced the opening of its 110th location in Ontario at 227 Dundas St. E. in Trenton. The restaurant of-ficially opened its doors on November 19. It hired 60 employees and has vowed to play an active role in the local community.
Boston Pizza Trenton is owned by Safdar and Musarrat Shah, with Jessica West in the role of General Manager. Mr. Shah has more than 40 years of restaurant experience.
Boston Pizza Trenton is one of the company’s first restaurant conversion projects. Formally an independent local restaurant location, Boston Pizza Trenton features many of the company’s new con-temporary interior and exterior design elements. With seating for 178 guests in the dining room and sports bar, the restaurant also features a patio with an additional 35 seats. The sports bar features a number of high-definition flat-screen televisions as well as state-of-the-art sound equipment.
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“The BrightonTeam”
“The BrightonTeam”
MLS#2135461Ideal location! All brick three bedroom bungalow with full
basement and detached garage and paved drive on a huge lot is walking distance to all amenities. Immediate
possession!
$199,900
MLS#2134803High Visibility for Your Business!
4,600 sq.ft. with showroom, offi ces, 2 bathrooms, storage, four bays and surfaced parking for loads of vehicles! Easy access to 401. Fully
wheelchair accessible.
$375,000
MLS#2137203904 Smith St. Beautifully well
maintained Victorian home with much of the original woodwork, within walking distance of public school. New roof on garage June
2012. � is solid brick home has main fl oor laundry, refi nished hardwood
fl oors, hi-effi cient gas furnace.
$179,900
MLS#2136878All brick bungalow with 2 baths, Gas fi replace, private back yard,
Finished basement.Single car garage with
Attached shed. Call Marian to view.
$199,900
MLS# 2131206Whether it’s your retreat from the
city or your 4 season home, you will want to look at this solid all brick 4 bedroom side split with a view & deeded access to Lake Ontario. Ceramic fl ooring throughout the
main level and a cozy wood burning fi replace in living room.
$225,000
MLS#21369801500 sq ft. waterfront dream
home on Presqu’ile Baywith high end fi nishes.
Two bedrooms, three bathsplus attached double garage
$499,900
MLS#2136842Great family home in Brighton
with large private back yard. Nice location. Quiet, 4 bedrooms. Main fl oor bdrm could be home offi ce. Many recent updates: shingles,
furnace, electrical and plumbing.
$159,900
22 Edgewater Drive89 Simpson St. 202 Main St. 23 George St. 11 Napier St. 130 Ontario St. 39 Greenway Circle
Quinte Limited,BrokerageEach Office Independently Owned & Operated
41 Main St., BrightonPhone (613) 475-6594Long Distance1-800-501-7499www.remaxquinte.com
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MLS#2134520TWO HOMES grace this 4.5 acre hilltop property! #1 off ers 5 bed, 4
bath, full walkout fi nished basement, triple garage. #2 has 2 bed, 2 bath, single garage. Each with own well & septic. Bonus 26 x 22 heated
workshop.
$850,000
New Listing
JOANNE McMASTERSales Rep.
ALLAN DUFFINSales Rep.
RITA SWEETSales Rep.
MARIAN JOHNSBroker
CLAY JACOBSONSales Rep.
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41 Main St., BrightonPhone: (613) 475-6594Cell: (613) 921-5431Email: [email protected]
16146 TELEPHONE ROAD
R0012392825
Quality built rural bungalow with exceptional state-of-the-art I.C.F. construction (insulated concrete foundation and exterior walls) offering incredible energy savings - heating and cooling, along with noise protection. This Colorado features bright open living spaces, 3 + 2 bedrooms, 3 bath, a nicely finished lower level with in-floor heating and an attached insulated double garage. Must be seen! Immediate possession.
MLS#2136921 $315,000
OPEN HOUSE on Sunday, November 24th
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Home of the Week
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6086
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ACRE FARM
R001
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669 Barcovan Beach Rd, BrightonWATERFRONT - Perfect view of Lake Ontario. 156 feet of owned waterfront. Cement break wall with stairs to water. 2400 plus sqft of living space. Open concept KI, DR & LR. Master w/ensuite. Main fl oor laundry. All the privacy you could wish for. Visit REALTOR website for more information.
$424,900
99 George St, Trenton Beautiful 1312 sqft 3 bed, 2 bath home. Full fi nished basement . 2013 upgrades included. Professionally painted throughout, new crown mouldings. Interior doors, new fridge, stove, dishwasher. Attached single car garage, freshly painted. Paved drive. Exceptional value in this price range.
$194,900 MLS® 2137011
OPEN
HOUSE
SAT Nov 23
12:30-2:00 PM
20 Ferry St, TrentonSituated 2 mins from the Trent River and boat launch in downtown Trenton. Raised bungalow with 2200 sqft of living space with extensive upgrades all in 2013. This home is fi nished top to bottom offering 3+1 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, eat-in kitchen, generous size living room, huge recreational room with fi replace, walk up from basement to large deck that measures 48 feet in length and fenced rear yard. Hi effi ciency forced air gas heat, central air & HRV. Gorgeous brand new kitchen with island, pot lighting, 5 new appliances(included), all new North Star windows & steel doors. Here is value at a glance!
$209,900 MLS® 2136914
OPEN
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SAT Nov 23
2:30-4:00 PM
6 Hickory Court, Brighton3300 square foot executive R2000 certifi ed. Two storey all brick home. Beautiful wrap around verandah. 9ft ceilings throughout. 4 bedrooms, 4 bathrooms 3 with full ensuites. Beautiful eat in kitchen. Separate dining room, den & main fl oor family room. Oversized double car attached garage Please visit REALTOR website for more information.
$499,900MLS® 2130956
OPEN
HOUSE
SUN Nov 24
1:00-3:00 PM
SOLD89 Rush Road, Brighton
Here is country living at its best! This home is situated on 4.387 acres offers 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, primarily 9 foot ceilings throughout. Lots of pine fl ooring, large eat in kitchen, main fl oor family room with woodstove and loft. Formal dining room measures 20.3 x 17.3, living room with fi eldstone fi replace and bar, crown moulding and pot lighting. Main fl oor laundry, attached one car garage. Run your own business out of this 40` x 80` maintenance free shop with 12` ceilings and concrete fl ooring in excellent condition. This shop is heated with an outdoor wood furnace and has 200 amp electrical service. Also you will fi nd a 24` x 30` two storey hip roof barn and a gorgeous large pond 14` deep to enjoy. There is a generator hookup for both house and shop. Here is value at a glance.
$309,900
COUNTRY
LIVING AT ITS BEST
MLS® 2135321
R001
2419
681
23 CHURCH STREET EASTVery charming starter home just a block
north of downtown Colborne. Original hardwood flooring throughout most of the
main floor, 2 + 1 bedrooms, renovated kitchen, full basement, detached 10 x 20 workshop and a nicely landscaped
private yard with a covered patio. Immediate possession. A nice home for
the downsizer too!MLS#2137117 $152,500
MLS#2134803 $375,000
23 STREAMSIDE DRIVEOn a quiet street at the edge of town, find this nice 3 + 1 bedroom brick bungalow with a full basement. Rec room has an attractive free standing gas fireplace. From the dining room, access a large deck overlooking the fully fenced yard
backing onto pastoral fields. Immediate possession. Good value at
MLS#2137202 $169,900
NEW LISTINGS IN COLBORNE
16 Brighton Independent - Thursday, November 21, 2013
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Brighton Independent - Thursday, November 21, 2013 17
Trinity-St. Andrew’s United Church in Brighton celebrated its 165th anniversary this week with the congre-gation donning attire from the past. Photos and memorabilia were on display in the hall where a scrumptious potluck luncheon was held following the ser-vice. Photo: Submitted
By Kate EversonNews - Quinte West – Water and Waste-water Services include a raw water line from Frankford to feed Batawa Ski Hill.
Quinte West Coun. Keith Reid asked at a recent Public Works committee meet-ing if that line was designated just for the ski hill. Chris Angelo, director of Public Works and Environmental Services, said it was.
“The line was extended from Frank-ford to Batawa,” Angelo said. “The line is maintained for Batawa fire protection. We may consider different options. The pumps need to be upgraded. We are hav-ing discussions with Mrs. Bata. We don’t want a detriment to the ski hill so we will continue to absorb those costs.”
Matt Tracey, manager of water and wastewater services, reported to the committee that several water leaks have been detected within the city. A water
leak was repaired on the raw water main in Batawa.
“This was a fairly significant leak,” he said. “The city had to replace approxi-mately 25 of the raw water mains. The system has been put back online and no additional leaks have been detected.”
He added that the Permit to Take Wa-ter allowance has been exceeded since March 29, 2013 and notification to the Ministry has been made.
New chlorination equipment was commissioned on the Frankford/Batawa Water Treatment Plant on November 14 by Genivar Engineering. The old process equipment will be removed.
Tracey reported that the Trenton Wa-ter Treatment Plant had some problems when a booster pump at Mount Pelion failed and had to be replaced.
“During the wind storm on November 1 the membrane roof on the Mount Pe-
lion Booster Station sustained some dam-ages,” he added. “Temporary repairs are being made with the roof scheduled for replacement in 2014. There are continual problems with vandalism, people on the roof.”
Trenton Wastewater Treatment plant had a raw sludge spill on October 11, as a result of a valve failure.
“This was a mess,” Tracey said. “It blew a hole in the bottom of the valve.”
Due to the hazardous nature and vol-ume of the spill, First On Site remedia-tion company was contracted to clean up the site. A portion of the cost will be re-covered through insurance. The city has hired Mirtren Contractors to perform the necessary repairs at the facility.
Coun. Don Kuntze asked about the insurance claims and Tracey said it will cost $25,000 to restore the facility. Jim Harrison asked if there were enough
Water services include raw water for ski hillalarms on the buildings. Tracey said there are alarms during the week but not on weekends. Harrison suggested they get more sensors. “If it happens on Fri-day you won’t catch it until Monday,” Harrison noted. Tracey said he will look
into it.The Dundas Street Pump Station up-
grades have been tendered out and may start as early as December. Tracey said they need to replace three pumps and there is a problem with asbestos removal.
165 years and
counting
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18 Brighton Independent - Thursday, November 21, 2013
By John CampbellNews - Warkworth – The fourth Warkworth Health and Wellness Fair wasn’t just about selling things that make people in general feel better.
It also had to do with helping one family in par-ticular, Chris and Krista Gutteridge and their three children.
“(Chris) has some serious health issues that has put him into the hospital for quite an amount of time ... so things are really tight with them financially,” said fair organizer Cherie Whalen.
All proceeds from the Nov. 16 event at the Wark-worth Town Hall Centre for the Arts were to go to family, as were the proceeds raised at a Legion dance that night organized by Whalen’s husband, Jake.
“It’s great to be able to come out here and support not only health and wellness but mostly (the Gut-teridges),” said Cait Lynch, a personal trainer, yoga and Pilates instructor participating in her first fair. “Coming into the holidays (they) will need some extra help.”
Whalen, an independent consultant associated with Arbonne, a maker of personal care and well-ness products, started the fair to make people aware
of the options that exist within the health and well-ness industry. But she has always made a point of directing proceeds to a worthwhile cause each time it’s held.
Sixteen vendors set up at the centre, offering an array of goods and services that include Reiki, re-flexology, massage therapy and skin care products.
It was a new experience for Lynch, who has op-erated her Warkworth-area CustomFit business for 10 years, offering 15 classes a week in yoga, Pilates and high intensity, interval training in a renovated century-old barn.
Her clients range from 10 years old to 70-plus.“We have something for everyone,” she said.
“We are big into technique and safety (and) focused on educating our clients holistically.”
Nutrition coaching is a major part of her busi-ness, as is making clients understand “why they’re doing what they’re doing,” so they’re not attending classes “like robots.”
The hour-long classes begin at 6:30 a.m. and con-tinue until 6:45 p.m.
“It’s a long day but I love it, it’s my passion,” Lynch said.
Proceeds from wellness fair, dance to benefit local family
Reiki practitioners Donna Shannon, standing, and Barbara Kelleher demonstrate how to “balance the energies” in fellow Reiki practitioner Dawn Burns’ body, to promote relaxation and healing. Photo: John Campbell
Colborne Art Gallery artist Irene Osborne shows off some of the works donated by their members for the fourth-annual fundraiser in support of ongoing gallery activities. All of the artworks started with a blank six-by-six-inch canvas and are on sale during the Christmas exhibition, this year entitled, ‘All Things Bright and Beautiful,’ which opened last weekend and runs until December 22. Colborne Art Gallery is located at 51 King St. E. and is open from noon to 5 p.m. Thursday through Sunday. Photo: Ray Yurkowski
Colborne Art Gallery
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Brighton Independent - Thursday, November 21, 2013 19
By Kate EversonNews – Quinte West – Santa is a busy boy! If you caught him in Brighton and Belleville and maybe even in Consecon on the weekend, you know he is driving his sleigh quickly throughout the area.
The Trenton parade is on Sunday, November 24, leaving from Centennial Park at 4:30 p.m. towards the downtown where the Christmas Fantasy will be lit in Fraser Park.
The Trenton DBIA is also holding its Festival Sights and Winter Lights an-nual window decorating contest display throughout the downtown. The theme this year is “Believe in the Magic of Christmas.” The deadline for downtown businesses to sign up is November 22. Contact the DBIA at 613-394-4318 or email [email protected]. The judging will take place on November 28. The fi rst place winner will take home $500 cash, second place is $300 in ad-vertising on Rock 107 and third place is $100, sponsored by the city, DBIA and Rock 107.
The lighting of the menorah in Fraser Park will take place on Wednesday, No-vember 27 at 6 p.m. All are invited to take part in the traditional Jewish celebration of the beginning of Hanukkah, the Cel-ebration of Lights, which runs eight days until December 5. Hanukkah is the com-memoration of the rededication of the Holy Temple in Jerusalem at the time of the Maccabean Revolt against the Seleu-cid Empire in second century BCE. One candle is lit each night.
On Thursday, November 28, join in the Jingle Bell Walk around downtown Trenton and enjoy the decorations. The walk will meet at City Hall at 6:15 p.m.
Santa Claus is coming to town!and be back at Fraser Park for the opening of the Nativ-ity Celebration at 6:45 p.m. joining the Murray Centennial School Choir in Christmas songs. Follow the piper back to City Hall for refreshments served by the DIBA and more music by Murray Centen-nial and the Trenton Christian School Band.
The Frankford Santa Claus parade is lining up to be a
big one, as popular as ever. It leaves the arena at 2 p.m. on Saturday, November 30 and winds its way past the Legion where Santa is ready to hand out candy canes to the kids. Then the lights are on in the Frankford Tourist Park with the gorgeous festive decora-tions of Christmas Fantasy of Lights, thanks to the hard work of many dedicated vol-unteers.
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20 Brighton Independent - Thursday, November 21, 2013
Cold Creek Comet Sarah Lajoie tries to take advantage of an open net against the Bancroft Jets in Peewee C Lower Lakes Female Hockey League action last weekend at Brighton arena. Lajoie couldn’t capitalize on this one but did contribute an assist in the 3-1 Comet victory. Photo: Ray Yurkowski
Cold Creek Comet Alyce McLean tries to control the puck between two Bancroft Jets de-fenders in Peewee C Lower Lakes Female Hockey League action last weekend at Brighton arena. McLean contributed a goal in the 3-1 Comet victory. Photo: Ray Yurkowski
She scores!
Quinte Red Devils report
Atom The Quinte Carpet One Atom Red Dev-ils had an excellent week in spite of in-jury and illness, picking up fi ve out of six points in three ETA league games. In game one, the Devils travelled to Woodville on Wednesday night, fi ring 29 shots at the Central Ontario Wolves and allowing only six, but needed a big last minute penalty kill to pick up a 2 - 1 win. Ethan Fraser picked up the win in goal. Lucas Culhane scored both goals for the Red Devils unassisted in his only appearance in the lineup of the week.
In game two, the Devils overcame a short bench and a 3 - 1 defi cit, picking up a 3 - 3 tie with the Clarington Toros. Nate Burelle led the attack with a goal and an assist, while Ross Maycock and Tanner Jones added single markers. Once again, a last minute penalty kill was crucial in the tie. Dixon Grimes was rock solid between the pipes for the Devils, making 17 saves in the tie. Returning home to the Devil Dome in Frankford, the Devils welcomed power-forward Ty Gauvin back in to the line-up after a two game absence with a 4 - 1 win over the North Central Predators. Maguire Shortt led the offence with a goal and an assist while Tanner Smith, Ross Maycock and Isaac Macleod also found the back of the net for the Devils. Nate Huffman, Tanner Jones, Gauvin and Matthew Lombardi picked up as-sists in the win. Ethan Fraser was very strong in the Devils goal, stopping 17 shots in the win.
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Brighton Independent - Thursday, November 21, 2013 21
SPORTS
Brighton Braves forward Justin Murdoch carries the puck into opposition territory in Eastern Ontario Minor Hockey League action at Brighton arena last weekend against the Stirling Blues. Murdoch scored two goals in the 5-1 win. Photo: Ray Yurkowski
Get away from my puck
Bowling – Presqu’ile Lanes Youth LeaguesNovember 9Bowlasaurus: Dayna
Faragher 68; Anna Hough 48.
Peewee: Liam Bateman 147; Logan Lloyd 100; Sa-vannah Sharp 98.
Bantam: Tristan Hough 125, 96, 96; Tucker Payne 104; Zoe Parsonson 87.
Junior: Jonathan Hough 184, 151; Rachel Sharp 127; Brandon Bird 118.
Senior: Brandi Hall 201, 181, 137; Shannon Catney 152; Sarah MacDonald 121.
Adult LeaguesNovember 11
Mixed: Ron Hadwen 262, 222, 214; Bill Mansell 247, 208; Trevor Kameka 234; John Covell 227; Carl Coe 216; Gary Sharp 214, 201; Claude Pellerim 202; Brenda Fay 202; Ron Grinham 202; Cal Matthews 195.
November 12Morning Mixed: Hazel
Male 212; Bob Dimt 205; Vic Grabko 202; Peter Harrald 202; Pat Lafferty 202; Elaine Grabko 200; Jim Lord 199, 187; Jane Goodfellow 175; Ron Bunker 172; Barb Nes-bitt 172.
Evening Mixed: Gary Sharp 323, 222; Mike Green-lee 311, 227, 196; Heather
ScoreboardFlindall 271, 235; Carmel Brooks 251, 223; Jeff Mosco 221; Jodie Barker 216; Cam-eron Pike 216, 196; Ernie Sharp 202; Dave Sharp 200; Dick Button 195.
November 13Mixed: Larry Harrison 269,
160; Mike Greenlee 266, 252, 210; Marcia Simpson 204, 167, 164; Natasha Goodfellow 192,171; Gerry Grundle 183; Gary Sharp 179, 171, 157; Tania Haisma 178; Ken Town
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November 14Ladies: Jean Sharp 224,
192; Lori Webb 217; Joan Windsor 202,168; Lynda Blackburn 191; Sharon Con-vey 190; Jeannie Turner 186; Angela Hart 181, 179, 173; June Leafl oor 179; Karen Bal-four 170; Val Wallace 167.
Hockey – Brighton MinorEastern Ontario Minor
Hockey LeagueNovember 16Novice – Braves 3 Ennismore 2. Bri-
ghton goals: Justin Murdoch (two), Jack Moran. Assists: Patrick Bigras, Tyler Bird, Layne Cocek, Tyler Ford, Nate Shuttleworth. Winning goaltender: Ka-telyn Fletcher.
Atom – Braves 5 North Frontenac 5. Brighton goaltender : Tristan Tsokos.
Bantam AE – Lakefi eld 6 Braves 1. Brighton goal: Mitch Bird. Assist: Raine Minnie.
November 17Novice – Braves 5 Stirling Blues 1.
Brighton goals: Justin Murdoch (two), Owen Bell, Tyler Bird, Jack Moran. Assists: Patrick Bigras (two), Dylan Murdoch. Winning goaltender: Katelyn Fletcher.
Atom – North Frontenac 7 Braves 0.Bantam – Ennismore 5 Braves 0.Bantam AE – Lakefi eld 7 Braves 3.
Brighton goals: Cody Borchert, Tristan Flatt, Lucas Waterhouse. Assists: Shane Barry, Borchert, Flatt.
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22 Brighton Independent - Thursday, November 21, 2013
SPORTS
By Steve JesselSports - Belleville - Cen-tral Ontario Secondary Schools Athletics AAA girl’s basketball took centre stage at Nicholson Catho-lic College on November 14, capped off by a pair of championship matches featuring three local high school teams.
On the junior side, the host Nicholson Crusaders took on the St. Theresa Ti-tans in an all-Bay of Quinte final, and in a close game
the Titans claimed the title with a 40 - 35 victory. The Titans led 23 - 17 at the half and never trailed during the final two quarters, led by Alex Sagriff’s 21 points. The Crusaders trailed by just four points with a 1:30 left in the game, but six con-secutive missed free throws by Nicholson in the closing minutes were the deciding factor in the Titans’ win. Nicholson was led by Ciana Bailey with 12 points and Josie Clarey with eight.
Hoops championships decided“They played amazingly to-
day,” said Titans coach Tina Roach. “They’ve improved so much over the season and we can’t ask for anything more.”
In the first semifinal from the se-nior bracket, the host Crusaders lost to Thomas A. Stewart from Peterbor-ough 28 - 17, while the hometown Quinte Saints advanced after a 45 - 40 semifinal win over Adam Scott. This set up a defensive struggle where the TAS Griffins narrowly escaped Bel-leville with a 37 - 33 win over the Saints to claim the COSSA AAA championship.
“I think we played awesome, we really worked hard on defense and got our offense going in the third quarter,” said Saints coach Liane Woodley. “We had a great year, we finished third in our league and while we didn’t win Bay of Quinte we did come back and won a silver medal at COSSA [today]. Last year we won three games, so I think that’s quite an improvement.”
After a low -scoring first quarter ended with the Griffins leading the Saints 8 - 5, TAS began to apply the pressure in the second quarter. The Griffins’ Keirsten Mangold was an
Quinte Saints’ Brooke Fleming led all Quinte scor-ers with 14 points in the COSSA AAA girls basket-ball � nal Thursday at Nicholson Catholic College. Photo: Steve Jessel
absolute force under the net, collecting rebounds and con-sistently getting good shots at the rim. With some cold shoot-ing the Saints trailed 21 - 9 at the half. However, when the second half got underway, the Saints’ shooting started to pick up. The Saints’ Brooke Flem-ing, Roberta Drummond and
Elizabeth Drummond com-bined to outscore the Griffins 19 - 10 in the third quarter, led by Fleming’s 12, and the Saints trailed by just three points heading into the fourth.
A spirited effort in the game’s final minutes had the Saints as close as four points with 1:30 remaining, but Quinte couldn’t
overcome Mangold’s game-high 18 points and lost by a final score of 37 - 33. Fleming led the Saints scorers with 14 points.
“I’m really proud of our team, they worked really hard all season and put a lot of dedi-cation into the game,” Wood-ley said.
Red Devils report con’tPeewee The Belleville CrossFit Peewee Red Devils defeated the Clarington Toros and North Central Predators by scores of 2 - 1, before losing to the York Sim-coe Express 5 - 4. Scoring in Clar-ington were, Logan White and Dalton Bancroft with Michael Andrews (2), and Jake Campbell picking up the as-sists. Ty Everden earned the win be-tween the pipes. Dalton Bancroft and Michael Andrews scored the two goals against the Preds with Zach Uens, Lo-gan White, Cole Leal, and Jake Camp-bell adding the helpers. Ethan Taylor was solid in net for Quinte. In the YSE game Jake Campbell, Elijah Brahaney, Michael Andrews, and Emmet Pierce lit the lamp for the Red Devils. Assists going to Dalton Bancroft, Logan White, Keegan Hunt, Brahaney, Pierce, and Campbell. Everden took the loss in net for Quinte. The team is on the road next Saturday where they will be playing the South Central Coyotes. The Belleville CrossFit Peewee Red Devils now hold a record of 13-4-1 in ETA league play.
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Brighton Independent - Thursday, November 21, 2013 23
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TRENTON CANADIAN TIRE STORE HOURS:MON-FRI 7:30 am-9:00 pm
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24 Brighton Independent - Thursday, November 21, 2013
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Paying for an EMC classified by credit card?
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B Section NewsB Section NewsConnected to Your Community Total EMC Distribution 474,000
November 21, 2013 www.InsideBelleville.com
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By John CampbellNews - Trent Hills – Empire Cheese rules!
The Campbellford-area farmers co-operative collected a pair of fi rsts at the Royal Winter Fair for its mild and extra mature cheddar cheese. It also collected two seconds (medium and extra mild), two thirds (marble and Stilton shaped cheddar), and was named reserve grand champion (mild cheddar).
“I’m happy, it looks good (for) a small cheese manufacturer to do well against the big guys,” said Empire’s head cheese maker, Mark Erwin.
Winning is nothing new for Erwin, who’s garnered numerous ribbons in 30 years of making cheese, including during the last six years that he’s been employed at Empire. His marble ched-dar was awarded top prize in 2012 and
Empire Cheese reserve grand champion at
Royal Winter Fair
Mark Erwin, head cheese maker at Empire Cheese, displays the mild and extra mature cheddar entries that collected red ribbons at the Royal Winter Fair Nov. 1-10 in Toronto. The farmers’ cooperative was also named reserve grand champion. The cheeses were judged according to � avour, texture, close-ness, colour and � nish. Photo: John Campbell
2011.This year’s performance is the best
the company has done at the annual competition held in Toronto since 2008 when it was proclaimed grand cham-pion (Canadian variety cheese) and re-serve champion, and earned seven top-two fi nishes, including three fi rsts.
Erwin said its “consistency in every-thing we do” that accounts for the co-operative’s stellar showings each year. That includes using good quality fresh milk and “cultures that work,” monitor-ing closely the acidic, salt and moisture content during the manufacturing pro-cess, and then aging the cheese properly afterward.
Its products are made the traditional way, in open-style vats. That involves “a lot of manual labour,” turning the
Please see “Area” on page B3
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B2 EMC Section B - Thursday, November 21, 2013
By Richard TurtleStirling - News - In the middle of one of many long rehearsals at the Stirling Festival Theatre, local firefighters ar-rived to rescue Rapunzel from her tow-er and provide a brief distraction and a perfect reason to break for lunch.
It was a moment of levity for cast and crew last week as an intense work schedule continues in the lead-up to the Christmas Panto opening later this month.
Managing Director David Vander-lip admits it is a busy time at the the-atre, preparing for both a naughty and family version of Rapunzel: A Hairy Tale before its month-long run begins on November 22, but adds the build-ing is alive with creative energy and the feeling is infective. Working with playwright Ken MacDougall and a team of actors, music directors, set and lighting designers and techni-cal support, Vanderlip notes there are many elements involved in building a show from the ground up and polish-ing it for performance. And the result-ing days can be long, he says.
“But I actually really like it,” he adds of the always hectic month of November. “This is what we’re sup-posed to be doing.”
Local airman to receive award for braveryQuinte West – News - Ca-nadian Armed Forces Mas-ter Corporal (M. Cpl.) Brent Nolasco, currently based at 8 Wing Trenton, is one of four recipients to be honoured at the 12th annual Justice In-stitute of British Columbia (JIBC) Foundation Awards for Justice and Public Safety Gala, presented by Scotia-bank, being held at the Hyatt Regency Vancouver on No-vember 28.
Each year, the Awards Gala recognizes and acknowledges individuals and organizations that have made outstanding contributions in the areas of justice, public safety and community leadership.
This year, M. Cpl. No-lasco will receive The JIBC Foundation Heroes and Res-cue Award for demonstrating courage in carrying out a dif-fi cult or heroic rescue to save another person’s life.
M. Cpl. Nolasco was in training to become a Search and Rescue Technician at the Canadian Forces School of Search and Rescue in Co-mox, B.C., when he found himself responding to a real-life rescue situation in De-cember 2012. It was during the practical portion of the medical phase of his training that a call came in about a car accident in Victoria where a vehicle had fl ipped over and
was partially submerged in a water-fi lled embankment; the 17-year�old female passenger was unconscious and trapped.
Upon arrival at the scene, police and fi refi ghters were attempting to turn the vehicle over but to no avail. Seeing that the passenger was still restrained in her seat belt, M. Cpl. Nolasco gave his knife to a police offi cer so he could cut the strap. Even after the shoulder strap was cut, the female passenger remained trapped. M. Cpl. Nolasco quickly rec-ognized that the young woman was still being restrained by the lap belt. With-out hesitation, he retrieved his knife,
entered the frigid water, cut the lap belt and freed the passenger. He then pulled her out of the wreckage, and with the help of the other emergency responders, carried her up the embankment to the ambulance where he performed chest compressions. While en route to hospi-tal, the young woman regained a normal heart rhythm.
“Master Corporal Brent Nolasco is a true hero in every sense of the word,” said John Chesman, JIBC Foundation Chair. “His bravery and selfl ess actions, while under such extreme stress, helped to save the life of another human being. Master Corporal Nolasco is a testament to the outstanding calibre of the Search and Rescue Technicians serving the Ca-nadian Armed Forces. We are proud to present him with this award. ”
M. Cpl. Nolasco will be attending the Awards Gala in Vancouver to accept his award.
“Master Corporal Brent Nolasco is a true hero in every sense of the word.”
Master Corporal Brent Nolasco, shown here, has been nominated for the JIBC Foundation Heroes and Rescue Award.
Fire department puts halt to Rapunzel rehearsal
And sometimes a little dis-traction is required.
Midway through a rehearsal last week, Fire Chief Rick Cad-dick arrived with firefighters Andrew Jeffs, Megan Fargey and Derrick Morgan, intent on rescuing the Panto star from her fairy tale prison. A lad-der in place, the first respond-ers quickly coaxed the at-first hesitant damsel from her perch
above the theatre stage. But af-ter reassurances they were in-deed professionals, Rapunzel, played by Kristi Frank, was safely brought back to earth and into the arms of awaiting firefighters. Cast and crew were quick to point cameras and cell phones to record the strange di-version from the script.
Immediately after the rescue, Vanderlip consented to a break
for lunch.Rapunzel opens November
22 with shows, both naughty and family oriented, running until the already sold out New Year’s Eve show. Special guest Santa Claus will be attending the opening weekend. Ticket information is available by con-tacting the box office (613-395-2100) or visiting their website at stirlingfestivaltheatre.com
From her tower at the Stirling Festival Theatre, Rapunzel, played by Kristi Frank, greets local � re-� ghter Andrew Je� s as he comes to her rescue. Cast and crew were interrupted during a recent rehearsal for the Christmas panto.
“This is what we’re supposed to
be doing.”
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“A dazzling show. ... The production values are grand.”—The Globe and Mail
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cheese and cutting it.“We can be unique because
we’re small (and can) actually control things maybe a little bet-ter,” than large cheese makers.
“They have technology but we have the ability to control small batches, that makes a dif-ference,” Erwin said.
Empire Cheese general manager Jack Oliver said the
cooperative’s topnotch record at the Royal Winter Fair is “a great advertising tool. The cheese that we win with is the cheese we make and sell all the time ... It certainly helps us a lot selling cheese.”
Oliver said “it’s hard to beat the big guys because they have thousands of (batches) to choose from” when submitting entries. To do well against them “really
means something.”Empire produces about
600,000 pounds of cheese a year, he said. “Your big plant would do that in three days,” operating around the clock.
The company has expanded its offerings over the years and manufactures “quite a few flavours now,” Oliver said. “We’re really strong in the curd business.”
Continued from page B1
Area farmers collect a pair of firsts
Entertainment - A talented sev-en-member singing cast known as For the Love of a Song are celebrating their seventh year to-gether and are sharing more won-derful music with their audiences including a salute to West Side Story featuring songs like Maria, Tonight, One Hand One Heart and Somewhere (There’s A Place For Us), as well as songs from many other Broadway shows in-cluding Crazy for You.
Working with their special guests the seven member Bay City Band, the singers are also
performing chart toppers from the 60s, 70s and 80s including tunes by The Mamas & The Pa-pas, Huey Lewis, Bobby Darrin and ABBA. The second half of the show is filled with some of your holiday season favourites.
Also joining the cast this year are ten talented performers from Tawny’s School of Dance. All styles including tap are featured as the dancers mold with the singers many times throughout the two-hour production.
Philippa Burkholder, Kim Dafoe, Anita Halfpenny, Craig
Parry, Hugh Williams and Al Za-back under the direction of Susan Walsh, are thrilled once again to be staging this production in the beautiful and fully accessible Maranatha Auditorium at 100 College St West, Belleville.
Twenty dollar tickets are available at the door with two performances left … Friday, Nov. 29 at 8 p.m. and Satur-day, November 30 at 2 p.m. This show is a very important fundraiser for both the Belleville Christmas Sharing Program and Adopt-A-Child.
For the Love of a Song: Only two performances left
Fiddlers will help Red Cross typhoon reliefBy Bill Freeman Asphodel-Norwood – News - As in they’ve done in the past, the Donegal Fiddlers Orchestra is reaching out to the victims of the devastating Typhoon Hai-yan in the Philippines which killed over 3,600 people and left, at last estimation, another 1.9 million people homeless.
The Donegal Fiddlers will use their December 7 Christ-mas dance to help raise funds for the Canadian Red Cross. Funds raised by the Red Cross and other charitable organiza-tions working to assist typhoon victims are being matched by the federal government.
In the past, the Orchestra has
raised money for Haitian earth-quake victims and Habitat for Humanity. They’re inviting any-one who wants to make a dona-tion to the Red Cross Typhoon Haiyan relief fund to come to the town hall December 7.
The decision to “lead the lo-cal appeal for help in that far-away country” was a natural re-sponse, said orchestra member Ron Scott said. “When the need arises we must act quickly.”
All proceeds from the dance will go to the Red Cross includ-ing cash and cheques especially dedicated to the cause as well as the admission at the door for the dance.
“We invite not only our reg-
ular dancers but anyone else who would like to drop by for the evening to stay and have a dance, listen to the music and bring along a little pot luck for lunch at intermission,” said Scott.
The concert, he said, will not only be an evening of social-izing but a local opportunity to “have a positive effect in this devastated part of the world.”
The federal government’s fund-matching program will run until December 9.
“Since before the typhoon made landfall, Red Cross teams have been working around the clock to support thousands of people in the storm’s path,”
Paula Kirkland of the Donegal Fiddlers Orchestra performs during last year’s Christmas dance. The Orchestra will donate the proceeds from their December 7 concert to the Canadian Red Cross Typhoon Haiyan relief fund. They are encouraging anyone who wants to make a donation to the relief fund to drop into the Norwood Town Hall that evening. Photo: Bill Freeman
says Conrad Sauvé, secretary general and CEO of the Cana-dian Red Cross.
Nine banks in Canada are also accepting donations in sup-port of Red Cross relief efforts.
The Red Cross has sent its state-of-the-art field hospital to the Philippines. The hospital can cover the health needs of over 100,000 people and treat patients by admitting them in the clinic or through out-patient services.
The hospital can treat up to
300 patients a day as out-pa-tients and provide immunization for 1,000 children if needed.
It will be deployed by a core team of 12 Canadian medical and support staff and will have additional surgical capacity of up to 70 in-patient beds and will be supported by both material and personnel from the Norwe-gian and Hong King Red Cross.
The organization was on the ground before the storm hit land on November 8 to help evacu-ate families in coastal areas and
support emergency shelters.Water, sanitation, medicine
and shelter are needed immedi-ately; flooding, landslides and damaged infrastructure con-tinue to hamper access to some hard-hit communities.
People can also make dona-tions at www.redcross.ca or by calling 1-800-418-1111. Lo-cally, TD Canada Trust, RBC, BMO Financial Group Sco-tiabank and CIBIC are among the nine banks accepting dona-tions.
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TRENT PORT HISTORICAL SOCIETY
invites everyone to the Unveiling of
Trent Port Photo MosaicMural
Saturday, November 23, 201311:00 AM
Parking lot of Captain George’s Restaurant
Reception to followTrenton Town Hall - 1861
55 King Street11:30am to 1:00pm
For information:Phone 613-394-1333Email: [email protected]
www.rocklandsentertainment.com www.frankmil ls.com
WED., NOVEMBER 27 - 2013 - 7 PMSHOW PLACE PERFORMANCE CENTRE - PETERBOROUGH
Call 705-742-7469 or visit www.showplace.org
MON., DECEMBER 2, 2013 - 7 PMGRAND THEATRE - KINGSTON
Call 613-530-2050 or visit www.kingstongrand.ca
Call 613-969-0099 or visit www.theempiretheatre.com
FRI., NOVEMBER 29, 2013 - 7 PMTHE EMPIRE THEATRE - BELLEVILLE
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bellevilletheatreguild.ca5 PLAYS for $80 2013 - 2014
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Velveteen RabbitThe
Two Incredible Nights of Theatre!
Special Show Time: 7:30pm Matinees 2pm
Call for Show Details. Wheelchair Accessible.
Directed by Lise Lindenberg
Preview Night See the Play for Only $5.
Tuesday, November 26 7:30pm
Opening Night Thursday, November 28
Join us for Reception following! Meet the Cast!
Runs November 28 to December 14
Velveteen RabbitThe
Two Incredible Nights of Theatre!
Special Show Time: 7:30pm Matinees 2pm
Call for Show Details. Wheelchair Accessible.
Directed by Lise Lindenberg
Preview Night See the Play for Only $5.
Tuesday, November 26 7:30pm
Opening Night Thursday, November 28
Join us for Reception following! Meet the Cast!
Runs November 28 to December 14
Velveteen RabbitThe
Two Incredible Nights of Theatre!
Special Show Time: 7:30pm Matinees 2pm
Call for Show Details. Wheelchair Accessible.
Directed by Lise Lindenberg
Preview Night See the Play for Only $5.
Tuesday, November 26 7:30pm
Opening Night Thursday, November 28
Join us for Reception following! Meet the Cast!
Runs November 28 to December 14
Velveteen RabbitThe
Two Incredible Nights of Theatre!
Special Show Time: 7:30pm Matinees 2pm
Call for Show Details. Wheelchair Accessible.
Directed by Lise Lindenberg
Preview Night See the Play for Only $5.
Tuesday, November 26 7:30pm
Opening Night Thursday, November 28
Join us for Reception following! Meet the Cast!
Runs November 28 to December 14
B4 EMC Section B - Thursday, November 21, 2013
ENTERTAINMENT
Starlite Tour kicks off Christmas festival
By Richard TurtleStirling - News - Officials and volunteers at the local agricultural museum have been busily preparing for the Christmas season and the return of the Starlite House Tour and Christmas at Farm-town Park this weekend.
The House Tour, which features half a dozen local homes spectacularly decorated for the holidays, runs today (Thursday) from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. with many participants expected to arrive at the village’s agricultural museum immediately afterwards for the opening of the Home For the Holidays display in Heritage Village.
Organizer Harry Danford, who was one of many involved in the planning and preparation at the museum, says the successful return of the fund raising raffle last year, after being hosted some years before, prompted the decision to make it an annual event. And with more than 60 items available for raffle throughout the weekend, he adds, crowds are anticipated through Friday, Saturday and
Sunday as well.“It’ll be quite something
to see all the trees lit up,” he says.
With the help of the Christmas festival’s Artistic Director Debbie Cooney, the historical street scene has all the charms of an old time Christmas, Danford says. With three heaters strategically located along the sidewalks, there will be plenty of added warmth as well. “It shouldn’t be too bad in here,” Danford says of the temperature in the usually unheated building, “and there will be places to go and get warm.”
Farmtown Park Manager Margaret Grotek says although the museum has been closed for the winter, there has been lots of activity there in the past few weeks. Dozens of artificial trees have been strung with lights and thematically decorated, boxes of toys and baskets of holiday items have been prepared along with other unique items and various displays in the facility’s popular streetscape building.
And volunteers have also
Young Pinnacle Players debut with The Velveteen
Rabbit November 28Events – Belleville - This year’s Christmas show at the Pinnacle Playhouse is breaking new ground with a cast and crew of 36 young people between the ages of 11 and 18 in the magical production of The Velveteen Rabbit. The play is based on the classic children’s book by Margery Williams that follows the experiences of a stuffed rabbit that becomes real through the love of a child. Some very experienced Belleville Theatre Guild veterans are providing leadership for these young actors as they learn the ropes of all aspects of putting on a theatrical production including stage management, set painting, makeup, dancing and acting.
Director Lise Lindenberg says, “This is one of the best groups I’ve has ever directed. With over a month still left of rehearsal time, The Velveteen Rabbit promises to deliver a very polished production. It’s going to be an excellent holiday season outing for the whole family.”
These last few weeks will be extremely busy as choreographer Amy-Lynn Van Londersele helps the actors master their dance routines and costume director Angela MacPherson and her assistant Helen Lindenberg create the imaginative costumes required for the
cast of toys, tree spirits, live rabbits, and human characters. Siobhan Enright, the set designer, assisted by Perry Poupore will be leading the young back stage crew in the fine art of set painting and scene changes. Even the lighting designers, Art MacKay and Jim Alexander, have enlisted the help of some keen teenagers to help with lighting.
The Velveteen Rabbit opens on Thursday, November 28th and runs Wednesday to Sunday until Saturday, December 14th. Evening performances will start at 7:30 p.m. and the two Sunday matinees are at 2 p.m. Ticket prices are $10 for students, $20 for adults and $18 for seniors. According to producer, Heather Muir , there will be one preview performance on Tuesday, November 26th at 7:30 pm for the bargain price of $5.
Tickets for The Velveteen Rabbit can be ordered by calling the box office at 613-967-1442. For information about this and other upcoming plays at The Belleville Theatre Guild visit the website at http://bellevilletheatreguild.ca/
The Pinnacle Playhouse is wheelchair accessible with an elevator service to the lobby, green room and theatre, a barrier-free washroom and reserved front row seating for wheelchairs and others with disabilities requiring front row access.
refurbished and painted the Farmtown Park Express, a miniature train that will be used at future functions as well, that has been loaded with toys for the weekend.
Each item available for raffle will have an accompanying box where tickets can be deposited. Throughout the four-day event that begins tonight, visitors can chose which draws to enter, with the final random selections scheduled
to begin Sunday at 2 p.m. The Starlite House Tour runs tonight from 4 p.m. 9 p.m. with Christmas at Farmtown Park continuing through Friday (noon - 9 p.m.), Saturday (10 a.m. - 6 p.m.) and Sunday from 10 a.m.
Proceeds from the fundraiser will go towards the continued operation of Farmtown Park. Further information is available by calling 613-395-0015 or emailing [email protected]..
Farmtown Park Manager Margaret Grotek (right) and Home for the Holidays Artistic Director Debbie Cooney share a laugh while preparing for this weekend’s Christmas festival at the Stirling museum. Dozens of Christmas items are available for raffle during the weekend event.
Group shot: l to r...Chloe Adams, Madison Davis, (rear) Keziah Heinricks and Ellie Lindenberg.
Do you have an opinion you’d like to share? Write the editor [email protected]
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EMC Section B - Thursday, November 21, 2013 B5
For the birds: recollections and ramblesBy Terry SpragueLifestyles - Fred Helleiner is hard to miss at Presqu’ile Provincial Park. His trademark rusty bicycle often can be found leaning against a tree somewhere, its owner nearby scanning the beaches for shorebirds, his spotting scope slung over his shoulder. If there is no snow on the ground, he will be wearing sandals.
Fred is something of an icon at Presqu’ile since moving there 14 years ago, following his retirement from Trent University, as professor in the Department of Geography, a department which he founded. His weekly bird report is circulated to 2,000 or more subscribers to the Ontario Birds Bird Alert listserv and is also carried on the NatureStuff website. Needless to say, if it is a bird, and is in the park, Fred soon knows about it.
With so many years of birding under his belt from the age of 12, it is appropriate that Fred should write a book on his hobby, from its “fledgling” beginnings when birdwatching was considered a namby pamby pursuit, favoured by elderly spinsters, retired teachers and school boys on a hike. His book, “For the Birds: Recollections and
Rambles”, is just that – a memoir on his life as a birder, looking back to some of those earlier days and the friendships he made with fellow birders, some of them renowned like Fred Bodsworth, Jim Baillie, Ron Scovell, and Jim Woodford, all of whom I had also met when I was a young birder. That he was able to extract his most memorable experiences and get them in a book of only 71 pages must have been a challenge. However, he tackled the job admirably, the result being a chronicle of his life as a birder.
Fred admits that, despite his many years of birding, he does not keep a life list, preferring to concentrate his efforts closer to home, namely Presqu’ile Park. This did not prevent him however, from driving to Milford to see a black-bellied whistling duck from Texas, or a northern wheatear on Wolfe Island. His earlier trips as a teen birder in Toronto and Peterborough involved more effort, and he often depended on the generosity of others to take him birding somewhere. Long ago, he saw the advantage that a bicycle would have in furthering his efforts in finding new birds and he used it to access birding areas that
previously had been beyond reach. On one exhausting trip, he relates, he biked from Hamilton to Burlington with a cohort to see a western grebe that had been reported there. Of course, the bird failed to appear, but he had better luck on another trip to see an American Avocet.
The entire book is sprinkled with similar anecdotes. A Frazier TV episode came to mind when he related a rite known as the snipe hunt. His perpetrators sadistically told him to sit quietly in the dusk surrounded by mosquitoes and wait patiently for the snipe to appear, which, of course, they never did. As a young gullible birder, his early life was riddled with similar experiences, all at his expense. Birdwatching was the target of ridicule when binoculars were stuffed under jackets to escape public view, and not the respected, popular pastime that it is today. I was also reminded of my own experiences as a field trip leader when birders will obediently follow me like sheep, even as I head for an outhouse. In his book, Fred commented that birding in earlier years in his birding circle was a male dominated hobby.
Finally permitting a female to join their group once in Toronto, she sought to become a “groupie” of one well known birder who was looking for a reported great gray owl and refused to give this birder the much needed opportunity to relieve himself behind a tree.
Only one reliable field guide available then – Peterson’s (and Fred admits to having memorized it from cover to cover), sub-standard binoculars, and a general lack of acceptance to birding as a legitimate hobby, things have sure changed in recent years. Fred, in his closing chapter, The Next Generation, mentions a number of younger birders who have given him reason to look forward to the future of birding with optimism. He is understandably moved by the enthusiasm of many of the younger birders he sees entering the park, reminding him of the days when he, too, was starting out as teen birder. If I were to mention two of the birders who stand out that Fred remembers as very young birders who have gone on to do great things, they would be Ian Shanahan and Doug McRae, two of the most respected birders in Presqu’ile Park today.
Fred laments that some of these new birders will no longer be able to see bobwhites, nor access the shrinking number of public birding areas, as he did as a youth. However, species uncommon to him in his youth can now readily be found as they expand their range. “If anything I have said or done while interacting with young people will inspire them to develop the all consuming passion for birding that has so enriched my own life, then I will feel greatly satisfied.”
“For the Birds: Recollections and Rambles”, by Fred Helleiner, is available at $20 at Out on a Limb in Brighton, and can be ordered directly from the author at 186 Bayshore Rd., Brighton, Ontario K0K 1H0 (add $2.50 for postage) All profits are being donated to the Friends of Presqu’ile’s 25th Anniversary Environmental Fund, which sponsors long-term projects like the eradication of invasive species.
For more information on today’s topic, please e-mail [email protected] or phone 613-476-5072. For more information on nature in the Quinte area, be sure to check out www.naturestuff.net .
CAOs trip to Kyrygzstan ‘an incredible experience’By John CampbellNews - Trent Hills – Helping the people of Kyryg-zstan, who have so little, “was an incredible ex-perience,” says Trent Hills Chief Administrative Officer Mike Rutter. “It really does change you in how you see the world.”
For one, it gave him a renewed appreciation of how “lucky” he is to live where he does and “have the best job in the world,” but it also led him to ask: “Why are we so blessed?”
He discovered during his 10 days in the central Asian country how few blessings are enjoyed by many of that impoverished country’s citizens.
After the Soviet Union collapsed, people’s jobs disappeared as factories closed “and there was no social safety net,” Rutter said. “They work so hard trying to make ends meet.”
But corruption is rampant and alcoholism is a big problem (“vodka is cheaper than water”), and there’s “just a hopeless feeling.
“It’s a country that forgot God,” he said. “I hope our society never does that ... because I think it has devastating results.”
Rutter encountered Third World-like conditions in Tokmok, the city where he stayed as a member of a team providing humanitarian aid to local residents.
He came across “some disturbing stuff” while there in October, such as men with “emotional challenges” institutionalized, living in a stark, cold
environment, and a 16-year-old girl being sold by her aunt as a bride to a 46-year-old stranger.
He and team leaders John and Julie Wright, sponsored by Norwood Pentecostal Church, provided blankets for the men, to protect them from the cold and to prevent their dying from disease. They also arranged for safe shelter on behalf of the girl who had been held captive for 10 days before escaping.
The Canadians bought “a winter’s worth of potatoes and carrots” for families who survive on what they can salvage at a landfill, and they took a group of university students to dinner and gave them supplies to help with their education.
They also treated children in one orphanage to a fun night and took another group to a water park and restaurant.
The sad lives Rutter regularly witnessed made for an “emotional” stay that still causes him to well up when discussing what he saw. But he also saw glimpses of hope that “they’re turning the corner,” although “it’s a daunting task.”
The university students, for example, “are going to change the world,” he said, and there’s evidence of an “entrepreneurial spirit” taking hold.
“They’re just wonderful people.”Rutter said if he had been asked a day after he got
back home if he would ever return to Kyrygzstan, he would have answered never again and opt to send money instead.
But now “I’m ready to go back,” he said, because he can see the impact acts of kindness can have on their lives.
And the reward that comes to those who offer
help is priceless.“You haven’t lived until you got a hug from one
of these little girls and boys,” he said. “They’re so thankful for everything, (even) the smallest stuff.”
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B6 EMC Section B - Thursday, November 21, 2013
DART team continues deployment to typhoon-ravaged Phillipines
Col. Lowthian and 8 Wing Operations Officer Lt.-Col Christian Roy listen to Maj. Gen. Ferron as he discusses the final details of the trip with them just prior to takeoff Wednesday night.
Maj. Gen. Jim Ferron, Commanding Officer of the 1st Canadian Division based in Kingston, observes as a responding DART team member photographs some other members while standing in front of a huge front-end loader which Maj. Gen. Ferron thinks will make a big difference in the Phillipines.
Canadian Armed Forces troops from across Canada prepare to board the shuttle bus which will carry them out to the waiting CC-177 Globemaster Wednesday night.
Photos: Ross Lees
By Ross LeesNews - Disaster Assistance Response team (DART) members continued to de-ploy from 8 Wing Trenton last Wednes-day night to help the typhoon-ravaged Phillipines.
Destined to finally touch down in the city of Iloilo in the Phillipines, the CC-177 Globemaster III aircraft was loaded with Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) personnel and an assortment of equipment to help out with the
humanitarian operation, according to Major General Jim Ferron, Commanding Officer of the 1st Canadian Division based in Kingston, Ontario.
“We need to get some engineering capability in there to start clearing away some of the rubble so that we can bring in some of our medical assets, so we’re bringing a group of engineers with a command and control capability to set those conditions we need to really get this job done,” he noted as the flight
was preparing for takeoff around 9 p.m. Wednesday night.
Sixty CAF personnel from all across Canada were loaded on the aircraft with equipment and Maj. Gen. Ferron said Canadians can be proud of the response of their men and women in uniform who came forward to get this effort underway.
He said the Canadian Armed Forces would continue to move personnel and equipment into the storm-damaged country to solidify the plan currently in place.
“I recognize that you can never be fast enough for an operation like this, but we’re putting in place the mechanism so that we get in. We’re prepared and we’ll truly make a difference to the Phillipine people,” he told The Contact.
The DART is a multidisciplinary military organization designed to deploy on short notice anywhere in the world in response to situations ranging from natural disasters to complex humanitarian emergencies. It is one component in Canada’s toolkit to respond to natural disasters abroad.
The DART is equipped to conduct emergency relief operations for up to approximately 40 days to bridge the gap until national and international aid agencies can arrive to provide long-
term help. Working alongside local authorities and other international organizations and agencies, DART acts as a stabilization measure until regular services are restored. Mobility of the DART is supported by the CC-177 Globemaster III, which helps provide everything from the rapid delivery of troops and cargo transport to oversized equipment anywhere in the world.
Maj. Gen. Ferron, 8 Wing Commander Col. David Lothian, and 8 Wing Operations Officer, Lt.-Col. Christian Roy, were all at the tarmac and in the deploying aircraft to meet with the men and women in uniform responding to the crisis success.
“They’re very motivated to get
Maj. Gen. Ferron mingles with the troops and the equipment just prior to takeoff Wednesday night from the tarmac at 8 Wing Trenton.
going and I was just so proud of them as we put them on board,” Maj. Gen. Ferron stated. “There’s a medical crisis there and one of the areas we hope to make a difference is in the provision of fresh water, so we’re bringing in our reverse osmosis water purification units (ROWPU) to do some of that work with the engineers clearing the way and then (we will be) bringing a very focussed medical team in to start helping out in some of the areas that really need the help.”
While onboard the aircraft to speak to the departing personnel, Maj. Gen. Ferron pointed to a large front-end loader and said, “That baby will make a big difference.”
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UCV - Alight at Night - Saturday, December 14/13Senators vs Bruins - Saturday, December 28/13
The Legend In Black - Friday, January 31/14Niagara Falls & The Calendar Girls - February 6-8/14Toronto Sportsmen’s Show - Saturday, February 8/14
Winterlude - Saturday, February 15/14Spring Fling - Myrtle Beach - March 17-25/14“Tickled Pink” Washington Cherry Blossoms
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EMC Section B - Thursday, November 21, 2013 B7
TRAVEL
Utrecht’s unique canals and wharf cellars
By John M. SmithLifestyles - My fondest memory of my visit to Utrecht in the Netherlands is of its plethora of wharf cellars that are still found along its inner city canals. These intriguing structures were built back in the Middle Ages, when Utrecht was an important trade centre, and they provided great storage facilities right at water level.
I discovered that these wharf cellars, with their pedestrian walkways, are unique to this Dutch city, and a series of staircases lead from these pedestrian quays up to the street level, providing the visitor with a two-level street system along the canals. I explored this unique area of Utrecht on foot and by boat and I was struck by both its practicality and its beauty. I saw many reminders of its bygone Middle Age era and even of earlier times (after all, a Roman fortress was built here as early as about 47 AD). I also saw many low bridges along these canals (including some swing bridges), parked boats (there’s a waiting list for ‘parking space’ along the canals), boat rentals (including pedal boats and canoes), bicycles (there are more bicycles than motor vehicles found in the inner core of the city), hidden gardens, and a great variety of architecture, both old and new. I even witnessed people carrying very heavy refrigerators, furniture, and supply items from the street level to the canal level, via the stairs!
Most of the old wharf storage facilities have now been converted into boutiques, craft shops, bars and restaurants, so I just had to check out some of these for myself. It’s interesting to explore these ancient cellars and see how so many of them
have been redesigned and reused today. For example, I found that the Ouden City Castle, an ancient fortress-like house located right in the heart of the city, now has a brewery in its old wharf cellar. I even dined in one of these mediaeval cellars, now converted into a “Restaurant Humphreys”. I discovered just how enormous and dark some of these storage facilities actually were. I also found out fi rst hand, just how much food was served here, for I could hardly believe the amount I was given and I couldn’t eat more than half of my portion!
As I did my touring of Utrecht’s canals and wharf cellars, I also discovered many of its other incredible tourist attractions. For example, it would be almost impossible to miss the city’s Domtower, the highest church tower in the Netherlands, which soars above Cathedral Square. It’s possible to ascend its 465 steps for a fantastic view of the city. In addition to this landmark, I also visited the interior of St. Martin’s Church, which was hit by a freak tornado back in 1674, collapsing its nave which was never rebuilt.
I also checked out Hoog Catharijne (one of Europe’s largest indoor shopping centres), Catharijne Convent (now a museum located in a beautiful mediaeval convent), Museum Speelklok (with its collection of musical instruments that play automatically), Centraal Museum (containing the world’s largest Rietveld collection, including the Rietveld chair),the Rietveld Schroeder House (where the shifting of walls provides access to other areas of the house), the Dick Bruna House (he’s best known for his children’s books, which
The highest church tower in the Netherlands.
Taking a canal cruise in Utrecht.
The interior of Humphrey’s Restaurant, located in a wharf cellar.
he both wrote and illustrated), the Pope’s House (currently the seat of the Provincial Executive of Utrecht, this house was originally built as the retirement home of Adrianus Floriszn Boeyens, who became the only pope from the Netherlands and, therefore, never actually got to reside here!), and the Dutch Railway Museum (with its impressive collection of rail and tram equipment and its own station). The “Trajectum Lumen”, a night light trail through the city centre, is another not-to-be-missed highlight.
This year marked the 300th anniversary of the “Treaty of Utrecht”, a global peace treaty that brought stability to Europe. It was signed here on Apr. 11, 1713, so a number of special events took place in Utrecht this year to celebrate this tercentenary, including the unveiling of a commemorative coin and special concerts, exhibitions and conferences. This treaty was of special signifi cance to what was to become
These wharf cellars are located below street level, next to the canal.
Canada, too, for France ceded its claims to the Hudson Bay Company’s territories and to Newfoundland and Nova Scotia at this time but retained its other pre-war possessions, including Ile-Saint-Jean (now Prince Edward Island) and Ile Royale (now Cape Breton Island).
A “Lonely Planet” guide stated that Utrecht was one of the world’s top ten “unsung places”, and I think that you’ll fi nd plenty to see and do here. However, be sure to include an exploration of Utrecht’s fascinating canals and wharf cellars.
For More Information: www.visit-utrecht.com
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B8 EMC Section B - Thursday, November 21, 2013
LIFESTYLES
Sheila WrayGregoire
Reality Check: Is being a double income family worth the stress?
Time to get ready for winterThe Good Earth: By Sheila Wray GregoireLifestyles - I love to-do lists and orga-nization planners. I have Excel spread-sheets for household chores and the business tasks I need to complete on a daily, weekly, and monthly basis. On good days, when I don’t hit the snooze button, I actually get most of those things done.
There’s only one problem. I have no margins in my life. If I’m super orga-nized and super energetic, it is possible to keep my house clean and to get all my work done and, hopefully, to head to the grocery store before we’re stuck discovering that all we have in the cup-boards are tins of cranberry sauce and tuna. But if an emergency comes up,
I’m in trouble.My husband works more than full-
time, and my writing and speaking require my full-time attention and too much travel. Because I write primar-ily on marriage, it’s also really hard to neglect mine, or that “hypocrite” word might get tossed around. And with my oldest now flown the coop, I’m trying to spend as much time as I can with my youngest before she leaves, too.
Life is simply busy. Pretty much ev-eryone feels that way. But I think one of the biggest sources of stress isn’t the amount of work on our plate; it’s that nagging feeling that one more straw is going to cause the whole thing to come crashing down.
We used to have some buffer in our
lives. At one time women were home to bring dinners to friends in the hospital, or to take parents to doctors’ appoint-ments, or to care for a sister’s child if said sister caught a disgusting intestinal bug. Today few of us have people we can rely on. And what’s perhaps even worse is that we aren’t able to be there for those that we love, either. When my cousin had a baby recently and needed help, I wasn’t in the position to go. What kind of life are we leading if we don’t have the room to be there for those that we love?
Yet my problem doesn’t stop there. What if, in all of our chaos of making more money, we’re actually missing out on a “good life”? A “good life” has to involve little touches of creativity and
beauty: that home-cooked meal instead of the barbecued chicken we picked up on the way home; those refinished dress-ers instead of the Ikea assemble-yourself plywood; the crocheted baby afghans. One of the things I miss most lately is the joy of friends coming for dinner, an event which is quite difficult if you’re never home to cook dinner, let alone to clear a path to the dining room table.
My business started off extremely part time, but it has mushroomed, for which I am grateful. My husband is doing well at his job, for which I am proud. Yet I am not certain that this is the life I want. If I have no room for emergencies, and little room for beauty and hospitality and fun, then what is the point?
The dual income family is now the norm, and that won’t change. Certainly we could all lower our expectations and work less. The reduction in stress is likely worth the reduction in income. Yet that is not always easy to do. And in the meantime, there is no one left to “keep the home fires burning”. We women felt undervalued when we were “just housewives”, but gradually, as most women work, more and more of us are realizing just how valuable hav-ing someone at home was. That spouse didn’t just care for the kids and do the housework; that spouse gave you that buffer, that margin, that made life live-able. I can’t give up a business I’ve spent years creating, but in the mean-time, I could really use a wife.
By Dan ClostLifestyles - O&S#1 Leaves: I know I tend to run on about this but it does surprise me to see so many bags of leaves sitting on the curb. Fortunately, they’ll go to a municipal compost pile where the black gold (carbon) can be returned to this good earth. Next spring, that carbon needs to be replaced and folks run out to garden centres and
nurseries to buy fertiliser, com-post and other stuff (sounds good on the late night infomer-cials). Time has been spent, money has been spent, and unnecessary resources (e.g. the plastic bags holding the com-post) have been used all to re-place something they threw out a few short months ago.
As it happens, I do toil away at a garden centre and will cer-
tainly not turn away sales. But, I would rather fill my corporate master’s coffers with coins proffered for other reasons.
O&S#2 Impatiens and Downy Mildew: It will be very interesting to see what hap-pens next spring; I confess that I haven’t got a clue as to how the markets will re-spond. There is no doubt that this was likely the last year for us to have complete confidence that our Impatiens walleriana is disease free. There will be some suppli-ers with clean stock, I’m sure, but all of the gardening gurus and growers magazines are advising that we select alternatives. Fortunately, this is an annual plant so the growers can quickly respond to the expect-ed changes. We gardeners will have many new choices next spring which can give us some pleasant hours “designing” our new flower beds.
O&S#3 Emerald Ash Borer: There are lots and lots of material available about this little critter. It will have a devastating impact on our ash trees, which is the most preva-lent deciduous tree species in the province. That means we need to select other trees for our landscapes. There are many choices available, including native species such as Celtis occidentalis, Hackberry, but I advise you to gen up on their bio’s. Hackberry is probably the closest in terms of form and function but it will require more attention towards formative pruning.
O&S#4 Christmas trees: A pet peeve here, I sell Christmas trees, not Happy Fes-tive Holiday Feel Good Today trees. The trees are arriving in outlets across our area and, judging by the ones at our store, they are looking very good this year. Just so you know, unless you go to a cut your own place, almost all of the trees were cut in November, with many being bundled up in October. Scots Pine, which doesn’t need a
triggering frost to switch it over to dormant mode, is the first species cut. I got that from our contact with Somerville Nurser-ies, aka Kris Kringle Christmas Trees; the things you learn, eh?
It is far too early to bring a tree indoors and expect it to last the entire season; but, it is not too early to buy one. Pick the one you like and keep it out-doors, out of the wind. Don’t cut the bottom. It will be fine when you are ready to bring it indoors.
O&S#5 Winter mulch: this is a task that too few of us do correctly. Winter mulch is used to keep the cold in. So, don’t apply it until there is some cold in the ground: an added benefit of waiting is that all of the critters who might nestle down close to a winter food supply will have moved on looking for warmer digs. . That doesn’t mean you have to wait until there’s an
inch of frost but it does mean that the surface should be crispy. You can have a pile of dry leaves waiting to place on top of semi hardy shrubs such as Zone 6 hydrangeas, but-terfly bush and garden mums. If you’ve pruned up junipers or other conifers, place the boughs around the bottoms of rhododendrons, kalmia, pieris etc., the shallow-rooted really expensive specimens in your beds.
O&S#6 Remembrance Day column: Thank you for all of your comments on last week’s column. I would like the vet-erans and serving members to know that responses to that col-umn indicate a deep undercur-rent of pride and gratefulness on the part of Canadians. I think it’s sort of like hockey, moose, and maple syrup-imbedded within our national psyche to the extent that it is part of us.
By Kate EversonQuinte West – News - This year, for the first time, the Al-zheimer Society is organizing a Walk for Memories in Trenton.
“The event will be on Sun-day, January 19, 2014,” says Hannah Brown, Fund Develop-ment Coordinator.
Walk for Memories is a fundraising event and an op-portunity for people in the community to come together in support of local individu-als and families living with Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias.
“Hosting this event in Trenton will give us a unique opportunity to recognize the Alzheimer’s disease support communities that have de-veloped in Quinte West and Brighton,” Brown says.
This event will provide an excellent opportunity to in-crease awareness around the many programs and services available to people in these communities.
“The number of people
we serve in Quinte West and Brighton has doubled over the past year,” Brown notes. “As an area where a large portion of the population is seniors we expect that number to continue growing.”
With less than 24 per cent of the organization’s annual bud-get funded by the government, it relies on the money raised at events such as Walk for Memo-ries. These funds provide criti-cal programs and services to individuals and families in the community.
“January is Alzheimer Month and we would like to partner with you to help us advocate the need for greater education and support in the community for people living with Alzheimer’s and other de-mentias,” Browns says.
The Alzheimer Society of Belleville-Hastings-Quinte is located in the Bay View Mall at 470 Dundas St. W. in Bel-leville. Call 613-962-0892 or go to alzheimersocietyofbhq.com for information.
First Walk for Memories in Trenton
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EMC Section B - Thursday, November 21, 2013 B9
By Steve JesselBelleville - News - History comes alive tonight in Belleville when the 2013 History Moments Series hits the big screen at the Empire Theatre be-ginning at 7 p.m., and producer Peter Lockyer said he has big ideas about what the future could hold for history-based tourism in the region.
“I would like to see us get into the his-tory business,” Lockyer, a former CBC Radio and Television broadcaster said. “There are many communities in the world that make money out of their his-tory... to me, we could do this here.”
Tonight, the History Moments Series will explore just a small piece of the vast history surrounding the region, through a series of short, 2-minute video vignettes. After the premiere, the videos will be dis-tributed for play at local theatres, on TV Cogeco, CKWS Television in Kingston and to local schools, archives and librar-ies, all in the interest of promoting local history. Some of the 2013 series high-lights include segments on Belleville’s Mackenzie Bowell, the fi fth prime min-ister of Canada, Belleville doctor James Bertram Collip’s contributions to the dis-covery of insulin and the history of the venerable Belleville Club.
“Not everybody in the series made headlines or won awards,” Lockyer said. “We have stories of ordinary people who lived quiet, decent hardworking lives like most of us, but they did something ex-traordinary.”
While the series is now entering its fi fth
Events - Deseronto’s Santa Claus parade takes place this Saturday, November 23rd at 6:30 p.m. View the parade route at www.deseronto.ca.
Don’t miss the Town Tree lighting ceremony, Christ-mas carols, visits with Santa and complimentary refresh-ments following the parade in Rathbun Park.
Deseronto Food Bank donations of non-perishable food items will be collected along the parade route by De-seronto Public School students; the generosity of specta-tors is greatly appreciated. The assistance of volunteers is needed for the collection of donations.
Join in the fun and enter a fl oat! Registration forms are available at www.deseronto.ca or contact the town hall at 613-396-2440, [email protected] for fl oat or volunteer inquiries.
Santa Claus is coming to Deseronto
Wealth of history explored
The 2013 History Moments Series explores local history through short video vignettes detailing signi� -cant moments and people. This photo from the Community Archives of Belleville and Hastings County shows a parade in Belleville in 1899 for the arrival of the Governor General. Photo: Submitted
year, Lockyer explained that an annual production wasn’t always the plan. After return-ing to his hometown of Picton around the year 2000, Lockyer said he had taken on an inter-est of his father’s, which was to restore and maintain a local cemetery.
After learning more about the project, Lockyer said he began to think the cemetery had some assets that were not being fully utilized, most no-tably a glut of history chroni-cling scores of individuals who made a meaningful impact on the history of the region. Af-ter a fundraising campaign to restore the cemetery far exceeded his expectations by raising over $90,000, walking tours and a lecture series were
quick to follow. In 2009, the 225th anniversary of Loyalist settlement in Prince Edward County, Lockyer created the fi rst History Moments Series.
“[We said] we’ll just do it once, to celebrate Loyalist settlement,” Lockyer laughed, refl ecting on the start of the se-ries. “It really registered with people...I’m not trying to tell you the whole story, because I want you to go to the mu-seums and get the rest of the story yourself, but I am trying to engage you in the local his-tory that is all around us.”
Looking ahead to the fu-ture, Lockyer said the poten-tial utilization of local history as a resource was huge. Lock-yer pointed to Gettysburg, a small town of just over 7,000
that attracts over three million visitors a year as a prime example of what kind of potential historical events can have on a community’s economy.
“I think there’s a real appetite for this, otherwise you wouldn’t have the history channel,” Lockyer said. “They exist as businesses because there’s a business in history.
“We have the history as a dormant re-source, why don’t we tell these stories to the world.”
The 2013 series premieres tonight at the Empire Theatre at 7 p.m. and tickets are $10 at the door. For more information on the History Moments Series, visit their website at www.his-toryliveshere.ca.
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B10 EMC Section B - Thursday, November 21, 2013
Seniors must be vigilant
The Trent Hills Community Policing Committee hosted a well-attended anti-fraud presentation in Hastings last week, which was presented by the Northumberland OPP. In the photo are (left to right) Const. Steve Bates, committee chair Lilian Adams, Const. Karen German and committee treasurer Laura Vickers. Photo: Bill Freeman
By Bill FreemanHastings – News - Fraudsters and scam artists target seniors because of their trusting nature and that’s why vigilance should be the number one defence against confi dence tricksters, police say.
“They target seniors because of your trusting nature,” Northumberland OPP Const. Karen German said during a fraud presentation at the Hastings Civ-ic Centre last week. The presentation, which drew a large crowd, was hosted by the Trent Hills Community Policing Committee.
The presentation was timely given the wave of “grandparent scam” at-tempts and the fact that Trent Hills residents have been victims.
Const. German and Const. Steve Bates cited some of the more popular scams but reminded guests that they were “just touching on a few of them” noting that the informative and helpful
Canadian Anti-Fraud Cen-tre lists at least 30 different types of frauds and scams.
While seniors are a large target group, there is “no typi-cal victim,” Const. German said. Anyone can be deceived.
“They will go where the money is. They want your money. If they take from you once they will go after you again.”
The offi cers talked about frequently used scams in-cluding computer repairs, home repairs, the big prize-lottery scam, advance fee letter fraud and cheque over-payment fraud.
The grandparent or emer-gency scam is the one that is often used, the two offi cers said. They’ve both seen ex-amples in Trent Hills.
“I deal a lot with emergen-cy scams,” Const. German said. “It plays on a person’s sympathies and emotions.”
“Grandparent scams are top of the list for frauds on se-niors,” Const. Bates agreed.
In the “grandparent scam” the scammer attempts to con-vince the victim that a loved one is hurt or in trouble and needs immediate fi nancial assistance to remedy or im-prove the situation. The call-ers usually have no infor-mation about the loved one and use a series of leading questions to fi ll in the blanks while preying on the victim’s sense of concern.
“Calm yourself down” when you get a call like that,” Const. Gorman said. “Ask personal questions only a (loved one) would know.”
If they can’t answer those questions accurately hang up the phone and call the police,
she said.“The phone is a very fre-
quent way to get information from seniors,” Const. Bates said, noting that an 86-year-old Hastings resident was a recent target with the caller asking increasingly person-al questions in an effort to squeeze him for information.
Always guard your per-sonal information, they stressed.
“He called the OPP which is the right thing to do,” Const. Bates said. “If you don’t know the person or rec-ognize the number that should be a red fl ag immediately.
“If you don’t know the number why would you waste the time talking?”
Seniors who use comput-ers should be equally vigi-lant, they added.
Policing Committee chair Lilian Adams said the pre-sentation was very informa-tive.
“It was very important be-cause of the seniors around here,” Adams said. “I get those calls all the time; it makes you nervous.”
Adams said she was vic-timized a couple of years ago and sent money in response to a call.
“I am guilty. You’re naïve and as you get older it’s so easy to be taken.”
Adams said information is power and the more people learn about frauds the safer they will be.
“I think these presenta-tions are terrifi c, especially in a small town.”
Seniors should not be em-barrassed to call police.
“Don’t be afraid to call us,” said Const. Gorman.
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Anti-submarine boats travelled Trent-Severn to engage German U-boats in Second World War
By John CampbellCampbellford – Warships made their way along the Trent-Severn Waterway more than 70 years ago to do battle with the dreaded German U-boats during the Second World War, members and guests of the Trent Hills Probus Club learned during a presentation last week.
“There was a real problem with submarine activity (which came to be) called the Battle of the St. Lawrence because so many of the sinkings were actually in Canadian territory,” Alan Brunger, a retired Trent University pro-fessor, told the club.
He’s written about this little-known chapter of Canadian military history in a paper, Warships in the Waterway that was published by the Peterborough His-torical Society and released just before Remembrance Day.
It tells the story of seven Fairmile anti-submarine motor launches built in Orillia by Hunter Boats Ltd. from 1941 to 1944.
The only way they could reach the wartime theatre of activity in the At-lantic Ocean from a shipyard on Lake Couchiching was via the Trent-Severn to Lake Ontario, which took them past Campbellford in their four-day journey southward.
Canada “was crucial in supplying Britain with all sorts of food, armaments (and) materials” but the ships were fa-vourite targets of U-boats, which sank many of them in the St. Lawrence estu-ary and beyond, Brunger said.
It got so bad – a ferry was torpedoed in 1942 killing more than 140 civilians – that “there was terrifi c pressure on the government to issue these contracts to build all sorts of ships” in response to the German threat, Brunger said.
At the start of the war, the Royal Ca-nadian Navy only had 13 ships, but by 1945 it had grown to become the fourth
Alan Brunger chats with Trent Hills Probus Club vice-president Art Linton before giving a talk on anti-submarine boats that travelled on the Trent-Severn Waterway during the Second World War en route to the Battle of the St. Lawrence. Photo: John Campbell
largest navy in the world, with 378 ships. The Fairmile was the second-most com-mon, behind the corvette.
Hunter Boats was one of fi ve boat-yards in Ontario chosen to build the mo-tor launches using prefabricated kits.
At 112 feet in length, they were short enough to fi t inside the locks between Orillia and Trenton (they couldn’t head north to Georgian Bay, which was clos-er, because they were too long for the marine railway at Big Chute).
Among the many photos Brunger included in his presentation were a few showing the Fairmiles docked in Camp-bellford, taken by Frank Linton, who later served as mayor of the town.
Brunger said there are no records of a Fairmile ever having destroyed a U-boat with its depth charges, but by 1943 the German submarines were on the defen-
sive and the motor launches “had a role in patrolling, which must have been ef-fective, so it was a good idea to build them.”
After the war, “the government was so anxious to get cash and to reduce the navy because it didn’t need 300-odd ships, it sold them for fi re sale prices,” Brunger said. Fairmiles were sold for just $3,500, even though they had cost $70,000 to build.
On a separate note, Probus Club president Bill Hogle announced that the newly formed group had set a cap on membership at 150 people, which was reached during the meeting held Nov. 13 at St. John’s United Church auditorium. Anyone interested in joining will be put on waiting list but must have a sponsor to become a member.
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B12 EMC Section B - Thursday, November 21, 2013
Batawa Ski Hill is making snow earlier than ever before
By Kate EversonNews - The Batawa Ski Hill’s new Operations Manager, Danny MacDuffie, says, “It is plain and simple, cold means snow.” And with the first real cold snap of the season, Batawa Ski Hill is making snow earlier than ever before.
At 11:15 p.m. on Monday November 11, 2013 the snow guns fired up and made snow until mid-day on Tuesday. “We will fire the guns up again tonight
and probably Wednesday night as well,” said MacDuffie. There will not be enough snow to open, but making snow at every opportunity will mean that the hill should be open for it planned grand opening on December 14.
“The goal is to have most, if not all, of the hill open before Christmas so that families will have a great place to play through the holidays,” said General Manager Andrew Rusynyk. “I
am so happy to have MacDuffie and his Outside Operations crew here this year. The hill is as ready as it has ever been to open for the winter fun season.”
MacDuffie came to Batawa Ski Hill in late of August and brings over 25 years of Ski Resort Operations Management in Ontario. He is a Certified Lift Mechanic as well as a millwright, diesel mechanic and a welder who has built high rises and factories, in addition to making snow
Snow operations are in great hands with Danny MacDuffie (Outside Opera-tions Manager), Chris Petit and Tom Koroscil (Lead Hand) Photo: Submitted
and getting people to the top of ski hills. Raised on a farm outside Collingwood, the ski industry was a way of life as his father, Russell MacDuffie, worked for the Welder family developing Blue Mountain back in the 60s, 70s and 80s.
“I started working at Blue Mountain at 13 years old in operations, lifts, maintenance and whatever else they would let me do. After high school I left to work as a welder and fitter at the shipyards for four years.”
Then after a stretch out west and working in the trades for a few years, he realized that something was missing. It was the ski industry. He got back into the ski biz with a job at Craiglieth Ski Club as the Maintenance Manager.
In his 11 years at the Craigleith he was the first non-member to receive the President’s Award. His work within the ski industry has also taken him to other resorts like Talisman, Cedar Highlands, Calabogie Peaks and Pine Ridge Ski Club. “I have enjoyed building small ski hills into larger four season venues,” says MacDuffie.
In 1979, he met his wife Susan. They have three children that come to visit Batawa frequently. When he came across the Outside Operations job at Batawa Ski Hill, he thought this would be a great place to finish out his career in the ski business. “So far my wife and I love it. It is a very special
community and living right in Batawa has been awesome,” laughs MacDuffie. “This whole area is so friendly that it sometimes seems unreal in comparison to what we have seen in the past.”
The new team at Batawa Ski Hill shares MacDuffie’s belief that it’s important to take the guests’ fun seriously. “I am happy to be part of this great new team that Heather Candler, Batawa General Manager, has assembled. I’m really excited for this season to get started,” notes MacDuffie.
Working with a team of great people, combined with the new investments in hill night lighting, chalet renovations and other hill improvements, have made this an exciting year to join the ski hill team. And the dropping temperatures bode well for a great winter.
The Ski Hill is now in its last month of season pass discount sales. Beginning December 2 the full season pass rates kick in so community members are encouraged to get their passes before the end of November.
Registrations have begun for the ski and snowboard lessons beginning over the Christmas holidays. For more information or to book lessons, contact 613-398-6568 or [email protected].
For more information please call 613-398-6568 or email [email protected]
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EMC B Section - Thursday, November 21, 2013 B13
Friends, Family & Neighbours of
Clarnece Herringtonare invited to the Masonic Temple
in Brighton, Ont. on
Sunday, November 24th, 2013between 2 – 4 pm
to celebrate
Clarnece’s 90th BirthdayBest Wishes only!Hugs & Kisses too
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PITCHER, Lawrence WesleyBorn September 8, 1935, passed away peacefully with his family by his side at the Trenton Memorial Hospital on Friday, November 15th, 2013. Larry Pitcher of Brighton, son of the late Walter Pitcher and the late Mary (Ward). Loving husband of Barbara (Gotsell). Dear father of Danny Pitcher and his wife Patricia of Stirling, Jody Lyn Pitcher of Dundalk, and Christopher Pitcher and his wife Heather of Mount Albert. Loved by many grandchildren, great grandchildren, nieces and nephews. Papa Larry will be missed by the Culkin family. Brother of Elfreda Sly (the late Donnie Sly), Elsie Paquette (the late Leo Paquette), and Robert “Bob” Pitcher (the late Sharon Pitcher). Predeceased by his sisters, Violet and Kathleen, and his brothers, Francis, Wilford, Arthur, Ron, and Bill. The family would like to express their thanks to the Doctors and Nurses at the Kingston Cancer Clinic, CCAC Palliative Care team – Dr. Nolan, Eva and Jennifer, and the nurses at Quinte Trenton Memorial Hospital, level 2, for the incredible compassion and care provided. The family will receive friends at the Walas Funeral Home, 130 Main street, Brighton, on Saturday, November 23rd, 2013 from 10:00 a.m. Service in the funeral home to follow at 12:30 p.m. Cremation with interment Mount Hope Cemetery at a later date. As an expression of sympathy, donations to the Trenton Memorial Hospital Foundation, would be appreciated by the family. www.rushnellfamilyservices.com
CL485264
SHARPE, Dorothy MarionAt Crown Ridge Place on Sunday, November 17th, 2013. Dorothy Sharpe (nee: Fenton) in her 91st year. Daughter of the late Harry and Ethel Fenton. Beloved wife of the late Alex W. Sharpe. Dear mother of Helen Sackrider and her husband Philip of Peterborough, Linda Annis and her husband Brian of Castleton, Mary Arthur and her husband Murray of Trenton, Gordon Sharpe and his wife Brenda of Quinte West. Much loved grandmother of Jennifer (Alan), Peter (Laura), Julie (Rob), Steven (Jennifer), Susan, Paul (Joanne), Bradley (Anne-Marie) and Matthew (Alexandra). Loved great-grandma of Emily, Lily, Dominic, Leah, Nathan and Parker. Sister of the late Allan, (Stephanie) Fenton, Marjorie (James) Winter, Charles, Robert and Kenneth Fenton. Survived by sisters-in-law, Eula and Verna Fenton. Special thanks to the caring staff at Crown Ridge Place for the love and compassion given to Mom. Arrangements entrusted to the WALAS FUNERAL HOME, 130 Main Street, Brighton. Service was held from Carman United Church on Wednesday, November 20, 2013 at 1:30 p.m. Reverend Doug Currie officiated. Interment Carman Cemetery If desired, Memorial Donations to the Carman United Church or the Heart and Stroke Foundation would be appreciated. On-line condolences at www.rushnellfamilyservices.com CL485270
TOP, Hans, Age 62 years, Retired from Ontario Power Generation Longtime Member of the Oshawa Curling Club - Peacefully passed away at Lakeridge Health Oshawa on Saturday November 16, 2013. Beloved husband of Margot. Dear father of Andrew Top and Joanne Top (Bill Britt). Dear brother of Frances (Gary) Bradley, Maria Top (Rick Busk) and Ben Top. Dear uncle of Erika McConnell, Christopher Bradley, Nicholas Bradley, Sable Top and Mike Top. Predeceased by his parents Bernardus and Adelheid Top and his sister Delitha Top. Visitation will be held at NORTHCUTT ELLIOTT FUNERAL HOME, 53 Division St. Bowmanville on Thursday November 21, 2013 from 6 - 8 pm. A Funeral Service will be held at EBENEZER UNITED CHURCH, 1669 Courtice Road South, on Friday November 22, 2013 at 1 pm, with visitation from 12 - 1 pm. Private Interment will be held at Mount Hope Cemetery, Brighton. In lieu of fl owers, Memorial Donations may be made to The Durham Regional Cancer Centre or The Arthritis Society.
www.northcuttelliott.com
McDonald, George ArthurP e a c e f u l l y passed away at the Hastings Manor on T h u r s d a y , N o v e m b e r 14th, 2013. Loving husband of Ruth (nee McCann) for 60
devoted years together. Beloved father of David of Colborne, and Ron of Red Deer, AB. Predeceased by his parents Lorne and Winnifred McDonald and sister Dorothy Walters. The family will receive friends at the Walas Funeral Home 130 Main St., Brighton (613-475-2121) on Saturday, November 16th, 2013 from 12noon till 2p.m. with a service to follow in the chapel at 2p.m. Interment Salem Cemetery. As an expression of sympathy, donations to the Alzheimer Society or Heritage United Church would be appreciated. On-line condolences at www.rushnellfamilyservices.com
CL484911
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GRANT, OrleneNovember 20, 2010
You were always a great persona great person indeedYou were always there
whenever I was in need
You raised me up in a big, safe world
I’m glad I had the chanceto be your little girl
You always had a smileon your beautiful, warm face
God did the right thingby taking you to a good place
Even though I miss youand we grow farther apart
I will always have a place for youright here in my heart
We miss you everyday Mom and Momma.
Love: Carmel, Brent, Braden & Gavin
CL4
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Leo Vanderwal - left his loving family on
Nov 26th, 2011
In Memory
It broke our hearts to lose you,but you did not go alone.
A part of us went with you,the day God took you home.
If tears could build a stairway,and heartaches make a lane,we’d walk our way to heaven,
and bring you back again.In life we loved you dearly,in death we love you still,
in our hearts you hold a placeno one could ever fill.
The night does notlast forever,It fades with thedawning of the morn.The rose does not last forever,It withers with the fadingof the spring.But your memory will linger forever,In the hearts of all who love you,Because love does last forever.
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(Edwards) MackWahnietaApril 30, 1938 - November 24, 2012
Miss you always ‘Tinita, Larry & Shirley and the rest
of your Cordova family.xoxo
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Happy 60th Birthday Dawn Mastromarco
Love your family and friends.
Thank You from Joel Lockwood and Family
We sincerely thank Brian and Sylvia McNeil for putting on the Little
Oktoberfest benefit in Queensborough to assist our family and Joel while
he undergoes cancer treatments. We also deeply thank Centre Hastings Secondary School, Marmora Fire
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DEATH NOTICE DEATH NOTICE
Prayer of the Blessed Virgin Mary Never known to Fail.
O most beautiful flower of Mount Carmel, fruitful vine, splendor of Heaven, blessed Mother of the son of God. Immaculate Virgin, assist me in my necessity. O Star of the sea, help me and show me here you are my Mother. O Holy Mary, Mother of God, Queen of Heaven and Earth. I humbly beseech you from the bottom of my heart to secure me in my necessity (Make Request). There are none that can withstand your power. Oh Mary conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee, (Say three times) Holy Mary I place this cause in your hands. (Say three times). Say this prayer for three consecutive days and then you must publish.
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B14 EMC B Section - Thursday, November 21, 2013
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68
ApArtmentsp r a d a c o u r t
CALL 1-800-706-4459613-475-3793 9am - 5pmwww.pradacourt.com
Featuring 2 bedroom apartments with all amenities including: fridge, stove, air conditioning and wheelchair access.The apartments are attractive and the buildings are secure.Ideal for Seniors or retired couples
CL4
7734
5
APARTMENT FOR RENT2nd floor apt., Front St. Hastings,
L/R, D/R, Kit., Bath, 1 bdrm, fridge, stove, window a/c, heat included; hydro extra, $650 per month, non
smoking, no pets, references required. Available now.
To apply call 705-696-3356 (daytime).
Kenmau Ltd.
Call Kenmau Ltd. Property Management (Since 1985)
613-392-2601
BELLEVILLECannifton Road 2nd level, 1 bedroom with private entrance, fridge & stove. $625 /mth + utilities.
STIRLING 1 bedroom with fridge, stove and heat included, $650/mth + hydro. 613-967-8654
CL43
9252
CL43
5769
APARTMENT FOR RENTAvailable December 1st or sooner, Seniors residence, 65 years or older. 1 bedroom, downstairs, unfurnished apt. Heat and Hydro included. Non-smoking building.
$630.00 a monthPlease contact Bill or Carol Gibson
613-398-1036 or 613-922-6798
CL43
9500
Belleville(Pringle Drive)
2 level, 2 bedroom apartment with private entrance, fridge, stove
& water included. $750/mth
plus heat & hydro.Kenmau Ltd.
(Since 1985)
Property Management
613-392-2601
CL43
6041
BRIGHTONAttractive 2 bdrm with
new fridge & stove, water and balcony. New
window coverings & flooring, freshly painted.
Building has security entrance & laundry facilities. $750/mth plus heat & hydro.
Kenmau Ltd.(Since 1985)
Property Management
613-392-2601
CL43
9255
CL42
9998
Brighton Downtown1 & 2 Bedrooms
with fridge & stove $525-$675 plus
utilities Kenmau Ltd.
since 1985
Property Management 613-392-2601
DON’T MISS OUTBay Terrace Apartments
334 Dundas St. E.Come see our GREAT
Renovations! Fantastic 1 & 2 bdrm suites. NUMEROUS
Amenities! Indoor pool, gym, social rm w/events.
MOVE IN INCENTIVE! Drop in today.
DAILY OPEN HOUSES.1-888-478-7169
CL43
5765
NEAR CFB TRENTON
Spacious apartments with fridge, stove and storage space. Some
with a balcony. One and two bdrm apartments
from $625-$725/mth + Utilities
Special Offer! Limited Time 12th Month FREE!
CALL 705-828-3333CL
4216
18 TrenTon WesT side
Unique one bedroom with 2 balconies, private
entrance,sunken living room, fridge, stove, dishwasher. Heat & water included.
$700/mth + hydro
Kenmau Ltd.(Since 1985)
Property Management
613-392-2601
CL436044
TrenTon WesT side
Attractive, spacious home comes with many extras, 2 fireplaces, in-ground pool, 3-4pc. bathrooms,
3-3pc. bathrooms, 5 bedrooms and
single car garage.$1,500/mth + utilities.
Kenmau Ltd.(Since 1985)
Property Management613-392-2601
CL43
9279
CL43
5764
LOOK NOFURTHERPRINCE WILLIAM
APARTMENTS165 Herchimer Ave.Fantastic 1 & 2 bdrm suites! Outdoor pool, sauna, exercise rm, social rm w/events, 24/7 on-site mgmt. DrOp in tODAy!
Don’t miss out!1-866-906-3032www.realstar.ca
COMING EVENTS
NEW YEARS EVE DANCEmusic by Jennifer Brant & Mustang Country music with some 50’s & 60’s Rock. December 31, 20138pm - 12:30 am. Light Luncheon included. Orange Lodge HallYork Rd, Tyendinaga Territory. $20.00 per person. Tickets can be purchased in advance: Pat 613-396-2132 Jennifer 613-396-3308Lenore 613-476-7632
November 30 Christmas Bazaar come and join us 9-4 at Havelock Town Hall Something for everyone
Free admission and free refreshments
Donation to local food bank is appreciated
FOR SALE
COMING EVENTS
Psychic Romance Dance, Nov 30th. Music, Dancing & Private Readings 8-11 p.m.! Only $20 for 20 mins with dance entry. Dance until 1am! Trenton Legion, back entrance. 613-392-9850.
FOR SALE
Amana bottom drawer 23 cu. ft., white fridge, good condition, $500. 613-394-2472.
AquaMaster softeners. Rated #1 in Canada! Rent, purchase or finance. Only available at Water Source 613-968-6256.
Beachcomber Soft Tub. 4-5 person. $500. 5 years old. 613-354-2986.
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
Butcher Supplies, Leather + Craft Suppliesand Animal Control Prod-ucts. Get your Halfords 136 page FREE CATALOG. 1-800-353-7864 or Email: [email protected] our Web Store:w w w. h a l f o r d s m a i l o r -der.com
ELECTRIC WHEELCHAIR excellent condition. New batteries, news tires, charger. $900 obo. 613478-5783
Flooring deals, berber carpet 99 cents sq. ft.; 12 mm laminate $1.49/sq. ft.; modern cut/loop carpet 1.49/sq. ft.; Free shop at home service. Saillian Car-pets 1-800-578-0497, (905)373-2260.
FOR SALEWinter Tires - Set of 4 Toyo 185/65R14 Observe G-02 Plus ice tires on black steel rims. In great shape. Asking $400.00Please call (343)263-2905
Forage King Snowblower. 7ft good condition. Arm-strong 75,000 btu propane furnace 613-398-7147 or 613-848-4380.
Four SNOW TIRES on rims, 6 lugs, fits 2006 Kia Sadona, hardly used, buy 2 or buy 4. Cost for all 4, $500. 613-475-4537
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
Sides of beef for sale. Cut, wrapped, frozen. $2.95/lb. C h e s t e r v i l l e 613-448-3471.
STEEL BUILDINGS/METAL BUILDINGS UP TO 60% OFF!30x40, 40x60, 50x80, 60x100,80x100 sell for balance owed! Call: 1 - 8 0 0 - 4 5 7 - 2 2 0 6 www.crownsteelbui ld-ings.ca
Stove Pellets, 40 lbs bags, $4.75 per bag plus HST. Low Ash/moisture, high BTU. [email protected] or 613-847-5457
Used vinyl windows for sale immediately.Many different sizes & configurations. White vinyl,thermal pane, double hung vertical, fixed, singles
& doubles. Can be viewed atwww.absolutecontractors.ca or in person at
1296 Hamilton Rd in Trenton, Mon to Fri 8-4:30.
Warehouse shelving, racking, lockers and exte-rior signs, good condition. To buy or sell, call Lloyd 613-530-7840. Website:shelvingandrackingworld.ca Email: [email protected]
FITNESS &HEALTH
Tranquility Spa, Best Western Country Squire, Gananoque. BFF Day. Re-ceive one regular service and receive 40% off your BFF’s service. Hen parties also available with a free room. Health Club Mem-berships 10% off until De-cember 15/2013. New cardio equipment, use of hot tub, steam room and pool. Call 613-382-3511 or 1-800-267-9415 for more info.
WANTED
Contractor pays top cash for property in need of renovation or repair, any area. Gerry Hudson, King-ston (613)449-1668 Sales Representative Rideau Town and Country Realty Ltd, Brokerage (613)273-5000.
FARM
MORTGAGES
WANTED
DUMP RUNSJunk removal &
willing to move arti-cles for individuals.
613-475-9591
FOR SALE
MUTTON METALSALVAGE
Free removal ofscrap metal.Call Jeff at
905-344-7733.
Standing timber, hard maple, soft maple, red and white oak, etc. Quality workmanship guaranteed. 705-957-7087.
Wanted: Standing timber, mature hard/softwood. Also wanted, natural stone, cubicle or flat, any size. 613-968-5182.
FARM
170 Allis Chalmers with Allis loader, 3 cyl. perkins diesel, 50 HP, good shape, rebuilt engine, $8,500. Call 705-778-7328.
Airless spray painting, roofs & sides, steel roofs repairs. 5 & 6” seamless eavestrough, soffit, facia, gutterguard installed or delivered. Free estimates. 1(877)490-9914.
FARM
MORTGAGES
FARM
Barn Repairs, Steel roof repairs, barn boards, beam repairs, sliding doors, eavestroughs, screw nail-ing, roof painting, barn painting. Call John 613-392-2569.
LIVESTOCK100 Rideau Arcott ewe lambs born May. Rams also available. High health status flock. Bakerstone Farm, Doug Savage 613-269-2636.
Bedding & Feed: Shavings for $4.75/each, bedding pellets for $4.00/each, Tiz Whiz grain for $15/each and Triple Crown grain for $25/each. plus HST. [email protected] or 613-847-5457.
PETS
Dog Grooming by Berna-dette. Professional servic-es with TLC. New clients welcome. 550 Trenton-Frankford Rd, 1 minute north of 401. (613)243-8245.
MORTGAGES
$$MONEY$$ CONSOLIDATE
Debts Mortgages to 90% No income, Bad credit OK!
Better Option Mortgage #10969
1-800-282-1169 www.mortgageontario.com
FOR RENT
MORTGAGES
Mortgage Solutions Purchases, Consolida-tions, Construction. Lower than bank posted rates (OAC) On-Site Pri-vate Funds for credit is-sues, discharged bankrupts and BFS without proven income. Chase Financial 1-613-384-1301 Chase Financial o/b 835289 Ontario Inc. Brokerage License #10876
COMMERCIAL RENT
DOWNTOWN BRIGHTON office space for lease. Multiple sizes and configurations possible. Plenty of parking. Call 613-813-2774.
Warkworth Main St., 2 adjoining stores/offices available now. First is 689 sq. ft. for $575, second is 546 sq. ft. for $550 or create one 1,235 sq. ft. space for $1,000/month HST and utilities extra. Water, parking and back courtyard included. Call 705-924-3341 and leave message.
FOR RENT
FOR RENT
1 & 2 Bedroom apart-ments in quiet, spacious senior’s residential build-ing, Downtown Trenton (across from Metro). All inclusive, $785 and $895/mth. Senior-dis-count, non-smoking, no pets. Call 613-922-5528
Beautiful loft apartment in Norwood. 3 bedrooms or 2 with an office. Large deck, backyard, parking, storage. Available Novem-ber. Call 705-639-5757 or 705-877-1973.
Colonial Inn Motel Madoc for rent daily, weekly, monthly. Kitchenette Available (613)473-2221.
FRANKFORD - 3 bdrm apt in Avail Dec.1 $870/mth1 bdrm apt Avail Dec. 1 $530/mth 613-392-4561
Frankford- 2 bedroom quiet adult building. Laun-dry, parking, heat and hy-dro included. First and last required. $795/month. 613-473-2885.
Kaladar; Three bedroom apt., fridge and stove, utilities extra, $550 per month, first and last re-quired. Call 613-336-9429.
MARMORA - Furnished room and large common area. $475/mth.Marmora - Large 1 bdrm apt for rent. Everything in-cluded. $875/mth. Available immediately 613-472-1697
Marmora 1 bedroom apartment. Clean, ground floor unit near downtown. Suitable for retired senior. $495 + hydro. Call 613-478-3303.
FOR RENT
FOR RENT
Need a home? Call the Hastings Housing Re-source Centre. Services offered in Belleville, Quinte West, North and Centre Hastings. (613)969-1748.
Town of Trent River, 1 bdrm cottage, newly reno-vated, close to Trent River water and park, available immediately, $700/month including H&H. Phone 705-212-2222 705-536- 1142
PERSONAL
TRUE PSYCHICSFor Answers, CALL NOW 24/7 Toll FREE 1-877-342-3032 Mobile: #4486 www.truepsy-chics.ca
LEGAL
CRIMINAL RECORD?Don’t let your past limit your career plans!Since 1989 Confidential, Fast Affordable - A+ BBB Rating EMPLOYMENT & TRAVEL FREEDOMCall for FREE INFO BOOK-LET 1-8-NOW-PARDON (1-866-972-7366)w w w. R e m o v e Yo u r R e -cord.com
LOST & FOUND
LOST DOG, NAMED DUKE. Male blood-hound/German Shepard mix. 4 years old. Weighs approx 75lbs. Lost on Wednesday October 16 from Flinton Ontario. Else-vir Rd. Black and tan with a white chest. Contact Misty or Ben at 613-336-6871.
FOR RENT
LOST & FOUND
Lost- gold ring. Trenton area. Canadian Coat of Arms engraving. Inscrip-tion on inside with name/retirement date. Lost Nov. 10. Reward! 613-965-6640.
FOR RENT
Metroland Media Classifieds
Residential items only1-888-967-3237
Buy 1 week get 1 free!
Call 613-966-2034 ext 560
There’s
To Be Made in theClassifiedsTo book your ad
CALL1-888-967-3237
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EMC B Section - Thursday, November 21, 2013 B15
TOWNSHIP OF ADDINGTON HIGHLANDS
NOTICE OF TENDER FOR THE DESIGN - CONSTRUCTION OF THE
NORTHBROOK MUNICIPAL FIRE HALL
SEALED TENDERS on the forms supplied will be received in envelopes plainly marked as to contents by the Township Clerk at the Township of Addington Highlands Municipal Office located at 72 Edward Street, Flinton, Ontario until:
10:00 a.m., local time, Thursday, December 19th, 2013
for the design and construction of the Northbrook Municipal Fire Hall
located at 11905 Highway 41 in Northbrook, Ontario.
The Work includes, but is not necessarily limited to the following:
The design and construction of a building that is approximately 5,900 sq.ft. in total area and includes 4 truck bays and approximately 2,250 sq. ft. of office space. The overall
scope of the project includes the design, supply and construction for the new building, all site works including storm water management control, installation of a right turn lane,
and well and septic installation for the site.
The scope of the new building includes new footings and foundation walls, reinforced concrete floor slab, structural framing, man doors and vehicle doors, interior partitions,
offices and washrooms and associated electrical, HVAC and mechanical systems. Tender documents may be obtained at the office of the Engineer between 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. local time Monday to Friday commencing November 19, 2013. There is a one-
time charge of $50.00 (including H.S.T.) per copy (non-refundable) for the Tender Documents. If further information is required, please contact Chris Bent, Project
Manager, G.D. Jewell Engineering Inc. at (613) 969-1111.
Tender documents will be available for viewing at the Kingston and Belleville Construction Associations.
Lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted.
If you are interested in receiving further information on this project, please contact the following: ENGINEER OWNER G.D. Jewell Engineering Inc. Township of Addington Highlands 71 Millennium Parkway, Unit 1 72 Edward Street Belleville, Ontario Flinton, Ontario K8N 4Z5 K0H 1P0 Telephone: (613) 969-1111 Telephone: (613) 336-2286 Fax: (613) 969-8988 Fax: (613) 336-2847
CL45
8273
Barcovan Golf Club will be holdingtheir IPM public meeting on
Monday, November 25th 8:00 am.Location 1412 County Road 64,
R.R.#2 Carrying Place. Bill Kuzmich,representative -Telephone 613-475-2155
HUCKLEBUG PRESCHOOL INC. Provides early learning and child care for children 0-12 yrs of age in the Nor-wood and Havelock communities and is seeking F/T per-manent registered Early Childhood Educator for our Stepping stone Preschool Centre. Current Police Check (Vulnerable Sector) will be required and First Aid with Infant/Child CPR. Send your resume with a cover letter to Kathy Hamilton by noon Mon. Nov 25, 2013. Email [email protected] Fax 705-778-5246. We thank all applicants, only those selected for an interview will be contacted.
CONTACT EATRIGHT Ontario and speak to a Registered Dietitian for FREE! Call 1-877-510-510-2 or visit eatrightontario.ca
Carrier Routes Available
CL
4214
88
Carrier Routes AvailableCarrier Routes Available
“We Need You!”
ROUTE # PAPERS MAIN STREET LOCATIONFC020 70 Charles St BellevilleFE016 120 Janlyn Cr BellevilleFE018 70 Spruce Gardens BellevilleFC009 95 Brassey St BellevilleFC018 119 Queen St BellevilleFB015 90 Hope Cr. BellevilleFD016 127 Golfdale St BellevilleFD002 100 Chatham St BellevilleFC017 71 Cannifton Rd BellevilleFB027 95 Boyce Crt BellevilleFC013 80 Byron St BellevilleFC014 62 Centre St BellevilleFC016 54 University Ave BellevilleFC012 63 West St BellevilleFC003 78 Forin St BellevilleFC006 61 Lingham St BellevilleFC021 65 Foster Ave BellevilleFD001 34 Dufferin Ave BellevilleFD005 36 Burnham St BellevilleFD014 100 Stanley St BellevilleFE013 64 Munro Ave BellevilleFE016 101 Carlow Crt Belleville
For more information on any of these routes please callBelleville/Central Hastings: Kathy LaBelle-613-966-2034 ext 512
QW/Brighton/Trent Hills: Kathy Morgan-613-475-0255 ext 210
CL4
3622
5
Part time Drivers requireDEnjoy Driving?
If so, we have the perfect position! Flexible hours! You choose the days!Must have a clean drivers abstract.
Friendly! Customer Oriented!
Please bring resume & drivers’s abstract to
97 Church St., Belleville, ON
Are you looking for WORK?We have over 60 posted and “Hidden Job Market” JOBS
ONE OF THEM COULD BELONG TO YOU!We GUARANTEE to be able to help you with your job search.
COME SEE US AT: 81 Dundas St. West, Trenton ON K8V 3P4 613-392-9157
www.careeredge.on.ca
JOBS! JOBS! JOBS!
CL41
6733
This Employment Ontario program is funded in part by the Government of Canada.
All Services FREE!
Get the EDGE!
CL4
3988
4
TOWNSHIP OF STIRLING-RAWDONrequires
Temporary Public Works Employee(s)to assist with winter patrol, snowplowing etc. primarily evenings, nights and weekends. A DZ licence with a clear driving record is required. Applicants should forward resumes in a sealed envelope clearly marked Temporary Employee to the undersigned no later than Wednesday, December 11, 2013 at 4:30 p.m.
Note: Only successful applicants will be notified.Charles Croll, Clerk-Administrator/Public Works Manager
Township of Stirling-RawdonBox 40, Stirling, Ontario K0K 3E0
[email protected] or drop off at 14 Demorest Road, Stirling
WAREHOUSE PERSONCampbellford Farm Supply is seeking a fulltime warehouse labourer for immediate employment. Applicant must have reliable transportation; excellent customer service skills for interacting with public; must be a team player or able to work independently; excellent organizational skills and able to maintain an orderly clean work environment. Applicant needs to be physically capable of lifting heavy loads and working outside in all types of weather. Fork Lift License is considered an asset but employer will train. An applicant that has Farm or Agriculture experience is well suited for this position. Position is Fulltime Monday to Friday with alternate Saturdays required. Wage is $10.50-$12.00 depending on previous experience. Please apply by email with resume to [email protected] or mail to Campbellford Farm Supply19 Industrial Dr., Campbellford, ON K0L 1L0 CL
4852
29
FULL TIME &PART TIME
Contract Drivers& Dispatcherneeded for Belleville/
Trenton Courier Service. Must have own vehicle.
Call Tues. To Fri. 8 am - 2 pm.
613-392-5585 or 613-967-5941 C
L43
5770
HELP WANTED
DRIVERS WANTED AZ, DZ, 5, 3 or 1 with air-brakes: Guaranteed 40 hour work week + overtime, paid travel, lodging, meal allow-ance, 4 week’s vaca-tion/excellent benefits package. Must be able to have extended stays away from home for three months at a time. Experi-ence Needed: Valid AZ, DZ, 5, 3 or 1 with air-brakes, commercial driv-ing experience. Apply online at www.sperry-rail.comunder careers, FastTRACK Application.
Help Wanted! Make $1000 weekly mailing brochures from HOME! NO experience required.Start immediately!www.TheMailingHub.com
NOTICES
HELP WANTED
NOW HIRING!!! $28.00/HOUR Undercover Shoppers Needed \\ $300/DAY TypingCompanies Advertising Online. We provide the training & the jobs toperform. Genuine Oppor-tunity. PT/FT. Experience Not Required.w w w . H e l p W a n t e d -Work.com
Retail sales person re-quired. For year round P/T employment in a nature shop. To start immediate-ly. Must have own trans-portation. References required. Some lifting in-volved. Drop off resume at The Birdhouse Nature Store in downtown Wooler 2823 Cty Rd 40.
RETIREMENT APART-MENTS, ALL inclusive. Meals, transportation, ac-tivities daily. Short leases. Monthly specials! Call 877-210-4130
HELP WANTED
NOTICES
BUSINESS SERVICES
County Water Treatment- Softeners, U.V. Lights, R.O. systems, chemical free iron and sulphur fil-ters. Sales, installation, service and repair. Steven Menna. (613)967-7143.
Hardwood Floor Installa-tion and resurfacing. Ce-ramics. Light renovations and upgrades. Over 30 years experience. Please call for free estimate 613-394-1908.
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
NOTICES
BUSINESS SERVICES
Ken Chard Construction. Renovations, decks, sid-ing, sidewalks, fences, ce-ramic, windows, painting etc. Free estimates. Call: 613-398-7439.
Rick’s Painting Services: Experienced & Reliable.
Residential & Commercial. Reasonable rates.
613-475-0032,613-967-7367
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED HELP WANTED
NOTICES
BUSINESS SERVICES
Steve Collins, Insulation- Blown cellulose, attics, walls, floors. Save money -live comfortably. Warm in winter, cool in summer. Quality work since 1974. Free estimates. Call (613)847-6791.
Steve Switzer construc-tion; new seemless eaves-troughing available, repairs and cleaning. Win-ter is coming, call 613-478-1936
HELP WANTED
NOTICES
BUSINESS SERVICES
Trev’sDelivery & MovingNights & Weekends613-849-7319
Winter Pruning:No leaves, No insects,
No worries! Call Treescape613-397-1457
CANCEL YOUR TIME-SHARE. NO RISK pro-gram. STOP Mortgage & Maintenance Payments Today. 100% Money Back Guarantee. FREE Consulta-tion. Call us NOW. We can Help! 1-888-356-5248
Visit us onlinewww.InsideBelleville.com
C.W. Armstrong Senior Counsellor &
Prominent Author
CL43
6205
CAREER OPTIONS for MANAGERS & PROFESSIONALS$60,000 - $175,000 Salary Expectations
Re-Establishing Your Career and/or 2nd Career Options
www.ictr.ca/[email protected]
We are now entering the year’s peek hiring season! The demand is for 7 – 30 years’ experience and a solid
career-oriented motivation.
Our Careeroute service identifies all your options … perhaps many you never considered or thought possible … and pilots you through
the complete career-hunting process. Managers and professionals have landed outstanding positions since 1986 – for example:
TRADITIONAL OUTSIDE THE BOX Executive & Managerial Director of Major Gifts Professions (All Disciplines) UAV’s, Ship’s Officer, Foreign Service Supervisory, Technical & Supportive Educational & Medical Tourism
“Knowing all your options, where the jobs are …and accessing the right decision-maker is the key to your next employment.”
HELPING INDIVIDUALS ESTABLISH A SOUND CAREER FUTURE
CALL FOR A FREE EXPLORATORY INTERVIEW (613) 498-2290 or 1 877 779-2362
CL43
6223
Classifi edWord Ad Deadline: Mondays at 3 p.m.
Ads can be placed online at www.EMCclassifi ed.ca
or by calling 613-966-2034 x560
613-475-0255 or 1-888-WORD-ADS
RESIDENTIAL ADSstarting at
$13.00/wk2nd week FREE!
COMMERCIAL ADSIncludes rental ads
starting at $15.10/wk
Offi ces:250 Sidney St.
(in the parking lot behind Avaya)
Bellevilleor
21 Meade St.Brighton
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B16 EMC B Section - Thursday, November 21, 2013
Network ADVERTISE ACROSS ONTARIO OR ACROSS THE COUNTRY!For more information contact your local newspaper.
FOR SALE
#1 HIGH SPEED INTERNET$32.95/Month
Absolutely no ports are blockedUnlimited Downloading
Up to 11Mbps Download &800Kbps Upload
ORDER TODAY AT:
www.acanac.caor
CALL TOLL-FREE:1-866-281-3538
SAWMILLS from only $4,897 - MAKE MONEY & SAVE MONEY with your own bandmill - Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to sh ip . FREE In fo & DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com/400OT 1-800-566-6899 Ext:400OT.
ANNOUNCEMENTSDo you know a young star who is making a difference? Nominate them for the 2013 Junior Citizen Award . Nomina t i on fo rms a t www.ocna.org/juniorcitizen, from this newspaper, or call 905-639-8720 ext 221.
EMPLOYMENT OPPS.JOURNEYMAN AUTOMOTIVE Service Technician(s) in Hanna Alberta. Hanna Chrysler Ltd. offers c o m p e t i t i v e w a g e s f r o m $32/hour, negotiable depending on e x p e r i e n c e . B r i g h t , m o d e r n shop. Full-time permanent with bene-fits. Friendly town just 2 hours from major urban centres. More info at: hannachrysler.ca Fax 403-854-2845; Email: [email protected].
STEEL BUILDINGSSTEEL BUILDINGS/METAL BUILD-I N G S 6 0 % O F F ! 2 0 x 2 8 , 30x40, 40x62, 45x90, 50x120, 6 0 x 1 5 0 , 8 0 x 1 0 0 s e l l f o r balance owed! Call 1-800-457-2206 www.crownsteelbuildings.caSTEEL BUILDING - THE GREAT SUPER SALE! 20X20 $4,070. 25X26 $4,879. 30X32 $6,695. 32X40 $8,374. 35X38 $9,540. 40X50 $12,900. One end wall includ-ed. Pioneer Steel 1-800-668-5422. www.pioneersteel.ca
DRIVERS WANTEDL A I D L A W C A R R I E R S VA N DIVISION requires experienced A Z l i c e n s e d d r i v e r s t o r u n the U.S. Premium mileage rate. Home weekly. New equipment. Also hiring Owner Operators. 1-800-263-8267
SERVICES
Have you become addicted to prescription medication? Drug & Alcohol Helpline1-800-565-8603www.DrugAndAlcoholHelpline.caAlso fi nd us at:Drug and Alcohol Helpline on Facebook or @ConnexOntario on Twitter
HEALTH
1 in 5 Canadianswill experience a mental health issue in their lifetimeMental Health Helpline1-866-531-2600www.MentalHealthHelpline.caAlso fi nd us at:Mental Health Helpline on Facebookor @ConnexOntario on Twitter
ADVERTISINGLOOKING FOR NEW BUSINESS and added revenue? Promote your com-pany in Community Newspapers across Ontario right here in these Network Classified Ads or in business card-sized ads in hundreds of well-read newspapers. Let us show you how. Ask about our referral program. Ontario Community Newspapers Association. Contact Carol at 905-639-5718 or Toll-Free 1-800-387-7982 ext. 229. www.networkclassified.org
MORTGAGES$$$ 1st, 2nd, 3rd MORTGAGES - Debt Consolidation, Refinancing, Renovat ions, Tax Arrears , no CMHC fees. $50K you pay $208.33/month (OAC). No income, bad credit, power of sale stopped!! BETTER OPTION MORTGAGES, CALL TODAY Toll-Free 1-800-282-1169, www.mortgageontario.com (LIC# 10969).AS SEEN ON TV - Need a MORT-G A G E , H o m e E q u i t y L o a n , Better Rate? Bad Credit, Self-E m p l o y e d , B a n k r u p t ? B e e n turned down? Facing Foreclosure, P o w e r o f S a l e ? C A L L U S NOW TOLL-FREE 1-877-733-4424 and speak to a licensed mortgage agent. MMAmortgages.com specializ-es in residential, commercial, rural, agriculture, farms, & land mortgages. Vis i t : www.MMAmortgages.com (Lic#12126).
FINANCIAL SERVICES
Want to talk to someone about gambling problems?Ontario Problem Gambling Helpline1-888-230-3505www.ProblemGamblingHelpline.caAlso fi nd us at:Ontario Problem Gambling Helpline on Facebook or @ConnexOntario on Twitter
PERSONALSAre you tired of people asking “WHY ARE YOU STILL SINGLE?” MISTY RIVER INTRODUCTIONS can help you find that special someone to spend your life with. CALL (613)257-3531, www.mistyriverintros.com.DATING SERVICE. Long-term/short-term relat ionships, free to try! 1-877-297-9883. Talk with single ladies. Call #7878 or 1-888-534-6984. Talk now! 1-866-311-9640 or #5015. Meet local single ladies. 1-877-804-5381. (18+)TRUE PSYCHICS! For Answers call now 24/7 Toll Free 1-877-342-3036; Mobile #4486; http://www.true psychics.ca.
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BOOKING DEADLINE FOR CLASSIFIED ADS IS MONDAYS AT 3 P.M.
Call 613-966-2034 x 560 • 613-475-0255 • 1-888-967-3237
Contract District Representative WantedContract District Representative needed for the Belleville News. The contract will be responsible for carrier recruitment, carrier maintenance and customer service. The contractor will also be
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Requirements:• Contractor must be available Thursday all day
• Have a cell phone • Have a computer• Have internet access • Have a valid driver’s license
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EMC B Section - Thursday, November 21, 2013 B17
2 miles EAST of Belleville on Old highway 2 and turn NORTH onto Elmwood Drive for ½ mile.ANTIQUE FURNITURE, GLASSWARES, ARTWORK AND COLLECTIBLES including pine flat to the wall cupboard, pine hand crafted sideboard, country couch, washstand’s, dressers, burled walnut Victorian sideboard, Gibbard tea wagon, press back chairs, extension table, oak desk, multi drawer silverware chest, chest of drawers, parlor tables, Victorian style walnut sideboard, Victorian arm chairs, walnut extension table, walnut drop front secretary desk with three door drawers, walnut china cabinet, oak sideboard with diamond point doors, original oil on board O.C.Madden artwork “Near Denbigh”, oil paintings, prints, Mary Gregory cranberry glass, several pieces of Flo blue, Blue Willow dinnerware, Spode Billingsley Rose dinnerware, Royal Albert “Blossom Time” Waterford crystal, Hummels, Beswicks, several oil lamps, Aladdin lamps, parlor lamps, quantity of hand painted china, quilts, toilet set pieces, sterling silver, vintage toys, stoneware jug with blue- Coxall and Paisley -Napanee; mantle clocks, Royal Doulton figurines, Carnival glass, vintage purses, military badges, Arabic knives, numerous other articles.TERMS - CASH OR CHEQUEOWNER & AUCTIONEER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENT OR INJURY DAY OF SALESULLIVAN AUCTIONEERSPlainfield 613-477-2082www.sullivanauctions.com
SALE CONDUCTED ATBELLEVILLE AND DISTRICT FISH AND GAME CLUB
170 ELMWOOD DRIVE, BELLEVILLE, ONT.WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 27TH AT 10:00 AM
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ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLESFROM MRS HILDA SMITH, NAPANEE
ELSIE HUFF , PICTONAND
PRIVATE COLLECTIONS
Waddingtons.ca/Cobourg
Tel: 905.373.0501 Toll Free: 1.855.503.2963 Fax: 905.373.1467Email: [email protected] 9 Elgin St. E., Unit 6, Cobourg ON K9A 0A1
9 Elgin Street East, Cobourg LARGE 2 DAY ESTATE, ART & BOOK
AUCTION Saturday November 23rd & Sunday November 24th
Preview @ 9:30 p.m. Auction starting at 11:00 a.m.SATURDAY: Sterling Silver & Silver-plate, Crystal,
Porcelain, Collection of Royal Doulton Figures, Nippon, Oriental Items, Large Amount of Smalls & Collector’s Items.
Oak Furniture to include: Dining Room Suite, Bedroom Furniture, Mahogany Corner Cabinet, Chests of Drawers,
Small Tables, Upholstered & Victorian Furniture, Lighting & Oriental Carpets.
SUNDAY: Large Amount of Smalls to Include Tray Lots, Pine & Retro Furniture. Large Collection of Canadian &
European Oils, Watercolours & Prints. Books Selling @ 1:00 to include Large Amount of
Folio SocietyGiant 1/2 Price Indoor Yard Sale to Include Furniture
Watch the Website for Updates & Photos. www.waddingtons.ca/cobourg
BROWSE OUR HOME FURNISHINGS CONSIGNMENT STORE
QUALITY ITEMS AT A FRACTION OF RETAIL.
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GIANT ½ PRICE INDOOR HOUSE CONTENTS & YARD SALESUNDAY – NOVEMBER 24TH
Starting 9:00 A.M. - 11 A.M.To Include 100’s of New Items: Large Amount of Smalls, Glass, Crystal, China, Lamps, Books, Collector’s Items, Oriental Items, Numerous Box
Lots, Doulton Figures & Mugs.Oil Paintings, Prints & Watercolours, Dining Room
Suite, Dressers, Chairs, Cabinets, Small Tables, Lamps, Mirrors, Beds and So Much More.
All Priced to Sell. Must Clear the Warehousewww.brightonestateauctions.com
BRIGHTON ESTATEAUCTIONS
101 Applewood Drive, Brighton, Ont. K0K 1H0 Phone 1-613-475-6223
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12 miles NORTH of Belleville on Highway 62 and turn EAST onto the Moria Road for 1 mile.THE AUCTION ORIGINALLY SCHEDULED FOR THIS DATE HAS BEEN CANCELLED
SULLIVAN AUCTIONEERSPlainfield 613-477-2082www.sullivanauctions.com
570 MOIRA ROAD, R.R.2 STIRLING, ONT.SATURDAY NOVEMBER 23RD AT 11:00 AM
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AUCTION SALEBUSINESS FOR SALE - CANCELLED
BY PUBLIC AUCTIONHASTINGS COUNTY MEAT PACKERS
CANCELLED
AUCTION SALE WED, NOVEMBER 27, 2013 AT 5:00 P.M.
DOUG JARRELL SALES ARENA, BELLEVILLE
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2002 Ford Windstar Sport van with 151,000 kms (sells as is), round pedestal kitchen table, Lazy-boy recliner, electric fireplace, coffee & end tables, set of 4 chairs, plant tables, 18 boxes of glass & china packed at listing, depression, BMP pieces, wooden cheese boxes, crocks prints & frames & numerous other smalls.
See my web site for detailed list & photos.AUCTIONEERS:
DOUG JARRELL & BEN TREVERTON613-969-1033 www.dougjarrellauctions.com
www.ruslands.com • [email protected]
A Trusted Name Since 1972
Thursday, April 12th ~ 5pmViewing 2pm auction day.
Morrow Building ~ 171 Lansdowne St., PeterboroughSELLING ENTIRE CONTENTS FROM A GAMBLING HALL.
GAMING & RESTAURANTAUCTION
Partial list includes: fork lift, slate pool table, leather sofas, poker tables, bar stools, cigar humidors, at screen tv’s, projectors w/large screens, restaurant
kitchen appliances and much more!CALL TO CONSIGN 705-745-4115
705-745-4115
www.ruslands.com • [email protected]
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BEVERLY HILLS HIGH END FURNITURE & CLOTHING
AUCTIONSUN NOV. 24 - 10AM
650 The Kingsway. Peterborough. ONOne of a kind auction from the home
of the Vice President of film distribution for Paramount Studios in Beverly Hills.
Furniture, rugs, dishes. DESIGNER CLOTHING, shoes, boots, purses, furs, leather coats by Gucci, Jimmy Choo,
Channel, Dolce & Gabbana, Armani, Prada, Versace etc. Majority of the hundreds of
items are brand new and have the original tags attached
More info at www.ruslands.com
www.ruslands.com • [email protected]
A Trusted Name Since 1972
Thursday, April 12th ~ 5pmViewing 2pm auction day.
Morrow Building ~ 171 Lansdowne St., PeterboroughSELLING ENTIRE CONTENTS FROM A GAMBLING HALL.
GAMING & RESTAURANTAUCTION
Partial list includes: fork lift, slate pool table, leather sofas, poker tables, bar stools, cigar humidors, at screen tv’s, projectors w/large screens, restaurant
kitchen appliances and much more!CALL TO CONSIGN 705-745-4115
705-745-4115
www.ruslands.com • [email protected]
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Rusland’s antique, ColleCtible & Fine
FuRnishings auCtiontues nov 26, 2013 - 5pm
Evinrude Centre - 911 Monaghan Rd., Peterborough
Pine strip canoe, antiques, rugs, furniture, china, glass, jewellery, books, artwork &
much more!Plan to Attend. Call to Consign
Tues Nov 26th @ 6pmDoors open at 5:00pm
AUCTION SALE atRIVERSIDE AUCTION HALL
Large auction, partial estate, other interesting items plus many consignments. Boxes as yet unpacked.
192 Front W. Hastings, ON K0L 1Y01-705-696-2196
Terms of sale: Cash, Debit, M/C, VisaCanteen & Washrooms
Auctioneer: Allen McGrath
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Saturday, November 30, 2013 at 10:00 am
The estate of the late allan Curleof rr 1 Campbellford, ontario
Farm tractor, machinery, equipment, hay, antiques and household items. Full list in next week`s paper and on our website.
MET
RO
LAN
D M
EDIA
AU
CTI
ON
SHAVE AN UPCOMING AUCTION?Get the word out to more than 69,000 homes.
Call to fi nd out how.613-966-2034
LOOK WHO’S MAKING MONEYWITH THE CLASSIFIEDS
www.InsideBelleville.com
RESIDENTIAL ADS FROM
$1300
To book your ad, call us at1-888-967-3237
or 613-966-2034 ext 5602nd WEEK FREE
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B18 EMC B Section - Thursday, November 21, 2013
Events
BELLEVILLEThe Canadian Hearing Society offers Walk In Wednesdays from 10 am-noon and 2-4pm. Speak to a Hear-ing Care Counsellor. No appointment necessary. Bayview Mall, 470 Dundas St. E Belleville
QuinTe Region Crokinole Club, every Tuesday, 7 p.m., Avaya building at 250 Sidney St., Belleville, south entrance. Cost is $4.00. http://www.qrcc.ca . For info: Dave Brown at 613-967-7720 or Louis Gauthier at 613-849-0690.
Belleville ChoRal Society concert, “Jubilation”, Sunday, December 1, 3 p.m., St Michael the Archangel Church, 296 Church St., Belleville. Tickets from Quinte Arts Council, St. Michael’s Parish or call 613-966-0372 for locations.
The Belleville & District Olde Tyme Fiddlers Assoc. Christmas party, Sunday, Nov 24, Belleville Fish & Game Hall, Elmwood Dr, 1 PM. Round and square dancing, open mic. A turkey din-ner afterwards. $10.00 per person. If you can, bring a small gift to be used as gift exchange.
QuinTe gRannies for Africa presents Flavours For Africa in food and story. Speaker: Ida Mukuka, field-worker for the Stephen Lewis Founda-tion, Thursday 28 November, 6 PM, St Thomas Anglican Church, Belleville. Tickets:$ 25.00/person Info: Kathy at 613-968-6566
nov 22, 23, 29 and 30, The “For the Love of a Song” singers with Bay City Band & Tawny’s School of Dance musi-cal production. Fundraiser for Christmas Sharing & Adopt-A-Child. Maranatha Auditorium, Tickets $20 in advance or at the door. Fridays, 8pm, Saturdays, 2pm
uniTed ChuRCh of Canada Direc-tor, David Armour, Guest Speaker at Anniversary Service, Bridge St. United Church, Sun., Nov. 24, 10:30 a.m. 60 Bridge St. E., Belleville.
Belleville gaRden Club meets the 4th Tuesday of the month, 7-9 pm, Moira Secondary School, 275 Farley Ave, Belleville. Info 613-966-7455.
Mini aRT workshops, last Tuesday of each month, 9:30 a.m.-12 p.m., pre-sented by John M. Parrott Art Gallery and Belleville Art Association. This month, Painting and Drawing Animals & Birds. Cost $3. Info: 613-968-6731 x 2240.
FoRMal dRess Sale, Belleville’s Thrift Store sale on over 100 dress priced between $10 - $30, Nov 28-30. Open until 8 pm on Thurs and Fri evening. 393 Sidney St., Belleville
noveMBeR 24, 1-4pm, Grand Ole Belleville Legion Country, Bluegrass Jamboree & Open Mic. $10/person or $8 with new toy or a non-perishable food item for Toy Drive and Food Bank. Share the wealth draws and door prizes. Food available by the Ladies Auxiliary.
FooTCaRe CliniC, Friday, No-vember 22, Quinte Living Centre. VON offers Basic, Advanced and Diabetic Foot Care (Fee for Service). To book your appointment 1-888-279-4866 ex 5346
CaMouFlage, MiMiCRy and Bio-mimicry – Life imitating Life! Speaker: Queen’s University professor, Dr. Barrie Frost. Quinte Field Naturalist, Mon-day, Nov. 25, 7:00 pm, Bridge Street United Church, Belleville. Free-will donation.
The Cn Pensioners’ Association,
Belleville and District, Christmas din-ner meeting, Thursday November 28, Travelodge Hotel, Belleville, at 12 pm. All CN pensioners, their spouses, wid-ows and new members are welcome. If you have not been contacted call 613- 395 -3250 by Nov. 24. Doors open at 11:00 AM.
QuinTe FRiendship Club, 4th. Wednesday of each month, 7 PM, down-stairs, Richmond Retirement Center. Activities include out to lunch bunch, pot luck dinners, euchre nights etc. Info: drop in, or 969-4475. New members welcome
The dRawing Room offers non-instructional studio sessions to practice drawing and painting the human figure from a draped model. November 21, 2 to 4 p.m., third floor meeting room, John M. Parrott Art Gallery. 613-968-6731 x2240 or e-mail [email protected]
senioRs 5-pin Bowling, Tuesdays, 1 p.m. Come and meet new friends for fun and fellowship. Belleville Pro Bowl, Bay-view Mall. Call Ken 613-962-3429
JoyFull noise Belleville Women’s Choir invites women of all ages to join. Songs from the 50’s to the 80’s. Tuesdays, 7 to 9 p.m., Core Centre, 223 Pinnacle St., Belleville. No auditions required. Novice to experienced singers. www.joyfull-noise.com.
dineRs CluB Belleville: Every Tuesday from 12-2:00pm, Parkdale Com-munity Centre, 119 Birch St. Belleville. Info: 613-969-0130
TeRRy Fallis, winner of Canada Reads 2011, presents his new book “Up and Down”, Belleville Public Library, Thursday November 28, 6:30 p.m.
TgiF FRozen Meals. Nutritious, church-prepared and frozen meals avail-able every Friday, 2 to 4 p.m., Bridge St. United Church (60 Bridge East entrance). No cost/no pre-ordering. Register at first visit with ID for each meal to be picked up.
aCTiviTy gRoup, every Thursday, Parkdale Community Centre, 119 Birch St. Belleville, 1-3 pm, activities vary from one week to another. For info and registration call Irene 613-969-0130
Food addiCTs in Recovery Anony-mous, Wednesdays at 7 p.m., St. Columba Presbyterian Church, 520 Bridge St E (at Farley), Belleville for those suffer-ing 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.
FRiends oF the Library Bookstore is accepting gently used books, CD and DVD donations. Foyer of Belleville Public Library 10-4, Monday through Sat-urday. Info: 613-968-6731 ext 2245
BRIGHTONindooR walking Club, Mon-days to Thursdays 6-9 pm until May 1, ENSS Brighton. No Charge but must pre-register. Gail at Community Care Northumberland (613)475-4190.
BRighTon CuRling Club, Nov. 22, Friday Night Rocks! Fun on the ice and socializing afterwards. Instruction and equipment provided. 7-9 p.m. Cost $5.00. www.brightoncurlingclub.ca
R.C.l. 100 Brighton Meat Roll, every Saturday, 3 – 5 pm
BRighTon dRuM CIRCLE meets November 28, 7-9 p.m. Enjoy the energy and fun of exploring rhythm with oth-ers. For address and information, email [email protected].
leaRn how to make Festive Ap-
petizers and Desserts, Thursday, Dec. 5, 6:30-8:30 p.m. Community Care Northumberland, Brighton. Cost $5. Pre-register at CCN Brighton, 46 Prince Edward St or call 613-475-4190.
FooTCaRe CliniC, Friday, No-vember 22, St. Paul’s Anglican Church. VON offers Basic, Advanced and Dia-betic Foot Care (Fee for Service). To book your appointment call 1-888-279-4866 ex 5346
Maplewood’s annual Tea Room and Bazaar, Saturday November 23, 2:00 pm. Baked goods handmade Christmas ornaments wood crafts, many knitted items and more. 12 Maplewood Ave, Brighton. Info: Rachel at 613-475-2442
BRighTon hoRTiCulTuRal Society, Pot luck Dinner, Photo Competi-tion Results and AGM. Tuesday Nov 26, 6-30 pm, Brighton Community Centre, Elizabeth St. Join fellow gardeners for a friendly get together. Please lug a mug and dinner ware. Info 613-475-6575
CAMPBELLFORDindooR walking program, Tues-days and Fridays 10 am. St. John’s United Church, 50 Bridge St. W., Campbell-ford.
CoMMuniTy dineR’s, Nov. 27 Christ Church Anglican, 154 Kent St. Campbellford at 12pm. Cost is $ 9. Info Natisha at 705-653-1411
winTeR CRaFT & Gift Sale, Satur-day, November 23, 10am-3pm, Camp-bellford Community Resource Centre, 65 Bridge St. E. Free Admission & Silent Auction
TRenT hills Cancer Society Euchre, 4th Tuesday every month, 7:30 pm. $3 includes coffee and sandwiches.Everyone welcome. Warkworth Legion. Info: Kathy Ellis (705) 924-9116
you, youR Child and Self Regula-tion parent workshop. Tuesday, No-vember 27, 9:30 to 11:00 am, St. Mary Catholic Elementary School, 35 Centre St, Campbellford. To register: Cheryl McMurray, Northumberland Child De-velopment Centre, 1-866-218-1427. [email protected].
FRee guided Walks continue to take place every Thursday in Ferris Park until December. Meet at the east end of the Suspension Bridge at 9 am for a one hour guided walk, rain or shine.
CaMpBellFoRd kineTTe Bingo every Thursday at 7pm. Campbellford/Seymour Arena, 313 Front St. N. $1000 Jackpot in 54 numbers, consolation prize of $200. Wheelchair accessible.
disCuss youR child’s development, speech and behaviour, Tuesdays, St. Mary Catholic Elementary School, Campbell-ford. 10-11am. All families welcome. Info: Cheryl McMurray, Northumberland Child Development Centre, 1-866-218-1427. [email protected]
CASTLETONCasTleTon uniTed Church Christmas Bazaar Saturday, November 23, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Lunch available. Crafts, preserves and baked goods. To reserve your craft table call Marion at 905-344-7601.
COBOURGFooTCaRe CliniC, Mon and Wed Mornings, St. Andrews Presbyterian Church. VON offers Basic, Advanced and Diabetic Foot Care (Fee for Ser-vice). For appointment call the VON at 1-888-279-4866 ex 5346
CODRINGTONCodRingTon dRop In Centre
Monday thru Thursdays from 9:30 till 11:30 am.
COLBORNEspeeCh TheRapy, Tuesdays, 9:00 am to 3:00 pm at Colborne Public School, 8 Alfred St, Colborne. By appointment only – please contact Northumberland Child Development Centre at 905-885-8137.
ladies’ soCial Group, Tuesdays at Community Care Northumberland, 11 King St. E. Colborne, 1:30-3 p.m. Info: 905-355-2989.
sanTa Claus Parade, Saturday, November 23, 7 p.m. Meet Santa after the parade at the Gazebo.
FOXBOROgilead hall euchre, Bronk Rd., every other Tuesday evening, 7:15 to 10:00. All welcome. Info: Fern at 613-969-9262.
dineRs CluB Thurlow: Every 4th Wednesday from 12-2:00pm, Thurlow Community Centre, 516 Harmony Rd. Corbyville. Info: 613-969-0130
FRANKFORDFRankFoRd lions Club Bid Eu-chre, every Wednesday 1 pm. Bingo, every Wednesday, 6:30 p.m.
saTuRday, noveMBeR 23, 11:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., Holy Trinity Fall Vendors and Craft Sale. Miscel-laneous vendors, refreshments, door prizes. Something for everyone.
gaRy MelaRkey Memorial Dart Tournament, Saturday, November 23, Frankford Legion. $10/person includes blind draw teams, lunch, draw prizes, and a silent auction. Cut-off 12.30. Start 1:00.
euChRe eveRy Tuesday, 7 pm, 1030 Mapleview Rd. From Stockdale take Will Johnston Rd to first turn on the right.
FRankFoRd legion: Men’s pool each Tuesday. Ladies pool each Thursday. Both start at 7 p.m.
GLEN MILLERTops (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
HASTINGSsT. geoRge’s Anglican Church Christmas Bazaar Luncheon, Saturday, November 23, 9 a.m.-1:30p.m. $6.00
kniTTing CluB, Thursdays, 1-3pm. Yoga, Wednesdays, 2:00pm. Cost $3. Zumba Class, Tuesdays, 9:30am. Cost $3. Line Dancing Class, Wednesdays, 10am. Cost $3. Belly Dancing Class, Thursdays, 10am. Cost $3. 6 Albert St. East, Hastings. Info: Sarah at 705-696-3891
HAVELOCKBingo eveRy Wednesday at Have-lock Community Centre sponsored by the Havelock Lions. Doors open at 5:30 p.m. Early birds 7:00 p.m., regular start 7:30 p.m. Info: Lion John at [email protected] 705 778 7362.
haveloCk legion: Meat draws, every Sat. 3 pm. Everyone Welcome. 8 Ottawa St. 705-778-3728.
hBM & District Santa Claus Parade, Saturday, November 23, 7 p.m. Visit with Santa at the Legion afterwards.
TRadiTional CounTRy Music Jam Sessions, Ol’ Town Hall, Matheson and Oak St, Havelock, every Wednesday.
Doors open at 12 pm. Music at 1 pm. Musicians (excluding drums), vocalists and visitors welcomed
MADOCMadoC aCTive Living Exercise: Wednesdays, 10:30 am. Trinity United Church, 76 St Lawrence St E. Program opened to seniors and adults with physi-cal disabilities.
Royal Canadian Legion Br 363 Madoc has mixed darts every Thursday night 7.30. Everyone invited
whiTe lake Bethesda United Church Ham Supper, Friday, November 22, 4:30 until sold out. Ivanhoe Veterans Hall
line danCing, Every Thurs. 10:30-11:30 am., St. John’s Anglican Church Hall, 115 Durham St. N. Madoc. Info: Carol Cooper 613-473-1446
saT. nov. 23, 11 am-2 pm, “Christmas on the Hill” Bazaar and Tea, St. John’s Anglican Church, 115 Durham St. N. Bake Sale, Crafts, Christmas Gifts and Decorations, Draws. Poured Tea from 11:30 a.m.
naTiviTy display Set Up, St. John’s Anglican Church 115 Durham St. N. If you have a set (large or small) for the display, please bring it to the church for set up on Friday Nov. 29, 1-4 or call Colleen 613-473-4124 or Al 613-472-3176 to make alternate ar-rangements or for pick up.
BadMinTon eveRy Tuesday and Thursday, 7-9:30 p.m., Centre Hastings Secondary School, with coaching for Junior players Thursdays, 6-7:00 p.m. Terry, 613-473-5662 for info.
MARMORAMaRMoRa soCial: Thursday, Nov 22, 43 Mathew Place. Seating: 11:30AM. Lunch at 12:00PM. Opened to seniors and adults with physical disabilities. Call 1-800-554-1564 to pre-register if not already a member of Marmora Social program.
CoMMuniTy youTh Night, Sat-urday, November 23, 7-8:30 p.m., Mar-mora Senior School. For grades 7-12. Info: Marmora Free Methodist Church, 613-472-5030 or Marmora Pentecostal Church, 613-472-5030.
MaRMoRa legion: Bingo every Monday 7pm. Ultimate Euchre, second Sunday of the month 1pm. Jam Ses-sions every third Sunday of the month, 1-4pm.
TuRkey Bingo, Tuesday, Novem-ber 26, 7:30 p.m. Sacred Heart of Jesus Parish Hall. Chip Bingo. Sponsored by Marmora Knights of Columbus.
Cwl ChRisTMas Tea & Bazaar, Saturday, Nov. 23, 11 am - 2 pm, Sa-cred Heart Church Hall, 46 Burstall St. Marmora. Tea Room with Light Luncheon, Bake Table, crafts, white elephant goods, prizes and quilt raffle. Admission $3.00.
NORWOODTake oFF Pounds Sensibly (TOPS) Tuesdays, St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church, Norwood. Weigh in from 5:30, meeting at 7 pm. Elaine 705-639-5710
asphodel noRwood Public Library, Norwood Branch: Story time every Friday, 10 a.m. Event info: www.anpl.org.
noRwood CuRling Club Mixed Open ‘Ham & Turkey’ Bonspiel Sat. Nov. 23. Two draws. Two games & lunch included in entry fee. Info: Mary, 705-295-6505
COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Continued on page B18
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PRICES EFFECTIVE:Thurs, Nov 21st
thru Wed, Nov 27th
STORE HOURS: Mon to Fri 8am-10pm,
Sat & Sun 8am-8pm
Pork Back Ribs Frozen Cryovac 4.41/kg
2L Sealtest Chocolate Milk
R001
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630
$2 SALE$2$2
LESS THAN 1/2 PRICE
SAVE $1.85
/lb
2L
Mauve Friday is Coming.Black Friday will never be the same.
EMC Section B - Thursday, November 21, 2013 B19
COMMUNITY CALENDAR
P.E. COUNTYConseCon Legion Bid Euchre every Tuesday, 7 pm. $5.00 ea. Mixed Fun Darts every Thursday, 7 pm. $5.00 ea. Crib every Wednesday, 7pm. $5.00 ea
Wednesdays, Knitting 2-4 pm. $5.00/wk. Zumba 7:30-8:30 pm. $8.00/wk Ameliasburgh Community Hall
the PrinCe Edward County 4 H Dance Club Country Square Dance, Saturday, November 23, 8-11 pm, Sophiasburg Town Hall, Demorestville. Live music. Adults $10, Students $5, Family $20 Under 9 free. Refreshments provided. Info: Liz at 613-476-8104 or Keith at 613-393-5336
STIRLINGdiners: Monday, Nov 25, St Paul’s United Church, 104 Church St. Lunch at 12:00 noon. Please bring your own plate, cup, and cutlery. Program opened to seniors and adults with physi-cal disabilities
stirLing Legion Sunday Brunch Nov. 24, 8 a.m.- 1 p.m. $8 per person. Children under 10 $5. Bacon, ham, sausage, home fries, eggs, baked beans, toast, coffee, juice. Everyone welcome.
the stirLing Festival Theatre presents Ra-punzel: A Hairy Tale, Nov 22 – Dec 31. For ages 5 and up. Also, Naughty version intended for 19 years and older. Matinee and Evening performances. For info: 613-395-2100 or 1-877-312-1162 or www.stirlingfestivaltheatre.com
TRENTONtoastMasters internationaL, Trenton Library. Every 2nd and 4th Wednesday, 6:30-8 pm. New members and guests welcome.
rCL Ladies Auxiliary Br. 110, Trenton, Christ-mas Carol Tea and Dessert, November 23, 1-3 p.m. Silent auction table, bank table, food hampers, crafts. Tea and dessert $2.
aUdition For Love, Sex and the IRS. 3 Women ages 20 - 50, 5 Men ages 20 - 50. Sunday, November 24, 1pm or Monday, November 25, 7pm, Historic Trenton Town Hall - 1861, 55 King St, Trenton. Come prepared to read from script
CraFt & Gift Sale in support of the Trenton Children’s Centre, Saturday, Nov 23, Club 105, 61 Bay St, Trenton, 9am-3pm. Admission $2
the trenton Memorial Hospital Auxiliary annual Holly Bazaar, Friday Nov. 22, 12-4 pm. Parking and admission free. Holly Tea Room $4 from 1 pm. The Silent Auction closes at 3:30 pm. Baked goods, poinsettias, crafts, gift baskets, raffles. Info: Karen White 613 965 0423
sPaghetti dinner Fundraiser , November 29, Royal Canadian Legion Branch 110, 20 Quinte St Trenton (upstairs), 6-9pm, Adults $8, 12 and under $5. for advance tickets: Rosemary 613 392 4754. All proceeds to the 173 Royal Tiger Air Cadet Squadron
King street United Church,100 King St, Trenton Victorian Christmas Tea and Bazaar,
Saturday, November 23, 11:30am - 2:00 pm. Luncheon $8. Entrance to Ye Olde Emporium Free. Preserves, Baking, Crafts, Antiques and Collectables.
trenton Von Monday Mornings. VON Foot Care Clinic: Basic, Advanced and Diabetic Foot Care (Fee for Service). For appointment call 1-888-279-4866 ex 5346
trenton seniors Club 105, Free Christmas Lunch for Seniors who live alone, Saturday Decem-ber 14, 12 noon till 3pm. Advance Tickets Only. Available at 61 Bay St., 9am-3pm Mon-Fri.
trent Port Historical Society Unveiling of Trent Port Photo Mosaic Mural, Saturday, No-vember 23, 11:00 AM, Parking lot of Captain George’s Restaurant. Reception at Trenton Town Hall - 1861, 55 King St, 11:30 AM to 1 PM
aL-anon. does someone’s drinking bother you? Join them each Wednesday at 8 p.m. 100 King St. Trenton.
trenton Lions Club is looking for new members. Meetings are 2nd and 4th Wed of each month, Sept to July. Info: Membership Chairman Darlene Hiltz 613-969-9502 or [email protected]
TWEEDtWeed CUrLing Club offers daytime exer-cise classes Mondays, Wednesday, Thursday & Friday. Zumba, Aerobics & Weights and Core Training. $5/class or $35/month. Info: Nancy 613-478-3464.
Bid eUChre every Tuesday night 7 p.m., Actinolite Recreation Hall
grey CUP Party, Tweed Legion, Sunday, No-vember 24. Clubroom opens at 3 p.m., pot-luck at 5 (bring a dish). Game time 6:30. Draws and prizes. Info: 613-478-1865.
gigantiC BooK Sale,Tweed Public Library, 230 Metcalf St., November 28, 4-7 pm, Novem-ber 29, 10 am - 5 pm, November 30, 10 am - 2 pm. Sponsored by The Friends of the Tweed Library.
Line danCing, Every Tues., 10:30-11:30 am, Hungerford Hall, Tweed. Info: Carol Cooper 613-473-1446
diners: Wednesday, Nov 27, St Ed-mund’s Hall- Stoco, Hungerford Rd. Lunch at 12:00 noon. Please bring your own plate, cup, and cutlery. Opened to seniors and adults with physical disabilities
tWeed Legion: Mixed darts every Friday night, 7:30 p.m. Mixed pool Wednesday nights (except 3rd Wed. of the month), 7:00 sharp. Ev-eryone welcome.
TYENDINAGAsUnday noV 24, 3 p.m. at Melrose United Church, 613 Melrose Rd, Tyendinaga, a massed choir Cantata “First Christmas”. Free will offer-ing to Deseronto Community Food Bank. Light refreshments to follow.
Foot Care, 4th Thursday of each month, Starts at 9am, Deseronto Lions Hall 300 Main St.
Deseronto call 613-396-6591 for further details
WARKWORTHWarKWorth LiBrary Story Hour/Playtime. Every Tuesday,10:30. Every other week Andrea from the YMCA Early Years will join us. Crafts, stories, songs, fun, snacks. For 3-6 year olds.
sUnday, noVeMBer 24, 2:00 pm, Food: Grow It, Prepare It, Share It - Abundance Project Community Conversation, Gathering Place at St. Paul’s United Church. We need your ideas, direction and support. Everyone welcome
CoMMUnity diner’s, Nov. 26, St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church, 20 Mill St.,Warkworth at 12pm. Cost is $9. Info Natisha at 705-653-1411
annUaL CandLeLight Dinner, Friday, November 29, St. Paul’s United Church, 60 Main St, Warkworth, 5-7 pm. $15.00 for adults, $6.00 for
children 6 to 12, free under 6 years old. Tickets: Don Young 705-924-3121 or Barb Trotter 705-924-2066 or Eclectic Mix, Warkworth
annUaL Bazaar & Bake Sale. Proceeds to benefit the Residents’ Council Community Nurs-ing Home, Warkworth. Saturday November 23, 9am – 1:30pm. 97 Mill St, Warkworth
WOOLERWooLer United Church U.C.W. is taking orders for “Christmas Cookie Trays.” Deadline: Nov. 30. Call Roxie 613-397-3027 or Linda 613-397-2106
Continued from page B18
Have a non-profit event coming up? Email your listing to [email protected]
Deadline is Mondays at 3 p.m. One listing per event. Ads may be edited or omitted as space permits
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B20 EMC Section B - Thursday, November 21, 2013